Louisiana-Pacific Corp.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsSep 20, 1993312 N.L.R.B. 165 (N.L.R.B. 1993) Copy Citation 165 312 NLRB No. 35 LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. 1 On December 23, 1992, Administrative Law Judge William J. Pannier III issued the attached decision and errata. The Respondent filed exceptions and a supporting brief and the General Counsel filed an answering brief. 2 We find no merit to the Respondent’s exceptions to the judge’s findings that the Respondent violated Sec. 8(a)(5) by eliminating Local rule 9 from its implemented terms and conditions of employ- ment after impasse and by transferring unit work to nonunion saw- mill employees. In adopting the judge’s finding that the Respondent violated Sec. 8(a)(5) and (1) by unilaterally eliminating Local rule 9, we do not rely on the judge’s discussion of the parties’ agreement to ‘‘call each other back’’ to the bargaining table. Nevertheless, we agree with the judge’s finding that the Respondent was not privi- leged to make last-minute changes to its final proposal prior to im- plementation without first offering the Union a meaningful oppor- tunity to bargain. 3 The Respondent has excepted to some of the judge’s credibility findings. The Board’s established policy is not to overrule an admin- istrative law judge’s credibility resolutions unless the clear prepon- derance of all the relevant evidence convinces us that they are incor- rect. Standard Dry Wall Products, 91 NLRB 544 (1950), enfd. 188 F.2d 362 (3d Cir. 1951). We have carefully examined the record and find no basis for reversing the findings. The Respondent does not except to the judge’s findings that it vio- lated Sec. 8(a)(1) by threatening to curtail overtime assignments if grievances about overtime assignments were filed, and Sec. 8(a)(3) by withdrawing an offer to partially reimburse an employee for med- ical expenses because he filed a grievance and pursued it to arbitra- tion. The Respondent also does not except to the judge’s finding that it violated Sec. 8(a)(5) by unilaterally allowing nonunit employees to perform shipping and receiving work during the plant shutdown. 4 The Union represents a unit of production and maintenance em- ployees at the pulp mill. The sawmill employees are not represented by any labor organization. 5 The General Counsel does not challenge the propriety of the shutdown. 6 In the past the Respondent had arranged for similar in-kind trades of materials with a competitor. Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, Western Division and Association of Western Pulp and Paper- workers, Local 49. Cases 20–CA–24231, 20– CA–24343, and 20–CA–24413 September 20, 1993 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN STEPHENS AND MEMBERS DEVANEY AND RAUDABAUGH Exceptions to the decision in this case1 present, inter alia, the following issues: (1) whether the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) by arranging with a competitor for an in-kind trade of pulp during a plant shutdown; and (2) whether the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) by refusing to ‘‘red-circle’’ the wage rates of two chip dump CAT operators.2 The National Labor Relations Board has considered the decision and the record in light of the exceptions and briefs and has decided to affirm the judge’s rul- ings, findings,3 and conclusions, as modified, and to adopt the recommended Order, as modified below. The Pulp Mill Shutdown The Respondent operates a pulp mill and a sawmill in Samoa, California.4 From mid-October through De- cember 1991, the Respondent, for economic reasons, shut down its pulp mill operation.5 During late October or early November 1991, one of the Respondent’s major customers, C. Itoh Company (Itoh), approached the Respondent for a supply of 5000 tons of pulp. The Respondent explained that its pulp mill was shut down, that it would cost approximately $200,000 to reopen it, and that it would do so only if Itoh would pay the cost to reopen the plant in addition to the cost of the pulp. Itoh refused and threatened that, if forced to find an- other supplier, the Respondent would risk losing Itoh’s business permanently. After further negotiations, Itoh suggested that the Respondent borrow the 5000 tons of pulp from a competitor to satisfy Itoh’s order.6 Acting on Itoh’s suggestion, the Respondent ar- ranged with a nearby competitor, Simpson Paper Com- pany (Simpson), to fill Itoh’s order and to the Re- spondent to fill a similar order for one of Simpson’s customers when the Respondent became operational. Simpson filled Itoh’s order in November 1991; the Re- spondent filled an order for a similar quantity of pulp for Simpson’s customers in January and February 1992. The complaint alleges, and the judge found, that the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) by ‘‘subcontract- ing out an order for pulp product rather than recall Unit employees at the Pulp Mill to do this work.’’ The judge found that the arrangement with Itoh, which the Respondent admits it made without notice to or bar- gaining with the Union, deprived the unit employees, during late 1991, of work they ordinarily performed. Rejecting the Respondent’s argument that the employ- ees did not incur a loss as a result of the arrangement, the judge found that the Respondent’s employees were deprived of the time value of the money they would have earned had they been permitted to perform the work in November. Moreover, the judge found that the Respondent presented no evidence that it would have suffered any economic detriment by the passage of time required to notify and bargain with the Union. The Respondent argues on exception that it was not obligated to bargain with the Union because the in- kind trade of pulp did not materially and substantially change the employees’ terms and conditions of em- ployment. The Respondent points out that it had in- formed Itoh that it (the Respondent) had no intention of reopening the pulp mill to fill Itoh’s order unless Itoh agreed to bear the $200,000 cost. Moreover, the Respondent notes that, because the employees per- formed work for Simpson in early 1992—work which they otherwise would not have had—the employees suffered no overall detriment, and indeed benefited, 166 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 7 The General Counsel’s reliance on Torrington Industries, 307 NLRB 809 (1992), is misplaced. In that case, the employer laid off unit employees and transferred a truck and a nonunit driver to per- form the unit work. We found that the decision to lay off unit em- ployees and replace them with nonunit employees and independent contractors to perform the same work constituted essentially ‘‘Fibreboard-type subcontracting’’ and did not change the scope or direction of the business. In that case, the General Counsel took issue with the decision to lay off the unit employees. In this case, by contrast, the complaint alleges at most a failure to recall the unit employees, by reopening the mill, but does not challenge the Re- spondent’s decision to close the mill in the first place. Given this factual distinction, Torrington Industries has no application to this case. Member Raudabaugh does not agree that a decision concerning whether or when to end a layoff has no significant impact on unit employees. In his view, such a decision, like the decision to have the layoff in the first place, does have such an impact on unit em- ployees. He would apply the test in Dubuque Packing, 303 NLRB 386 (1991), to such a decision. See generally his concurring opinion in Holmes & Narver, 309 NLRB 146 (1992). Applying that test, he assumes arguendo that the General Counsel met his prima facie bur- den under Dubuque. However, the Respondent has shown that the decision was not based on labor costs; it was based on the Respond- ent’s unwillingness to spend $200,000 to reopen the facility. Accord- ingly, the decision was not a mandatory subject. 8 Therefore, we adopt the judge’s conclusions of law except as modified above. We also adopt the judge’s finding that the Respondent violated Sec. 8(a)(5) and (1) by transferring unit mechanical work to nonunit sawmill employees during the pulp mill shutdown. By contrast to the in-kind trade, the Respondent demonstrated a willingness to, and did, call in laid-off mechanics during the shutdown to perform mechani- cal work, and pulp mill mechanics thereby suffered significant det- riment when their work was transferred to the sawmill. 9 The contractual provision reads as follows: In the event [Respondent] permanently eliminates an estab- lished regular job classification, those employees with five (5) or more years of service in the mill who occupied that job clas- sification at the time it was eliminated shall not have their straight-time hourly rate reduced below that of the eliminated classification at the time of discontinuance unless they refuse to accept a promotion or refuse to bid for available job openings. . . . 10 We do not agree that Industrial Relations Manager Greenhalgh’s acknowledgment at trial that the Respondent had probably ‘‘provided a benefit that . . . some of the employees weren’t entitled to under from the Respondent’s decision. We find merit in the Respondent’s exception. As the Respondent correctly notes, an employer is not obligated to bargain over a decision to subcontract unit work if the decision would have no substantial, significant, or material effect on the employees’ terms and conditions of employment. See Westinghouse Elec- tric Corp., 153 NLRB 443, 446–447 (1965) (no viola- tion where employees suffered no ‘‘significant det- riment’’ as a result of subcontracting unit work); see also Precision Castings Corp., 233 NLRB 183 fn. 1 and 210–211 (1977) (no violation where subcontract- ing occurred after plant had been closed and employ- ees terminated). We find that, under the circumstances of this case, the in-kind trade of pulp did not have a significant detrimental effect on the unit employees. We note first that the pulp mill was closed at the time Itoh approached the Respondent with its order for 5000 tons of pulp. Thus we are not here faced with a situation in which the Respondent could merely have postponed the mill closing or not closed it at all. Rath- er, as the judge noted, the Respondent had closed the plant in October, well before Itoh placed its order for pulp, and there is no dispute that it would have cost approximately $200,000 to reopen the plant to fill the order. There also is no evidence to contradict the Re- spondent’s contention that it had no intention of re- opening the plant to fill Itoh’s order, even at the risk of losing Itoh’s business. Because the pulp mill had been shut down and the employees laid off, a decision to which the General Counsel does not take issue, and because the evidence supports the Respondent’s contention that it would not have opened the plant unless Itoh agreed to bear the cost, we find that the employees would have had no occasion to perform the work in any event during the latter part of 1992. We find, therefore, contrary to the judge, that the employees did not sustain a significant detriment as a result of the Respondent’s arrangement with Simpson.7 Accordingly, we find that the Re- spondent did not violate Section 8(a)(5) and (1) by ar- ranging an in-kind trade of pulp with a competitor.8 The Chip Dump Cat Operators We agree with the judge that the Respondent vio- lated Section 8(a)(5) by revoking its agreement to apply the red-circle provision in the collective-bargain- ing agreement to employees adversely affected by the shutdown of the Respondent’s power boiler operation.9 We do not agree, however, with the judge’s finding that the agreement extended beyond the 37 employees in the power boiler operation to encompass the 2 chip dump CAT operators. The judge noted that on August 16, 1991, the Respondent sent a memo to its employ- ees to ‘‘explain the various procedures and plans asso- ciated with the reduction of Pulp Mill employees.’’ Paragraph 6 of that memo stated: Those employees who displace junior employ- ees and remain in the mill will have their rates red circled. In future years, employees’ rates that are red circled will only receive 50% of future in- creases. They may also lose their rates if they refuse to exercise their seniority and bid on avail- able jobs. Although the Respondent’s August 16 memorandum to employees could be read to apply more broadly, we find that the context in which the memorandum was issued—2 days after the steering committee meeting of Union and Respondent representatives to discuss the imminent, permanent shutdown of the power boiler op- eration—reasonably confines the agreement to employ- ees of that operation.10 167LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. the [expired collective-bargaining] agreement’’ constituted an admis- sion that the Respondent understood the agreement to have broader application. In our view, Greenhalgh’s statement admits to nothing more, in light of the chip dump employees’ claims, than a recogni- tion of unintended consequences resulting from the parties’ agree- ment to red-circle the power boiler operation employees. 11 Backpay for employees who were laid off as a result of the Re- spondent’s unlawful unilateral changes shall be computed in the manner prescribed in F. W. Woolworth Co., 90 NLRB 289 (1950). Backpay for employees whose pay was reduced as a result of such changes shall be computed in the manner prescribed in Ogle Protec- tion Service, 183 NLRB 682, 683 (1970), enfd. 444 F.2d 502 (6th Cir. 1971). Accordingly, we reverse the judge’s finding only to the extent that his remedy11 and Order could be read to include the two chip dump CAT operators. ORDER The National Labor Relations Board adopts the rec- ommended Order of the administrative law judge as modified below and orders that the Respondent, Lou- isiana-Pacific Corporation, Western Division, Samoa, California, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall take the action set forth in the Order as modified. 1. Substitute the following as paragraph 2(c). ‘‘(c) Make whole, with interest on the amounts owing, all employees for any losses of pay and bene- fits suffered as a result of elimination of the layoff re- striction set forth in Local rule 9, of refusal to honor the red-circle wage rate agreement of August 1991, and of performance of mechanic and storeroom clerk work by nonunit employees during the last 4 months of 1991.’’ 2. Substitute the attached notice for that of the ad- ministrative law judge. APPENDIX NOTICE TO EMPLOYEES POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government The National Labor Relations Board has found that we violated the National Labor Relations Act and has or- dered us to post and abide by this notice. Section 7 of the Act gives employees these rights. To organize To form, join, or assist any union To bargain collectively through representatives of their own choice To act together for other mutual aid or protec- tion To choose not to engage in any of these pro- tected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT change any term or condition of em- ployment of employees in the appropriate unit de- scribed below, without first giving notice to Associa- tion of Western Pulp and Paperworkers, Local 49 and affording it an adequate opportunity to bargain about that proposed change. The appropriate bargaining unit is: All hourly paid employees in the Machine Room, Pulping, Causticizing, Material Handling & Ship- ping, Chip Dump, Storeroom, Technical, Recov- ery, Power Boiler, and General Departments and all Maintenance Department hourly paid employ- ees of the pulp mill in Samoa, California; exclud- ing employees classified as, or working in, admin- istration, actual supervision, watchman duties, sales, engineering and drafting, research and tech- nical occupation requiring professional training, accounting, clerical, stenographic and other office work. WE WILL NOT rescind and refuse to honor agree- ments reached with the above-named labor organiza- tion concerning employment terms and conditions of employees in the above-named bargaining unit. WE WILL NOT withdraw offers to reimburse em- ployee expenses for medical examination and treat- ment, or otherwise discriminate against employees be- cause grievances are processed to arbitration, nor be- cause of activity or support for the above-named labor organization or any other labor organization. WE WILL NOT threaten employees with discontinu- ance of overtime assignments if grievances are filed. WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce you in the exercise of the rights guaranteed you by Section 7 of the Act. WE WILL restore and observe the layoff restriction set forth in Local rule 9 of our 1988–1991 collective- bargaining contract with the above-named labor orga- nization and, in addition, the terms of the our red-cir- cle wage agreement of August 1991. WE WILL reinstate any employee laid off as a result of failure to continue observing the layoff restriction set forth in Local rule 9 and reinstate the red-circle wage rates earned by employees pursuant to the agree- ment of August 1991. WE WILL make whole, with interest, all employees for any losses of pay and benefits suffered as a result of our elimination of the layoff restriction set forth in Local rule 9, of our refusal to honor the red-circle wage rate agreement of August 1991, and of the per- formance of mechanic and storeroom clerk work by nonunit employees during the last 4 months of 1991. LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORPORATION, WESTERN DIVISION Frank M. Wagner, for the General Counsel. 168 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 1 The General Counsel’s unopposed motion to correct transcript in three respects is granted. Robert Hulteng and Edward J. Goddard (Littler, Mendelson, Fastiff & Tichy), of San Francisco, California, and Chris Beincourt, of Aden Lake, Idaho, for the Respondent. DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE WILLIAM J. PANNIER III, Administrative Law Judge. I heard this case in Eureka, California, on August 12 and 13, 1992. On February 24, 1992, the Regional Director for Re- gion 20 of the National Labor Relations Board (the Board) issued an order consolidating cases, consolidating for hearing and decision separately issued complaints, one based on a charge filed in Case 20–CA–24231 on September 19, 1991, another based on a charge filed in Case 20–CA–24343 on November 19, 1991, and a third based on a charge filed in Case 20–CA–24413 on January 10, 1992, collectively alleg- ing violations of Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 151, et seq. (the Act). All parties have been afforded full opportunity to appear, to in- troduce evidence, to examine and cross-examine witnesses, and to file briefs. Based on the entire record,1 on the briefs that were filed, and upon my observation of the demeanor of the witnesses, I make the following FINDINGS OF FACT I. JURISDICTION At all times material, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, West- ern Division (Respondent) has been a California corporation, with a pulp mill located in Samoa, California, engaged in the business of processing and selling paper and other wood products on a nonretail basis. In the course and conduct of those business operations during calendar year 1990 and, again, during calendar year 1991, Respondent sold goods valued in excess of $50,000 directly to customers located outside the State of California and to enterprises within Cali- fornia, each of which meets the applicable Board standard for asserting jurisdiction on a direct basis. Therefore, I con- clude, as admitted in each of Respondent’s answers to com- plaint, that at all times material Respondent has been an em- ployer in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act. II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED At all times material, Association of Western Pulp and Pa- perworkers, Local 49 (the Union) has been a labor organiza- tion within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. III. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Background and Issues This case presents a potpourri of issues, based on mostly undisputed evidence, arising from a bargaining relationship between the Union and Respondent. Their most recent col- lective-bargaining contract had a stated term of June 1, 1988, to May 31, 1991. Essentially, it encompassed an admittedly appropriate bargaining unit of employees working at Re- spondent’s pulp mill in Samoa. Thus, as recited in section 3 of that contract, the bargaining unit is: All hourly paid employees in the Machine Room, Pulping, Causticizing, Material Handling & Shipping, Chip Dump, Storeroom, Technical, Recovery, Power Boiler, and General Departments and all Maintenance Department hourly paid employees; excluding employ- ees classified as, or working in, administration, actual supervision, watchman duties, sales, engineering and drafting, research and technical occupations requiring professional training, accounting, clerical, stenographic and other office work. One of the employees in that unit had been Chuck Annis, a shift millwright who had worked for Respondent for a number of years, but who had passed away by the time of the hearing in this proceeding. As a shift millwright, Annis had been required to wear a self-contained breathing appara- tus or respirator when responding to fires or whenever a toxic chemical leak occurred. A medical examination in early 1990 disclosed that he had developed a pulmonary impair- ment that left him unable to wear that apparatus. During that examination, Annis had mentioned that he had been exposed to asbestos while working in earlier years at the pulp mill. As a result, the attending physician, Phillip L. Wagner, M.D., suggested in a letter to Industrial Relations Manager Richard Greenhalgh that Annis ‘‘be offered examination at the Uni- versity of California occupational pulmonology department in San Francisco to rule out a preventable progressive dis- order.’’ Wagner’s suggestion was followed. Annis made three trips to San Francisco during July and August 1990. Greenhalgh testified that, before the first of them, he had notified Annis that Respondent’s workmen’s compensation program would reimburse his trips’ expenses if there was an ultimate deter- mination that his condition was associated with asbestosis, but would not provide reimbursement if it was determined that his condition was not work-produced. As set forth in a letter to Dr. Wagner, dated August 13, 1990, Professor of Clinical Medicine Jeff Goldman, M.D. concluded that Annis did ‘‘not have interstitial lung disease from an occupational exposure.’’ Nevertheless, Annis filed a claim for reimbursement of all expenses for the three San Francisco trips. Believing that it had derived some benefit from the testing conducted there, Respondent offered to compensate Annis for some of those expenses. In a letter dated October 29, 1990, Greenhalgh no- tified Annis, inter alia: I have reviewed your expense request for costs in- curred and wages lost while being tested at the Univer- sity of California Occupational Pulmonary Department in San Francisco. . . . . As I explained, the Company cannot be responsible for the costs of medical tests merely because the employee assumes the underlying condition to be work-related. Notwithstanding this, the Company did derive some in- cidental benefit from your tests and we are therefore willing, as a goodwill gesture, to pay the difference be- tween the cost of the tests and what your group health 169LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. plan paid. I understand this to be approximately $599.00. This is done on the basis it will not establish any precedent and that there will be no further claims against the Company in this matter. Gerald Cawvey, an instrument mechanic who was chairman of the Union’s delegation to the Standing Committee, a body described below, testified that after receiving the letter Annis had ‘‘wanted to grieve for all of the expenses.’’ However, there is no evidence that he ever actually did so. In fact, there is no evidence that he or the Union voiced any re- sponse whatsoever to Greenhalgh’s letter by November 9 when, due to his pulmonary condition, Respondent trans- ferred Annis from shift millwright to day-shift worker. Although that transfer resulted in a pay reduction for Annis, the General Counsel does not challenge its legality. Nor does the General Counsel contest any of Respondent’s other actions described in the immediately preceding para- graphs regarding Annis. Instead, the 8(a)(3) and (1) allega- tion pertaining to Annis arises from the following subsequent events. On the date that he received notice of his transfer, Annis filed, and the Union began processing a grievance pro- testing that the transfer had constituted a contractual viola- tion: ‘‘SEC. 21 SENIORITY. FORCING CHUCK OFF OF SHIFT MILLWRIGHT JOB IS A SENIORITY VIOLA- TION.’’ The Union and Annis processed that grievance through arbitration, where a decision was rendered sustaining the propriety of Respondent’s transfer decision. Although the grievance did not involve Annis’ expenses for medical test- ing in San Francisco, it did become a factor in Respondent’s ultimate decision to withdraw the above-quoted reimburse- ment offer in Greenhalgh’s letter of October 29, 1990, the action which the General Counsel does allege violated Sec- tion 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act. Greenhalgh initially testified that Respondent’s withdrawal of its partial reimbursement offer had occurred because Annis ‘‘never contacted me nor did a union representative that they wanted to accept this offer,’’ but Greenhalgh con- tinued by adding ‘‘because [Annis] didn’t agree with the conditions that I put in the letter of October 29th 1990.’’ Asked to explain what he meant by ‘‘not agree to the condi- tions,’’ Greenhalgh testified: He did not—he did not respond. He did not call. No one made any indication that the $599 was acceptable to him. I should say beyond that, when we got a grievance we assumed that he was going to be pursuing his—the issue at least beyond what we had offered, and so we assumed that this offer we had made had been rejected, and I think we so indicated in a standing committee meeting that based upon his pursuing this grievance and other issues, that we would withdraw our offer. In fact, in a letter to Cawvey, dated March 22, 1991, pertain- ing to ‘‘open items from our last Standing Committee Meet- ing on March 14, 1991,’’ Greenhalgh stated specifically: 3. Grievance No. 59–90, Chuck Annis removal from shift. With a Class II profile, Mr. Annis was medically precluded from wearing a respirator except to escape. This was incompatible with responsibilities of a shift Millwright. The letter enclosed was an offer to under- write part of the costs for the medical evaluation. If you choose to pursue this grievance to arbitration, this would void our offer. The General Counsel points to the admitted reliance on pursuit of Annis’ grievance to arbitration as the basis for ar- guing that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act when it withdrew its partial reimbursement offer. In op- position, Respondent contends that there is no evidence that it harbored animus or otherwise had been acting to retaliate against Annis. It further contends that Greenhalgh’s letter ‘‘was analogous to a proposal to settle a pending employ- ment dispute’’ that Respondent ‘‘was under no obligation to keep . . . on the table for any length of time’’ and, that Annis and the Union’s nonresponse, coupled with pursuit to arbitration of the grievance concerning Annis’ job transfer resulting from his pulmonary disorder, constituted objective evidence that Respondent’s ‘‘conditional settlement offer’’ was not acceptable to Annis. For the reasons set forth in sub- section III,F, infra, I reject those contentions and conclude that Respondent did violate Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act by withdrawing its offer to partially reimburse some of Annis’ expenses of traveling to San Francisco for medical examination. An alleged independent violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act arises from an incident occurring during the night shift on August 5 and 6, 1991, when Machine Room Production Superintendent Edwin Eaton needed a day-shift employee to report early to feed operating bales to the beater. Rather than call Arthur Nally and Joe Mills, the two senior day-shift em- ployees who rarely had been willing to accept such overtime work, Eaton called Charles Baker, a day-shift employee who usually responded to such calls and who, indeed, did report between 1 and 3 a.m. in response to Eaton’s call that morn- ing. Nally then reported for work at his usual 7 a.m. starting time and, discovering what had occurred, complained to Eaton during an in-plant telephone conversation. Nally testi- fied that when he had said that Eaton’s explanation—that Eaton needed someone and that Nally did not normally work overtime—made no difference, Eaton had retorted that if Nally filed a grievance, ‘‘I’m going to go down there and send those guys home and there won’t be anymore overtime. We’ll have it done on day shift.’’ Similarly, Shannon Newman, who had recently become shop steward, testified that when he had come to Eaton’s of- fice later that day with Nally’s grievance, Eaton had ‘‘said if I filed the grievance, that he’d cut off the overtime, and have the guys on day shift in the yard labor crew do the jobs—that job.’’ According to Newman, he left the office with the grievance after Eaton had instructed him to, ‘‘Take your grievance back. Talk to the guys on [Newman’s] crew and see what they want to do, and get back to me.’’ Based on the foregoing testimony, the General Counsel al- leges that Respondent, through Eaton, violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by threatening to curtail overtime work as- signments if employees filed grievances. As discussed in more detail in subsection III,G, infra, while Eaton denied that he had made the above-quoted statements to Nally and to Newman, his own accounts of those conversations, as well as certain objective considerations that he acknowledged, tend to support the two employees’ seemingly candid de- 170 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD scriptions of Eaton’s statements. By virtue of his having made them, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. Five separate allegations are made under Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act, arising from events occurring after the 1988–1991 contract had been reopened and 22 bargaining sessions had led to impasse in mid-July 1991. By letter dated July 31, 1991, Respondent’s legal counsel, Chris Beincourt, notified the Union’s principal negotiator, Robert W. Crane, that Respondent intended to implement, in effect, its final offer, the terms of which were ‘‘detailed on the attachment [to Beincourt’s letter] effective August 10, 1991. Our final offer will be available for acceptance until that time.’’ The General Counsel does not challenge the propriety of the bar- gaining that occurred, the impasse that was reached, nor the stated terms in the attachment to Beincourt’s letter that were, in fact, implemented on August 10, 1991. Rather, the com- plaint’s alleged violations of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act are based on events occurring after Beincourt’s letter had been sent to Crane. The first one alleges that Respondent belatedly supplied an additional change to that attachment’s list, and implemented that change on August 10, 1991, without affording the Union notice and adequate opportunity to bargain about it. That al- legation pertains to Local Rule 9 appearing in Exhibit D, on page 78, of the 1988–1991 contract. It covers maintenance work and states: 9. Contracting of Work The Company will not lay off mill mechanics while contracting out in-plant maintenance work that could be performed by mill mechanics. Respondent concedes that at no point during the negotiations did it specifically propose eliminating Local Rule 9. No men- tion of that rule appears in the attachment to Beincourt’s let- ter of July 31, 1991. By letter to Crane and Norman Miller, the Union’s presi- dent, dated August 8, 1991, Beincourt announced, in perti- nent part, I am writing to notify you of [Respondent’s] intent to exempt Local Rule 9 from those provisions of the expired agreement which will be effective beginning August 10, 1991. That provision, as you know, would bar the Company from contracting out in-plant mainte- nance work that could be performed by laid-off mill mechanics. . . . . We believe that the bargaining history is clear and that the implemented terms would allow [Respondent] to determine whether it makes sense to reduce manning and use contractors. To eliminate any chance for confu- sion, however, we did want to add Local Rule 9 to the list of items that would be implemented. If you have any questions, or if you do not agree that this is consistent with [Respondent’s] position at the table, we hereby call you back to the table for fur- ther discussions. We are available to meet before imple- mentation on August 10th if you like, or any day the following week if you deem necessary. The General Counsel contends that so belated an announce- ment of Local Rule 9’s elimination from what had become, by the time of Beincourt’s letter, a term and condition of em- ployment constituted a unilateral change that violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. Respondent contends that during negotiations it had put the Union on notice that it intended to eliminate all manning restrictions by which it had been bound by the contract. As a result, urges Respondent, the Union should have been on notice that restrictions imposed by contractual provisions such as Local Rule 9 would be encompassed by that elimi- nation posture. Furthermore, Respondent argues that the par- ties had agreed that tentative agreements could be modified until such time as the employees ratified a contract and since that never occurred, because the employees had rejected Re- spondent’s final offer, both parties had remained free to modify their proposals, as Respondent did concerning Local Rule 9. Finally, contends Respondent, it is undisputed that no union representative contacted Respondent to object to, or negotiate about, eliminating Local Rule 9, though offered the opportunity to do so in the above-quoted final paragraph of Beincourt’s letter to Crane and Miller. In consequence, Re- spondent urges, the Union waived whatever remained of its right to bargain about Local Rule 9’s elimination. I reject these arguments. As more fully discussed in subsection III,B, infra, Re- spondent’s negotiating posture never necessarily encom- passed Local Rule 9’s restrictions and, indeed, Respondent specifically told the Union during negotiations that the rule’s restriction was inapplicable to its proposal to remove con- tractual manning restrictions. Second, whatever the merit of an argument to allow preratification changes in proposals and tentative agreements, in announcing Local Rule 9’s elimi- nation Respondent failed to observe the very procedure agreed on for doing so. Consequently, it can take no solace in whatever such arrangement it now advances. Finally, as Beincourt’s above-quoted letter states, despite the offer to bargain about elimination of Local Rule 9’s restrictions, Re- spondent adhered to its position that implementation of its final offer would occur on August 10, 1991, 2 days after the date of Beincourt’s letter announcing that elimination. Ac- cordingly, the Union had been accorded only 1 day to formu- late a bargaining position and negotiate about Respondent’s suddenly announced reversal of position concerning Local Rule 9. So short a period hardly affords adequate opportunity for meaningful negotiations and, in fact, appears to have been nothing more than an exercise in going through the bar- gaining motions before implementing an already decided-on change in a term and condition of employment. Thus, in the circumstances, there is no basis for concluding that the Union’s failure to respond constituted a waiver. The second alleged violation of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act is that on September 26, 1991, Respondent unilater- ally changed procedures concerning the effects on unit em- ployees of a reduction in force. That allegation finds its ori- gin in Exhibit A, section I, subparagraph C,10, on pages 47 to 48 of the 1988–1991 contract. That provision remained unaffected by the 1991 negotiations, impasse, and implemen- tation of Respondent’s final offer. It states: In the event [Respondent] permanently eliminates an established regular job classification, those employees 171LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. with five (5) or more years of service in the mill who occupied that job classification at the time it was elimi- nated shall not have their straight-time hourly rate re- duced below that of the eliminated classification at the time of discontinuance unless they refuse to accept a promotion or refuse to bid for available job openings, in which event their rate of pay, at that time, shall re- vert to the rate of their new job. Fifty percent (50%) of general wage increases and adjustments will not be used to increase their retained rate of pay. In essence the provision ‘‘red-circles’’ existing wage rates of employees adversely affected by a reduction in force, so long as the provision’s qualifications are satisfied, by allowing those employees to avoid having their wage rates dropped to the bottom rates of other progression ladders for jobs to which they are transferred. By letter dated August 13, 1991, Pulp Mill Manager Fred R. Martin notified Union President Miller that the power boilers and associated equipment would be permanently shut down and that ‘‘we have identified certain jobs which will no longer be required,’’ followed by a list of 37 ‘‘employees whose jobs will be eliminated.’’ In fact, most, but not all, of those employees’ job classifications had been eliminated. Nevertheless, all 37 employees would have their rates red- circled under the plan submitted to the Union by Martin. On August 14, 1991, that subject was discussed at a meet- ing of the Standing Committee, a body consisting of equal numbers of union and management representatives who peri- odically meet to resolve grievances and other issues. That meeting’s minutes, the accuracy of which is not disputed, re- cite: 7. [Respondent] reviewed the red circle provisions of the implemented contract. No wage reductions will take place for red circled employees until the next wage in- crease. Red circled rates will only receive 50% of fu- ture wage increases. Red circled employees will lose their rate only if they refuse to bid on posted jobs. On August 16, 1991, Greenhalgh implemented that arrange- ment, authoring a memo to all employees ‘‘explain[ing] the various procedures and plans associated with the reduction of Pulp Mill employees.’’ Paragraph 6 of that memo states: Those employees who displace junior employees and remain in the mill will have their rates red circled. In future years, employee’s rates that are red circled will only received 50% of future increases. They may also lose their rates if they refuse to exercise their seniority and bid on available jobs. The General Counsel voices no objection in connection with the foregoing events. Shortly after they occurred, how- ever, a change in chip dump handling procedures led Re- spondent to decide to reduce by two the number of Cat oper- ators in that department. Although the Cat operator job clas- sification was not eliminated, the two affected operators claimed that their wages should be red-circled, just as Re- spondent had red-circled those of employees whose jobs, but not job classifications, had been eliminated by the power boiler shutdown. Their claim led Respondent to reevaluate its decision to red-circle all power boiler employees. Initially Respondent proposed that the Union agree to con- fine the August arrangement to employees adversely affected by the power boiler shutdown, thereby constructing a fence around them, and that subsequent reductions in force, includ- ing the one involving the two chip dump Cat operators, would again be governed by the above-quoted provision of Exhibit A, section I, subparagraph C,10. The Union rejected that proposal. By letter dated September 26, 1991, Greenhalgh advised the Union that Respondent intended to remove from the list of 37 power boiler employees the 7 whose job classifications had not been eliminated and who, consequently, had not been covered by the red-circle provi- sions of subparagraph C,10 of Exhibit A, section I: ‘‘Accord- ingly, the people whose classifications were not eliminated, even though they may have five years of service, will have their rates reduced to the rate of the job they presently hold.’’ The General Counsel contends that by removing the red- circle wage rates of those seven employees and of the two chip dump Cat operators, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. In opposition, Respondent charac- terizes the August arrangement to red-circle the rates of the seven power boiler employees as a mere ‘‘informal agree- ment’’ that, in effect, was invalidated by the Union’s subse- quent unwillingness to ‘‘neither confirm nor renew’’ its limi- tation to power boiler employees. I reject that argument. As described more fully in subsection III,C, infra, what- ever the parties’ interpretation of Exhibit A, section I, sub- paragraph C,10 had been prior to August, Greenhalgh admit- ted that Respondent, in effect, agreed in connection with the power boiler shutdown to interpret that contractual provision so that red-circle benefits would be extended to all employ- ees adversely affected by reductions in force. That is a result not changed by characterizing that agreement as ‘‘informal,’’ for the Act imposed no formalities as a condition precedent for establishing that an agreement has been struck. Con- sequently, in August Respondent and the Union agreed to apply red-circle rate benefits to all employees adversely af- fected by a reduction in force, thereby effectively creating a term or condition of employment to which all such employ- ees would be entitled. To be sure, that agreement was not necessarily unlimited in duration. Like any noncontractual term and condition of employment, qualifications for red-circle rate benefits could be changed through the process of negotiations. However, a party is not free to utilize already conferred benefits of a term or condition of employment as a lever to extract changes or limitations in that employment term’s prospective application. That is what occurred here. Greenhalgh con- ceded that Respondent’s agreement with the Union allowed rates to be red-circled for all employees adversely affected by a reduction in force. Unhappy with that consequence of its agreement, Respondent sought to negotiate a limitation on the term and condition of employment resulting from that agreement, by restoring all qualifications enunciated in Ex- hibit A, section I, subparagraph 10,C. Unable to achieve agreement to that restoration, Respondent simply rescinded its August agreement and all benefits already conferred by its terms on employees. As a consequence, the seven power boiler employees and two chip dump Cat operators had their red-circle employment terms erased, as if Respondent had 172 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD never agreed to confer that benefit. In so doing, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. The third alleged violation of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act is that in September and, again, during the period be- tween mid-October and December 1991, Respondent trans- ferred unit mechanical, i.e., maintenance, work from unit pulp mill employees to nonunit sawmill employees, without affording the Union notice and an opportunity to bargain about those work transfers. There is no dispute that mechani- cal work transfers occurred during those months and, further, none about the fact that the work involved was maintenance work performed in the past by unit employees. However, Re- spondent argues that such transfers had been encompassed by the June–July negotiations and by the implemented changes which, urges Respondent, ‘‘permitted [it] to reduce the num- ber of maintenance mechanics and to subcontract and/or transfer maintenance mechanic work at its sole discretion.’’ As discussed more fully in subsection III,D, infra, Re- spondent’s argument is supported neither by testimonial nor documentary evidence. Indeed, the evidence shows that Re- spondent violated the terms of its own implemented final offer by transferring the mechanical work without ‘‘prior conferral with the Union,’’ as required by its implemented changes, and there is no showing of any past practice of transferring mechanical work to the sawmill on an ad hoc basis. Consequently, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act by the September and October–December 1991 transfers of mechanical work to the sawmill employees for performance. The remaining two allegations that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act arise from events occur- ring in connection with one of the periodic temporary pulp mill shutdowns. In this instance, the shutdown lasted from approximately October 15 to after Christmas of 1991. The General Counsel does not challenge the propriety of that shutdown. However, during late October or early November 1991 a customer, C. Itoh Company, requested 5000 tons of pulp. Though Respondent explained that it would cost $200,000 to reopen the plant and close it again after produc- tion of that pulp, Itoh was unwilling either to pay that cost or, alternatively, to seek another supplier for its order with- out permanently taking its business elsewhere. Itoh’s rep- resentative suggested that Respondent borrow the pulp. Act- ing on that suggestion, Respondent worked out an arrange- ment with a nearby competitor, Simpson Paper Company, to fill Itoh’s order and, once Respondent’s pulp mill reopened, to allow Respondent to fill a like order for Simpson. As a result, the latter filled the Itoh order in November and De- cember 1991 and Respondent filled Simpson’s like order in early 1992. Respondent admits that those arrangements with Simpson had been made without any notice of them being given to the Union and without affording the Union an opportunity to bargain over disposition of work normally performed by em- ployees that it represented. Because of Respondent’s failure to do so, the General Counsel alleges that Respondent vio- lated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act by ‘‘subcontract[ing] out an order for pulp product rather than recall Unit employ- ees at the Pulp Mill to do this work.’’ Respondent takes issue with that characterization, contend- ing that the transaction had been merely an ‘‘in-kind’’ trade of produce, not a subcontracting of production, that was within the scope of its entrepreneurial prerogative. To sup- port that contention, Respondent points out that an employer is under no obligation to accept specific orders from particu- lar customers and that its decision to effect an in-kind trade was not one susceptible to the give-and-take of negotiations. Moreover, argues Respondent, it had a practice of engaging in such trades in the past and, in any event, the unit employ- ees performed a like amount of work for Simpson Paper in 1992, with the result that they suffered no work loss in the final analysis. For the reasons set forth in subsection III,E, infra, I reject Respondent’s arguments. Respondent is under no obligation to operate a business at all, but having chosen to do so it must comply with all obligations imposed by law, including by the Act. Disposition of unit work is a mandatory subject of bargaining. Neither good-faith nor economic exigencies relieve an employer’s obligation to give notice of, and an op- portunity to bargain about, changes in mandatory bargaining subjects to its employees’ bargaining agent before effecting changes in those subjects. The evidence does not support the past practice and no-loss components of Respondent’s argu- ment. Accordingly, I conclude that Respondent’s failure to satisfy its statutory bargaining obligation in connection with Itoh’s order violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. The other allegation arising from the shutdown involves the pulp mill storeroom where four shipping and receiving department employees, denominated storeroom clerks, work during normal operations. They receive incoming supplies for all areas of Respondent’s Samoa complex, they either deliver those supplies to their intended area of the complex or store them in inventory, and, in addition, they issue requisitioned materials from inventory upon presentation of an issue or order ticket by personnel from the various areas of the Samoa complex, as well as from other facilities operated by Respondent in Northern California. During past temporary pulp mill shutdowns one storeroom clerk had been retained to continue receiving and storing or distributing supplies to areas of the Samoa complex that were not shut down. Respondent decided that during the 1991 pulp mill shutdown it would stop all supplies shipments to the extent possible, store in the sawmill area whatever shipments could not be stopped without actually storing those shipments’ contents, and lay off all four storeroom clerks during the shutdown. The General Counsel does not contest the propriety under the Act of those particular deci- sions. Since the sawmill remained in operation during 1991’s final calendar quarter, supplies continued to be received for its operation. Moreover, periodically supplies needed to be withdrawn from inventory for areas that continued to operate, such as the office. Initially, the General Counsel alleged that Respondent violated the Act by, without giving prior notice and affording a bargaining opportunity to the Union, using ‘‘supervisors and Saw Mill employees to do Unit work in the shipping and receiving Department of the Pulp Mill.’’ But during the hearing, the General Counsel was allowed to amend that allegation to delete its specification of ‘‘super- visors.’’ With respect to that allegation as amended, the parties never litigated nor have they argued concerning performance of that work specifically by sawmill employees. Instead, they have litigated and argued about whether receiving and dis- 173LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. tributions from inventory had been made generally by per- sonnel other than the storeroom clerks, most particularly by Sandra Swift, whose title is store supervisor, and by purchas- ing department buyer Phillip Sutter. Respondent contends that both of those individuals are statutory supervisors and, further, argues that there has been no showing of shipping and receiving work being performed during the shutdown by other than supervisors or contractors in any manner contrary to past practice. As discussed in subsection III,E, infra, the evidence does show that receiving and distribution of mate- rials from inventory had been made by other than unit per- sonnel during the shutdown and, moreover, in a manner not consistent with past practice. Inasmuch as Respondent con- cedes that it never notified the Union of those particular changed practices, I conclude that Respondent violated Sec- tion 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. B. Notification that Local Rule 9 Would Be Eliminated As pointed out in subsection III,A, supra, although Re- spondent concedes that it never specifically proposed elimi- nating Local Rule 9’s restriction during 1991’s June-July ne- gotiations, it argues that the thrust of its bargaining strategy and related proposals concerning manning restrictions should have put the Union on notice that the restriction of Local Rule 9 could not survive implementation of Respondent’s final offer. Evaluation of that argument necessitates an exam- ination of Respondent’s bargaining strategy and of its pro- posals concerning continued performance of unit mainte- nance work by mill mechanics. In the course of formulating its bargaining strategy prior to commencing negotiations, Respondent determined that it had been operating at a competitive disadvantage, because of its nearest competitor’s greater latitude to subcontract work. In view of that fact, and in light of recent modernization of machinery that enabled it to operate with fewer people, Re- spondent formulated certain proposals to allow future oper- ations to be conducted with a lesser number of unit pulp mill employees. The first one, to which the General Counsel voices no objection, increased the ability of supervisors to perform unit work. More to the point of the complaint’s allegation concerning Local Rule 9 is number 8 of Respondent’s proposals submit- ted to the Union on June 11, 1991: 8. Section 21 and Exhibit A, section 11—Paragraph a—Revise seniority section and manning requirements for maintenance department to remove all restrictions on [Respondent’s] right to determine manning or elimi- nation of classifications. The portion proposing a change in Ssction 21 of the 1988– 1991 contract involves no issue in this case, since it pertains to production employees’ promotion and progression ladders. The second portion of Respondent’s proposal 8, however, is material, for it refers to a contractual provision—correctly stated, Exhibit A, section II, subparagraph 9(a), on page 53 of the 1988–1991 contract—that concerns maintenance work: 9. Nothing in Section II or Section III shall be con- strued so as to (a) oblige [Respondent] to hire or retain any employee unless there is work for him, except maintaining maintenance crew strength at June 1, 1974, level so long as mill is in normal operation. . . . The maintenance portion of Respondent’s proposal 8 was tar- geted at eliminating that 1974 floor for maintenance crew numbers. Obviously, neither Exhibit A’s above-quoted language nor Respondent’s proposal 8 make any specific reference to Local Rule 9. Moreover, from the face of those two contrac- tual provisions, elimination of the 1974 maintenance crew floor would not, of itself, obviate Local Rule 9’s separate prohibition against laying off mill mechanics where work that they could perform was being contracted. However, both parties presented evidence concerning discussion of Local Rule 9 during the course of the negotiations in June and July 1991. For the General Counsel, Area Representative Robert W. Crane testified that Local Rule 9 had been discussed at more than one negotiating session and that, during those discus- sions, the Union had expressed willingness to agree to Re- spondent’s proposal 8 so long as the restriction of Local Rule 9 was strengthened. According to Crane, Respondent’s prin- cipal negotiator, Beincourt, had rejected that counterproposal, in the process stating expressly that Respondent preferred the language already recited in Local Rule 9. Yet, both in con- nection with that description and in the course of testifying about other subjects, Crane did not appear to be testifying candidly. That appearance is strengthened by a review of the record of his testimony which shows an almost total inability to provide coherent and detailed descriptions of events, in- cluding specifically his generalized assertions about what had occurred with respect to discussions of Local Rule 9—gener- alized assertions which Respondent’s witnesses effectively denied having taken place. Additionally, Crane’s generalized claims about discussions of Local Rule 9 during negotiations were not corroborated by other members of the Union’s ne- gotiating team, though Respondent’s questioning showed that many, if not all, of them were present during the hearing. Accordingly, I place no reliance of Crane’s testimony con- cerning what had been said about Local Rule 9 during nego- tiations in the summer of 1991. Nevertheless, the testimony of Respondent’s witnesses does show that in the course of discussing Local Rule 9 dur- ing negotiations, Beincourt had specifically rejected the sug- gestion that Local Rule 9 was affected by Respondent’s above-quoted proposal 8. Thus, Beincourt testified that when he had been asked by the Union’s negotiators, during the session on June 21, 1991, if Local Rule 9 ‘‘Wouldn’t . . . prohibit you from contracting out maintenance levels,’’ he had read the rule and, then, had responded that it ‘‘wouldn’t apply to prevent us from subcontracting maintenance work because if we eliminated the job, people wouldn’t be on lay- off, would they?’’ Similarly, Industrial Relations Manager Greenhalgh testi- fied that, when asked at that negotiating session about the ef- fect of Local Rule 9 on Respondent’s proposed elimination of the 1974 manning floor, Beincourt had said that Local Rule 9 ‘‘wouldn’t have any bearing at all on our proposal.’’ In like vein, Employment Manager and Housing Manager Oscar Filgas testified that after Beincourt had ‘‘reiterated our position that we still intended to’’ remove ‘‘all language re- lated to . . . 1974 manning levels,’’ and after Crane had read Local Rule 9 aloud, Beincourt had eventually responded that 174 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD the rule ‘‘wouldn’t be applicable, anyway, because there would be no maintenance levels.’’ Based on the three ac- counts of these officials of Respondent, the evidence shows that Respondent specifically had told the Union that Local Rule 9 was not affected by Respondent’s proposals. More- over, Beincourt, Greenhalgh and Filgas each testified that Local Rule 9 had not been discussed at any negotiating ses- sion other than on June 21. Consequently, whatever the gen- eral thrust of Respondent’s bargaining strategy and regardless of the proposals actually made by Respondent, Beincourt had specifically told the Union during negotiations that Local Rule 9 would not be affected by Respondent’s bargaining proposals and objectives. As a result, there is no basis for concluding that the Union should have understood from the general thrust of bargaining that Respondent’s actual propos- als reasonably contemplated removal of Local Rule 9’s re- striction. Indeed, any remaining force to such an argument is erased altogether by Respondent’s admitted reason for having cho- sen to send the letter of August 8, 1991. Beincourt testified that, after having sent his notice of intent to implement Re- spondent’s final offer by letter of July 31, 1991, he had re- ceived a report that employees had been saying that sub- contracting mill mechanics’ work could be blocked by the continued existence of Local Rule 9. In view of that report, testified Beincourt, ‘‘to follow the safer course, we decided that we needed to put out a letter immediately’’ concerning Respondent’s position on Local Rule 9. Thus, he authored the letter of August 8, 1991, quoted in pertinent part in sub- section III,A, supra. That letter’s assertion that Local Rule 9’s elimination had been contemplated by the June–July ne- gotiations is directly contradicted by Respondent’s own offi- cials’ admission regarding what Beincourt had told the Union about Local Rule 9 on June 21. Further, had Beincourt truly believed a month and a half later that the rule had been rea- sonably comprehended by the negotiations, it seems mean- ingless for him to have again conveyed such a message spe- cially to the Union when, so far as the evidence shows, no similar clarification was ever issued concerning any other implemented term. In fact, rather than simply pursuing a ‘‘safer course,’’ Re- spondent appears to have sent the letter of August 8, 1991, because the employees’ statements had led it to re-evaluate the effect of Local Rule 9’s restriction on its actual propos- als. Having done so, it appears to have concluded that it may too hastily have rejected the possible impact of that rule’s re- striction as an obstacle to its above-described bargaining strategy. Thus, it set out to correct the problem, in the proc- ess trying to portray the belated change as no more than a clarification, instead of a change. However, as concluded above, Beincourt’s letter did announce a change. Respondent was not at liberty to try to perfect its bargaining strategy by simply adding at the last minute a change to a provision whose significance it had previously overlooked. Under the Act, a party to negotiations is not free to ‘‘exceed[] its last offer,’’ Eastern Maine Medical Center v. NLRB, 658 F.2d 1, 13 fn. 11 (9th Cir. 1981), by belatedly adding changes to re- pair earlier omissions without giving the other party ‘‘a chance to discuss the specifics of any proposal before it is implemented.’’ Peerless Roofing Co. v. NLRB, 641 F.2d 734, 735 (9th Cir. 1981). As pointed out in subsection III,A, supra, Respondent ar- gues that there had been an understanding that either party was free to make changes before the employees ratified agreement on all terms for a contract. That had not occurred when Beincourt’s letter had been sent. Yet, Respondent’s conduct in connection with its announcement that Local Rule 9 would be eliminated was not consistent with Beincourt’s uncontroverted description of how that understanding was to operate. During negotiations, Beincourt testified, he had pro- posed that any party would be free to make changes prior to ratification and, Mr. Crane didn’t have any problem philosophically with that position, but he insisted that his words were something to the effect of, ‘‘Well, let’s not do it through letters. Call us back or we’ll call you back, if there’s any issue that needs to be clarified.[’’] We have to call the other party back to the bargain- ing table. We agreed to do that. But on August 8, 1991, Beincourt followed the very course that he admitted had been understood would not be followed in making proposed changes. Rather than refraining from announcing the change by letter and, instead, calling the Union to notify it of Respondent’s decision to add Local Rule 9’s elimination to the list of changes to be imple- mented, Beincourt sent a letter to Crane and Miller. He never claimed that he had even tried to call Crane in connection with that addition. Accordingly, whatever force it might de- rive in other circumstances from this understanding with the Union, Respondent cannot rely on an understanding whose very procedure it concededly disregarded. Respondent further argues that before eliminating Local Rule 9’s restriction, it had offered an opportunity for the Union to resume negotiations and discuss abolishing that rule. In so arguing, Respondent points to the above-quoted final paragraph of Beincourt’s letter of August 8, 1991. Yet, this argument is not as persuasive as Respondent urges. Al- though the Union never challenged Respondent’s assertion in Beincourt’s letter that Local Rule 9’s elimination was con- sistent with Respondent’s overall bargaining position and never accepted Respondent’s offer to meet for discussion about it, neither the assertion nor the offer is as appealing as they might facially seem. First, as discussed above, Local Rule 9’s elimination was not ‘‘consistent with [Respond- ent’s] position at the table,’’ and, as participants in the nego- tiations, the Union’s representatives were well aware that such a statement misrepresented Respondent’s admitted ear- lier position that its proposals did not affect Local Rule 9’s continued viability. By virtue of that blatant misrepresenta- tion, Respondent naturally called into question the good faith of its own expression of willingness to bargain about the be- lated addition to its list of intended changes. Of perhaps greater significance, Beincourt’s letter states that Respondent intended to effect ‘‘implementation [of its final offer] on August 10th.’’ At no point in that letter, nor by any other means so far as the evidence shows, did Re- spondent offer to delay implementation of its final offer, nor at least of its intent to abolish Local Rule 9, until such time as the Union had an opportunity to evaluate the effect of that rule’s elimination, formulate a bargaining position regarding that subject, and engage in meaningful bargaining with Re- spondent concerning this belated announcement. Two con- 175LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. sequences flow from that circumstance. First, the letter left the Union with less than 48 hours to fulfill its bargaining ob- ligation to unit employees, by trying to prepare for and en- gage in meaningful negotiations concerning the rule’s an- nounced abolition. In fact, Beincourt’s letter was not faxed to Crane and hand-delivered to Wilson until around noon of August 8, 1991, thereby leaving the Union with but a single full workday before ‘‘implementation on August 10th.’’ Crane’s office is in Walnut Creek, California, over a hun- dred miles south of the Samoa pulp mill. At the time, Beincourt’s office had been in Portland, Oregon, well to the north of that pulp mill. As a result, this was not a situation where Crane could simply walk across the street or drive a few miles down the road to meet with the Union’s officers, and perhaps some of the unit employees, to discuss the rule’s announced elimination and, then, to immediately discuss its elimination face to face with Beincourt and Respondent’s other representatives. In sum, the timing of the announce- ment hardly accorded ‘‘adequate time [for the Union] to con- sider and respond to [Respondent’s] proposal[].’’ Southwest Forest Industries v. NLRB, 841 F.2d 270, 273 (9th Cir. 1988). A second, independent, consequence of the abbreviated time between Beincourt’s announcement of Local Rule 9’s elimination and implementation of that change on August 10, 1991, is that the letter created the appearance, if not the re- ality, that bargaining about the added change would be fu- tile—that Respondent was simply going through the motions of offering to bargain about an already finalized decision to implement an additional, and belatedly announced, change at the same time that it implemented the previously and law- fully announced changes in the attachment to Beincourt’s let- ter of July 31, 1991. In other words, in the circumstances ‘‘the unilateral change was effectively implemented when it was announced,’’ ABC Automotive Products Corp., 307 NLRB 248 (1982), and Respondent had no intention of bar- gaining with an open mind about its possible retention. To be sure, properly conducted negotiations about elimi- nation of Local Rule 9’s restriction might not have yielded, in the end, an agreement concerning Respondent’s proposed change. Yet, in the circumstances, any conclusion about the outcome of any negotiations about the rule’s restriction, had Respondent given proper notice of willingness to undertake them, is speculative. Respondent is the party that belatedly announced the additional change in employment terms. It has not shown that its abrupt reversal of position concerning con- tinued viability of Local Rule 9’s restriction would not have generated a counterproposal and could not have led to mean- ingful negotiations concerning continuation or modification of the restriction embodied in Local Rule 9. In sum, there is no basis in the evidence for concluding that proper notice, and a properly afforded opportunity to engage in meaningful bargaining about the addition of Local Rule 9 to Respond- ent’s list of changes to be implemented, would not have led to further negotiations between the parties. For the foregoing reasons, I conclude that a preponderance of the evidence does not establish that the Union’s non- response to the letter of August 8, 1991, constituted a waiver of its right to adequate proper notice and an opportunity to bargain about elimination of Local Rule 9’s restriction. Therefore, I conclude that Respondent’s belated addition of that restriction’s elimination to the list of already announced changes to be implemented on August 10, 1991, violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. C. Change in the Red-Circle Rate Benefit As described in subsection III,A, supra, the General Coun- sel alleges that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act by changing an agreed-on red-circle procedure in a manner that deprived employees of a benefit they had al- ready earned as a result of that agreement. This particular al- legation requires examination of essentially three areas: past interpretation of Exhibit A, section I, subparagraph C,10 of the 1989–1991 contract, discussions conducted by the parties in mid-August 1991 regarding red-circling, and bargaining that occurred after the chip dump Cat operators’ claim had arisen. As to the contractual provision itself, there is no evidence that it had been interpreted to apply in favor of employees who job classification had not been eliminated by a reduction in force. Thus, Exhibit A, section I, subparagraph C,10 be- gins by applying its terms only to situations where Respond- ent ‘‘permanently eliminates an established regular job clas- sification.’’ There is no evidence whatsoever of past in- stances where that qualification had been disregarded when- ever particular employees’ jobs had been eliminated. Nor is there any evidence that an interpretation eliminating that qualification had been the subject of previous negotiations, much less that there had been a prior understanding by the parties to, in effect, tacitly rewrite that threshold qualification out of Exhibit A, section I, subparagraph C,10. In an apparent effort to supply such evidence, Crane testi- fied that during negotiations in July 1991, Greenhalgh had asked for the Union’s interpretation of the red-circle rate contractual provision, Miller had replied that it applied to employees with more than 5 years’ service who lost their jobs because of a closure, and Greenhalgh had said that also was Respondent’s position. Then, testified Crane, at a meet- ing ‘‘around August 5,’’ Greenhalgh once more had agreed to the Union’s assertion that wages would be red-circled for all employees with more than 5 years’ seniority whenever there was a closure. However, Crane’s convenient description of these events appeared no more reliable than his assertions concerning discussions about Local Rule 9 during negotia- tions, as described in subsection III,B, supra. At the outset, there simply is no corroboration for Crane’s testimony about these asserted red-circle rate conversations. Most particularly, though present during the hearing, Miller never confirmed having participated in the July conversation described by Crane. Furthermore, while Employment Man- ager and Housing Manager Filgas testified that the subject of red-circling had been discussed at a Standing Committee meeting on July 9, 1991, there is no evidence that Crane had attended that, or any other, Standing Committee meeting. Nor is there any objective evidence that those Standing Com- mittee discussions had been pursued into the concurrently oc- curring negotiating sessions, as Crane seemed to be trying to claim. Accordingly, I conclude that a preponderance of the evidence does not support an argument that there had been an historic understanding that, despite its express terms to the contrary, Exhibit A, section I, subparagraph C,10 would be interpreted to allow rates to be red-circled even for employ- ees whose job classification had not been eliminated. 176 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD As Respondent points out in its brief, however, ‘‘accounts of the July 9 Standing Committee meeting [have] little, if any, bearing on the issue,’’ because, ‘‘The main crux of this case concerns the agreement reached by the parties at the August 14 Standing Committee meeting.’’ Moreover, Re- spondent concedes that the substance of that particular agree- ment did remove the requirement of job classification elimi- nation as a condition for receiving red-circle rate treatment. However, as described in subsection III,A, supra, Respondent contends that only an ‘‘informal agreement’’ concerning that subject had been reached on that date. Yet, as pointed out in that subsection, the Act does not differentiate agreements by type and, then, grade their significance based on the par- ticular type of agreement at issue. Absence of accompanying ruffles and flourishes does not accord second-rate status to a particular agreement, so long as one was reached, under Section 8(d) of the Act. A more significant consideration is the scope of the red- circle agreement reached by the parties in August 1991. To be sure, it arose as a result of Respondent’s closure of power boilers and associated equipment. Moreover, while item 7 of the Standing Committee minutes for its meeting of August 14, 1991, quoted in subsection III,A, supra, recite that, ‘‘No wage reductions will take place for red circled employees,’’ those minutes also show that the discussions during that meeting had pertained to the boiler shutdown. Consequently, there is some basis for concluding that the red-circle agree- ments had been confined only to the 37 employees affected by that shutdown. However, Greenhalgh conceded that the August agreement had not been so limited by the parties themselves. For, he testified that after the two chip dump Cat operators had claimed the benefit of that agreement, he had reported to his superiors ‘‘that we had probably provided a benefit that . . . some of the employees weren’t entitled to under the [expired collective-bargaining] agreement,’’ by providing red-circle protection to employees ‘‘who had lost their jobs, but their classification had not been eliminated.’’ Moreover, it is un- disputed that Respondent had then set out to negotiate modi- fication of that August red-circle agreement so that it would apply no further than to the 37 power boiler and associated equipment employees. As a result, Respondent’s own admis- sions and course of conduct establish that it had understood its agreement with the Union in August 1991 to extend to all employees whose jobs would be eliminated, not merely to those who lost jobs as a result of the power boiler and associated equipment shutdown. Apparently, Respondent had made the red-circle agreement under the mistaken belief that it simply had been abiding by the expired contract’s Exhibit A, section I, subparagraph C,10. Yet, there is no evidence that the Union had misled Respondent into such a belief. Nor is there evidence that the Union had been aware of Respondent’s subjective impres- sion. Respondent’s bargaining obligation has not terminated as a result of the contract’s expiration and implementation of its final offer. As ongoing events affecting unit employees arose, Respondent had a continuing obligation to negotiate about their effects on employees represented by the Union. The fact that, in the course of doing so, Respondent offered an employment term more beneficial to employees than the contractually specified one did not oblige the Union to chal- lenge or contest that offer. Nor, given the myriad reasons that parties make proposals, did such an offer serve as some form of notice to the Union that, in effect, Respondent did not know what it was doing in making such a proposal. A party to negotiations is entitled to assume that the opposing party is competent to understanding the consequences of its own proposals. Accordingly, the Union cannot be faulted for accepting at face value Respondent’s red-circle rate offer, even though it turned out that, from Respondent’s perspec- tive, it created a less than desirable situation. The Union’s agreement to that proposal created a term and condition of employment that Respondent was obliged to continue honor- ing. Of course, since the August red-circle rate agreement had not been a contractual one, Respondent remained free there- after to give notice that it wanted to modify that agreement by resurrecting all qualifications enumerated in Exhibit A, section I, subparagraph C,10. However, a party is not free to hold hostage already conferred benefits as a device for com- pelling the other party to accept future changes in those ben- efits. That is, an employer cannot withhold employees’ wages for past work, for example, to extract their bargaining agent’s agreement to a wage reduction for future work. In the final analysis, that is what occurred here. Respondent admittedly made a broad agreement to red-cir- cle rates for employees whose jobs were eliminated, without regard to elimination of their job classifications. Nine em- ployees—seven power boiler and associated equipment em- ployees and two Cat operators—qualified for that benefit be- fore Respondent returned to the Union and proposed restor- ing all contractual conditions for red-circle rate benefits. Re- spondent was free to pursue that course of conduct. It was also free to implement that proposal in the future, once it had bargained in good faith to a legitimate impasse. But, the Act does not allow a party to rescind and withdraw benefits earned prior to agreement or impasse. Nor does it permit a party to utilize withdrawal of already earned benefits to lever concessions from the other party in negotiations. Therefore, by rescinding the red-circle rate benefits already conferred by the August 1991 agreement, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act and, furthermore, inherently tainted the bargaining and any impasse that otherwise would have resulted from those negotiations. D. Performance of Unit Maintenance Work by Sawmill Employees It is undisputed that Respondent never gave prior notice to the Union in September 1991 when it sent a store’s forklift for transmission overhaul and, also during that same month, a heavy Cat loader for repairs by nonunit sawmill employees. Similarly, during December 1991, without prior notice to the Union, three pulp mill 988 Cat loaders were repaired by nonunit sawmill employees. Although major mechanical work on pulp mill machinery had been ordinarily performed by independent contractors, prior to September 1991 less major mechanical work on the pulp mill’s machines had been performed by three mechanics and one serviceman employed in the pulp mill and included in the bargaining unit. As a re- sult, it is undisputed that the above-described forklift and loader repair works had been performed ordinarily by em- ployees in those job classifications. The General Counsel alleges that by allowing unit work to be performed by nonunit employees without prior notice to 177LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. the Union, and affording it an opportunity to bargain about that subject, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. Respondent argues that under its implemented em- ployment terms, enumerated in the attachment to Beincourt’s letter of July 31, 1991, Respondent had been allowed to transfer mechanical work to nonunit employees. However, as stated in subsection III,A, supra, the evidence does not sup- port what, in effect, is a plea in avoidance. In the first place, no official of Respondent ever testified as to the reason for having chosen to have that repair work performed by nonunit sawmill employees. Consequently, there is no testimony sup- porting Respondent’s argument that the repair work transfers had been made pursuant to the terms of Respondent’s imple- mented offer. Nor, for that matter, is there evidence that the implemented terms had even been considered before any of those equipment transfers had been made. Aside from that fact, the evidence shows that those work transfers to the saw mill had not been made in conformance with the terms of Respondent’s final offer. In making that ar- gument, Respondent points to the 14th paragraph of the at- tachment to Beincourt’s letter. In pertinent part, that provi- sion states: ‘‘Provide that [Respondent] has the sole right, after prior conferral with the Union, to eliminate or change jobs on progression ladders and to vary manning levels with- in the maintenance trades.’’ (Emphasis added.) Inasmuch as Respondent acknowledges that it never had given notice to the Union before sending the forklift and loaders to the saw- mill for repair by nonunit employees, it obviously failed to satisfy the italicized requirement of item 14 of its own imple- mented offer. In consequence, that implemented change can- not stand as a defense to the unilateral change in perform- ance of repair work by unit employees. Nor can it be persuasively maintained that sending unit maintenance work to the sawmill had been somehow consist- ent with Respondent’s general bargaining strategy concerning maintenance work and that the Union should have under- stood as much. As discussed in subsection III,B, supra, al- though Respondent’s general bargaining objective had been to operate with fewer employees, it had chosen generally to do so by expanding the ability of statutory supervisors and contractors to perform unit work. So far as the evidence dis- closes, at no point did Respondent’s negotiators even suggest the specific possibility that unit work would be transferred to nonunit employees as a means of operating with fewer em- ployees. To be sure, Respondent’s eighth proposal, quoted in sub- section III,B, supra, seems to allow removal of all restric- tions on Respondent’s ‘‘right to determine manning’’ for the maintenance department. Yet, that proposal was made in the context of a specific proposal to remove the 1974 mainte- nance floor imposed by Exhibit A, section II, subparagraph 9(a), as also quoted and discussed in subsection III,B, supra. Consequently, a respectable basis exists for concluding that, independent of that 1974 crew floor, proposal 8 did not con- template transfers of unit work to nonunit Samoa complex employees. In any event, that proposal was implemented by the attachment’s above-quoted item 14 and, as pointed out above, the forklift and loaders were transferred to the saw- mill for maintenance without compliance with the imple- mented term’s required ‘‘prior conferral with the Union.’’ Accordingly, by its own disregard of that requirement, Re- spondent fouled the nest of any argument based on the em- ployment terms that it implemented on August 10, 1991. Before concluding this discussion, one further point is worth mentioning. As described in subsection III,A, supra, the pulp mill had been closed temporarily from mid-October to late-December 1991. As a result, the three mechanics and one serviceman had not been working when the three 988 Cat loaders had been transferred for repair to the sawmill. However, unilateral action ‘‘interferes with the right of self- organization by emphasizing to the employees that there is no necessity for a collective bargaining agent.’’ May Stores Co. v. NLRB, 326 U.S. 376, 385 (1945). By proscribing uni- lateral action, the Act ‘‘prevent[s] the employer from under- mining the union by taking steps which suggest to the work- ers that it is powerless to protect them.’’ NLRB v. Advertisers Mfg. Co., 823 F.2d 1086, 1090 (7th Cir. 1987). Those poli- cies, and the harm which they are intended to prevent, are not altered in any fashion by the fact that represented em- ployees happen to be temporarily laid off at the time of the employer’s unilateral action. During the shutdown, Respondent had periodically recalled one of the unit’s storeroom clerks to perform needed work and had recalled three of those clerks before the shutdown’s conclusion to perform certain work. There is no basis for concluding that Respondent could not at least have bargained with the Union and given it the opportunity to propose a similar or other course of action concerning repair of the 988 Cat loaders. And, of course, there had been no temporary shutdown in progress at the time that the forklift and heavy Cat loader had been transferred to the sawmill for repair in September 1991. Continued performance of unit work is a mandatory bar- gaining subject, Fibreboard Products Corp. v. NLRB, 379 U.S. 203 (1964), subject to certain qualifications not applica- ble here. First National Maintenance Corp. v. NLRB, 452 U.S. 666 (1981). Therefore, I conclude that by having failed to give notice and an adequate bargaining opportunity to the Union before transferring machinery to the sawmill for re- pairs ordinarily performed by unit employees, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. E. Events During the 1991 Pulp Mill Shutdown As described in subsection III,A, supra, from mid-October until after Christmas 1991, Respondent’s pulp mill had been closed. During that closure Respondent filled an order for pulp by having a competitor supply it. In early 1992, it filled one of that competitor’s order for a like amount of pulp. Re- spondent acknowledges that it gave no prior notice and bar- gaining opportunity to the Union with regard to that arrange- ment. Based upon these facts, the General Counsel alleges that Respondent unilaterally subcontracted unit work in vio- lation of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. As pointed out in subsection III,A, supra, Respondent takes issue with that characterization, arguing that the trans- action had been an in-kind product trade, not a subcontract of work. Yet, such a characterization is no more than a word game. Regardless of how the transaction is characterized, it resulted in the movement of work ordinarily performed by Respondent’s unit employees to employees not employed in the bargaining unit at Respondent’s pulp mill. As a result, unit employees were deprived of income during late 1991 from work that they ordinarily performed. Continued per- 178 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD formance of unit work is a mandatory subject of bargaining, as pointed out in subsection III,D, supra. Accordingly, re- gardless of the label affixed to the transaction, Respondent failed to satisfy the statutory obligation to give the Union no- tice of and an opportunity to bargain about the mandatory subject of unit work performance. While Respondent does not actually challenge that general proposition, it advances arguments that, it contends, establish that the pulp trade fell within a limitation or exception to the general proposition that notice, and an opportunity to bar- gain, must be provided before specific unit work can be transferred to nonunit employees. First, Respondent argues that it is under no obligation to accept specific orders from specific customers and, inferentially, that it had no obligation to bargain about doing so in any particular instance, such as with respect to the order from Itoh. As far as it goes, that argument is correct. However, the General Counsel is not al- leging that Respondent failed to bargain about whether or not to accept Itoh’s order. Rather, the allegation is that Respond- ent failed to satisfy a bargaining obligation that arose from events that followed as a consequence of Respondent’s deci- sion to accept that pulp order. After all, Respondent is under no obligation to continue operating a business. But having chosen to do so, it is required to observe obligations imposed by the Act. So too, having accepted Itoh’s order, it is obliged to follow the Act’s restrictions with respect to filling that order. A facially more compelling argument is that it would have been too expensive to reopen the pulp mill to process Itoh’s order and, consequently, that Respondent made a good faith business decision to effect a product trade for which no alter- native could have been provided realistically through the bar- gaining process. Yet, it is settled that unlawful unilateral ac- tion is not excused by a claim of ‘‘good faith nor [a] claim of economic justification,’’ NLRB v. Amoco Chemicals Corp., 529 F.2d 427, 432 (5th Cir. 1979), nor will it be ex- cused by ‘‘the emergency nature of the situation.’’ NLRB v. Hondo Drilling Co., 525 F.2d 864, 867 (5th Cir. 1976), cert. denied 429 U.S. 818. It may well be that, even had Respondent satisfied its stat- utory obligation of affording notice and a bargaining oppor- tunity to the Union, negotiations would have yielded no al- ternative course of action for providing pulp to Itoh, in light of the costs of reopening and reclosing the pulp mill. How- ever, in light of the merely generalized evidence concerning that subject, the record provides no basis for concluding with any certainty that no such alternative course could have been developed as a result of negotiations—at least to the extent that only some, if not all, unit employees could have earned income from providing pulp for Itoh in late 1992. Certainly, Respondent has produced no evidence that it would have suffered any economic detriment from passage of the time needed to notify the Union of Itoh’s order and, if a timely request to promptly discuss it had been received from the Union, to bargain about the ability of unit employ- ees to perform at least some of the work needed to fill it. Of course, unit employees were paid for filling Simpson’s like order in 1992. However, that fact is not so compelling a consideration as Respondent now seeks to portray it. As every creditor appreciates, timing of money’s receipt is a ma- terial consideration. Thus, the fact that employees received income for work performed in early 1992 does not erase det- riment they suffered as a result of not having been provided with an opportunity to bargain about possibly earning it in late 1991. Beyond that consideration of timing of income receipt, there is no evidence that the existence of Simpson’s order had any effect whatsoever on the unit employees’ return to work at the end of 1991, nor on their ability to work con- tinuously thereafter during early 1992. That is, Respondent presented no evidence showing that the back side of its ar- rangement with Simpson had led to earlier recall of the pulp mill employees than would otherwise have occurred. Simi- larly, Respondent presented no evidence to show that but for the need to fill the order for Simpson, unit employees would not have been able to work continuously during 1992’s first calendar quarter. Accordingly, there is no evidence that the existence of the need to fill Simpson’s order had enhanced unit employees’ employment opportunities. It must be kept in focus that, in the final analysis, the Act does not oblige Respondent to succeed in negotiating an ar- rangement satisfactory to the Union and the employees that it represents. Instead, Respondent had been obliged to do no more than offer a bargaining opportunity to the Union and, within reason, try to negotiate a mutually satisfactory ar- rangement. See generally Foodway, 234 NLRB 72, 77 (1978). Respondent has presented no evidence showing that it would have suffered any detriment by having taken those steps. In contrast, as pointed out in subsection III,D, supra, unilateral action undermines a bargaining agent by conveying the message that it is powerless to protect employees and ‘‘that there is no necessity for a collective bargaining agent.’’ May Stores Co. v. NLRB, supra. Finally, Respondent argues that the pulp transaction ar- ranged with Simpson had been consistent with a practice of past product and material trades with competitors to which the Union had never voiced any objection. Yet, waiver of the statutory bargaining obligation is not established merely by a bargaining agent’s past failure to object to similar unilateral conduct. See, e.g., Ciba-Geigy Pharmaceuticals Division v. NLRB, 722 F.2d 1120, 1127 (3d Cir. 1983). Furthermore, Respondent has presented no evidence whatsoever that the Union had even been aware of whatever past trades had been made by Respondent and its competitors. The absence of such evidence nullifies any contention that past failures to protest those trades constitutes a waiver and establishes a past practice allowing them to be effected in the future with- out affording the Union prior notice and an opportunity to bargain about them. In addition, there is no particularized evidence of past ma- terial and product trades of the magnitude of the 5000-ton pulp trade arranged with Simpson. Pulp Mill Manager Martin provided a generalized account to the effect that past trades had occurred. But he gave no more than a generalized de- scription of items involved and circumstances under which those trades had taken place. At no point does his testimony about those incidents show that they had been similar in magnitude to the volume of pulp involved in Respondent’s arrangement with Simpson. Therefore, I conclude that a preponderance of the evidence establishes that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act by failing to notify and offer to bargain with the Union about performance of unit work by nonunit employees before arranging to have Simpson perform unit work. That 179LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. leaves for consideration in connection with the temporary shutdown the allegation involving the work of the pulp mill shipping and receiving department during it. As set forth in subsection III,A, supra, the General Counsel does not chal- lenge Respondent’s decision to layoff all four storeroom clerks during the pulp mill’s 1991 shutdown. Nor does the General Counsel contend that Respondent violated the Act by deciding to stop deliveries of pulp mill supplies during that shutdown. Finally, while there is evidence of occasional removal by supervisors of items from inventory, the General Counsel was permitted to withdraw the supervisory portion of this allegation. That leaves three areas for evaluation. First, although it is not altogether clear, the General Coun- sel appears to contest the decision to store whatever supplies were received, because their delivery could not be stopped, for the storeroom. The record shows that these deliveries were taken to a central location where they were stored until three storeroom clerks were recalled immediately before Christmas, before the other pulp mill employees, to distribute those supplies. In addition, one storeroom clerk had been re- called on three earlier days during December 1991 to handle then-needed supplies’ distributions from that central location. To the extent that the General Counsel may be arguing that Respondent violated the Act by storing supplies delivered during the shutdown, rather than return a storeroom clerk to handle and distribute them immediately upon receipt, I do not agree. Obviously, the layoff of all storeroom clerks for the shut- down’s duration meant that there would be no one to receive shipments as they were delivered. Yet, the complaint in- cludes no allegation that the decision not to retain one clerk, as in the past, had been unlawfully reached or implemented. Indeed, so far as the evidence discloses, Respondent had sat- isfied its bargaining obligation by notifying the Union that it intended to layoff all four clerks. Moreover, unlike the above-described situation regarding Respondent’s arrange- ment with Simpson, there is no evidence that the clerks ulti- mately lost any work as a result of this particular facet of the shutdown. Incoming materials were simply stored and, when the clerks returned, they distributed items from that central location to their appropriate destinations within the Samoa complex. As a result, the clerks, not someone else, ended up performing that work and being paid for the work of recording and breaking down those shipments of supplies and, then, distributing them. Second, notwithstanding the above-described general ar- rangement, not all incoming supplies had been delivered to that central location. The General Counsel presented 17 in- voices for shipments of sawmill supplies that had been deliv- ered to the Samoa complex during the 1991 shutdown. Lead Stores Clerk Glen Vickers testified ‘‘that particular set of documents reflects material that would have come to [the clerks] and been distributed’’ by them in cartons that ‘‘we would not open,’’ but ‘‘would take [them] and load [them] in a van and deliver’’ them to the appropriate location within Respondent’s complex. Respondent does not dispute that it had not notified the Union and given it an opportunity to bargain about direct delivery of those supplies to the sawmill during the shutdown. Respondent did point out that each of the 17 invoices had been addressed to No. 1 L-P Drive, which is the address of the Samoa complex, rather that to the pulp mill or storeroom. Yet, Respondent presented no evidence that, in fact, those materials had been delivered directly to the intended destina- tion within the complex, rather than to the storeroom or to the designated central location from which distribution of them had been undertaken by nonsupervisory, nonunit per- sonnel. Employment Manager and Housing Manager Filgas did testify that supplies addressed to No. 1 L-P Drive some- times are delivered by carriers directly to the location within the Samoa complex where they are to be used. However, he admitted that he did not ‘‘have first hand knowledge of how the material comes to the saw mill.’’ More specifically, Filgas did not claim to know how the supplies covered by the 17 invoices had gotten to the sawmill. To be sure, Respondent might have rerouted supplies de- liveries directly to the sawmill for the shutdown’s duration. Yet, Respondent presented no evidence to that effect. As a result, so far as the record shows, there were 17 sawmill sup- plies deliveries received during the 1991 shutdown, those supplies ordinarily were received and distributed to the saw- mill by unit employees, and someone else, not shown to be a supervisor, had received and distributed supplies from those 17 shipments, without prior notice to the Union that a change in ordinary receiving and distributing procedure would be occurring during the shutdown. Finally, during their normal working hours of 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. the storeroom clerks distribute requisitioned items to personnel upon presentation of an issue or order ticket by them. During other hours, when no unit storeroom clerks are working, supervisors and nonsupervisory personnel obtain a stores key from a guard and go into the storeroom from where they pick out needed item(s). There is evidence of off- hours pickups from inventory stores during the shutdown. However, since it had been established practice for personnel to remove items from the storeroom from 3:30 p.m. to 7 a.m., when storeroom clerks are not working, no violation of the Act can be based on continuance of that practice during the shutdown. There is, however, evidence of several items being re- moved from the storeroom, or perhaps from the central loca- tion where supplies were being received and stored during the shutdown, between the hours of 7 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. during the shutdown. Store Supervisor Sandra Swift admitted that she had ‘‘filled a few orders’’ between those hours on November 7 and 18, 1991. Buyer Phillip Sutter testified that he had filled some orders from inventory, most after 3:30 p.m. However, he did not claim that six other orders had been filled by him at times other than between 7 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. during the shutdown. Nor did Respondent present any other evidence that Sutter had filled those six orders other than between those daytime hours when the storeroom clerks ordinarily work. In addition, two other orders, one in- volving Gary Bernardi and the other Bill Manson, had been filled from inventory during the shutdown. There is no evi- dence that those two orders had been filled before 7 a.m. or after 3:30 p.m. Nor did Respondent contend that, on those occasions during the shutdown, either Bernardi or Manson had been a statutory supervisor. Respondent does contend that both Swift and Sutter had been statutory supervisors and, by virtue of the deletion of supervisors from the General Counsel’s allegation, that their removal of inventory items had not given rise to a violation of the Act. To support that supervisory contention regarding 180 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Swift, she testified generally that she possessed authority to discipline employees. But, Respondent presented no particu- larized evidence that she ever had done so and she acknowl- edged that she never had actually disciplined anyone. While she testified that she scheduled the four storeroom clerks and one salaried person, presumably Sutter, the clerks all work a regular 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. schedule and Respondent pre- sented no evidence that Swift had ever told any of the clerks when to perform particular tasks. After testifying that she possesses authority to ask employees to work overtime, Swift acknowledged that before doing so, ‘‘I normally would get an okay through someone else’’ in the maintenance depart- ment. Moreover, there is no evidence that her asserted au- thority to grant vacations, as well as days and other time off, is more than ministerial. Consequently, the evidence is not sufficient to establish that Swift had been a supervisor within the meaning of Section 2(11) of the Act. Even less persuasive is Respondent’s contention that Sutter had been a statutory supervisor at all times material. In the final analysis, that contention rests solely on his testimony that he relieved Swift whenever she was absent from Re- spondent’s facility. Since I have found that she is not a statu- tory supervisor, the fact that he relieves her hardly suffices to establish supervisory status under Section 2(11) of the Act. Furthermore, even if Swift had been a statutory super- visor, there is no evidence whatsoever that she is absent from Respondent’s facility with any regularity and that he fills in for her other than occasionally. Additionally, there is no evi- dence that, when doing so, Sutter exercises, or had possesses authority to exercise, independent judgment in connection with the supervisory powers enumerated in Section 2(11) of the Act. Consequently, as is true of Swift, Respondent has failed to present evidence supporting its assertion that Sutter had been a statutory supervisor at all times material. A somewhat facially more appealing contention advanced by Respondent is based upon the undisputed fact that it would have taken no more than 20 to 30 minutes to fill any one of the above-mentioned orders and, in some instances, no more than a few minutes. In short, argues Respondent, the filling of these orders by nonunit personnel had been only a minor matter. ‘‘The Board has recognized that not every minor unilateral change in working conditions constitutes an unfair labor practice.’’ Xidex Corp. v. NLRB, 924 F.2d 245, 253 (D.C. Cir. 1991). ‘‘For a unilateral change to be unlaw- ful, it must be ‘material, substantial, and significant.’’’ (Foot- note omitted.) Litton Systems, 300 NLRB 331 (1990). Stand- ing alone, a total of 11 instances of less than 30 minutes each—a total of less than 6 hours—spent filling orders dur- ing a 2-month period would appear to qualify as not being ‘‘material, substantial and significant.’’ Yet, evidence of fill- ing orders from stores does not stand alone as the only ship- ping and receiving department employees’ work performed during the 1991 shutdown. As described above, supplies from 17 shipments had also been received and taken to locations within the Samoa com- plex. That also is work that unit storeroom clerks ordinarily would have performed, but for the layoff of all of them dur- ing the 1991 shutdown. And the distribution of those sup- plies, like the distributions from inventory by nonunit person- nel, had been made without affording the Union prior notice and an opportunity to bargain about those changes in proce- dure. Furthermore, those events pertaining to the shipping and receiving department did not occur in a vacuum. As con- cluded earlier in this subsection, Respondent failed to satisfy its bargaining obligation in connection with Itoh’s order. Moreover, as concluded in preceding subsections, Respond- ent further violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act when it eliminated Local Rule 9, rescinded benefits already con- ferred as a result of its red-circle agreement, and transferred mechanical work to nonunit sawmill employees. In con- sequence, even if the shipping and receiving department uni- lateral changes had not been ‘‘material, substantial and sig- nificant,’’ of themselves, those ‘‘apparently unimportant change[s] in a working condition take[] on more signifi- cance,’’ Xidex Corp. v. NLRB, supra, 924 F.2d at 253, in the context of Respondent’s other unfair labor practices. There- fore, I conclude that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act by unilaterally allowing nonunit employees to perform shipping and receiving department employees’ work during the 1991 shutdown. F. Withdrawal of Respondent’s Offer to Partially Reimburse Annis As described in subsection III,A, supra, it is undisputed that Respondent withdrew its previously made offer to par- tially reimburse Annis for his medical examination and treat- ment in San Francisco that followed diagnosis of his pul- monary impairment. Moreover, Respondent admits that a fac- tor in that withdrawal decision had been the Union’s decision to pursue to arbitration a grievance concerning Annis’ job transfer. That is shown by Greenhalgh’s testimony, quoted in subsection III,A, supra, and, most specifically, by the portion of his letter quoted in that subsection to Cawvey on March 22, 1991. Section 7 of the Act protects the right of employ- ees to file and process grievances. See, e.g., NLRB v. City Disposal Systems, 465 U.S. 822, 836 (1984). Accordingly, depriving Annis for that reason of a benefit promised in the course of his employment relationship violated Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act. But, in the circumstances pre- sented, analysis cannot simply terminate with that conclu- sion. Respondent characterized its partial reimbursement offer as ‘‘analogous to a proposal to settle a pending employment dispute.’’ Based in that characterization, it contends that it properly withdrew its offer in light of the time that had elapsed without any specific response to that offer and the supposedly inconsistent action of filing and processing Annis’ grievance to arbitration. However, in the cir- cumstances, those factors do not provide the support for its proposed settlement contention urged by Respondent. Of itself, passage of time without specific acceptance by Annis of the offer is not a significant consideration. Re- spondent never placed a time limitation upon acceptance when Greenhalgh originally made the offer to Annis on Oc- tober 29, 1991. Respondent has not argued, nor provided evi- dence to support an argument, that it suffered any detriment from absence of a more immediate response by Annis to that offer. To the contrary, on March 22, 1991, almost 5 months after the offer had been made initially, Greenhalgh wrote to Cawvey in terms that clearly portrayed the offer as still via- ble. Indeed, the terms of that particular communication, quoted in subsection III,A, supra, convey the unmistakable meaning that the offer would continue to be viable into the 181LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. future. At no point in that communication did Greenhalgh express even the slightest concern about timeliness for its ac- ceptance. Rather, the lone concern that Greenhalgh expressed in his letter in connection with the reimbursement offer per- tained exclusively to pursuit of Annis’ grievance to arbitra- tion. However, in the final analysis, there was no relationship between the offer of reimbursement for expenses of medical examination and treatment, on the one hand, and the subject of the grievance, transfer of Annis from shift millwright to day shift, on the other hand. To be sure, in his letter of October 29, 1990, Greenhalgh conditioned Respondent’s partial reimbursement offer ‘‘on the basis . . . that there will be no further claims against [Respondent] in this matter.’’ But that letter makes no spe- cific mention of any claims other than Annis’ ‘‘expense re- quest for costs incurred and wages lost while being tested at the University of California Occupational Pulmonary Depart- ment in San Francisco.’’ Accordingly, despite the letter’s generalized reference to ‘‘further claims,’’ the context of that reference tends to show that Respondent intended its general- ized terminology to refer only to ‘‘expense request[s] for costs’’ in excess of the $599 that Greenhalgh expressed will- ingness to pay Annis. In fact, Respondent admits as much in its brief: ‘‘Nevertheless, [Respondent] made an offer to pay Annis $599.00 if Annis agreed that no further claims relating to the medial examinations be filed against [Respondent].’’ At no point does Greenhalgh’s letter make any specific men- tion that the job transfer was encompassed, as well. That is not necessarily surprising since at the time of Greenhalgh’s offer on October 29, 1991, Annis had not yet been transferred from shift millwright to day shift. Nor was he to be transferred for almost another 2 weeks. In footnote 7 of its brief, Respondent argues that it had been aware of the need to make that job transfer at the time that Greenhalgh had sent that letter to Annis. However, that argu- ment suffers from a lack of evidence to support it. In his ex- planation of reasons for making the offer, quoted in sub- section III,A, supra, Greenhalgh made no mention whatso- ever of Annis’ subsequent job transfer as a consideration for the offer of October 29, 1990. Nor is the evidence so clear that Respondent had even contemplated transferring Annis to day shift at the time that Greenhalgh had sent that letter. Not only did that transfer not occur until passage of almost another 2 weeks, but approxi- mately a half year had elapsed since initial diagnosis of Annis’ condition. Respondent presented no evidence that dur- ing that period it had even considered, much less reached a decision concerning, the possible need to transfer Annis to a different position. In sum, the evidence does not support Respondent’s argument that Annis’ transfer had been con- templated by its officials at the time of Greenhalgh’s partial reimbursement offer on October 29, 1991. Of perhaps greater significance in the circumstances, not only was no specific mention of a future job transfer made as part of Greenhalgh’s offer, but there is no basis in the evidence for concluding that Annis would likely have understood that Greenhalgh’s offer encompassed relinquishing any right to protest any sub- ject other than medical expenses exceeding $599. Indeed, so far as the record discloses, not until the following March did Respondent, itself, so contend. In sum, neither testimonial evidence nor objective consid- erations support Respondent’s argument that its partial reim- bursement offer had contemplated waiver of any claim by Annis other than his already filed ‘‘expense request for costs incurred and wages lost while being tested at the University of California Occupational Pulmonary Department in San Francisco.’’ Accordingly, Respondent cannot expand the scope of its initial settlement offer by simply pasting on an added condition as a supposed intended quid pro quo for having originally made it. Nor is Respondent’s position en- hanced by two other contentions that it advances. First, Respondent points out that it had not been ‘‘obli- gated to pay Annis’ lost wages or expenses related to the medical examinations in San Francisco.’’ However, this is no more than a recast form of the argument made in connection with the Simpson arrangement: That Respondent had no obli- gation to accept particular orders from specific customers. Only in this instance, Respondent is arguing, in effect, that it had no obligation to provide a particular benefit to an em- ployee. But, as with Itoh’s order, the significant point is not Respondent’s obligation to undertake a particular course of action. Rather, having freely chosen to do so, Respondent is obliged to follow the Act’s requirements and proscriptions in pursuing its chosen course of action. As Greenhalgh ex- plained, a belief of benefit derived from Annis’ trips to San Francisco had led Respondent to offer partial expense reim- bursement. The Act does not allow Respondent to condition such an offer on illegal conditions. Nor does it permit the offer’s later withdrawal because Annis exercised his Section 7 right to file and pursue a grievance pertaining to a sepa- rate, but unrelated, consequence of his impaired condition. Second, Respondent argues that there is no evidence that it harbored animus against Annis, nor has it been shown that Respondent intended to retaliate against Annis over the grievance’s processing to arbitration. Yet, animus is not so narrow a concept that its meaning extends no further than one of hatred or malice. Dissatisfaction, even mild dis- satisfaction, with an employee’s protected activity suffices to supply animus. Here, Respondent does not dispute that it was dissatisfied with having to defend in arbitration its decision to transfer Annis to day shift. Thus, animus did exist. More- over, in a broader sense, animus is one analytical tool for ascertaining whether causation exists between the exercise of Section 7 activity and an employer’s action. Respondent ad- mits that pursuit to arbitration of Annis’ grievance had caused it to withdraw its partial reimbursement offer to him. In light of that admission of causation, no evidence of more extreme antagonism toward Annis is required. Therefore, a preponderance of the evidence establishes that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act when it withdrew its offer to Annis of partial expense reimbursement. G. Eaton’s Statements to Nally and Newman As described in subsection III,A, supra, Nally and New- man each attributed to Eaton the independently made threat that overtime assignments would be curtailed if a grievance was filed about Eaton’s failure to first call Nally and Mills for available overtime work during the night shift of Novem- ber 5 to 6, 1991. The fact that an identical threat was attrib- uted to Eaton on separate occasions by each of two employ- ees tends to lend some support for a conclusion that the threat, in fact, had been made. Eaton denied having made those threats. However, certain factors undermine those deni- als and tend to support a conclusion that, indeed, Eaton had 182 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD threatened Nally and Newman as alleged by the General Counsel. First, despite his denials, Eaton’s description of what he had actually said to Nally and Newman contradicts those de- nials and tends to support Nally’s and Newman’s accounts. Thus, during his conversation with Nally, Eaton admitted having said, [W]e worked this time on straight time basis before, and that it was issues like this that always, you know, make it hard to keep on working overtime, especially when it can be done on a straight time basis, and, you know, maybe looking out for the rest of the people that’s like to work the overtime, that, you know, my job is to save the company money, and if we can do it on a straight time basis, it should be, but we have been doing it on an overtime basis. Similarly, Eaton conceded having told Newman ‘‘virtually what I told [Nally]. I said that’s—you know, it’s tough to keep on paying the overtime for this kind of things.’’ During cross-examination, Eaton further reinforced Nally’s and New- man’s accounts by admitting that he had told each of them that ‘‘the work can be done on a straight time basis and had been before.’’ Second, further support for the likelihood that Eaton had made the threats attributed to him is supplied by his own de- scription of the circumstances underlying overtime assign- ments in 1991. Though not actually applicable to Baker’s early call to work on November 6, 1991, Eaton testified that since 1984 he had followed a particular overtime assignment procedure worked out with his crew, one of whom had been a Standing Committee member. In agreeing to that arrange- ment, testified Eaton, he had specifically qualified his agree- ment by telling the crew, ‘‘Sure, I’ll give it a try, as long as there’s no problems.’’ Eaton admitted that prior to Nally’s protest on November 6, 1991, ‘‘We’ve never had any prob- lems.’’ Thus, Nally’s grievance and Newman’s effort to present it to Eaton posed the very circumstance that Eaton had told his crew must not occur if the overtime arrangement was to continued by him. That fact, coupled with his above- quoted acknowledgment of responsibility for saving Re- spondent money and his admitted statements to Nally and Newman that ‘‘the work can be done on a straight time basis,’’ buttress a conclusion that he had, in fact, made the threat to Nally and, later, to Newman which those two em- ployees described. Third, to support Eaton’s general denials, Respondent re- lies on the testimony of Pulp Mill Superintendent Byron Wil- son, whose office adjoined that of Eaton during, at least, No- vember 1991. Instead of corroborating Eaton’s account of his conversation with Newman, however, Wilson contradicted Eaton’s account. Thus, the latter testified that Wilson had joined his conversation with Newman ‘‘about halfway through the conversation of what Shannon felt about the grievance,’’ which Newman had characterized as ‘‘a horseshit grievance, and he didn’t believe in it, and the only reason he came down there was because he was being pres- sured to do it.’’ But, Wilson admitted during cross-examina- tion that he had not overheard any of the conversation be- tween Eaton and Newman, because the conversation between those two individuals had ended by the time that he (Wilson) had entered Eaton’s office. It is not material to the General Counsel’s allegation whether or not Newman had personally felt, and had told Eaton, that there was no basis for Nally to grieve about not having been called for overtime work. Nally had a statutory right to file a grievance. As steward, Newman had a statutory right to process it. Both employees appeared to be testifying candidly about what Eaton had said to them. Newman’s per- sonal opinion of the grievance’s merit hardly entitled Eaton to threaten adverse consequences for employees if that griev- ance was filed and processed. Therefore, I conclude that a preponderance of the credible evidence establishes that Eaton threatened to discontinue overtime work assignments if the grievance was filed and processed, thereby violating Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. That conclusion is not altered by Re- spondent’s subsequent payment to Nally and Mills of the money they would have earned for working overtime, had one of them been called by Eaton, nor by the absence of cur- tailment of overtime assignments after Cawvey took over processing the grievance. For, neither action suffices as a re- pudiation under the standards set forth in Passavant Memo- rial Area Hospital, 237 NLRB 138 (1978). CONCLUSIONS OF LAW Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, Western Division, has com- mitted unfair labor practices affecting commerce by threaten- ing to curtail overtime assignments if a grievance were filed and processed, in violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act; by withdrawing an offer to partially reimburse an employee for expenses of medical examination and treatment because a grievance of that employee was pursued to arbitration, in violation of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act; and, without affording prior notice and an adequate bargaining opportunity to Association of Western Pulp and Paperworkers, Local 49, the bargaining agent for hourly paid employees in an appro- priate bargaining unit of Samoa pulp mill employees, by be- latedly adding elimination of a layoff restriction to employ- ment terms to be implemented pursuant of a final offer that had not previously encompassed elimination of that restric- tion, by retroactively rescinding the terms and already con- ferred benefits of an agreement to red- circle wage rates of employees who lost their jobs, and by assigning pulp mill mechanic, production, and shipping and receiving department work to nonunit employees, in violation of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. REMEDY Having concluded that Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, Western Division has engaged in certain unfair labor prac- tices, I shall recommend that it be ordered to cease and de- sist therefrom and, further, that it be ordered to take certain affirmative action to effectuate the policies of the Act. With respect to the latter, it shall be ordered to reinstate the layoff restrictions set forth in Local Rule 9 of the 1988–1991 col- lective-bargaining contract and the red-circle wage rate agreement of August 1991. It also shall be ordered to rein- state any employees laid off as a result of its failure to con- tinue observing the layoff restriction set forth in Local Rule 9 on and after August 10, 1991, and to reinstate the red-cir- cle wage rate of all employees who qualified for its benefit 183LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORP. 2 If no exceptions are filed as provided by Sec. 102.46 of the Board’s Rules and Regulations, the findings, conclusions, and rec- ommended Order shall, as provided in Sec. 102.48 of the Rules, be adopted by the Board and all objections to them shall be deemed waived for all purposes. 3 If this Order is enforced by a judgment of a United States court of appeals, the words in the notice reading ‘‘Posted by Order of the National Labor Relations Board’’ shall read ‘‘Posted Pursuant to a Judgment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board.’’ under the agreement of August 1991. In addition, it shall be ordered to make whole in accordance with normal Board principles all employees for any loss of pay and benefits suf- fered as a result of the changes made unilaterally by it, as well as the estate of Chuck Annis in the amount of $599, with interest to be paid on the amounts owing as computed in the manner prescribed in New Horizons for the Retarded, 283 NLRB 1173 (1987). On these findings of fact and conclusions of law and on the entire record, I issue the following recommended2 ORDER The Respondent, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, Western Division, Samoa, California, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall 1. Cease and desist from (a) Changing any term or condition of employment of em- ployees in the appropriate bargaining unit described below, without first giving notice to Association of Western Pulp and Paperworkers, Local 49 and affording it an adequate op- portunity to bargain about that proposed change. The appro- priate bargaining unit is: All hourly paid employees in the Machine Room, Pulping, Causticizing, Material Handling & Shipping, Chip Dump, Storeroom, Technical, Recovery, Power Boiler, and General Departments and all Maintenance Department hourly paid employees of the pulp mill in Samoa, California; excluding employees classified as, or working in, administration, actual supervision, watchman duties, sales, engineering and drafting, re- search and technical occupations requiring professional training, accounting, clerical, stenographic and other of- fice work. (b) Rescinding and refusing to honor agreements reached with the above-named labor organization concerning terms and conditions of employment for employees in the above- described bargaining unit. (c) Withdrawing offers to reimburse employees’ expenses for medical examination and treatment, or otherwise dis- criminating against employees because grievances are proc- essed to arbitration, or because of activity or support for the above-named labor organization or any other labor organiza- tion. (d) Threatening employees with discontinuance of over- time assignments if grievances are filed. (e) In any like or related manner interfering with, restrain- ing, or coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guar- anteed them by Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action necessary to ef- fectuate the policies of the Act. (a) Restore and observe the layoff restriction set forth in Local Rule 9 of the 1988–1991 collective-bargaining contract with the above-named labor organization and, in addition, the terms of the red-circle wage rate agreement of August 1991. (b) Reinstate any employee laid off as a result of failure to continue observing the layoff restriction set forth in Local Rule 9 and reinstate the red-circle wage rates earned by em- ployees pursuant to the agreement of August 1991. (c) Make whole, with interest on the amounts owing, all employees for any losses of pay and benefits suffered as a result of elimination of the layoff restriction set forth in Local Rule 9, of refusal to honor the red-circle wage rate agreement of August 1991, of the arrangement for unit pulp production to be performed by employees of Simpson Paper Company during the final calendar quarter of 1991, of per- formance of mechanic and storeroom clerk work by nonunit employees during the last 4 months of 1991. (d) Preserve and make available to the Board or its agents, for examination and copying, all payroll, business and other records necessary to compute the backpay and reinstatement rights as set forth in the remedy section of this decision. (e) Post at is Samoa, California complex copies of the at- tached notice marked ‘‘Appendix.’’3 Copies of that notice on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 20, after being duly signed by its authorized representative, shall be posted by Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, Western Division immediately upon receipt and maintained for 60 consecutive days in conspicuous places, including all places where no- tices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by it to ensure that those notices are not al- tered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (f) Notify the Regional Director in writing within 20 days from the date of this Order what steps it has taken to com- ply. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation