Mary Thompson HospitalDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsOct 6, 1989296 N.L.R.B. 1245 (N.L.R.B. 1989) Copy Citation MARY THOMPSON HOSPITAL Mary Thompson Hospital and Warehouse, Mail Order, Office, Technical Professional Employ- ees Union , Local 743, affiliated with Interna- tional Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, AFL- CIO. Cases 13-CA-27319 and 13-CA-27716 October 6, 1989 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN STEPHENS AND MEMBERS HIGGINS AND DEVANEY On April 6 , 1989, Administrative Law Judge Walter H . Maloney issued the attached decision. The Respondent filed exceptions and a supporting brief, and the General Counsel filed a brief in answer to the Respondent 's exceptions. The National Labor Relations Board has delgat- ed its authority in this proceeding to a three- member panel. The Board has considered the decision and the record in light of the exceptions and briefs and has decided to affirm the judge 's rulings, findings,' and conclusions and to adopt the recommended Order a modified below.2 There were no exceptions to the judge's failure to defer to the arbitrator 's ruling that the Respond- ent lawfully discontinued making pension fund con- tributions. ORDER The National Labor Relations Board adopts the recommended Order of the administrative law judge and orders that the Respondent, Mary Thompson Hospital, Chicago, Illinois, its officers, agents, successors , and assigns , shall take the action set forth in the Order as modified. 1. Insert the following as paragraph 2(d). "(d) Notify the Regional Director in writing within 20 days from the date of this Order what steps the Respondent has taken to comply." i Although the Respondent contends generally that the community continuity assurance agreement is confidential , it has not shown why the information should not be supplied to the Union We therefore find that the Respondent has failed to meet its burden of demonstrating a legiti- mate and substantial confidentiality of interest that outweighs the Union's need for the information requested Washington Gas Light Co., 273 NLRB 116 (1984) 2 We shall modify the judge's recommended Order to include the Board 's traditional notification clause Dawn Miller, Esq. and Tamara Tanzillo, Esq., for the General Counsel. Norman Jeddeloh, Esq., of Chicago, Illinois, for the Re- spondent. Stephen B. Rubin, Esq., of Chicago, Illinois, for the Charging Party. DECISION FINDINGS OF FACT STATEMENT OF THE CASE 1245 WALTER H. MALONEY, Administrative Law Judge. This case came on for hearing before me at Chicago, Illi- nois, upon a consolidated and amended unfair labor prac- tice complaint , ' issued by the Regional Director for Region 13, which alleges that Respondent Mary Thomp- son Hospital2 violated Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act. More particularly, the consolidated complaint alleges that the Respondent unilaterally discontinued a contrac- tually mandated pension plan covering both its bargain- ing unit and its nonunit employees , and that it unlawfully withheld from the Union information requested concern- ing the discontinuance of its operations and its affiliation with another hospital . The Respondent contends that it had the unilateral right to discontinue pension plan con- tributions because of language found in the plan itself and by virtue of the zipper clause in its collective-bar- gaining agreement with HELP . It further argues that an arbitration award which it obtained to this effect should be given deference by the Board . As for the information requested by HELP, the Respondent states that it is both privileged and irrelevant to any duty on the part of the Union to bargain concerning the effects of closing the hospital. Upon these contentions , the issues herein were joined.3 A. The Unfair Labor Practices Alleged Mary Thompson Hospital was founded just after the Civil War by the woman physician after whom it was named . For many years it provided medical and hospital services at a location on South Ashland Avenue in Chi- cago . On or before May 30, 1988, it closed its doors for good because of financial difficulties having their roots in the reduction of medicare and medicaid payments for many of its elderly and indigent patients . It laid off all of i The principal docket entries in this case are as follows. Charge filed in Case l3-CA-27319 by Warehouse, Mail Order , Office, Technical Pro- fessional Employees Union , Local 743, affiliated with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America , AFL-CIO (Union) on November 4, 1987 ; complaint issued against Respondent on June 30 , 1988, Respondent 's answer filed on July 29, 1988 , charge filed in Case 13-CA-27716 by the Union against the Re- spondent on April 25 , 1988; amended consolidated complaint in both cases issued against the Respondent by the Regional Director for Region 13 on September 14, 1988; Respondent's answer filed on September 21, 1988, hearing held in Chicago , Illinois, on January 9, 1989 ; briefs filed with me by the General Counsel and the Respondent on or before March 2, 1989. 2 The Respondent admits, and I find , that it is a corporation which provided health care and related services at a facility located in Chicago, Illinois. During calendar year 1987 , Respondent , in the course and con- duct of this operation , derived gross revenues in excess of $250,000 and purchased directly from points and places located outside the State of Il- linois goods and materials valued in excess of $5000. Accordingly, the Respondent is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Sec 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act Hospital Employees Labor Program of Metropolitan Chicago (HELP), a joint effort of the Union and of Local 73, Service Employees International Union , AFL-CIO, is a labor organi- zation within the meaning of Sec 2(5) of the Act. 8 Errors in the transcript are noted and corrected 296 NLRB No. 164 1246 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD its employees either in late May or early June 1988.4 For many years Respondent 's dietary and housekeeping em- ployees, along with its licensed practical nurses, ward clerks, and patient care attendants , were represented by a coalition formed by Teamsters Local 743 and SEIU Local 73 which , at the Respondent 's facility and else- where in Chicago , bargained on behalf of unskilled and semi-skilled health care employees under the acronym HELP. During the final days of Mary Thompson Hospi- tal, there were about 16 employees in the HELP bargain- ing unit . The latest and last contract between HELP and the Respondent was a 3-year contract which expired on March 31, 1988 . It was extended until April 30, 1988, and then until July 30, 1988. On October 3, 1986, about midterm in the collective- bargaining agreement , Gwen Rodriguez , Respondent's personnel director, wrote Clara Day, the Local 743- HELP business manager, to point out that the Respond- ent's financial outlook was poor and that its patient census was low . She further informed Day that, in an effort to reduce costs, the board of directors had ap- proved a 15-month suspension of pension contributions, effective October 1, 1986. She told Day: I would appreciate hearing from you in this regard . Specifically will the union consider suspen- sion of pension contributions for union employees, which is currently 3% of annual salary? I would appreciate your response as soon as pos- sible , or by October 9. On October 8, Day responded to this letter and said no. In fact the Respondent was considering not merely a temporary suspension of the pension plan but its com- plete elimination, but Rodriguez did not inform Day of this fact. The plan referred to by both correspondents was the Accumulator Future Service Plan and Trust-No. 3, a noncontributory pension plan which the Respondent began to maintain with Connecticut General Life Insur- ance Company in 1974. The plan covered both bargain- ing unit and nonunit employees alike and was referred to in sec . 21.4 of the collective-bargaining agreement as fol- lows: Pension Benefits-The Connecticut General Life In- surance Accumulator Plan, which provides pension benefits for employees upon their retirement, is in- corporated in this Agreement for all eligible em- ployees. From its inception in 1974 until January 1, 1987, the Re- spondent had been making regular payments into the pension plan trust fund amounting to 3 percent of the wages and salaries of the employees covered by the plan. It continued to do so during the year or so which elapsed before the execution of the 1985-1988 agreement 4 The parties entered into a detailed stipulation of facts in this proceed- ing which contained somewhat confusing provisions relating to the layoff of bargaining unit personnel One section stated that the last bargaining unit employees were laid off in late May or early June while another sec- tion stated that they were all laid off before July 30, 1988 While not mu- tually exclusive, these provisions make it difficult to pinpoint exactly when the final layoff occurred when no written collective-bargaining agreement was in effect. During negotiations leading up to this agreement the Respondent proposed that pension contributions be reduced from 3 percent to 1 percent of an employee's wage but the Union objected and the parties agreed to continue the 3-percent payment . Rodriguez testified that the plan required a 3-percent contribution by the em- ployer and the stipulation of facts executed by the parties also says as much , but there is nothing in the documents submitted by the parties which recites this fact. Sometime in March 1987 , the Respondent 's board of directors decided to discontinue the pension plan entire- ly, retroactive to January of that year. On April 2, 1987, Jeffrey R. Ellis, the Respondent 's chief financial officer, wrote the account representative for Connecticut Gener- al (CIGNA) informing her that, pursuant to their phone conversation , the Respondent was giving written notifi- cation that it was terminating its pension plan retroactive to December 31, 1986 . He noted that the Respondent had made no contributions to the plan since January 1, 1987, and attached a copy of a resolution of the Re- spondent 's board of directors directing this action. Respondent 's employees were not notified of this action until June 3, 1987. On that date Respondent's ad- ministrator , Ivette Estrada, announced to bargaining unit employees that the pension plan had been terminated ef- fective January 1, 1987. In a letter sent to HELP on the same day, Rodriguez conveyed the same information to Day, stating that the reason for this action was the Re- spondent's difficult financial position . She informed Day that employees had been told that they would receive 100 percent refunds of their pension fund accounts and that the amounts would be forthcoming in the next 8 to 10 weeks. The Union's response to this information was a grievance , filed on June 4 by 10 unit employees, which stated that "we, the undersigned, ask that the Hospital not withdraw the pension plan that is listed in the union contract. We further ask that they not issue the funds and that the funds issued be reinstated." The case was heard through an expedited process before Arbitrator Donald J . Peterson . In an award ren- dered on January 11, 1988, Peterson denied the griev- ance, stating: The disputed contract language in the instant case is Section 21.4 which reads as follows: The Connecticut General Life Insurance Ac- cumulator Plan, which provides pension benefits for employees upon their retirement, is incorpo- rated in this Agreement for all eligible employ- ees. It was argued by the Union that this language clearly and unambiguously requires the pension to be maintained for the duration of the contract, namely, until March 31, 1988 . The Union also con- tended that it is well established in the labor law that working conditions cannot be unilaterally changed while a contract is in effect. However, a close reading of the language in question (Section 21.4) indicates that it merely "in- corporates" the Connecticut General Life pension MARY THOMPSON HOSPITAL 1247 into the agreement . The word " incorporate" means, of course, that all provisions of the plan become part of the contract itself. In the pension booklet distributed to all eligible employees [Hospital Exh. 2], and which sets out the major terms of the plan, is the following language: You can expect the plan to continue indefinite- ly. However, we may modify, suspend, or termi- nate the plan should circumstances force us to do so. If the plan is terminated, plan contributions will stop, and you will receive a total distribution of your account. Thus, the right of the Employer to terminate the plan becomes part of the collective agreement. "Circumstances" giving rise to the termination of the plan were indeed compelling. A Hospital wit- ness testified, without contradiction, that it was losing substantial sums of money due to lower pa- tient census and the mix of payments to it. It did not, therefore, act arbitrarily or capriciously in its decision to terminate the plan in a cost saving effort. Moreover, the Union is charged with construc- tive knowledge of the contents of the plan booklet, based on its distribution to employees and the fact that it has been in force since 1975. Indeed, in the past, modifications have been made to the plan without union protest. Other language in the collective agreement indi- cates that the parties were aware of the possibility of benefit termination while the contract was in effect. For example, Section 21.1 is a proviso that life insurance ". . . must be continued in effect during the life of this agreement . . . ." Obviously the parties were cognizant that the benefits could be terminated and chose not to include that restrictive language for the pension section. Because of the clear contract language in the agreement, there was no requirement that the Hos- pital bargain regarding the plan's termination. It did announce to the Union its intention to terminate the plan, however, as early as October of 1986. The pension plan provided for a 50-percent vesting of benefits after 5 years of coverage and complete vesting after 10 years of coverage. Some employees elected to take their share of the plan's equity in a lump sum and others elected to draw monthly annuities. Apparently the elimination of pension benefits did not serve to stem the flow of red ink at the Respondent's fa- cility in 1987 and it was casting about for other means of preserving its operation intact.5 One effort was an at- tempt to affiliate with another local hospital, Bethany Hospital, or possibly with an umbrella group, Evangeli- cal Health System (EHS), a group of hospitals with which Bethany was affiliated. This effort fell through and, because it fell through, the Respondent's board of 6 The Respondent 's former personnel director testified that the Hospi- tal had a $2 6 million net operating loss in 1986 and a $2 3 million net operating loss in 1987 . As a result of this predicament , it had instituted a salary freeze in April 1986 , and laid off 45 employees. directors was well aware, as of the end of 1987 or the beginning of 1988, that Mary Thompson Hospital would close. However, the Respondent withheld this informa- tion from its employees and their bargaining agent for several months and in fact made statements indicating the contrary. Notwithstanding the fact that a decision had already been made to close the Hospital, Respondent's adminis- trator, Estrada, held two meetings with employees during the month of February. At the first meeting she stated that the Hospital was actively pursuing affiliation with other hospitals, mentioning Bethany, Good Samari- tan, and Christ Hospital as possibilities. In the second meeting she said that an agreement had been made to "team Mary Thompson Hospital with EHS." Both state- ments were false and were known to be false when made. On or about February 25, 1988, Rodriguez and Pogany told two employees in the oncology department of the Respondent's hospital that the oncology depart- ment was being transferred to Bethany Hospital. One of the purposes of the conversation was to discuss with those employees their seniority and bumping rights under the existing contract. On or about March 5, Anne Brown, the shop steward, phoned Day to tell her of the pending transfer. Day in turn phoned Rodriguez to set up an appointment for March 8 to discuss the matter. On the day of their meeting, Rodriguez transmitted to Day a letter in which she stated, in pertinent part: The Oncology Service as we discussed is being transferred to Bethany Hospital. The transfer is part of an affiliation arrangement between Mary Thomp- son and Evangelical Health System. Although the final date has not been decided, we are considering March 7 or 8 as a good possibility. We believe that, as a result of this transfer of On- cology, the layoff provisions of our agreement apply to the three union employees assigned to this unit. It is our understanding that should Bethany need bargaining unit staff as a result of the transfer of the Oncology Service, Bethany will follow the terms and provisions of its agreement. At their March 8 meeting, Day questioned Rodriguez concerning the proposed affiliation. Rodriguez replied that the matter was not yet clear. Day asked whether the Respondent was negotiating with Bethany Hospital for the transfer of any bargaining unit employees to Bethany and whether it had decided upon any benefits which might be paid to employees of the Respondent who might be laid off as the result of a transfer. Rodriguez replied in the negative, repeating that the question of af- filiation was not quite clear as of that time. Rodriguez admitted in her testimony that she knew, as of March 8, that there was not going to be any affiliation with Betha- ny but she did not want to disclose this information in advance of any formal announcement because she feared the repercussions of such a disclosure. 1248 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD On the same day, both women engaged in a formal ex- change of correspondence . In a "Dear Gwen" letter, Day wrote: You have advised me that the Hospital intends to enter into a form of partial affiliation with Bethany Hospital under which certain bargaining unit jobs will be transferred to Bethany Hospital . As you are doubtless aware, Local 743, International Brother- hood of Teamsters , has a contract convering a com- parable bargaining unit at Bethany Hospital. The Union wishes to protect the rights of all of its members wherever located and, to this end, it is quite important that we meet to consider a dovetail- ing of seniority rights of such employees should they be integrated into the Bethany Hospital struc- ture. Rodriguez ' March 8 letter said that she was writing to inform Mrs. Day of the "details about the Oncology transfer and . . . about a staff reduction which occurred on March 7." Stating that the "Oncology Service was transferred to Bethany Hospital, effective March 8, 1988," the letter went on to provide details as to how three oncology department employees had bumped three other employees elsewhere in the Hospital and gave the names of the three lowest ranking employees who would be laid off as a result of this change.6 The contract covering the Respondent's employees was due to expire on March 31, so negotiations for a re- newal started on March 22. Nothing much was accom- plished on that day so the parties met again on March 31. At this meeting Rodriguez again spoke about the dire financial straits in which the Hospital found itself but in- sisted that they were still trying to make it work. Union Vice President Robert Simpson asked about affiliation by the Respondent with another hospital and inquired spe- cifically when it might be expected to take place, adding that he wanted to know what would become of the Union 's members who were employed outside the oncol- ogy department . Rodriguez replied that it would be an- other 5 or 6 weeks before they could answer that ques- tion . The Union also persisted in asking how many of its members would be involved in any transfer or affiliation and did not receive any responsive answers . The only thing accomplished at this meeting was a 30-day exten- tion of the expiring collective-bargaining agreement, an extension which was further extended later on until July 30. According to Rodriguez it was at the March 31 meeting that the Respondent informed the Union that the Hospital was going to close. The next meeting of the parties took place on April 22. In the interim a large number of the Respondent's bargaining unit employees had been laid off. Stephen B. Rubin, the Union 's attorney , asked management negotia- tors why the Hospital had waited until that date to inform the Union of the closing . Rubin went on to ask questions about when the last patients would be dis- charged and whether there was anything in the affiliation agreement relating to bargaining unit employees. The reply was that all transfers to date related to physicians and nurses and that no bargaining unit employees had gone over to Bethany . Rubin insisted that all information concerning the transfer or affiliation which had previous- ly been requested be supplied to the Union . He also de- manded that unit employees receive money for all unused sick leave and accumulated days of personal leave and made a further demand for a week 's severance pay for all separated employees . They agreed to extend the expired collective-bargaining agreement for another 3 months . The parties met again on April 28. At this time the Union received certain data which had been request- ed. Norman Jedelloh , the Company attorney , who had earlier said that the agreement with Bethany was not all that Mary Thompson had wanted,' stated at this meeting that he was reviewing the agreement to see if it con- tained anything which applied to bargaining unit em- ployees . Rubin and Jedelloh spoke again by telephone on May 11. On this occasion , Rubin told Jedelloh that the Union wanted to see the Respondent 's agreement with Bethany . On the same day Rubin wrote Jedelloh in which he stated that "this will confirm our telephone conversation . . . in which you informed me that Ivette Estrada is attempting to put together a response to our request for those portions of the Affiliation Agreement which relate to the bargaining unit." The Respondent has never delivered to the Union a copy of any affiliation agreement and asserts that no such agreement exists . It insists that, since Bethany actu- ally refused to affiliate with Mary Thompson Hospital, no affiliation agreement could possibly come into being. It admits that an agreement relating to the oncology de- partment was concluded between the Respondent and Bethany Hospital and, in response to a subpoena in this proceeding , produced this document at the hearing. It admits further that it concluded a community continuity assurance agreement with Bethany but insists that it is a confidential agreement and contains nothing relating to bargaining unit employees . Rodriguez, who had inspect- ed this agreement , stated that the agreement dealt with some topics of the sale of the Near West Medical Center, an affiliate of the Respondent, the transfer of the Re- spondent 's oncology service to Bethany, the acquisition of the Respondent's medical staff by Bethany, the con- tinuation of the Mary Thompson name and its tradition of service to poor women and children, the mutuality of service areas , and the division of patients and service areas between Bethany and Mary Thompson Hospital. B. Analysis and Conclusions 1. Deferral to the arbitration award Because the Respondent obtained from an arbitrator a favorable ruling concerning its right to terminate the hospital pension plan, it urges that the Board ignore the merits of the unfair labor practice alleged by the General Rodriguez denied in her testimony that Jedelloh made this statement 6 The only employees in the oncology department who were trans- Rodriguez had been untruthful throughout her entire dealings with the ferred to Bethany were professional employees who were not in this bar - Union and was no more reliable on the stand than she was before she gaining unit . took the stand . I discredit her testimony on this point MARY THOMPSON HOSPITAL 1249 Counsel and defer to the arbitrator 's decision under Board doctrine set forth in Olin Corp., 268 NLRB 573 (1984). The General Counsel contends that the Union did not waive the right to bargain over the termination of pension benefits and that any waiver of a right which arises from statute and not by contract cannot be lightly inferred . Since the arbitrator did not address the waiver of this statutory right , the General Counsel maintains that deferral is inappropriate because the arbitration award is repugnant to the purposes and policies of the Act. Manitowoc Engineering Co., 291 NLRB 915 (1988). In order for an arbitration award to be valid , the arbi- trator must have authority to render the judgment in question , even if that judgment misconstrues or misap- plies the contract provision under scrutiny . If he had no jurisdiction to act, the award is invalid and deferral is in- appropriate . St. Agnes Medical Center, 287 NLRB 242 (1987). In this case, the issue presented by the employer to the arbitrator , as well as the determination which gave rise to the award , involved a putative right of the Re- spondent to terminate pension benefits based upon a sec- tion of a pamphlet it distributed to its employees years ago outlining pension benefits . The pamphlet contained the statement that "we may modify, suspend , or termi- nate the plan should circumstances force us to do so." The arbitrator reasoned that the Union had knowledge of this pamphlet and its contents and, over a period of years, had bargained with the employer with this back- ground in mind . Hence, it should be bound by the terms and provisions of the pamphlet . The Union correctly points out that it was a signatory to a collective -bargain- ing agreement , not to a pamphlet, and the sole provision in that agreement relating to the pension plan is a state- ment that the "Accumulator Plan, which provides pen- sion benefits for employees upon their retirement, is in- corporated in this agreement." Both the contract itself and general arbitration law do not permit an arbitrator to go beyond the terms and con- ditions of the contract which confers authority upon him to determine the rights and liabilities of its signatories. In this case , the arbitrator concluded that the Union had, in fact, agreed to the language of the pamphlet , when the Union had not, and he based his decision largely upon that faulty premise . In so doing, the arbitrator went out- side the agreement he was commissioned to interpret and apply . Section 8.1 of that contract provided that the arbi- trator "shall not have authority to add to, detract from, or alter in any way the provisions of the Agreement." This is exactly what he did in rendering the award relied upon by the Respondent which is based upon the provi- sions of a pamphlet no one agreed to. In light of these factors, his award was repugnant to the purposes and policies of the Act and is not entitled to deferral. 2. Waiver found in the provisions of the contract itself As noted above, section 21.4 incorporates the entire Connecticut General Life Insurance accumulator plan into the body of the agreement between the parties. In other words, the accumulator agreement is as much a collectively bargained instrument as if the Union and the Respondent had formally affixed their signatures to that document . The Respondent made no argument to the ar- bitrator based on terms and conditions contained in the plan. Somewhat as an afterthought , it argued in this case that sections 12 and 16 of that plan also contain waivers of any right on the part of the Union to bargain over the discontinuance of pensions . In this regard it is correct. Section 16 .4 of the Plan, entitled "Termination of the Plan," provides: The Employer intends to continue the Plan indefi- nitely for the benefit of its Employees , but reserves the right to terminate the Plan at any time by reso- lution of its Board of Directors . Upon such termina- tion , the liability of the Employer to make Employ- er Contributions hereunder shall terminate. This language , to which the Union adhered when it agreed to section 21.4 of the basic collective-bargaining agreement , is a clear and unambiguous waiver of its right to be consulted or to object, during the contract term, to a termination of employer contributions to the pension plan. The Respondent also points to a clause in the contract, section 24 . 1, which provides: This agreement constitutes the entire agreement be- tween the parties and concludes all collective bar- gaining negotiations for the term hereof. Inasmuch as both parties have had a full opportunity to nego- tiate with respect to all matters relating to wages, hours, and all other terms and conditions of em- ployment, neither party is under any duty to bar- gain with respect to any changes, modifications, or additions to this Agreement to take effect during its term. Such clauses, usually called zipper clauses , are often in- serted in labor contracts to make sure that there is noth- ing dangling and that, during the contract term, one party cannot force the other back to the bargaining table to discuss items that they forgot to discuss or which they deliberately avoided during negotiations but which fall within the broad definition of "wages, hours, and terms and conditions of employment" that negotiators are bound under the Act to address if called upon to do so. A resolution of this element of the consolidated com- plaint need not go so far as a consideration of the zipper clause. When, as here, the Union affirmatively agreed that the Respondent could terminate its pension plan at any time by resolution of its board of directors , the right of the Respondent to do so, free and clear of mandatory consultation or of union objections, was contractually es- tablished. The language in question left nothing to be done through negotiations when and if the employer de- cided to take the action so authorized . Accordingly, so much of the consolidated complaint which alleges that the Respondent failed to bargain in good faith with the Union when it terminated its pension plan should be dis- missed. 1250 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 3. The refusal to provide information The duty of an employer under Section 8(a)(5) of the Act to provide the bargaining representative of its em- ployees with information which is relevant to bargaining and the responsibility of the agent to represent unit em- ployees is well established . See Brooklyn Union Gas Co., 220 NLRB 189 (1975), and cases cited therein . In deter- mining relevance , the Board and the courts are not limit- ed to a tunnel -vision meaning of that word but are called upon to employ a liberal discovery-type concept of rel- evance which might be employed in ruling upon ques- tions posed during the taking of depositions . NLRB v. Acme Industrial Co., 385 U.S. 432, 437 fn. 6 (1967). One of the Respondent 's defenses is that the request for infor- mation made by the Union in this case is moot because the Hospital has closed its doors and the bargaining unit no longer exists . The right of the Union to the informa- tion requested must be determined by the situation which existed at the time the request was made, not at the time the Board or the courts get around to vindicating that right . Otherwise, important rights under the Act would be lost simply by the passage of time and the course of litigation . Part of the duty to supply relevant information includes the duty to do so in a timely fashion . Quality Engineered Products, 267 NLRB 593 (1984). Information relating to the transfer of employees and the affiliation of Mary Thompson Hospital with Bethany had arguably been requested by the Union in March 1988. It was certainly requested by Rubin at the meeting of April 22 and was renewed again on May 12. Through- out the discussions it had with the Union at this point in time, Respondent 's spokesmen frequently used the term "affiliation" or "affiliation agreement ." Now its position is that there was and is no such agreement, except possi- bly with respect to the oncology department , and all that exists is a community continuity assurance agreement be- tween the institutions , which it has refused to produce on the basis that the Agreement is confidential . The sub- ject matter of that Agreement covers such things as the transfer of the oncology service to Bethany, the continu- ation of the Mary Thompson name and tradition of serv- ice, the mutuality of service areas, and the kinds of pa- tients and service areas between Bethany and Mary Thompson Hospital . The possibility that the agreement, or other understandings between the Respondent and Bethany, relate to job opportunities , the location of assets out of which employee claims for pensions and other moneys due might be satisfied, and the underlying question of whether the Respondent is really out of busi- ness or has merged its operations with Bethany in a manner which would suggest possible ongoing obliga- tions to the Union in this case are all reasons why the terms and conditions of the community continuity assur- ance agreement and any other exchanges of correspond- ence or memoranda of understanding between Mary Thompson Hospital and Bethany Hospital would be rele- vant to collective bargaining as it could have, and should have, taken place in the spring of 1988 . For all of these reasons, I conclude that the data sought by the Union, whether formulated in a single instrument or contained in a series of written documents, is relevant to the Union's obligation to bargain collectively on behalf of the members of the Mary Thompson Hospital bargaining unit . By its refusal to supply such information , and by its refusal to supply the oncology transfer agreement in a timely fashion, the Respondent herein violated Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act. On these findings of fact and on the entire record con- sidered as a whole, I make the following CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. Respondent Mary Thompson Hospital is an employ- er engaged in commerce and in an industry affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act. 2. Warehouse, Mail Order, Office, Technical Profes- sional Employees Union, Local 743, affiliated with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, AFL-CIO, Local 73, Service Employees International Union, AFL- CIO, and Hospital Employees Labor Program of Metro- politan Chicago (HELP), and each of them, are labor or- ganizations within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. All licensed practical nurses, patient care attendants, ward clerks, utility attendants , and housekeeping and die- tary employees employed by the Respondent at its hospi- tal at 140 North Ashland Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, facil- ity, but excluding all regularly scheduled employees working less than 20 hours a week , casual employees, guards , student nurses , engineers , licensed maintenance men, licensed and/or certified employees, and supervi- sors as defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropriate for collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act. 4. At all times material herein , HELP and its sponsor- ing organizations, Local 743 and Local 73, have been the duly designated exclusive collective-bargaining represent- atives of all the Respondent 's employees employed in the unit described above in Conclusion of Law 3. 5. By failing and refusing to provide the Union herein in a timely fashion with information requested concern- ing the transfer to Bethany Hospital of the Respondent's oncology department ; and by failing and refusing to pro- vide the Union herein with requested information con- cerning the transfer to Bethany Hospital of the Respond- ent's other assets, personnel, operations , and good will, including but not limited to a community continuity as- surance agreement, the Respondent herein violated Sec- tion 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act. Said unfair labor practices have a close, intimate , and substantial effect on the free flow of commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. REMEDY Having found that the Respondent has committed cer- tain unfair labor practices, I will recommend that it be ordered to cease and desist therefrom, and that it take other affirmative actions designed to effectuate the pur- poses and policies of the Act. Accordingly, I will recom- mend that the Board direct the Respondent to provide the Union with the information requested and that it mail to each of the bargaining unit employees who were on MARY THOMPSON HOSPITAL 1251 its payroll on March 30, 1988 , a copy of the attached notice , informing them of their rights and of the results in this case. On these findings of fact and conclusions of law and on the entire record considered as a whole, I make the following recommended" ORDER The Respondent , Mary Thompson Hospital, Chicago, Illinois, its officers, agents, successors , and assigns, shall 1. Cease and desist from (a) Refusing to bargain collectively in good faith with Warehouse, Mail Order , Office, Technical Professional Employees Union , Local 743, affiliated with the Interna- tional Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs, Warehou- semen and Helpers of America, AFL-CIO, Local 73, Service Employees International Union, AFL-CIO, and Hospital Employees Labor Program of Metropolitan Chicago (HELP), as the exclusive collective -bargaining representatives of its licensed practical nurses, patient care attendants , ward clerks, utility attendants, and housekeeping and dietary attendants employed by it at its 140 North Ashland Avenue, Chicago, Illinois facility, but excluding all regularly scheduled employees working less than 20 hours a week , casual employees , guards, student nurses, engineers, licensed maintenance men, licensed and/or certified employees, and supervisors as defined in the Act. (b) Failing and refusing to provide the collective-bar- gaining agents of its employees in a timely fashion with information which is relevant to the performance of their duties as bargaining representatives. (c) By any like or related means interfering with, co- ercing , or restraining employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed to them by the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action necessary to effectuate the policies of the Act. (a) Upon request , bargain collectively in good faith with the Unions herein concerning wages, hours, and terms and conditions of employment of employees in the bargaining unit set forth in section 1(a) of this Order. (b) Furnish the Unions in a timely fashion herein with the oncology transfer agreement with Bethany Hospital, the community continuity assurance agreement , and any other documents reflecting an agreement or understand- ing between the Respondent and Bethany Hospital or its 8 If no exceptions are filed as provided by Sec. 102 46 of the Board's Rules and Regulations , the findings , conclusions , and recommended 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 pur- poses associated hospitals concerning the transfer of functions, assets, personnel , or good will of the Respondent. (c) Immediately upon receipt , mail to all bargaining unit employees who were on its payroll on March 31, 1988, copies of the attached notice, marked "Appen- dix,"9 which shall be signed by a representative of the Respondent . Copies shall be furnished to the Respondent by the Regional Director for Region 13. 8 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 Nation- al 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 " 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. WE WILL NOT refuse to bargain collectively in good faith with Warehouse , Mail Order, Office, Technical Professional Employees Union , Local 743, affiliated with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, AFL-CIO, Local 73, Service Employees International Union, AFL- CIO, and Hospital Employees Labor Program of Metro- politan Chicago (HELP), as the exclusive collective-bar- gaining representatives of certain of our employees who were employed at the Mary Thompson Hospital at 140 North Ashland Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. WE WILL NOT in any like or related means interfere with , coerce, or restrain employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed to them by the Act. WE WILL refrain from failing and refusing to furnish these Unions in a timely fashion copies of requested data which is relevant to the performance of their duties as bargaining representative of our employees. WE WILL furnish to these Unions in a timely fashion copies of the oncology transfer agreement with Bethany Hospital , the community continuity assurance agreement, and any other documents reflecting an agreement or un- derstanding with Bethany Hospital or its associated hos- pitals concerning the transfer of functions , assets, person- nel, or good will. MARY THOMPSON HOSPITAL Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation