Moore Business Forms, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsJun 27, 1973204 N.L.R.B. 552 (N.L.R.B. 1973) Copy Citation 552 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Moore Business Forms, Inc. and Graphic Arts Interna- tional Union , AFL-CIO, Petitioner. Case 1-RC- 12533 June 27, 1973 DECISION AND ORDER BY MEMBERS FANNING, KENNEDY AND PENELLO Upon a petition duly filed with Region I of the National Labor Relations Board under Section 9(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, a hearing was held on February 27 and 28, 1973, before Hearing Officer Thomas P. Kennedy. Thereafter, pur- suant to Section 102.67 of the National Labor Rela- tions Board Rules and Regulations and Statements of Procedure, Series 8, as amended, and by direction of the Regional Director for Region 1, this case was transferred to the Board for decision. Thereafter, the Employer and the Petitioner filed briefs. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the Na- tional Labor Relations Board has delegated its au- thority in this proceeding to a three-member panel. The Board has reviewed the Hearing Officer's rul- ings made at the hearing and finds that they are free from prejudicial error; they are hereby affirmed. Upon the entire record in this case, including the briefs filed herein, the Board finds: 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. The labor organization involved claims to repre- sent certain employees of the Employer. 3. The Employer, at its Manchester plant, the only plant involved herein, manufactures complex contin- uous business forms. A complex continuous form is an assembly of carbons and papers punched so that it can be fed over the customer's automatic printing device or computer. The Petitioner seeks to represent a unit of all bind- ery and shipping employees including collator opera- tors and helpers, slittermen, carbon rewind operators, carbon coater operators, material handlers, and ship- ping and receiving employees. The Employer contends that because of the inte- grated nature of its operation with overlapping job functions and production processes, the only appro- priate unit is a production and maintenance unit in- cluding those job categories sought by Petitioner and press operators and helpers, preliminary employees, planners, and maintenance employees. There is no history of collective bargaining at this plant. All the principal manufacturing operations are per- formed in a large open area. In the center of this area are four enclosed cages: a stock cage where paper and carbon are stored, a machine shop cage where mainte- nance personnel maintain the equipment, an ink cage, and a number cage.' North of the cages are the colla- tors; south, east, and west of the cages are the press units; and also east of the cages are slitters, rewinders, and carbon coaters. The remaining part of the plant is partitioned into three other large sections: central storage, which in- cludes a carbon kettle storage area, and a docket and preliminary storage cage where reusable plates for both the presses and collators are kept; a finished goods storage area, which also includes shipping, and a security cage for negotiable instruments printed for customers; and a section subdivided into rooms for the preliminary department, customers' and confer- ence rooms, planning, superintendents' offices, and clericals. The Employer's operation is divided into five de- partments, each headed by a superintendent. The pre- liminary department has approximately 45 employees and includes typesetting, camera, pasteap, and plate- making employees.' The press department has ap- proximately 68 press operators and helpers and I number head specialist.' The finishing (collating) de- partment has approximately 48 collator operators and helpers. The carbon manufacturing and material han- dling department, which includes carbon coating, car- bon rewinder, slitters, and warehouse job functions, has approximately 35 employees of whom 15 operate the carbon coaters, rewinders, and slitters, 12 are ma- terial handlers who transport raw material and fin- ished goods among all departments 4 and do janitorial work, and 8 general planners whose job is to route the work efficiently through the plant. The maintenance and engineering department has approximately 10 employees who service all machines I and the build- ing. The press department has 23 press units which print, assemble paper and carbon tissue sheets, glue, punch, perforate, slit, fold, and stripe the forms. Four presses are similar to the carbon manufacturing and material handling department's carbon coating ma- chines in that they can apply carbon dope to tissue in a patterned configuration. Approximately 35 percent of the business forms are completed by the presses and are packed at the presses. 1 Printing devices used by both the presses and collators to consecutively number the forms being produced are stored in this cage 2 These employees make plates for the presses and collators and also collect reusable plates from the various departments for storage in the prelim- inary material storage area t The employee responsible for numbering units, see in. I. Press and collator helpers also help move raw materials to, and finished goods from, their respective departments 5 All employees also do some basic maintenance work on their machines 204 NLRB No. 93 MOORE BUSINESS FORMS The finishing (collating) department's 14 collating machines are used in the remaining 65 percent of the forms to insert carbon tissue into the forms and to do more complicated gluing, perforating, slitting, and folding than the press units. The collators also print consecutive numbers. One collator also prints mag- netic ink characters and most collators can print lines and borders. The carbon manufacturing and material handling department consists of slitting machines which cut paper or tissue into the proper width needed for a job for the presses, collators, and carbon coating ma- chines; carbon coating machines which apply carbon dope on the tissue's entire surface and carbon coaters which can apply the carbon dope in a patterned con- figuration; and carbon rewinders which punch holes in the carbon paper margins to enable the paper to be aligned with the marginal punching performed on the press units. These holes allow the paper to be moved through the collators. The requested unit consists of all employees of the finishing (collating) department and all employees of the carbon manufacturing and material handling de- partment except the latter department's eight general planners. Most new employees are hired without any printing experience. They receive a short orientation course with limited emphasis on their specific job. The new employees are then immediately sent to their work assignments where they acquire most of their skills 553 while on the job. The facts in this case are substantially similar to those in Moore Business Forms, Inc.,6 where the Board found a substantially identical unit inappropriate. We find that the requested employees do not constitute a well-defined group of employees entitled to separate representation. All production and maintenance em- ployees, except preliminary, shipping, and storage employees, work in one large area; printing presses perform collating, punching, and slitting functions; and collators perform some printing functions. Em- ployees in the requested unit service both presses and collators and the employees in question do not share the same supervision and those sought in the carbon manufacturing and material handling department share their supervision with employees not requested. We conclude that the unit sought is a heterogene- ous grouping of employees and inappropriate for pur- poses of collective bargaining. Accordingly, as no question affecting commerce exists concerning the representation of employees of the Employer within the meaning of Sections 9(c)(1) and 2(6) and (7) of the Act, we shall dismiss the petition herein. ORDER It is hereby ordered that the petition herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed. 6 173 NLRB 1 133 The Employer's operation in the instant case is virtually identical to the operation in the earlier Moore Business Forms case which involved a sister plant of the plant involved here Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation