The J. L. Hudson Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsDec 7, 1965155 N.L.R.B. 1345 (N.L.R.B. 1965) Copy Citation THE J. L. HUDSON COMPANY 1345 (b) Notify the Regional Director for Region 2, in writing, within 20 days from the date of receipt of the Trial Examiner's Decision as to what steps the Respondent has taken to comply herewith.12 za In the event that this Recommended Order be adopted by the Board, this provision shall be modified to read "Notify the Regional Director for Region 2, in writing , within 10 days from the date of this Order , as to what steps the Respondent has taken to comply herewith." APPENDIX NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES Pursuant to the Recommended Order of a Trial Examiner of the National Labor Relations Board, and in order to effectuate the policies of the National Labor Rela- tions Act, as amended, we hereby notify our employees that:. WE WILL NOT coercively interrogate employees concerning their union mem- bership, sympathies, and activities or those of other employees; or threaten to discharge or take other action against against employees in reprisal for their union membership, sympathies, and activities; or harass employees for the pur- pose of discouraging union membership. WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization, to form labor organizations, to join or assist Taxi Drivers Organizing Committee, AFL-CIO, or any other labor organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of col- lective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection , or to refrain from any or all such activities, except to the extent that such right may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization •as a condition of employment, as authorized in Section 8(a) (3) of the Act. A & A MAINTENANCE CORPORATION, . Employer. Dated------------------- By------------------------------------------- (Representative ) ( Title) This notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the date of posting, and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. If employees have any question concerning this notice or compliance with its provisions , they may communicate directly with the Board's Regional Office, Fifth Floor, Squibb Building, 745 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, Telephone No. 751-5500. The J. L. Hudson Company and Building Service Employees' In- ternational Union , Local No. 79, AFL-CIO, Petitioner and Local Union No. 58, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO, Petitioner and Local Union No. 547, International Union of Operating Engineers, AFL-CIO, Petitioner and Paint- ers District Council No. 22, Brotherhood of Painters , Decorators and Paperhangers of America , AFL-CIO, Petitioner and Car- penters Local 337, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, AFL-CIO, Petitioner . Cases Nos. 7-RC- 6692, 7-RC-6731, 7-RC-6749, 7-RC-6750, and 7-RC-6751. De- cember 7, 1965 DECISION AND DIRECTION OF ELECTIONS Upon separate petitions duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, a consolidated hearing was held 155 NLRB No. 133. 1346 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD before Hearing Officer George Rallis at Detroit, Michigan. The Hearing Officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. Upon the entire record in this ease.' the National Labor Relations Board finds: 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. The Petitioners are labor organizations Within the meaning of the Act, claiming to represent certain employees of the Employer. 3. Questions affecting commerce exist concerning the representa_ tion of employees of the Employer within the meaning of Section 9(c) (1) and Section 2(6) and (7) of the act.. 4. Each of the Petitioner seeks to represent a different unit of employees at the Employer's department store in downtown Detroit, Michigan, none of which are represented by any labor organization .2 The Employer contends that no unit limited to employees at the down- town store is, appropriate. and also that. Petitioners are seeking inap- propriately limited units of employees at that store. The units sought are as follows : 1. In Case No. 7-RC-6751, the Carpenters 3 seeks an election in a unit of all carpenters in the carpentry department. 2. In Case No. 7-RC-6750, the Painters 4 seeks a unit of all painters in the painting department. 3. In Case No. 7-RC-6749, the Operating Engineers 5 seeks a unit in the. mechanical engineering department consisting of a licensed boiler operator and the. licensed refrigeration equipment operators and repairmen. 4. In Case N o. 7-R.C-6731, the Electricians 6 seeks a lmit in the electrical engineering department consisting of employees working as electricians. 5. In Case No. 7-RC-6692, the Building Service Employees 7 seeks a. unit of orderlies and maids (who together constitute the housekeeping 1 The Employer 's request for oral argument is hereby denied as the records and briefs adequately present the issues and positions of the parties. 212ne only existing collective-bargaining relationships the Employer has are with a union not a petitioner here which represents units of all delivery drivers and helpers (pursuant to a consent election and certification ) and of all warehouse employees (pur- suant to another consent election and certification ). In an earlier decision , however, the Board noted a 1944 certification for a unit of passenger elevator operators . J. L. Hudson Compa4sy, 103 NLRB 1378, 1379, footnote 4. 8 Carpenters Local No. 337, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, AFL-CIO. 4 Painters District Council No. 22, Brotherhood of Painters , Decorators and Paperhangers of America , AFL-CIO. 5 Local Union No. 547, International Union of Operating Engineers , AFL-CIO. s Local Union 58, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO. 7 Building Service Employees ' International Union, Local No. 79, AFL-CIO. THE J. L. HUDSON COMPANY 1347 department), passenger elevator operators (organized into a separate department), and freight elevator operators (located in the receiving department). Initially, we shall consider whether units limited to the downtown store are appropriate. The Employer operates three large retail department stores within the Detroit metropolitan area, one being located in the center of Detroit ("Downtown" store) and two ("North- land" and "Eastland" stores) in outlying suburbs.8 Each of the buildings containing these stores also contains a budget store which the Employer administers separately from the. regular stores; four other budget stores are located in various suburbs. To support this large retail operation, the Employer has five warehouses, three delivery substations, and two garages. Approximately one-half the Employer's 16,000 employees work at the Downtown store. Corporate officers are located at this store. Buyers located in the Downtown store purchase merchandise for all three department stores, and, separately, for the budget stores. The buyers establish uniform prices for the stores and, when necessary, have merchandise transferred from one store to another. Sales promo- tion and advertising, billing and credit, and deliveries are also centrally handled. In short, purchasing and merchandising for all locations is centralized at the Downtown offices. In personnel matters a cor- porate vice president and director of personnel establishes broad corporate policies with respect to, for example, age restrictions, physi- cal examinations, and levels of benefits for given job classifications. Each store has a personnel manager who operates within the frame- work of such policies. The foregoing factors indicate that units comprising employees at all stores may be appropriate., but they do not demonstrate that companywide units are alone appropriate. The following factors indicate that units limited to Downtown store employees are also appropriate. The Downtown store. is run by a store manager, as are the other main stores. The store manager has the authority necessary to run his store on a day-to-day basis, a part from the authority centralized in the buyers) with respect to selling, providing customer services, normal maintenance, and the controlling of costs in these areas. The personnel executive for the Downtown store, under the immediate supervision of the store manager, ordinarily does the hiring (of nonsupervisory> employees), promoting, granting of merit wage increases, and discharge of employees with less than 5 years' service. The corporate personnel director stated his function in such matters as being `-not [to] 'Look at names": his "job is to see that one store does not get out of line in relatively- the same jobs." s The record shows that the Employer was to open another suburban store ("West- land") in July 1955. 212-809-66-col. 155-86 1348 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Employees at each location operate under single-store supervision. The Downtown store has an assistant superintendent (property) up-der paint-Whom are the mechanical engineering, electrical enginering, ing, carpentry, and housekeeping (maids and orderlies)) departments, each of which is separately supervised. Only the_ Downtown store of the three main stores has a maintenance department divided along such craft lines. There me occasional permanent transfers of employees from one of the Employer's locations to another but, as the parties stipulated, virtually all nonselling jobs are- filled by the hiring of persons from outside the. Employer.9 Temporary assignment of Downtown store employees to another location is minimal; virtually all employees here involved never work at another location. In our view, the above-enumerated, circumstances warrant the estab- lishment of units limited to the. Downtown store.1° To -summarize, support for such units isfound in the authority of the store manager in personnel matters, in the minimal employee interchange between the Downtown- store and other locations, the geographical separation of the stores, the lack of bargaining history on a multaistore -basis, and the fact that no labor organization seeks to represent employees on a broader.basis-ll The appropriateness of the various units petitioned .for-remains to be considered The Employer contends that the units sought at the Downtown store are inappropriate because the smallest appropriate unit is one which would include all selling and nonselling employees at the store. This contention, premised on the view that sto"rewide units are exclusively appropriate because of policies unique to the retail industry, has recently been rejected by the Board: 12 Although the Board has regarded the storewide unit in retail establishments as "basically appropriate" or the "optimum unit," it has held that the single comprehensive unit is not the only appropriate unit in such establishments. Thus it has directed 9 Large-scale transfers did occur when the two suburban stores opened. When Northland opened in 1954, about 500 Downtown store employees permanently transferred to the new store. Eastland opened in 1957 and about 300 employees transferred there. In each case such transfers accounted for about 20 percent of the staff at the new store. iJ. W. Mays, Inc., 147 NLRB 968. See also The May Department Stores Company, d/b/a Famous-Barr Company, 153 11%-LRB 341 ; The W. H. Block Company, 151 NLRB 318 ; San;-On Drugs, Inc., 138 NLRB 1032. n We also reject the Employer 's argument that no support exists for single-store units other than the extent of organization . We have just stated the factors supporting our determination that such units are appropriate. v Anted Stares of New York, Inc., d/b/a Stern's, Paramus, 150 NLRB 799. The Em- ployer seeks to distinguish Stern's, Paramus and related cases (Arnold Constable Corpo- ration, 150 NLRB 788 ; Lord ,& Taylor, A Division of Associated Dry Goods Corporation, 150 NLRB 812 ) by limiting these cases to their particular facts. We do not, however, consider those cases so limited and consider them authority for our decision here that units smaller than a storewide unit may be appropriate. THE J. L. HUDSON COMPANY 1349 elections in separate units of selling and of nonselling employees where there has been agreement among the parties or a history of collective bargaining. And the Board has recognized the differences in work and interest of many occupations in retail department stores and has directed elections in a variety of small units. Such units are : restaurant, bakery, office employees, altera- tion department, display employees, and carpet installers. Simi- larly, the Board has directed elections in units of warehouse employees, building services employees, beauty salon employees, and truckdrivers. [Citations omitted.] 13. Moreover-and of particular relevance here-is the fact that "Collective-bargaining agreements covering... craft units are common in [this] industry."14 Although we have not recently had occasion to determine the appropriateness of traditional craft units in depart- ment stores, we find no reason to treat differently requests for such units in this industry from the manner in which we have long treated requests for similar units in other industries 15 We therefore -reject the Employer's arguments that units less than storewide in scope are not appropriate. The Carpenters seeks an election in a unit comprising "All employees working as carpenters in or from the maintenance carpentry shop" at the Downtown store. -There are 17 employees classified as carpenters at this store-, all of whom work in the "carpentry shop," i.e., the car- pentry department under the supervision of a foreman who reports to the assistant superintendent (property). The Employer has a 4-year training program for carpenter shop employees not possessing tradi- tional craft skills, and 2 of the 17 present carpenters are trainees or apprentices. As is customary in this craft., the Employer provides power tools while the employees provide their own hand tools. There is no doubt that the carpenter shop employees comprise a traditional craft group, such as has often been recognized as an appropriate craft imiL16 Accordingly, we find the requested unit of carpenters to be appropriate. The Painters seeks an election in a unit of "all employees working as painters in or from the Maintenance Paint Shop" at the Downtown store. There are 10 painters in the painting department, and they con- is Interestingly, one of the citations is to an earlier J. L. Hudson decision, 103 NLRB 1378, where the Board found appropriate units of "cutters , layers, and sewers" in the carpet workroom ; "upholsterers , upholstery cutters, sewers, welt makers, cushion fillers, cushion sealers and trainees" engaged in the upholstery and drapery workrooms and "Multigraph and printshop" employees. 1*Allied Stores of New York, Inc., d/b/a Stern's, Paramus, supra. 15 See discussion of Board policy in retail industry in Sav-On Drugs, Inc., 138 NLRB 1032. 1s E.g., Sullivan Mining Company, et al., 101 NLRB 1866 , 1372; Standard Oil Company of California, 79 NLRB 1466 , 1471-1472. 1350 DECISIONS OF NATION-AL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD stitute a traditional craft groUp.17 The only other Downtown store painter is a spray painter in the display department. The Employer objects to the e-sclusion of the display painter from the. unit, and -se find merit in the objection. The painter in the display department works exclusively on display department projects, primarily spraying displays and decorations (to be used at the Downtown store) under the supervision of the manager of the department. The painters in the painting department do all the other painting at the Downtown store which is not con- tracted out by the Employer. This includes all of the normal mainte- nance painting, miscellaneous painting, and spray work for the budget store's displays. There is no difference in the wages or other benefits received by the display painter and the other painters. The, display department spray painter possesses the skills of the maintenance painters. Since the display painter possesses the same skills as the other paint- ers, has the same rate of pay and benefits, and since other painters also do display painting, we shall include the display department painter in the. unit with the painting department. employees. The Electricians seeks an election in a unit composed of the 10 licensed electricians and the 3 electricians trainees in the electrical engineering department. The Employer's specific objection to this proposed unit is the exclusion of the other employees in the depart- ment, consisting of six elevator repairmen and three small machinery repairmen. We find merit in the Employer's objection to the exclusion of the elevator repairmen from the proposed unit. The electricians perform maintenance work on the store's electrical and internal communications system and repair some motors and fans. They exercise the traditional skills of maintenance- electricians in performing this work. The Employer had a training program to qualify these employees for their licenses. Four licensed elevator repairmen maintain the elevators and escalators in the stores; the two unlicensed repairmen, who work at night, primarily lubricate the escalators. The small machinery repairmen maintain the pneumatic tube system, the measuregraph equipment (which measures yard goods) , ticket choppers, and charge plate imprinters. The elevator and small machinery. repairmen do not perform electricians' work. The skills of the. elevator repairmen, however, are like those of the electricians, albeit more specialized, and in fact a majority of the -Licensed elevator repairmen have held electricians' licenses. We find that the electricians are a craft group appropriate. for bargaining purposes.18 We shell include in this unit the elevator 17 E.g., W. C. Hamilton and Sons, 104 NLRB 627, 630 ; The Kroger Company, 103 NLRB 218, 220. 19 E.g., Screw Products Corporation of America., 106 NLRB 401; Schwein Engineering Company, 101 NLRB 662, 664 ; Blue Diamond Corporation, at al., 81 NLRB 484, 487. THE J . L. HUDSON COMPANY 1351 repairmen since they have craft skills closely akin to those of electri- cians and have the same supervision. We shall exc-lude the macliinery repairmen because they are not electrician craftsmen, apprentices, or helpers. The Operating Engineers seeks an election in a unit composed of "licensed boiler operators, licensed refrigeration equipment operators and apprentices, and the personnel repairing said boiler and refrigera- tion equipment" at the Downtown store. This proposed unit includes the single boiler operator (licensed) and the eight refrigeration equip- ment inechanics (all licensed) in the store, all of whom are located in the mechanical engineering department. The Employer objects to the exclusion from the proposed -unit of 18 other employees consisting of 4 heavy and 4 light machinery repairmen, 6 duct cleaners and oilers, 2 plumbers, and 2 general maintenance employees. We Find partial merit in the Employer's position. Mechanical Engineer AlePeek testified that he supervises all the employees specified in the previous paragraph, but that in fact. they comprise. ',o separately budgeted departments: 5060, referred to by other witnesses as the heat control and powerplant unit, which Me-Peek defined as having to do with air conditioning; and 5040, a general maintenance department. - The employees whom the Petitioner seeks to include in the unit all work in department 5060. The eight refrigeration operators and mechanics include a working leader, six refrigeration equipment operators who perform normal maintenance, and one. relief operator.ls There are also heavy machinery repairmen in 5060 who do routine servicing of the refrigeration equipment just as do the licensed per- sonnel in the department; six duct cleaners and oilers who do the less skilled maintenance work on the. refrigeration equipment, such as changing filters and oiling, and also clean the store's air ducts; and a licensed boiler operator. In department 5040, the light machinery repairmen repair small machinery and drinking fountains, perform welding for plumbers, maintain shop tools, and equipment, and answer the shop telephone. The two plumbers in 5040, who are licensed, do normal maintenance plumbing and the two general maintenance men do a variety of less skilled maintenance work including a great deal of shelving work. The three heavy machinery repairmen in 5040 do major maintenance work on the pumps, fans, and other equipment, including some work on the refrigeration equipment under the direction of licensed per- sonnel in department 5060. Department 5060 performs a distinct, specialized function in the operation of the Downtown store. All the employees in the department 1e Five have first-class licenses , two have second -class licenses, and one has a third-class license. 1352 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD perform related work, with the largest number of employees highly skilled and licensed refrigeration equipment mechanics and operators.20 All of the, department employees work snider the same supervision. Under these circumstances, we believe, that all of the employees in department 5060 have a strong community of interest and should be included in the same unit. We so find. The Building Service Employees seeks a unit described in its amended petition as "All employees of the housekeeping department... including orderlies and 'maids, and all elevator operators." Its brief refers to this proposed unit as "intended to encompass all employees.. . who perform traditional custodial, janitorial, and service duties." The employees in this proposed unit are approximately 67 maids and 89 orderlies who together constitute the housekeeping department, plus the 74 passenger elevator operators in their own department, plus 15 freight elevator operators who together with several checkers con- stitute the receiving department .21- The Employer objects to the proposed unit because restaurant orderlies are excluded, and because the groups of employees sought to be jointly represented cannot appro- priately form a separate unit. Most of the maids are termed "house-keeping maids" and work during the day from numerous janitor closets throughout the store perform- ing various cleaning chores. These maids are supervised exclusively by their departmental supervisors. About six maids are "selling maids" and are assigned to a particular department to keep the mer- chandise_ciean, e.g., a maid is assigned to the glassware department to keep the glasses clean.' These several maids are directed - to some extent by the supervisor of the selling department in which they work. Housekeeping-maids act as substitutes for selling maids when neces- sary. Orderlies work either during the day or night. _ They perform a great variety of work-from answering telephones at night to trash collection and assisting maintenance craftsmen-but the orderlies are basically a janitorial group of employees and primarily maintain the premises and do routine custodial work. Passenger elevator operators operate the passenger elevators. Freight elevator operators load their elevators as directed, take the load to the floors indicated, and unload it. We have in the past found appropriate units such as that proposed here grouping together janitorial employees and elevator operators,22 and the grouping otherwise appears to be a traditional one in this and aD Hawley & Hoops, Inc., 115 NLRB 1276. 21 Orderlies and freight elevator operators at the warehouses are represented by the union certified as representative of the warehouse employees. 22 The Title Guarantee Company, 97 1 LRB 1497 ; The Bailey Department Stores Com- pany, '85 NLRB 312; Thalh4mer Brothers, Incorporated, 83 NLRB 664. DETRAY PLATING WORKS, INC. 1353 similar industries.23 We shall therefore direct an election in this unit here. We shall exclude restaurant orderlies from the unit since they do not work with unit employees, their work is distinctive, they do not have common supervision, and they are in a separate department. Restaurant orderlies would appropriately belong in a unit of restau- rant employees. Accordingly, we find that the following units of employees of the Employer at its downtown Detroit, Michigan, department store, excluding from each unit all other employees and supervisors as defined in the Act, are. appropriate for the purpose of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act : 1. In Case No. 7-RC-6692: All passenger elevator operators, freight elevator operators, and maids and orderlies in the housekeep- ing department, excluding restaurant orderlies. 2. In Case No. 7-RC-6731: All electricians and electrician trainees, licensed and unlicensed, and elevator repairmen in the electrical engi- neering department, excluding small machinery repairmen. 3. In Case No. 7-RC-6749: All licensed refrigeration equipment operators and mechanics, trainees for said license, licensed boiler opera- tors, duct cleaners and oilers, and the heavy machinery repairmen in department 5060,. excluding all employees in department 5040. 4. In Case \o. 7-RC-6750: All painters and painter trainees in the painting department, and spray painters in the display department. 5. In Case No. 7-RC-6751: All carpenters and carpenter trainees in the carpentry department. [Text of Direction of Elections oniitted'from publication.] MEMBER JE. KINS took no part in the, consideration of the above Decision and Direction of Elections. - 28 See Arnold Constable Corporation; 150 NLRB 788, footnote 11. DeTray Plating -Works, Inc. and Des Moines Associate Workers Union -No. 5, International Mailers Union. -Case No. 18-CA- 1975. December 8,1965 DECISION AND ORDER On September 21, 1965, Trial Examiner William W. Kapell issued his Decision herein, finding that Respondent had engaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint 155 NLRB No. 129. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation