The M. O'Neil Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 17, 1970181 N.L.R.B. 710 (N.L.R.B. 1970) Copy Citation 710 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD The May Department Stores Company d/b/a The M. O'Neil Company and Retail Clerks International Association , Local 698, AFL-CIO. Case 8-RC-7117 March 17, 1970 SUPPLEMENTAL DECISION, ORDER, AND DIRECTION OF SECOND ELECTION BY CHAIRMAN MCCULLOCH AND MEMBERS BROWN AND JENKINS Pursuant to a Decision and Direction of Election' issued by the National Labor Relations Board on April 23, 1969, an election by secret ballot was conducted on May 22, 1969, under the direction and supervision of the Regional Director for Region 8, among the employees in the following described unit:' All regular selling and nonselling employees at the Employer's Akron, Ohio, store, including employees of Audiophone Company of Akron, Incorporated, and all qualified "pink card" employees, but excluding professional employees, casual employees, temporary employees, seasonal employees, guards, confidential employees, supervisors as defined by the Act, and employees represented by other labor organizations. The test established in the Decision for determining eligibility of the "pink card" employees included any employee who "regularly averages 4 hours or more per week for the last quarter prior to the eligibility date." At the conclusion of the election, the parties were furnished with a tally of ballots which showed that of approximately 1528 eligible voters, 1420 cast ballots, of which 682 were cast for, and 609 against, the Petitioner, and 6 were void. There were 123 challenged ballots, a number sufficient to affect the results of the election. Thereafter, the Petitioner filed timely objections to conduct affecting the results of the election and the Employer filed timely objections to the conduct of the election and conduct affecting the results of the election. In accordance with Section 102.69 of the Board's Rules and Regulations and Statements of Procedure, Series 8, as amended, the Regional Director conducted an investigation and, on October 15, 1969, issued and duly served upon the parties his Report on Challenged Ballots and Objections. The Regional Director found that, of the 123 challenged ballots, 2 "pink card" and 11 "white card" full-time employees were eligible to vote. Of the remaining challenged ballots, more than 75 involved "pink 1175 NLRB No 97 'The Decision ordered elections to be held in three separate units This Supplemental Decision deals only with the unit involved in Case 8-RC-7l 17 card" employees. In order to determine the eligibility of these "pink card" employees, the Regional Director said that it was necessary to construe the meaning of "regularly averages 4 hours or more per week" as used in the Board's Direction of Election. According to the Regional Director, the words "regularly averages" should not be construed to mean that the employees had to have worked each week during the eligibility quarter, but rather that they worked a sufficient number of hours during the quarter with a "substantial degree of regularity." He therefore found that any "pink card" employee who "worked at least 52 hours during the quarter (13 weeks x 4 hours) and worked some time during at least 9 of the 13 weeks was eligible to vote in the election." On the basis of this formula, the Regional Director determined that 21 "pink card" employees were eligible to vote and 34 were ineligible. Seven other employees were found ineligible because they terminated their employment prior to the election, were not employed by the Employer on both the eligibility date and the day of the election, or were excluded by stipulation. Forty-eight remaining challenges were found to raise issues of fact and law which could not be resolved ex parte, but rather required a hearing. The Regional Director thus concluded that the challenges to the ballots of 34 employees (the 13 "pink card" and "white card" full-time employees and the 21 eligible "pink card" employees) were without merit and recommended that they be overruled and these ballots be opened and counted; that the challenges to the ballots of the 41 other employees discussed above be sustained; and that the challenges to the ballots of 48 employees be resolved at a hearing to be held before a duly designated Hearing Officer , unless the opening and counting of the aforementioned 34 ballots showed that the 48 ballots could not be determinative of the election. Thereafter, on November 20, 1969, the Employer filed timely exceptions to the Regional Director's Report on Challenged Ballots and Objections and a brief in support thereof. The Petitioner filed an answering brief in support of the Regional Director's Report. The Employer filed a reply to the Petitioner's brief. The Employer excepted to the Regional Director's recommendation with regard to 22 of the 34 "pink card" employees found ineligible by him, but did not except to the recommendation that the challenges to 34 of the employees be overruled and their ballots be opened and counted. The Board thereupon issued , on December 18, 1969, an Order Directing the Regional Director to Open and Count Challenged Ballots. In accordance with this Order, 33 challenged ballots were opened, with the revised tally of ballots showing 690 votes for Petitioner and 634 votes against . Sixty-nine contested challenged ballots remained in issue . One challenged ballot 181 NLRB No. 109 THE MAY DEPARTMENT STORES 711 which the Board had ordered counted was not counted because of a discrepancy in the spelling of the name. The undetermined challenged ballots are .still sufficient to affect the results of the election. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel. Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds: 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. The labor organization involved claims to represent certain employees of the Employer. 3. A 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. 4. The appropriate unit is as previously described. 5. The Board has considered the Regional Director's Report, the exceptions and briefs, and the entire record in this case, and finds as follows: In addition to its exception urging that 22 of the 34 "pink card" employees found ineligible by the Regional Director should have their ballots counted, the Employer asserts that the Board's original formula was vague and uncertain and provided insufficient guidance to the parties. Thus, the Employer argues, the stated formula which enfranchised "any employee who regularly averages 4 hours or more per week for the last quarter prior to the eligibility date" could be construed in a variety of ways. In compiling the eligibility list, the Employer construed the formula broadly, according to a liberal eligibility formula which it had urged upon the Board prior to issuance of the Decision and Direction of Election. At the election, the Employer charges, the Union was able to challenge the ballots of those part-time employees whom the Union preferred not to vote and to pass without challenge other "pink card" employees with work records similar to those challenged. In construing the Board's formula after the election, the Regional Director settled upon a standard (52 hours and 9 out of 13 weeks) which was more stringent than the formula used by the Employer in compiling the eligibility list. This procedure has resulted, the Employer alleges, in a large number of "pink card" employees having been placed on the eligibility list and having voted unchallenged who did not, in fact, meet the minimum work history requirements now announced by the Regional Director as essential to qualification. It appears to us that the Board's failure to prescribe more precise standards for the eligibility of "pink card" employees has resulted in a situation in which the potential for inequity to all parties looms large. The most direct and expeditious way of righting the situation is to require that another election be held, under a more well-defined formula. It is regrettable that the parties must be put to the burden of waging another election campaign. We believe, however, that the paramount consideration before us is the right of the employees to an equitable and democratic election. In the hope of achieving fairness to all parties, we shall order that a new election be held.3 As noted in our earlier Decision, "pink card" employees are either full-time probationary employees or employees who work less than 20 hours per week. Included in the category of "pink card" part-time employees are students, social security annuitants, and other employees. While the record discloses the hours that such employees have worked in the past, it is inconclusive as to the certainty with which they are generally scheduled. It appears that some are regularly scheduled for at least 4 hours a week (even though in what is a weekly "on call" status); others work only during busy retail seasons, such as the Christmas season; and still others work irregularly when the Employer needs them. While there is disagreement as to the extent of turnover among these employees, there is no disagreement that there is, in fact, high turnover. Thus, the problems presented by "pink card" employees are different from those present in dealing with regular employees. In the selection of an equitable formula for determining the eligibility of these "pink card" employees, we are concerned with assuring the existence of a sufficient community of interest between the "pink card" employees and the other employees in the unit. A showing of regularity and currency of employment, as demonstrated by meeting minimum requirements of hours and distribution of days worked over a recent period of time, would indicate that such a community of interest exists. With these considerations in mind, we conclude that any "pink card" part-time employee who worked 4 hours or more per weekly payroll period in 9 of the 13 weekly payroll periods preceding the date of this Direction of Election; and any "pink card" employee who began work after the start of such 13-week period, but no later than in the seventh week of such 13-week period, and who worked 4 hours or more per week in two-thirds of the weeks between the week in which he began work and the end of the 13-week period, should be eligible to vote. The latter requirement shall be construed to mean that an employee who began work in the 'See N L R B v Joclin Manufacturing Company, 314 F 2d 627 (C A 2), in which the Court was dealing with the validity of a certification which had given rise to an 8 (a)(5) charge The Court held that there were errors of law or factual issues that entitled the Employer to a hearing in the representation case and it remanded the case to the Board . The Court also noted that it saw nothing "that would prevent the Board, if so advised, from determining that , in view of the lapse of time, a new election, with a more clearly defined bargaining unit, to be held on consent or other appropriate proceedings , would serve the purpose of the statute more fully than further inquiry into this old and at best exceedingly close one " 712 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD second week of the 13-week period must have worked 4 hours or more in 8 weeks of the period; an employee who began work in the third or fourth week must have worked in 7 weeks of the period; an employee who began in the fifth week must have worked in 6 weeks; and an employee who began in the sixth or seventh week must have worked in 5 weeks of the period. The requirement of 4 hours or more per payroll period and of two-thirds of the payroll periods is designed to insure that an employee has worked a minimum amount of time, with regularity, over a reasonable period in the quarter, so as to have a community of interest with other employees in the unit. It is also designed to indicate currency in employment - to sift out employees who worked a large number of hours in the first few weeks of the quarter with no indication that they will work again. Of course, any employee terminated prior to the end of the eligibility period or the election shall not be permitted to vote. In like manner, a minimum of 7 weeks' experience is used as the eligibility period for measuring new hires to insure that their employment demonstrates some regularity and currency. We find that the following employees of the Employer, at its Akron, Ohio, store, constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of the Act: All regular selling and nonselling employees, including employees of Audiophone Company of Akron, Incorporated , and all qualified "pink card" employees , but excluding professional employees, casual employees , temporary employees , seasonal employees , guards, confidential employees, supervisors as defined by the Act, and employees represented by other labor organizations. ORDER It is hereby ordered that the election previously conducted herein on May 22, 1969, be, and it hereby is, set aside. [Direction of Second Election's omitted from publication.] As it is clear that "The May Company" is not part of the Employer's name, and as inclusion on the ballot may be misleading or confusing, the Employer 's name on the ballot shall appear as "the M O',Neil Company " We note the parties have agreed to the above 'In order to assure that all eligible voters may have the opportunity to be informed of the issues in the exercise of their statutory right to vote, all parties to the election should have access to a list of voters and their addresses which may be used to communicate with them Excelsior Underwear Inc, 156 NLRB 1236, N L R B v Wyman-Gordon Company, 394 U S 759 Accordingly, it is hereby directed that an election eligibility list, containing the names and addresses of all the eligible voters, must be filed by 'the Employer with the Regional Director for Region 8 within 7 days of the date of issuance of the Notice of Second Election by the Regional Director The Regional Director shall make the list available to all parties to the election No extension of time to file this list shall be granted by the Regional Director except in extraordinary circumstances Failure to comply with this requirement shall be grounds for setting aside the election whenever proper objections are filed Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation