General Electric Company v. National Labor Relations Board, Local 571, Sheet Metal Workers International Association, Intervenor

916 F.2d 1163, 135 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2846, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 18323
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 18, 1990
Docket89-2362, 89-2538
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 916 F.2d 1163 (General Electric Company v. National Labor Relations Board, Local 571, Sheet Metal Workers International Association, Intervenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Electric Company v. National Labor Relations Board, Local 571, Sheet Metal Workers International Association, Intervenor, 916 F.2d 1163, 135 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2846, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 18323 (7th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

BAUER, Chief Judge.

The General Electric Company (“G.E.”) petitions this court for review of a decision and order of the National Labor Relations Board (“N.L.R.B.” or “Board”), reported at 294 NLRB No. 11 (May 23, 1989) (“Board Decision”). In that decision, the Board affirmed and adopted (with one modification discussed below) the decision of the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”), who held that G.E. violated sections 8(a)(1) and 8(a)(5) of the National Labor Relations Act (“Act”), 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1) & (5), by refusing to provide information requested by Local 571, Sheet Metal Workers International Association, AFL-CIO (“Union”). The Board, in response, cross-petitions for enforcement of its order, and the Union intervenes in support of the Board’s order. At issue is the Board’s ruling that G.E.’s duty to bargain in good faith required G.E. *1165 to turn over requested cost information on certain maintenance subcontracts or be guilty of an unfair labor practice. Because that ruling is not supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole and evidences an unreasonable application of the Act, we decline to enforce the Board’s order.

I

G.E. operates an appliance manufacturing facility in Cicero, Illinois. The Union represents a unit of production and maintenance employees at G.E.’s Cicero facility. The two have been parties to collective-bargaining agreements (“CBAs”) since 1963. In all of these CBAs, including the 1985-88 CBA that was effective at the time of the actions involved here, G.E. management retained the right to subcontract. As stated in the “Management Rights” provision of the 1985-88 CBA:

The Union recognizes that the Company maintains the exclusive right to manage its business in such manner as the Company shall determine, subject only to those provisions of this Agreement which expressly qualify this right. The Company’s right to manage its business affairs shall include, but not be limited to, its rights to determine the methods and means by which its operations are to be carried on, to subcontract, to discontinue or relocate all or any portion of such operations, to assign work, to schedule hours of work including overtime, and to establish the size, composition and qualifications of the work force, to determine job classifications, standards and rates of pay and to maintain safety, efficiency and order in its plants and operations.

(Emphasis added.)

G.E.’s retention of this right has not been without some opposition. At the negotiations that preceded the 1982-85 and 1985-88 CBAs, the Union proposed changes in this language, which would have limited or eliminated G.E.’s right to subcontract maintenance work. These Union proposals were unsuccessful. Nonetheless, the Union filed numerous grievances between 1981 and 1987 regarding G.E.’s subcontracting of maintenance jobs, and the Union three times went out on strike in support of these grievances.

Most of these subcontracting grievances followed immediately on the heels of one of G.E.’s “peak periods” for maintenance jobs. For two-to-three weeks in the summer and again for two-to-three weeks in late December/ early January, G.E. shuts down its production operations at the Cicero facility. It is during these shutdowns or “peak periods” that G.E. performs its major maintenance projects. G.E. often employs subcontractors to perform some of the many individual jobs involved in these major maintenance projects, which include servicing and replacing production machinery, installing and repairing heating units, and the like.

In pursuing one of its shutdown-related grievances in 1982, the Union requested a variety of information regarding the challenged subcontracts, including the “cost per man hour of work.” In response, G.E. reiterated its “exclusive right to subcontract” contained in the CBA, and the matter appears to have ended there.

This case finds its genesis in a similar grievance filed in January, 1987. Again, the Union was grieving G.E.’s subcontracting during the late December/ early January shutdown. G.E. scheduled 64 maintenance jobs for that peak period in 1986-87. All but 12 of these jobs were designated by G.E. as “Priority 1,” which meant that they could be done only during shutdown and that cost was irrelevant. A few of the other jobs were designated “Priority 2,” which meant that they “should” be done during shutdown and that doing them during production would entail “greater cost.” The remaining jobs had no priority designation.

About 60 of the 64 scheduled jobs actually were performed during the 1986-87 shutdown. G.E.’s regular employees performed about 46 of them, subcontractors performed about 11, and the remainder were performed by both G.E. employees and subcontractors. Although there was conflicting testimony before the ALJ as to *1166 how many of the 11 subcontractor jobs could have been performed by G.E.’s regular maintenance employees, that number is no greater than three. Also, the record reveals that the vast majority of unit maintenance employees who were not on vacation during the 1986-87 shutdown worked overtime on the maintenance projects performed during that shutdown, and that all 11 of G.E.’s regular production employees who asked to work on the maintenance projects were brought over to help out.

On January 2, 1987, the Union filed a grievance protesting G.E.’s subcontracting during the 1986-87 shutdown. The grievance demanded that G.E. furnish the Union with a list of the subcontractors used, the jobs they performed, the cost of the individual jobs, and the identity of the bidders on these jobs. On January 16, G.E. and the Union held a “second-step” meeting on this grievance. (The CBA provided for a three-step grievance procedure, after which the grievance could go to arbitration if it involved an arbitrable matter under the CBA. Subcontracting was specifically exempted from the scope of arbitration.) At the second-step meeting, G.E. defended its decision to subcontract on the following grounds: its consistent and longstanding practice, protected by the CBA, of subcontracting during peak periods; all unit maintenance employees already were working at full capacity during the shutdown; much of the work had to be done during shutdown; and regular maintenance employees lacked the skills, knowledge and/or tools to perform some of the jobs.

At the subsequent third-step meetings held in February, 1987, G.E. basically repeated these same factors in defense of its decision to subcontract. At these meetings, G.E. provided the Union with some of the requested information, but refused to provide cost data. G.E. specifically and consistently asserted that cost data was irrelevant both to its decision to subcontract and to the Union’s grievance protesting that decision. For its part, the Union asserted that G.E. should hire more maintenance employees, alleging that G.E. effectively had “replaced” unit maintenance employees with subcontractors by allowing attrition in the ranks of the maintenance employees. Union officials also asserted that they wanted G.E. to stop its practice of subcontracting altogether, that the Union had a right to all of the requested subcontracting information, and that without the cost information the Union would be unable to continue with the grievance procedure.

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916 F.2d 1163, 135 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2846, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 18323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-company-v-national-labor-relations-board-local-571-ca7-1990.