Newspaper Printing Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board

692 F.2d 615, 111 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2824, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 24435
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 1, 1982
Docket80-1567
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 692 F.2d 615 (Newspaper Printing Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newspaper Printing Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board, 692 F.2d 615, 111 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2824, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 24435 (6th Cir. 1982).

Opinion

ENGEL, Circuit Judge.

The National Labor Relations Board and Newspaper Printing Corporation (“the Company”) petition for enforcement and review, respectively, of an order of the Board dated July 28, 1980 and reported at 250 N.L.R.B. No. 132. The order affirmed a determination by the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) that the Company had violated sections 8(a)(1) and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act (“Act”) by bargaining to impasse on a modification of the bargaining unit and by thereafter unilaterally implementing changes in the terms and conditions of employment of employees within the unit.

Our review is confined to the question whether there was substantial evidence to support the Board’s findings in the face of the Company’s claim that it had bargained to impasse on unit jurisdiction, or work assignment, but not on the description of the appropriate bargaining unit, which sets forth the scope of a union’s representation.

The dispute must be viewed in light of changes in technology which have substantially altered the methods by which words are transmitted from their author to the pages of the newspaper and changes in the publishing business itself. Typesetting has progressed from “hot type” to “cold type” to “optical scanning” to “on line” transmission directly from the writer to the typesetting machine. 1 As a result, typesetting as a *617 skilled trade has largely disappeared from the newspaper printing business, and during the past twenty years the technology of typesetting has seen the linotype machine largely relegated to history. In the publishing business, economic difficulties faced by the nation’s newspapers in their struggle to compete with other media for the advertising dollar have forced them to turn to increasingly automated, complex and expensive machinery. 2 A careful review of the record and the extensive negotiations between the Company and Nashville Typographical Union, No. 20 (“the Union”), which finally led to impasse, clearly discloses the concerns faced by both management and union as a result of the ongoing changes in the methods of typesetting.

The Company and the Union have had a long history of collective bargaining. The most recent collective bargaining agreement before the negotiations that led to impasse covered the period from 1972 to 1975. In Article I of that agreement, the parties had consensually defined the appropriate bargaining unit in the following clause:

JURISDICTION
Sec. 3. Jurisdiction of the Union and the appropriate unit for collective bargaining is defined as including all composing room work and includes classifications such as hand compositors, typesetting machine operators, makeup men, proofpress operators, proofreaders, machinists for typesetting machines, operators and machinists on all devices which cast or compose type or slugs, or film, operators of tape perforating machines and recutter units for use in composing or producing type, operators of all phototypesetting machines such as Fotosetter, Photon, Linofilm, Monophoto, Coxhead Liner, Filmotype, and Hadego, and employees engaged in proofing, waxing and paste make-up with reproduction proofs, processing the product of phototypesetting machines, paste-makeup of all type, hand-lettered illustrative, border and decorative material constituting a part of the copy; ruling; photoproofing; correction; alteration; and imposition of the paste-makeup serving as the completed copy for the camera used in the plate-making process. Paste-makeup for the *618 camera as used in this paragraph includes all photostats and prints used in offset or letter-press work and includes all photostats and positive proofs of illustrations (such as Velox) where positive proofs can be supplied without sacrifice of quality or duplication of efforts. The Employer shall make no other agreement covering work above mentioned, especially no contract using the word “stripping” to do any of the work above mentioned.

App. 28 (emphasis added). 3

At the time the 1972-75 agreement was negotiated, the Company was using primarily cold type and automated hot type processes. When the time came to negotiate a new agreement, however, the Company had begun to switch to a computer-aided typesetting process which used optical scanning equipment and made it unnecessary for composing room employees to retype or “rekeyboard” material that had already been typed by editorial or advertising employees. Both parties recognized that the language of the 1972-75 contract was outmoded because it referred to types of labor and mechanical processes which had long since disappeared and, at the same time, failed to resolve disputes concerning the Union’s jurisdiction over the newer work methods either being employed or desired to be employed by the Company.

Negotiations for a new contract continued over more than two years. The parties could not agree upon a clause (or clauses) to replace the “Jurisdiction” clause found at Article I, Section 3 of the 1972-75 agreement. After offering at least two other alternate proposals, the Company made a final offer in April 1976. The “Jurisdiction” clause in this proposal provided:

JURISDICTION
Section 3. Jurisdiction of the Union and the appropriate unit for collective bargaining is defined as including all work performed in the composing room. Composing room work shall include the work performed in the classifications of electronic technicians, Ad Make-up machine operators, Paste Make-up and all other composing room employees, including work assigned to the composing room and performed at or on Linotron 505’s, Log-E Film Processors, Harris 2200 Display Systems, Bruning Proofing and other proof presses, Ad Desk, Ad Make-up and Page Make-up or substitute or similar equipment and processes placed in and assigned to the composing room from time to time, it being specifically understood that composing room employees shall process copy in whatever form, wherever and however produced that is delivered to the composing room.
Jurisdiction of the Union and bargaining unit work and/or composing room work shall not include work performed on or by general purpose computers, micro processors, mini computers, optical character recognition devices and/or optical scanners, VDT and/or CRT equipment, IBM selectrics, leased telephone wire copy, all wire service input devices, wire copy, syndicated matter and feature materials, or replacement or substitutes for same, or the programming or reprogramming, maintenance or operation of any equipment within the jurisdiction of the Union.

App. 43-44 (emphasis added).

The Company did not move from this proposal, and following more negotiations, a federal mediator declared an impasse on October 27,1977. Based on this impasse in bargaining over the “Jurisdiction” clause, the Company implemented unilateral changes in terms and conditions of employment in January and February 1978. 4

*619

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Bluebook (online)
692 F.2d 615, 111 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2824, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 24435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newspaper-printing-corporation-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca6-1982.