Northern Michigan Building & Construction Trades Council v. National Labor Relations Board

243 F. App'x 898
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 2007
Docket05-2590
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 243 F. App'x 898 (Northern Michigan Building & Construction Trades Council 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
Northern Michigan Building & Construction Trades Council v. National Labor Relations Board, 243 F. App'x 898 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

*899 PER CURIAM.

The Northern Michigan Building & Construction Trades Council and its affiliated unions (“Union”) petition the court to review a final decision of the National Labor Relations Board (“Board”). The decision found portions of an unfair labor practice complaint filed by the Union against Zurn/ N.E.P.C.O. (“Zurn”) to have merit and dismissed other portions of the complaint as being without merit. Zurn has intervened in this proceeding on the side of the Board. This court has jurisdiction over the proceeding pursuant to § 10(a) and (f) of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 160(a) and (f).

I. Background

The facts giving rise to the complaint are set forth in the decision issued by the Board in this matter on August 22, 2005. See Zum/N.E.P.C.O., 345 NLRB No. 1 (2005). The pertinent facts are summarized herein.

Zurn is a general contractor headquartered in Washington and Maine. The Union is composed of member unions representing various trades, including pipefitters, ironworkers, electricians, carpenters, millwrights, sheet metal workers, and operating engineers. A local consortium contracted with Zurn to build a cogeneration plant in Cadillac, Michigan. Before it began hiring for the project in April 1992, Zurn entered into an arrangement with a state agency, the Michigan Employment Security Commission (“MESC”), to register applicants for jobs at the project and to process their applications. In late January 1992, after numerous union members had attempted to apply for jobs directly with Zurn, Zurn informed the Union that it would not be accepting direct applications, but instead MESC would process all applications. The Union then began sending its members to the MESC office to register for positions. At least 349 applicants with union affiliations ultimately registered with MESC.

Zurn came to a special arrangement with MESC called a “custom referral arrangement.” Under this arrangement, instead of referring qualified individuals to Zurn in the order in which they registered, MESC agreed to honor Zurn’s priority hiring system, known as “policy 303.” The policy gave priority in hiring to qualified applicants who were present or former employees of Zurn, or who had appropriate work experience and had been referred by current managers, supervisors, or employees of Zurn. Thus, MESC would register individuals with priority under policy 303 and refer them to Zurn on a “name call” basis ahead of other nonpriority registrants, including those who had registered before the priority registrants.

In April of 1992, construction work began on the Cadillac project. Thirteen pipefitters and other individuals were hired in the first few months. In May, the Union began scheduling regular organizing meetings with Zurn’s employees, which were attended by the 13 pipefitters and several carpenters. On May 18, Zurn’s resident manager assembled the employees, announced that soliciting was prohibited, and threatened to fire anyone caught soliciting. A few days later, Zurn laid off the four electricians it had hired.

On June 2, several of the unions notified Zurn of their organizing efforts and identified their employee organizers. Sometime in early June, the pipefitting crew began wearing union insignia on the jobsite. On June 12, the Union notified Zurn’s superintendent that seven pipefitters, among others, were members of the organizing committee and that it was demanding recognition on behalf of Zurn’s employees at the Cadillac jobsite.

On June 18, the Union held a rally at Zurn’s gate, which was attended by pipe- *900 fitting crew members on their lunchbreak. The pipefitters returned to work wearing union insignia. That afternoon, Zurn laid off the entire pipefitting crew, ostensibly for lack of work. The following month, Zurn hired two firms to complete the piping work. Zurn then began its main hiring of construction craft workers to build the plant, with the last hires occurring in April 1993.

Unfair labor practice charges were filed against Zurn on July 1, September 2, October 19, November 13, and December 4, 1992. On December 5, several of Zurn’s employees struck over Zurn’s alleged labor law violations, including its failure to hire union applicants. Other employees and individuals joined the strike activity. On December 8, the Union contacted Zurn and made an unconditional offer to return to work. Around December 9, MESC discontinued making “name call” referrals to Zurn, reverting to its usual “first in, first referred” method in reaction to Zurn’s requesting 70 more “name call” applicants on a preferred basis.

After the strike began, Zurn attempted to contact 39 union applicants, identified as discriminatees in the Union’s charges filed with the Board, with alleged offers of employment. Many of these applicants expressed interest in employment, but only one was ultimately hired.

The Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) who heard the case found that over the course of the Cadillac project, approximately 1700 persons registered with MESC to work for Zurn, and 1057 completed MESC “Form 2511.” Of those applicants, 439 had union backgrounds. Zurn hired 202 employees in the trades the Union sought to represent: carpenters, millwrights, ironworkers, pipefitters, boilermakers, electricians, and operating engineers. According to the Board, 50 of the successful applicants had union backgrounds. According to evidence submitted by Zurn, 169 of those hired, including 17 with union backgrounds, were hired pursuant to Zurn’s special referral arrangement with MESC. The remaining 33 were hired according to MESC’s regular referral processes. Of those, 15 had union backgrounds.

The Cadillac project was completed in August 1993. Zurn never recognized the Union as the representative of any of its employees on that job.

Based upon the Union’s unfair labor practice charges, the Board’s General Counsel issued several complaints alleging that Zurn had violated the Act by, among other acts and omissions, refusing to hire qualified applicants because of their union membership and affiliation; refusing to consider such applicants for hire; laying off and failing to recall numerous union supporters; threatening and interrogating employees; and discriminatorily enforcing a no-solicitation rule. The matter was tried before an ALJ between June 1993 and May 1994. The ALJ issued his initial decision on October 27, 1995. The Board remanded the matter to the ALJ. The ALJ issued his First Supplemental Opinion on February 24, 1997. The Board subsequently remanded the case to the ALJ to make further findings in accordance with the decision in FES (a Division of Thermo Power) & Plumbers & Pipefitters Local 520 of the United Assoc., 331 NLRB 9 (2000), appeal after remand, 333 NLRB 66 (2001), enforced, 301 F.3d 83 (3rd Cir.2002). On September 6, 2001, the ALJ issued his Second Supplemental Decision. The Board thereafter issued its decision from which this appeal is taken.

II. The Board’s Decision

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243 F. App'x 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-michigan-building-construction-trades-council-v-national-labor-ca6-2007.