United States v. United States Steel Corporation

371 F. Supp. 1045
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedDecember 11, 1973
DocketCiv. A. 70-906, 66-343, 66-423, 66-625, 67-121, 68-204, 69-68, 69-165 and 71-131
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 371 F. Supp. 1045 (United States v. United States Steel Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. United States Steel Corporation, 371 F. Supp. 1045 (N.D. Ala. 1973).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF OPINION

POINTER, District Judge.

Consolidated trial of these Title VII cases 1 began in June, 1972. In December, 1972 — after hundreds of witnesses, more than 10,000 pages of testimony, and over ten feet of stipulations and exhibits (the bulk being in computer or summary form) — the parties rested, subject to the submission of certain supplemental computer studies and analysis. Trial would have been even more prolonged but for the severance of one major issue (test validation) and for the very professional attitude of all counsel in expediting trial. 2 A decree of over *1049 150 pages was entered May 2, 1973, covering most issues; and on August 10, 1973, a final judgment was entered covering all remaining issues except that of test validation. This preface is given to explain why the court in this opinion has chosen not to deal with each aspect and issue but rather to focus on matters related to the few questions as to which appeal has been taken. 3

OVERVIEW OF OPERATIONS AND ORGANIZATION

“Fairfield Works”, one of the largest units of United States Steel Corporation, consists of nine plants in Jefferson County, Alabama. Two (Ore Conditioning; Coke & Coal Chemicals) process raw materials. Two (Ensley; Fair-field) are basic steel producing facilities, with some finished products. Four (Tin; Wire; Sheet; Bessemer Rolling) make finished products. The ninth 4 (Rail Transportation) provides rail transportation services for the other eight.

The plants came into being at different times, and some were initially under different ownerships. Ensley, the oldest part of the works, was started in 1886, while Ore Conditioning, the most recent, was constructed in 1939-40. The nine plants now form a single interrelated steel producing operation, with operational responsibility vested in a General Superintendent. His principal managerial assistants, called Division Superintendents, have functional responsibilities which may include operations at more than one plant.

Similarly, union organization — and subsequent management recognition — occurred at different plants at varying times during the late 30’s and early 40’s. Two locals of the Steelworkers represent production and maintenance (P & M) employees of the Rail Transportation plant; a separate Steelworkers local represents P & M employees at each of the other eight plants. A separate Steelworkers local represents plant protection employees throughout the works, and another represents the unionized clerical and technical (C & T) employees works-wide. 5

In recent years the basic principles for employment of P & M employees have been established in triennial industry-wide negotiations leading to, e. g., the 1965 Basic Steel P & M Agreement. These principles have, however, since 1953 been modified on a local basis through the adoption of “local seniority rules and regulations”, in which the various locals have asserted their independence in collective bargaining. The consequence is that, though the basic principles are similar, there are ten separate arrangements governing seniority for P & M employees at Fairfield Works, as well as a separate arrangement for plant protection workers and one for the unionized C & T employees. It should be noted that employees holding trade and craft (T & C) positions in a plant are part of the same local which represents non-T & C employees at that plant and are subject to the same collective bargaining agreement, though with some special provisions for T & C jobs.

In the steel industry in general, and at Fairfield Works in particular, there are significant fluctuations in operational requirements and, hence, in manpower *1050 levels. Some jobs may be worked on a three-shift-a-day, seven-day-a-week basis (“21-turns”), and then at other times worked one-shift-a-day, five-days-a-week by a single man or crew (“5-turns”), or even completely halted, with a variety of intermediate manning levels. Within a given plant one operation may be on a 21-turn basis and another, during the same period, on a 5-turn basis. This fluctuation constitutes a major factor in the study of the “system” at the works and, in turn, is dealt with at length in the collective bargaining rules.

On a relatively busy day one would expect to find some 12,000 persons on the job 6 at Fairfield Works, of which some 27% would be black employees. 7 P & M employees constitute the bulk of the work force — typically some 3,100 blacks and 6,000 whites— and, accordingly, it is not surprising that this litigation has tended to focus principally on employment practices and conditions concerning P & M employees.

There are over a thousand P & M positions, most of which are filled by more than one employee on a given day. These positions have a technical name generally descriptive of their principal function, e. g., “Rail Straightener Helper”, and frequently have a shop name, e. g., “Gagger”. Each position has a prescribed job class level, e. g., “JC 4”, which determines the relative wage scale for that job in comparison with other jobs. 8 Most, but not all, positions have production-oriented incentive pay arrangements, either direct or indirect, some by individual performance and others by crew or group productivity. The differences between these negotiated incentive plans may be quite significant: for example, a JC 2 position with a “good” incentive plan may be more attractive financially than one rated JC 6 with a “poor” plan. Of course, the earnings of any individual P & M employee are also dependent upon how many hours are worked and when (e. g., overtime, shift premiums, and Sunday and holiday premiums).

SENIORITY SYSTEM

Within each plant the higher paying jobs — virtually all in JC 5 or above, and some in JC 4 — are grouped for promotional and retention purposes in ladder-like sequences called lines of progression or promotion (LOP). 9 The groupings *1051 generally, but not always, are composed of occupations which work together on some process (e. g., feeding and operating a rolling machine) or which perform similar functions (e. g., maintaining production or inventory records). For the most part the upward sequence is from the lowest JC occupation in the line to the highest; but, here again, there are numerous instances in which a higher job in the LOP may, whether by reason of its JC level, incentive plan, or otherwise, be a lower paying job in practice than one or more of those below it.

When a vacancy arises in a job in an LOP, those persons on the immediately preceding rung of the ladder are entitled to first consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
371 F. Supp. 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-united-states-steel-corporation-alnd-1973.