Associated Cleaning Consultants & Services, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsNov 19, 1976226 N.L.R.B. 1066 (N.L.R.B. 1976) Copy Citation 1066 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Associated Cleaning Consultants & Services, Inc. and District 1199P , National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees , Division of RWDSU, AFL-CIO. Cases 6-CA-8584 and 6-CA-8778 November 19, 1976 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MURPHY AND MEMBERS FANNING AND PENELLO On August 19, 1976, Administrative Law Judge Nancy M. Sherman issued the attached Decision in this proceeding. Thereafter, Respondent filed excep- tions and a supporting brief. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the Na- tional Labor Relations Board has delegated its au- thority in this proceeding to a three-member panel. The Board has considered the record and the at- tached Decision in light of the exceptions and brief and has decided to affirm the rulings, findings,' and conclusions of the Administrative Law Judge and to adopt her recommended Order. We agree with the Administrative Law Judge that Respondent on September 3, 1975, violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by interrogating and threatening employees with respect to union activities. Inasmuch as the Respondent embarked on a clear course of unlawful conduct on September 3, 1975, and the Union's demand for recognition was made and re- fused on that date, we find that the Respondent un- lawfully failed to recognize and to bargain with the Union as of September 3, 1975.2 ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Re- lations Board adopts as its Order the recommended Order of the Administrative Law Judge and hereby orders that the Respondent, Associated Cleaning Consultants & Service, Inc., Pittsburgh, Pennsylva- ' The Respondent has excepted to certain credibility findings made by the Administrative Law Judge It is the Board's established policy not to over- rule an Administrative Law Judge's resolutions with respect to credibility unless the clear preponderance of all of the relevant evidence convinces us that the resolutions are incorrect Standard Dry Wall Products, Inc, 91 NLRB 544 (1950), enfd 188 F 2d (CA 3, 1951) We have carefully exam- ined the record and find no basis for reversing her findings 2 Member Fanning agrees with this result but does so for the reasons set forth in his concurrence in Trading Port Inc, 219 NLRB 298 (1975) In adopting the Administrative Law Judge's Conclusion of Law number 6, we hereby modify it by inserting the words "since September 3, 1975," after "failing and refusing" n:a, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall take the action set forth in the said recommended order. DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE NANCY M. SHERMAN, Administrative Law Judge: This consolidated proceeding was heard at Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania, on February 3, 4, and 5, 1976. In Case 6-CA-8584, the charge was filed on September 5, 1975,' and amended on September 25 and 27 and November 7; the complaint was issued on November 24. In Case 6-CA-8778, the charge was filed on November 7 and amended on January 5, 1976; the complaint was issued on January 5, 1976. The issues presented are whether Respondent Associated Cleaning Consultants & Services, Inc. (a) interrogated and threatened its employees about activity on behalf of Dis- trict 1199P, National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees, Division of RWDSU, AFL-CIO (the Union), in violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Rela- tions Act, as amended (the Act); (b) discharged employees Joseph Santavicca and Sandra McLaughlin because of their union activity in violation of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act; (c) discharged employees Roberta Turner and Ethel Turner because of their protected concerted and/or union activity, in violation of Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act; and (d) refused to bargain with the Union under cir- cumstances calling for a bargaining order, in violation of Section 8(a)(5) of the Act. Upon the entire record, including my observation of the witnesses, and after due consideration of the briefs filed by Respondent and by counsel for the General Counsel, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. JURISDICTION Respondent is a Pennsylvania corporation engaged in providing janitorial and housekeeping services, with its principal office in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. During the re- spective years preceding the issuance of the complaints, Respondent provided services to its customers valued in excess of $1 million of which services valued at more than $50,000 were provided to customers such as the Common- wealth of Pennsylvania and Saint Francis Hospital, Pitts- burgh, Pennsylvania, which customers annually each pur- chase from outside Pennsylvania goods and materials valued at more than $50,000. I find that, as Respondent admits, Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act, and that exercise of jurisdiction over its operations will effectuate the policies of the Act. The Union is a labor organization within the meaning of the Act. i Unless otherwise stated, all dates hereafter are 1975 226 NLRB No. 173 ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS 1067 11. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Background Respondent provides its services to, inter alia, Woodville State Hospital (the Hospital), which consists of several buildings. Respondent's office and the timecards of all its employees at the Hospital are located on the first floor of the geriatrics building, which is at the top of a hill. The other hospital buildings serviced by Respondent are below this hill and about a mile from the geriatrics building. After punching in at the geriatrics building, employees of Re- spondent who are not assigned to that building customarily drive to the building where they work. About mid-August 1975, employees Joseph Santavicca and Ethel Turner discussed working conditions at the Hos- pital, where both were then working for Respondent as housekeeping personnel. Santavicca, at least, believed that Respondent employed too few employees at the Hospital to perform all the housekeeping work there Santavicca and Ethel Turner decided to try to get a union to improve their working conditions. About August 23 or 24, Santavic- ca telephoned Union Representative David Paul, advised him that some employees in the hospital housekeeping de- partment were interested in a union, and arranged for a meeting on August 26. As set forth in greater detail infra, meetings were subse- quently held on August 26 and September 2, at which a number of employees signed union cards. Ethel Turner signed a card at the first meeting, urged others (including her mother, employee Roberta Turner) to attend the sec- ond meeting, and herself attended that meeting. Owing to illness, Joseph Santavicca did not attend the first meeting. He urged others to attend the second meeting, and he signed a card at that meeting. B. Alleged Interference, Restraint, and Coercion 1. The September 3 incident in the office Employee Mary Krawczynski is the mother of employee Santavicca and the sister-in-law of employee Frank Krawczynski. She and her brother-in-law attended the Au- gust 26 union meeting arranged by Santavicca and Ethel Turner, and signed cards there. As previously noted, Ethel Turner also signed a card at that meeting. Mary Krawczynski also attended the September 2 meeting, at which was formed a four-employee organizing committee which included Frank Krawczynski, Santavicca, and Ethel Turner.2 On September 3, Mary Krawczynski opened up the of- fice, which, as noted, is on the first floor of the geriatrics building. Before working hours began, she saw Frank Krawczynski go up to the second floor of the building. He then came down and told his sister-in-law that employee Pauline King had told him that she was going to tell Super- visor Richard Kelly that they were trying to start a union. Thereafter, and still before working hours, Mary 2 This meeting was also attended by Patricia Bonkowski. who is Santavicca 's aunt and Mary Krawczynski's sister Krawczynski saw employees Santavicca and Ethel Turner go to the second floor of the geriatrics building. After reaching this floor, Santavicca asked employee Bob Fife to sign a union card. Fife replied that he was not too sure about signing one. Then, and still before working hours, Santavicca joined employees Ethel Turner, Christine Aras- niewicz, and King in another ward on that same floor He and Turner explained the Union to the others and asked them to sign union cards. They replied that they would sign if Assistant Supervisor Wayne Sewell (admittedly a super- visor under the Act) gave them permission to sign, that their job meant too much for them to lose it. At 8:05 a.m., 5 minutes after working hours began, Mary Krawczynski sent employee Raymond Anthony up after Santavicca and Ethel Turner to tell them to come down. Anthony and employee Thomas Cavey both went upstairs When Cavey came down, he told Mary Krawczynski that, according to employee King, Santavicca and Ethel Turner had asked King and Arasniewicz to sign union cards, and that the latter two employees had said they were not going to sign anything until they talked to Supervisor Richard J. Kelly (admittedly a supervisor under the Act) or Sewell Santa- vicca and Ethel Turner then went to the buildings where they worked. A little later, Kelly and Sewell came in to the office. Mary Krawczynski told them that there was a rumor going around that someone was trying to start a union. Kelly asked who was doing this. She replied that she did not know but "you know how it is when one starts something, they all follow." Then, Sewell received a telephone call, which (he told Mary Krawczynski) was from employee King. Thereafter, King came down to the office and told Kelly, in Sewell's presence, that Santavicca was trying to get her to sign a union card, and she and Arasniewicz could not get their work done because Santavicca was bothering them. The foregoing findings as to the events in the office are based on the testimony of Mary Krawczynski, a reluctant witness who initially refused to comply with the General Counsel's subpena, and whom he examined without objec- tion as a hostile witness under Rule 611(c) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. I have accepted the version of her testi- mony which was admittedly supported by her prehearing affidavit. Sewell corroborated much of her testimony by testifying that before Santavicca's September 4 discharge, King and (perhaps) Arasniewicz came downstairs into the office and said that while they were working, Santavicca, Ethel Turner, and Frank Krawczynski were "harassing" them to "sign some cards for a union." Kelly testified that on September 5, the day after Santavicca was terminated, King told him that Santavicca and Ethel Turner had tried to talk King and Arasniewicz into signing union cards. Al- though still in Respondent's employ at the time of the hear- ing, Arasniewicz and King did not testify, nor was their absence explained.3 On the basis of the witnesses' de- 3 See Golden State Bottling Compam, Inc, d/b/a Pepsi-Cola Bottling Com- pany of Sacramento v NLRB B. 414 U S 168 (1973), N L R B v Sam Wal- lick and Sam K Schwalm, d/b/a Wallick and Schwalm Company, et a!, 198 F 2d 477, 483.(C A 3. 1952), International Union, United Automobile Aero- space, and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UA W) [Gyrodyne Company of America] v N L R B, 459 F 2d 1329, 1335-45 (C A D C, 1972) 1068 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD meanor and Sewell 's partial corroboration of Mary Krawczynski's testimony, I credit her. 2. The September 3 conversation between Sewell, Cavey, and Vogel Later that same day, September 3, employee Vogel ap- proached Assistant Supervisor Sewell outside the Hillcrest East building and asked permission to leave the building to obtain a squeegee . Almost simultaneously , Sewell told em- ployee Cavey to go to the Hillcrest West building to get a vacuum cleaner . Both employees had attended the union meeting the previous day and had signed cards there. Se- well accompanied both employees as they went to fetch their cleaning equipment from Hillcrest West . During this walk, Sewell said that "Ethel" and "Joey" had laid their jobs on the line by trying to bring in a union, that they were "troublemakers" and "instigators ," that Supervisor Kelly was not going to "put up" with this, and that Re- spondent could not afford a union.4 At that time, Ethel Turner was the only "Ethel" in the unit, and the only "Joey" other than Santavicca was Joe Vogel. The record fails to show whether Vogel or Cavey reported their con- versation with Sewell to any other employees. C. The Union's Bargaining Demand and Respondent's Refusal Respondent's December 3 answer concedes that the Union "since September 3, 1975, has demanded and has continued to demand that it be recognized as the bargain- ing agent for the employees ." The Union 's written demand was initially received by Respondent 's secretary -treasurer, Reems. Kelly testified that he learned about this letter on September 5. Respondent's December 3 answer further concedes that Respondent "has failed and refused and continues to refuse to recognize and bargain collectively with the Union." D. The Alleged Unlawful Discharges 1. Santavicca a. Santavicca's discharge and rehire Joseph Santavicca was first hired by Respondent in Feb- ruary 1974 on a part-time basis, while he was still in high school. Upon graduating in June 1974, he became a regu- lar, full-time employee . He worked at the Hospital until November 1974; was then transferred at his own request to another location serviced by Respondent, referred to in the record as Interstate 79; and , upon the expiration of the Interstate 79 contract at the end of June 1975 , was trans- ferred back to the Hospital. Kelly testified that up to this My findings as to this incident are based on Cavey's and Vogel's mutu- ally corroborative testimony Sewell testified that the only matters discussed were the squeegee and the vacuum cleaner On the basis of the witnesses' demeanor and Sewell's unreliability as to other matters , I credit the employ- ees point Santavicca's work was "very satisfactory." In July 1975, when the state employees were on strike at the Hos- pital, Kelly told Respondent's employees that if they worked during the strike they would receive a bonus. San- tavicca worked during the strike and received the bonus. Between Santavicca's early July 1975 transfer back to the Hospital and August 11, 1975, he was shifted around to various jobs in various buildings as the need arose. Kelly testified that Santavicca did some of this work "very well." Kelly further testified , "Mr. Santavicca 's performance for me, from the time he started until the time he left, other than the periods just prior to his [September 4] leaving, he did a very excellent job." Sewell testified that Santavicca was an "extremely good worker" before his early July 1975 return from Interstate 79, at which time his attitude "changed overnight... . I couldn 't say nothing to him. He'd get riled up very quick ." Because Santavicca had ex- pressed preference for a regular assignment to a single building , on August II he was permanently assigned to Hillcrest East. As previously noted , Santavicca and Ethel Turner were the employees who initiated the union drive and arranged for the first union meeting, on August 26. Santavicca urged other employees to attend the September 2 meeting, the first one his health permitted him to attend . At that meet- ing, he signed a union card and volunteered to become one of a four-employee organizing committee. Thereafter, on September 3 and 4 , he successfully solicited four employees to sign union cards. Moreover , as previously found, on September 3 he unsuccessfully solicited the signatures of three more employees. As previously found, on September 3 employee Mary Krawczynski (Santavicca 's mother) told Supervisors Kelly and Sewell that there was a rumor going around that some- one was trying to start a union ; and Kelly asked who was doing this. Although well aware of her son's union activity, Mary Krawczynski replied that she did not know. How- ever, employee King then told Kelly and Sewell that San- tavicca had been soliciting for the Union . Further , Sewell remarked that Santavicca and Ethel Turner had laid their jobs on the line by trying to bring in a union, that they were "troublemakers" and "instigators ," that Kelly was not going to "put up" with this, and that Respondent could not afford a union. On the following morning , employees Ralph and Sandra McLaughlin, who are husband and wife , came to the office to punch their timecards. Sandra McLaughlin asked if her husband should nde with others to his usual building. Se- well told Ralph McLaughlin to stay in the office, because he might be taking the place of Santavicca , whom Sewell had summoned to come to the office from the Hillcrest East Building, where Santavicca worked. When Santavicca came into the office , Sewell said that he had heard Santavicca was "talking about " Sewell. San- tavicca replied that Sewell sounded as if he was trying to start an argument with Santavicca , but he was not going to get into an argument. Sewell said that if he wanted to fire Santavicca, Sewell had "enough stuff," pointed to a file cabinet, and said he had "enough stuff in there to fire him right now." (Kelly testified, however, that prior to Septem- ber 3 there were "probably" no written complaints in Re- ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS spondent's file personally directed to Santavicca.) Sewell further told Santavicca that Kelly wanted to see him when he came in. Sewell then sent Santavicca and Ralph Mc- Laughlin to work at Hillcrest East, which at that time was not McLaughlin's regular duty post. They went to the building and started to operate the wet vacuum in the cafe- teria. About 20 minutes later, Santavicca received a telephone call at the Hillcrest East building, stating that Kelly wanted to see him. Santavicca then returned to the office, where he confronted Kelly and Sewell. Kelly gave Santavicca "dis- charge papers" stating that he was not doing his work. Kel- ly told this to Santavicca orally, and further said that he was not running the wet vacuum in the cafeteria. Santavic- ca replied that the machine was broken, and "this is all being done because of the union and [Kelly] would see him in court." 5 Santavicca then returned to the Hillcrest East building and reported his discharge to Ralph McLaughlin, who thereafter did the work which Santavicca had been doing. Respondent's December 3 answer to the first complaint states that Santavicca had not been reinstated "for the rea- son that he has a substantially better job with another em- ployer which pays him substantially higher wages than with [Respondent], and, further, the said Joseph Santavicca does not desire to be reinstated to his position of employ- ment." 6 Later that month, Santavicca talked to Kelly about being rehired. Santavicca told Kelly that he thought he had been fired for union activity, and Kelly denied this. Santavicca further said that he wanted the Board proceed- ings discontinued. Thereafter, Kelly told Santavicca that he was "an excellent worker, [Kelly] could use someone of his caliber because he is a good machine man and [Kelly] would be very happy to have him back" if he could prove during a trial period that he would "continue doing the work as required." After consulting Sewell, Kelly rehired Santavicca, effective January 11, 1976, to work on week- ends only. He was still working this schedule at the time of the February 1976 hearing. Before being discharged, San- tavicca had worked a 5-day-per-week schedule, which sometimes included weekend days and sometimes did not. Kelly denied taking him back on any condition that he would drop his complaint against Respondent, or any simi- lar consideration.? There is no evidence or contention otherwise. 5 My findings as to the substance of this conversation are based on a composite of Santavicca's testimony and credible portions of Kelly 's testi- mony Sewell was not asked about this conversation . I discuss infra (fns 10 and 17 ) Kelly's testimony that after August 15 , Santavicca never com- plained to him about the operation of the wet vacuum machine , and that during the discharge interview Kelly said that Santavicca was being dis- charged partly for failure to fill out work reports 6 At the hearing before me , Respondent sought to ask Santavicca ques- tions about the wages he received from the firm where he worked after Respondent discharged him. Upon Respondent 's representation that this line of questioning was directed toward determining the amount of backpay due Santavicca should it be determined that his discharge was unlawful, I sustained the General Counsel's objection thereto on the ground of relevan- cy See N L R B v Deena Artware, Inc, 361 U S 398, 411 (1960) (concur- ring opinion ), Heinrich Motors, Inc, 153 NLRB 1575 (1965) and 166 NLRB 783, 785-786 (1967) (supplemental ), enfd 403 F 2d 145, 149-150 (C A 2, 1968) 7 The charges herein were filed by the Union, not Santavicca 1069 b. Evidence bearing on Respondent's explanation for Santavicca s discharge At the outset of the hearing, Respondent's counsel as- serted that Santavicca was discharged partly because Re- spondent thought that he had deliberately damaged the wet vacuum machine so as to make it "not workable." Kelly's testimony about Respondent's difficulties with this machine contains no allegation that anyone had deliber- ately damaged it. Sewell testified that he believed the ma- chine to have been deliberately jammed, but that this dam- age had nothing to do with Santavicca's discharge.8 At the outset of the hearing, Respondent's counsel stated that Santavicca was discharged partly for failure to fill out certain forms. This reason for Santavicca's discharge was relied on by Kelly, but not Sewell. Among Santavicca's duties between August 11 and his September 4 discharge was the cleaning of food service areas in the Hillcrest East building areas. With respect to the cleaning of such areas, Respondent's employees are required to fill out food-ser- vice-areas "work checkout list" forms for Virginia Simon, who is an employee of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and is the Hospital assistant food manager in the dietary department. These forms list certain cleaning operations and contain spaces for the signatures of the employees who performed such operations. Respondent's housekeeping employees are expected to enter the appropriate check- marks and signatures on these forms, which are then picked up by the Hospital's dietary employees. At least one form a day (plus a carbon copy) is supposed to be forward- ed to Simon, and under some circumstances, she should receive two.' During the 24-day period between Santavicca's August 11 transfer to the Hillcrest East build- ing and the day before his September 4 discharge, he worked a total of 18 days but submitted only one form- for September 1, the second from the last full day he actu- ally worked However, because these forms are initially sent to the Hospital dietary department rather than to Re- spondent, because assistant dietary department manager Simon testified that she usually accumulated these forms for at least a week before forwarding them to Respondent, and because none of Respondent's witnesses testified in terms that he was aware before Santavicca's discharge about any failure by Santavicca to send in forms after Au- gust 26, I infer that at the time of Santavicca's September 4 discharge, Respondent was not aware of his post-August 26 conduct with respect to such forms.10 As to the 6 days during this August 11-September 3 period when Santavicca did not work, a form was submitted by other employees- Joseph Vogel (Santavicca's replacement) and night shift 8 Sewell's testimony indicates that the machine broke down between Au- gust 1 and 8 Santavicca did not start working at Hillcrest East, where the machine was used, until August II At all relevant times several employees were responsible for cleaning the areas where the machine was supposed to be used v Sometimes a form which has been filled out by the day shift is turned in by the Hospital employees before the start of Respondent's night shift ")Accordingly, I do not credit Kelly's testimony that on the morning of September 4 he told Santavicca that he was being discharged partly for failure to fill out these forms For similar reasons, I do not credit Kelly's testimony that he reproved Santavicca about the matter on the morning of September 3 As previously noted, Santavicca did fill out a form at the end of his September I shift 1070 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD employee Robert Washington-for 2 days, August 26 and 27. During this period, Vogel replaced Santavicca on 3 ad- ditional days, for which no forms were submitted. Respon- dent retained Vogel in its employ until November 17, when he was discharged for reasons unrelated to his failure to fill out forms. Simon testified that she did not receive these forms "all the time." On August 26, she sent a memoran- dum to Respondent complaining that, inter aha, "Reports are not coming in from H. C. West nor regularly from H. C. East." Respondent never replied to this memoran- dum. However, on August 26 Sewell and Kelly complained to Santavicca about his failure to fill out these forms, which, if completely filled out, would require Santavicca to insert about 39 checkmarks and three signatures. Santavic- ca replied that he had no time. Kelly initially testified that he had never terminated anyone but Santavicca in whole or in part for failing to fill out these forms. However, Kelly later testified that the November 7 discharge of Ralph Mc- Laughlin, who replaced Santavicca and signed all but two of the Hillcreast East forms submitted to Simon between September 4 and 20, was partly due to his failure to fill out these forms At the outset of the hearing, Respondent's counsel stated that Santavicca was discharged partly because "Kitchens were not swept under the counters. Lavatories were being neglected." Sewell testified that he had "been getting re- ports from Mrs. Simon in dietary, when Joe was working there, that he wasn't doing his work," and was using only one mop and one bucket, rather than the two (one clean mop with detergent water, and one clean mop with clear water) which were required when the wet vaccum was not used.l i Sewell dated these complaints as having been made before August 15. Santavicca did not begin his regular tour of duty at the Hillcrest East building until August 11, and between then and September 1 failed to fill out any report forms, which Simon testified were her only basis for know- ing who had done particular work. Sewell further testified that at about 9 a.m. on Septem- ber 4, the day of Santavicca's discharge, Simon and "the people in dietary" called him to his office and complained to him about the condition of the Hillcrest East dietary department, that he then inspected the area, and that it was "really dirty." Neither Simon nor any other "people in di- etary" corroborated his testimony about this September 4 incident,12 Sewell testified that the conditions he allegedly found on September 4 were "a constant thing. It never improved." Respondent offered into evidence Santavicca's September 1 work report form with the following notation, 11 Simon, Kelly, and Sewell all testified that such were the requirements which the Hospital imposed on Respondent, and their testimony in this respect is corroborated by the work report forms which Respondent's em- ployees were required to submit to Simon However, Respondent's contract with the State requires that after each meal, the dining rooms are (1) to be "dry mopped with a treated mop or vacuumed Then a detergent disinfec- tant shall be applied by the spray technique and the area shall be wet vacuumed" or else "(2) dry mopped with a treated mop or vacuumed and damp mopped, flooded and wet vacuumed after the evening meal " 12 The record strongly suggests that Santavicca was discharged before 9 a in The McLaughlins were supposed to clock in before 8 a in, and Ralph McLaughlin testified that Santavicca was summoned to his discharge inter- view about 20 minutes after he and McLaughlin had started to work in Hillcrest East added by Simon after she received the form as prepared by Santavicca, "Lavatories not cleaned. Wet vaccum not being used one bucket." 13 Simon testified that Kelly and Sewell may have received the report with her notation as late as a month after September 1 (Santavicca was dis- charged on September 4), and there is no evidence about when Respondent's management received this document. Kelly credibly testified that between August 18 and 21 he told Santavicca that his work was not satisfactory be- cause, inter alia, Simon had been complaining that the lav- atories had not been cleaned."' Simon testified that she complained to Respondent's management about the clean- ing in the Hillcrest East and Hillcrest West dietary sections before, during, and after Santavicca's tour of duty at Hill- crest East.ts Her credible testimony in this respect is cor- roborated by her comments on the employees' report forms, by Kelly, and to some extent by Sewell. Kelly testi- fied that he had talked to every one of the employees about bad work. Sewell testified that Ethel Turner and Mary Krawczynski were also responsible for the allegedly poor cleaning of Hillcrest East. Mary Krawczynski was still working for Respondent at the time of the hearing, 5 months after Santavicca's discharge. At the outset of the hearing, Respondent's counsel stated that Santavicca was discharged partly because the wet vac- uum was not being used. Sewell initially testified that Santavicca's failure to run this machine had nothing to do with his termination, and then that his failure to run this machine was "part of it." Kelly testified that Santavicca was discharged partly because he was cleaning the dietary area with only one mop and one bucket, although he was supposed to use either the wet vacuum cleaner or two mops and two buckets-one with detergent and one with clear water. A few days before August 15, Kelly reproached San- tavicca for this practice. Santavicca replied that the wet vacuum was broken; that if he used two mops and two buckets he could not complete his work tasks during his workday, and that he could not complete his work tasks within his workday even if the wet vacuum was operating properly.16 Kelly replied, in effect, that Santavicca would somehow have to manage completing his assigned tasks while still using either the wet vacuum or two buckets and two mops. However, Kelly said that he would have the machine repaired. On August 15, a repairman worked on the machine while on Respondent's premises. Later, Sewell checked the machine and decided that it had in fact been restored to good operating condition. However, the ma- 13 The form states that two mops and two buckets had been used I infer that Simon's notation otherwise was based on oral reports to her from the dietary employees, who, unlike her, were in a position to observe the clean- inp techniques in fact used l accept Kelly's testimony about the date, in view of Santavicca's un- certainty in this respect Nor do I accept Santavicca's testimony that there- after he cleaned the lavatories, in view of his failure to make any such claim on his September I report 15 Simon testified, inter alia , "it's repeatedly that they don't clean the lavatories It just isn't now and then they don't clean them It isn't just now and then that they don't use the [wet vacuum] machine , it's all the time, and it gets a little boring to call [Respondent' s management ] on the phone ev- eryday, so I just-we have meetings and we discuss it It's just over and over and over again, the same complaints " 16 If the machine is used, all the furniture must be moved out of and then back into the area ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS chine thereafter left puddles on the floor.l" A month later, about early October 1975, Respondent brought a different machine into the Hillcrest East building and moved the old machine to another job situs, where it was replaced before the hearing in early February 1976. The record is ambigu- ous about the extent to which the machine was used be- tween the repairman's August 15 visit and the machine's October 1975 removal.18 Kelly testified that, about 2 weeks before Santavicca's September 4 discharge, he and Sewell decided that unless Santavicca began to do the work required and to improve his "attitude" he would have to be terminated. Sewell testi- fied on direct examination, and initially on cross-examina- tion, that Respondent decided to discharge Santavicca about 2 or 3 weeks before his September 4 discharge-that is, between August 14 and 21. Later on cross-examination, when asked to explain why he had allegedly given three warnings to Santavicca after deciding in mid-August to ter- minate him, Sewell testified: A. I hadn't decided I was going to terminate him; I said he was possibly being terminated. I don't decide no one's terminated. Q. Well, I thought- A. I mean, I give 'em a warning, yes. I don't decide when anyone's terminated. I don't have no reason to decide anyone on his job is terminated. I give him a warning, telling him that are gonna be, they will possi- bly be terminated. I don't try to fire anyone, if I can get around it 17 Santavicca's testimony in this respect is corroborated by Ralph Mc- Laughlin and Ethel Turner Ralph McLaughlin, who operated the wet vacu- um the day Santavicca was discharged, testified without contradiction that Kelly and Sewell saw the puddles that same day and Kelly told McLaughlin to clean them up I note, moreover, that when asked whether the wet vacu- um was leaving puddles on August 26, Kelly replied, "No sir, not at that time " (Emphasis supplied ) Because of Kelly's testimony in this respect and demeanor considerations, I do not accept Kelly's generalized testimony that after the repairman's visit the machine was working properly, which, testimony was based on alleged periodic checks by Kelly Further, in view of his testimony that he made these periodic checks, I do not credit his testimony that, after the repairman's visit, Kelly received no complaints about the machine I am inclined to believe Kelly's testimony that on August 26 he checked the machine by running it with water in it However, the amount of puddling might well have been affected by the length of time and the size of the area in which the machine was operated It seems unlikely that Kelly checked the machine by cleaning the entire dietary area 18 Kelly testified, in effect, that he did not know whether the machine was operated by anyone after August 15 Sewell testified that he saw this ma- chine run "Everyday of the week Night and daytime" later in the same week after the repairman's visit , but this visit occurred on a Friday Sewell credibly testified, with some corroboration from Santavicca, that the date of his discharge was the only occasion after August 15 on which he used the machine Each of the 18 Hillcrest East work reports submitted to the dietary de- partment between August I i and September 20 states that two buckets and two mops were used, a procedure required only if the wet vacuum is not used However, I I also aver that the wet vacuum was used Moreover, such forms were filled out by Ralph McLaughlin on September 9-13 and 18-20, notwithstanding his testimony that after September 4 he cleaned up the area "With a mop and bucket" In view of McLaughlin's testimony in this re- spect and Simon's testimony quoted supra, In 15, I regard these forms as having virtually no probative value as to the cleaning techniques in fact used Kelly testified that mops and buckets could be usefully employed with the machine (cf supra, In 11) Presumably, although his testimony was not clearly directed to this consideration, mops could be used to get rid of puddles left by the machine 1071 s Q. (By Mr. Surprenant) Then, it's not your testi- mony that you and Mr. Kelly decided about two weeks before he was discharged, that you were going to discharge him? A. If he didn't do his job, and what he was expect- ed to do, then we would have to get rid of him. Q. So, it depended on what kind of work he did in the next few weeks? A. In other words, he was on a trial basis. Q. Did you tell Mr. Santavicca that he was on a trial basis during that period? A. I didn't tell him in these words, but I told him in so many words that he'd have to keep up with his work, or else, I'd have to get rid of him. Q. And, when did you tell him that? A. Oh, that was the week before That week I told him twice in one week that he wasn't doing the work and I couldn't keep up with him, and I couldn't talk to him. In addition, Sewell (but not Kelly) testified that Respon- dent discharged Santavicca partly because he was out of his work area for long periods of time. In this connection, Sewell referred to the September 3 incident, the day before Santavicca's discharge, when Santavicca was soliciting em- ployees to sign union cards in the geriatrics building. Santavicca admitted that he was warned on several occa- sions that his work was not satisfactory. He testified, in effect, that he received the last such warning during the interview described above regarding the wet vacuum, which conversation occurred shortly before August 15. Kelly testified that, about 10 days after this conversation, he reproved Santavicca for his "attitude" and for his fail- ure to clean the dietary area in the manner required. In view of Kelly's inaccurate statement about another reproof allegedly given Santavicca (supra, In. 10), and for de- meanor reasons, I discredit Kelly's testimony about this alleged late August conversation. Sewell testified that, on two occasions during the last week in August, he warned Santavicca that he was not cleaning the baseboards and that he would be discharged if he did not do his work a little better. Sewell testified that Santavicca "never did them." In addition, Sewell testified that on September 3, the day when to Sewell's knowledge Santavicca was solicit- ing for the Union in the geriatrics building, Sewell told Santavicca "he's going to have to start doing his work; otherwise, we're going to have to get rid of him." In view of Sewell's testimony that he gave these warnings to Santavic- ca after deciding to discharge him, and after considering the witnesses' demeanor, I credit Santavicca's testimony that he received no such warnings and discredit Sewell's testimony regarding the alleged warnings during the last week in August and on September 3 2. The Turners Employee Roberta Turner is the mother of employees Ethel Turner and Sandra McLaughlin. Sandra McLaugh- lin and Ralph McLaughlin are husband and wife Until 1072 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD November 7, 1975, Ralph McLaughlin was also in Respon- dent's employ. The Hospital was to undergo a special state inspection over a 4-day period between about November 11 and 14. About late October , management asked some of the house- keeping employees if, during their regular days off the next 2 weeks, they would come to work in order to prepare for the inspection . Ethel Turner (whose regular days off were Thursday and Friday) and Roberta Turner (whose regular days off were Friday and Saturday) both agreed to work on Friday, November 7. On that day , the Turners and the McLaughlins all drove to the facility in the same car . All three women worked in buildings about a mile from the geriatrics building, where Respondent 's office and all the timecards were located. When the car reached the geriatrics building , the Mc- Laughlins entered Respondent 's office . The Turners waited in the car in the expectation that Sandra McLaughlin would punch in all three women and would then return to the car , after which Ethel Turner would drive all three to their respective work areas . Sandra McLaughlin did punch in herself and the Turners . However , while Sandra Mc- Laughlin was still in the office , and before Ralph Mc- Laughlin could punch himself in, Assistant Supervisor Se- well handed him a paper telling him that he was discharged . Sandra McLaughlin looked at the paper and started to weep. The McLaughlins then went out to the car, where the Turners were waiting . While Sandra McLaughlin continued to weep , Ralph McLaughlin told the Turners that he had been discharged . Ethel Turner said that she was not doing Sewell any favors, she was not working her day off , Sewell had no reason to terminate Ralph Mc- Laughlin . Roberta Turner then remarked that she was not working her day off either , that if Sewell could afford to fire Ralph McLaughlin, Sewell did not need the Turners to work their days off . Roberta Turner told Ethel Turner to tell management that the Turners were not working their days off. Ralph McLaughlin and Ethel Turner then went together into the office . McLaughlin crumpled his discharge notice and threw it at Sewell . Ethel Turner told Sewell that she would not work her days off for him , that if he had to "do" people the way he did she was not going to do him any favors. She further stated that she and her mother were refusing to work their "off days" because of Ralph Mc- Laughlin 's discharge . Ethel Turner then crossed out the "in" entry on her timecard and returned to the car. The Turners drove Sandra McLaughlin to her building, and then drove home . No contention is made that Ralph Mc- Laughlin was discharged for unlawful reasons. After Sandra McLaughlin reached her building , an indi- vidual identified in the record as "a girl " told her that Se- well had said that Sandra McLaughlin had quit. Sandra McLaughlin thereupon telephoned Sewell and told him that she was up there at her building . A short while later, Sewell came to the building and told her to tell Ethel Turner not to bother coming back to work. Sandra Mc- Laughlin relayed this message to Ethel Turner by tele- phone. Later that morning , Ethel Turner went with her mother (Roberta Turner) and her sister (Sandra McLaughlin) to a restaurant on the hospital grounds called "The Little Dip- per." While the three women were eating lunch there, some hospital guards came in and asked whether they were em- ployed there. Ethel Turner replied that so far as she knew she was not. The record fails to show what, if anything, Roberta Turner said. The guards then told the Turners to leave the grounds, and they did so. Supervisor Kelly, Sewell's immediate superior, testified that he had heard that Ethel Turner was at the Little Dipper talking with Respondent's employees, and that he had asked "security to have her removed from the grounds." Kelly testified that he told "security" that "she was not to be in the building at that time [b]ecause she was not permitted on the grounds at that time. She had not reported for work, and therefore, she had no reason to be there." He testified that "the peo- ple" had been told not to be on hospital grounds on their days off, and that this was hospital policy "because they have no reason to be there. This again is for security rea- sons." Kelly further testified that the Little Dipper is open to the general public, "but really not too many people, other than the people from the grounds, usually go into it." That afternoon, Supervisor Kelly received a memoran- dum from Sewell which read in part as follows: Subject: Resigned Miss Ethel Turner and Mrs. Roberta Turner in- formed myself & Mr. Kelly they would work the whole week of 11/3/75 to 11/9/75. When Ralph Mc- Laughlin was terminated both ladies informed me they would not work today and walked off the job. 19 The foregoing incident occurred on Friday, November 7. Fridays and Saturdays were Roberta Turner 's regular days off. Through Ethel Turner, Roberta Turner had previously advised management that she would work on Saturday, November 8, to prepare for the inspection; but she did not work that day. On November 7 or 8 , Sewell removed her timecard from the rack. Roberta Turner 's next regular workday was Sunday, November 9, and she reported to work on that day. She asked Mary Krawczynski where Ro- berta Turner's timecard was, and Krawczynski replied that she did not know anything about it. Turner asked Krawczynski for the telephone number of Sewell, who was not at work that Sunday, so Turner could find out about her missing timecard, but Krawczynski refused. Turner then went up to her building, obtained Sewell 's telephone number from employee Vogel, telephoned Sewell, and asked him why her timecard was not in the rack . Sewell replied that it was not in the rack because she did not have a job. Turner asked why. Sewell replied , ". . . because I don't have to give you a reason ," and hung up on her. Turner then telephoned her husband and asked him to pick 19 In view of this memorandum, I do not credit either Kelly's testimony that he told Sewell to pull the Turners ' timecards "because I wanted to find out why they didn't come to work that day and why they left," or Sewell's testimony that he pulled Roberta Turner's timecard on November 7 or S "Because I wanted to know why she didn't want to work , I wanted her to explain it to me" ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS 1073 her up. While she was waiting for him, two security guards came up and told her to get off of state property, she did not belong there. Kelly testified that he was told she came to Associated Cleaning that day. Between November 16 and 19, Kelly entered the nota- tion "Resigned 11/7/75" on the timecards of both Turners for the week ending November 9. When asked when it was decided that the Turners were terminated, Kelly testified, "At the time that I filled out my timecards, and they had never returned to work, and never discussed it with me. It was reverted back to November 7, because that was the last day that they had showed up for work. They were on the premises." Thereafter, Respondent's attorney filed with the Board's Regional Office a document entitled "Answer to Charges Against Employer," which was sworn to on November 21, 1975, by Kenneth Kushner, Respondent's executive direc- tor of operations. This document states, inter alia, that the Turners were terminated because they failed to report for work on November 7, that November 7 was the "effective termination date" of Ethel Turner, and that "as of Novem- ber 7," Roberta Turner was "terminated with" Ethel Turner. Respondent's answer to amended charges against Employer, sworn to by Supervisor Kelly on January 12, 1976, asserts that the Turners "were terminated on Novem- ber 7, 1975, in that they quit their jobs." Respondent's an- swer to the complaint and notice of hearing, likewise sworn to by Kelly on January 12, states that the Turners were "terminated . . . because of the unsatisfactory nature of [their] services." In ccounsel's opening statements at the beginning of the hearing on February 3, 1976, Respon- dent's counsel alleged, inter alia, that the Turners were "terminated for just cause." Respondent's March 1976 brief asserts, "The facts indicate . . . that employees Ethel Turner [and] Roberta Turner . . . were terminated by [Respondent] on November 7th [and] November 9th .. . respectively . . . Respondent . . . denies that the termina- tions of . . . Ethel Turner on November 7, 1975, [and] Ro- berta Turner on November 9, 1975, [were] motivated by anything other than poor work records, and in the case of Roberta Turner, that she resigned her position." Sewell tes- tified at the hearing that the Turners quit and he did not discharge them. Thereafter, Respondent's counsel stated on the record that the Turners had "quit." My findings as to the circumstances which led to the Turners' separation are based on the mutually corrobora- tive testimony of the Turners, the McLaughlins, and Super- visor Kelly. Sewell to a large extent corroborated their tes- timony. However, he denied telling Sandra McLaughlin to tell Ethel Turner not to report to work. In addition, Sewell testified that he removed Roberta Turner's card from the rack because he wanted to talk to her about her November 7 failure to report to work (cf. supra, In. 19); that he did not expect her to actually perform work on Sunday, November 9, or Monday, November 10, which latter date would have been his first opportunity after November 7 to discuss the November 7 incident with her in person; that she obtained his home telephone number from "unauthorized person- nel"; and that when she telephoned him on Sunday, No- vember 9, "she asked me why she wasn't working, and then-I don't remember what I said to her, I know she got very nasty about it. So then I told her, wait a minute. I don't have to go through this. I don't have to explain any- thing to you . . . I said you want to find out, come in Monday morning, I'll explain it to you . . . . She got into a hang-up, an attitude. She started using all kinds of foul language, so I decided I didn't even want to talk to her, at all. I don't have to explain anything to you. I said, I don't have to go through this. So, I hung up." In view of the witnesses ' demeanor, Sewell's unrehabihty as a witness in other respects, Kelly's testimony, and the representations made by Respondent's counsel, I do not credit the testi- mony by Sewell set forth in this paragraph. Although the opening statement by Respondent's coun- sel did not refer to any breach of rules regarding time- clocks, during the hearing counsel seemed to rely on a company rule, posted on October 13, which provided, "Each employee will punch his or her own card. This is a must. If the card isn't punched you will not get paid. Also you could be discharged." Both Ethel Turner and Sandra McLaughlin credibly testified that employees frequently punched others' timecards. Sewell testified that punching one's own card was not required where "it was too far for them girls to travel from down below without transporta- tion to get up to the top of the hill." He did not clearly distinguish between "girls" in cars or (like the Turners) in car pools, and those (if any) who would have had to walk the mile to their own buildings. I do not credit his testi- mony that on two occasions, which dates he did not recall, he complained to the Turners about having all their cards punched by one of the family, in view of their continuance of this practice and the absence of evidence that he men- tioned this practice to the Turners on the date of their termination or at any time thereafter. Sewell testified that, at the time Roberta Turner was sep- arated from Respondent's employ, she had been slacking off in her housekeeping work. On September 4, more than 2 months before her separation, Sewell reproved her for failure to perform certain cleaning work 20 On October 22, about 2 weeks before the Turners' separation, a state em- ployee inspected all of the areas cleaned by Respondent and sent reports to her superior, Custodial Service Manag- er Lou Ferrari, regarding Roberta Turner and Ethel Turner. The report about Roberta Turner contains no checkmarks in any of the 36 blanks after the listing, "The following areas need attention"; but contains the notation, "Kitchen area dirty. Stairways, water fountain. Take cart, chairs and sofa out basement." The report about Ethel Turner contains eight checkmarks and the comment, "Handrails under counter in dayhall. Entire area dirty." Sewell testified that he and Kelly told Roberta Turner about this October 22 document, that she had "access to it," and in effect, that Sewell made known its substance to 20 Roberta Turner dated the incident as sometime in October My finding as to the date is based on the "special request" slip (infra, fn 26), which she refused to sign Respondent asserted at the outset of the hearing that the Turners were discharged partly for failure to comply with "posted rules" requiring them to turn in "work sheets" So far as the record shows, the "special request" forms were the only forms which were required from per- sons performing the Turners ' work , and there is no evidence that any "post- ed rules" mentioned this requirement The September 4 slip was the only "special request" form offered into evidence regarding Roberta Turner, and none was offered regarding Ethel Turner 1074 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD her, although she was not given a copy. However, Kelly was not asked about this matter, and Sewell's testimony indicates that she was given the substance of the October 22 document in her September 4 "special request" form. Accordingly, and in view of the witnesses' demeanor, I credit her testimony that the September 4 complaint about her work was the only one she ever received, and that no- body ever complained to her about the matters mentioned in the October 22 report 21 Sewell testified that Ethel Turner "had access to see" the report about her, although she was not given a copy. In view of the absence of specific evidence that she was told about this document, and in view of the witnesses' demeanor, I credit Ethel Turner's testimony that the substance of the October 22 report was never relayed to her. There is no evidence about how many reports were made to Ferrari in consequence of this Octo- ber 22 inspection. He testified that he received between 10 and 20 such adverse reports a week, out of a theoretical maximum of 60 per inspection.22 In addition, the record contains evidence regarding Eth- el Turner's August 1975 difficulties in working with head nurse Mary Hughes, which difficulties they themselves eventually resolved, and about Ethel Turner's signing a September 25, 1975, patient-abuse complaint to the hospi- tal nursing office 10 days after the incident occurred and without getting in touch with her own supervisor.23 Also, Kelly testified that, during a period established as early August by Ethel Turner's testimony, she failed to perform as much cleaning work as she should have. He tacitly ad- mitted, however, that during this period she did not have enough time to complete her assigned duties, because of special cleaning problems caused by the nurses' permitting patients to use tobacco during prohibited periods. In addi- tion, Ethel Turner advised her superiors, and credibly testi- fied without contradiction, that her work was further inter- fered with by the presence of urine and feces which the nurses aides were supposed to clean up.24 In any event, Sewell testified that the Turners' alleged bad work had nothing to do with their termination, Sewell and Kelly testified that Ethel Turner's difficulties with Hughes (which included disputes about the responsibility for cleaning up urine and feces) had nothing to do with Ethel Turner's termination, and, as previously noted, Re- spondent contended before me that the Turners were not discharged but, rather, quit 3. Sandra McLaughlin Sandra McLaughlin was hired by Respondent on July 12, 1975, as a housekeeper. As previously noted, she is the 21 From the testimony of Roberta Turner, Simon , Sewell , and Ferrari, I infer that it was unclear whether Respondent was still responsible for clean- in ¢ the Hillcrest South kitchen , which was no longer being used 2 Such inspections were not made every day Their frequency varied 23 On September 30, Respondent suspended Ethel Turner for 3 working days on the asserted ground that she had failed to report the incident to her superior Kelly's and Ferrari 's testimony that she had reported the incident (to hospital management ) shows that Respondent 's November 1975 answer to charges against Employer erred in averring that she "completely ignored the incident " 24 Although Respondent 's counsel stated at the hearing that she was re- sponsible for such cleaning , there is no record evidence to this effect sister of employee Ethel Turner, who with employee San- tavicca initiated the union campaign. Sandra McLaughlin attended the first union meeting, on August 26, and signed a card there. She also attended the September 2 meeting, where her husband (Ralph McLaughlin) and her mother (Roberta Turner) signed union cards. Between then and October 15, the Union held a meeting almost every week, and she attended all of them. On October 15, just before going to the last union meeting, Sandra McLaughlin and Union Representative Paul went to the home of employee Mary Krawczynski. Some days later, Krawczynski told Su- pervisor Kelly that Sandra McLaughlin had come to her house with Union Representative Paul.25 It is undisputed that because of illness, McLaughlin did not work on December 1. Both McLaughlin and Sewell testified that he gave her a discharge notice on December 2. This notice is dated December 1, is in Sewell 's handwrit- ing, bears Sewell's and Kelly's signatures, and states: "Toi- let. Nurses areas, shou [?] rooms garbage neither emptied like it should be. Toilets are terrible. You have been told about this before. [Too] much loafing, personality terrible. [Too] many complaints from State Supervision. [Leaving] your area going into another without permission. Which you were warned about before." Sewell made no remarks to her on this occasion. On December 15, Supervisor Kelly prepared, and sent to Respondent's payroll department and to the city of Pittsburgh, a form reciting that Mc- Laughlin had been discharged effective December 1 be- cause "Work not satisfactory, warned several times." Re- spondent's answer to amended charges against Employer, sworn to by Kelly on January 12, 1976, asserts, inter alia, "Sandy McLaughlin was terminated on December 2, 1975 ... because on November 7, 1975 Ethel Turner and Ro- berta Turner quit because of what they considered the un- lawful termination of Ralph McLaughlin . . . . As a result of the said quit . . . . Sandy McLaughlin, wife of Ralph McLaughlin subsequently was terminated on December 2, 1975 because of unsatisfactory work having been warned on several occasions that her work was of an unsatisfactory nature." McLaughlin was responsible for the "male" section of the Hillcrest West building She was responsible for the mopping of the floors and the cleaning of the lavatories, dayhalls, patient dormitories, and all the partitions and glass within that area. Sewell testified that he discharged Sandra McLaughlin partly because she failed to perform certain work specified in Respondent's Exhibit 2A, which is the original and car- bon copy of a "special request" form relating to the "Dorms" area of the "Hillcrest" (whether East or West is not specified).26 The form contains McLaughlin' s name af- 25 My finding in this sentence is based on Krawczynski's testimony For demeanor reasons , I do not credit Kelly's testimony that she did not men- tion Sandra McLaughlin 26 An employee is normally given a white top copy and at least one yellow carbon copy of the "special request" form relating to each incident , inferen- tially with the carbon paper still remaining between the sheets The forms call for entries after "Date to be Completed," "Date Completed," and "Sig- nature " Upon receiving such a set of forms, the employee is expected to perform the work specified, to fill in the "Date Completed" and "Signature" blanks, and to return the white top copy and a yellow carbon copy to the office ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS ter the printed entry "Referred to"; the handwritten entry "Terrible" after restroom sinks, floor, mirrors, commode, and partitions; the handwritten entry "Dirty" after rest- room walls and waste container; and, after the printed en- try "Other Remarks," the handwritten comment, "[It] seems as though she doesn't want to get her hand dirty. Because this is her worst area (toilets)." The blanks follow- ing the printed entries "Date Completed" and "Signature" are empty. Sewell testified that he prepared these docu- ments, and gave both of them to Sandra McLaughlin, on December 1, a date on which (by her uncontradicted testi- mony) she was out sick. After the printed entry, "Date to be completed," these forms set forth the date "12/3/75." It is uncontradicted that the last day on which McLaughlin actually worked for Respondent was November 30, and that she was advised of her discharge when she reported to work on December 2. Moreover, a slip subsequently pre- pared by Supervisor Kelly, and forwarded by him to Re- spondent's payroll department, states that she was dis- charged effective December 1, the date on which Sewell allegedly prepared Respondent's Exhibit 2A. Respondent did not explain how it retrieved Respondent's Exhibit 2A from her, and she testified that she had never seen these documents In view of the foregoing (especially the incon- sistencies between Sewell's testimony and the dates on Resp. Exh. 2A) and the witnesses' demeanor, I credit Mc- Laughlin. Sewell further testified that on December 1 he prepared a set of "special request" forms whose yellow carbon copy is Respondent's Exhibit 2B. This document is substantially the same as Respondent's Exhibit 2A, except for the entries after "Other Remarks," "Date Completed," and "Signa- ture." He did not explain why he chose to make out both Respondent's Exhibit 2A and the set of forms including Respondent's Exhibit 2B. Sewell further testified that he took Respondent's Exhibit 2B to Sandra McLaughlin's building, was unable to find her,27 and gave the document to employee Shirley Costello, who actually performed the work called for by the document. Sewell also testified that Costello signed "the slip." Respondent's Exhibit 2B, all of which appears to be a carbon copy, contains Shirley Costello's purported signature after the printed entry "Sig- nature ," the entry "12/2/75" after the printed entry "Date Completed," and the following entry in Sewell's handwrit- ing after the printed entry "Other Remarks:" "Shirley Cos- tello cleaned commodes & sinks, which [McLaughlin] was suppose [sic] to do. Garbage was a disgrace ." 28 Sewell tes- tified that he saw Sandra McLaughlin read this form, with- out, however, specifying a date. In view of the witnesses' demeanor and the fact that McLaughlin did not actually work for Respondent on or after the date on which Re- spondent's Exhibit 2B was allegedly prepared, I credit Mc- Laughlin's denial that she ever saw Respondent's Exhibit 2B.z 27 As previously, noted, she was out sick on December 1 ie Certain portions of Sewell's testimony suggest that he left the top copy of this slip in his office and brought only the carbon copy to Hillcrest West However, I regard such testimony as too vague to squarely raise the issue of why Costello's signature is a carbon copy Respondent's counsel indicated that top copies of such slips are retained in Respondent 's office files 1075 Sewell testified that in his presence Supervisor Kelly pre- pared two memoranda (Resp. Exhs. 14A and 14B) about Sandra McLaughlin. Kelly was not asked about these doc- uments, and there is no evidence that either was ever shown to her. Respondent's Exhibit 14B bears the date October 28 at 8:15 a.m., and states, "On this date Mr. Wayne Sewell ob- served Sandy McLaughlin, Gail Scott and Lisa Ann Ru- pich sitting in the lobby of [Hillcrest West] when in fact they should have already started working. Their starting time is 8:00 AM." Sewell testified that Kelly prepared this memorandum on the basis of information supplied by Se- well. However, Sewell initially testified that this incident occurred "before quitting time. Way before quitting time. They had almost an hour or an hour and a half to finish their work, yet." 30 Sewell testified that when he observed this incident, he told all three employees, "You're not sup- posed to be sitting. You're supposed to be working. What are you doing sitting here9" He further testified that Ru- pich later quit, and that Scott was later terminated for rea- sons unrelated to this incident. Respondent's Exhibit 14A is dated October 27 at 12:20 p.m. and states that Sewell observed McLaughlin and Vo- gel "sitting in the [Hillcrest West] Dayroom on Female side watching television . . . . They are to be working at that time and had no reason to be sitting there." Sewell testified that Kelly prepared this document on the basis of informa- tion supplied by Sewell. Sewell was not asked what, if any- thing, he said to McLaughlin and Vogel on this occasion. Vogel testified for the General Counsel, but was not asked about this incident. Vogel was discharged about 3 weeks later , but there is no claim or evidence that this alleged incident played any part in his discharge. McLaughlin testified about an incident, which she thought occurred on October 28 but was not sure, when Sewell saw her and employee Jackie Washington "just sit- ting" in the lobby of the building. When asked, "How about Gail Scott and Lisa Ann Ruben [sic]?" she replied, "I don't know." McLaughlin further testified that, on Oc- tober 27, Sewell came to the dayroom; that two other, uni- dentified people were sitting there, that he "said something about sitting"; that she accurately stated that she was not sitting, she was dust mopping; that he said "something about he better not ever come back and catch it again"; and that Sewell never mentioned the incident again. In view of the discrepancies between the October 28 in- cident as described in Respondent's Exhibit 14B, as de- scribed by Sewell (who allegedly provided the information which underlay that document), and as described by Mc- Laughlin; Kelly's failure to testify about Respondent's Ex- hibit 14B (which he drafted); and the witnesses ' demeanor, I conclude that the incident occurred as described by Mc- Laughlin and that Respondent's Exhibit 14B was not in fact drafted as a good-faith effort accurately to describe an 29 At the outset of the hearing, Respondent's counsel averred that Sandra McLaughlin was discharged partly for failure to comply with "posted rules" requiring her to turn in "work sheets " There is no evidence that Respon- dent had any posted rules to this effect McLaughlin credibly testified with- out contradiction that the "special request" forms were the only forms which she was required to fill out 30 Sandra McLaughlin's quitting hour was 2 30 p m 1076 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD incident which genuinely disturbed management. How- ever, particularly in view of Vogel's failure to testify about the matter, I find that the October 27 incident occurred substantially as described in Respondent's Exhibit 14A. I conclude that McLaughlin erred in dating the dust-mop incident as having occurred on October 27, and that this incident occurred on a different date. It is undisputed that, on three occasions between Sep- tember 8 and Sandra McLaughlin's December 2 discharge, Respondent gave her documents relating to her work. On September 8, Sewell prepared and gave to her two "special request" forms, each in duplicate, which stated that certain portions of the front nurses' office in her building (Hillcrest West) needed attention-more specifically, that the desk top needed washing, that the waste basket was not emp- tied, and that attention was also required to the bathroom window sills and the restroom sinks, floor, mirrors, waste container, and partitions. 1 About a week later, on Septem- ber 16, on the basis of a personal inspection, Sewell gave McLaughlin another set of "special request" forms sharply criticizing the condition of the "male" area in Hillcrest West.32 Sewell admitted that she corrected these conditions in connection with the November 11-14 state inspection, and she testified without contradiction that during the in- spection Sewell told her that her building "looked good." On October 17, Sewell prepared and gave to McLaugh- lin a memorandum stating "you are being warned for the last time. Stay in your own building." Sewell testified that, both before and after he wrote this October 17 memoran- dum, he found her leaving her building and warned her about this. McLaughlin testified that, on occasion before October 17, she left her building during working hours without permission, that October 17 was the only time that she was ever told or warned not to leave her work area, and that thereafter she stayed in her building. I credit Mc- Laughlin, in view of the witnesses' demeanor and Sewell's statement that she was leaving the building to talk to her husband, who was discharged on November 7.33 Moreover, 3i The record fails to show why McLaughlin received two sets of Septem- ber 8 "special request" forms reciting the same work to be done She signed only one set of these forms At the hearing, she explained that she failed to sign the other set because a fellow employee who was supposed to help her perform the work had been transferred out of the building and, in conse- quence, McLaughlin had to do all the work herself 32 The forms stated that the front rug needed vacuuming , the wastebasket and door frames needed washing, the door glass, window sills, and restroom sinks, floor, mirrors, waste container, and partitions needed attention, the commode was "V Dirty B M ", and the floor was sloppy and dusty, the building had a bad odor, there were food stains on the rails in the halls, the night stands were dirty, the garbage can should be emptied and washed, and "rooms never been dust or mopped " 33 The testimony is as follows Q [By Mr Surprenant] After 10-17, did you find her leaving her building after that'[ A She had, yeah, and I told her about it Q You didn't give her another written statement' A No, I didn't write it, I told her Q How many times did you tell her' A I told her all the time about it It got to be sickening, I mean, her husband was on one side and she was on the other- Q Yes, but her husband- A She was always going to visit him Q Her husband left on November 7th Sewell testified that on her discharge paper he did not refer to her leaving her job place. The foregoing establishes that on September 8 and 16 McLaughlin received written complaints about her work, and that on October 17 she was warned in writing to stay in her building. McLaughlin testified that while she was working for Respondent she thought there were three or four complaints about her work, but there may have been more, she was not "sure." She further testified that she thought, but was not sure, that all but one of these were made before the first union meeting on August 26. She described one of the pre-August 26 complaints as relating to "offices I had to clean. They said they weren't cleaned right ." As previously noted , the September 8 "special re- quest" slip related to this matter. Supervisor Kelly testified that, on three different occasions during Sandra Mc- Laughlin's 5-month tenure of employment, he inspected her area in response to complaints by a Hillcrest West Nurses aide identified in the record merely as Sylvia, and then talked to McLaughlin about her area's being dirty. At one point, Kelly testified that these conversations occurred in June (before McLaughlin was hired), July, and August (at least 3 months before she was fired), but he then testi- fied that he could not remember when such conversations occurred. Sewell's testimony implies that he repeatedly re- proved her about her work, but his testimony is exceeding- ly vague about dates, subjects, and other specifics. On the basis of the testimony recited in this paragraph, the wit- nesses' demeanor, and the probabilities of the situation, I conclude that McLaughlin was somewhat understating the number of complaints she received, that Kelly was some- what overstating them, and that Sewell was trying to ob- scure his conclusion that she had not received an above- average number of complaints. I conclude that she re- ceived three or four complaints about her work before August 26, and about three (including the two written complaints) between August 26 and September 16. On the basis of the witnesses' demeanor and Sewell's unreliability as to other matters, I credit McLaughlin's testimony that after September 16 she received no more complaints about her work and discredit Sewell's testimony that he com- plained to her about her work shortly after the November 11-14 inspection. Further, in view of the credited testi- mony about the absence of complaints and Sewell's de- meanor, I discredit his wholly uncorroborated testimony that after the November 11-14 inspection he received complaints about her work from the nursing staff and the "higher" staff. Kelly testified that he had talked to every one of Respondent's employees about bad work "ever since the first day." Sewell testified that during an unspecified period (possi- bly after the November 11-14 inspection), McLaughlin was the "main one" of a group of employees, whose num- ber and identity he did not specify, who left early and over- A She still was over there running back and forth when he was there, that's what I'm talking about Q When he was there After he left, was she running back and forth, then" A Oh, yeah Q Who did she go to see then' A She went over Who she went to see , I have no idea , what went on I don't know who she talked to ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS 1077 stayed their lunch and break periods. The October 28 inci- dent aside , he did not testify that he ever mentioned any of these matters to McLaughlin before discharging her; her timecards were not produced ; and she testified that after the inspection she was never reprimanded for loafing. For these reasons , and on the basis of Sewell 's demeanor, I do not credit his testimony in this respect. Kelly testified that he received a telephoned report from executive housekeeper Ferrari that McLaughlin and four other employees , including Costello, had been making a lot of noise at the Little Dipper , a restaurant on hospital grounds. Kelly further testified that on November 24, he warned all five employees about this conduct , and put a memorandum about the matter into the personnel file of each . Sewell to some extent corroborated Kelly's testimony in this respect , and McLaughlin was not asked about it. Accordingly , I accept Kelly's testimony in this respect, even though Respondent 's witness Ferran was not asked about the matter and Respondent produced only the mem- orandum in McLaughlin 's file . Respondent did not termi- nate any of the other employees involved in this incident. Kelly testified that on three occasions when nurses aide Sylvia complained about the condition of McLaughlin's area , he reported these complaints to Sewell and asked him to check the area. Kelly could not recall the dates of any of these conversations . Sewell testified that he received com- plaints about McLaughlin from an unspecified source or sources when she had "just started" to work for Respon- dent in July , more than 4 months before her discharge. I conclude that the foregoing testimony by Kelly and by Se- well relates to the same time period. During the hearing , counsel seemed to be relying on Mc- Laughlin 's action in punching in her sister's and her mother 's timecards , in violation of company rules. Mc- Laughlin's husband , sister , and mother were separated from Respondent 3 weeks before her discharge , punching others' timecards was common practice , and there is no evidence that her conduct in this respect had anything to do with her discharge. E. The Union's Majority Status As previously noted, Respondent concedes that. since September 3, the Union has demanded and continues to demand recognition and that Respondent has failed and refused and continues to refuse to bargain. The General Counsel and Respondent agreed that, as of September 3, 26 named individuals constituted the bargaining unit, which appropriateness is conceded in Respondent's answer to the first complaint.34 The General Counsel contends that, by September 3, 19 of these employees signed opera- tive cards and that another employee signed an operative card on September 4. Respondent contends that most of these cards were insufficiently authenticated and that many were not operative because of representations made to the employees before they signed and/or the employees' subjective understanding of what such cards meant. 34 "All housekeeping employees employed by the Respondent at its Woodville State Hospital, Woodville, Pennsylvania, location, excluding all other employees, office clerical employees, professional employees, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act" The printed portions of each of these cards are substan- tially identical. The cards are headed: "District 1199P Na- tional Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees a Division of RWDSU/AFL-CIO," with the words "District 1199P" in print heavier and much larger than any other printing on the cards. Underneath, the cards are headed "Application for Membership" in capital letters. Then, the cards call for the employee's name, social sucurity number, address, telephone number, employer, job title, date of hire, hourly rate, hours worked per week, shift, and date the card was signed. The cards also state, in the smallest type used on the cards, "I hereby apply for membership and designate the National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees of RWDSU/AFL-CIO to represent me in collective-bargaining negotiations on wages, hours and working conditions." Then, blanks call for the employee's signature. Although all of these cards are self-addressed with postage prepaid, there is no indication thereon or else- where in the record that any was mailed to the Union. Each of them contains a Region 6 date-stamp of Septem- ber 11, 1975, at 8:46 am. Almost all of them are almost completely filled out. As to each card, all the respective entries appear to be in the same handwriting and (except the card bearing Joe Vogel's purported signature) the same pen as the signatures. 1. Cards bearing the purported signatures of Nancy Cascio, Frank Krawczynski, Mary Krawczynski, Sandra McLaughlin, and Ethel Turner The first union meeting was held in Union Representa- tive Paul's office on August 26, after the employees' regular working hours. Paul passed out authorization cards to the five employees present, explained that the cards were ap- plications for membership in the Union, and stated that there would be no financial obligations until they had a contract. He gave them copies of a union magazine show- ing the types of improved benefits (such as vacations, holi- days, and health care) that union employees had won, and stated that he could not promise his audience what they themselves would obtain because "I don't produce any paychecks." He did not tell them the disadvantages of union membership, because he did not see any. He told them that, in order to get a union, a majority of the em- ployees would have to sign cards, that "then you have to set up for an election," and that "if we won the election ... we would have to negotiate . . . to settle for an agree- ment for things that we wanted, and things that they want- ed." 35 He did not tell them that getting a union in was conditioned on an election.36 Paul had the employees read the cards, and asked if there were any questions. There were none. 35 My findings in this sentence are based on a composite of the testimony of Ethel Turner and Sandra McLaughlin. 36 He testified Q. [By Mr Acker ] Then they told you it was conditioned upon an election , is that right? A. [By Sandra McLaughlin ] Not when we signed the cards, we weren't sure we'd have an election or not, because we weren't sure how many people were going to go for it 1078 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Paul credibly testified without contradiction that em- ployees Mary Krawczynski, Frank Krawczynski, Ethel Turner, Sandra McLaughlin, and Nancy Cascio thereupon signed cards in his presence and gave them to him. Sandra McLaughlin credibly testified that she signed a card on this occasion; that she believed the card meant "if you want to go for a union for better benefits and the union will back you up, stand behind you"; that she did not know what the word "collective bargaining" means; and that she believed "negotiations" means "meeting." When asked whether she signed her card "so you could get an election," she credibly testified, "That was the reason. That was for the Union. To go for the union." Ethel Turner credibly testified that she and the four others at the meeting, whom she named, all signed cards at the meeting. Mary Krawczynski credibly testified that she had signed the card bearing her purported signature, that she had given it to Paul, and that Paul ex- plained the meaning of the card to her. She impressed me as being an intelligent woman, and I do not credit her further testimony that she did not understand the card.37 Nancy Cascio and Frank Krawczynski did not testify. Frank Krawczynski's purported signature is dated August 24. The other four are all dated August 26. All five employ- ees who signed cards at the first meeting also attended the second meeting. 2. Cards bearing the purported signatures of Patricia Bonkowski, Thomas Cavey, Ralph McLaughlin, Sara Olszewski, Joseph Santavicca, Toni Talmonti, Roberta Turner, and Joe Vogel At the second meeting, held on September 2, Paul re- lated the advantages of union membership and passed around union magazines. Those present discussed what a union could and could not do, how much interest there was in a union, and why they wanted a union. Paul also stated that "we would at least have to have a couple meetings in order to get things organized, and then he would have to send in the union cards to see if we would be recognized ... if the union went through . . . we would have an elec- tion." Paul passed out union cards to those who had not already signed cards. He credibly testified without contra- diction that, in his presence, cards were signed by Patricia Bonkowski, Thomas Cavey, Ralph McLaughlin, Sara Olsz- ewski, Joseph Santavicca, Toni Talmonti, Roberta Turner, and Joe Vogel. Inferentially, these employees returned such cards to him. Joe Vogel's card is dated August 2, but he and Paul credibly testified that Vogel signed in on Sep- tember 2. The meeting, which lasted about an hour and a half, was held at a tavern because employees who under- Q Well, let's assume that you got a majority of the cards, then is it your understanding that you would have an election1 A If you got a majority of the people, yes Q I see That's what was told you9 A Yes 37 As previously noted, Mary Krawczynski, who was still in Respondent's employ at the time of the hearing, initially refused to comply with a subpena issued at the General Counsel's instance Without objection, the General Counsel was permitted to examine her as a hostile witness under Rule 611 (c) of the Federal Rules of Evidence took to arrange for a firehouse could not obtain it. Santav- icca had one beer after signing his application. Frank Krawczynski, who had signed a card at the first meeting, also drank beer. So far as the record shows, none of the others, most of whom were under the legal drinking age, consumed any alcoholic beverages. Ralph McLaughlin, Santavicca, Roberta Turner, and Vogel each credibly testified to signing a union card at that meeting. Cavey testified for the General Counsel, but was not asked about this matter. None of the other September 2 card-signers testified. When Ralph McLaughlin was asked whether he understood what he signed, he credibly testified, "I signed a card that, to have that union back us up. To try to get the union in there. . . . They were going to represent us... As a union. To try to get the union. They would back us up." Santavicca credibly testified to a belief that the language on the card "means that the union would back you up if anything happened . . . the union would negotiate for better-with the management, better conditions to work with and maybe higher wages if possi- ble." Roberta Turner credibly testified that she did not understand every word on the card, "But, to me it means better working conditions, better benefits," and that they have a collective-bargaining election. Vogel credibly testi- fied that he "signed an application for membership in the union" but that he did not know what was meant by the language "to represent me in collective-bargaining negotia- tions on wages, hours and working conditions." 3. Cards bearing the purported signatures of Raymond Anthony, Vonnette Reynolds, Judy Haines, Emily Mullens, Lula Fitzgerald, Sheila Higgins, and Jacqueline Washington At the September 2 meeting, four employees, including Santavicca and Ethel Turner, volunteered to form an orga- nizing committee. Paul gave them blank authorization cards and told the committee members to show them to their fellow employees, to have the employees read them, to answer any questions, and then to see if the employees would be willing to join the Union. Santavicca credibly testified as follows: On September 3, he gave blank authorization cards to Raymond Anthony, Vonnette Reynolds, and Judy Haines. Most if not all these employees filled out their cards in Santavicca's presence, and all of them signed their cards in his presence. When giving out cards, Santavicca "explained" them by stating that "if the union went through, that we would probably get better wages, better working conditions, and more peo- ple to work with us. . . . That the union would back you up if anything would happen, and . . . not to worrry about anything if you got fired, cause the union would try to help you get your job back." Haines "was a little hysterical about it at first. Like she didn't know if she wanted to sign it or not " He had to explain to her about how to fill out her card The same day he procured these September 3 cards, Santavicca gave them to Ethel Turner. On Septem- ber 4, at Santavicca's solicitation, employee Jacqueline Washington signed a card in his presence and returned it to him. Santavicca did not recall what he told her. Ethel Turner credibly testified as follows: Also on Sep- ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS tember 3, during lunchbreak, she gave blank cards to Emi- ly Mullens, Lula Fitzgerald, and Sheila Higgins, and each of them signed her card in Ethel Turner's presence.38 Ethel Turner "explained" the meaning of an application for membership by telling Fitzgerald "that you needed so many people for an election, to win an election," that a majority was needed. Turner did not explain the last phrase on the card to Fitzgerald, nor the meaning of the card to Sheila Higgins. That same afternoon, Ethel Turner gave Paul the cards signed by Anthony, Reynolds, Haines, Mullens, Fitzgerald, and Higgins. Paul received Jacqueline Washington's card at a September 9 union meeting. The record fails to show who gave it to him. None of these seven card-signers testi- fied at the hearing. While attending a union meeting some- time after September 2, Haines and Reynolds told Paul they had signed union cards. F. The Representation Proceeding As previously noted, Respondent received the Union's bargaining demand on September 3, the day before Santavicca's discharge. The Union's charge based on Santavicca's termination was filed on September 5. On September 11, the Union filed a representation petition with the Board's Regional Office. A stipulation for a con- sent election to be held on October 20 was executed by the parties on September 25 and approved by the Acting Re- gional Director on September 29. Between September 3 and October 15, the Union held various meetings of Re- spondent's employees. Paul testified that at the October 15 meeting "we had also found out that another person had been fired or laid off that previous week, and with the amount of firings [for union activity] that were going on, we didn't feel that we could proceed with a fair election on the date that had been set for it." 39 On October 17, the Union requested withdrawal of its petition and such with- drawal was approved by the Regional Director on October 20. G. Analysis and Conclusions 1. Interrogation and threat I agree with the General Counsel that Respondent vio- lated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act when Supervisor Kelly asked employee Mary Krawczynski who was trying to start a union, and when Supervisor Sewell told employees Cavey 38 Fitzgerald's card does not contain her social security number, which she could not remember Higgins' card is undated and contains only her name , street address, social security number , telephone number, and signa- ture 39 The record fails to show what October discharge Paul was referring to Cavey was discharged on October H, but so far as the record shows no contention was ever made that his discharge was motivated by his having signed a union card The Union's amended charge in Case 6-CA-8584 alleged that on September 19 Respondent discriminatorily discharged Nan- cy Cascio; but no such allegation as to Casico appears in the second amended charge in that case, or in the complaint. The Union's charge in Case 6-CA-8778 alleged that Respondent discriminatonly suspended Eth- el Turner on September 30, but no such allegation appears in the complaint (see supra, fn 23). 1079 and Vogel that Ethel and Joey (by whom he clearly meant Ethel Turner and Joseph Santavicca) had "laid their jobs on the line" by trying to bring in a Union. In finding Kelly's interrogation of Krawczynski to be unlawful, I note that she untruthfully said that she did not know who the union activists were (although she knew that they included her own son, Joseph Santavicca, and her brother-in-law, and although she herself had attended both prior union meetings); that later that same day Sewell threatened San- tavicca and union activist Ethel Turner with discharge for their union activity; that (as found infra) Santavicca was discharged the next morning for that reason; that (as found infra) Ethel Turner was discharged partly for that reason about 2 months later; and that no legitimate reason ap- pears for Kelly's inquiry. 2. The alleged unlawful discharges a The Turners Friday, November 7, was the last regular day off which Ethel Turner (whose regular days off were Thursday and Friday) agreed to work in contemplation of the November 11 inspection. November 7 and 8 the last regular days off which her mother, Roberta Turner (whose regular days off were Friday and Saturday) agreed to work in contempla- tion of the inspection. Both of them reported to work on November 7. However, because of the discharge of Ralph McLaughlin (Roberta Turner's son-in-law and Ethel Turner's brother-in-law) that same morning, the Turners jointly decided that they would not work their days off. Supervisors Sewell and Kelly were advised of this decision and the reason for it. Although both of them from time to time referred to the Turner's walkout as a resignation or "quit," Sewell's testimony 40 and his November 7 memo- randum to Kelly 41 establish that they knew the Turners' refusal to work was limited to November 7 and (as to Ro- berta Turner) November 8, and that Sewell and Kelly did not entertain the erroneous belief that the Turners intend- ed to abandon their jobs. Management's awareness that the Turners intended to absent themselves only tempo- rarily is further shown by Sewell's November 7 instructions to Sandra McLaughlin, to tell Ethel Turner not'to bother coming back to work-a message which Sewell would have regarded as wholly unnecessary if he had really thought she quit. Moreover, in a November 21 affidavit, Respon- dent's executive director of 'operations stated that the Turners were "terminated" because df their November 7 failure to report for work. The foregoing circumstances persuade me, and I find, that Respondent discharged the Turners because of their joint refusal to work on their days off (November 7 and, as to Roberta Turner, November 8 too) in protest against em- ployee Ralph McLaughlin's discharge. I agree with the 40 "They found out Ralph was fired and Sandy went out to the car and told them about it Well Ethel came in and said that they weren't going to work anymore Her and her mother, Mrs Roberta Turner They said they refused to work anymore on their off days" (Emphasis sup- plied ) 41 "[The Turners said] they would work the whole week 11 /3/75 to 11/9/75 When Ralph McLaughlin was terminated both ladies informed me they would not work today and walked off the fob " (Emphasis supplied ) 1080 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD General Counsel that this point refusal by the Turners to report to work for this reason was protected by Section 7 of the Act , and, therefore , that their discharge for engaging in such conduct violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. Their point refusal to work enjoyed statutory protection even though Ralph McLaughlin was discharged for lawful rea- sons.42 Nor was the Turners ' joint refusal to work rendered unprotected by the fact that it encompassed days which were their regular days off and which they had agreed to work in preparation for the forthcoming inspection . Florida Steel Corporation, 221 NLRB 554 (1975). The cases cited by Respondent 43 involve employees who repeatedly worked part but not all of the hours which the employer had scheduled the employees to work for the respective days in question . In the instant case , Ethel Turner refused to work at all on November 7, and Roberta Turner refused to work at all on November 7 and 8 . Moreover , because the Turners were refusing to work on their last regular days off before the forthcoming inspection which had caused Respondent to request such work , there is no basis for any inference that they planned to continue refusing company requests or orders to work on their regular off days. Cf. First National Bank of Omaha , 171 NLRB 1145, 1149-1151 (1968), enfd . 413 F.2d 921, 923-925 (C.A. 8, 1969); Poly- tech, Incorporated, 195 NLRB 695 (1972) I also agree with the General Counsel that the Turners were discharged partly to discourage union activity and, therefore , that their discharge also violated Section 8(a)(3) of the Act .44 Ethel Turner and Santavicca introduced the Union into Respondent 's operation . So far as the record shows, they were the only employees who were successful in soliciting union cards from their fellow workers . About 2 months before the Turners' discharge , Sewell remarked that Ethel Turner and Santavicca had "laid their jobs on the line" by trying to bring in a union 45 The day after this remark , Respondent discharged Santavicca because of his union activity (infra, sec. II ,G,2,b). Respondent had found out by late October about the union sympathies of Sandra McLaughlin , who was Ethel Turner's sister and Roberta Turner's daughter, and because of such sympathies dis- 42 Eagle International, Inc, 221 NLRB 1291 (1975), 223 NLRB 29 (1976), NLRB v J Mitchko, Inc, 284 F 2d 573, 576 (C A 3, 1960), NLRB v Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Miami, Inc, 449 F 2d 824, 830, In 5 (C A 5, 1971), cert denied 407 U S 910 (1972); see also Houston Insulation Contrac- tors Association v N L R B, 386 U S 664, 668-669 (1967), Roemer Indus- tries, Inc, 205 NLRB 63, 64-65 (1973) 47 Prince Lithograph Co, Inc, 205 NLRB 110 (1973), Lodge 76, Interna- tional Association of Machinists v Wisconsin Employment Relations Commis- sion (Kearney and Trecker), 67 Wis 2d 13, 226 N W 2nd 203 After Respon- dent filed its brief, Kearney and Trecker was reversed by the Supreme Court of the United States (44 U S Law Week 5026 92 LRRM 2881) on grounds irrelevant here 44 Dilene Answering Service, inc, 222 NLRB 462 (1976), N L R B v West Side Carpet Cleaning Co, 329 F 2d 758, 761 (C A 6, 1964), Hugh H Wilson Corporation v N L R B, 414 F 2d 1345, 1353, In 17 (C A 3, 1969), cert denied 397 U S 935 (1970) 45 In view of this remark, the credited testimony that employee King told Sewell and Kelly that same day about Santavicca's union solicitation, and Sewell's admission that King also named Ethel Turner, I do not credit Kelly's testimony that he did not know about Santavicca's union activity, or Sewell's and Kelly's testimony that they did not know about Ethel Turner's union activity, before the respective discharges Indeed, Kelly admitted that before Ethel Turner's termination he had heard "rumors" from King and others about Ethel Turner's union activity charged her less than a month after the Turners ' discharge (infra, sec. II ,G,2,c). Also, Kelly admitted that before their discharge he had heard "rumors" about the union activity of Roberta Turner, who attended all the union meetings held after she signed a card at the second meeting .46 Fur- thermore , the very fact that Respondent discharged two employees who (it knew ) intended to return to work after a day or two indicates that the absence which led to their discharge did not substantially inconvenience Respondent. I conclude that the Turners ' discharge was motivated in part by their union activities and, therefore , violated Sec- tion 8(a)(3) of the Act as well as Section 8 (a)(1).47 While the Turners may have given Respondent lawful cause to dismiss them , "The concurrent existence of an otherwise valid reason for the discharge of an employee does not preclude a factual inference that his discharge was discrim- inatory, if it appears from a preponderance of evidence, and the reasonable inference drawn therefrom , that the dis- charge was in fact motivated by the employer 's opposition to the employee 's union activities ." N.L.R.B v. Buitoni Foods Corporation , 298 F .2d 169 , 174 (C.A. 3, 1962).48 In any event , my 8(a)(3) finding as to the Turners does not affect the remedial order. b. Santavicca Santavicca was the employee who first contacted the Union. He urged employees to attend the second meeting (the first his health allowed him to attend), when he signed a card and volunteered to become a member of the em- ployee organizing committee. He obtained more executed union authorization cards than did any other employee; indeed, so far as the record shows, he and Ethel Turner were the only employees who ever obtained such signa- tures. On the morning of September 3, employee King told Supervisors Sewell and Kelly that Santavicca had been trying to induce her and another employee to sign a union card. Later that same day, Supervisor Sewell remarked that Santavicca had laid his job on the line by trying to bring in a union. On the following morning, he was discharged. This sequence of events provides a strong prima facie case that Santavicca's discharge was motivated by his union ac- tivity. "The abruptness of a discharge and its timing are persuasive evidence as to motivation." N.L.R.B. v. Mont- gomery Ward & Co., 242 F.2d 497, 502 (C.A. 2, 1957), cert. denied 355 U.S. 829 (1957). 46 In view of this testimony and demeanor considerations, I do not credit Sewell's testimony that before Roberta Turners' discharge he did not know of her union activity 47 Certain statements made by the General Counsel toward the end of the first day of the hearing suggest that he was making no 8(a)(3 ) contention as to Roberta Turner However, both the complaint and the General Counsel's opening statement advance such a contention , and the issue has been briefed by both parties My conclusions herein in no respect rely on Ethel Turner's testimony that in late October, in Roberta Turner's presence, Ethel Turner advised Kelly and Sewell that she herself and others were involved in union activity and these supervisors replied that they were well aware of who was involved in the Union. Roberta Turner denied that any such conversation occurred 48 See also McDonald v Santa Fe Trail Transportation Co, 12 EPD 110,997 44 U.S Law Week 5070, 12 FEP Cases 1577, 1581 (June 25, 1976), Wilson, supra, 414 F 2d at 1352-53 ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS Moreover, the evidence establishes that at least some of the reasons tendered by Respondent for the discharge could not be real reasons . Thus, although Respondent's counsel asserted that Santavicca was discharged partly be- cause Respondent thought he had deliberately rendered the wet vacuum machine inoperable, Sewell testified that this damage had nothing to do with Santavicca's discharge. Further, although Kelly and Respondent's counsel (but not Sewell) stated that Santavicca was discharged partly for failure to fill out certain forms, other employees who were at least equally guilty of this omission were not discharged for this reason. Similarly, although Sewell and Kelly testi- fied that Santavicca was discharged partly because the Hospital dietary personnel complained about his work, As- sistant Dietary Department Supervisor Simon testified that she had complained about the work of Respondent's em- ployees in the Hillcrest East and West dietary areas before and after (as well as while) Santavicca was cleaning the Hillcrest East dietary area ; and Respondent retained in its employ other personnel responsible for the allegedly poor cleaning of the facility. Moreover, although Sewell testified that Simon had complained before August 15 that Santa- vicca was not doing his work in the Hillcrest East area (to which he was not transferred until August 11), Simon testi- fied that her only basis for knowing who did particular work was the daily reports, which Santavicca was not fill- ing out dunng this period. Nor did Simon or anyone else corroborate Sewell's testimony that on September 4 the di- etary department complained about the Hillcrest East area. As to Santavicca's failure to use the wet vacuum, Sewell initially testified that this had nothing to do with his dis- charge, and the credible evidence shows that at no material time was this machine working properly. Further impugn- ing Respondent's contention that Santavicca was dis- charged for lawful reasons on the day after Sewell threat- ened that Santavicca would be discharged for union activity are the inconsistencies in the testimony of Respon- dent's witnesses as to when his admittedly good work alleg- edly deteriorated and as to when the discharge decision was made. While Respondent may have had lawful cause to discharge Santavicca, such a circumstance did not per- mit Respondent to discharge him wholly or in part for union activity 49 49 Santavicca 's solicitation activity consumed about 5 minutes of the working time of Santavicca and (perhaps ) two others whom he unsuccess- fully solicited in the geriatrics building, and also ( in effect) an undisclosed period of time which he spent going from that building to his Hillcrest East work station Sewell testified, in effect , that Santavicca was discharged part- ly for being outside his area during working hours and using part of this time to prevent two other employees from working by soliciting them to sign union cards Respondent could likely have lawfully discharged Santavtcca for this working hours activity, provided that the timing of such activity was really Respondent 's sole objection thereto and that Respondent would have discharged Santavicca for engaging during such periods in solicitation unre- lated to union or protected activity However, Respondent's objection to Santavicca 's union activity was not limited to its timing Sewell's threat to discharge Santavicca and Ethel Turner did not refer to the timing of their union activity, Sandra McLaughlin and (in part) Roberta Turner were dis- charged for union activity which did not occur during working hours, and there is no evidence that Respondent mentioned the timing of Santavicca's union activity (or, for that matter, his failure to stay in his area during working hours) when discharging him 1081 c. Sandra McLaughlin Sandra McLaughlin signed a union card at the first union meeting and attended all of the subsequent meet- ings. Her sister, Ethel Turner, was one of the two employ- ees who introduced the Union into the plant and success- fully solicited other employees to sign union cards. Respondent threatened to discharge Ethel Turner for such activity, and thereafter discharged her and Roberta Turner (the mother of Ethel Turner and Sandra McLaughlin) part- ly to discourage union activity. Moreover, in late October Kelly learned that Sandra McLaughlin had come to anoth- er employee's house with Union Representative Paul.50 On December 2, Sewell gave her a discharge slip dated Decem- ber 1, when she had been out sick. I conclude that Sandra McLaughlin was discharged at least in part because of her union activities, in violation of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act. Thus, prior to the hear- ing Kelly swore that Sandra McLaughlin was discharged "as a result of [the Turners'] quit," referring to their dis- criminatory discharge. Further pointing to a similar moti- vation for McLaughlin's discharge is the untruthfulness, to some extent established by Respondent's own records, of Respondent's tendered explanations for her discharge.5t Thus, Respondent contends that she was discharged, ad- mittedly before beginning work on December 2, partly be- cause she had failed to complete by December 3 certain work specified in a complaint form which (according to Sewell) he gave her on December 1, a day when (on the uncontradicted evidence) she was out sick. Moreover, a memorandum of an alleged "loafing" incident, which memorandum was allegedly in McLaughlin's personnel file although there is no evidence she ever saw it, differs in significant respects from the testimonial account given by Sewell, on whose oral report the memorandum was assert- edly based. Furthermore, the only evidence even tending to support the contention that she was discharged partly be- cause she breached Respondent's rule against punching others' timecards is that she did so on the last day her relatives worked there-that is, November 7, several weeks before her December 2 termination. Also indicating that Sandra McLaughlin was not really discharged for lawful reasons are (1) her discharge slip's reference to her going outside her area without permission, although she had not done this after being warned about it 6 weeks before her discharge and, indeed, Sewell testified that the discharge slip did not mention her leaving her job place; (2) Respon- dent's failure to take any action against the other partici- pants in the October 27 television-watching incident; (3) Respondent's admission that more than 2 weeks before her discharge she corrected the conditions complained of on September 8 and 16; and (4) the absence of any subsequent complaints about her work. As previously stated, the fact that she may have given Respondent lawful reasons to dis- charge her did not privilege Respondent to discharge her for union activity. 50 In view of the facts set forth in this paragraph, I do not credit Sewell's and Kelly's testimony that they did not know about Sandra McLaughlin's union sympathies before her December 2 discharge 51 Shattuck Deno Mining Corporation (Iron King Branch) v N L R B, 362 F 2d 466, 470 (C A 9, 1966) 1082 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 3. The refusal to bargain a. The Union's majority status It is undisputed that the appropriate unit consisted of 26 employees as of September 3. I conclude that all of the 20 cards signed between August 26 and September 4, inclu- sive , were operative designations of the Union as bargain- ing representative. Contrary to Respondent's contention at the hearing, I find that the cards were sufficiently authenti- cated by the testimony of witnesses who saw such employ- ees sign their cards.52 Independent Sprinkler & Fire Protec- tion Co., 220 NLRB 941 (1975) and cases cited. Nor do I regard the operative effect of any of these cards as negated by either the representations made when they were solic- ited, or the signers' testimony about what such cards meant . See generally N.L.R.B. v. Gissel Packing Co., Inc., 395 U.S. 575, 584, 601-609 (1969); Hedstrom Co., a subsid- iary of Brown Group, Inc., 223 NLRB 1409 (1976). b. The 8(a)(5) allegations and the requested bargaining order Respondent's answer concedes that it received but failed to honor the Union's September 3 bargaining demand. The principles declared in Gissel, supra, 395 U.S. at 610-616, call for a finding of an 8(a)(5) violation and a remedial bargaining order. Respondent has discharged a fifth of the Union's supporters (and almost a sixth of the unit) to dis- courage their union activity. Included among these dis- criminatees were the Union's two most active supporters, who between them obtained the authorization cards signed by seven other employees (more than a third of the Union's supporters, and more than a fourth of the bargaining unit), and the mother and sister of one of them. Moreover, before embarking on the discriminatory discharges, Respondent unsuccessfully tried to learn the union activists' identity from another employee who not only was well aware of the Union's progress but also was the mother of the Union's most active supporter; and, after obtaining this informa- tion from another source, Respondent stated that they had thereby "laid their jobs on the line" to two other card- signers. Further, at the time of the hearing three of the discriminatees had never been rehired and the fourth had been rehired for weekends only. I conclude that these un- fair labor practices are so serious, pervasive, and extensive as to make a bargaining order the only effective, available remedy therefor. At the very least, they fall within the Gissel middle cate- gory of "less pervasive practices which nonetheless still have a tendency to undermine union strength and impede the election process." As unfair labor practices within that category, they would justify under Gissel a bargaining or- der based upon the Union's majority card showing and 52 These employees are Anthony, Bonkowski, Cascio, Cavey, Fitzgerald, Haines, Higgins, Frank Krawczynski, Mullens, Olszewski, Reynolds, Tal- monti, and Jacqueline Washington Although Respondent's personnel files presumably contain specimens of all these employees' signatures on with- holding forms or other documents, Respondent made no effort to show that such signatures differed from those on the cards Respondent's failure to honor the Union's bargaining de- mand if other relevant considerations confirm "that the possibility of ensuring a fair election by the use of tradi- tional remedies, though present, is slight, and that employ- ee sentiment once expressed through cards would, on bal- ance, be better protected by a bargaining order." Such confirmation in the instant case is provided by the inherent lingering tendency of discriminatory terminations persis- tently to discourage continued union activity not only by the immediate victims, but also by their fellows, particu- larly where, as here, the immediate victims include the em- ployees who had been the most active and successful in inducing others to join.53 Further confirmation is provided by the fact that by continuing to discharge employees for union activity after the Union had withdrawn its petition, Respondent has indicated that its misconduct is likely to recur. A bargaining order would remain appropriate even assuming that the Turners were discharged solely because of their protected concerted activity, particularly because of Respondent's prior threat to discharge Ethel Turner for union activity. See Elling Halvorson, Inc., 222 NLRB 534 (1976). CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. Respondent is engaged in commerce within the mean- ing of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 2. The Union is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. Respondent has violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by interrogating an employee about employees' union activity, and by threatening to discharge employees because of their union activity. 4. Respondent has violated Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act by discharging Ethel Turner and Roberta Turner be- cause of their union and other protected concerted activity. 5. Respondent has violated Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act by discharging Joseph Santavicca and Sandra Mc- Laughlin to discourage union activity. 6. Respondent has violated Section 8(a)(5) of the Act by failing and refusing to bargain with the Union as the repre- sentative under Section 9(a) of the following unit which is appropriate for such purposes: All housekeeping employees employed by the Respon- dent at its Woodville State Hospital, Woodville, Penn- sylvania, location; excluding all other employees, of- fice clerical employees, professional employees, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act. 7 The foregoing unfair labor practices affect commerce within the meaning of the Act. 53 Superior Microfilm Systems, Inc and/or Wilfred W Burgart and Jessee Guido, Partners, etc v N L R B, 485 F 2d 681 (C A 3, 1973), enfg per curtain 201 NLRB 555, 563 (1972), N L R B v Sition Tank Company, 467 F 2d 1371 (C A 8, 1972 ), enfg 193 NLRB 209 (1971), N L R B v Rollins Telecasting, Inc, 494 F 2d 80, 81 (C A 2), cert denied 419 U S . 964, enfg in relevant part 199 NLRB 613, 628 (1972), Motel 6, Inc, 207 NLRB 473 (1973). N L R B v Henry Colder Company, 447 F 2d 629, 631 (C A 7, 1971), Joseph J Lachniet d/b/a Honda of Hastert, 201 NLRB 855 (1973), enfd 490 F 2d 1382 (C A 2, 1974) ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS THE REMEDY Having found that Respondent has violated the Act in certain respects, I shall recommend that Respondent be required to cease and desist therefrom. Because the unfair labor practices found include the discharge of four employ- ees because of their protected and/or union acitvity, Board precedent calls for a broad order. SKRL Die Casting, Inc., 222 NLRB 85 (1976); Brom Machine and Foundry Co., 222 NLRB 74 (1976). Accordingly, I shall recommend that Re- spondent be required to cease and desist from infringing on employee rights in any other manner. Further, I shall recommend that Respondent be required to offer each of the four unlawfully discharged employees immediate rein- statement to the job of which he was unlawfully deprived, or, in the event such job no longer exists , a substantially equivalent job, without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges, and make each of them whole for any loss of earnings he may have suffered by reason of his unlawful discharge, from the date of his discharge to the date of a valid offer of reinstatement, to be computed in the manner described in F. W. Woolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289 (1950), with interest as described in Isis Plumb- ing & Heating Co., 138 NLRB 716 (1962).54 In addition, for the reasons previously indicated, I shall recommend that Respondent be required to bargain with the Union, on re- quest. Also, I shall recommend that Respondent be re- quired to post appropriate notices. Upon the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, and the entire record in the case , and pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act, I hereby issue the following rec- ommended: ORDER 55 Respondent Associated Cleaning Consultants & Ser- vices, Inc., Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania , its officers agent, suc- cessors, and assigns , shall: 1. Cease and desist from: (a) Interrogating employees about union activity in a manner constituting interference , restraint , or coercion. (b) Threatening to discharge employees for union activi- ty. (c) Discharging or otherwise interfering with , restrain- ing, or coercing employees , because they have engaged in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection (d) Discouraging membership in District 1199P, Na- tional Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees, Division of RWDSU , AFL-CIO, or any other labor orga- nization , by discharging employees , or otherwise discrimi- nating in any manner in regard to their hire or tenure of employment or any terms or condition of employment. (e) Refusing to bargain in good faith with District 1199P as the exclusive bargaining representative of the following unit which is appropriate for such purposes: All housekeeping employees employed by the Respon- dent at its Woodville State Hospital, Woodville, Penn- 1083 sylvania, location; excluding all other employees, of- fice clerical employees, guards, and supervisors as de- fined in the Act. (f) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing its employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action designed to ef- fectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Offer the following employees immediate reinstate- ment to their formerjobs or, if their former jobs no longer exist, to substantially equivalent jobs, and make them whole for any loss of pay they may have suffered by reason of their unlawful discharge, in the manner set forth in the section of this Decision entitled "The Remedy:" Joseph Santavicca, Ethel Turner, Roberta Turner, Sandra Mc- Laughlin. (b) On request, bargain with District 1199P as the exclu- sive bargaining representative of the employees in the ap- propriate unit with respect to wages, rates of pay, hours of employment, and other terms and conditions of employ- ment and, if an understanding is reached, embody such understanding in a signed written agreement. (c) Preserve and, upon request, make available to the Board or its agents, for examination and copying, all pay- roll records, social security payment records, timecards, personnel records and reports, and all other records neces- sary or useful to analysis of the amount of backpay due under the terms of this Order. (d) Post at its place of business in Woodville, Pennsylva- nia, copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix." 56 Copies of the notice on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 6, after being duly signed by Respon- dent's representative, shall be posted by it in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by Re- spondent to insure that the said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (e) Notify the Regional Director for Region 6, in writ- ing, within 20 days after the date of this Order, what steps Respondent has taken to comply herewith. 54 As to Ethel Turner, see Polytech, supra However, the Turners will not be entitled to backpay for the days on which they refused to work in protest against Ralph McLaughlin ' s discharge-that is , November 7 as to both Turners , and November 8 as to Roberta Turner Board precedent indicates that Santavicca ' s wages from Respondent for weekend work after his dis- criminatory discharge are to be considered as interim earnings even though he may also have concomitantly received interim earnings from a 5-day workweek for another employer See East Texas Steel Castings Co. Inc. 116 NLRB 1336. 1358 (1956), enfd 255 F 2d 284 (C A 5, 1958), clarified 281 F 2d 686 (C A 5) 55 In the event no exceptions are filed as provided by Sec 102 46 of the Rules and Regulations of the National Labor Relations Board , the findings. conclusions , and recommended Order herein shall, as provided in Sec 102 48 of the Rules and Regulations . be adopted by the Board and become its findings , conclusions, and Order , and all objections thereto shall be deemed waived for all purposes 56 In the event that the Board's Order is enforced by a Judgment of a United States Court of Appeals. the words in the notice reading "Posted by Order of the National Labor Relations Board " shall read "Posted Pursuant to a Judgment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board " 1084 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD APPENDIX NOTICE To EMPLOYEES POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government After a hearing in which all parties had the opportunity to present their evidence, it has been decided that we violated the law in certain respects. We have been ordered to post this notice. We intend to carry out the Order of the Board and abide by the following: WE WILL NOT interrogate our employees about union activity in a manner constituting interference, restraint or coercion. WE WILL NOT threaten to discharge employees for union activity. WE WILL NOT discharge or otherwise interfere with, restrain , or coerce employees because they have en- gaged in concerted activities for the purpose of collec- tive bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. WE WILL NOT discharge or otherwise discriminate against any employee to discourage membership in District 1199P, National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees, Division of RWDSU, AFL- CIO, or any other Union. WE WILL NOT refuse to bargain with District 1 I99P as the exclusive representative of the employees in the following unit: All housekeeping employees employed by us at our Woodville State Hospital, Woodville, Pennsylvania, location; excluding all other employees, office cleri- cal employees, guards, and supervisors as defined in the Act. WE WILL offer the following employees reinstate- ment to their old jobs or, if such jobs no longer exist, to substantially equivalent jobs, and make them whole, with interest, for loss of pay resulting from their discharge. Joseph Santavicca Ethel Turner Roberta Turner Sandra McLaughlin WE WILL, on request, bargain with District 1199P as the exclusive representative of the employees in the above unit, and embody in a signed written agreement any understanding reached. The National Labor Relations Act gives the following rights: To engage in self-organization To form, join, or assist any union To bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing To engage in activities together for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protec- tion To refrain from any such activities. WE WILL NOT in any manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of these rights. Our employees are free to exercise any or all of these rights, including the right tojoin or assist District 1199P or any other union. Our employees are also free to refrain from any or all such activities, except to the extent that union membership may be required by a collective-bar- gaining agreement as a condition of continued employ- ment as permitted by the proviso to Section 8(a)(3) of the Act ASSOCIATED CLEANING CONSULTANTS & SERVICES, INC. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation