Atlantic Richfield Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsOct 31, 1972199 N.L.R.B. 1224 (N.L.R.B. 1972) Copy Citation 1224 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Atlantic Richfield Company and Local 7-210, Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union, AFL-CIO. Cases 13-CA-8796, 13-CA-9351, 13- CA-9498, and 13-CA-9610 October 31, 1972 DECISION AND ORDER On October 6, 1970, Trial Examiner Benjamin K. Blackburn issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that Respondent had engaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor practices within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, and recommending that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action, as set forth in the attached Trial Examiner's Decision. The Trial Examiner also found that Respondent had not engaged in certain other unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint and recommended that these allegations be dismissed. Thereafter, Respondent, the General Counsel, and the Charging Party filed excep- tions to the Trial Examiner's Decision and supporting briefs. The Respondent, the General Counsel, and the Charging Party also filed answering briefs to the ex- ceptions filed by the respective opposing parties. The Board has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner made at the hearing and finds that no preju- dicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Trial Examiner's Decision, the exceptions and briefs, and the entire record in the case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner, except as modified below. This case involves three essentially contractual disputes between Respondent and the Union, who have had a continuous collective-bargaining relation- ship since 1935. The contract between the parties, which was in effect at the time each of these disputes arose, provides for a grievance procedure to resolve any and all differences arising during the term of the governing agreement regarding wages, hours, or working conditions, and for final and binding arbitra- tion of any such disputes which cannot be resolved by the parties. One such dispute arose out of a suspension by Respondent of certain employees for refusing to work overtime. That dispute was made the subject of a union grievance, which was submitted to arbitration. The arbitrator ruled that the grievance was without merit. As set forth in detail in the Trial Examiner's Decision, the proceedings in that arbitration were complicated because the Union refused to participate in the hearing, principally because it asserted that Respondent was seeking to have arbitrated not only the particular suspensions but the broader issue of whether the contract permitted Respondent to en- force a compulsory overtime policy. It was the Union's claim that that underlying policy question had been determined in a prior arbitration proceeding between the parties which had arisen out of an earlier suspension by Respondent of other employees under a different set of facts. Nevertheless, the arbitrator in the instant case ruled that the arbitration should pro- ceed, and proceeded to rule both on the suspensions in issue and on the broader contract interpretation issue. His ruling on the broader issue was contrary to the ruling in the earlier arbitration. The Trial Examiner held that despite the above summarized complications and the fact that two arbi- trators had arrived at differing conclusions on a con- tract interpretation issue, he would honor the award growing out of the instant dispute in accordance with his understanding of the doctrine established by this Board in Spielberg Manufacturing Company, 112 NLRB 1080. We agree with his conclusion in this regard for the reasons he set forth. We note with approval his poignant observation that: The fact that the intransigence of the parties has prevented an end to the matter does not perforce make the Board the proper forum for continuing the fight. We find unnecessary, therefore, to pass on his alternative basis for dismissing on the merits the overtime dispute allegations of the complaint. Unlike our dissenting colleagues, we see no need for this Board to serve as yet a third forum in which an issue of contract interpretation should be allowed to be presented, nor do we believe that we have greater competence to decide such an issue than an expe- rienced arbitrator selected by the parties for precisely that purpose under their agreement. Essentially identical considerations lead us to the further conclusion that we should defer to the availa- bility of the grievance and arbitration procedures of the contract for resolution of the other two disputes. One involves an issue as to whether the posting by the Company for apprentices was in accord with the collective agreement at the time in effect. The other involves the propriety of the suspension and discharge of two employees, which in turn hinges upon an issue as to whether the refusal of these two employees to perform a work assignment was just cause for their discharge or whether, as the Union contends, the men were entitled to so refuse because of Respondent's alleged failure to comply with safety requirements and procedures which are specified in the collective agreement and in other understandings in effect between the parties. It requires no extensive discussion to demon- 199 NLRB No. 135 ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY , 1225 strate that these disputes, while arguably presenting an issue as to whether Respondent's action was viola- tive of Section 8(d) of our Act, nevertheless all are fundamentally issues of contract interpretation, and should, therefore, be referred to contractual grievance and arbitration proceeding for resolution under the principles established by this Board in Collyer Insulat- ed Wire, A Gulf and Western Systems Co., 192 NLRB No. 150. We shall so order. There remains the allegation that the strike which occurred in protest over the discharge of the two em- ployees who refused work assignments is an unfair labor practice strike. Having held that the dispute over these discharges is one which should be resolved under the parties' grievance and arbitration proce- dure, it follows that the strike over these discharges was subject to the contractual no-strike prohibition.' The provisions in the agreement which provide for peaceful machinery for resolving disputes go hand in hand with the agreement by the Union not to engage in strikes over such issues . It is thus clear that the strike in this case was unprotected, that the allegations of the complaint relating to the strike should be dis- missed, and that there is no purpose to be served in our retaining jurisdiction as to this portion of the complaint. Having so determined, we shall order dismissed outright the allegations of the complaint as to the "overtime" dispute and the unfair labor practice strike, although as to the other issues we shall retain jurisdiction as in Collyer. ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Rela- tions Board hereby orders that those portions of the complaint relating to the "overtime" dispute and the "unfair labor practice strike" be, and they hereby are, dismissed in their entirety. It is further ordered that the remaining allegations of the complaint be, and they hereby are, dismissed; provided, however, that: Jurisdiction of this proceeding is hereby retained for the limited purpose of entertaining an appropriate and timely motion for further consideration upon a proper showing that either (a) the disputes have not, with reasonable promptness after the issuance of this Decision, either been resolved by amicable settlement in the grievance procedure or submitted promptly to arbitration, or (b) the grievance or arbitration proce- dures have not been fair and regular or have reached a result which is repugnant to the Act:2 MEMBERS FANNING AND JENKINS , concurring in part and dissenting in part: We concur in the result reached by the majority in dismissing that portion of the complaint involving the "overtime" dispute. We do so on the basis of the Trial Examiner's independent resolution of the Respondent's right under the contract to assign overtime and to discipline those employees who, with- out valid reasons, refuse to comply with duly issued overtime assignments. As the Trial Examiner pointed out, this issue does not fall within the Spielberg 3 guidelines. We note that, there was not one, but two arbitrations. One arbitrator has in effect sat as a court of review of another arbitrator's decision of several years earlier. Whether or not the hearing before Arbitrator Hebert was fair and regular and therefore not repugnant to the Act is not for us to decide at this time. More important is the ultimate question as to whether or not one arbitrator has the right to overturn an earlier arbitration decision. This is not a question for this Board, and the Board has no basis for making such a choice, except on the arbitrary basis of which deci- sion came first, or last. The Board does, however, have the authority and power to review the Davis arbitra- tion and either accept or reject it. This is what the Trial Examiner did in his independent finding. Ac- cordingly, we would adopt the Trial Examiner's inde- pendent findings and conclusions as to the "overtime" dispute. For the reasons set forth in our dissent in Collyer Insulated Wire, 192 NLRB No. 150, and for the rea- sons stated in the decision of the Trial Examiner, we do not believe that the remaining issues presented in this case should be tried before an arbitrator rather than before this Board. The "apprenticeship" dispute involves a charge tha4 the Respondent unilaterally changed the contract terms setting out the conditions and limitations on eligibility for the various apprenticeship programs in violation of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. The record shows that on August 14, 1969, Respondent posted notices of openings in the electrical, instru- ment, and machine shop apprenticeship programs. The notice for each contained the following eligibility requirements: 1. 35 years of age or under as of August 1, 1969. 2. High school graduate. The agreements relating to these programs provide the following: = Titus-Will Ford Sales, Inc., 197 NLRB No. 4 Wrought Washer Manufac- ' As the Trial Examiner properly held, the alleged unfair labor practices turing Co., 197 NLRB No. 14. The Respondent and the Charging Party have alleged here are not of the nature of those in Mastro Plastics Corp v. requested oral argument . This request is hereby denied because the record N.LR.B., 350 U.S. 270, which are "destructive of the foundation on which and statements submitted by the parties adequately present the issues and the collective bargaining must rest ." Arlan's Department Store of Michigan, Inc, positions of the parties. 133 NLRB 802 3 Spielberg Manufacturing Company, 112 NLRB 1080. 1226 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Electric Shop: 1. 33 years of age or less. 2. High school education or its equivalent. Instrument department: 1. 35 years of age or less. 2. High school education or its equivalent. Machine shop: No age or educational requirements. It is clear that Respondent unilaterally changed the age requirements of at least two of the apprentice- ship categories, and unilaterally changed the educa- tional requirements of all three categories, without any notice to or the consent of the employees' bar- gaining representative. Respondent does not contend that the contract terms have not been changed. Rath- er, Respondent contends that the issue should be tried before an arbitrator, or alternatively, that because they are at best "technical violations" they do not require a Board remedy. We do not agree. Section 8(a)(5) requires that employers and unions bargain in good faith and Section 8(d) in clear and unmistakable language spells out that a party to a contract cannot modify that contract unilaterally. Yet, this is exactly what Respondent has done. In our opinion, there is nothing to arbitrate on this issue, and any decision as to whether a remedial order should or should not issue against Respondent is exclusively a matter for the Board. Accordingly, we would affirm the Trial Examiner's Decision with respect to the apprentice- ship issue. As to the "safety-flexibility-size of crew" issue we are of the opinion that deferral of these issues to arbi- tration will only create duplication of litigation and further frustration in the processing of the alleged unfair labor practices, as has already occurred with respect to the successive and differing arbitrations had here. The majority apparently sees this case as nothing more than a question of contract interpreta- tion. Yet, substantial employee rights under the ,kct are involved that will not be and cannot be resolved by an arbitrator's decision. These issues are not limit- ed to contract matters. Over and above the contract terms and their meanings is the issue of whether or not Maybaum and Padjen were engaged in protected con- certed activity at the time of their suspension, and whether or not their protest activity leading to a refus- al to work on the part of their fellow employees was an unfair labor practice strike. These latter issues can- not be resolved by an arbitrator, and assuming ar- guendo that an arbitrator could decide that the strike was an unfair labor practice strike, it is exclusively within the Board's province to determine what the proper remedy is to be, and beyond the capacity of the arbitrator to prevent in the future. In the instant case, the Trial Examiner, after a lengthy hearing, and after reviewing numerous doc- uments and other exhibits, concluded that the Re- spondent had not lived up to the terms of the collec- tive-bargaining agreement. Concededly, an arbitrator would have the authority to reach the same result. The Trial Examiner, however, found that the protest activ- ity of Padjen and Maybaum was protected activity engaged in to protest the Respondent's unfair labor practices and that the strike constituted an unfair la- bor practice strike. Resolution of these issues, and issuance of the appropriate remedy, are plainly not within the ambit of an arbitrator's powers. Finally, the Trial Examiner, in fashioning his remedy, concluded that although it was an unfair labor practice strike the principle announced in Arlan's Department Store of Michigan, Inc., 133 NLRB 802, was applicable, and that Respondent's unfair labor practices were not of such a degree as to support a work stoppage in the face of the Grievance-Arbitration/No-Strike clause. Again, we submit, this is not an issue for resolution by an arbitrator. The majority now sends these issues back to an arbitrator for resolution. They will be laid to rest only if the arbitrator finds on all issues for the Respondent. If the arbitrator concludes that Respondent in any way breached the terms of its collective-bargaining agreements with the Charging Party the case must then come back to the Board, winding its way through normal Board procedures for ultimate decision by the Board as to whether or not Padjen's and Maybaum's activity was protected, whether or not the "strike" was an unfair labor practice strike, and if so, what the remedy ultimately will be. These issues have been tried before the Trial Examiner, the legal and factual issues have been resolved by him, and an appropriate remedy has been recommended. In short, these issues are now before us for.decision. No useful purpose will be served, in the name of justice or stability of indus- trial relations, by submitting issues to an arbitrator. As Chief Justice Marshall wrote: ... it is desirable to terminate every cause, upon its real merits, if those merits are fairly before the court, and to put an end to litigation, where it is in the power of the court to do so. Church v. Hubbart, 6 U.S. (2 Cranch) 187, 232 (1804). The delays, duplication of expense and effort, and the ineffectiveness of arbitration already had in this case all illustrate the errors in the majority's Coll- yer approach. More importantly, the majority action in dismissing the issue whether the strike was an un- fair labor practice strike, and the protection to be afforded the employees if it was, constitutes a still further undermining of the Act's protection by Coll- lyer, contrary to Mastro Plastics Corporation v. N.L.R.B. 350 U.S. 270. The effect is that an arbitra- tion clause can eliminate unfair labor practice strikes if the employer can somehow connect the strike to the ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY contractual terms and conditions of employment. This is an easy task in most cases, as the present case illustrates, for the strike resulted from (1) refusal to cross a picket line of two employees protesting their suspension because of allegedly unsafe conditions which were arguably related to the contract terms governing safety, and (2) the firing of the two employ- ees for picketing and thus precipitating the strike. Even if the arbitrator were to find the suspensions or discharges unlawful,4 in the majority's view the strik- ers joining in protesting them are not entitled to pro- tection as unfair labor practice strikers. As a conse- quence, for example, since the majority now defers discriminatory discharge cases to arbitration, on the ground that a contract provision restricting discharg- es to "good cause" makes them arbitrable, a strike to protest and rectify such discharges, heretofore an un- fair labor practice strike with the strikers entitled to substantial protection, will no longer receive the pro- tection afforded by the Act and Board decisions. Thus, the majority's justification of the action, that the alleged unfair labor practices here are not "de- structive of the foundation on which collective bar- gaining must rest," has indeed a hollow ring; for since most unfair labor practices can somehow be tied to a contract provision, there will hardly ever be a case in which an arbitration clause exists where the majority will find the unfair labor practice to be "destructive of the foundation" of collective bargaining. Would the majority regard the arbitrator's decision as deter- minative of the strikers' right to vote in an election held during the strike? We do doubt it; and the same considerations require that the Board, not an arbitra- tor, decide the unfair labor practice strike issue pre- sented to it. Accordingly, we would affirm the Trial Examiner's Decision on this issue. The majority errs in saying the two employees were discharged for refus- mg to work as ordered Rather, they were discharged for picketing at the time when they were not scheduled to work , clearly a concerted and protected activity , and their discharges were clearly unlawful, as the Trial Examiner found. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE BENJAMIN K. BLACKBURN , Trial Examiner: These cases involve events which occurred at various times at an oil refinery in East Chicago, Indiana . At the beginning of the period in question the refinery was owned by Sinclair Oil Corporation, referred to herein as Sinclair . During the peri- od many of the assets of Sinclair , including this refinery, were acquired by Atlantic Richfield Company,' referred to herein as Respondent , and Sinclair ceased to exist as a 1 Name of Respondent as amended at hearing. 1227 corporate entity. Local 7-210, Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union, AFL-CIO, bargaining repre- sentative of employees at the refinery since 1934, filed the original charge in Case 13-CA-8796 on December 9, 1968, and amended it on November 10, 1969. It filed charges in Case 13-CA-9351 on September 15, 1969, in Case 13-CA- 9498 on December 2, 1969, and in Case 13-CA-9610 on February 6, 1970. Local 7-210 is referred to herein as the Charging Party. Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Inter- national Union, AFL-CIO, is referred to herein as the Un- ion. The various charges alleged the commission of unfair labor practices by Sinclair and/or Respondent as the corpo- rate situation was known to the Charging Party at any given moment. The General Counsel of the National Labor Rela- tions Board, by the Regional Director for Region 13 (Chica- go, Illinois), issued various orders consolidating two or more of these cases and consolidated complaints, the first on December 24, 1969. The last was issued on March 6, 1970. This document consolidated all four cases for hearing and alleged a host of violations of Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, by both Sinclair and Respondent based on the charges in all four. As each consolidated complaint issued. Sinclair and Re- spondent filed answers. Their answer to the final consolidat- ed complaint was duly filed on March 30, 1970. It admitted certain allegations of the complaint and denied others, de- nied the commission of any unfair labor practices, and ad- vanced various affirmative defenses to the violations alleged. At the hearing, held before me pursuant to due notice in Chicago on May 25, 26, 27, and 28 and June 2, 3, 4, 5, 29, and 30, 1970, a number of significant procedural things happened. The confusion caused by naming Sinclair as a party when all parties were agreed that only one employer entity has existed at any given moment, that Respondent is now that entity, and that Respondent is responsible for all the employer's actions, whether performed in the guise of Sinclair or Atlantic Richfield Company, was cleared up by the simple expedient of amending the caption and all the pleadings as already indicated in footnote 1, above. Respondent's motion to strike allegations of the complaint relating to events which took place in October 1966 and October 1967 was granted on the ground that they preceded the 10(b) date. Respondent's motion to dismiss on the ground that the Board should defer to the grievance and arbitration procedure contained in the collective-bargaining agreement between Respondent and the Union was denied with leave to renew at the close of the hearing. It was , in fact, duly renewed and is disposed of herein. The parties reached an informal settlement with respect to the issues raised by the charge in Case 13-CA-9610. The General Counsel's motion to withdraw those parts of the consolidated com- plaint which were based on Case 13-CA-9610 was granted. Consequently, the issues litigated grew out of three separate and distinct disputes between Respondent and the Union; namely, the overtime dispute, the apprenticeship program dispute, and the safety dispute. All parties appeared at the hearing and were given full opportunity to participate, to adduce relevant evidence with respect to each of the issues litigated, to examine and cross-examine witnesses , to argue 1228 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD orally, and to file briefs. Upon the entire record,2 including the very able briefs filed by all parties, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. THE BUSINESS OF RESPONDENT Respondent is a Pennsylvania corporation involved at numerous locations in the United States in the oil business. One of those locations is the refinery in East Chicago, Indi- ana, involved in these cases. During the year just prior to the issuance of the final consolidated complaint herein, Re- spondent refined and manufactured petroleum and related products valued in excess of $500,000 at its East Chicago refinery and shipped such products valued in excess of $100, 000 directly from that refinery to customers outside the State of Indiana. On the basis of these admitted facts, I find that Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED The complaint alleges, the answer admits, and I find that the Charging Party is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act; so is the Union. 111. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Facts 1. The overtime dispute The so-called master agreement between Respondent and the Union covers the East Chicago refinery as well as other of Respondent's installations . At East Chicago there are also various supplementary agreements . The master agreement contains a provision with respect to hours of work. It reads, in pertinent part: ARTICLE VI Hours of Work 1. Hours of work shall not exceed forty (40) in any one work week, or eight (8) in any one day, or sixteen (16) in any two consecutive days, except in the case of emer- gency.... Article XXVI of the master agreement sets forth a five-step grievance and arbitration procedure. In the first step an aggrieved employee and/or his union committeeman takes up the grievance with the employee' s immediate foreman. If he is still dissatisfied, the employee moves to step two by filing a written grievance with the refinery workmen's com- mittee . This committee is an arm of the Charging Party. The workmen's committee is also authorized to institute written grievances "concerning any alleged violation of this agree- ment" by filing them with the superintendent of the refin- 2 The General Counsel 's motion to correct transcript is granted Also, in order to place them in the proper sequence , pp. 1314, 1315, and 1316 of the ery. At step two the committee screens out those grievances from employees which, in its opinion, have no merit. It carries those that remain to a meeting with the refinery superintendent or his representative. If step two fails to resolve the dispute, it moves out of the local and into the International level of the Union. Step three calls for a conference between the president of the Union or his representative and Respondent's director of industrial relations or his representative. At step four arbi- tration enters the picture. At the request of the president or a district director of the Union, an arbitration board con- sisting of one person designated by either the president or a district director of the Union and one person designated by Respondent is set up at the refinery level. As this provi- sion is worded, of course, only the Union and not Respon- dent has a contractual right to force a grievance to arbitration. These two partial arbitrators attempt to resolve the dispute or, failing that, to agree on an impartial third arbitrator. If they can reach no agreement, the services of an impartial arbitrator are acquired through Federal Me- diation and Conciliation Service. Consideration of the grievance by a three-man arbitration board, one repre- senting the Union, one representing Respondent, and one impartial, is step five. Section 9 of article XXVI reads: The decision of the Board aforesaid, as provided in Section 8 hereof [i.e., the decision of either a two- man or three-man board], shall be final. However, if the rules and conditions existing at the time a given case originated are subsequently changed, it is under- stood that the arbitration award rendered under former rules and conditions shall not act to prohibit considera- tion of a complaint originating under the changed rules and conditions. When an impartial arbitrator is resorted to his fee and ex- penses are shared between Union and Respondent. Whether Respondent has the right under article VI of the master agreement to require employees to work overtime is a dispute of long standing. Its recorded history goes back to grievance 45-D-65, filed on May 26, 1965. Three employees protested 2-day suspensions meted out to them for refusing to work overtime on Saturday, May 22, 1965. Grievance 45-D-65 wended its way through all the steps outlined in article XXVI, ending in an Opinion and Award handed down on July 18, 1966, In the Matter of the Arbitration Between Sinclair Refining Company, East Chica- go, Indiana, and OCAWIU, Local 7-210, 66#52, FMCS 66A/598. The Opinion and Award reads, in pertinent part: The hearing in this case was held on April 5, 1966 ... before Pearce Davis serving as sole arbitrator. The parties waived the Board of Arbitration provided in the contract. 11 The company's case was presented by Earl H. Green- lee. 11 transcript are hereby renumbered 1316, 1314, and 1315, respectively. cient cause to impose the discipline. The issue is whether the company had good and suffi- ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY 1229 * * * * * this award is supported for reasons other than require- ment to work overtime, as already explained above. If the company cannot obtain sufficient manpow- The record demonstrates, as indicated above, that er through voluntary overtime, in nonemergency situ- the grievants refused a direct and unambiguous order ations, then its only alternative to modification of of the company to report to work. They erred, in the present contract terms is increase in its regular labor opinion of the arbitrator, in disregarding the force. company's instructions. 0 The arbitrator finds that a measure of discipline was warranted because of the improper method of protest utilized by the grievants. However, the contractual position of the company in this case is very weak, in the judgement of the arbi- trator. Article VI, Section 1 specifically states that hours of work shall not exceed 40 "except in the case of emergency." This clause, be it noted, was brought into existance [sic] by action of the company as well as of the union. It restricts, quite severely, the usual gener- al right of a company to require employees to work overtime, in reasonable amounts, without interference. Section 1 of Article VI places this company in a very different position than it would be in if the last six words of the first sentence of Article VI had not been jointly placed in the contract. The arbitrator certainly cannot disregard the presence of these words. They mean, in practice, that the company cannot, with con- tractual propriety, require that employees work overtime except when emergencies occur. Emergencies means unusual, unforseen [sic] situations of the Act of God type or rare and unusual (definitely limited in frequency) situations where output must be maintained or increased because of unusual and unexpected busi- ness reasons. Contract terms being what they are at present, the company really is not free to choose, as it stated it did at the hearing, between hiring more employees and regularly working existing employees overtime. That choice was eliminated when present Article VI, Section 1 was placed in the contract. The choice can only be restored if, through negotiations, Section 1 of Article VI is appropriately modified. Of course, if existing employees wish to work nonemergency overtime on a regular basis, and suffi- cient overtime manpower can be obtained in this fash- ion, Section 1 will not and does not serve as an effective limitation. But the grievants in this case did not wish to work the overtime on May 22, 1965. At the hearing the company conceded that no emergency existed on May 22, other than brisk compa- ny business. There was no plea of unusual, rare or unexpected business circumstance . If there was no emergency, then, contractly, employees were not re- quired to work overtime. Since it is admitted that no emergency existed and the contract only requires overtime work when there is an emergency, the arbitra- tor can scarcely support disciplinary actions imposed upon employees who didn't want to serve on an overtime basis. The degree of discipline supported in * * * * AWARD * * * 0 0 3. The grievants and union are supported in their contention that the company violated the contract (Ar- ticle VI, Section 1) when it required overtime work in an admitted nonemergency situation. The company did violate the contract by this action. Points 1 and 2 of the award rescinded the suspensions and substituted written warnings. This document became fa- mous in the history of Union-Respondent labor relations as "45-D or the Pearce Davis Award." On September 29, 1966, Earl H. Greenlee, who signed as "Company Arbitrator," filed a Dissenting Opinion of Company Arbitrator. This document reads, in pertinent part: The undersigned dissents for the reason that the Arbi- trator exceeded his authority by ruling in his Award upon a matter beyond the Issue in the case, as defined by the Arbitrator and as raised by the complaint, and which at no time had been submitted to him for deci- sion . More particularly, the Arbitrator's statement as to Article VI, Section 1 of the Master Agreement as recit- ed in paragraph 3 of the "Award" on page 4 of the aforesaid Opinion and Award, is in excess of his au- thority and hence of no binding force and effect. Respondent has consistently refused to abide by point 3 of the Pearce Davis award, standing on the position that it is ultra vires. On October 4, 1966, Respondent suspended 15 electricians for 5 days for refusing to work nonemergen- cy, in the Pearce Davis sense, overtime on Sunday, October 2. A grievance protesting the suspensions was filed on Octo- ber 12, 1966. It,was processed through step four of the grievance-arbitration procedure. Respondent did not lift the suspensions or otherwise modify the punishment meted out in the course of the grievance process. The Union did not explicitly acquiesce in Respondent's decision during the grievance process. On October 24, 1966, Respondent sus- pended four compounding and packaging department em- ployees for 2 days for refusing to work overtime on Saturday, October 22, 1966. Once again, grievances were filed and processed through step four. On October 12, 1967, Respondent disciplined two com- pounding and packaging department employees, Eugene Mysker and E. Dorcik, for refusing to work overtime on 1230 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Saturday, October 7. Mysker was suspended for 2 days. Dorcik was issued a warning. This time a work stoppage involving the refinery's entire complement of some 1,000 employees resulted. Respondent sought an injunction in a state court. The Union removed the case to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana. On October 20, 1967, a hearing was scheduled before Judge George N. Beamer on Respondent's motion to remand the matter to the state court. Judge Beamer informally suggest- ed the parties might better resolve the real issues between them by resorting to arbitration. At the judge's invitation, representatives of the parties spent several hours in the judge's chambers in discussions which ultimately resulted in another arbitration case on the overtime issue . Judge Beam- er continued the case before him on the understanding that work would be resumed at the refinery the next day, as it was. Precisely what the representatives of the parties said to each other in Judge Beamer's chambers that. day poses the only significant credibility conflict in this record. The Union contends that it agreed only to arbitrate the specific suspensions which caused the work stoppage and not the underlying question of whether Respondent could require employees to work overtime in nonemergency situ- ations . Respondent contends that the Union agreed to rear- bitrate the entire Pearce Davis award. In support of its position the Union offered the testimony of Kenneth Hanes, an International representative who was present during the discussions . Hanes testified that the Union's spokesman stated specifically the Union would only arbi- trate the question of whether Respondent could legally dis- cipline Mysker and Dorcik in light of the Pearce Davis award and would not rearbitrate point 3 of that award. In support of its position, Respondent offered the testimony of John Macaulay, Respondent' s area manager of industrial relations who was also present on October 20, 1967, in Judge Beamer's chambers. Macaulay testified that no union representative stated specifically the Union was not agree- ing to arbitrate point 3 and that the first time he heard such an allegation made was at the arbitration hearing which ensued. I credit Macaulay over Hanes for several reasons. In the first place, Hanes was most reluctant to make the point the Union's counsel was seeking, as the following excerpt from his testimony indicates: Q. What did he [the Union's attorney] state? A. The issue as the union seen [sic] it, that the Mysker incident came under 45-D and that 45-D be arbitrated. We had won the decision and that the 2703's 3 which had been issued, should not have been issued, and that was what we would have arbitrated. Q. Did the union at any time ever agree to rearbi- trate the issues in 45-D? A. Certainly not. Miss HILLMAN No further questions. TRIAL EXAMINER Did it ever state specifically that it would not, Mr. Hanes? THE WITNESS In front of the judge? TRIAL EXAMINER At any time during that time. THE WITNESS During the course of discussions 3 2703 is the number of the Individual Personnel Report form Respondent uses in disciplining employees. with Mazur [Respondent's attorney] in the refinery, and I'm sure with Mr. Tadlock [the Union's attorney] it was our very strong position that we were not going to arbitrate the issue of 45-D again because of the Mysker incident. TRIAL EXAMINER' I take that answer to mean that this was specifically stated in the conference in Judge Beamer's chambers on the 20th of October. THE WITNESS To my recollection, yes. In the second place, the arbitration case which followed could not have taken the course it did, as developed more fully below, if the Union had made its position crystal clear before the parties went back into Judge Beamer 's courtroom to tell him that they were going to follow his arbitration suggestion. In the third place, I think the most accurate picture of what happened that day was painted by Tyler Swanson, another staff representative of the International union. He testified: Q. Now, Mr. Swanson, you testified there was some agreements and some disagreements in Judge Beamer's chambers. Could you tell me what was discussed and what was the disagreements between the parties and the agreement reached between the parties? A. Well, I understood the situation that particular day the company was trying to insist or get us into a position of re-arbitrating and certainly going at arbi- trating and getting the judge to rule against us to arbi- trate the case, and our position was, as I remember it, that particular time, that the issue was not a question of whether the individual had a right to work or not work the overtime, but the real problem question was from our viewpoint did the company have a right at that time to require the overtime as provided for under the Davis award and was Mysker and Dorcik right in refusing and was the 2703's and the disciplinary action given to these individuals justifiable as provided for under the Davis award. Our position was it was not. The company's posi- tion was that it was. Q. Now, did you reach an agreement to arbitrate certain matters? A. As I remember, the judge came back into the courtroom, he recommended that the parties meet im- mediately to try to resolve the issue and suggested that we do arbitrate, get together and try to arbitrate the differences, if we could not resolve the issue. Q. Did you reach any agreement in that regard, the company and the union, the persons there? A. Not at that time in the judge's chambers and, frankly, we never did reach an agreement. We had a meeting at the Dorchester Inn imme- diately thereafter with management and the union being present which Mr. Jenkins was the spokesman for the union. Q. And did you reach an agreement at that meet- ing? A. No, we did not. Q. You never reached an agreement as to the is- sues to be arbitrated? A. No. ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY 1231 Therefore, I find that, on October 20, 1967, in the discus- sions in Judge Beamer's chambers which led up to the sec- ond arbitration of the overtime issue , the Union's representatives did not state that the Union would not rear- bitrate point 3 of the Pearce Davis award. As Swanson indicated, the parties went from Judge Beamer's courtroom to the Dorchester Inn in Dolton, Illi- nois , on October 20, 1967, to carry out the judge's instruc- tions that they arbitrate without delay. There the Union drafted a grievance which was given the number 90-F-67. It read: The Company's action in issuing 2703's to Mysker and E. Dorcik is unjust, improper and in violation of the Articles of Agreement and Supplements. We demand that these 2703's be withdrawn and that all proper adjustments be made. It was officially filed on October 21, 1967, and expedited through the preliminary steps of the grievance-arbitration process. On November 16, 1967, Paul Hebert was named impartial arbitrator .4 Hearing was set for February 12, 1968, in Dolton before an arbitration board comprised of Hebert, Swanson as union arbitrator, and R. E. Legg as company arbitrator. At the Union's request it was postponed until April. However, Swanson became ill in late March, and Hanes was substituted as union arbitrator. The hearing was again postponed without objection until July. On July 1, 1968, Legg requested an indefinite postponement in a letter which suggested to Hebert that discussions in progress be- tween the parties might make arbitration unnecessary. He- bert granted the request, once again without objection. In October 1968 the overtime issue again popped up in the compounding and packaging department. Respondent suspended various employees for either 5- or 10-day periods for refusing to work in a nonemergency, in the Pearce Davis sense, situation. These suspensions are presented in tabular form in the Appendix attached hereto. Respondent only resorted to drafting employees for overtime if it could not get enough volunteers. Some employees in the com- pounding and packing department were refusing to vol- unteer at this time because they were upset that Respondent had disciplined employees in an unrelated incident. The Charging Party sought, in meetings with Respondent on October I1 and 18, to resolve the situation by having Re- spondent withdraw the 2703's it had issued if the Union would persuade the disaffected employees to begin vol- unteenng for overtime again . Respondent refused to with- draw the 2703's. Grievances were filed and processed through step three of the grievance-arbitration proceeding. Respondent did not lift the suspensions or otherwise modify the punishment meted out in the course of the grievance process. The Union did not explicitly acquiesce in Respondent's decision during the grievance process. No in- cidents involving the overtime issue have arisen at the refin- ery since October 1968. However, the arbitration based on the October 1967 e The Opinion and Award which resulted from this arbitration is titled In the Matter of Arbitration Between Atlantic Richfield Company, East Chicago, Indiana, and Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union, Local 7-210, Complaint 90-F-67, Federal Mediation and Conciliation File No 68- incident has, as already indicated, resulted in an Opinion and Award by impartial Arbitrator Hebert. On February 9, 1969, Respondent asked Hebert to reset the case for hear- ing. He picked May 12 and 13, with Hanes' concurrence. On April 25, the Union asked for an indefinite postponement on the ground that the unfair labor practice charge in Case 13-CA-8796, filed on December 9, 1968, was pending. Re- spondent objected. Consequently, Hebert refused to cancel the heanng set for May 12 and 13. It was, at the request of the Union's attorney, postponed for a few days. The hearing opened in Dolton, Illinois, on May 16 before a board of arbitration made up of Hebert, Hanes, and Legg. The first issue taken up was whether the proceed- ing should be continued because the unfair labor practice charges were pending. Hebert denied the Union's request and ruled that the hearing on the merits should proceed. Following a short caucus, the Union stated that it refused to participate any further. Respondent took the position that whether the hearing should proceed at that point was within Hebert's discretion. Since the Union was refusing to go ahead with the hearing while Respondent was not insist- ing on continuing, Hebert adjourned indefinitely, stating: I think the wise thing to do is to adjourn the hearing indefinitely, without prejudice to the right of either side to take such legal or other proceedings as are indicated by the present state of the record in light of what was developed here this morning. It is my opinion on the record as I see it now, that as Arbitrator, I would have authority to direct that the hearing proceed and then to go on to decide the case, including the jurisdictional issue, based on whatever evidence is actually presented and on the arguments that have been addressed to that question. This, however, would be exceedingly difficult to do if only one side were to participate. And, as I have indicated, I am convinced that this would probably be more harmful than helpful in the relationship the par- ties are striving to maintain. All recognize, I am sure, this is a unique case. If I were sitting as a judge in a State or Federal Court in a normal judicial proceed- ings, I guess I would be expected to go on with the case. But in the situation that has here developed, I believe it is wiser not to do so. It is entirely possible that time and further developments might mean that we would be back at the arbitration table shortly, or possibly the necessity for arbitration at all might be averted by the tenor of subsequent developments. In August Respondent sent Hebert a copy of a letter it had sent to the Board's Regional Director in Chicago. It referred to the Respondent's understanding that the Gener- al Counsel was deferring action on Case 13-CA-8796 pend- ing the outcome of the arbitration case. On October 3, 1969, Respondent asked Hebert to reset the case for hearing. On October 16 the Union refused to join in Respondent's re- quest, arguing in its letter that it was not required to reliti- gate the Pearce Davis award as Respondent was trying to do. It stated that its understanding of the status of Case 13-CA-8796 was that a decision had been made by the A/2237. It is famous in the history of union-respondent labor relations as "90-F or the Hebert Award." Hebert is pronounced A-BEAR. It is spelled phonetically in a variety of ways in the transcript. 1232 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD General Counsel to issue complaint. On October 24 Hebert ruled that the arbitration case should proceed and set it for hearing in Dolton on December 11, 1969. He also ruled that the hearing on the merits would proceed even if the Union refused to participate. On October 28 Respondent informed Hebert that it, too, now understood that complaint was to issue in Case 13-CA-8796.5 On November 3 the Union protested Hebert's decision and stated that it was withdraw- ing the grievances which had given rise to the arbitration case . On November 12 Hebert ordered both sides to submit memoranda by November 24, later extended to December 2, on the basis of which he would rule on the Union's withdrawal of the grievances and Respondent's request for a hearing on the merits . In order to give himself time to study the memoranda he received, Hebert postponed the hearing from December 11 to December 18. On December 11 Hebert ruled that the Union could not withdraw the grievances, that his jurisdiction was not affected by the pending Board case, and that the hearing would be held on December 18. He denied the Union' s request for a further postponement until January 1970. On December 13 the Union advised Hebert that its withdrawal of the grievances had ended the arbitration and that it would not participate further. On December 15 Hebert invited the Union to have observers present on December 18 or make a special ap- pearance if it so desired. The hearing convened as scheduled in Dolton on the morning of December 18, 1969. George Liskow had previ- ously been substituted for Legg as Respondent's arbitrator. Hanes was still the Union's. Hanes and other representa- tives of the Union appeared only specially in order to make their objections to Hebert's jurisdiction a part of the record being made that day. When the jurisdiction phase of the hearing was complete , Hanes and the other union represent- atives withdrew. Hebert proceeded to hear the merits of the case . Only Respondent presented evidence. Hebert issued his 69-page Opinion and Award, concurred in by Liskow, on March 12, 1970. In it, Hebert said, in pertinent part: On the Jurisdiction of the Board The Chairman has restudied the contentions ad- dressed to thejurisdiction of the Board and finds them to be without merit. The filing of charges before the Na- tional Labor Relations Board on December 9,1968 while this dispute was pending in arbitration did not have the effect of preempting or depriving the Arbitration Board of jurisdiction. Likewise, the subsequent action of the National Labor Relations Board in issuing a complaint and setting the matter for hearing does not deprive this Arbitration Board of jurisdiction to proceed with the rendition of an award. The first consolidated complaint in this matter which included Case 13-CA-8796 was one issued on February 2, 1970. The delay from August or October , as the case may be, to February is unexplained in the record I am also firmly of the opinion that the Union's attempted withdrawal of the Grievance after the arbitra- tion stage had been reached came too late and is not effective over the opposition of the other party to this proceedings. Such withdrawal could not unilaterally de- prive the Arbitration Board of the right to proceed fur- ther in the hearing on the merits. I also hold that the prior rendition of the Pearce Da- vis Award under the same contract between the same parties, because arbitration is by its nature an ad hoc proceeding, does not foreclose the exercise of jurisdic- tion to determine the merits of the instant grievance. Similarly, the Arbitrator is compelled to rule that the failure and refusal of the Union to participate in the arbitration of the dispute on its merits after adverse rulings on the jurisdictional issues did not deprive the Arbitration Board of authority to proceed to hear the matter. Consequently this Board had and now has full jurisdiction to decide the merits of the dispute. Any other conclusion would make shambles of the Arbitra- tion process. Ample authority supports the foregoing conclu- sions. A question which is of considerable concern to the Impartial Chairman and which he himself directed the parties to consider and argue is that of whether or-not the prior arbitration award rendered by Arbitrator Pearce Davis should not be followed and applied in the interest of stability in the maintenance of the relation- ship under the contract between the,parties. In this connection the Impartial Chairman had in mind the line of decisions disclosing a marked reluctance to re- fuse to apply the conclusions reached by a prior arbi- trator under the same contract between the same parties. These statements express desireable policy with respect to subsequent arbitration proceedings between the same parties under the same contract. In the instant case also the contract provision relative to arbitration affords additional plausibility to the argument that a matter once decided ought not to be reopened unless circumstances are changed [Footnote omitted.] A sub- stantial showing has been made, however, that Arbitra- tor Pearce Davis went beyond the merits of the exact ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY issue submitted to him , and an additional showing has been made that there were matters of the history of negotiations pertinent to the question which he decided not submitted or considered . In that case , without the elaborate emphasis on the basic contract interpretation issue here involved , it was not inappropriate for the case to be tried on narrower grounds than the present dispute . There is also substantial countervailing arbi- tration authority to the effect that the arbitration pro- cess is by its nature an ad hoc proceeding and consequently a subsequent arbitrator ought not to con- sider himself bound by a prior arbitration award. I have concluded on the exact facts here pre- sented , that under the circumstances the best interests of justice will be served by considering the Pearce Davis Award on its merits and, in the process , to determine whether or not it represents the correct logical and applicable interpretation of the collective bargaining agreement which should be deemed binding and fol- lowed by the parties to this Master Agreement. This conclusion is based in part upon practices in the plant and other grievances , rules, exchanges of correspon- dence and similar factors all of which combine to indi- cate that the parties may , indeed , in their long relationship have given an entirely different recogni- tion to the obligation of working overtime than that reflected in the award which is questioned in this pro- ceeding and these matters were not previously brought to bear in the arbitration process as they are here. The meets of the question here presented must be decided. In the discussion on the merits the extent of the ques- tion and nature of the proceedings decided by Arbitra- tor Pearce Davis will be considered. ON THE MERITS Under the facts in evidence , it is established that the two grievants did decline to work as requested and further declined to give any excuse for their actions in failing or refusing to report for overtime work on Octo- ber 7, 1967 except to say that they had "personal busi- ness ." Likewise, the evidence established that they were told to report to their supervisors to discuss the matter and neither of them reported for such discussions nor did they report for work on Saturday , October 7, 1967. As these facts are so clearly established , it would be possible to dispose of the instant grievance on the narrow ground that, pretermitting the validity of the order to work overtime, the conduct of the employees constituted a refusal to comply with an order of their supervisors and that the discipline is justified on that 1233 narrow ground. A disposition on the basis of this issue would treat the dispute as an "obey now and grieve later" matter . There is considerable arbitration authori- ty which would support an award for the Company on this basis: The Impartial Chairman , however , does not believe it would be proper in this proceedings to dispose of the instant dispute exclusively on the narrow rationale ac- cepted in these cited decisions . The extent of the entire dispute involved and fully explored by this grievance has been in the context of raising for decision the ques- tion of whether the Company has a right to require employees to work overtime , absent emergency condi- tions as those conditions were interpreted in the prior award of Arbitrator Pearce Davis. I am convinced by the record that this is the issue the parties agreed to submit to arbitration in proceed- ings before Federal District Judge Beamer in October, 1967, and it is the same continuing dispute which is reflected in the exchange of letters between Company representatives and the International Union officials in November and December 1966 following the rendition of the Pearce Davis Award. As already indicated, I hold that the meets of this grievance must be considered and that such consideration is not foreclosed by the Davis Award .... In reaching this last-mentioned con- clusion, the Impartial Arbitrator has not overlooked Article XXVI, Sec. 9 , which provides that the decision of the Board of Arbitration shall be final and the possi- ble implication from the last sentence of Section 9 from which it is possible to conclude that absent changed conditions or changed rules a matter once decided is not to be relitigated . Section 9 of Article 6 [sic], in my opinion , does not apply to a situation in which the prior award did not require a determination of the issue deemed crucial by the prior arbitrator in the rendition of his award and important pertinent matters were not considered . Here , there are substantial contentions that the issue of compulsory requirement of overtime was not intended to be submitted to the prior arbitrator and, for this reason, important matters relating to nego- tiating history and practice under the parties of the agreement were not brought to bear in the prior pro- ceeding. Under such circumstances it is proper to hold that the previous award is not necessarily binding in this proceeding. This leaves , however, the question, of whether or not that prior arbitration award, by virtue of its expres- sions and holdings, should be followed in this particular case. If that prior award can be deemed to be erroneous because all pertinent considerations were not brought to bear in its determination for the reasons indicated , it is the Arbitrator 's opinion that the prior award should not necessarily be followed. This brings us to a consideration of the Pearce Davis Award. 1234 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD My study of the Pearce Davis Award leads me to the conclusion that the Arbitrator did go beyond the authority imposed upon him by the submission to arbi- tration in that case . The statements concerning com- pulsory overtime may properly be regarded as "obiter dictum" and , as such , are not binding upon a subse- quent arbitrator. In the instant hearing, evidence was introduced (Tr. pp. 133, 134) that the Company de- fended the complaint before Arbitrator Pearce Davis as a case involving merely failure of an employee to follow a foreman 's instructions. This was not an im- proper position at the time of the Pearce Davis Award because the Arbitrator himself held in the opinion that the employees were at fault in not raising the overtime question in a proper proceeding. The testimony ad- duced in this case is that the Company did not present evidence as to the negotiating history concerning the meaning of the hours of work and overtime clauses of the Master Agreement and they did not do so because the complaint in that case was considered to be quite narrow in scope. * The negotiating history introduced into this volu- minous record by the Company is quite convincing to show that the "except in the case of emergency" limita- tion contained in Article VI (Hours of Work) was in- tended to apply to the regular normal scheduled work week and its reduction or extension. Thus, in the 1946 negotiations, Umon President Knight even made the statement: "We have agreed to work overtime." There is a strong implication in the Agreement itself that employees would work overtime in the detailed provi- sions contained in Article VII (overtime clause) gov- erning the manner in which employees are to be paid when they work overtime. The record in this case also shows that complaints filed in 1950 (No. 21-0-50), in 1964 (No. 48-C-64), in 1966 (Complaint 78-E-66) were all denied or rejected on the ground that Article VI did not restrict the management's right to require overtime. The evidence is also convincing to show that there have been agreements in the plant under which the "draft the junior man principle" has been followed when a sufficient number of employees do not vol- unteer for necessary overtime assignments . In the opin- ion of the Arbitrator the complaints and practices referred to confirm the idea that the parties did con- template that overtime could be required under the terms of the present Master Agreement and they did not adopt a restrictive version of an "emergency" but related it to business exigencies. Further confirming evidence of what the parties must have in mind is afforded by the circumstances involved in the Meltzer Award of February 1, 1965. This case dealt with a grievance in which the complaint was addressed to the Company's failure to distribute Sunday overtime uniformly when work had to be done on the overhauling of the 810 Still. Significantly, as the Company points out in its brief, this grievance did not protest the Company's right to assign Sunday overtime but merely protested the uniformity of distribution. This award and its subsequent application in the Autrey Award (arising at Sinclair's Houston Refinery) both give implied indication that the parties were acting on the assumption that the right to assign overtime exists under the Master Agreement between the Company and Umon. It also is established in this record (Testi- mony of Company witness MacAulay) that the "emer- gency" limitation incorporated into Article VI of the Master Agreement refers to a change in the regularly scheduled or normal work week, and that it was not intended originally to restrict the Company's right to assign and require employees to work overtime. Study of the contract provisions incorporated in Article VII leads the Arbitrator to the conclusion that the parties certainly must have contemplated that overtime in a refinery requiring continuous operation could be required. If this were not so, it is difficult to understand why such elaborate and detailed provisions regarding the method of compensation for overtime should have been incorporated into the agreement. Also at various points in Article VII language is used giving unmistakable evidence of intent to require overtime in this continuous operation. * * * When one adds to the contract language, the supple- mental overtime procedures which have been agreed upon, it is difficult to escape the conclusion that the parties did in fact agree and understand that there is a requirement that the employees will work overtime when business conditions incident to continuous oper- ations reasonably require such overtime. I am persuad- ed by the evidence that if the parties had intended such an important qualification upon the rights of Manage- ment as is urged in this case, it would have been more clearly spelled out in the Agreement. What the parties have done, as I see it, is to stipulate various penalties as a deterrent to excessive overtime , but also to give recognition to the practical necessities dictated by con- tinuous operation in a refinery of this nature. * Reviewing this evidence in the light of all the mat- ters in the record, your present Arbitrator is in agree- ment with the Company argument that there is a continuing thread of official Union recognition of Company's need and the Company's right to schedule overtime occasioned by operating necessities as de- termined by management and its right to require em- ployees to work such overtime reasonably and fairly assigned. The evidence further strongly suggests that the Union was relying upon the overtime payment pen- alties as a means of discouraging compulsory overtime rather than to limit management's rights by non-recog- ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY nition of any right to assign overtime if done in a rea- sonable and fair manner. When the evidence in this record is considered, along with the trend generally in arbitration awards, which is to recognize that employees may be required to work overtime under pain of disciplinary penalty for failure and refusal to perform such work unless a rea- sonable excuse is tendered and accepted in advance, your present Arbitrator is led to the conclusion that the prior award rendered by Arbitrator Pearce Davis was an erroneous interpretation of the Master Contract. I do not believe Arbitrator Davis would reach the same conclusion on the facts before the Arbitrator in this record. For that reason, the Pearce Davis Award will not be followed here. s The crux of the present case is whether or not the word "emergency" as used in Article VI operates as a limitation on the right to require overtime when the exigencies of the business would dictate that overtime be worked in a reasonable amount and subject to pro- cedures which afford the opportunity to provide excus- es for non-compliance with an order to work overtime. It is my opinion that the Company has made a convinc- ing showing that the emergency clause in Article VI was not intended to limit the right of the Company to require employees to work overtime. Taken in context, the limitation means that the normal work week shall be 40 hours per week and 8 hours per day "except in emergencies" and that the management in case of emergencies related to refinery operations may depart from such normal scheduling of employees. My study of the testimony and supporting doc- uments, including the excerpts from transcriptions of negotiations and the wording of prior contracts con- vinces me that the parties to this agreement never con- sciously intended to limit the right of the Company to require employees to work overtime. The Company had a 36 hour week prior to World War II. This was changed during the war and the Union was interested in getting back to the normal 36 hour week when condi- tions would permit. The term "emergency" in Article VI must be understood in this context, namely, that the normal work week could not be changed except in cases of "emergency." There was repeated recognition, express and implied, that the Union did not intend to prohibit overtime but was relying upon premium pay clauses in Article VII to discourage it. The past prac- tice, as testified to by Mr. Mazur, abundantly confirms this interpretation of the Agreement. It is virtually im- possible to study the record made in the arbitration hearing of December 18, 1969 without concluding that the Davis Award, in which such matters were not con- sidered, reached an erroneous conclusion because the full record of details presented in this case were proba- bly not made available in the hearing before Arbitrator Davis.'In this state of affairs, it would be grossly unfair to follow the Davis Award as a final and binding dispo- 1235 sition of the dispute in which the contentions urged against compulsory overtime are so clearly contra- dicted by the practices in the plant and by the negotiat- ing history. I also give weight of repeated recognition by the Union of a duty to work overtime and of the right of the Company to require it with proper limita- tions which were present in this case. s s s s AWARD 0 Complaint No. 90-F-67 filed at the Company's East Chicago Refinery against Sinclair Oil Corporation (now Atlantic Richfield Company) is in all respects denied. 2. The apprenticeship program dispute A supplementary agreement entered into on September 22, 1955, covers the training of apprentices in the electric shop at the East Chicago refinery. It provides that, in order to qualify for the program, trainees must be 33 years of age or less and have a high school education or its equivalent. A similar agreement for the instrument department dated March 11, 1947, provides that trainees must be 35 years of age or less and have a high school education or its equiva- lent. A third such agreement for the machine shop dated June 1, 1942, provides no age or pnor schooling limitations for entry into the program. On August 14, 1969, without any prior notification to or discussion with the Charging Party, Respondent posted separate notices that applications were being accepted for each program. The notices read, in pertinent part: Applications for Electrical [or Instrument Depart- ment or Machine Shop] Trainee Program are now being accepted at the Personnel Department Office, 1st Floor, Main Office. Applications must be made no later than August 29, 1969. ELIGIBILITY Any hourly man with the qualifications listed be- low may apply: 1. 35 years of age or under as of August 1, 1969. 2. High school graduate. Robert Dermody and H. Reitz, chairman and vice chairman, respectively, of the workmen's committee, spoke to H. L. Letherman, Respondent's personnel supervisor (training), on the morning of August 26 or 27. They protest- ed that the notices contained age limits for applicants which differed from the supplementary agreements. Letherman 1236 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD said he had posted the notices as he had been told . He said that he had been instructed to accept applications from all who applied, regardless of their ages. Employees older than 35 applied for admission to each of the training programs. In September 1969 five applicants were selected for elec- trical shop training ; all were younger than 33 . Four were selected for instrument department training ; only one, born December 13, 1933, had passed his 35th birthday. Three were selected for machine shop training ; all were younger than 35. In December 1969 another applicant was added to the machine shop program; he was under 35. The record does not reveal the educational level of any of the appli- cants, successful or unsuccessful . Applicants for machine shop training who were older than 35 were selected for machine shop training in September 1966 and June 1964. The 1960 census reveals that median schooling of males in Lake County, Indiana, the county in which the East Chica- go refinery is located, is 10.2 years. It also reveals that, of 135,732 males over the age of 22 in Lake County at the time of the census, only 22,081, or approximately 16 percent, had graduated from high school. Written grievances were filed in September 1969 pro- testing Respondent's changing the apprenticeship criteria and its selection of trainees under the new standards. Step two discussions were held on September 19. By agreement, Respondent has not yet filed the written reply required of it in that stage of the grievance -arbitration process . Discus- sions of the apprenticeship programs generally, as distin- guished from discussions of the grievances , were held between Respondent and the Charging Party in late Octo- ber or early November. 3. The safety dispute a. Negotiation of flexibility Prior to January 1969 article IV (Classification Changes-Work Assignments), section 5, of the master agree- ment read: 5. All work peculiar to any craft or classified em- ployment (job) shall be done by employees regularly assigned to that craft or classification (job) except in cases of extreme emergency . No arbitrary changes in present classifications will be made with the purpose or result of reducing the pay of any classified job. Respondent wanted a more liberal clause which would permit it to require one craft or classification to do the work normally assigned to another craft or classification where the work is only incidental or related to the basic job being performed. This concept is known as "flexibility." Similar clauses had been successfully negotiated by other employers in the oil industry , leading to Respondent 's first suggesting such a modification in the master agreement to the Union in January 1968. At that time Respondent submitted the following proposal: COMPANY PROPOSAL FOR DELETION OF AR- TICLE IV, SECTION 5 OF MASTER AGREE- MENT AND SUBSTITUTION OF THE FOLLOWING: Work normally considered a skilled qualification of a craft or classification shall be done by employees as- signed to that craft or classification , except in cases of emergency. Work not normally so considered shall be assigned to employees in any classification according to the practicalities of the situation at hand. Under the foregoing provision the parties agree that employees shall perform work incidental or related to work which is part of their craft or classification; that during turnarounds , unscheduled shutdowns , or peri- ods of slack work operating employees may be as- signed, when practicable, to such other work as is available ; and that no arbitrary changes in present crafts or classifications will be made for the purpose or result of reducing the pay of any classification. In applying the foregoing work incidental and related concepts, it is agreed that: 1. The work or tasks assigned will be incidental or related to the primary job assignment; 2. The work or tasks will be within the normal capabili- ties of employees responsible for the job assignment; 3. Clean up and good housekeeping is work incidental or related to the work normally considered a part of each craft or classification; and 4. Running maintenance is work incidental or related to work normally considered a part of each classifica- tion assigned to the operation of refinery units and equipment. A special meeting was held between Respondent and the Union to discuss the proposal. In its presentation Re- spondent mentioned several examples of the sort of job situations it had in mind. The discussion was fruitless. Another special meeting was held in July 1968 at which Respondent's flexibility proposal was discussed. This time, Respondent expanded its explanation of what it had in mind by showing slides which illustrated examples of work situations to which the new concept would apply. Again, the discussion came to nothing . Respondent 's proposal that a subcommittee be formed to study flexibility was rejected. The master agreement was scheduled to expire Decem- ber 31, 1968. Negotiations for a new contract were held in Kansas City. They began with the exchange of proposals in September . Included in Respondent 's package was its flexi- bility proposal as set forth above. Negotiators next met from October 8 to 15. Flexibility was discussed, along with other subjects on the bargaining table. Respondent again made a slide presentation with additional examples included. It again suggested a subcommittee. Negotiators next met for a period in November. Flexi- bility was again among the subjects discussed. On Novem- ber 13 the Union agreed to a subcommittee to study flexibility. Such a subcommittee was formed. It met periodi- cally in November during the week or so that negotiations continued following its formation. Negotations were re- cessed until December . When they resumed , the subcom- mittee continued to meet and discuss flexibility periodically until negotiations recessed on December 20 for the Christ- mas holiday. Among the concerns expressed by the Union during subcommittee discussions was the effect a change in the contract would have on safety. Respondent expressed its continuing concern for and interest in safety. Negotiations resumed December 27, 1968. A Decem- ber 31 strike deadline had been set. Consequently, the flexi- ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY 1237 bility subcommittee met no more. Flexibility, still an unresolved issue , was among the many open issues which continued to be discussed by the full negotiating committee. Negotiations were conducted on a daily basis until January 6 or 7, then recessed for approximately a week. When they resumed they ran daily until agreement was reached on a new contract on January 24, 1969. A strike affecting all of Respondent's installations and operations covered by the master agreement began on January 3 or 4 and lasted until January 27. The Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service was involved in the latter stages of the negotiations. On January 20, 1969, Respondent made a new written proposal. Included was a modified proposal on flexibility. It read, in pertinent part: Delete present Section 5 of Article IV, and substi- tute the following therefor: 5. Work normally considered a skilled qualification of a craft or classification shall be done by employees assigned to that craft or classification, except in cases of emergency; provided, however, that employees shall perform work incidental or related to work which is part of their craft or classification. No arbi- trary changes in present crafts or classifications will be made for the purpose or result of reducing the pay of any classification. During the negotiations, and especially during the strike, Respondent took the position that it could not reach an agreement without getting some concession in the area of flexibility. The Union took the position that it would not go beyond the question of work done by the crafts, as distin- guished from noncraft workmen. On January 24, when agreement on a new contract was reached, the negotiators for each side were in separate rooms with the Federal mediator conveying messages be- tween them. The Union made an offer to Respondent which took the form of certain changes written or marked on Respondent's January 20 proposal. With respect to the part of section 5 of article IV immediately above , a line was drawn through the words "or classification" in each of the first three places they appear. The Union' s purpose in so doing was to limit its flexibility concession to the crafts, in keeping with the last position it had taken during negotia- tions. The paper presented to Respondent by the mediator looked like this: 5. Work normally considered a skilled qualification of a craft shall be done by employees assigned to that craft except in cases of emergency; provided, however, that employees shall perform work incidental or related to work which is part of their craft. No arbitrary changes in present crafts or classifications will be made for the purpose or result of reducing the pay of any classification. Respondent accepted the counterproposal. The paragraph as altered by the Union was included in a 12-page memo- randum of understanding executed on January 24. Respondent's chief negotiator stated that the language of section 5 as altered by the Union did not meet Respondent's needs but Respondent could live with it. Respondent's em- ployees ratified the agreement on January 25. The strike ended on January 27, 1969. During the negotiations it had been agreed that flexi- bility, if adopted, would apply only to the maintenance departments of Respondent' s refineries . Consequently, sec- tion 5 of article IV in the current master agreement as ultimately executed by Respondent and the Union reads: 5.(a) In refineries, work normally considered a skilled qualification of a craft shall be done by employ- ees assigned to that craft, except in cases of emergency; provided, however, that employees shall perform work incidental or related to work which is part of their craft. No arbitrary changes in present crafts will be made for the purpose or result of reducing the pay of any classifi- cation. In applying the foregoing work incidental and re- lated concepts, it is agreed that: (1) The work or tasks assigned will be incidental or related to the primary job assignment; (2) Clean up and good housekeeping is work incidental or related to the work normally consid- ered a part of each craft. (b) In pipeline and producing operations, all work peculiar to any craft or classified employment (job) shall be done by employees regularly assigned to that craft or classification (job) except in cases of extreme emergency. No arbitrary changes in present classifica- tions will be made with the purpose or result of reduc- ing the pay of any classified job. b. Implementation of flexibility Starting around February 10, 1969, John Macaulay toured all of Respondent's refineries to explain the new concept of flexibility to local management. His tour includ- ed East Chicago. He left with the local managers lists of all the examples which had been brought up during negotia- tions suitably annotated to indicate those situations to which flexibility, as finally agreed to, would not apply. During the negotiations Respondent had suggested that, 60 days after the new contract went into effect, local meetings between Respondent and the various locals of the Union might be useful to discuss any flexibility problems which had arisen. Respondent kept track of situations in- volving a change based on flexibility in preparation for these meetings if the Union did, in fact, request them. Such meetings were held at Respondent's refineries in Houston, Texas, and Sinclair, Wyoming, with no major disputes over the implementation of flexibility developing, In East Chica- go, the story was different. More than 950 different instances where Respondent sought to implement flexibility were recorded by Respon- dent at East Chicago by the time of the hearing in these cases . These involved approximately 95 different recurring work situations . Enough serious trouble developed at East Chicago and at Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania,6 that a na- tional level meeting on flexibility was held between Respon- dent and the Union in New York in the spring of 1969. 6 Like East Chicago (see below), the refinery at Marcus Hook also suffered a work stoppage as the result of a local dispute over Respondent 's efforts to implement flexibility shortly after the new contract went into effect 1238 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD No local 60-day meeting was ever requested by the Union in East Chicago. Respondent held a series of meet- ings with groups of employees to explain flexibility. It used, as examples of changes in work assignments it planned to make, those of its slides which were still applicable to flexi- bility as finally negotiated. Various officials of the Charging Party protested during these meetings that Respondent was going beyond what had been agreed to in the new contract. In May 1969 a work stoppage occurred as the result of Respondent's attempt to have one man both drive and oper- ate a truck used to vacuum sludge from tanks? In June a work stoppage occurred when Respondent assigned carpen- ters the job of demolishing a wooden stack on top of a cooling tower, including removing metal banding as an "in- cidental or related" task. As a result, a meeting between Respondent and the Union was held in Dolton, Illinois, in mid-June at which flexibility at East Chicago was discussed. Respondent capitulated. As they had been in the past, boil- ermakers were assigned the work of removing the metal bands on this particular demolition. The safety issue arose on November 25, 1969, over the task of charging tower number 826. A tower is charged by filling it with a material such as clay or salt. The material serves as a filter. Petroleum products are pumped through towers in the course of the manufacturing process. The filter removes unwanted substances such as water. At no time during the negotiations leading up to agreement on the new contract containing flexibility or during Respondent's postagreement explanations of flexibility to managerial, su- pervisory, or rank-and-file employees was the possible ap- plication of flexibility to the task of charging a tower brought up. Plug gang men charge towers. Plug gang men are laborers.8 Laborers are not a craft, within the meaning of the master agreement, at Respondent's refineries. c. Safety and the Bunger letter Article XXIII (Inspection of Equipment and Safety Hazards), section 2, of the master agreement reads: 2. No employee shall be required to perform serv- ices that seriously endanger his physical safety, and his refusal to do such work shall not warrant or justify discharge. In all such cases an immediate conference between the Employer and the Union shall be held to settle the issue in question. There is a management safety committee at the East Chicago refinery. It is chaired by the assistant plant manag- er. It includes two representatives of the Charging Party who are elected to it by the workmen's committee. These two Charging Party members of the safety committee are, in practice, the union representatives who participate in the immediate conference contemplated by section 2 of article XXIII when a safety complaint arises. On March 2, 1962, L. R. Bunger, at the time assistant plant manager, issued a memorandum on safety procedures to all department heads, assistant department heads, and foremen in his capacity as chairman, management safety committee. The Bunger letter is included in Respondent's Safety Procedure Manual for the East Chicago refinery. On July 24, 1967, E. J. Burke, Jr., who had succeeded Bunger as assistant plant manager, reissued the Bunger letter over his own signature as chairman of the management safety committee. The Bunger letter reads: In the event an employee believes he is working under an unsafe condition, the procedure to follow to remedy the condition is to be the following: 1. Contact his immediate foreman who is to imme- diately attempt to remedy the unsafe condition, provid- ed one exists. If the immediate foreman is not available, then the Assistant Division Head or the Division Head should be contacted. In a situation where a mechanical man is working in an operating area and the alleged unsafe condition is related to operating conditions or operating procedures rather than to the mechanical or physical aspects of the job, the operating foreman re- sponsible for that area should be contacted. 2. In the event that a solution cannot be found satisfactory to the employee and the foreman, then the foreman is to immediately notify Mr. H. G. Roessner, of the Safety Department, and at the same time notify the Safety Committeeman's foreman. The latter, in turn, will notify the Safety Committeeman of an imme- diate on-the-spot conference in an effort to work out a solution to the problem. 3. Failure to reach a satisfactory solution to the safety problem will then require contact with the Chair- man of the Management Safety Committee for imme- diate handling of the problem. On occasions prior to November 25, 1969, when a safe- ty dispute arose that could not be resolved at the first or second steps of the Bunger letter procedure, the third step was followed. These occasions were numerous enough and frequent enough to establish a past practice that Respondent's assistant plant manager, acting in his capacity as chairman of the management safety committee, would participate in discussions with representatives of the Charg- ing Party before Respondent made a final decision in a safety dispute. d. Charging the tower Tower 826 is located in the continuous treating plant area of the East Chicago refinery. Less volatile petroleum products such as kerosene and number 1 and number 2 fuel oils are manufactured in the continuous treating plant area. More volatile products such as gasoline are manufactured 7 There were seven work stoppages at East Chicago between October 1967 resulted from Respondent's efforts to implement flexibility, as described in and November 1969. The first grew out of the overtime dispute which led to this section In each case, almost all unit employees struck. The refinery the Hebert award as described in sec. I, above . The second occurred in continued to operate using managerial and supervisory personnel. October 1968 Two more , in January 1969, were related to the negotiations s However , the plug gang is a separate department from the general labor at that time The last three , beginning with the fight over the sludge truck, pool ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY 1239 in an area north of the continuous treating plant which is surrounded by a fire dike. Tower 826 is the north and east most of a group of six vertical steel cylinders arranged in two east-west rows of three tanks each . Each is 9 feet in diameter and 22 feet 10 inches tall . A railing around the top of each raises the total height above the ground to 26 feet 4 inches. The distance between adjacent tanks is 6 feet. West of tower 826 in north row are first tower 827 and then tower 828 . South of tower 826 is tower 343. West of tower 343 in the south row are first tower 933 and then tower 970. South of tower 343 is tank 321, the west most of three parallel, horizontal, steel cylinders of 10,000 gallons' capaci- ty each which are used as storage tanks. They also lie in an east-west row. The distance from the southern edge of tower 343 to the northern edge of tank 321 is 15 feet 10 inches. East of tank 321 and separated from it by a space of 1 foot 4 inches is tank 320 . East of tank 320 the same distance lies tank 319. The long axis of tanks 319, 320, and 321 runs north and south. Each is 30 feet long by 7 feet 10 inches wide. The top of each is 8 feet 4 inches above the ground. There is an iron walk bridge across the top of all three. The top of the bridge is 9 feet above the ground. Tower 826 is dumped, repaired, and recharged two or three times a year. Clay is brought to the area in bags on a trailer. A Lorain-Moto crane with a 70-foot boom is used to lift the clay from the ground to the top of the tower. The crane is positioned west of the tanks and south of the towers. Prior to November 25, 1969, two plug gang men opened the bags on the trailer and emptied them into a bucket on the end of the boom. When the bucket was full, a bottom hook- er took hold of a tag line attached to the bucket and signaled the operator of the crane to lift the bucket and swing toward the top of tower 826. A plug gang man and a top hooker were on top of the tower. When the crane had swung to a position where he could see the men on top of the tower, the operator shifted his gaze from bottom to top hooker. The top hooker guided the crane over the opening in the top of the tower. The plug gang man dumped the load of clay into the tower by tripping a lever on the bottom of the bucket. The bucket was then returned to the trailer for another load. The operator took his signals from the top hooker as he began the swing and from the bottom hooker as he ended it. Thus, prior to November 25, Respondent used six men- one crane operator, two hookers, and three plug gang men-m charging tower 826. On November 25, as more fully developed below, Re- spondent tried to eliminate the bottom hooker. In all other respects, the operation would have been the same as on prior occasions. The bucket weighs 1,100 pounds. Approxi- mately 10 bags, each containing approximately 75 pounds of clay, are required to fill the bucket. Thus, a loaded bucket weighs somewhere in the vicinity of a ton. Approximately 35 bucketfuls of clay are required to charge the tower. The purpose of the tag line is to steady the bucket while it is in the air. If the tag line is not held the bucket will spin. The crane and the trailer are positioned in such a way that when the bucket is on the ground at the trailer, the boom of the crane is pointing south. To reach tower 826 the boom and bucket must describe a half circle in a counterclockwise direction over tanks 319 and 320. In returning to the trailer, they follow the same path in a clockwise direction. The Lorain-Moto crane is so constructed that the base of the boom is to the right of the cab, blocking the operator's view in that direction. He has full visibility to his left and straight ahead. In swinging from trailer to tower, the boom does not obscure the operator's vision at all since the swing is toward his left. However, in swinging from tower back to trailer, the boom prevents the operator's seeing the bottom hooker un- til a major part of the swing has been completed. On November 25, 1969, the other towers grouped with tower 826 were filled with salt and were being used to re- move water from various products. Number 2 fuel oil was being pumped through 828, 933, and 970. Number 1 fuel oil was being pumped through 343. Kerosene was being pumped through 827. At any given moment each contained approximately 200 barrels or 8,400 gallons of fuel oil or kerosene. Tanks 319 and 321 were essentially empty. Tank 319 is used to store deicer. Tank 321 is used to store AFA- 1, a gum inhibitor used in kerosene. Each had been emptied by pumping until air came through the outlet valve, located near the bottom of the tank. Thus, on November 25, tank 319 had a small residue of deicer and tank 321 had a small residue of AFA-1 lying in the bottom below the level of the outlet valve. Tank 320 contained approximately 2,000 gallons of Primene 81R, a gum inhibitor used in number 1 and number 2 fuel oil. Flashpoint is the temperature of a liquid at which suffi- cient vapors will be given off to form an ignitable mixture at the surface of the liquid. The flashpoints of the various liquids just mentioned are: Number 2 fuel oil-140 degrees F. Number 1 fuel oil-115 degrees F. Kerosene-115 degrees F. Deicer-115 degrees F. AFA-1-220 degrees F. Pnmene 81 R-205 degrees F. A liquid must be a few degrees hotter than its flashpoint before it will burn rather than merely flash. November 25, 1969, was a cold day in East Chicago, Indiana. The temperature averaged in the 30's. e. The events of November 25, 1969 Tower 826 came up for periodic recharging in mid- November 1969. A meeting is held daily at the refinery to schedule upcoming maintenance work. At the one, some 2 weeks before November 25, at which tower 826 was dis- cussed, the maintenance planner suggested that the job could be done with five rather than six men by letting one of the plug gang men on the ground double as bottom hooker. Frank Luzzi, assistant superintendent of mainte- nance, approved the suggestion . Consequently, when No- vember 25, the day on which the tower was scheduled to be charged, rolled around, five men rather, than six were as- signed to the job. They were Gordon Maybaum, a crane operator with some 34 years' seniority, Mike Petty, the hooker whose normal assignment is to work with Maybaum on the Lorain-Moto crane, and three men from the plug gang ; namely, William Padjen, John Lundsford, and George Jonkman. Padjen had 22 years' seniority. Jonkman had worked for Respondent only a week or two. 1240 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD On the morning of November 25, Steve Gigac , the area foreman in charge of the job , assigned Lundsford to the top of the tower and Padjen and Jonkman to work on the ground. Gigac instructed Padjen that , when he and Jonk- man had filled the bucket with clay, he was to jump down from the trailer , grab the tag line, and hang onto it while the crane lifted the bucket to the tower . Padjen protested. He pointed out that the job had always had an experienced bottom hooker in the past . He indicated that he had never held a tag line before . He asked who was going to do the signaling . Gigac said all he was asking Padjen to do was hold onto the tag line . Padjen said he could not do that and demanded union representation . Gigac said he would get him a committeeman . Paden asked for George Badus, a member of the workmen 's committee from the truck and crane department. Badus arrived on the scene shortly before 9 a.m. Paden told him what had happened . Badus said Padjen could not do the job the way Gigac had ordered, Padjen would get killed . Paden said he agreed , that was why he had sent for Badus . Badus said it was a matter for the union safety man. He sent for Ray Lewis , one of the two union representatives on the management safety committee . Apparently he also sent for Robert Dermody , chairman of the workmen's com- mittee , for Dermody as well as Lewis arrived on the scene a few minutes later. In the meantime , word had also passed up manage- ment channels that there was trouble at tower 826. Luzzi went to the tower . So did Don Long , foreman of the truck and crane department. From about 9:45 a .m. until lunch- time various combinations of employees , Charging Party's officials , and representatives of management held various conversations about the situation . While the sequence of who said what to whom is not clear in the record, it is undisputed that the following statements were made and positions taken: The question of who was going to do the signaling on the ground was raised . Luzzi said Paden . Padjen said he did not know how and asked if there was a set of signals he should use . Luzzi said it did not matter what signal he used so long as Maybaum understood it, he could nod his head if he wanted to. Dermody insisted that safety was the issue. Luzzi disa- greed . He said there was nothing unsafe about the work assigned to Paden . Dermody and his colleagues argued that Respondent had to assign a bottom hooker for safety rea- sons because there had always been a bottom hooker as- signed to the job for that reason in the past . Luzzi insisted that Respondent could assign the bottom hooker's duties to Padjen because they were incidental and related to Padjen's primary job of filling the bucket with clay. Maybaum said that he would not operate the crane without a bottom hooker who was qualified to give proper signals because it was unsafe to do so. Long telephoned the plant safety department and asked Herman Neimann , director of plant safety , to send one of his two safety men over to inspect the job. Neimann sent both Sherman Moore and Tom Chorba. They went to the tower , inspected the setup , rendered an opinion that the job was not unsafe , and reported back to Neimann. Luzzi sent for Neimann after Moore and Chorba had come and gone . Neimann went to the tower, inspected the job, and ruled that it was not unsafe. After lunch , around 12:30 p .m., William Faissler, su- perintendent of maintenance , went to the tower and in- spected the job. He encountered Dermody in the area. He told Dermody that he saw nothing unsafe about the job, that safety was not the real issue , that the men were going to be ordered to do the work , and that Dermody should talk to them because the situation was getting out of hand. Der- mody replied that the men could not perform the job until Respondent made it safe. The men had gathered in a pumphouse near tower 826 after lunch . Dermody joined them there. Long, the crane foreman , was the first management representative to enter the pumphouse. He asked Maybaum and Petty whether they were going to go and do their job . Maybaum said he would as soon as the job was made safe . Dermody read section 2 of article XXIII of the master agreement. Long told Maybaum and Petty they were both suspended. A little after 2 p.m. Faissler, Luzzi , Long, and Gigac came to the pumphouse. Another long , animated discussion took place . Padjen and Maybaum were warned they would be suspended if they refused to do the job . When the ques- tion of signaling came up , Faissler said that Long would give the signals . The employees and Charging Party repre- sentatives laughed at the idea, pointing out that Long would not be permitted to because he was a foreman. During the discussion of employees' rights where safety is involved, Dermody again read section 2 of article XXIII . Finally, around 2 : 30 p.m., Faissler asked Padjen and Maybaum again whether they would do the job. They replied they would as soon as Respondent made it safe . Faissler sus- pended them and ordered them to leave the refinery. Petty was not suspended . As Faissler was leaving the pumphouse he was asked whether the suspensions would be put in writ- ing. He replied that they would . Padjen and Maybaum sub- sequently received 2703's dated November 26, 1969, which stated that they were suspended from 2 : 30 p.m. November 25 through November 28 for violation of paragraph 5 of the Respondent's code of conduct in that: On November 25, 1969 , you were given a direct and clear order to return to work and proceed with your assigned duties. You did not return to your work place and after being warned that your conduct would result in suspension you were suspended. Paragraph 5 of the code of conduct proscribes "refusal to obey direct and proper instructions or deliberate disobe- dience of such instructions of management." Dermody accompanied Padjen and Maybaum toward the guardhouse as they left the plant. A sergeant of the plant guard force told Dermody that Stanley Skrentny , manager of industrial relations , would be happy to see him imme- diately if the Charging Party wanted to talk about the situ- ation. As a result, a meeting was held in Skrentny 's office around 3 p.m. at which Skrentny discussed the situation with A. F. Schilling , the president of the Charging Party who had been summoned to the refinery by Dermody, and a group of workmen 's committee members , including Der- mody . Padjen and Maybaum were not present . Once again, ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY 1241 the parties disagreed on whether the issue involved was safety or flexibility. Burke , assistant plant manager and chairman of the plant safety committee, came into Skrentny's office for a while during the discussion. Howev- er, he did not enter into the debate. On the evening of November 25, Maybaum telephoned Paden at home. They agreed to meet in front of the refin- ery the next morning to picket.9 Both made picket signs that night. f. The strike Padjen and Maybaum appeared at the entrance to the refinery with their picket signs around 6 a.m. on November 26. Padjen picketed in front of the clockhouse. Maybaum picketed at the automobile entrance. Padjen's signs read "Doggone by ARCO" and "How do you like your safety clause now, fellows?" Maybaum's read, simply, "On strike." As a result of the picketing, few of the employees in the unit represented by the Charging Party reported for work. Many of them gathered outside the plant. Article III (Strikes-Lockouts-Slowdowns-Work Stop- pages), section 3, of the master agreement reads: 3. Union further agrees that during the term of this Agreement there shall be no strikes or work stoppages: (1) For any cause which is or may be the subject of a grievance under Article XXVI of this Agreement, or (2) For any other cause, except upon written notice by Union to Employer provided: (a) That Employer within thirty (30) days from the receipt of such notice will meet with the repre- sentatives of the Union and endeavor to reach an agreement on the matter in dispute. (b) In the event an agreement is not reached within forty-five (45) days after the expiration of the thirty (30) day period specified in (a) hereof, Union, upon the expiration of such forty-five (45) day peri- od, may exercise its right to strike by serving fifteen (15) days' notice in writing upon Employer of Union's intention to strike at the expriation of such notice. Dermody arrived at the refinery around 7:20 on the morning of November 26. He was met near the gate by Skrentny and other management officials. Skrentny urged Dermody, as the highest ranking Charging Party official 10 who was employed at the refinery, to live up to the no-strike clause and get the employees back to work. Skrentny said Respondent would investigate the Padjen-Maybaum sus- pensions as soon as the strikers returned. Dermody urged Skrentny to investigate first. Skrentny refused. Dermody talked to some of the strikers. They told him they were striking because of Respondent's attitude toward safety. When Dermody reminded them of the no-strike clause and 9 They had precedent . In the June 1969 incident involving the stack on the water cooler, carpenters who refused to remove the metal bands were sus- pended . They picketed the next morning , causing a work stoppage The record does not indicate whether they were discharged I would assume, from Padjen's and Maybaum 's willingness to follow their example and from the grievance-arbitration procedure, they indicated they were also angry because of Respondent's refusal to live up to the Pearce Davis award. Schilling, president of the Union, and Hanes and Swanson, the two business representatives of the Union who were involved in the overtime dispute, also went to the refinery that morning and conferred with management offi- cials. Respondent stuck to its position that it would not consider the Padjen-Maybaum situation until the strike ended. Hanes and Swanson talked to strikers outside the refinery. They were also told by various employees that the employees' reasons for striking were dissatisfaction over safety, the Pearce Davis award, and Respondent's discrim- ination against older employees by its changes in the ap- prenticeship program. Respondent discharged Padjen and Maybaum on No- vember 28 for instigating a strike in violation of the no- strike clause. The 2703's mailed to them that day read: Commencing on or about 7:00 a.m. November 26, 1969, in concert with [Padjen or Maybaum] you paced across and/or stood at the entrances to the Clockhouse and the # 1 Gate driveway, displaying placards read- ing "On Strike" and orally encouraged employees, as they were about to report for work, not to cross your picket line and not to report for work as scheduled. Such employees illegally withheld their services in re- sponse to your actions and conduct, which thus precip- itated a "wildcat strike." Your irresponsible and inexcusable conduct, which has caused and is causing the Company considerable operating difficulties, sub- stantial expense and inconvenience, consitiutes a fla- grant violation of Article III of the Master Agreement and universally-accepted standards of industrial be- havior, both of which preclude and render deplorable any such resort to self-help. For the foregoing reasons your employment with Atlantic Richfield Company is terminated effective im- mediately. Respondent brought suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana. It sought an injunction against the strike, an order that the Union submit all grievances to arbitration, and money damages. Hearing was held before Judge Beamer on December 4 and 10, 1969. On December 17, Judge Beamer ruled that he had no au- thority to enjoin the strike or to order arbitration and that his jurisdiction was limited to granting Respondent "dam- ages against the union under Section 301 of the Taft-Hartley Act and against the union and the individual members thereof under applicable state law." The suit is pending. Union representatives met with Respondent's repre- sentatives several times during the strike . The Umon urged Respondent to take Padjen and Maybaum back as a way of ending the strike. Respondent continued to insist that the strikers return to work first. Respondent's capitulation in the June 1969 discussion of flexibility with the Union, that they were not. 10 Dermody is also president of the Atlantic Richfield Nationwide Council composed of representatives from all the locals of the Union at Respondent's plants and, as such, participates in negotiations and other union activities at national level 1242 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD The strike ended on December 29, 1969. During the strike no more than 25 of the approximately 950 employees represented by the Charging Party as well as a group of some 50 clerks whom it does not represent reported for work. All the strikers finally went back to work after they were informed, on December 27, by the Union's attorney that the National Labor Relations Board had issued com- plaint on the apprenticeship program and safety disputes and was going to issue complaint on the overtime dispute. Grievances over their suspensions and discharges have been filed by both Padjen and Maybaum. They are pre- sently in step four. Since the end of the strike, towers have been charged at the East Chicago refinery without the help of a bottom hooker and without mishap. On those occasions, a plug gang man on the ground held the tag line as the boom lifted the bucket straight up from the ground until it was higher than the tanks before swinging. B. Analysis and Conclusions 1. Deferral to arbitration and the overtime dispute Respondent contends that the Labor Board should de- fer to arbitration in these cases and dismiss the consolidated complaint in its entirety. There is merit in Respondent's position with respect to the overtime dispute but not the apprenticeship program or safety disputes. The parameters of the Board's policy on deferring to arbitration are set forth in Speilberg Manufacturing Compa- ny 11 and Jos. Schlitz Brewing Company.12 In Spielberg, the Board said: ... the proceedings appear to have been fair and reg- ular, all parties had agreed to be bound, and the deci- sion of the arbitration panel is not clearly repugnant to the purposes and policies of the Act. In these circum- stances we believe that the desirable objective of en- couraging the voluntary settlement of labor disputes will best be served by our recognition of the arbitrators' award. In Schlitz, it said: ... where ... the contract clearly provides for grievance and arbitration machinery, where the unilat- eral action taken is not designed to undermine the Un- ion and is not patently erroneous but rather is based on a substantial claim of contractual privilege, and it ap- pears that the arbitral interpretation of the contract will resolve both the unfair labor practice issue and the contract interpretation issue in a manner compatible with the purposes of the Act, then the Board should defer to the arbitration clause conceived by the parties. This particular case is indeed an appropriate one for just such deferral. The parties have an unusually long established and successful bargaining relationship; they have a dispute involving substantive contract in- terpretation almost classical in its form, each party asserting a reasonable claim in good faith in a situation wholly devoid of unlawful conduct or aggravated cir- cumstances of any kind; they have a clearly defined 11 112 NLRB 1080, 1082. ^Z 175 NLRB No. 23. grievance-arbitration procedure which Respondent has urged the Union to use for resolving their disputes; and, significantly, the Respondent, the party which in fact desires to abide by the terms of its contract, is the same party which, although it firmly believed in good faith in its right under the contract to take the action it did take, offered to discuss the entire matter with the Union prior to taking such action. Thus, Spielberg sets forth the applicable guidelines where arbitration has been invoked and completed; Schlitz, where arbitration is available but has not been invoked. In these cases, arbitration has been invoked in the overtime dispute but not the other two. Turning first to the latter, it is clear that the apprenticeship program and safety disputes involved in these cases are totally unlike the relief scheduling dispute in Schlitz. In the first place, while Re- spondent and the Union apparently have a long and suc- cessful bargaining relationship at other installations covered by the master agreement, it is obvious that the relationship at the local level during the period covered by these cases has been somewhat less than successful when success is measured in terms of labor peace and stability. In the second place, while I have no doubt that Respondent acted in good faith and did not seek to undermine the Union or the Charging Party, in each of these disputes Respondent is the party which sought, improperly, to change the terms of its contract, as developed more fully below, and not the party which, in fact, desires to abide by its terms. Therefore, I reject Respondent's deferral-to-arbi- tration defense with respect to the apprenticeship program and safety disputes and deal with them on their merits in sections 2 and 3, respectively, below. The overtime dispute, however, has been through the arbitration procedure which the parties themselves have voluntarily established not once but twice. Therein, of course, lies the rub. That the overtime dispute does not fit Spielberg guidelines exactly is as obvious as the fact that the other two do not fit Schlitz. The Pearce Davis award did not resolve the issue, for Respondent refused to accept it. The Hebert award has not resolved the issue for the Union and the Charging Party have refused to accept it. Each side takes the position that the proceeding which went against it is invalid. Respondent contends that Arbitrator Davis went beyond the scope of his authority in ruling that it could order employees to work overtime only in truly emergency situations. The Union contends that Arbitrator Hebert had no authority to rule on the question at all since , by with- drawing from the proceeding, the Union effectively ended it before he ruled. But, in my opinion, all of the important factors which underlie both Spielberg and Schlitz are pre- sent here. First, the overtime dispute is purely and simply a "dis- pute involving substantive contract interpretation almost classical in its form." Everything hinges on what the parties meant when they used the word "emergency" in section 1 of article VI of the master agreement . That question has been considered at length and ruled on, albeit differently, by both Davis and Hebert. Next, unlike the apprenticeship program and safety disputes, in the overtime dispute Re- spondent is not trying to change its contract. It is simply, in good faith, contending for its interpretation of what the parties meant when they wrote article VI, section 1. Last, ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY 1243 and most important, the proceedings before both Davis and Hebert have been fair and regular and the decision of nei- ther is clearly repugnant to the purpose and policies of the Act. The Union, of course, disagrees that the proceeding before Hebert was "fair and regular," as that phrase is used in Spielberg, relying on the fact that it refused to participate in that proceeding beyond a certain point. At the core of the Union's position lies the question of whether a party to an arbitration proceeding can legally subvert the arbitration process by withdrawing unilaterally once the machinery has been set in motion . As indicated in the brief summary above of the procedural path followed in the case before him, Hebert leaned over backwards to assure the Union a fair and regular hearing on all the contentions it made. After careful deliberation and a weighing of the authorities on the question, he ruled that the Union could not withdraw. That, I think, is sufficient to meet the Spielberg "fair and regular" standard. In summary, the overtime dispute has been dealt with in a grievance and arbitration procedure to which the parties voluntarily consented 13 involving a fair and regular proceeding in which the rights of both sides were protected with a final result that is not clearly repugnant to the pur- poses and policies of the Act. The fact that the intransigence of the parties has prevented an end to the matter does not perforce make the Board the proper forum for continuing the fight. A court in which one side or the other seeks to enforce its arbitration victory is. Therefore, I find that the Spielberg doctrine covers an arbitration proceeding which has taken the involved route of the overtime dispute here and that the Board should defer to that proceeding by dis- missing all allegations of the consolidated complaint which, are based on the overtime dispute. I am mindful, however, that this finding goes beyond narrow reading of Spielberg and thus may be beyond my authority as a Trial Examiner. Therefore, I now turn to a consideration of the overtime dispute on its merits. In the overtime dispute the General Counsel has al- leged that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act by suspending employees in October 1968 for refusing to work overtime and Section 8(a)(5) and (1) by unilaterally changing existing hours of employment. Implicit in both theories is the idea that it is an unfair labor practice for Respondent to refuse to abide by the Pearce Davis award, right or wrong. I have already found that Respondent acted through- out in good-faith reliance on its interpretation of the master agreement. In fact, if there is any bad faith present, the Union is the guilty party. I have found, on the basis of the record made before me, that the Union did not specifically state that it was refusing to rearbitrate the overtime dispute when it agreed, in Judge Beamer's chambers on October 20, 1967, to carry the Mysker-Dorcik matter to arbitration. Ar- bitrator Hebert went even further. He specifically found, ` ... whether the Company has a right to require employees to work overtime, absent emergency conditions as those conditions were interpreted in the prior award of Arbitrator Pearce Davis ... is the issue the parties agreed to submit to arbitration in proceedings before Federal District Judge Beamer in October, 1967." But whether or not the Union has acted in good faith is irrelevant. What is relevant and, in fact, decisive is Respondent's good faith. If there were some evidence that Respondent's motive, in insisting that Arbitrator Davis was without authority to rule on the basic issue and wrong in his interpretation of the contract, was to discourage employees from supporting the Union and/or the Charging Party or undermining their position, Respon- dent would be guilty of unfair labor practices regardless of whether Davis was right or wrong. However, there is no such evidence.14 Absent such evidence, Respondent can only be guilty of an 8(a)(3) violation if its suspension of employees was so inherently destructive of their rights un- der the Act that no specific motive need be proved; Respon- dent can only be guilty of an 8(a)(5) violation if the Davis award's interpretation of the overtime provision "became as much a part of the contract ... as if it had been written in nuncpro tunc."15 For either theory to prevail, it is first neces- sary that Davis have been right. Therefore, when considered on the merits of an unfair labor practice case, the overtime dispute comes down to a determination by the Board of whether the Pearce Davis award was right or wrong on the merits of the contract question. I have set forth both the Pearce Davis and Hebert awards above at such length because they speak so elo- quently for themselves. The Hebert document is much the more cogent. I agree with Hebert's conclusion that Davis would not have reached the conclusion he did if he had had before him the record made before Hebert. The fact that the record before Hebert consisted solely of evidence presented by Respondent does not make it any less valid. The Union had an opportunity both before Hebert and before me to present any evidence it chose which might have countered the evidence on which Hebert based his decision. The tran- scripts of both Hebert hearings as well as all exhibits were introduced into this record. No evidence going to the merits of the contract question was offered to counter them. There- fore, I find that, insofar as the merits of the contract issue are concerned, Davis was wrong, Hebert right. Since failure to follow the Pearce Davis award can only be unfair labor practices if Davis was right, I find, on the merits of the overtime dispute tried before me, that Respondent did not violate Section 8(a)(1), (3), or (5) by its actions in suspending employees in October 1968 for refusal to work overtime. 13 The General Counsel argues that Respondent could bankrupt the Union by forcing it to the expense of arbitrating all disputes if it is denied the protection of the Act in this proceeding Abstractly considered , the proposi- tion may be correct , but it misses the point of these cases completely. There is no evidence Respondent had any such purpose in mind The cost of arbitration is part of the puce the Union elected to pay when it agreed to the grievance-arbitration procedure of the master agreement Finally, and more specifically, only the Union can carry a dispute to arbitration under the terms of the master agreement and that is precisely what it agreed to do in the situation which led to the Hebert award regardless of what, if any, limitations it intended to put on the issue to be arbitrated 14 The Charging Party contends that Respondent's failure to abide by the Pearce Davis award is itself sufficient evidence to establish Respondent's bad faith Such an argument is, of course, circular, since the element , bad faith, required to make an act, refusal to abide by an arbitrator' s decision , illegal is supplied by the act itself. I reject it See sec 3 for more on the question of Respondent 's good or bad faith 15 International Union, United Mine Workers of America, et at (Westmore- land Coal Co), 117 NLRB 1072, 1075 1244 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 2. The apprenticeship program dispute In the apprenticeship program dispute the General Counsel has alleged a violation of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act on a unilateral change theory. On the merits, Re- spondent argues that "the Company's postings for appren- tices ... was not one impinging on the Union's or employ- ees' basic statutory rights, nor was it one suggesting any superiority of Board remedies over resort to and utilization of the grievance-arbitration machinery." The second half of that argument simply harks back to Respondent's basic deferral-to-arbitration defense . There is simply no require- ment that Board remedies must be found to be superior to arbitration remedies before a unilateral change in terms and conditions of employment becomes an unfair labor prac- tice. The first half of Respondent 's argument is also without merit . Certain age and educational requirements for entry into apprenticeship programs were negotiated between Re- spondent and the Charging Party and formalized in written agreements . Thereafter, without consulting the Charging Party, Respondent changed them. In the case of the ma- chine shop, Respondent imposed an age limitation where none had existed before . In the case of that agreement as well as the electric shop and instrument department it stiff- ened the educational standard by requiring a high school diploma where something less sufficed before . The effect was to bar from the programs employees who had previous- ly qualified. The fact that Respondent raised the age limita- tion for electric shop apprentices from 33 to 35, thus possibly opening an opportunity for employees previously barred, does not help it any. Respondent 's employees had a statutory right not to have any changes made without Respondent's first negotiating with their representative. Therefore, I find that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) when , on August 14, 1969, it unilaterally changed the standards for admission to apprenticeship programs in its electric shop, instrument department , and machine shop. Wisconsin Contractors, Inc., 183 NLRB No. 84; Bierl Supply Company, 179 NLRB No. 125. 3. The safety dispute a. The events of November 25, 1969 In the safety dispute the General Counsel has alleged violations of Section 8(a)(3) and ( 1) of the Act in that Re- spondent discriminatorily suspended and discharged Wil- liam Padjen and Gordon Maybaum and violations of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) in that Respondent unilaterally changed terms and conditions of employment by reducing the number of employees used to charge tower 826 on No- vember 25 , 1969, from six to five and by failing to follow step three of the Bunger letter by having the chairman of the management safety committee himself confer with the Charging Party's safety committeeman before suspending Padjen and Maybaum that day. In addition , he has alleged that the tower changes created abnormally dangerous con- ditions for work at the place of employment of its employees within the meaning of Section 502 of the Act and that the strike which began on November 26, 1969 , was caused by Respondent's unfair labor practices. This phase of these cases turns on whether the dispute which erupted at the East Chicago refinery on November 25, 1969 , was really a safety problem , as the General Coun- sel contends , or a flexibility problem , as Respondent con- tends . A threshold question is whether "abnormally dangerous conditions" within the meaning of Section 502 were created that day . I find they were not . The only thing which Respondent sought to change that day about the routine procedure for charging a tower was to eliminate the bottom hooker. All other details , especially the fact that clay in a heavy metal bucket was to be lifted by a crane from the ground some 30 feet in the air and swung over storage tanks, remained precisely the same . Such a slight change is not sufficient to change "normal" working conditions to "ab- normal."16 A more difficult question is whether Padjen was being "required to perform services that seriously endanger[ed] his physical safety" when he was ordered to hold onto the tag line and signal Maybaum . Here , the problem is compli- cated by the manner in which the issue has been formulated by the General Counsel in the pleadings , during the hearing, and in his brief . Paragraph XIII(b) of the complaint reads: Respondent ARCO's conduct alleged above in subparagraph (a) created abnormally dangerous condi- tions for work at the place of employment of its em- ployees within the meaning of Section 502 of the Act. Respondent moved for a bill of particulars . Trial Examiner Charles W. Schneider ordered the General Counsel to "specify what place within the Chicago refinery is referred to in Paragraph XIII(b) of the Amended Complaint." The General Counsel 's response stated: Respondent ARCO's conduct alleged in subpara- graph XIII(a) created abnormally dangerous condi- tions for work throughout Respondent ARCO's entire East Chicago , Indiana refinery within the meaning of Section 502 of the Act. Early in the hearing the question arose of just what the General Counsel 's theory was. Was he relying on dangers to Padjen in having to perform an unfamiliar job? Or was he relying, as his response to Schneider's order seems to imply, on the danger of an explosion or fire if Padjen ineptly guided the bucket into one of the storage tanks? Or was he relying on both? On the second day of the hearing the General Counsel stated: I believe the General Counsel's position was that the movement of this bucket in the way that it was ordered by the respondent and over the physical equip- ment or physical properties . . . is what created the abnormally dangerous condition. And Mr . Padjen's safety is just one part of that abnormally dangerous situation that would have oc- curred with an inexperienced man being required to perform the operation as directed and ordered by the respondent on that particular day. Thereafter, the hearing went off in the direction of estab- lishing the facts set forth in section A, 3, d, above, which relate to the question of whether there was any danger of explosion or fire if the bucket had hit something on Novem- ber 25. , 16 Cf. Knight Morley Corporation, 116 NLRB 140, and Fruin -Colnon Con- struction Co, 139 NLRB 894. ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY 1245 In his brief, the General Counsel appears to have dropped this part of his theory completely. There is no discussion of storage tanks, their contents, or the chemical properties of the contents. There is no discussion of the weight of the loaded bucket, the construction of the storage tanks, or the possibility of such a bucket so loaded breach- ing a storage tank so constructed if they happened to col- lide. There is no mention of explosion or fire. Instead the General Counsel merely states: The employees were endangered because an inex- perienced employee, Padjen, was assigned to perform the critical job of ground hooker in the charging of the 826 Tower. In the performance of this job, it is undis- puted that it would have been necessary for Padjen to guide, by using signals, a 1-ton metal bucket back and forth over horizontal tanks during 35 swings between the ground and the top of a 22-foot high tower .... Therefore, the safe movement of the bucket depended on the signals given by the ground hooker. i f f • The testimony which is material and decisive came from Maybaum. He testified: Q ... Would you show us on this exhibit, would you draw for us the path that the bucket follows up to this point? A. Well, at this point where this bucket is here in the center of this lowboy [i.e., the trailer]- Q. You are pointing to the starting point, is that right? A. I'm starting at the starting point. Now the buck- et is setting here on the ground. Q. All right. A. This bucket starts to come up like this. I swing it up over the tank. Q. Now you have given us the entire path that is followed by the bucket, is that right? A. Right. Q. Thank you. You may sit down. Now, after the ground hooker gives you the swing signal, what would happen next? • A. While I'm swinging up over these [tanks] 18 at It is the contention of the General Counsel that the myriad of dangers which arose from using an inexpe- rienced man as a ground hooker created "abnormally dangerous" conditions, within the meaning of Section 502 of the Act, when Padjen was assigned this job. In any event, whether or not General Counsel intended to preserve an explosion/fire theory by his vague references to "employees" who were endangered'7 or to "myriad of dangers," it is clear that no such danger existed on Novem- ber 25. Without belaboring all the facts in section A, 3, d, it is obvious that, if the bucket had hit one or more of the storage tanks or towers, the tanks or towers would probably not have been ruptured, and even if they had, no explosion or fire would have resulted. I so find. With respect to the dangers to Padjen and his col- leagues, the General Counsel relies heavily on the testimony of John Howe. Howe, a rigger employed by Respondent at East Chicago, was called as an expert witness. He testified about the long apprenticeship rigger's serve, the length of time it takes to master the standard hand signals regularly used between hookers and crane operators, the technique by which the tip of the boom is placed slightly off center of the load to be lifted in order to lift the load straight up when its weight causes the boom to dip slightly, the danger that the cable will wind onto the drum in an irregular manner, slip, and cause the load suddenly to drop 6 or 7 feet, and the danger that the bottom hooker may inadvertently let the end of the tag line wind around his leg, causing him to go up with the load. I credit all of its. I also find it immaterial to this issue. 17 There is no evidence that any employees were in the immediate area on November 25, either on or near the horizontal storage tanks or on or near the vertical towers, other than Padjen and his colleagues If they had tried to carry out Respondent 's instructions that day, Padjen and Jonkman would have been on the ground near the trailer , Maybaum in the cab of the crane, and Petty and Lundsford on top of tower 826. this time- Q. You are referring to, you are pointing to the horizontal [tanks]? A. Horizontal [tanks]. When I get to the north of these [tanks] here, then I pick my hooker up on top of the tower. Q. What do you mean you pick your hooker up? A. I disregard this man and then I'm watching this hooker on top of the tower. Q. Where is the bucket when this happens? A. It's north of these horizontal [tanks] here. Q. How far north would it be would you say? A. I'd say around maybe five foot past these [tanks]. D THE WITNESS When I pick this bucket up and start swinging and when I get over the top of the east [tanks], I am looking at him . That's when I start swinging the bucket over to the east [tanks] here to my left. TRIAL EXAMINER You mean by swinging you are- THE WITNESS I am cleared of this. TRIAL EXAMINER How do you know that? THE WITNESS From this man right here . He gives me the signal when I clear these hand railings and everything on this [tank]. Then he gives me the signal to start swinging over these horizontal [tanks]. Q. (By Mr . Mazur) When do you look at the hook- er at the top of the tower? A. When I get past around about at the north edge of these [tanks]. 's The word used throughout is "towers" but it is clear from the context and the use Maybaum made of the diagram before him as he testified that both the General Counsel and Maybaum were referring to what I have called the horizontal tanks to distinguish them from the vertical towers. 1246 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD In other words, Maybaum would have relied on Padjen to tell him that the bucket was high enough off the ground to clear the horizontal tanks before starting his swing toward tower 826. By the time the bucket got near the higher verti- cal towers, Maybaum would have been relying on Petty, his experienced hooker on top of the tower, for directions. Howe's expert testimony is meaningless because Pad- jen was not asked on November 25 to be a skilled rigger. All he was asked to do was hang onto the tag line so that the bucket would not spin and signal Maybaum to lift the buck- et higher than 9 feet so that it would clear the horizontal tanks as Maybaum swung the crane to and from tower 826. Any movement of any part of Padjen's anatomy which told Maybaum when to start lifting, how high to go before he started swinging, and when, on the return trip, the bucket was in position to be lowered to the ground would have done the trick. For this Paden did not need a knowledge of all the hand signals . Some recollection of what he had done in the past would have helped him with the problem, for, as Paden admitted, he had given up-and-down signals to the operator of an A-Frame type crane which differs from the Lorain-Moto in design but not in function. Even, as Luzzi suggested, a simple nod of the head would have served if Paden and Maybaum had worked it out between them. As to Howe's other points on the way an expert rigger would have done thejob, a slight swing of the bucket caused by the dipping of the boom as it took the weight of the load posed no real threat. From where he was standing as the bucket started up, Padjen could not have seen whether the cable was rolling onto the drum smoothly. The drum, on the Lorain-Moto crane, is behind the cab. Padjen would have been standing in front of it, some 70 or more feet away. As to the danger of getting entangled in the tag line, a little common caution would have avoided the problem. The Padjen who testified did not strike me as being either a stupid man or a careless workman. For all of these reasons, therefore, I find that Respondent' s assigning Paden the additional duties of a bottom hooker on November 25, 1969, did not, in fact, require him to perform services that seriously endangered his or anybody else's physical safety within the meaning of article XXIII, section 2, of the master agreement. It does not follow from this finding, however, that Pad- jen did not honestly think his physical safety was seriously endangered that day. I have no doubt that not only Padjen but all the representatives of the Charging Party and the Union who got involved in this dispute took the position only safety was involved in good faith. By the same token, I am equally certain that Respondent took its position that the only issue was flexibility in good faith. On the question of whether safety was the issue, the Charging Party was wrong, Respondent was right. As I have already indicated, whether Respondent was acting in good faith throughout the events of these cases is an extremely important question. I have set forth the facts and considered the various disputes separately in the hope of clarifying a complex situation. I have not, however, lost sight of the fact that these disputes are intertwined. For example, I have kept in mind and weighed the fact that Respondent unilaterally changed the apprenticeship pro- gram between the first and second Hebert hearings and the fact that the second Hebert hearing was held during the strike which grew out of the safety dispute. There is no explanation in the record of why Respondent tried to change the apprenticeship programs. This could justify a finding that Respondent was seeking, in some devious way, to get rid of the Union. But not, I think, on this record. On the basis of the relationship at the national level between Respondent and the Union, the length of time that relation- ship has existed, and the fact that relations at the East Chicago refinery have become exacerbated, a more likely explanation is that Respondent overlooked the provisions of the supplementary agreement when it drew up the notices it posted on August 14, 1969, then was unwilling to concede its mistake when the Charging Party made an issue of it. Similarly, the fact, as developed immediately below, that Respondent was wrong in its position that the new flexibili- ty clause in the master agreement gave it a contractual right to eliminate the bottom hooker from the tower charging job couldjustify a finding of bad faith. Such a finding would be incorrect. Once again, I think, the explanation lies in the tension that existed between Respondent and the Charging Party at the East Chicago refinery. Therefore, after weigh- ing together all the evidence on which a finding that Re- spondent was seeking to cripple or get rid of the Charging Party could be based, especially Respondent's refusal to abide by the Pearce Davis award and its attempt improperly to apply flexibility to the tower charging job, I do not find that Respondent acted in any aspect of these cases in bad faith. I find, rather, that it did what it did in a good-faith belief that the things it said and did were right and necessary to maintain its position vis-a-vis the Charging Party. Respondent, then, was right that flexibility, not safety, was the issue on November 25. It was wrong, however, when it took the position that the new article IV, section 5(a), covered the situation. Respondent sought to negotiate a broad flexibility clause . The Union took the position that it wanted to retain the old agreement. The disagreement was compromised in the final settlement of the 1968-69 negotia- tions on January 24, 1969. Respondent got something less than it wanted. The Union gave something more than it wanted to give. Just what was got and what was given is evidenced by the words-"or classification"-the Union struck out of Respondent's last proposal on flexibility and by the acknowledgement of Respondent's chief negotiator that what the Union had agreed to was less than what Respondent sought but still something it could live with. What Respondent and the Union had agreed to was that flexibility would apply only to the work of craft employees. Consequently, Respondent could properly rely on flexibility on November 25, 1969, only if Padjen's job was a craft job. There are two ways of looking at the job Padjen was assigned to do on November 25. He can be viewed either as a plug gang man or as a bottom hooker. Either way he was not involved in craftwork. Plug gang men are admitted- ly only laborers. Riggers are a craft, but the bottom hooker's work on tower charging jobs does not require the skill of a fully trained rigger . Therefore, Respondent had no contrac- tual right on November 25 to reduce the size of a tower charging crew from six men to five without first discussing the change with the Charging Party. From these three basic findings, namely, that flexibility ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY 1247 and not safety was the real issue on November 25, that both sides, notwithstanding, were acting in good faith when they did what they did that day, and that Respondent had no contractual right to act as it did, three violations of the Act flow. First, when Respondent reduced the tower charging crew by one man without first consulting the Charging Par- ty, it unilaterally changed a condition of employment, there- by violating Section 8(a)(5) and (1).19 Similarly, even though safety was not really the issue that day, the fact that Padjen, Maybaum, and the Charging Party raised a safety question in good faith brought the provisions of the Bunger letter and the past practice established under it into operation. When Respondent suspended Padjen and Maybaum before it complied with the third and last step of the Bunger letter procedure, it again made a unilateral change in a condition of employment, thereby violating Section 8(a)(5) and (1). Finally, Padjen and Maybaum were concertedly seeking to invoke a contractual right that day. Even though they were wrong about the application of article XXIII, section 2, of the master agreement to the situation, they were acting in good faith and thus had a colorable right under the contract to take the position they did 20 Therefore, they were sus- pended for engaging in a protected, concerted act, and Re- spondent thereby violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act 21 sions of Padjen and Maybaum so that there was no time ,between the violation and the strike for even the lowest steps of the grievance-arbitration procedure to be invoked. Pad- jen and Maybaum were only suspended for 3 days, a mild enough punishment for refusing to do the work to which they were assigned. Most importantly, all of these disputes could have been resolved through arbitration. There is no evidence that Respondent has ever failed to abide by an arbitrator's award which went against it in a case where, as distinguished from the Pearce Davis award, the issue was fairly and fully framed, presented, and argued before an arbitrator who did not go beyond the issue before him. There is no reason to think that Respondent would not have abided by awards which went against it on any or all of these issues. When weighed against Padjen's and Maybaum's egregious conduct on the morning of Novem- ber 26, 1969, Respondent's unfair labor practices on August 14 and November 25 pale into insignificance. Therefore, I find that Respondent did not violate the Act when it dis- charged them.24 Upon the foregoing findings of fact, and upon the en- tire record in these cases, I make the following: CONCLUSIONS OF LAW b. The events after November 25, 1969 Respondent's employees struck on November 26, 1969, because Padjen and Maybaum set up a picket line at the entrances to the refinery. Padjen and Maybaum picketed because they had been suspended. When Respondent sus- pended Padjen and Maybaum it committed an unfair labor practice. Therefore, the strike was in protest of and thus caused by Respondent's unfair labor practice. That much is simple . What effects flow from this finding that the strike was an unfair labor practice strike is not so simple. The General Counsel relies on the Mastro Plastics 22 principle to excuse Padjen's and Maybaum's conduct in instigating a strike of approximately 1,000 employees at a major American refinery in the face of an explicit no-strike clause in the master agreement. In Mastro Plastics the Su- preme Court ruled that a no-stake clause does not waive the right of employees to strike in protest of an employer's unfair labor practices. Padjen and Maybaum were dis- charged by Respondent on November 28, 1969, for instigat- ing the strike. Therefore, despite the existence of article III, section 3, of the master agreement , they may have been engaged in a protected activity when they picketed on the morning of November 26 and their discharges for that rea- son could be violations of the Act. Whether this is so must depend, in the final analysis, on whether the unfair labor practices which Respondent has committed are serious ones.23 I think they are not. The three instances of unilateral changes in conditions of employment are technical viola- tions only. Two of them arose in the context of the suspen- 19 American Oil Company, 160 NLRB 541. 20 Anaconda Aluminum Company, 160 NLRB 35 21 But not Sec. 8(aX3), there being no evidence on which to base a finding that, by suspending Paden and Maybaum, Respondent discouraged mem- bership in the Union 22 Mastro Plastics Corp v N LR.B, 350 U S 270 1. Atlantic Richfield Company is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 2. Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union, AFL-CIO, and its Local?-210 are labor organiza- tions within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. All employees who were, prior to the merger of Sin- clair Oil Corporation and Atlantic Richfield Company on March 4, 1969, engaged in refining as conducted by the manufacturing division of Sinclair Oil Corporation; pipe- line operations as conducted by the Sinclair Pipe Line Com- pany; and the development and/or production of crude oil and/or natural gasoline and the purchase and marketing of crude oil by the producing division of Sinclair Oil Corpora- tion; and those employees who were covered and employed by the research division of Sinclair Oil Corporation consti- tute a unit appropriate for the purpose of collective bargain- ing within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act. 4. At all times since 1934 the Union has been and presently is the representative for the purpose of collective bargaining of the employees in the unit described above and, by virtue of Section 9(a) of the Act, has been and now is the exclusive representative of all the employees in said unit for the purposes of collective bargaining in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, or other terms and conditions of employment. 5. By unilaterally changing the standards for admission to apprenticeship programs in the electric shop, instrument department, and machine shop at its East Chicago, Indiana, refinery, on August 14, 1969, and by unilaterally reducing the crew used to charge towers from six men to five and changing the procedure followed in adjusting good-faith claims by its employees that they are being required to perform services that seriously endanger their physical safe- 23 Arlan's Department Store of Michigan, Inc, 133 NLRB 802. 24 Sunbeam Corporation, 184 NLRB No 117 1248 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD ty on November 25, 1969 , Respondent has engaged in un- fair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. 6. By suspending William Padjen and Gordon May- baum on November 25, 1969 , for concertedly engaging in the protected activity of asserting , in good faith , a claimed right under a collective -bargaining agreement , Respondent has engaged in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a)(1) of the Act. 7. The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 8. The following allegations of the consolidated com- plaint have not been sustained: 'a. That Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5), (3), and (1) of the Act in October 1968 by suspending em- ployees for refusing to work overtime and unilaterally changing existing hours of employment; b. That Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) of the Act by suspending William Paden and Gordon Mayb- aum on or about November 25, 1969; and c. That Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act by discharging William Padjen and Gor- don Maybaum on or about November 28, 1969. 9. Respondent did not create abnormally dangerous conditions for work at the place of employment of its em- ployees within the meaning of Section 502 of the Act when, on November 25, 1969 , it reduced the crew used to charge towers at its East Chicago , Indiana , refinery from six men to five. 10. The strike which began at Respondent 's East Chi- cago, Indiana , refinery on November 26, 1969 , was caused by Respondent 's unfair labor practices. THE REMEDY Having found that Respondent has engaged in unfair labor practices , I will recommend that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action which will effectuate the policies of the Act. I would ordinarily include a reinstatement and make- whole remedy for William Paden and Gordon Maybaum to undo the effect of their illegal suspensions . However, their suspensions merged into their discharges so soon thereafter and the conduct for which they were legally dis- charged caused such a disruption to Respondent 's normal business activities that I will omit any remedy for them. Similarly , while I have found that the strike which began on November 26, 1969 , at the East Chicago refinery was caused by Respondent 's unfair labor practices , I will omit the usual remedy that Respondent reinstate all strikers who make an unconditional offer to return to work . All of them made such an offer and duly returned to work on December 29, 1969. [Recommended Order omitted from publication.] ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY 1249 Employee Date of APPENDIX Date of Length of Date Incident Company Action Suspension Suspension Began_ W. Czarnik 10/9 _ 10/10 5 , 10/21 10/10 10/23 5 12/16 E. Dorcik 10/9 10/10 5 10/14 10/10 10/23 5 12/16 R. Ewbank 10/10 10/23 5 12/9 J. Gaio 10/9 10/10 5 11/18 10/10 10/23 5 12/16 C. George 10/10 10/23 5 12/23 10/22 10/22 10 12/? W. Golubiewski 10/9 10/10 5 10/28 10/10 10/23 5 12/2 J. Herrman 10/10 10/23 5 12/23 J. Kicho 10/9 10/10 5 10/28 10/10 10/23 5 12/16 10/22 10/22 10 j2./2 P. Kuntz 10/9 10/10 5 11/11 10/10 10/23 5 11/25 10/22 10/22 10 12/9 R. Lewis 10/22 10/22 5 12/9 T. Nevers 10/9 10/10 5 11/11 W. Parsons 10/9 10/10 5 11/4 J. Petrunich 10/9 10/10 5 10/21 10/10 10/23 5 12/23 W. Piorkowski 10/9 10/10 5 11/4 J. Skorupa 10/9 10/10 5 10/14 10/10 10/23 5 12/9 W. Wright 10/22 10/22 5 12/2 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation