Big "N," Department Store No 307Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsDec 15, 1972200 N.L.R.B. 935 (N.L.R.B. 1972) Copy Citation BIG "N," DEPARTMENT STORE NO 307 935 Big "N," Department Store No 307, Big "N," a Division of Neisner Bros, Inc i and Central Penn Joint Board, Textile2 Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO, Petitioner Case 4-RC-9773 December 15, 1972 DECISION AND DIRECTION OF ELECTION BY CHAIRMAN MILLER AND MEMBERS JENKINS AND KENNEDY Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, a hearing was held before Hearing Officer Anthony D DaDalt of the National Labor Relations Board Following the close of the hearing the Acting Regional Director for Region 4 transferred this case to the National Labor Relations Board for decision Thereafter, the Employer filed a brief Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its authority in this proceeding to a three-member panel The Board has reviewed the Hearing Officer's rulings made at the hearing and finds that they are free from prejudicial error They are hereby affirmed Upon the entire record in this proceeding, the Board finds 1 The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act, and it will effectuate the purposes of the Act to assert jurisdic- tion herein 2 We find that Petitioner is a labor organization within the meaning of the Act 3 Petitioner claims to represent certain employees of the Employer 3 A question affecting commerce exists concern- ing the representation of certain employees of the Employer within the meaning of Sections 9(c)(1) and 2(6) and (7) of the Act 4 The appropriate unit Petitioner seeks to represent a unit of about 70 sales and service employees at the Employer's i The name of the Employer appears as amended at the hearing 2 The name of the Petitioner appears as amended at the hearing 3 The Employer contends that Petitioner is not a labor organization under the statutory definition because it asserts employees do not hold direct membership in it Petitioner does not negotiate collective-bargaining contracts in its own name and the constitution and bylaws of the International Textile Workers Union limit organization to the textile manufacturing industry The record shows that the Joint Board is an amalgamation of four locals and that employees with membership in the constituent locals are also members of the Joint Board In any event the employees participate in the Joint Board by virtue of the election of delegates to that Board from the several constituent locals Space Services International Corporation 156 NLRB 1227 1229 Halliburton Company 142 NLRB 644, 645 Contrary to Respondents assertion, Petitioner does negotiate contracts in its own name together with those of its constituent locals Apart from discount department store at Williamsport, Pennsyl- vania The Employer contends that the one-store unit requested is inappropriate It argues that an appro- priate unit should encompass all 15 stores in the Employer's eastern district or, alternatively, 7 of them which are under the supervision of an assistant district manager There is no history of collective bargaining for any of the Employer's employees The Employer, Big N, is a division of Neisner Bros, Inc, a Pennsylvania corporation with head- quarters in Rochester, New York The Employer operates 34 stores in six States It has divided the stores, for purposes of administration, into three districts Each operates under the direction of a district manager The eastern district, in which the Williamsport, Pennsylvania, store is located, includes 14 other stores located in Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Massachusetts The record does not show the city location of all stores in the eastern district It does show the city location of the seven stores in the Employer's proposed alterna- tive unit In addition to the Williamsport, Pennsylva- nia, store, the six others are located at Lock Haven, Shamokin, and Stroudsburg, all in Pennsylvania, and at Wellsville and Hornell, New York, and Newton, New Jersey The Lock Haven and Shamokin stores are within 50 miles from the Williamsport, Pennsyl- vania, store The other stores are all more than 100 miles from Williamsport 4 The distance between some stores exceeds 200 miles 5 The eastern district is directed by a district manager, an assistant manager is responsible for the seven stores in the locations referred to above The district manager visits the Williamsport store once every 2 weeks and the assistant district manager about twice a week The headquarters office at Rochester performs centrally such functions for a new store as purchas- ing, distribution of merchandise, and hiring Other services performed by the Rochester office for all stores include major purchasing and pricing of goods, payment of bills, recordkeeping, inventory whether Petitioner is a signatory to collective bargaining agreements as a body which handles administrative details for its constituent locals it exists in part to deal with or negotiate with employers respecting conditions of work See cases cited above Further the International Union s constitutional limitations on its own jurisdiction cannot serve to detract from the statutory definition in Sec 2(5) of the Act Petitioners willingness to represent employees is the controlling factor Mayfair Industries Incorporated, 126 NLRB 223 224 4 The record shows that Lock Haven is 28 miles from Williamsport Pennsylvania and that Shamokin is 50 miles distant from Williamsport The third Pennsylvania location Stroudsburg is 114 miles from Williamsport Standard Highway Mileage Guide Rand McNally & Company (1966 Ed) at p 187 Hornell, New York is Ill miles from Williamsport Id at p 125 Wellsville New York, is 107 miles from Williamsport Id at p 190 5 Hornell New York is more than 200 miles distant from Stroudsburg Pennsylvania and Newton New Jersey Id at pp 125 and 298 200 NLRB No 137 936 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD control, and establishment of employee policies and benefits The record shows, however, that the individual store manager has day-to-day control of store operation He has authority to hire, layoff, recall from layoff, and discharge employees He may also reprimand employees or grant increases He submits a recommended budget to the central office He has authority to purchase about 40 percent in value of replacement merchandise as well as to purchase nonsaleable staples necessary for store operation Competitive pricing and a limited percentage of markdowns are also done at the individual store level There is no showing of a substantial number of transfers between stores A list submitted by the Employer showed 17 transfers in the 24-month period preceding the hearing Nine of these were between stores in the 7-store unit proposed by the Employer 6 Three were transfers into Williamsport -one of these from Iowa, outside the eastern district There were three transfers out of Williams- port, all manager trainees who, the record shows, train in more than one store There is no clear showing whether the majority of transfers were of a permanent or temporary nature An Employer official testified that employees have transferred from the Williamsport store to assist in new store openings at Shamokin and Lock Haven 7 Three others mentioned by name as transferring from Williamsport for other new store openings are not included on the record exhibit of transfers in the past 24 months The facts demonstrate the autonomy of individual store operations and an absence of substantial interchange of employees among the 15-store eastern district or a lesser 7-store area We note particularly the long geographic distances separating the seven stores On these facts we find that the presumptive appropriateness of a single-store unit has not been rebutted, and that the single-store unit sought by the Petitioner is appropriate 8 Certain unit issues remain The parties have stipulated to the inclusion in the sales and service unit of six department heads and four sales employ- ees in two leased departments 9 They have stipulated to the exclusion of the head cashier as a supervisor and to the exclusion of the personnel service center employee as a confidential employee Additionally, the Employer would include, and the Union exclude, 6 This statement assumes that the Mill Hall store location referred to in the Employer s Exh I is the same as the Lock Haven Pennsylvania store within the eastern district The Employer states in its brief that the two names identify the same store 7 The three transfers from the Williamsport store in the last 2 years as shown in Employer Exh 1, were to Mill Hall and Newton 8 Big N Department Store No 333 199 NLRB No 28 three office clerical employees, two manager trainees, and two leased department heads The office clerical employees collect money and tapes from cash registers, process invoices listing merchandise, prepare payroll entries, and perform other recordkeeping duties At times they assist in marking merchandise They work in an office on the mezzanine above the restaurant Their work, howev- er, takes them to the sales floor when collecting money, marking merchandise, or performing relief duties at the customer service center They are in regular contact with sales employees who come to the office to receive petty cash, mail records, forms, or advertising information The office clericals are hourly paid, receive the same wage and fringe benefits as sales employees, work the same hours, and are subject to the same personnel procedures On these facts we find that the office clerical employees have a like community of interest with sales employees and we shall include them in the unit 10 The Union contends that the manager trainees should be excluded from the unit as supervisors The trainees function as department heads, a group which the Union has agreed to include because they are not supervisors The trainees' training program ranges from 3 to 6 years, a period when they learn all store duties They have no authority to hire, discharge, adjust grievances, discipline employees, or make effective recommendations as to such actions Nor can they assign employees in accord with their own independent judgment The manager trainees are hourly paid, receive time and one-half for overtime work, receive the same fringe benefits, and have the same working conditions as other employ- ees The record thus shows that the manager trainees lack the statutory indicia of supervisors We shall therefore include them in the unit 11 The Union contends that the heads of the two leased departments are supervisors and should be excluded from the unit It has stipulated to include four other department heads, directly employed by the Employer, who it agrees are not supervisors One leased department sells shoes , the other, paint, hardware, and automotive equipment Each has two sales employees in addition to the department head The store manager exercises primary control over the personnel of the leased departments He advertises for their sales position, supplies the applications to prospective employees, and makes a security check on new employees Hiring for the leased department 9 After the hearing the lessees of the two leased departments advised the Board by letter of their attorney dated October 11, 1972 of their position that employees in the leased departments should be included in the unit The letter is hereby made a part of the record 10 Big N Department Store No 333 supra 11 Big N Department Store No 333 supra BIG "N," DEPARTMENT STORE NO 307 937 requires the approval of the Employer The store manager can hire, discharge, and discipline leased department employees as well as transfer them to other departments in the store as needed The store manager can also discharge the leased department head The leased department heads exercise some control over the sales employees in the way of discipline, scheduling work, or granting time off Such authority is limited however, by store regula- tions, schedules, wage scale, and fringe benefits which are applicable to the leased department employees We find that the leased department heads are not supervisors and we shall therefore include them in the unit 12 We find that the following employees of the Employer constitute a unit appropriate for the purpose of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act All sales and service employees, including leased department employees, employed at Big N Department Store No 307, located at Williamsport, Pennsylvania, excluding con- fidential employees,13 supervisors14 and guards as defined in the Act [Direction of Election and Excelsior footnote omitted from publication I 12 Big N Department Store No 333 supra 13 The parties have agreed to exclude the personnel service center employee as a confidential employee 14 The parties have agreed to exclude the head cashier because she is a supervisor Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation