Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of WisconsinDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 26, 1993310 N.L.R.B. 844 (N.L.R.B. 1993) Copy Citation 844 310 NLRB No. 141 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 1 ITT World Communications, 201 NLRB 1 (1973) (petition for unit clarification was dismissed because all persons in the classifica- tion sought to be added were statutory supervisors). 2 Melbet Jewelry Co., 180 NLRB 107 (1969). 3 Campbell Soup Co., 111 NLRB 234 (1955); a similar standard is used when an employer petitions for an election to test a union’s representative status. K. Van Bourgondien & Sons, 294 NLRB 268 (1989). Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Wisconsin and Teamsters Local 344, affiliated with International Broth- erhood of Teamsters, AFL–CIO, Petitioner. Case 30–UC–321 March 26, 1993 DECISION ON REVIEW AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN STEPHENS AND MEMBERS DEVANEY AND OVIATT On December 17, 1992, the Regional Director for Region 30 issued a Decision and Order in which he granted the instant unit clarification petition to include certain production employees in the existing collective- bargaining unit. In accordance with Section 102.67 of the National Labor Relations Board’s Rules and Regu- lations, the Employer filed a timely request for review. The Petitioner filed a brief in opposition. The National Labor Relations Board has delegated its authority in this proceeding to a three-member panel. The Employer’s request for review of the Regional Director’s Decision and Order Granting Unit Clarifica- tion is granted as it raises substantial issues warranting review. The Petitioner filed the instant UC petition to clarify the existing unit of warehouse distribution, sales, driv- ers, mechanics, and vending machine repair employees to include production (bottling) employees, who were hired in 1992. The Regional Director found first that the production employees were properly included in the bargaining unit because they had been included in the unit when it was certified in 1961 and because the successive bargaining agreements thereafter included the production classification in their recognition clauses. The Regional Director alternatively found that the production employees should be included because of their close community of interest with existing unit employees. Based on the undisputed facts set forth by the Regional Director, we find for the following rea- sons that the Employer’s production employees do not constitute an accretion to the existing bargaining unit. First, in the circumstances of this case, it is immate- rial whether production employees were included in the successive contractual recognition clauses. The Employer ceased production operations in 1980 and from 1980 to 1992 had no production operations and employed no production employees. The Board finds that this 12-year hiatus, when the Employer in fact had no production employees, is controlling. In representa- tion cases in general and unit clarification proceedings in particular, the Board looks to the actual, existing composition of units and to employees actually work- ing to determine the composition of units, not to ab- stract grants of recognition. For example, the Board has dismissed unit clarification petitions when there were no employees in the classification sought to be added,1 does not automatically accrete employees at a new store solely because the unit description includes all the employer’s stores, present and future, in a geo- graphic area,2 and has found in cases involving decer- tification elections that the appropriate unit must be the actual, current unit.3 Accordingly, we shall reverse the Regional Director’s principal finding. Second, we find that the Employer’s production em- ployees have a community of interest separate and dis- tinct from the current bargaining unit employees. Bar- gaining unit employees are engaged in warehouse dis- tribution, sales, and delivery of the product, repair of vending equipment, and in related maintenance. Pro- duction employees are engaged in operating the bot- tling equipment and in related maintenance. Although there is some overlap of functions, as in the operation of forklifts and in the maintenance of production equipment, it is undisputed that the production employ- ees work in a separate walled off area of the facility, are engaged in different work, for the most part use different skills, have not in fact interchanged with unit employees, and have separate day-to-day supervision. In a number of other cases, the Board has found units like the existing warehouse and distribution unit here to be, themselves, separately appropriate. See Esco Corp., 298 NLRB 837 (1990); Brescome Distributors Corp., 197 NLRB 642 (1972); hence, production em- ployees are not a necessary part of, or an accretion to, such a unit. In addition, the 12-year hiatus when the Employer had no production employees renders the earlier inclusion of production employees in the unit insignificant. Based on the above factors, we find that the produc- tion employees can be a separate appropriate unit. Thus, contrary to the Regional Director’s conclusions, the production employees do not constitute an accre- tion to the existing unit. Safeway Stores, 256 NLRB 918 (1981). Accordingly, we reverse the Regional Di- rector’s Decision and Order Granting Unit Clarification and dismiss the petition. ORDER The petition is dismissed. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation