Fisher Controls Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsAug 4, 1971192 N.L.R.B. 514 (N.L.R.B. 1971) Copy Citation 514 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Fisher Controls Company and United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW), Petitioner. Case 18-RC-8493 August 4, 1971 DECISION AND DIRECTION OF ELECTIONS 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 William L. Schmidt. Following the hearing and pursuant to Section 102.67 of the National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regulations , Series 8, as amended , the Regional Director for Region 18 issued an Order transferring the case to the Board for decision. Subsequent to the hearing, the Employer and the Petitioner filed briefs with the Board.' Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case 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 case, the Board finds: 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act and it will effectuate the purposes of the Act to assertjurisdiction herein. 2. The Petitioner is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. A question affecting commerce exists concern- ing the representation of certain employees of the Employer within the meaning of Section 9(c)(1) and Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 4. The Petitioner, which represents the Employer's 1 The Employer has requested oral argument . This request is hereby denied because the record and the briefs adequately present the issues and the positions of the parties. 2 The Employer moved to dismiss the petition on the grounds: (1) the unit sought in the petition is inappropriate because it would include office and plant clerical employees ; (2) the Employer was denied due process because the Petitioner allegedly refused to state its position on specific unit inclusions and exclusions other than to agree to stipulations on plant associated personnel, supervisors, and confidential and managerial employees. We find no merit in the motion and hereby deny it. As to (1) a petition is not a pleading and therefore the fact that the Board does not find appropriate a unit in the exact form requested in the petition does not justify dismissing the petition . As to (2) during the course of the extensive hearing the Petitioner made its position absolutely clear with respect to unit inclusions and exclusions and the Employer had ample opportunity to become aware of and to meet the issues involved in the Petitioner's unit request. E The departments located in this building are as follows : advertising and exhibits, education center, market planning, order wnte-up, ACE documentation , design engineering, printing , research, general accounting, product cost accounting , specialty pricing and billing, parts pricing and production and maintenance employees, seeks to represent a single unit of office and plant clerical employees at the Employer's Marshalltown, Iowa, facilities, excluding technical employees, summer student employees, and traditional statutory exclu- sions. In the alternative, the Petitioner is willing to proceed with elections in whatever unit or units the Board deems appropriate. The Employer contends that all office clerical employees should be in one unit, that plant clerical employees should be permitted to vote separately as to whether they desire to be included in a broader unit, that technical employees should be included in the same unit with the clerical employees with whom they are associated, and that summer student employees should also be included? The Employer is engaged at Marshalltown, Iowa, in the manufacture of automatic valves, regulators, and controllers for controlling fluids, gases, and other related processes. The Marshalltown facilities consist of a main office building on Center Street, a plant-and office building, also on Center Street, which is connected by a tunnel with the main office building, and a machining plant and offices on Governor Road. The main office building has three floors .$ The clerical employees in this building generally work the same hours and have substantially the same working conditions. They do not interchange with employees at other locations in the Employer's operation.4 They are separately supervised and perform the kind of work usually performed by employees classified by the Board as office clericals. We find that the clericals in the main office building are office clerical employ- ees. As noted, supra, some clerical employees work in offices located in the machining plant and factory.5 The record shows that the clericals employed at these locations perform functions closely allied to the production processes or to the daily operations of the production facilities at which they work. The hours of work for many of them are generally tied to those of billing, export order processing , financial planning and budget, office service, mail department , file department, stenographic pool, microfilm, communications, credit payroll, and data processing. The classifications of employees working in these departments are listed in Appendix A, attached. Some employees in the above-named departments are technical employees, discussed infra Their location and job classifications are also listed in Appendix 4. 4 The record does show that numerous permanent transfers do occur, but there is no contention that employees temporarily interchange among departments in the different buildings. 5 The offices located in the machining plant at Governor Road are as follows: receiving and shipping, quality control , maintenance , machining manufacturing, tool engineering, purchasing, manufacturing equipment engineering, manufacturing control, toolcrib, industrial engineering, facilities engineering, and employee relations. Those located in the factory at Center Street are as follows : shipping, quality control, finished stores, receiving, reserve stock , assembly and stores , purchasing, inventory control, customer service , traffic, gas regulator, industrial engineering , facilities engineering, advertising and exhibits, and electronics . The classifications of employees working in these departments are listed in Appendix B. attached. 192 NLRB No. 66 FISHER CONTROLS"CO. the production shifts on which they serve; and their daily contacts are with plant personnel. None of, them interchange with the clerical employees employed in the -general office building although -there have been several instances of permanent transfers The parties have stipulated that at . least some of the clerical employees inthe factory buildings are plant clericals. Absentgagreement of the parties, the Board does not join office and-plant clerical employees in•a single unit .? We perceive no reason for departing from that rule in the instant case . Contrary to the Petitioner's primary position, we find, therefore,, that a unit containing both office and plant ' clericals is not appropriate., However, we find that a unit limited to office clerical employees is appropriate. Petitioner's -alternative' willingness to accept the requested plant clericals on any other basis we may deem appropriate presents no problem because the group of plant clericals whom the Petitioner„ seeks, is composed, in the main, of employees assigned to operations which contain the production and mainte- nance employees . whom Petitioner currently -repre- sents. Where, as here, plant clericals are sought to be represented by a -union -which enjoys , recognized status-as the representative, of production and maintenance employees;8 the Board has made a practical judgment that the interests of all concerned would best , be served -byadding related-plant clericals to the established unit of production and maintenance employees if they desire to be represented by the same union.9 We shall, accordingly, establish a voting group composed of, and limited to, all plant clerical employees. If a majority of the employees in this voting group selects Petitioner, we shall require Petitioner to represent this group as part of its established unit of production and maintenance employees. We turn now to determine which employees are to be included in or excluded from the unit or the voting group described herein. The Employer and Petitioner agreed that clerical employees who work in certain departments, marked by an asterisk after the name of the department'listed in Appendix B, attached, were plant clerical employ- ees because they perform clerical functions on the shop floor and in near proximity to and in association with the production and maintenance employees. The record-shows that the remaining clericals in factory buildings work' in, close association with the conceded plant clerical employees. They have little personal contact with employees who work in the main office 6 See fn. 4, supra. 7 See, eg., The Rudolph Wurfitzer Company, 117 NLRB 6; V'ulcanized' Rubber and Plastics ,=Company, Inc, 129 NLRB 1256; Weyerhaeuser Company, 173 NLRB -1170.' 8 Swift & Company, 119 NLRB 1556 ; Robbins & Myers, Inc., 144 NLRB 295, 299 ; The Armstrong Rubber Company, Pacific Coast Division, 144 5115 building, and are subject to=-different supervision. Accordingly, we find thatall clerical employees. who work in the offices ( in-, the- machining, plant on Governor Road,and,the Center, Street-factory; and listed- in Appendix B, attached, 'are plant'. clerical employees. We shall4iriclude,theitinthe-plant€leril voting group.', Teehnicdl -employees. ,Petitioner would exclude as technicals and the Employer would include the following- categories° -of" employees:--,-designers and layout men-in facilities engineering;- assistant=drafts- men, senior -draftsmen ^ draftsmen,, and,,designers in design -engineering;, assiitait`draftsmen, draftsmen, technicians, senior r ,technicians;, ,electronics. engineer- ing associates innelectronics; applicator analysts; work measurement analysts, and senior w.or'k measurement analysts- in` industrial,-engineering,`; order,-detailer -trainees;" order detailers grades A and -and.: order detailer complex : in order write-up; and assistant technicians, technicians, senora technicians, and research associatesyin research. The record shows that employees` in the, above=named job classifications perform work which requires both extensive'tecbnical training and knowledge and the exercise of, independ- ent judgment. They are paid-salaries which are at the top of the grade cafe, and-their,work is `uillike that of any of the other employees whom Petitioner seeks to represent.. , . <Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation