Franklin Convalescent CenterDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMay 5, 1976223 N.L.R.B. 1298 (N.L.R.B. 1976) Copy Citation 1298 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Tuschak/Jacobson, Inc. t/a Franklin Convalescent Center and District 1199, National Union of Hospi- tal and Health Care Employees , Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, AFL-CIO and Amal- gamated Local 298, AFL-CIO, Party in Interest Amalgamated Local 298, AFL-CIO and District 1199, National Union of Hospital and Health Care Em- ployees, Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, AFL-CIO. Cases 22-CA-6251 and 22-CB- 2906 May 5, 1976 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MURPHY AND MEMBERS FANNING AND PENELLO On January 8, 1976, Administrative Law Judge Michael O. Miller issued the attached Decision in this proceeding. Thereafter, Respondent Employer filed exceptions and a supporting brief. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the Na- tional Labor Relations Board has delegated its au- thority in this proceeding to a three-member panel. The Board has considered the record and the at- tached Decision in light of the exceptions and brief and has decided to affirm the rulings, findings,' and conclusions of the Administrative Law Judge and to adopt his recommended Order except as modified below.2 ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Re- lations Board adopts as its Order the recommended Order of the Administrative Law Judge as modified below and hereby orders that Respondent Tuschak/ Jacobson, Inc., t/a Franklin Convalescent Center, Franklin Park, New Jersey, its officers, agents, suc- cessors , and assigns , and Respondent Amalgamated Local 298, AFL-CIO, Union City, New Jersey, its 1 The Respondent Employer has excepted to certain credibility findings made by the Administrative Law Judge . It is the Board 's established policy not to overrule an Administrative Law Judge 's resolutions with respect to credibility unless the clear preponderance of all of the relevant evidence convinces us that the resolutions are incorrect . Standard Dry Wall Products. inc.. 91 NLRB 544 (1950). enfd . 138 F.2d 362 (C.A. 3. 1951). We have carefully examined the record and find no basis for reversing his findings- 2 In his recommended Order the Administrative Law Judge uses the nar- row cease-and-desist language . "in any like or related manner ." Respon- dents here have committed violations which go to the very heart of the Act. We shall therefore modify the Administrative Law Judge's recommended Order to require Respondent to cease and desist from in any other manner infringing upon the rights guaranteed to its employees by Section 7 of the Act. N.L.R.B. v. Entwistle Mfg. Co.. 120 F.2d 532. 536 (C.A. 4. 1941). officers, agents, and representatives, shall take the action set forth in the said recommended Order, as so modified: 1. In paragraph A,1,(d), of the recommended Or- der, delete the words "In any like or related manner" and substitute in lieu thereof "In any other manner." 2. In paragraph B,1,(d), of the recommended Or- der, delete the words "In any like or related manner" and substitute in lieu thereof "In any other manner." 3. Substitute the attached notices for those of the Administrative Law Judge. APPENDIX A NOTICE To EMPLOYEES POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government WE WILL NOT assist or contribute support to Amalgamated Local 298 , AFL-CIO, or any other labor organization , by assisting it to orga- nize our employees or by recognizing it as the exclusive collective-bargaining representative of our employees unless and until it has been certi- fied as such representative by the National La- bor Relations Board. WE WILL withdraw and withhold all recogni- tion from Local 298 as the collective -bargaining representative of our employees. WE WILL NOT threaten our employees with dis- charge by telling them that they must join Local 298 or any other labor organization as a condi- tion of employment and WE WILL NOT interrogate our employees concerning their union member- ship, activities , and desires. WE WILL NOT encourage membership in Amal- gamated Local 298 , AFL-CIO , or any other la- bor organization , or discourage membership in, or activities on behalf of, District 1199, National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees, Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, AFL-CIO , or any other labor organization, by discharging or in any other manner discriminat- ing against our employees in regard to their hire or tenure of employment or any terms or condi- tions of employment. WE WILL NOT in any manner interfere with, restrain , or coerce employees in the exercise of their rights to self-organization , to form labor organizations, to join or assist District 1199, Na- tional Union of Hospital and Health Care Em- ployees, Retail , Wholesale and Department Store Union , AFL-CIO, or any other labor or- 223 NLRB No. 197 FRANKLIN CONVALESCENT CENTER ganization, to bargain collectively through rep- resentatives of their own choosing, to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection, or to refrain from engaging in any or all such activ- ities, except to the extent that such rights may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization as a condition of em- ployment as authorized in Section 8(a)(3) of the Act, as modified by the Labor-Management Re- porting and Disclosure Act of 1959. WE WILL, jointly and severally with Local 298, make Linda Lee whole for any loss of earnings she may have suffered because of her discharge. TUSCHAK/JACOBSON, INC. T/A FRANKLIN CONVALESCENT CENTER APPENDIX B NOTICE To MEMBERS POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government WE WILL NOT accept recognition as the exclu- sive collective-bargaining representative of Franklin Convalescent Center's employees or enter into a collective-bargaining agreement with Franklin unless and until we have been cer- tified as such a representative by the National Labor Relations Board. WE WILL NOT restrain or coerce employees by falsely telling them that we have already been selected as their collective-bargaining represen- tative and that they are required to join this Union as a condition of continued employment. WE WILL NOT cause or attempt to cause Frank- lin or any other employer to discharge or other- wise discriminate against its employees in order to encourage membership in Local 298 or to dis- courage membership in District 1199, National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees, Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union, AFL-CIO, or any other labor organiza- tion. WE WILL, jointly and severally with Franklin, make Linda Lee whole for any loss of earnings she may have suffered because of her discharge. WE WILL NOT in any other manner restrain or coerce employees of Franklin in the exercise of the rights guaranteed them in Section 7 of the Act. AMALGAMATED LOCAL 298 , AFL-CIO DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE 1299 MICHAEL O. MILLER, Administrative Law Judge: Based upon charges filed by District 1199, National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees, Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, AFL-CIO (herein District 1199) against Tuschak/Jacobson, Inc., t/a Franklin Con- valescent Center (herein Franklin or Respondent Employ- er) and Amalgamated Local 298, AFL-CIO (herein Local 298 or Respondent Union) on February 24, 1975, and March 31, 1975 (first amended charge against Local 298), the Regional Director for Region 22 of the National Labor Relations Board (herein the Board), on June 11, 1975, is- sued the order consolidating cases, complaint, and notice of hearing upon which these cases were heard. The hearing was held on July 28 through July 31, 1975, at New Bruns- wick, New Jersey. The consolidated complaint alleges that Respondent Employer violated Section 8(a)(1), (2), and (3) of the Na- tional Labor Relations Act, (herein the Act) by various acts including threats and interrogations, encouraging membership in Respondent Local 298, otherwise assisting and recognizing Respondent Local 298 at a time when said Local 298 did not represent an uncoerced majority of its employees in an appropriate bargaining unit and while an- other union, District 1199, had a substantial claim of repre- sentation as to these same employees, and by discharging an employee, Linda Lee, because said employee joined or assisted District 1199 and refused to join or assist Local 298. As to Respondent Local 298, the complaint alleges violations of Section 8(b)(1)(A) and (2) by threatening to cause and causing the discharge of employees and by ac- cepting recognition at a time when it did not represent an uncoerced majority of the employees in a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining. Both Respondents have denied the substantive allega- tions of the complaint. General Counsel and both Respondents were repre- sented by counsel at the hearing. All parties were afforded full opportunity to be heard, to examine and cross-examine witnesses, to introduce oral and documentary evidence, to argue orally and to file briefs. Briefs were submitted by General Counsel and counsel for Respondent Employer and have been carefully considered. Throughout the hearing, the witnesses and their demean- or were carefully observed by me. Based upon these obser- vations and my consideration of the entire record in this case, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. RESPONDENT EMPLOYER'S BUSINESS The complaint alleges, Respondents admit, and I find, that Respondent Employer is engaged in the business of providing health and medical care and related services for the aged at its convalescent center located in Franklin Park, New Jersey. During the 12 months prior to issuance 1300 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD of the complaint, a representative period , Respondent Em- ployer had gross revenues in excess of $100,000 and pur- chased and received goods and materials valued in excess of $50,000 directly from points located outside the State of New Jersey. Respondent is an employer within the mean- ing of Section 2(2) of the Act, engaged in commerce and in operations affecting commerce within the meaning of Sec- tion 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 11. LABOR ORGANIZATION STATUS The complaint alleges , Respondents admit , and I find, that both Respondent Local 298 and District 1199 are la- bor organizations within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. Ill. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Background Respondent Employer 's convalescent center has been in operation since November 1973. Included among its su- pervisory hierarchy are Executive Director Nathan Lin- denbaum, Administrator Roger Wardlow, and Director of Nursing Judith Tucker.' Catherine Lafferty was a nurses ' aide alleged in the com- plaint to be an agent of Respondent Employer and both shop steward and agent of Respondent Local 298. Both Respondents denied her agency status . Jack Buck is Local 298's financial secretary and is, I find, an agent of Local 298. B. The Advent of Local 298 at Franklin Lindenbaum testified that he learned of the existence of the Modern Nursing Home Association through periodi- cals and seminars in 1974. This Association, he stated, pro- vided its members with information , and engaged in some lobbying. He was also aware of and admitted interest in the fact that "the members of the nursing homes of the association had a good relationship union-wise." In the lat- ter part of December 1974, Lindenbaum told his adminis- trator, Wardlow, that they were considering becoming members of that Association. Wardlow testified that Lin- denbaum referred to some advantages of membership, in- cluding the sharing of information regarding various mat- 1 Additionally, Respondents stipulated for the purpose of unit placement that Constance Mierta , Francis Beckman , and Charles Gilmore were super- visors within the meaning of Section 2 (l1) of the Act. General Counsel sought to adduce evidence , and made offers of proof to the effect that these three individuals had directed certain employees to speak with Local 298's representatives while the latter were soliciting support. Objections to the tendered evidence were sustained and offers of proof rejected because the complaint did not allege these individuals to be supervisors or agents and therefore did not adequately apprise Respondents of the conduct against which it would have to defend . At the opening of the second day of hearing, General Counsel moved to amend the complaint to so allege them and to allege their conduct as coercive . That motion was granted but subsequently withdrawn by General Counsel to avoid any delay in the conduct of the hearing . General Counsel, however, stated his intention to pursue his argu- ment concerning the admissibility of such testimony in the absence of an amendment to the complaint but did not allude thereto in brief . The ruling made at the hearing in regard to such evidence is maintained herein. ters, such as legislative trends, day-to-day problems, and labor relations. Among the advantages mentioned was the ability to act in concert in labor negotiations. Lindenbaum told Wardlow that the members of the association were represented by Local 298 and that membership in the asso- ciation would allow their employees the opportunity to consider representation by Local 298.2 Thereafter, without further discussions with Wardlow, Lindenbaum applied for and received membership in the Modern Nursing Home Association. He told Wardlow of this on January 20, 1975.3 On that same date, January 20, after being informed by the president of the Modern Nursing Home Association that Franklin had become a member, Jack Buck accompa- nied by another agent of Local 298, Joe Farango, appeared at Franklin. Buck told Lindenbaum that Local 298 repre- sented the Association's employees and requested recogni- tion and the signing of a contract. Buck did not show Lin- denbaum Local 298's contract with other association members but showed him a list of various benefits, entitled "Franklin Convalescent Center" which listed benefits to be granted in the area of holidays, sick leave, insurance, and wages, and concluded "MUST JOIN UNION AFTER 30 DAYS." Lin- denbaum indicated, according to Buck, that he would go along with some benefits. There were no negotiations and no agreements reached on benefits or union security. Lin- denbaum allegedly 4 rejected Buck's request for immediate recognition on the grounds that there was no showing that the employees wanted Local 298 to represent them. Buck asked to be permitted to go through the facility speaking to employees in order to prove his representative status, which request was denied. It was agreed, however, that one employee would be furnished to Buck. Buck, Lindenbaum, and Wardlow discussed the unit, with Buck stating that he was considering the nurses' aides, housekeeping, dietary, and laundry department employees. He was not interested in representing high school students and part-time employees working less than 20 hours per weeks Lindenbaum told Buck that there were between 40 and 42 employees in that unit. This meeting lasted between 15 minutes and one-half hour. C. The Involvement of Catherine Lafferty Lindenbaum called Judith Tucker , director of nursing, and told her that there were some men who wished to speak with her employees and that she should release those who wished to be released, but should not allow disruption of the work. Wardlow then left the office where he had been talking with Buck and Lindenbaum and went to the nursing department . He asked Tucker for an employee ] Lindenbaum testified that he was not aware of the identity of the union representing the association 's members ' employees at that point in time. Wardlow 's testimony . however, indicated that Lindenbaum identified Local 298 as the union representing those employees . I credit Wardlow 's state- ment, in the nature of an admission , over Lindenbaum 's denial. l All dates hereinafter referred to are 1975 unless otherwise specified. 4The testimony of this meeting though self-serving , stands uncontradict- ed. 5 The contract between Respondent Local 298 and other members of the Modern Nursing Home Association contained no such exclusion of stu- dents and part-time employees. FRANKLIN CONVALESCENT CENTER 1301 from that department who could be spared and Tucker, observing nurses' aide Catherine Lafferty nearby, suggest- ed that Wardlow speak with her. Wardlow called her aside, told her that there was a union representative in his office who wanted to talk with an employee, and asked her if she wanted to be a union steward. He told Lafferty that Lin- denbaum had given his permission for her to talk with the union representative. According to Wardlow, Lafferty said that she had never had any dealing with a union and didn't know anything about it but would go. Lafferty accompa- nied Wardlow back to his office where he introduced her to Buck and Farango. Buck spoke privately with Lafferty in the conference room. According to his testimony, he told her who he was and explained that he wanted to represent Franklin's em- ployees. He showed her the list of benefits previously shown to Lindenbaum and Wardlow and told her, "that once I get a contract signed, there would be a clause in the contract stating that all those who joined in the period of 30 days I would waive the initiation fee." 6 He explained to her that he was not being permitted to go through the insti- tution himself, which was why Lindenbaum had appointed her to come down and see him. He told her to bring a couple of employees at a time to him and he would explain why he was there. Lafferty was told that in return for this, she would be the union steward, that she would receive a $12 raise and be required to pay neither the initiation fee nor monthly dues. She was also told, according to her testi- mony, that she would collect dues, pass out cards, and at- tempt to resolve problems for employees. Lafferty returned to the nursing floor and asked Tucker whether it would be all right for her to take some employ- ees from the floor to speak with Buck. Tucker replied affir- matively. She began to bring employees to Buck at the conference room. D. The Signing of Local 298s Application for Membership/Authorization for Representation Cards Lafferty testified that she went to a number of employ- ees and told them "that we were going to have a union and that there were two representatives from the union and 61 am not inclined to credit his self-serving statement. Such benefits. applicable only at the beginning of a collective-bargaining relationship and' deriving from the Union, are rarely, if ever the subject of provisions in collective-bargaining agreements . I note that Local 298's contract with other association members contained no such provision but did include a union security clause which stated: ARTICLE III - UNION SHOP 1. All employees covered by this Agreement shall be or become mem- bers of the Union on the 30th day following the beginning of employ- ment or the effective date of this Agreement , whichever is later, and all such employees shall thereafter maintain their union membership in good standing with respect to union membership dues and initiation fees for the duration of the Agreement as a condition of their continued employment. I note further that Buck 's alleged statement is inconsistent with the state- ment in the list of benefits shown the employee , Lafferty and , subsequently. other employees , that employees "MUST JOIN UNION AFTER 70 DAYS ." The fact that Buck 's statement was not controverted by Lafferty, a reluctant if not hostile witness for the General Counsel , does not compel its acceptance in light of its inconsistency and implausibility . See J. C. Penney Co., Inc. y. N.L.R.B.. 416 F.2d 702, 704 (C.A. 7, 1969). they wanted to speak to them and there were cards to be signed," that "they had to go into the conference room to sign the cards and if they had any questions that the two gentlemen in there would explain it to them." She told at least some of the employees that Tucker had said it was all right to leave their work station. She also testified that she told the employees that the union would cost them $7 per month, they would receive a wage increase and an addi- tional holiday and that they had 30 days within which to join the Union. She testified that she told them that if they did not join within 30 days, they would have to buy the union book for either $25 or $30.1 Lafferty handed out or showed employees the list of benefits provided by Buck. Lafferty stated that all of the employees who went to the conference room on January 20 did so upon her urging. Reviewing the cards relied upon by Local 298 in claiming majority support she stated that she recalled the following employees having gone to the conference room: John Bieg- en, Brenda Cowan, Charlotte Heikkila, Barbara Pilalides, Ella Posten, Lillian Reed, Olga Ruppert, Rosemarie Rup- pert, Marie Jane Stout, Addie Taylor, Marilyn Williams, and Isabel Pagano. Lafferty did not see all of the foregoing employees sign cards. Lafferty, herself, of course, also spoke to Buck in the conference room and signed an au- thorization and membership application card. Pagano was recalled by Lafferty as having declined to sign a card while in the conference room; she took the card home for the expressed purpose of discussing her signing with her hus- band and then returned the signed card to Lafferty. Laffer- ty either did not recall or was unsure as to whether the signers of the remaining cards went to the conference room at her direction or request: Brian Austin, Harriet Bolyog, Virginia Bonner, Bruce Emens, Dorothy Harrison, Gwenthe Wacker, Jeanne Cogan, Sandra Holliday, Eileen Killea, Susanna Tonelli, Christine LaRose, Irene Retman- ski, and Sharon Schwartz. One card, in evidence as Gener- al Counsel's Exhibit 2(a), was illegible and could not be identified by Lafferty. Buck did not identify the employees he spoke with in Franklin's conference room on January 20 and 21. He tes- tified that to those with whom he spoke, he introduced himself as the representative of Local 298, the union which represented the employees of the association of which Franklin was a member. He testified that: he showed them the list of benefits, previously referred to, and told them that those were some of the benefits they would get if he got a majority of the cards signed; that he would waive initiation fees for all members that joined within the 30 days after the contract was signed; that those who did not join within the 30 days would have to pay an initiation fee; and that they would be discharged if they did not join after 30 days. The following employees testified in regard to the cir- cumstances under which they signed Local 298's cards: Brian Austin: Austin signed his card in Franklin's cafete- ria on January 21, at the request of an unidentified woman. 7 Oscar Bailey, an employee who did not sign a card, testified that in the beginning of February, Lafferty asked him to join Local 298 and, when he replied that he was not interested, told him, "well, I don't know if you know it or not. you will have 30 days to sign, otherwise your employment will be terminated." I credit Bailey. 1302 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD On the prior day (Austin testified that it was a couple of days prior to his signing of the card ; January 20, however, was the first date the union representatives appeared at Franklin), Lindenbaum and Wardlow had come to the kitchen where Austin worked and "said there are a few people from the union and they would like to tell you something about it , you know, so in case I would like to join it ." Austin went to the conference room . It was his recollection , somewhat vague, that another employee asked if they had to sign the cards at that time and that one of the representatives stated that they should sign it at that mo- ment . Austin and the other employee walked out of the meeting without signing cards. John Biegen: Biegen went to the conference room 8 on January 20 . He recalled several other employees , Jeanne Cogan , Lillian Reed , Rosemarie Ruppert , and two others identified only as Susanna and Brenda ," as well as two union representatives , being present . Biegen 's recollection, albeit somewhat vague , was that they were told , "our Con- valescent has a union and it will give you better benefits, more pay and holidays." In response to a leading question, Biegen recalled that something was said to the effect that they had 30 days in which to sign the cards. Harriet Bolyog: Bolyog was sent, along with Joanne Co- gan, to Tucker's office where Tucker told them to go to the conference room where there were two union men that wanted to talk to them . They went to the conference room where Buck or Farango told them that they had been trying to get in for a period of 2 weeks, that they had tried to get them a 50-cent raise but that the Company would only give a 20-cent raise which they would get on February 15, and that they would be paid in December for unused sick leave . She recalled no reference to any 30-day period. Bolyog and Cogan were given cards and both signed. An- other employee present took a card but did not sign it. Virginia Bonner and Barbara Pilalides : Shortly after Bon- ner arrived for work on the second shift on January 20, she passed the nurses' station where Tucker greeted her and told her that there was a union meeting in the conference room . Bonner recalled waiting for a few minutes and then going to the conference room with another nurses' aide, Barbara Pilalides , whom she had told about the meeting. (Pilalides did not describe going to the meeting with Bon- ner; she stated that she was told about the meeting by a man standing by the door as she came in. She did, howev- er, recall being in the meeting at the same time as Bonner.) Buck told them of benefits , a raise and payment for unused sick leave, they would get from the Union , and told them that they would have to sign within 30 days. They were told that it they didn' t sign within 30 days, they would have to pay $25 to join the Union and if they did not pay $25 8 An offer of proof to the effect that he was directed to go to the confer- ence room by his supervisor was rejected for the reasons set forth in fn. 1. supra. Similar offers of proof were rejected in regard to the testimony of Ella Posten and Addie Taylor. the circumstances of whose card signings are discussed . infra. 9 The payroll list for the relevant date lists only one employee named Susanna (Tonelli) and two employees named Brenda (Cowan and Burnett). Brenda Burnett was shown to be a high school student . As previously noted. a card was signed by Brenda Cowan . Susanna Tonelli's card (G. C. Exh. 2(y)) was identified by Ella Posten and was received in evidence . No card signed by Burnett was proffered. they would be discharged.10 Bonner and Pilalides signed cards. Charlotte Heikkila: Heikkila signed an authorization card for Local 298 on January 21 upon being approached by an employee named Cathy, who claimed to be the shop steward. (As Lafferty was the only unit employee named Catherine and apparently the only employee designated as shop steward, I conclude that she was the person who ap- proached Heikkila). She asked Heikkila whether Heikkila would like to join the Union. Heikkila indicated that she would if everyone else did, and signed the card. Heikkila then asked Lafferty what they would be getting and Laffer- ty showed her the list of benefits previously described. She also asked Lafferty what would happen if they did not sign and Lafferty told her, "when the union comes in you will have to sign it." Within a week of signing the card, Heikkila changed her mind and attempted to retrieve it from Lafferty. Lafferty told her that it was in the office. She went to the office and asked Lindenbaum for the return of her card. She ex- plained that she did not feel that she was getting enough of a raise . Lindenbaum told her that everyone was getting 20-cents per hour but that there were possibilities of merit raises . She again asked for the card and either Lindenbaum or Tucker, who was also present, told her that the card was not there, and said that "it ... does [not] matter because when the union comes in we would all have to sign any- way." Sandra Holliday: Holliday was not scheduled to work on January 20 but was called by Tucker and asked if she would be able to come in. Tucker told her that there were two union men to see her and asked if she wanted to sign. She came into work and Tucker told her to punch in and then see the union men . The list of benefits was shown to her and explained by Buck. Buck gave her a card and she signed it. About a week later, Holliday attempted to retrieve her card. She went, allegedly in the company of Eileen Killea (who testified, but not in regard to this incident) to Linden- baum and asked if they could have their cards back. Lin- denbaum told her that the union men had the cards and that they could get them when the union men came back. About a week later, the union representatives returned and Holliday heard Lindenbaum tell them that she was the em- ployee who wanted to pull her card. Outside the presence of Lindenbaum , the union representatives told her that "I wouldn't be able to pull my card because if I did then within 30 days I would have to be fired. Everyone had to sign the union card." Holliday testified that she went to work on January 20 because she thought having a union was a good idea. She also testified that at the time she signed the card she be- lieved that the Union was already in at Franklin. Eileen Killea: Killea called Tucker on January 20 to tell her that she would be unable to come in because of the snow storm. However, she agreed to come in if Tucker sent someone down for her. Holliday was sent to pick her up. On the way to work, Holliday (whose testimony made no 10The foregoing is from the combined and consistent recollections of Bonner and Pilalides. FRANKLIN CONVALESCENT CENTER 1303 mention of picking up or talking to Killea on January 20) told her that there were two union men at Franklin, talking to the employees, and that she had already signed a card for the Union. Holliday told her that there was going to be a raise. When Killea arrived at the convalescent home, Tucker greeted her and told her that there were two union men there who would like to talk with her. Tucker introduced Killea to the union men. Lindenbaum had been talking to the union representatives at this time but left before they began to talk to Killea. Tucker had also left, but returned and asked Killea if she could sit in while they talked with her as she had not heard what they had been telling em- ployees. I I Killea was given the list of benefits and was told that she would get a raise of 20 cents as of February 15. Other benefits were described and she was told that if a majority signed cards, everyone would have to sign with that union. Tucker was present when Killea signed her card. Isabel Pagano: Pagano signed a card for Local 298 on January 23. The card had been given to her by Lafferty and the one^she signed may have been the second card she received from Lafferty. She took the first card home. Her testimony, while less than clear, was candid, and revealed that Lafferty showed her the list of benefits, Pagano pro- tested that they were inadequate, Lafferty assured her that they were better than they had previously received and Pa- gano told Lafferty that she did not like the benefits, did not want to sign and asked Lafferty what would happen if she did not sign. Lafferty told her that the union was coming in and would be in effect on the following day, that if she did not sign then, she would have to pay $25 and that if she did not sign the card she would be terminated in 30 days. Simi- lar remarks, at least about paying the $25, were made to Pagano by the union representative. Ella Posten: Posten signed a card for Local 298 on Janu- ary 20, in a meeting with Buck in the conference room. She recalled that also present and signing cards at that time were Christine LaRose, Susanna Tonelli, John Biegen, and possibly Jeanne Cogan. Buck or Farango told them that they were there to represent the union and were going to get them good benefits, more holidays, and more money. Authorization cards were given out and they were told that if they signed within 30 days they wouldn't have to pay anything, that they would have to pay something if they did not sign within 30 days, and if they did not sign at all they would be terminated. Addie Taylor: Taylor testified that she was in the confer- ence room on January 20 together with John Biegen, Su- sannL, and Ella. It was her recollection, which she admit- ted was less than complete, that they were told that the Union wanted to come in, that they would get a raise after it came in , that it would cost $7 if they joined and $20 if they joined after 30 days, and that they had 30 days to "Tucker admitted having walked into the conference room while Buck was talking to Killea, but claimed she did so while looking for tardy arrivals among the nurses' aides and did not pay any attention to the discussion being carried on. I credit Killea, who impressed me as a candid witness endeavoring to accurately describe the events about which she was being questioned. make up their minds. She received the impression, from being told that they had 30 days to make up their minds, that if she didn't sign she would lose her job. Marie Jane Stout: Stout was given a card by Lafferty, who told Stout that she was the shop steward. Lafferty showed Stout the list of benefits. Stout told Lafferty that she had heard about the union from Addie Taylor and that "from what I have heard, I guess I have no choice but to go ahead and sign ...." Lafferty did not reply verbally, but smiled. Stout signed the card. E. Franklin's Recognition of Local 298 - The Unit On January 23, in the morning, Buck again requested recognition and the execution of a collective-bargaining agreement . He gave Lindenbaum 29 applications of mem- bership/authorization for representation cards which pur- ported to be signed by employees in the unit sought by Local 298: all nurses' aides, orderlies, dietary, housekeep- ing, and laundry employees, excluding part-time employees working less than 20 hours per week, high school students, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act.12 The parties, by stipulation at the hearing, agreed'as to the inclusion of 43 employees in this unit. Nineteen high school students employed by Franklin were identified by similar agreement and the inclusion or exclusion of some of them is in dispute herein. Of these 19, the record reflects that 13 regularly worked less than 20 hours per week and thus, pursuant to the agreement of the parties, were excluded from the unit. Six, however, aver- aged more than 20 hours per week in the five payroll peri- ods preceding and including the date of recognition: Bren- da Burnett, Richard Daniels, Vickie Lee Humbard, Barbara Kroeper, Bill Newburg, and Mike Quindlen. Tes- timony of Wardlow indicated that while high school stu- dents perform the same work under the same conditions as other employees, and are eligible for a pro rata share of most fringe benefits (sick leave, holidays, vacations) if they average 20 or more hours per week, they had a higher rate of turnover and less expectancy of continued employment than other employees. Only one employee could be re- called as having continued in Franklin's employ following graduation from high school. The Board, in Otis Hospital, Inc., 219 NLRB 164 (1975), recently stated: Upon consideration we conclude that in the health care industry we will give effect to all stipulations de- signating unit compositions that do not contravene the provisions or purposes of the Act or well-settled Board policies. The exclusion of high school students from the unit agreed to herein may not provide for the optimum unit. It does, however, have a rational basis and does not "contravene 12 General Counsel initially contended that the exclusion of part-time em- ployees working less than 20 hours per week and high school students who performed the same work, under the same conditions, as unit employees was inappropriate . In the course of the hearing, however, General Counsel withdrew that position and stated that "it does not contend that it was inappropriate to exclude from the unit in issue, high school students for others] regularly working 20 or less hours per week." General Counsel con- tinued to maintain that high school students regularly working more than 20 hours per week should be included in the unit. 1304 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD the provisions of the Act or well-settled Board policies." I thus conclude that the high school students were not inap- propriately excluded from the unit wherein Respondent Union sought to establish its majority status. As to the inclusion or exclusion of 10 other individuals, no agreement was reached. The record as to those individ- uals reflects the following: Anne Chase and Jean McCalla, in the five payroll peri- ods (2 weeks) preceding and including January 23, aver- aged less than 15 hours per week , except for the period which would include Christmas week (when part-time or student employees have more hours available and are uti- lized to give full -time employees more time off) when each averaged approximately 32 hours per week . Roseland Thompson , Anna Davidson , and Irene Retmanski aver- aged less than 20 hours per week in each of the same pay periods. Michele Hilyard apparently commenced her em- ployment in the pay period ending February 6, having worked but 16 hours in that period and not at all in the four preceding pay periods. I would therefore conclude that Chase , McCalla , Thompson , Davidson , Retmanski, and Hilyard fall within the agreed exclusion of part-time employees and are not to be counted as part of that unit. The records, however, also reveal that nurses' aide Star Brown worked total hours of 63-1/2, 59-1/2, 75-1/2, 55, and 36-3/4 in the pay periods of December 12, December 26, January 9, January 23, and February 6, respectively, and that in those same pay periods nurses ' aide Helen Hag- in worked 39-3/4, 46, 27-1/2, 46-1/2, and 48 hours. I there- fore conclude that Brown and Hagin regularly worked in excess of 20 hours per week and are includable in the agreed-upon unit. Respondent Employer contended that Linda Carron and Joann Vitello were supervisors in the dietary department. The sole evidence relating to them was adduced through Lindenbaum. He described them as supervisors, having the authority to assign employees to their work task and direct them in those tasks. He testified that as supervisors , Carron and Vitello would have the authority to schedule hours and assign overtime , if necessary, without checking with Ward- low, to whom all supervisors reported. Lindenbaum had not directly observed the work of Carron and Vitello and did not know how many employees reported to them. He believed that they were hourly paid and that they worked on separate shifts . Based upon the foregoing , while not free from doubt , I am constrained to conclude that Carron and Vitello are supervisors and thus excluded from the unit. General Counsel has not sustained his burden of proof to establish otherwise. I thus conclude that the unit , at the time of recognition, contained 45 employees, the 43 agreed to by stipulation plus Brown and Hagin. Lindenbaum took the 29 cards proffered by Buck into his office where he compared the signatures against other documents . He excluded Irene Retmanski 's card as that of a part-time employee outside the unit . Two cards were un- dated but were counted on Buck 's representation that they had been signed in the same period of time as the other cards. As Buck had proffered 28 signed cards in a unit that Lindenbaum deemed to number 43, he agreed to recognize Local 298 at that time . No contract negotiations were held at that time and no agreements, beyond recognition, were reached. Buck did not give or show Lindenbaum a copy of the association agreement. There was no discussion of union security. Several times thereafter, Buck and Linden- baum discussed increases in benefits over the telephone. F. Activity and Card Signing for District 1199 Linda Lee, a nurses' aide, testified that she made an ini- tial contact with District 1199 in November 1974, but be- cause of the pendency of the holidays and other business, organizational activities were not undertaken at that time. She made a second contact with District 1199 in January and arranged a meeting with Mr. Evanoff, a representative of that union, for her home, to be held on January 22. According to both Lee and Joyce Milicia, another nurses' aide, that meeting was held, with Evanoff, Milicia, Gwenthe Wacher, and Martha Anderson present. Follow- ing this meeting, where literature and authorization cards for District 1199 were passed out, but no cards signed, the employees went to work, and met with additional employ- ees in Franklin's second floor dining room. It was at the gathering in the dining room that cards were signed. On the following evening, January 23, an additional meeting was held for District 1199, at Corvino's Restau- rant, near the convalescent center, following the comple- tion of the 3 p.m. to II p.m. shift. Additional cards were signed at this meeting. Twelve authorization cards for District 1199 were identi- fied or tendered at the hearing. Of these, two cards, those of Virginia Bonner and Sandra Holliday, were rejected as evidence because they were admittedly signed at the meet- ing at Corvino's on January 23, after Franklin's recogni- tion of Local 298. A third card, that of Oscar Bailey, simi- larly signed at Corvino's on January 23 and a fourth card, carrying that same date but about which there was no testi- mony, were not offered. Of the eight cards for District 1199, received in evidence, three (those signed by Sharon Schwartz, Helen Hagin, and Eileen Killea) are dated January 22. The remainder, cards signed by Lee, Wacher, Milicia, Martha Anderson, and Eileen Pinkrah, are dated January 23. Notwithstanding the dates they bear, General Counsel asserted that these cards were actually executed on January 22, at the gathering in Franklin's dining room following the meeting at Lee's home. Lee so testified and explained the discrepancy in dates as follows: Q. (by General Counsel): Would you explain to us why the date in the upper right-hand corner is January 23, 1975? A. (by Lee): Because of the nature of the shift in which I work even though I go in on say a Wednesday night, the basis of our work is done the next day and when we sign a document or enter information or charts [sic] information, we chart on that day's date. Q. Which day's date? A. The next day's date. As she had stated in a May 28 letter to the Board, the date of January 23 reflected the date of the bulk of the shift which they were commencing. Lee's testimony in this re- FRANKLIN CONVALESCENT CENTER 1305 gard is directly corroborated by Milicia. It is further sup- ported by the testimony of Schwartz, who described both the meeting in the dining room on January 22 and a subse- quent meeting at Corvino's and testified that she received her card from Lee and signed it at the meeting in the din- ing room on the date it bore, January 22. I note further that while Bonner testified that she saw Killea and Hagin at the January 23 meeting at Corvino's, she also testified that not all of the persons present at that meeting signed cards that night and that Killea had mentioned signing a card prior to the meeting at Corvino's. I therefore conclude, in agree- ment with the contentions of General Counsel, that the District 1199 authorization cards executed by Schwartz, Hagin, Killea, Lee, Wacher, Milicia, Anderson, and Pink- rah were signed on Janaury 22, prior to Franklin's recogni- tion of Local 298.13 Of these eight employees, Killea, Pink- rah, Schwartz, and Wacher had previously signed cards for Local 298. There was no evidence that anyone in a supervisory or agency capacity with Franklin was aware of the activity on behalf of District 1199 prior to Franklin's recognition of Local 298. Buck asked Bailey if he wanted to join; Bailey replied that he was not sure. Neither of the union representatives had a card for Bailey to take at that time.14 On February 14, Local 298 conducted a meeting in Franklin's dining room. According to Buck, the purpose of the meeting was to explain the requirement and advantage of signing a card for Local 298. Present throughout the meeting was Director of Nursing Judith Tucker, 5 Tucker did not speak or otherwise participate in the meeting. Local 298's authorization cards were passed out, as was a list of benefits similar in a format and content to that which had been shown employees during the initial orga- nizing phase. The benefits, however, were slightly different, with more holidays, sick leave, and insurance but slightly less in annual wage increases. The list of benefits was head- ed: Local 298 A.F.L. C.I.O. EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 15, 1975 ALL EMPLOYEES SHALL RECEIVE It concluded, as did the original list: MUST JOIN UNION AFTER 30 DAYS. G. Events Post-Recognition Employee Oscar Bailey testified about conversations with Lafferty in what would appear to be early February. In the first conversation, she asked him if he wanted to join Local 298, told him that Local 298 was a union which was coming in and that he had 30 days to join the union or be terminated. In the second conversation, the same day, she repeated her request that he join and told him that it was for his own good. About a week later, as he was coming to work, Bailey was told by Lindenbaum that there were two union men upstairs, posting a notice rescheduling a union meeting to February 14 (which would place this conversation around February 12.) He went upstairs and met Buck and Faran- go. He introduced himself and asked for information about the Union. Buck gave him a description of the benefits it had wrested from Franklin' s management . He asked Buck how Local 298 had come to Franklin and become the rep- resentative . Buck told him that Lindenbaum had joined an association, that all members of the association were under Local 298's jurisdiction and that the employees had no choice; they had to join or be terminated. Some mention was made of an association contract. In response to a ques- tion , Bailey was told that once the nursing home was under Local 298's jurisdiction, no other union could come in. 13 In so concluding, I am not unmindful of certain inconsistencies be- tween Lee's testimony and her pretrial statements in regard to the dates and places various events took place, as exemplified by the statement in her May 28 letter to the Board purporting to correct the date of her card from Janu- ary 23 to January 22. In that letter , she stated that she signed her card at the meeting with Al Evanoff. At the hearing, she testified that she received the card from Evanoff but signed it at the convalescent home . Similar changes from her pretrial statements appeared in regard to her attendance at one of two meetings at Corvino's and the date of a conversation between Anderson and Lindenbaum . Such inconsistencies weigh against crediting Lee. On bal- ance , however, considering that three cards were dated on January 22 and that Lee's testimony was both plausible and corroborated, I am constrained to reach the conclusion as set forth above. The employees were told that Local 298 was repre- senting the employees of Franklin because Franklin had joined an association of nursing homes and that, because of that representation, they would receive certain benefits and increases. According to Buck, he told them that once the contract was ratified and signed, the benefits would be retroactive to January 23. He did not tell them when it would be signed. The list of benefits shown to employees, Buck testified, was the sum total of the completed negotia- tions with Franklin. He further testified that he had no discussion or negotiations with Lindenbaum regarding union security. In regard to union security and the requirement set forth at the end of the list of benefits, Buck stated that the em- ployees had 30 days from the signing of the contract to sign up with the union, that those who joined up after 30 days would have to pay a $25 initiation fee. In response to a question, Buck told the employees that if they did not sign, they would be discharged.i6 In the course of the meeting, Linda Lee repeatedly questioned Buck in regard to the Modern Nursing Home Association, how Local 298 came upon the scene at Franklin, how Lafferty came to be stew- ard and whether employees would be discharged if they did not join Local 298. She also asked for literature con- cerning both the Association and Local 298. Buck asked her who she was and why she was giving them a hard time. She received no literature on either the Association or the Union. At least one other employee, James Bonner raised similar questions and received a reply similar to that given Lee. 14 The foregoing is from the uncontradicted and credible testimony of Bailey. Neither Lafferty nor Buck testified as to these conversations. 15 To the extent that the mutually corroborative statements of Lafferty, Bonner. and Lee placing Tucker at the meeting contradict Tucker's testimo- ny that she was only in the dining room to control unruly patients, I credit the employees. 16 Linda Lee's testimony. that employees were told that they would be discharged if they did not join by February 15. is inconsistent with other, more plausible evidence, including the list of benefits given to the employ- ees. 1306 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD On about February 16, employee Milicia was asked by Tucker whether she was going to join the Union. She told Tucker that she was not going to join and Tucker told her that she had 30 days in which to make up her mind. On February 20, Lafferty came into the home while Milicia was working and asked Milicia and another employee if they were going to join. They both said that they were not joining and Lafferty told them, "you have a week to decide or two weeks to find different employment ... ." Around the third week of February, Bailey was called into Tucker's office where Tucker was discussing the union with another employee, Joann Stibal. Tucker told Bailey that he had 30 days within which to join or he would be terminated . She told him that he should not wait until the last minute because he might decide not to join and quit on the spot. He was given no reference point from which the 30 days began to run. However, he was told that he had a 2-week grace period during which time he could join with- out payment of the initiation fee. He asked Tucker how Local 298 could come in and "take over" and was told only that Local 298 was, in Tucker's experience, "one of the less violent unions she had anything to do with." Several times thereafter, Tucker asked Bailey whether he was going to join Local 298.17 Around March 7, Local 298 held another meeting for Franklin's employees, at Corvino's Restaurant. Bailey was told of the meeting by Tucker and went there on his break. He again asked Buck to explain what was going on and how the union could just come in and "take over." Buck told him that they had no choice because the home was under Local 298's jurisdiction because of the home's mem- bership in an association. Bailey asked how they could have a union without an election and Buck told him, "your election was actually when you signed the cards." Bailey protested that this should have been told to the employees when they were asked to sign.18 H. The Discharge of Linda Lee Around February 15, Lafferty telephoned Linda Lee to ask whether Lee was going to join Local 298. Lee told her that she was undecided and was told, in turn, that it had been decided to give her 30 days from that day within which to decide. About a week later, as Lee recalls it, Laf- ferty called her again and asked her if she had made up her mind about joining the union. Lee said that she had not and Lafferty told her that she did not have 30 days to decided, that she only had until the end of the following 17 I credit the foregoing specific testimony of Oscar Bailey as against that of Tucker, who admitted that Lafferty told her that employees who had not joined the union would have to be replaced . gave her the names of some employees who had not joined Local 298. possibly including Bailey's and who did not specifically deny. but could only state that she did not recall, discussing Local 298 with Bailey. 19 1 credit this testimony of Bailey notwithstanding that his pretrial affida- vit omitted any mention of these statements in describing this meeting. Bailey's explanation that he was thinking of so many things in the course of the interview that he forgot about these statements at the interview 's conclu- sion was not implausible . I note that said affidavit related similar statements by Buck in an earlier conversation . I note , also, that Buck did not contradict Bailey's testimony. week because Tucker wanted to give those employees who were not going to join the union 2 weeks' notice to find another job. Lee stated that she would take the week to decide and would let Lafferty know by Friday. However, on the following day, Lafferty called again and said that she had to know, immediately, whether Lee was going to join the union. Lee said that she was not and Lafferty stat- ed that she would have to tell Tucker. Several hours later, after being so authorized by Wardlow, Tucker called Lee and confirmed that Lee was not going to join Local 298. She told Lee not to report for her next workday, that she was being terminated and replaced because she was not joining the union.19 On February 28, Tucker called Lee and offered her rein- statement to her former position. Lee accepted and re- turned to work on March 10. IV. ANALYSIS AND CONCLUSIONS A. Unlawful Assistance and Support-Section 8(a)(2)-8(b)(1)(A) To summarize, I find the following chain of events oc- curred herein: Franklin joined an association of nursing homes with knowledge that its constituent members main- tained collective-bargaining contracts with Local 298. Lo- cal 298 appeared at Respondent Employer's premises, at the suggestion of the president of the association, almost immediately upon Franklin's acquisition of membership. On behalf of Local 298, Buck demanded recognition and the signing of a contract. Franklin's executive director Lin- denbaum asked for proof of majority status, agreed to the suggested unit description, indicated a willingness to go along with some increases in benefits and told Buck how much employee support he would need to achieve a major- ity. Wardlow, Franklin's administrator and Tucker, its di- rector of nursing, then selected and designated the employ- ee, Lafferty, who would be appointed shop steward and assist Local 298. With the assistance of Lafferty, and with regard to at least six unit employees (Austin, Bolyog, Co- gan, Bonner, Tucker, and Killea) at the suggestion or urg- ing of Tucker, Lindenbaum, and/or Wardlow, employees were brought to or went and spoke with the union organiz- ers, on company property, during working time. Those who were brought to Buck and Farango by Lafferty, of whom there were at least 12, were told by Lafferty that manage- ment had granted permission for them to leave their work stations for this purpose. They were also told that they "were going to have a union," that "there were cards to be signed," that "they had to go into the conference room to sign the card," that they had 30 days within which to join 19 The foregoing testimony of Lee was essentially corroborated by Tucker who acknowledged that Lafferty had told her that several people, including Lee. had not joined the union, that there was a deadline for these people to join and that if they didn't join by that deadline, they would have to be replaced. Tucker admitted checking with Wardlow and being authorized to terminate Lee for failure to join Local 298. It is also corroborated by Lafferty's admission that she called Lee several times regarding the joining of the union. Lafferty's testimony to the effect that Tucker discharged Lee for absenteeism is without support in the record and is not credited. Lafferty was a reluctant, if not hostile witness called by General Counsel and may have been unwilling to assume responsibility for Lee's discharge. FRANKLIN CONVALESCENT CENTER 1307 the union and that they would receive certain benefits. They were shown the list of benefits, prepared by Local 298, already entitled with their employer's name, which concluded with the statement "MUST JOIN UNION AFTER 30 DAYS ." In the conference room , union representatives urged employees to sign the membership/authorization cards. On at least one such occasion Tucker was present (Killea) and employees observed the union agents in cordial discussion with Lindenbaum and Wardlow. At least some of the em- ployees were given or received the impression from Laffer- ty and Buck that Local 298's representative status was al- ready an established fact.20 Employees were told that if they joined within 30 days they could avoid paying an initi- ation fee and were told, or otherwise received the carefully fostered impression, that if they did not sign after 30 days they would be discharged 2' When Buck secured signed cards from what appeared to be a majority of the employees, he presented the cards to Lindenbaum. Lindenbaum personally examined the cards, without the intervention of any neutral third party, and granted recognition within the hour. Less than 3 days had elapsed from Local 298's first appearance to the grant of recognition. The principal issue herein is whether Franklin's coopera- tion with the efforts of Local 298 to organize its employees, as described above, surpassed the line of permissibility and constituted unlawful assistance and support. As was stated in Longchamps, Inc. and its Wholly Owned Subsidiary, S & B Restaurant of Huntington, d/b/a Steak and Brew of Huntington, 205 NLRB 1025, 1031 (1973): The quantum of employer cooperation which surpass- es the line and becomes unlawful support is not sus- ceptible to precise measurement. Each case must stand or fall on its own particular facts. Respondents herein rely upon the Board's decision in Longchamps and its predecessors, Jolog Sportswear, Inc. and Jonathan Logan, Inc., 128 NLRB 836 (1960), affd. sub. nom. Mary Kimbrell Mildred Poteat, et al. for themselves and other employees of Jolog Sportswear Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 290 F.2d 799 (C.A. 4, 1961), and Coamo Knitting Mills, Inc., 150 NLRB 579 (1964) to support their position that the conduct herein did not reach the level of unlawful support. General Counsel would seek to distinguish the instant case from those authorities. Other authorities, both antedating and postdating the line from Jolog to Longchamps, estab- lish that such distinctions may validly be drawn. In this 20 To the extent that Buck 's testimony in regard to what he told these employees contradicts that of employees to the effect that Buck created an impression that Local 298 was already their collective -bargaining represen- tative, I credit the employees . In so concluding, I place reliance upon Buck's demeanor which reflected less than full candor , the implausibility of certain aspects of his testimony , the list of benefits shown to Lindenbaum and the employees which would foster such an impression , the statement by Laffer- ty to other employees which had to derive from her conversations with Buck , and the statements attributed to Buck by the credible testimony of Oscar Bailey, wherein Buck indicated that Franklin was under Local 298's jurisdiction because of Franklin's membership in the Modern Nursing Home Association . These latter statements are some evidence that, at least in Buck 's mind , the card signing was a formality rather than a requirement. 21 The fact that some employees were able to resist such persuasive cir- cumstances and avoid signing cards at that time is not relevant as to the lawfulness or propriety of such pressure. regard, The Bassick Company, Spring Valley Division, a Di- vision of Stewart-Warner Corporation, 127 NLRB 1552 (1960), Howard Creations, Inc., 212 NLRB 179 (1974) and Vernitron Electrical Components, Inc. Beau Products Divi- sion, 221 NLRB 464 (1975), are of particular interest. A review of the facts and holdings of these cases is instruc- tive. In Jolog, the employer having rejected the union's claim that it represented the employees by accretion to its exist- ing bargaining unit, granted permission for the union rep- resentatives to address its employees in the plant on com- pany time. The employer's representatives introduced the union representatives to the employees and remained pre- sent while the union representatives noncoercively ad- dressed the employees. Employees were told of advantages of union membership; they were also told that they were in a "right-to-work" state and could refrain from joining the union. No card signing resulted directly from that meeting. Vigorous campaigning for and against representation fol- lowed and the employer remained neutral. The card check, approximately 3 weeks after that meeting, was conducted by the South Carolina Department of Labor. The Board, in dealing with these facts, stated: The Board has never held that mere permission to a union to address employees on company time is a per se violation of Section 8(a)(2) of the Act. Such con- duct, however, has been found to violate this section of the Act where other unlawful assistance has oc- curred . . . . (Jolog, supra, at 888, 889). The Board concluded that the employer's conduct in Jolog was both isolated and trivial. Similarly, in Coamo, supra, the employer permitted a meeting and the distribution of authorization cards on company property, but during the worktime of only 5 of the employer's 170 employees. The employer introduced the union representatives and a company representative was present during the meeting, but could not and did not observe the signing of cards. The employer made no effort to ascertain which employees attended the meeting. The Union's address to the employees was noncoercive in con- tent and made clear to the employees that the union was not yet their representative. A majority signed cards at this meeting and the employer recognized the Union, without an outside card check, on the following day. The Board held that the mere presence of the company representative during the meeting was insufficient to support a finding that the employees were coerced in their selection of the union or that the majority was tainted. The Board also applied a de minimis rule in regard to the 3 percent of the work force who were on company time during the meeting. In Longchamps, a few days after the opening of its res- taurant, the employer called a meeting to introduce the newly hired employees to the supervisory staff and explain the employer's policies. At the end of the employer's pre- sentation , an employer official introduced union represen- tatives, turned the meeting over to them, and-together with other supervisors-left the room. The union represen- tatives then explained union benefits and distributed au- thorization cards, 10 of which were immediately signed and returned to the representatives. Later the same day, 1308 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD four employees were directed by a supervisor to leave their work stations and report to a room where the union repre- sentatives successfully solicited their authorization card signatures. Approximately 2-1/2 weeks later, after a card check by a local governmental agency had affirmed the Union's card majority, the employer recognized it as the employees' representative and 2 weeks thereafter executed a collective-bargaining agreement . The Administrative Law Judge, whose decision was adopted by the Board,u found no violation , pointing out that the Employer neither threatened the employees with reprisals if they did not join nor promised them benefits if they did join the union, man- agement did not even urge its employees "in so many words" to join , management representatives were not pre- sent when the cards were signed , no other union was seek- ing to organize the employees at the time and the Union's majority was verified by an agent of a local governmental unit. As noted , other Board cases , treating facts similar to those of the instant case , have found unlawful support. In Bassick, the employer advised the Union when it would be appropriate to organize , indicated a willingness to agree to an increase in benefits including wages prior to any organi- zational activity , called a meeting of its employees for the Union , directed the employees to attend , the meeting was held on company time and property, management repre- sentatives opened the meeting , expressed a favoritism to- ward this Union , and attended the first part of the meeting. Lower level supervisors told employees that it was a good union which they should join and such supervisors re- mained in the meeting . Union representatives assured the employees that they would get a wage increase , authoriza- tion petitions were signed at the meeting and the employer examined those petitions itself immediately after the meet- ing and granted recognition . The Trial Examiner, in an Intermediate Report which was adopted by the Board, stated: A consideration of the entire record as a whole com- pels the conclusion, which I find, that the authoriza- tion petitions did not truly reflect `that complete and unhampered freedom of choice [of the signers] which the Act contemplates,' and therefore cannot serve as the basis for establishing the majority status of Local 1031. Bassick, supra, at 1562. The Trial Examiner also noted , as an additional basis for finding a violation , that two other unions had an interest in these employees , which interests were known , at least to some extent, by the employer at the time it executed its contract with the assisted union. In Howard Creations, the employer: permitted union agents to come into the plant, use the company office, and speak to employees on company time . He provided them with a list of employees and an interpreter, and told the interpreter to ask each em- ployee who was called into the office for an interview to join. The employer was present for portions of the interviews, 22 Then Chairman Miller vigorously dissented. going back and forth from the plant to the office while they were going on. The Union was then recognized and a con- tract signed on the basis of cards secured under the fore- going conditions. The employer's conduct was found to be assistance to the union in the solicitation of the union au- thorizations cards, in violation of Section 8(a)(2). The facts in the most recent case in this line, Vernitron, succinctly stated, were as follows: the employer was in- formed by his corporate headquarters that representatives of the union which represented the employees of the corpo- ration's other plants would be coming to organize the plant involved. The supervisors, pursuant to instructions, assem- bled the employees for meetings with the union representa- tives and told some employees who asked either that what- ever they did about the union was all right with the employer or that the employer wanted this union. The meetings were held on company property and time and the employees were told by the organizers that the union repre- sented the company's employees at other plants, that they would get a raise and other benefits if they signed up, and that the union "would obtain a union-security clause under which they would have to join Local 210, 30 days after a contract was signed, regardless of whether they executed union cards that day or not." Some employees were misled to believe that they might as well sign because more than half the unit employees had already done so. Supervisors were present for all or part of each meeting and, while not speaking, were in a position to observe the employees while they executed authorization cards. The Union secured signed cards from a substantial majority by the end of those meetings and the employer, after inspecting the cards himself, granted recognition the same day. The Board, finding that the foregoing conduct by Vernitron provided unlawful assistance to the union in violation of Section 8(a)(2), specifically distinguished these facts from those in Longchamps, Jolog, and Coamo, as follows: Here, as in Longchamps, there were no employer threats or promises, and no other labor organization was involved as of the date of Local 210's organiza- tional meetings . But, supervisors were present and ob- served the solicitation and execution of the Union's authorization cards, and no neutral source was brought in to verify the card majority. Further, the instant recognition granted by Respondent prevented employees who might have felt pressured by the pres- ence of their supervisors from having the opportunity to take subsequent action to either revoke their au- thorizations or bring another union into the organiza- tional campaign. In Longchamps, by contrast, there was a 2-1/2 week hiatus between the date the authori- zations were solicited and the date recognition was granted. ... we note that in Jolog no supervisors or other man- agement personnel were present when the authoriza- tion cards used in seeking recognition were executed; a card check was conducted by the representative of a governmental agency; recognition was not granted until I month after the union's meeting on company premises ; and, during the interim, the employer issued statements assuring employees of their free choice and FRANKLIN CONVALESCENT CENTER 1309 its neutrality. In Coamo, attendance at the union meet- ing was not compulsory; all but 5 out of 170 employ- ees at the meeting were on nonwork, nonpaid time; and no supervisor or other employer official was in a position to view the employees executing the authori- zations. The Board found that, in Vernitron, a set of factors existed which, in combination, constituted unlawful assistance: (a) considerable indirect pressure placed upon employees by being directed and paid to attend union meetings during worktime; (b) direct pressure by being solicited to sign au- thorizations while supervisors were in a position to observe whether or not they signed, and (c) the employer extended recognition within a few hours without seeking a neutral party's verification of the Union's alleged majority status. It is my conclusion that the facts in the instant case are more nearly comparable to those of Bassick, Howard Crea- tions, and, particularly, Vernitron, than to those of Jolog, Coamo, and Longchamps. Thus, in the instant case, as in all of the foregoing cases except Coamo, the union representa- tives spoke to employees on company paid time and prop- erty; as in Howard Creations, the employer advised the Union as to how many cards were neded for a majority; an employee was assigned to assist the union and did so by indicating that the signing of cards was expected or re- quired, as in Howard Creations; the employer indicated a willingness to grant certain benefits, as in Bassick; the em- ployees were given the impression that the Union's bar- gaining representative status was already determined (a factor Lindenbaum could reasonably have garnered from his examination of Local 298's prepared list of benefits), as in Vernitron; supervisors were present for portions of the Union's meetings with employees, as in Jolog, Coamo, Bas- sick, Howard Creations, and Vernitron; and most signifi- cantly, as in Coamo, Bassick, and Vernitron, recognition was granted hastily and without verification of Local 298's majority status by an independent and neutral third party. Indeed, the haste with which recognition was granted in the instant case takes on special significance in view of the fact that several employees-enough to have affected the Union's majority status-sought unsuccessfully to revoke their authorizations within a week of their initial execution. Additional employees had signed authorization cards for District 1199 immediately subsequent to the January 23 recognition, which act would have had the same effect as revocation, even without Respondent Franklin's knowl- edge, had it occurred prior to recognition.23 This effect of hasty recognition upon employees who might wish to re- voke their authorizations or seek representation from an- other union was precisely the concern voiced by the Board in finding Vernitron's conduct violative. Accordingly, I find that by assisting Respondent Local 298 in its efforts to organize its employees, Respondent Franklin has given assistance and support to Local 298 in violation of Section 8(a)(2) of the Act. By accepting such assistance and support, and the exclusive recognition which derived from it, Respondent Local 298 has violated Section 8(b)(1)(A) of the Act. International Ladies' Garment Workers Union v. N.L.R.B.,-[Bernhard-Altmann] 366 U.S. 731 (1961). Additionally, the foregoing findings of violation by both Respondents herein are validly based upon another ground, Local 298's lack of an uncoerced majority, Bern- hard-Altmann, supra. As previously found, the unit as "stipulated" contained 45 employees, the 43 agreed to at the hearing plus Brown and Hagin. Buck proffered the signed authorization cards of 28 employees purportedly within that unit . However, four of those cards, those signed by Killea,24 Pinkrah, Schwartz, and Wacher, were "not reliable evidence of the signers' selection of the Respondent Union as their exclu- sive bargaining representative" because those employees had also signed authorization cards for District 1199 prior to Franklin's grant of recognition to Local 298. This is so whether or not either Respondent was aware of activity on behalf of District 1199 as "the grant of recognition to a minority union violates the Act without regard to the par- ties' good or bad faith." Allied Supermarkets, Inc., supra at 927; Bernhard-A ltmann, supra. Thus, the number of ostensi- bly valid cards possessed by Local 298 dropped to 24. Ad- ditionally, I would exclude the authorization card executed by Catherine Lafferty who was asked to assist Local 298 and become its shop steward by Respondent Employer's Administrator Wardlow. Such an introduction to Respon- dent Union could not help but prevent Lafferty from exer- cising a free choice in regard to union affiliation. I would also exclude the cards of Harriet Bolyog and Joanne Co- gan, who were sent to meet the union representatives by Tucker and who, upon meeting them, were told that Local 298 had already completed its negotiations with Franklin. For the same reasons, I would exclude the cards executed by Virginia Bonner , Barbara Pilalides, Sandra Holliday, Isabel Pagano, and Ella Posten. Each of these employees was led to believe, both by the circumstances of the meet- ings being held on company time and property, and by the verbal and written statements of Buck and Lafferty, that the decision had been made for them, that they were re- quired to join the union, that there was a direct financial gain if they joined immediately (waiver of the initiation fee) and serious economic consequences (a required pay- ment of an initiation fee or discharge) if they did not join. Respondent Union's statements regarding the necessity of joining to avoid discharge were not presented to these em- ployees in the form of a prediction of what might happen if a union contract were signed. The impression created was that such a contract already had been reached. Cards so secured are not valid designations of representative. Hunter Outdoor Products, Inc., 176 NLRB 449 (1969); but cf. Ma- rin Chatmur, Inc. d/b/a Holiday Inn, 188 NLRB 68 (1971). I conclude that of the 28 cards of unit employees ten- dered by Buck, at least 12 were either invalid designations because the signatories had previously executed cards for another union or were tainted by the pressures levied upon the signers by both Respondents. At most, therefore, Local 23 Yankee Department Stores, Inc., a Subsidiary of Hartfield-Zodys, Inc., d/b/a Zodys, Elbhart, Indiana, 211 NLRB 306 (1974); Allied Supermarkets, 24 Killea's card is also subject to rejection because of Tucker's presence Inc., 169 NLRB 927 (1968). throughout her meeting with Buck, including when she signed the card. 1310 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 298 processed valid authorizations for representation from 16 employees in a unit of 45 . The grant of recognition to such a minority union violates Section 8(a)(2) and the ac- ceptance of exclusive recognition under such circum- stances violates Section 8(b)(1XA) of the Act. Bernhard- Altmann, supra; Allied Supermarkets, Inc., supra. As there was no evidence that the organizational activity on behalf of District 1199 came to Respondent Employer's attention prior to its January 23 grant of recognition to Local 298 , nor any evidence that District 1199 ever made any claim of representation, I find that there were no rival claims extant on January 23 and the conduct of Respon- dents , though violative for other reasons , did not contra- vene the Board 's Midwest Piping doctrine. Midwest Piping and Supply Co., Inc., 63 NLRB 1060 (1945). B. Interference, Restraint and Coercion-Independent Violations of Section 8(a)(1) and 8(b)(1)(A) Counsel for General Counsel had contended that Re- spondent Employer violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by interrogating and threatening employees with discharge if they did not join Local 298 and that Respondent Local 298 violated Section 8(b)(IXA) by similar threats and by mis- representing to employees that it was already their collec- tive-bargaining agent . These contentions are well founded. The record reflects that Catherine Lafferty was selected by Respondent Employer to act for it and for Respondent Union in helping to secure signed authorizations . She re- leased employees from their work on behalf of the Employ- er. She was appointed Local 298's shop steward and was so represented to the employees. She was thus the agent of both the Employer and the Union and both are responsible for her actions within the scope of this authority . Broyhill Company, 210 NLRB 288 (1974); N.L.R.B . v. Dayton Mo- tels, Inc., d/b/a Holiday Inn of Dayton, 474 F.2d 328, 330- 331 (C.A. 6, 1973); Local 825, International Union of Oper- ating Engineers (Morin Erection Co., Inc.) 168 NLRB 1 (1967). The record further reflects that both prior to and after the purported recognition , Lafferty told employees that they had to join the Union and that they had 30 days, or less as in the case of her statements to Milicia and Lee, to sign or be terminated . Similar statements were made by Buck , orally and in the lists of benefits shown employees, both before and after the invalid recognition . In addition, Director of Nursing Tucker was present at the union meet- ing on February 14 when Buck passed out the second list of benefits and told employees that Local 298 was repre- senting the employees, that they were going to get certain benefits because of that representation and that once (not if) the contract was signed , they would have 30 days to join the Union or be terminated. Tucker, herself, made similar statements to both Bailey and Milicia during the third week in February and further questioned these employees and Linda Lee as to whether or not they were going to join the Union. Statements to employees telling them that they must join the Union as a condition of continued employment, when such a requirement is not based upon a valid union securi- ty clause , restrains and coerces employees in the exercise of their statutory rights. In the instant case , there was not, at any point in time , a valid union security clause; certainly there was none prior to recognition, there could be none in view of the invalid recognition, and even if the recognition were valid, union security was neither discussed nor agreed to by the employer. Such statements violate Section 8(a)(1) and 8(b)(1)(A), Isaac Putterman d/b/a Rockville Nursing Center, 193 NLRB 959, 977 (1971); Hunter Out- door Products, Inc., supra. As was stated in Hunter, at 456: It would be difficult to imagine a more threatening and coercive representation in the course of soliciting union authorizations. It would be unthinkable to hold that union cards signed under such circumstances reli- ably reflected the employees' free choice. In addition to its responsibility for the statements uttered by Tucker and Lafferty, Respondent Employer is responsi- ble for those statements uttered by Buck at the February 14 meeting in Tucker's presence and not disavowed by her. Holiday Inn, 188 NLRB 68, 71 (1971). Similarly, as Linden- baum was shown Local 298's list of benefits, headed with the employer's name and setting forth the requirement of joining the Union within 30 days, and did not prevent it from being distributed to its employees, Respondent Franklin must share in the responsibility for the coercive effect of that distribution. Finally, in this regard, I find merit to General Counsel's contention that Tucker's questioning of employees con- cerning whether or not they were going to join the union constituted interrogation in violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. Such interrogation was all the more coercive in light of the repeated admonitions to join the Union within 30 days or be discharged. C. The Discharge of Linda Lee-Section 8(a)(3) and 8(b)(2) Little, if any, real dispute exists in regard to the dis- charge of Linda Lee. Lee openly questioned Local 298's presence at Franklin, campaigned for District 1199 and refused, when asked by both Lafferty and Tucker, to join Local 298. Lafferty reported Lee's last refusal to Tucker and told Tucker that there was a deadline for the employ- ees to join. Tucker sought and received Wardlow's authori- zation to discharge Lee and Lee was expressly discharged for her refusal to join Local 298. There was no collective- bargaining agreement between the Respondents herein and, in the absence of a contract and a valid union-security clause , with a full 30-day grace period, Lee's discharge, and the causation thereof by Lafferty, Local 298's agent, was clearly violative of Section 8(a)(1) and (3) and 8(b)(1)(A) and (2) of the Act. V. THE EFFECT OF THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES UPON COMMERCE The unfair labor practices of Respondent Employer and Respondent Union set forth in sections III and IV, above, occurring in connection with the operations of Respondent Employer set forth in section I, above, have a close, inti- mate, and substantial relationship to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States and tend to lead to FRANKLIN CONVALESCENT CENTER 1311 labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and 7. The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor the free flow thereof. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. Tuschak/Jacobson , Inc., t/a Franklin Convalescent Center is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 2. Amalgamated Local 298, AFL-CIO and District 1199, National Union of Hospital and Health Care Em- ployees , Retail , Wholesale and Department Store Union, AFL-CIO are labor organizations within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. By unlawfully assisting Local 298 in obtaining union application for membership/authorization for representa- tion cards from its employees , recognizing and granting exclusive collective -bargaining rights to Local 298 when said Union did not represent an uncoerced majority of the employees in the agreed -to unit; by telling employees that Local 298 was their collective -bargaining representative and that they had to sign union application for member- ship/authorization for representation cards as a condition of continued employment at a time when Local 298 had not been validly recognized as the collective -bargaining representative of its employees and no valid union security clause was in effect ; and by interrogating its employees concerning their union membership , activities and desires, Respondent Employer has interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of their Section 7 rights in violation of Section 8(a)(2) and (1) of the Act. 4. By discriminatorily discharging Linda Lee because of her activities on behalf of District 1199 and her refusal to join Respondent Local 298, Respondent Employer has in- terfered with , restrained , and coerced its employees in the exercise of their Section 7 rights in violation of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act. 5. By accepting recognition as the exclusive representa- tive of Franklin 's employees in the agreed -to unit at a time when it did not represent an uncoerced majority of said employees ; by telling employees that it was their exclusive collective-bargaining representative and that they were re- quired to sign its application for membership and authori- zation for representation cards as a condition of continued employment at a time when it had not been validly recog- nized as the collective-bargaining representative of said employees , and at a time when no valid union -security clause existed Respondent Union has restrained and coerced employees in the exercise of their Section 7 rights in violation of Section 8(b)(1)(A) of the Act. 6. By attempting to cause and causing the discharge of Linda Lee because of her activities on behalf of District 1199 and her refusal to join Respondent Local 298, Re- spondent Local 298 has restrained and coerced employees in the exercise of their Section 7 rights in violation of Sec- tion 8(b)(1)(A) and 8(b)(2) of the Act. practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Sec- tion 2(6) and (7) of the Act. THE REMEDY Having found that both Respondents engaged in certain unfair labor practices , in violation of Sections 8(a)(1), (2), and (3) and 8(b)(I)(A) and (2), I shall recommend that they cease and desist therefrom and that they take the following affirmative actions which are necessary to effectuate the policies of the Act. I have found that the Respondent Employer unlawfully assisted Respondent Union to organize its employees and recognized Respondent Union on January 23, 1975, as the exclusive collective -bargaining representative of certain of its employees in an agreed -to unit and that Respondent Union accepted such recognition as the exclusive collec- tive-bargaining representative of said employees at a time when Respondent Union had not been designated or se- lected as the collective-bargaining representative of an un- coerced majority of said employees . By such conduct, Re- spondent Employer has interfered with , restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of their right freely to select their own bargaining representative , and has accord- ed unlawful assistance and support to Respondent Union and Respondent Union has restrained and coerced said employees in the exercise of those same rights . In order to dissipate the effect of these unfair labor practices , Respon- dent Employer shall withdraw and withhold recognition from Respondent Union as the exclusive representative of its employees in the aforementioned unit and Respondent Union shall cease maintaining or giving effect to its current recognition by Respondent Employer , or any renewal or extension thereof , until such time as Respondent Union shall have been certified by the Board as the exclusive rep- resentative of the employees in question. Having found that Respondent Employer discriminato- rily discharged Linda Lee on February 21, 1975, in viola- tion of Section 8(a)(3) and ( 1) of the Act , and that Respon- dent Union caused such discrimination , thereby violating Section 8(b)(2) and (1)(A) of the Act , I shall recommend that Respondent Employer and Respondent Union, jointly and severally, make said Linda Lee whole for any loss of pay she has suffered by reason of such discrimination, by payment to her of a sum of money equal to the amount of wages she would have earned between the date such dis- crimination began and March 10, 1975, the date on which she was reinstated to her former position , less any interim earnings , together with interest on said sum at the rate of 6 percent per annum . Isis Plumbing & Heating Co., 138 NLRB 716 (1962). Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact and con- clusions of law, and the entire record in this proceeding, and pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act, I hereby issue the following recommended: 1312 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD ORDER 25 A. Tuschak/Jacobson , Inc., t/a Franklin Convalescent Center, Franklin Park , New Jersey , its officers , agents, suc- cessors, and assigns , shall: 1. Cease and desist from: (a) Assisting or contributing support to Respondent Lo- cal 298, by helping in the organization of its employees or by recognizing or bargaining with it as the exclusive repre- sentative of its employees for the purpose of collective bar- gaining unless and until Respondent Local 298 is certified by the Board as the collective-bargaining representative of said employees pursuant to Section 9(c) of the Act. (b) Discharging or in any other manner discriminating against its employees in regard to their hire or tenure of employment or any terms or conditions of employment in order to encourage membership in Respondent Local 298 or any other labor organization or in order to discourage membership in District 1199 or any other labor organiza- tion. (c) Threatening employees with discharge if they re- fused to join Respondent Local 298 or any other labor organization or interrogating employees concerning their union membership , activities and desires. (d) In any like or related manner interfering with, re- straining, or coercing its employees in the exercise of the right to self-organization, to form labor organizations, to join or assist any labor organization , to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing , and to en- gage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collec- tive bargaining or other mutual aid or protection as guar- anteed in Section 7 of the Act , or to refrain from any and all such activities, except to the extent that such right may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization as a condition of continued employ- ment, as authorized in Section 8(a)(3) of the Act as modi- fied by the Labor -Management Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959. 2. Take the following affirmative action which it is found will effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Withdraw and withhold all recognition from Re- spondent Local 298 as the collective-bargaining representa- tive of its employees unless and until said labor organiza- tion has been duly certified by the National Labor Relations Board as the exclusive representative of such em- ployees. (b) Jointly and severally with Respondent Local 298, make Linda Lee whole for any loss of earnings she may have suffered as a result of her discharge, in the manner set forth herein in the section entitled "The Remedy." (c) Preserve and, upon request , make available to the Board or its agents , for examination and copying , all pay- roll records , social security payment records , timecards, 25 In the event no exceptions are filed as provided by Sec. 102.46 of the Rules and Regulations of the National Labor Relations Board, the findings. conclusions , and recommended Order herein shall, as provided in Sec. 102.48 of the Rules and Regulations . be adopted by the Board and become its findings, conclusions, and Order, and all objections thereto shall be deemed waived for all purposes. personnel records and reports , and all other records neces- sary to analyze the amount of backpay due under the terms of this Order. (d) Post at its Convalescent Center in New Brunswick, New Jersey , copies of the attached notice marked "Appen- dix A ." 26 Copies of said notice , on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 22 after being duly signed by the Respondent Employer's representative, shall be posted by Respondent Employer immediately upon receipt there- of, and be maintained by it for 60 consecutive days thereaf- ter, in conspicuous places , including all places where no- tices to its employees are customarily posted . Reasonable steps shall be taken by Respondent Employer to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced , or covered by any other material. (e) Post at the same places and under the same condi- tions as set forth in (d) above , as they are forwarded by the Regional Director, copies of Respondent Local 298's no- tice marked "Appendix B." (f) Mail signed copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix A" for posting at Respondent Local 298's of- fices and meeting halls. (g) Notify the Regional Director for Region 22, in writ- ing, within 20 days from the date of this Order , what steps the Respondent Employer has taken to comply herewith. B. Respondent , Amalgamated Local 298 , AFL-CIO, Union City, New Jersey , its officers , agents , and represen- tatives , shall: 1. Cease and desist from: (a) Accepting exclusive recognition as the representative of Respondent Franklin 's employees at the Franklin Con- valescent Center in New Brunswick , New Jersey , or enter- ing into collective bargaining with Respondent Franklin as the exclusive representative of those employees unless and until certified by the Board as the exclusive collective-bar- gaining representative of said employees pursuant to Sec- tion 9(c) of the Act. (b) Causing or attempting to cause Respondent Em- ployer or any other employer to discharge or in any other manner discriminate against its employees in regard to their hire or tenure of employment or any terms or condi- tions of employment in order to encourage membership in Respondent Local 298 or any other labor organization or in order to discourage membership in District 1199 or any other labor organization. (c) Restraining or coercing employees by falsely telling them that the Union has already been selected as their collective-bargaining representative and that they are re- quired to join this union as a condition of continued em- ployment. (d) In any like or related manner restraining or coercing Respondent Franklin 's employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed them in Section 7 of the Act , except to the extent that such rights may be affected by an agree- ment requiring membership in a labor organization as a 26 In the event this Order is enforced by a Judgment of a United States Court of Appeals. the words in the notice reading "Posted by Order of the National Labor Relations Board" shall read "Posted Pursuant to a Judg- ment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board." FRANKLIN CONVALESCENT CENTER 1313 condition of employment as authorized by Section 8(a)(3) of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action, which is neces- sary to effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Jointly and severally with Respondent Franklin, make Linda Lee whole for any loss of earnings she may have suffered as a result of her discharge, in the manner set forth herein in the section entitled "The Remedy." (b) Post at its offices and meeting halls copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix B." 27 Copies of said notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 22, after being duly signed by Respondent's Local 27 In the event that this Order is enforced by a Judgment of a United States Court of Appeals, the words in the notice reading "Posted by Order of the National Labor Relations Board " shall read "Posted Pursuant to a Judgment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board." 298's representative shall be posted by Respondent Local 298 immediately upon receipt thereof, and be maintained by it for 60 consecutive days thereafter, in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to members are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by Re- spondent Local 298 to insure that said notices are not al- tered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (c) Post at the same places and under the same condi- tions as set forth in (b) above, as they are forwarded by the Regional Director, copies of Respondent Franklin's notice marked "Appendix A." (d) Mail signed copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix B" to the Regional Director for posting at Franklin Convalescent Center. (e) Notify the Regional Director for Region 22, in writ- ing, within 20 days from the date of this Order, what steps the Respondent has taken to comply herewith. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation