Fulton Bag and Cotton MillsDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsDec 20, 194671 N.L.R.B. 1227 (N.L.R.B. 1946) Copy Citation In the Matter of FULTON BAG AND COTTON MILLS, EMPLOYER and INTERNATIONAL PRINTING PRESSMEN AND ASSISTANT'S UNION OF NORTH AMERICA, A. F. L. Case No. 10-R-1924.-Decided December 20, 1946 Messrs. John M. Slaton and Frank A. Constangy, of Atlanta, Ga., for the Employer. Messrs. George 0. Baker and W. R. Sanders, of Atlanta, Ga., for the Petitioner. Mr. Emil C. Farkas, of counsel to the Board. DECISION AND DIRECTION OF ELECTION Upon a petition duly filed, hearing in this case was held at Atlanta, Georgia, on July 22, 1946, before Albert D. Maynard, hearing officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from preju- dicial error and are hereby affirmed. Upon the entire record in the case, the National Labor Relations Board makes the following : FINDINGS OF FACT I. THE BUSINESS OF THE EMPLOYER Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, a Georgia corporation, operates sev- eral manufacturing plants in various parts of the United States in- cluding one at Atlanta, Georgia, with which we are solely concerned. At this plant, the Employer is engaged in the manufacture, sale, and distribution of cotton textiles and bags of all kinds made from sheet- ing, paper, burlap, and osnaburg; it also manufactures canvas prod- ucts such as luggage, tents and tarpaulins, and reclaims and renovates used bags. During the year ending 1945, the Employer purchased for use at this plant raw materials valued in excess of $1,000,000, of which approximately 75 percent represented shipments from points outside the State of Georgia. During the same period, the Employer sold finished products valued in excess of $1,000,000, of which ap- 71 N. L. R. B., No. 194. 1227 1228 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD proximately 75 percent represented shipments to places outside the State. The Employer admits and we find that it is engaged in interstate commerce within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act. II. THE ORGANIZATION INVOLVED The Petitioner is a labor organization affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, claiming to represent employees of the Employer. III. THE QUESTION CONCERNING REPRESENTATION The Employer refuses to recognize the Petitioner as the exclusive bargaining representative of employees of the Employer until the Petitioner has been certified by the Board in an appropriate unit. We find that a question affecting commerce has arisen concerning the representation of employees of the Employer, within the meaning of Section 9 (c) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. IV. THE APPROPRIATE UNIT The Petitioner seeks a unit consisting of all employees in the printing department and the job press department I at the Em- ployer's bag mill at Atlanta, Georgia, who are engaged in the opera- tion of printing presses, setting up type, stereotype and engraving, including the working foreman in the job press department, but ex- cluding the foreman, assistant foreman, trucker and all other em- ployees in both departments. The Employer, on the other hand, con- tends that the unit petitioned for is inappropriate and that in view of its integrated operations either a unit composed of all employees in its bag and cotton mill at Atlanta, Georgia, excluding clerical and super- visory employees, or in the alternative, a unit of employees of the bag mill, with similar exclusions, would be appropriate. The Atlanta, Georgia, operations are composed of a cotton mill and bag mill. The cotton mill manufactures cotton goods for use in the bag mill where these goods are then converted into bags, luggage, tents, and tarpaulins. The actual manufacture of bags, the principal item produced, consists of cutting a web of fabric into various designated lengths, sewing together two of the edges and one of the ends, turning the bags right side out and imprinting a design or label on one or both sides. This process requires many operations such as cutting, sewing, ' It appears that the Employer considers job press as a part of its general manufacturing operation and not as a distinct department. However, the record indicates that job pies., is physically separated and is separately supervised from other departments of the bag mill Accordingly we shall, for purposes of this decision, refer to it as the job press department. FULTON BAG AND COTTON MILLS 1229 hemming, bottoming, turning, folding, and printing, the basic opera- tion being cutting. The employer has organized its operations at the bag mill into various departments to correspond generally to the 'different steps in production, viz, cutting, sewing, printing, drawcord, canvas, shipping, warehouse, and salvage departments. These de- partments as well as the job press department 2 are all under the ultimate supervision of the superintendent of the bag mill. The record discloses that the departmental lines in the bag mill are for the most part loosely drawn, particularly in the cutting and printing departments. Thus, the cutting of bags, while primarily a function of the cutting department; is not always performed as a separate and distinct operation. For special reasons such as the size of the bags to be cut, or the width of the cloth, bags may be cut by special attachments on the printing presses in the printing department. In these cases the printing presses are used as a substitute for the cutting machune.3 The determination of where the cutting operation is to be performed is dependent upon the type of printing to be put on the bag and the workload in the cutting department. Similarly, the printing department performs two functions: (a) the printing, by means of printing presses, of trade-marks or brand names of customers on bags, and (b) the cutting of bags of various types by special attachments to the automatic presses.4 In this con- nection it appears that although more than 75 percent of the bags are imprinted with a design of some type, either advertising a brand or designating the materials contained, not all manufactured bags so printed, necessarily pass through the printing department. Bags that are printed with brand names or trade-marks go through the printing department. Bags having a freight classification, however, are printed on cutting machines in the cutting department. Duck or canvas bags are stenciled in the canvas department; and when bags are printed by "silk screening" 5 this operation is also performed in the canvas department. The employees whom the Petitioner seeks are located in the printing department and in the 'job press department. Although the latter department is separated physically and organizationally from the printing department, there is evidence that the printing department employees consider the job press department as part of the printing 2 See footnote 1, supra Appiotimately 15 percent of the work performed by the printing department involves the cutting of bags and is done bN the employees sought herein 4 Opei ations such as bottoming, tun ning, folding, and hemming are also performed under the jurisdiction of the printing department s ` Silk ac!cemng " is it panting operation wherein ink is mashed through a silk screen, ontaming an outline of letters, and is impressed on the substance to be printed in the foam of letters 1230 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD department, and both groups use the same locker room and other facilities. In addition, the same proofreader serves both departments. The job press department appears to have no overlapping functions with other departments. Here are located two types of standard printing presses, Mieble verticals and Miehle horizontals which print small mailing bags used by companies to facilitate the handling of their mail. This is the only department which performs printing work of this type. The printing department, as noted above, does have some overlapping functions with other departments such as the cutting and canvas departments. However, it is clear that the re- quested employees in both departments are distinguishable from the workers in the cutting department who print freight classifications, or from the employees in the canvas department who do "silk screen- ing" and stenciling work in that none of these operations involves the use of printing presses, or requires a substantial degree of skill. The printing work, which the employees in issue perform, and, which occupies by far the greater portion of their time, requires a rather high degree of skill and specialization and is work typical of the print- ing crafts. Unlike other employees these individuals are required to undergo periods of training varying from approximately 1 to 2 years before they are fully qualified on these presses. - It also appears that the employees sought herein are generally not interchangeable with other employees. While we are not unmindful, as urged by the Employer, that the nature of the operations and the uniform personnel policies and work- ing conditions throughout the Employer's plant indicate that its employees could function for the purposes of collective bargaining on a more comprehensive basis, it is significant that there is absent here any collective bargaining history, that no labor organization claims to represent employees of the Employer on a broader basis and that the Petitioner admits to membership only employees who work in the printing trades and at associated skills.° Accordingly, on the basis of the foregoing facts and the entire record in the case, we believe that the above-mentioned employees in the printing department and the job press department comprise a sufficiently identifiable and cohesive group, possessing the characteristics of a true printing craft, so as to warrant setting them apart as a separate collective bargaining unit' We shall therefore reject the unit contentions of the Employer. We find that all employees in the printing department and the job press department at the Employer's bag mill at Atlanta, Georgia, who 9 While the Board has in the past established plant-wide units in other similar plants of the Employer, in those cases no union sought, as does the Petitioner here, to represent employees working in the printing trades in a separate unit. 7 The Employer has taken no position with respect to the specific composition of the requested unit. FULTON BAG AND COTTON MILLS 1231 are engaged in the operation of printing presses, setting up type, stereotype, and engraving, including the working foreman in the job press department, but excluding the foreman, assistant foreman, trucker, and all other employees in the printing department, and all supervisory employees in both departments with authority to hire, promote, discharge, discipline, or otherwise effect changes in the status of employees, or effectively recommend such action, constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the mean- ing of Section 9 (b) of the Act. DIRECTION OF ELECTION As part of the investigation to ascertain representatives for the pur- poses of collective bargaining with Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, Atlanta, Georgia, an election by secret ballot shall be conducted as early as possible, but not later than thirty (30) days from the date of this Direction, under the direction and supervision of the Regional Director for the Tenth Region, acting in this matter as agent for the National Labor Relations Board, and subject to Sections 203.55 and 203.56, of National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regulations- Series 4, among the employees in the unit found appropriate 'in Sec- tion IV, above, who were employed during the pay-roll period imme- diately preceding the date of this Direction, including employees who did not work during said pay-roll period because they were ill or on vacation or temporarily laid off, and including employees in the armed forces of the United States who present themselves in person at the polls, but excluding those employees who have since quit or been dis- charged for cause and have not been rehired or reinstated before the date of the election, to determine whether or not they desire to be represented by International Printing Pressmen and Assistant's Union of North America, A. F. L., for the purposes of collective bargaining. 717734-47-vol 71-79 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation