Local Union No. 103, Iron WorkersDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 21, 1972195 N.L.R.B. 980 (N.L.R.B. 1972) Copy Citation 980 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Local Union No. 103, International Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers, AFL-CIO, and its agent Charles Tremper and As- sociated General Contractors of America , Evansville Chapter, Inc. Case 25-CB-1023 March 21, 1972 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MILLER AND MEMBERS FANNING AND JENKINS ,ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Re- lations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board adopts as its Order the recommended Order of the Trial Examiner and hereby orders that the Re- spondent, Local Union No. 103, International Associa- tion of Bridge,,Structural and Ornamental Iron Work- ers, AFL-CIO; its officers, agents, and representatives, and the Respondent, Charles Tremper, its business agents shall take the action set, forth in the Trial Ex- aminer's recommended Order. On April 13, 1971, Trial Examiner Alba B. Martin issued the attached Decision in this proceeding. There- after, Respondents filed exceptions and 'a supporting brief, arid' the General Counsel filed limited exceptions, a supporting brief, and a brief, in reply to Respondents' exceptions. 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 Trial Examiner's Decision in light of the exceptions and briefs and has decided to affirm the Trial Examiner's rulings, findings,' conclusions, and recommendations as modified herein. We agree with the Trial Examiner's conclusion that the record clearly establishes the cause of the impasse in negotiations on July 31 was Respondents' adamant insistence upon the resolution of jurisdictional disputes by the Interim Joint Board or the National Joint Board or by Respondent Union's "work jurisdiction" accom- panied by its freedom to strike. Moreover, the record evidence convinces us that Respondent Union did not enter the July negotiations with an open mind, but continued on its earlier course of unlawful bargaining' with a fixed inflexible position and was rigidly unwill- ing to consider seriously any possible alternatives to its jurisdictional disputes proposals. In these circum- stances, we find that a valid impasse was not reached in negotiations because of Respondents' unlawful course of bargaining, and Respondent Union was not lawfully free to negotiate and sign separate agreements with individual members and thereby fracture the exist- ing multiemployer bargaining unit. Plainly, Respond- ents' conduct is violative of Section 8(b)(3) as alleged. ' We note that the Trial Examiner inadvertently found that Randolph Walther had not participated in negotiations after the first meeting in Febru- ary 1970 The record discloses that Walther attended the July 13 meeting and all but one other meeting prior to his attendance at the July 13, 1970 meeting. Local Union No 103, International Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers, AFL-CIO, and its agent Charles Tremper (Associated General Contractors of America, Evansville Chapter, Inc.), 190 NLRB No 145 TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE ALBA B. MARTIN, Trial Examiner: This proceeding, with all parties represented by counsel, was heard before 'me in Evansville, Indiana, on February 9 and 10, 1971, on com- plaint of the General Counsel and answer of Local Union No. 103, International Association of Bridge, Structural and Or- namental Iron Workers, AFL-CIO, and its agent Charles Tremper, Respondents herein. The Union is sometimes re- ferred to as Local 103 or the Union. The issues litigated were whether Respondents violated Section 8(b)(3) of the Act' by negotiating and entering into and putting into effect separate collective-bargaining agreements with five employer mem- bers of a multiemployer unit at a time when they were legally bound to continue their bargaining for these five and all other members of the multiemployer unit with the bargaining agent for this unit, Associated General Contractors of America, Evansville Chapter, referred to herein as Evansville Chapter.' At the conclusion of the hearing decision was reserved on Respondents' motion to dismiss the complaint and for a sum- mary judgment in favor of Respondents. These motions are hereby disposed of in accordance with the findings and con- clusions below. After the hearing all parties filed helpful briefs, which have been carefully considered.' Upon the entire record and my observation of the wit- nesses, I hereby make the following: FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS I THE BOARD'S JURISDICTION The Board's jurisdiction is not in dispute. The complaint alleged, the answer admitted, and I find that each of five named corporations who are members of Evansville Chapter met the Board's jurisdictional standards during a representa- tive period, the 12-month period prior to issuance of the complaint herein on December 2, 1970. Burch and Lamb, Inc„ had a direct inflow in excess of, and a direct outflow in excess of, $50,000. Industrial Contractors, Inc., Peyronnin Construction Co., Inc., Bauer Bros., and Rust Construction Corp., each had a direct inflow in excess of $50,000. ' The Act refers to the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, 29 U.S C Sec. 151, et seq. Evansville Chapter filed the charge on August 14, 1970 With his brief the General Counsel submitted a motion to correct the record in certain respects. No opposition was filed to this motion As the changes appear correct to me I hereby grant the motion The corrections, as worded in the motion, are attached as Appendix A [omitted from publica- tion] In addition the following corrections are made to conform to state- ments at the hearing. p 11, 1. 20, change "testimony" to "time"; p. 95, 1 12, change "no impasse" to "an impasse." 195 NLRB No. 179 LOCAL UNION NO. 103, IRON WORKERS 981 As of May 25, 1970, these 5 and some 41 additional compa- nies made up the membership of Evansville Chapter. Ran- dolph Walther, executive director of Evansville Chapter since 1967, testified that he recalled no changes in the membership since July 7, 1970, the date of the hearing before Judge Mul- lin. The record shows no change in the membership between May 25 and July 7.' The testimony before me established that in July 1970, Evansville Chapter through a committee held seven bargain- ing conferences with Local 103; that this followed a series of bargaining conferences beginning in February 1970; and that others of its committees negotiated collective-bargaining agreements with other craft unions including the "Carpen- ters" and possibly the "Millwrights." The testimony before me established further that Evansville Chapter and Local 103 had earlier been parties to a 3-year written "Agreement" covering wages, hours, working rules, working conditions, safety provisions, grievance procedure, etc. Upon the above evidence I find and hold that one of the purposes for which Associated General Contractors, Evans- ville Chapter, Inc., exists is to represent its employer mem- bers in collective bargaining with various labor organizations, including Local 103, and that among its members are con- tractors who in the course and operation of their business meet the Board's jurisdictional standards. I conclude that Evansville Chapter and its members are employers engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED Local Union No. 103 (sometimes referred to as the Union), International Association of Bridge, Structural and Orna- mental Iron Workers, AFL-CIO, is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. At all times material herein Charles Tremper has been and is, business agent for Local 103. III. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Background Upon his consideration of the first 14 bargaining meetings in 1970 between Local 103 and Evansville Chapter, towards a new contract, Trial Examiner Robert E. Mullin concluded that Local 103 and Tremper violated Section 8(b)(1)(B) and (3) by insisting upon, to impasse, and striking for, a clause providing for the submission of jurisdictional disputes to the Interim Joint Board, or the new National Joint Board for Settlement of Jurisdictional Disputes, on neither of which body did Evansville Chapter have any representation. The Board has not yet passed upon Judge Mullin's decision, which was in Case 25-CB-973. Principally involved before me are the seven bargaining sessions after the hearing before Judge Mullin on July 7, 1970, and the fracturing of the multiemployer unit. The Evansville Chapter was bargaining on behalf of its members, including the five who negotiated separate agreements with Respondent Local 103. B. The July Negotiations Between Local 103 and Evansville Chapter The testimony before me proved convincingly that Re- spondents' insistence upon the inclusion of the "National Joint Board" clause persisted, with some slight relaxation, during the seven negotiating sessions in July 1970, and that ' After the material events herein, three corporations orally told Walther they may not or would not pay their dues for 1971. this issue was never resolved prior to the execution of the separate agreements. These sessions occurred on July 13, 17, 21 (two meetings), 23, 28, and 31. Norman Knoop, chairman of Evansville Chapter's Iron Workers negotiating committee and its chief negotiator, credibly testified that during the July meetings the jurisdictional dispute problem was the major issue; that as of the last meeting "this was the main problem that we had yet to resolve and it has been the main problem for many, many sessions prior to that and it was what we were hung up on." The evidence supported these conclusions. When at the beginning of the first session (July 13) Knoop asked if Local 103's position had changed on article VIII of the old agreement, the article which included the National Joint Board,' Respondent Business Agent Tremper, chief negotiator for Local 103, objected strenuously that that issue was not to be discussed at this meeting. Knoop agreed not to bring it up again at that meeting. The parties then discussed and reached agreement on subjects entitled "Precast" and "Compensation Insurance." At the July 17 meeting the jurisdictional dispute issue was not discussed. The parties discussed and agreed upon subject entitled "Foreman-General Foreman-Area Foreman," "Ironworkers required on guy and stiff leg derricks," and also a tool clause. At the two negotiation sessions on July 21, the parties made a real effort, without success, to find a substitute for article VIII of the expired agreement, to find a compromise between Respondents' insistence upon the resolution of juris- dictional disputes by the Interim Board or the National Joint Board and Evansville Chapter's strong desire not to be bound by a body on which it was not represented. Local 103 offered as an alternative a clause setting forth its work jurisdiction accompanied by the absence of a no-strike, no-lockout, clause. At this meeting Respondent Business Agent Tremper said that Local 103 "could not agree to a contract that did not have reference to this National Joint Board or a board or some means that would be equally as good as the National Joint Board for the settlement of jurisdictional disputes." The July 23 meeting lasted only 30 or 45 minutes, with no agreements on anything. As the meeting broke up the parties were discussing the matter of the National Joint Board and Local 103's work jurisdiction. Knoop started the July 28 session with a plea that his side was interested in getting an agreement, that the negotiations had been unduly prolonged, and that he hoped they could get down to "some earnest business of resolving our differences." The parties discussed a number of subjects, including vaca- tions, increased compensation insurance (which was agreed upon), improvements of other benefits, reporting time, trans- portation. "A figure for a raise was tossed on the table" but e This clause read as follows: "Article VIII, Craft Jurisdiction. It is agreed that the jurisdiction of work covered by this Agreement is that provided for in the Charter Grant issued by the American Federa- tion of Labor to the International Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers, it being understood that the claims are subject to Trade Agreements and final decisions of the AFL-CIO, as well as the decisions rendered by the National Joint Board for the settlement of jurisdictional disputes. The parties to this Agreement are subject to and agree to be bound by all decisions and awards made by the National Joint Board for Settlement of Jurisdictional Disputes with respect to all jurisdictional disputes which may arise under this Agreement." The expired agreement between the Associated General Contractors of America, Evansville Chapter, Inc., and International Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers Local Union No. 103, was in effect from April 1, 1967, until March 31, 1970. The strike began April 1, 1970, and has continued until the present except as to the five companies which signed separate agreements with Respondent Local 103 in August and September 1970. 982 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD wages were not discussed in depth. Knoop testified that the parties had earlier agreed to resolve all nonmonetary items before getting to "money," and that this agreement occurred prior to July 7. At the July 28 meeting the parties discussed trying to get some help from a Federal mediator and one, Mr. Richards, was called and he arrived about 9 p.m. He talked with both sides and set up a meeting for July 31. Mediator Richards opened the July 31 meeting with a 15- or 20-minute appeal to both sides. About the only issue then discussed by the parties was the matter of resolving jurisdic- tional disputes. The first general vice president of the Interna- tional Association, John McCarthy, from St. Louis, was present . McCarthy said he could not understand why the Evansville Chapter could not accept the National Joint Board because several Associated General Contractors chapters had accepted it, naming Springfield, Illinois; Detroit, Michigan; and St . Louis, Missouri . After a while the employer repre- sentatives called Randolph Walther into the meeting. Walther was executive director of Evansville Chapter, and he had not participated in the negotiations since the first meeting in February 1970. Mediator Richards had the two sides caucus in separate rooms and Richards went back and forth between them. Then he brought them back together in one room. Walther disputed McCarthy's repeated claim that the three AGC chapters had agreed to the National Joint Board clause. According to Walther's credible and uncontradicted testimony, McCarthy "insisted that we negotiate a contract with the National Joint Board, or all the work classifica- tion(s) in the Iron Workers' constitution" without a no-strike clause. Walther replied that "We had no representation on the Joint Board, we could not participate in that Board, and we could not include all the work classifications in the Iron Workers' constitution because it included many work classifi- cations of other trades, and all of our contracts contained no-strike clauses in jurisdictional disputes." Walther credibly testified that "most of the conversation after that was general, that we'd reached an impasse ." Vice President McCarthy said that "he could understand now why the Iron Workers couldn't get a contract with AGC." Knoop credibly testified that McCarthy said that AGC represented less than 10 per- cent of the membership of Local 103 and that "they could negotiate with whomever they pleased." Business Agent Tremper said, "We are bargaining with the wrong people." Mediator Richards adjourned the meeting. There have been no meetings since. During the July negotiations there was some reference to money, as has been seen above, but wages were not discussed at length or in depth. Also there was lack of agreement on other subjects. But the preponderance of the evidence estab- lished that the cause of the impasse on July 31 was Local 103's and Tremper's insistence upon the resolution of juris- dictional disputes by the Interim Board or the National Joint Board or by Local 103's "work jurisdiction" accompanied by its freedom to strike. As has been seen Norman Knoop tes- tified to this effect. As has been seen this jurisdictional dispute issue was discussed at length but to no avail at the two meet- ings on July 21; and the July 23 and 31 meetings were devoted almost entirely to it. Note also, below, the testimony of David Poe and John Robert Moye on this subject, and the fact that article VIII was included unchanged in the separate agree- ments. Thus I conclude that the July 31 impasse and the continuation of the strike thereafter was caused by the Union's and Tremper's adamant position. I note in this con- nection that on October 27, 1970, after considerable corre- spondence between the parties concerning setting a new date for further negotiations . Business Agent Tremper wrote Knoop, As, Iron Workers Local 103 feels that we need some manner to handle jurisdictional disputes in the agree- ment equally as good as the National Joint Board and at no cost to the Local Union, we feel like we need some assurance from you that this is possible, to negotiate or further negotiation would be fruitless. The July negotiations proved also that both parties hon- ored the historic multiemployer appropriate unit and that both sides to the bargaining understood that Evansville Chapter was negotiating on behalf of all its members who hired ironworkers in the territorial jurisdiction of Local 103. C. Breakaway From Multiemployer Unit, and Negotiation and Execution of Separate Agreements By August 1970 the strike had been on for some 4 months, and from economic necessity three employers' took the initia- tive and departed from the multiemployer bargaining; they negotiated and on August 7 signed a separate agreement with Local 103. The employer party to the agreement was desig- nated as "Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky Erector's [sic] As- sociation," and the agreement was signed by each of the three employers. "Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky Erector's As- sociation" did not then, and does not now, exist. The name was used with the thought that eventually such an association would come into existence. As each of these three employers signed the agreement, as the strike immediately thereupon ended as to at least one of them and presumably all of them, and as this employer, Tri-State, thereafter was able to get and work men from Local 103, I conclude that this contract amounted to a separate contract between Local 103 and each of the three corporations. On August 17 Poe Steel Erection, Inc., signed a similar agreement, except that its president, David C. Poe, crossed out "Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky Erector's Association" as the employer party and inserted "Poe Steel Erection, Inc." Upon signing the contract the strike was over as to Poe and he has gotten his men from Respondent Local 103 ever since. Poe refused to sign unless he also received an agreement with the International Association which Respondents agreed to. Poe later received such agreement. Poe testified he signed this contract because either that or I'm out of business . I only hire ironwork- ers. I was $30,000 in debt over a 4 % month strike with no work. It's simple. John Robert Moye, president of Tri-State, testified that he signed the agreement: in order to go back to work ... I contract to subcontract steel erection. I erected with ironworkers. In order to get ironworkers you sign a contract. That's what I'm refer- ring to when I say go back to work.... In order to maintain the business, keep the business operating, to keep from going under. On August 7 Charles Braun, president of Industrial Con- tractors, Inc., telephoned Randolph Walther that I may get kicked out of the AGC, but it looks like I am going to have to sign with the Iron Workers or sit here and go broke. Burch and Lamb, Inc., signed Local 103's agreement on November 18, 1970, in order to get ironworkers on a job it was doing for "Alcoa." In early November Business Agent Tremper told Alcoa's project manager that Burch and Lamb had no contract with Local 103. Tremper testified this project manager knew "from this year" and also previous years the "known fact that I wouldn't furnish ironworkers to a contrac- These were Allied Erection & Conveyor, Inc., Industrial Contractors, Inc., Tri-State Steel Erection, Inc. LOCAL UNION NO. 103, IRON WORKERS 983 tor that does not sign an agreement with Local 103." Alcoa's project manager then called Jerry Lamb , president of Burch and Lamb, Inc., and told him Tremper said Burch and Lamb had not signed his contract and that Tremper would not allow Burch and Lamb on the jobsite. Lamb replied he would take care of that. Lamb then called Tremper and told him they would sign his contract. Local 103's president brought to Lamb's office, and Lamb signed, an "Acceptance of Agree- ment," stating that Burch and Lamb, Inc., accepted the agreement between Local 103 and "the Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky Erector's Association." As this association was not in existence I conclude this amounted to an agreement be- tween Local 103 and Burch and Lamb, Inc. Since.signing the contract the latter corporation has obtained ironworkers from Respondent and Tremper and has worked them at the Alcoa project. President Lamb testified that he signed the agreement be- cause we had arrived at a point financially where we were going to have to sign with the Iron Workers or close our doors. It's that simple. All of the contracts signed by these five corporations con- tained the same article VIII, set forth above, as appeared in the agreement which expired March 31, 1970. David Poe credibly testified and without contradiction that at the meet- ings between the several breakaway employers and Local 103 the latter's committee said that the "National Joint Board" had to be included if the employers were to get a contract. Poe testified further that the several employers saw "no way of getting a contract without the National Joint Board through the AGC." Moye testified that in the separate negotiations the Union said it would have to have article VIII to protect its work jurisdiction. There were three meetings of the breakaway employers with the Union's negotiating comttlittee, two of them in July. The presidents of four of the breakaway corporations were on Evansville Chapter's Iron Workers Committee and par- ticipated, along with at least four other employer representa- tives, in the 1970 negotiations with the Union on behalf of Evansville Chapter. The Union's Committee in the breaka- way negotiations was essentially the same one as the commit- tee that was negotiating with Evansville Chapter; in both cases Business Agent Tremper was chief spokesman. One of the separate negotiation meetings occurred right after the breakup of one of the sesssions with Evansville Chapter, and in the same room, in late July.' When they negotiated and signed the separate agreements all five of the breakaway corporations were members of Evansville Chapter and were being negotiated for by Evans- ville Chapter. At least some of them knew that other mem- bers of Evansville Chapter's negotiating committee consid- ered their actions in going-it-alone to be unlawful. And all of them knew that Randolph Walther, executive director of Evansville Chapter, was strongly opposed to their actions, and took the position that they were illegal. During Evans- ville Chapter's negotiations, Walther met with the entire membership once a week for 16 weeks, and always took the position that Evansville Chapter's board of directors consid- ered that all members were bound by Evansville Chapter's bylaws to try to negotiate a contract, and they could not withdraw from the bargaining. Poe Steel Erection, Inc., and ' The Respondents indulged in these breakaway negotiations even though on March 4, 1970, they had filed with the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service a notification, requested by law, that Evansville Chap- ter was the employer involved in the negotiations in issue in this case. Respondents never changed this representation to Evansville Chapter or to the F.M.C.S. Burch and Lamb, Inc., signed the separate agreement after the charge herein had been filed and after Walther had writ- ten them and all members on August 13, 1970: The Evansville AGC has today filed with the NLRB additional charges against Local 103 Iron Workers and the International Iron Workers Union for negotiating contrary to law, contracts with individual members of the AGC and ignoring the bargaining rights of the AGC. Prior to signing these separate agreements none of the five employers gave any notice or took any step to withdraw from Evansville Chapter. Nor did Respondents ever notify Evans- ville Chapter of their intent to withdraw from group bargain- ing. All five corporations are parties to other agreements Evansville Chapter negotiated for them with other unions., At the separate negotiations both sides accepted all the clauses previously agreed upon between Evansville Chapter and the Union's negotiating committee in all the 1970 negotiations since February 11, 1970; and in addition decided it would be a 3-year contract, and decided upon wages. The five employers agreed upon higher wage increases than Evansville Chapter had ever offered the Union's Committee, but wages were never discussed exhaustively or in depth in the negotiations between Evansville Chapter and the Union's Committee. D. Analysis and Conclusions The outcome of this case depends upon the Board's deci- sion in the earlier case , Case 25-CB-973. If the Board finds in the earlier case that a legitimate impasse existed at the conclusion of the negotiations covered by that case, because it arose over one or more mandatory subjects of collective bargaining; the strike was a lawful strike; and the Board therefore dismisses that case, then this case also should be dismissed. The testimony before me showed that the strike continued during seven more negotia- tion sessions in July 1970, and that on July 31 another im- passe occurred over the same issue as was involved in the earlier case: Respondents' insistence upon the inclusion of the National Joint Board clause or its equivalent . If the impasse in the earlier case was a legitimate impasse , then the same is true of the impasse involved in the present case , the case at bar. If the strike in the earlier case was a lawful strike, then the continuation of the strike for the same reasons , involved herein, was also lawful action . Following a lawful impasse the Union could lawfully through economic action cause the fracturing of the multiemployer unit and could lawfully enter into separate contracts with the employer members of the multiemployer unit. Therefore if the Board dismisses Case 25-CB-973 under the reasoning set forth in this paragraph, the complaint in the case at bar should be dismissed. If on the other hand the Board finds in the earlier case that a legitimate impasse was not reached in the negotiations cov- ered by that case because it arose over a nonmandatory sub- ject of collective bargaining; the strike was an unlawful strike, and the Board therefore holds there was a violation of the Act, then I hold that the complaint before me should also be upheld. If the strike was unlawful at its inception because it followed an illegitimate impasse over a nonmandatory sub- ject, then the same is true of the impasse involved in the present case. In that event the five employers and Respondent Union were not lawfully free to negotiate and sign separate agreements and thereby fracture the multiemployer unit. Therefore if the Board finds a violation in Case 25-CB-973 ' Walther testified that what action Evansville Chapter takes against these five corporations , if any, depends upon the outcome of this case. 984 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD under the reasoning set forth in this paragraph , then I hold that the complaint in the case at bar should be upheld. In order to expedite the decision ' in this case I assume, without deciding , the correctness of Judge Mullin's Decision and Order in Case 25-CB-973, and hereby issue the-follow- ing recommended:' ORDER Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact and conclu- sions of law , and upon the preponderance of the evidence in the entire record considered as a whole, I recommend that Local Union No. 103, International Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers, AFL-CIO, its officers, representatives , agents, successors , and assigns, and Respondent Charles Tremper, its business , agent, shall: 1. Cease and desist from: - (a) Honoring or giving , any effect to the separate agree- ments entered into in August and November 1970 with Allied Erection & Conveyor, Inc., Industrial Contractors, Inc., Tri- State Steel Erection , Inc., Poe Steel Erection , Inc., and Burch and Lamb, Inc. (b) Refusing to bargain with Evansville Chapter, Inc., by negotiating and entering into and/or giving any effect to separate collective-bargaining agreements with any member of Evansville Chapter at a time when it is obligated by law to bargain with Evansville Chapter for all of its members. (c) In any like or related manner , refusing ',to bargain col- lectively in good faith with Evansville Chapter. 2. Take the following affirmative action which is necessary to effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Respondent Local 103 and Respondent Charles Tremper shall notify Evansville , Chapter in writing that they will bargain in good faith with Evansville Chapter for all of the members of Evansville Chapter; and that they will cease to honor and give any effect to the agreements entered into in August and November 1970 with Allied Erection and Conveyor , Inc., Industrial Contractors , Inc., ' Tri-State Steel Erection , Inc., Poe Steel Erection , Inc., and Burch and Lamb, Inc., or any other agreement they have negotiated and en- tered into with any member of Evansville Chapter at a time when Respondent Local 103 was obligated by law to bargain with Evansville Chapter for all of its members. (b) Post in Local 103's offices and meeting places within its territorial jurisdiction , copies of the notice attached hereto and marked "A,ppendixB ." 10 Copies of said notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 25, after being duly signed by a representative of Respondent Local 103 and by Respondent Tremper, shall be posted by them immedi-' ately upon receipt thereof, and be maintained by them for 60 consecutive days thereafter , in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to members are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by Respondents to insure that said notices are not altered , defaced , or covered by any other (c) Promptly after receipt of copies of said notice from the -Regional Director , return to him signed copies for -posting by Evansville Chapter and by all employer-members of Evans- ville Chapter, if they are willing, at their places of business, including all places where notices to employees are cus- tomarily posted. (d) Notify the Regional Director for Region 25, in writing, within 20 days from the date of this Decision , what steps. have been taken to comply herewith." it In the event that this recommended Order is adopted by the Board after exceptions have been filed, notify the Regional Director for Region 25, in writing , within 20 days from the date of this Order , what steps Respond- ents have taken to comply herewith APPENDIX B NOTICE To MEMBERS POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government WE WILL NOT honor or give any effect to the collec- tive-bargaining agreements we entered into in August and November 1970 with Allied Erection and Conveyor, Inc., Industrial Contractors, Inc., Tri-State Steel Erec- tion , Inc., Poe Steel Erection, Inc., and Burch and Lamb, Inc. WE WILL NOT refuse to bargain with Associated Gen- eral Contractors of America, Evansville Chapter, Inc., by negotiating and entering into and/or giving any effect to separate collective-bargaining agreements with any member of Evansville Chapter at a time when we are obligated by law to bargain with Evansville Chapter for all of its members. WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner refuse to bargain collectively in good faith with Evansville Chap- ter. LOCAL UNION No. 103, INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BRIDGE, STRUCTURAL AND ORNAMENTAL IRON WORKERS, AFL-CIO, AND ITS AGENT CHARLES TREMPER (Labor Organization) Dated By (Representative) (Title) material . Dated By ' 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, recommendations , and recommended Order herein shall, as provided in Sec 102 46 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 t0 In the event that the Board 's 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 be changed to read "Posted Pursuant to a Judgment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board " Charles Tremper, Busi- ness Agent This is - an official notice and must not be defaced by any- one. This notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the date of posting and must not be altered , defaced, or covered by any other material. Any questions concerning this notice or compliance with its provisions may be directed to the Board's Office, 614 ISTA Center, 150. West Market Street, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204 , Telephone 317-633-8921. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation