McGraw Electric Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMay 25, 1954108 N.L.R.B. 1033 (N.L.R.B. 1954) Copy Citation LINE MATERIAL COMPANY 1033 If a majority of the employees in the voting group vote for the Petitioner, they will be taken to have indicated their desire to constitute a separate appropriate unit , and the Regional Director conducting the election directed herein is instructed to issue a certificate of representatives to the Pe- titioner for the unit described in the voting group above, which the Board , under such circumstances , finds to be appropriate for purposes of collective bargaining . On the other hand, if a majority vote for the Intervenor , the Boardfinds the existing unit to be appropriate and the Regional Director will issue a certification of results of election to such effect. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication.] LINE MATERIAL COMPANY, DIVISION OF McGRAW ELEC- TRIC COMPANY and TOOL & DIE MAKERS LODGE NO. 78, INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MACHINISTS, AFL, Petitioner . Case No . 13-RC-3764. May 25, 1954 DECISION AND DIRECTION OF ELECTION Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before Jewel G . Maher, hearing officer. The hearing officer ' s rulings made at the hear- ing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. t Upon the entire record in this case , the Board finds: 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the mean- ing of the Act. 2. The labor organizations involved claim to represent certain employees of the Employer. 3. A question affecting commerce exists concerning the representation of employees of the Employer within the mean- ing of Section 9 (c) (1) and Section 2 (6) and ( 7) of the Act. 4. The Petitioner seeks to sever from the existing production and maintenance unit, a unit of all of the Employer's tool- and die-makers and model shop employees, including the heat treater, the tool and cutter grinder, and the tool crib attendant, but excluding all other employees. The Employer and Intervenor contend that the requested unit is inappropriate because of the history of collective bargaining on a plantwide basis and the integration of the Employer ' s operations . The Intervenor further contends that the employees in the requested unit are not skilled craftsmen . Since 1937 , the Intervenor has been the bargaining representative for all production and maintenance employees in a single unit. 'Local 1109, United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE), herein called the Intervenor, was permitted to intervene on the basis of a recently expired contract. 108 NLRB No. 139. 1034 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD There are approximately 400 production and maintenance employees working at the plant. The Employer' s operations are carried on in 3 divisions, the manufacturing division, which in- cludes the toolroom, the engineering division, which includes the model shop, and the marketing division, which includes the packing, shipping, receiving, and stock departments. The manu- facturing and marketing divisions are under the supervision of a plant manager . The engineering division is under the super- vision of a vice president in charge of engineering . Directly responsible to the plant manager is a manufacturing super- intendent who has jurisdiction over all phases of manufacturing, including the toolroom and all maintenance work connected with the production departments. He has no jurisdiction over the model shop. The Employer's operations are carried on in several different buildings. The toolroom is located in a building which houses the Employer's production departments, but is physically separated from the production departments. The tool crib is enclosed by wire in one corner of the toolroom. It has two openings, one of which faces the production departments. The heat treat room is separated from the toolroom by a 4- foot wall. The model shop is located in another building which houses the engineer- ing department. Toolroom employees: There are 20 employees who work under the separate supervision of the toolroom foreman, who reports to the manufacturing superintendent. Of these em- ployees, 17 are tool- and die-makers who are classified as tool- and die-maker A, B, and C. There is also a tool and cutter grinder, a tool crib attendant, and a heat treater who work under toolroom supervision. The tool- and die-makers spend from 90 to 95 percent of their time making new tools, dies, gauges , jigs, and fixtures. The remainder of their time is devoted to maintaining or repairing tools and dies. The majority of their work is done within the confines of the toolroom. They work from blueprints, and con- struct the tools and dies to completion. They sometimes design parts they are going to make. Their work requires them to work to close tolerances . They use all of the tools and machines located in the toolroom including shapers, lathes, horizontal and vertical milling machines, a horizontal the miller, surface grinders, contour saws, filling machines, band filers, and die filers. Some of the tool- and die-makers also own their own hand tools which they use in connection with their work in the toolroom. The tool- and die-makers go into production departments to check the dies that they make, to see that they are functioning properly. At such times they may work near other maintenance employees, but each works at his own particular trade. The tool- anddie -makers do not make anything on a production basis, and do not do any production work. Nor, with the exception of one employee, do any production employees do the work of the LINE MATERIAL COMPANY 1035 tool- and die-makers. When the tool- and die-makers are all tied up with rush jobs, this one employee, a lathe and shaper man, sometimes makes simple fixtures . Not more than 5 to 10 percent of his time is spent on this toolroom work. In connection with the Employer's quality control program, dies made in the toolroom are turned over to the inspection de- partment for check and inspection. They are then turned over to the punch press department , and there they are inspected again. If the piece parts are not correct , they are turned over to the department foreman, who refers them back to the tool- room foreman, who takes it up with the tool- and die-maker responsible . Occasionally , various production employees use machines in the toolroom which are not available in the pro- duction departments, such as band saws, lathes, and the radial drill press. The radial drill press, which is not an intricate machine, is the only one in the plant, and is seldom used by the toolroom employees . While working on these machines in the toolroom, the production employees remain under the super- vision of their own foreman. The tool and cutter grinder and the tool-crib attendant both work in the tool crib. The tool-crib attendant serves the entire plant. When he is not busy handing out tools and supplies to employees, he cuts cold rolled steel and tool steel which is used by the toolmakers, the model shop, and by production em- ployees. The tool and cutter grinder grinds all the cutters and die chasers. He grinds tools for production and maintenance employees as well as for the toolroom. He also waits on the window when the tool-crib attendant is too busy to handle all the work. There are 2 heat treaters employed at the plant, 1 in the foundry and 1 in the heat treat room near the toolroom. The foundry heat treater works only on production items, whereas the employee in the heat treat room spends about 80 to 90 per- cent of his time heat treating toolroom items, and the remainder of his time production items. The latter operates the heat treat furnaces for the purpose of heat treating tools and dies. He is not required to have experience as atoolmaker, and does not do any of the work of the tool- and die-makers. Model-shop employees: There are 7 modelmakers who work under the separate supervision of a model-shop foreman, who is responsible to the research engineer , who, in turn , reports to the vice president in charge of engineering . All the model- makers are classified as modelmaker B. The modelmakers build models of products to be manufactured by the Employer from blueprints and stretches. The models are made according to engineering specifications from different kinds of metal, depending upon what the specifications call for. Occasionally they make wood models. They make all the tools which they use to build the models. About 90 percent of their work is done in the model shop. They do not work in the pro- duction departments, but sometimes turn over to production 1036 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD employees certain functions which cannot be done in the model shop because of a lack of facilities . This includes models which are too large to be completed in the model shop , and models which require welding. At present , the Employer has no formal apprenticeship pro- gram for any of the employees involved in this case .2 It fills vacancies by hiring from the outside, or by transferring quali- fied employees from production and maintenance departments. Transfers to the toolroom or model shop are made on the basis of ability and seniority . The Employer gives most weight to ability. The record indicates that employees are not transferred directly from production and maintenance departments into the toolroom, but must complete an on-the-job training program before such a transfer is made . The line of promotion is from tool- and die -maker C to B to A . Employees are promoted on the basis of ability and the amount of work that is available in the classification . The record does not show whether employees must pass a test before being promoted to a higher classifica- tion or transferred into the toolroom or model shop. Toolroom and model-shop employees are never temporarily assigned to work in other departments . There is no interchange of work between the toolroom and model shop , and the two groups have little contact with each other . 3 Toolroom em- ployees work the same hours as the production and maintenance employees , from 7 a . m. to 3:30 p . m. Modelmakers work the same hours as other employees in the engineering department, from 8 a . m. to 4:30 p. m . Both modelmakers and toolroom employees are hourly paid, as are approximately 50 percent of the Employer ' s production and maintenance employees. The other production and maintenance employees work on a piece- rate basis , or a combination of an hourly rate and a piecework rate. All production and maintenance employees receive the same vacation and sick-leave benefits . Under the present con- tract with the Intervenor , seniority is on a departmental basis for employees who have worked for the Employer for less than 3 years. Seniority for employees who have worked for the Em- ployer for 4 years or more is determined on a plantwide basis. The Petitioner contends , and we agree, that the tool- and die- makers and the modelmakers here comprise a traditional craft group, performing distinctive and typical craft tasks . The Board has heretofore found that tool - and die-makers and modelmakers are craftsmen of substantially the same type , and has found ap- propriate for severance purposes a unit of such employees.4 Moreover , the Petitioner herein is a union which has tradition- ally devoted itself to serving the special interests of the em- ployees in question . Under these circumstances , we find that the tool - and die - makers and modelmakers may constitute a sepa- 2 The record indicates that in the past the Employer had an apprentices , ip program for tool- and die-makers. 3 model-shop employees sometimes go to the toolroom to use a machine which is located in the toolroom and is not available in the n codel shop. 4Ceneral Electric Company , 101 NLRB 1341. STAUFFER CHEMICAL COMPANY 1037 rate appropriate unit, if the employees so desire, despite the history of collective bargaining on a broader basis.' We will, however, exclude the heat treater, the tool and cutter grinder, and the tool-crib attendant from the unit, as they are not crafts- men and are not in direct line of progression in the craft.6 Accordingly, we shall direct an election among all of the tool- and die -makers and modelmakers employed by the Em- ployer at its Central Plant, in South Milwaukee, Wisconsin, excluding the heat treater , the tool and cutter grinder, the tool- crib attendant , supervisors , and all other employees. If a majority vote for the Petitioner, they will be taken to have indicated their desire to constitute a separate unit, which the Board finds, under the circumstances , to be appropriate for purposes of collective bargaining , and the Regional Director is instructed to issue a certification of representatives to the Petitioner for such unit . If a majority vote for the Intervenor, they will be taken to have indicated their desire to remain a part of the existing appropriate plantwide unit, and the Regional Director is instructed to issue a certification of results of election to that effect. [ Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication.] 5But for the fact that he considers himself bound by the Board's decision in American Potash & Chemical Corporation, 107 NLRB 1418, Member Peterson would not sever these employees in view of their inclusion for 17 years in the broader unit, and the absence of any facts showing the need for their severance. 6American Potash & Chemical Corporation, 107 NLRB 1418; General Electric Company, 101 NLRB 1341. STAUFFER CHEMICAL COMPANY and LODGE 681, DISTRICT 27, INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MACHINISTS, AFL' and INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF FIREMEN & OILERS, AFL2 and INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF FIREMEN & OILERS, LOCAL #320, AFL and PIPE FITTERS LOCAL UNION NO. 522, UNITED ASSOCIATION OF JOUR- NEYMEN AND APPRENTICES OF THE PLUMBING AND PIPE FITTING INDUSTRY OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA, AFL,' Petitioners. Cases Nos. 9-RC-2147,9-RC- 2158, 9-RC-2182, and 9-RC-2164. May 25, 1954 DECISION AND DIRECTION OF ELECTIONS Upon petitions duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, hearings were held before Thomas M. Sheeran, hearing officer . The hearing officer's rulings made at 'therein called LAM. 2Herein called Oilers. 3Herein called Pipe Fitters. 108 NLRB No. 145. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation