Mile Square Health Center, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMay 5, 1976223 N.L.R.B. 1314 (N.L.R.B. 1976) Copy Citation 1314 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Mile Square Health Center, Inc. and District Council 19, American Federation of State , County and Mu- nicipal Employees , AFL-CIO,' Petitioner. Case 13- RC-13461 May 5, 1976 DECISION ON REVIEW AND DIRECTION OF ELECTION By CHAIRMAN MURPHY AND MEMBERS FANNING AND PENELLO On December 23, 1975, the Acting Regional Di- rector for Region 13 issued a Decision, Order and Direction of Elections in the above-entitled proceed- ing 2 in which, inter alia, he dismissed the instant pe- tition on the ground that at the time it was filed, prior to the effective date of the 1974 health care amend- ments, the Employer fell within the statutory exclu- sion of enterprises over which the Board could not assert jurisdiction. Thereafter, in accordance with the National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regula- tions, Series 8, as amended, the Petitioner filed a timely request for review of the Acting Regional Director's decision on the grounds, inter alia, that, in dismissing the petition, he departed from well-estab- lished precedent. By telegraphic order dated January 26, 1976, the Petitioner's request for review was granted. Thereaf- ter, the Petitioner and the Employer filed briefs on review.' 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 entire record in this case with respect to the issues under review and makes the following findings: For the reasons set forth hereafter, we find, con- trary to the Acting Regional Director, that we are not prohibited by Section 2(2) of the Act 4 from asserting jurisdiction in this proceeding. We also find no merit in the Employer's contention that an election is 1 The name of the Petitioner appears as amended at the hearing. 2 The Regional Director consolidated the instant case with Case I3-RC- 13497 for purposes of hearing . In his decision thereafter , the Acting General Director severed the cases and dismissed the instant petition. 3 At the hearing, Hospital Employees Labor Program of Metropolitan Chicago (HELP!) and its sponsoring organizations , Local 743, International Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs. Warehousemen and Helpers of America , and Local 73, Service Employees International Union, AFL-CIO. were permitted to intervene on the basis of a collective-bargaining agree- ment with the Employer covering the employees involved herein. At the time the petition was filed , prior to the effective date of the 1974 health care amendments , Sec. 2(2) excluded from the term "employer," inter a/ia, "any corporation or association operating a hospital. if no part of the net earnings inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual." barred by its recognition of and/or collective-bar- gaining agreement with the Intervenor. Accordingly, we shall direct an election in the unit which the par- ties have stipulated is appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining. The Employer, an Illinois corporation, operates a comprehensive health care center on a not-for-profit basis in four buildings located in Chicago, Illinois.' At two of its buildings, the Employer provides medi- cal treatment for patients with drug abuse problems on an inpatient basis. The Petitioner seeks to repre- sent certain employees 6 at the Employer's other two facilities where the Employer provides various outpa- tient health care services, such as adult medicine, pe- diatrics, dentistry, obstetrics, gynecology, family planning, and mental health. These latter two facili- ties also serve as the admitting center for patients in the Employer's drug abuse program.' The Employer has an agreement with Rush Pres- byterian-St. Lukes Medical Center, herein called Rush Medical Center, whereby Rush Medical Center provides the Employer with hospital beds on an as- needed basis and charges the Employer for the beds so used by its patients. Patients of the Employer hos- pitalized at Rush Medical Center are under the ex- clusive medical control, supervision, and treatment of the Employer's doctors and nurses who are paid by the Employer. On a daily basis, there are between 40 and 50 patients of the Employer hospitalized at Rush Medical Center and their average stay is ap- proximately 7 days. The parties stipulated that Rush Medical Center is a nonprofit hospital excluded from the coverage of the Act prior to August 25, 1974, the effective date of the health care amendments. The Employer is a member of the Chicago Hospi- tal Council, the Illinois Hospital Association, and the American Hospital Association. However, the Em- ployer is neither licensed as a hospital by the State of Illinois nor accredited as a hospital by the National Joint Committee on the Accreditation of Hospitals. In view of the foregoing and the record as a whole, we conclude that with respect to the employees here sought the Employer operates a medical clinic over which the Board asserted jurisdiction prior to the ef- 5 During the last fiscal year preceding the commencement of the hearing, the Employer received gross revenues of approximately $4,200,000, of which approximately $4 million was derived from Federal agencies, such as the Debpartment of Health . Education and Welfare. On August 8, 1974, the Petitioner filed a petition seeking an election in a unit of all employees of the Employer, excluding doctors and supervisors as defined in the Act. At the hearing, the petition was amended to conform to the unit in the current collective -bargaining agreement between the Em- ployer and the Intervenor. The petitioned-for unit was generally referred to by the parties as a service and maintenance unit. The parties stipulated to exclude from the unit involved herein employ- ees who work exclusively at the drug-related facilities and those employees whose work at the other two facilities relates solely to the Employer's drug program. 223 NLRB No. 201 MILE SQUARE HEALTH CENTER, INC. 1315 fective date of the health care amendments.' We dis- agree with the Acting Regional Director's conclusion that the Employer was an exempt hospital at the time of filing of the petition because it "furnishes hospital services, including care on an in-patient basis as an integral part of its operations ...." Although some of the Employer's patients are hospitalized at Rush Medical Center where they remain under the Employer's exclusive medical control, the duties of the petitioned-for employees do not involve caring for such patients at that hospital? Rather, these em- ployees work at those facilities of the Employer pro- viding the outpatient services of a medical clinic. Furthermore, it is clear that the Employer itself is not a hospital, as it is neither licensed nor certified as such, and its legal existence, function, and operation is separate and distinct from the nonprofit hospital with which it contracts for hospital beds.10 In these circumstances, we find that with respect to the in- stant petition the Employer was engaged in com- merce within the meaning of the Act prior to August 25, 1974, and that it will effectuate the purposes of the Act to assert jurisdiction in this proceeding. Turning to the Employer's recognition-bar conten- tion, the relevant facts can be summarized as follows. In August 1973, the Employer, on the basis of signed authorization cards submitted to it, recognized the Intervenor as the collective-bargaining representative of its community health aides, housemen, and main- tenance men. The Employer refused to recognize the Intervenor's claim to represent a larger group of em- ployees on the ground that it had not proved that it represented a majority of such employees. In January 1974," the Employer and the Interve- nor commenced negotiations for a collective-bar- gaining agreement which included the issue of the scope of the bargaining unit. In May, the Intervenor submitted additional signed authorization cards to the Employer's counsel on the basis of which the Employer recognized the Intervenor as the bargain- ing representative of additional employee classifica- tions which are set forth in the collective-bargaining agreement subsequently agreed to by the parties." s E.g., Quain and Ramstad Clinic, 173 NLRB 1185 ( 1968). '9 See Duke University, 200 NLRB 81 (1972). 10 As the Employer states in its brief , "Mile Square itself has no other relationship to Rush , other than this rental of Rush beds." 11 All subsequent dates herein are in 1974 unless otherwise indicated. 12 Sec. 2 . 1 of the collective-bargaining agreement of the Employer and the Intervenor provides as follows: The Health Center recognizes the Union as the exclusive bargaining agent with respect to wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment for all environmental specialists , environmental aides. maintenance employees , community health aides, medical record clerks, registration clerks, storeroom clerks, clinical clerks, and drivers. The unit specifically excludes supervisors , temporary and casual em- ployees, regular part time employees normally working less than twenty (20) hours per week , and all other employees of the Health Center. By letter dated July 22, the Petitioner advised the Employer that a majority of its employees had au- thorized the Petitioner to represent them and re- quested a meeting to discuss recognition. The Em- ployer replied a week later, stating that it was "a little surprised" by the Petitioner's claim that it repre- sented a majority of all Mile Square employees. The Employer further stated that it had recognized the Intervenor as collective-bargaining representative for some of its employees the previous August, that it was presently negotiating a contract with the Interve- nor, and that therefore it could not comply with the Petitioner's request. On August 8, the Petitioner filed the instant peti- tion seeking an election in a unit of all employees of the Employer, excluding doctors and supervisors as defined in the Act. The petition was amended at the hearing to conform to the unit in the present collec- tive-bargaining agreement between the Employer and the Intervenor which was executed on August 20, 1974, and is effective until August 31, 1977. In these peculiar circumstances, we find that the Employer's recognition of the Intervenor does not bar an election at this time. The facts of this case reveal that recognition was extended to the Interve- nor in the ttnit finally agreed upon on the basis of authorization cards submitted on two different dates. A substantigll period of time elapsed between the ini- tial submission of cards in August 1973 covering three employee classifications and the eventual reso- lution of the unit scope issue the following May through the submission of additional cards covering additional employee classifications. Less than 3 months later, the Petitioner notified the Employer that a majority of its employees had authorized the Petitioner to represent them, thus raising the possibil- ity that some of the cards signed by employees the previous August were, by the time recognition was granted in May, no longer reflective of those employ- ees' desires as to collective representation. In view of this uncertainty, and in the absence of other evidence indicating that the Intervenor enjoyed majority sta- tus at the time recognition was extended in May in the entire unit involved herein, we believe that an election in which all employees in the unit can ex- press their present desires as to representation is in order." 13 We also find no merit in the Employer's contention that an election is barred by its current collective-bargaining agreement with the Intervenor which was executed in the interim period between the filing of the petition and the amendment thereof at the hearing. Where, as here , the amendment does not result in a unit substantially different from that sought in the original petition , it is well established that the filing date of the petition is controlling and that a subsequently executed contract will not constitute a bar. Deluxe Metal Furniture Company, 121 NLRB 995 (1958 ). For this rea- son, the Employer's reliance on Hyster Company, 72 NLRB 937 (1947), is clearly misplaced. 1316 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Accordingly, we shall direct an election in the fol- lowing unit which the parties stipulated , and we find, constitutes a unit appropriate for the purposes of col- lective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act: All nonsupervisory community health aides, clinic clerks , registration clerks, receptionist clerks, medical records clerks, maintenance em- ployees, environmental specialists , environmen- tal aides , drivers , mail clerks , receiving and storeroom clerks, appointment clerks, dental as- sistants , playroom counselors, distribution clerks, x-ray clerks, darkroom clerks, pharmacy clerks, optometric aides, supply coordinators, and transport clerks employed by the Employer at its facilities located at 2040 and 2045 West Washington Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois; but excluding guards, supervisors as defined in the Act, and all other employees. [Direction of Election and Excelsior footnote omit- ted from publication.] Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation