New York UniversityDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsOct 25, 2010356 N.L.R.B. 18 (N.L.R.B. 2010) Copy Citation DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 18 New York University and GSOC/UAW. Case 2–RC– 23481 October 25, 2010 ORDER BY MEMBERS BECKER, PEARCE, AND HAYES Petitioner’s request for review of the Regional Direc- tor’s order dismissing petition without a hearing is grant- ed as it raises compelling reasons warranting review. The Petitioner seeks to represent a unit of graduate students who, the Petitioner contends, are employed by the Employer, New York University, to provide teaching and research services. The Regional Director dismissed the petition without conducting a hearing, citing the Board’s decision in Brown University, 342 NLRB 483 (2004), which held that graduate students performing such services at Brown University are not employees within the meaning of Section 2(3) of the Act. The Employer’s opposition to the Petitioner’s request for review makes several significant factual representa- tions, and contentions concerning unit placement. Be- cause the Regional Director dismissed the petition with- out a hearing, we cannot assess the accuracy of these representations or determine the Petitioner’s position on these factual questions or the unit placement issues that they appear to raise. First, the Employer represents in its opposition that it has substantially altered both its relationship to graduate students who perform teaching duties and its legal posi- tion in regard to such individuals since the decisions in New York University, 332 NLRB 1205 (2000), and Brown University. The Employer represents that it has classified the overwhelming majority of its graduate stu- dents who perform teaching duties as adjunct faculty and now concedes that they are employees covered by the Act. The Employer concedes that, unlike the graduate students at issue in Brown University, the payments re- ceived by graduate students appointed as adjunct faculty are not the same as or similar to the amounts received by students on fellowships without teaching duties. Howev- er, the Employer contends that the graduate students ap- pointed as adjunct faculty are properly included in an existing unit of adjunct faculty. The Employer does not make any specific representations concerning what per- centage of the graduate students who are appointed as adjunct faculty satisfy the other criteria for inclusion in that unit, including provision “of forty contact hours of instruction in one or more courses in an academic year . . . or at least a total of 75 contact hours of individual instruction or tutoring during a semester.” The Employer further represents that there are fewer than 15 graduate students performing teaching duties who have not been classified as adjunct faculty. Neither party presents any argument concerning the relevance of the classification of some graduate students performing teaching duties as adjunct faculty to the employee status of the remaining graduate student teachers who are not so classified. The Regional Director therefore did not consider this ques- tion. Second, the Employer also represents in its opposition that some unspecified portion of its graduate students who provide research assistance are “funded by external grants” and, pursuant to the Board’s decision in New York University, supra at 1209 fn. 10, they are not em- ployees of the Employer regardless of the validity of the Brown University decision. Again, because the Regional Director dismissed the petition without a hearing, we cannot assess the accuracy of these representations and the Petitioner’s position on the factual and legal ques- tions they appear to raise. Finally, we believe there are compelling reasons for reconsideration of the decision in Brown University. The Petitioner points out that Brown University overruled the decision in New York University, which had been issued just 4 years earlier. The Petitioner argues that the deci- sion in Brown University is based on policy considera- tions extrinsic to the labor law we enforce and thus not properly considered in determining whether the graduate students are employees. The Petitioner also offered to present evidence of collective-bargaining experience in higher education as well as expert testimony demonstrat- ing that, even giving weight to the considerations relied on by the Board in Brown University, the graduate stu- dents are appropriately classified as employees under the Act. Finally, the Petitioner argues that the decision in Brown University is inconsistent with the broad defini- tion of employee contained in the Act and prior Board and Supreme Court precedent. The Employer, however, contends that Brown University was correctly decided.1 We believe the factual representations, contentions, and arguments of the parties should be considered based on a full evidentiary record addressing the questions raised above as well as any others deemed relevant by the Regional Director. Accordingly, the Regional Direc- tor’s dismissal of the petition is reversed, the petition is 1 Contrary to our dissenting colleague, we do not read Sec. 102.67(c) of our Rules to bar the Board from considering arguments and factual assertions contained in the responsive papers in determining whether “compelling reasons exist” for granting review. In addition, unlike our colleague, we are unwilling to find, in the absence of any evidence, that the graduate students who have been appointed as adjunct faculty “are currently represented” and that the instant petition is therefore inappro- priate. Factual findings must be based on evidence; since no evidence was presented, a remand for a hearing is necessary. 356 NLRB No. 7 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY 19 reinstated, and the case is remanded to the Regional Di- rector for a hearing and the issuance of a decision. MEMBER HAYES, dissenting. I would deny the Petitioner’s request for review inas- much as the Regional Director’s dismissal of the instant petition is entirely consistent with existing Board prece- dent, and the Petitioner has set forth no compelling rea- sons for reconsideration of any Board rule or policy. Thus, the request for review fails to meet the most basic requirements for granting review under the Board’s own Rules and Regulations. Additionally, I disagree with my colleagues that any of the papers before us creates a ma- terial issue of fact that would require a hearing in order to affirm the Regional Director’s determination. The Petitioner here has sought a unit composed of “all individuals enrolled in graduate level programs . . . who are employed to perform the functions of teach- ing assistants, research assistants and graduate assistants (regardless of job title).” The unit sought is not appro- priate under the Board’s decision in Brown University, 342 NLRB 483 (2004). This is a fact which the Petition- er freely concedes. Thus, it notes that: “It is undisputed that the Brown decision compels . . . [the dismissal of the petition].” The Petitioner makes absolutely no assertion, proffer, or claim that there are any facts at all that would distin- guish any of the individuals sought by its petition from those found not to be statutory employees in Brown. Indeed, the Petitioner scrupulously notes that its request for review is based solely on Section 102.67(c)(4) in urg- ing that there are “compelling reasons for reconsideration of the Board’s Brown decision.” The Petitioner is com- pletely candid about the objective of its request for re- view—it wants the Board to grant the request, overrule Brown, and reinstate the Board’s prior holding in New York University, 332 NLRB 1205 (2000) (NYU), that most of the individuals in the petitioned-for unit are stat- utory employees. The request for review itself sets forth no proper, let alone “compelling” reasons for reconsideration. The re- quest does not raise, allege, or reference a single fact, circumstance, argument, legal precedent, or claim that was not in existence and clearly before the Board when it rendered its decision in Brown. Thus, the request for review does nothing more than ask that a Board, with changed membership, view precisely the same evidence and argument considered by a prior Board, but reach an opposite result. This is not a proper basis for “reconsid- eration.” To suggest that it is merely serves to reinforce the views of the Board’s critics who charge that its view of the law is wholly partisan and thus changeable based on nothing more than changes in Board membership.1 The deficiencies in the Petitioner’s request for review are patent, and my colleagues’ effort to overcome them serves only to cast the problems in bolder relief. Rather than basing their grant of review and direction of a hear- ing on compelling reasons stated by the Petitioner, the party requesting review, my colleagues’ take their basis for granting review from the Employer’s opposition. Thus, they note that the Employer asserts (1) it has in- cluded some graduate students in an adjunct faculty bar- gaining unit; and (2) some graduate students in the peti- tioned for unit would not only be excludible under the Brown, but under the prior NYU decision as well. Neither of these factual assertions presents a “compel- ling” reason to grant review of Brown’s holding, nor do they require a hearing. As far as the graduate students in the adjunct faculty unit are concerned, if their circum- stances are no different from the time of the prior NYU decision, then under Brown they are not statutory em- ployees. The Employer may voluntarily engage in col- lective-bargaining for a unit including such individuals, but that does not make them statutory employees. On the other hand, if their circumstances have changed such that they are now statutory employees, then they are current- ly represented and the petition to include them in a sepa- rate unit is inappropriate. As for the Employer’s claim that certain individuals in the petitioned-for unit were also excluded as nonemploy- ees in NYU, the alleged necessity for a hearing to assess the “accuracy of [the Employer’s] representations” exists only if Brown is overruled. It is otherwise immaterial. Granting review on this basis unavoidably suggests that overruling Brown is a preordained result. The remainder of my colleagues’ stated reasons for granting review unfortunately suffers from the same in- firmity as the Petitioner’s arguments. Thus, there is noth- ing referenced that was not, or could not have been duly considered by the Board when it reached its decision in Brown. The Board then was well aware of the “evidence of collective-bargaining in higher education,” including, most notably the experience of the individuals and Em- ployer that are the object of the instant petition.2 1 “[A]n agency interpretation of a relevant provision which conflicts with the agency’s earlier interpretation is entitled to considerably less deference than a consistently held agency view.” INS v. Cardoza- Fonseca, 480 U.S. 421, 446 fn. 30 (1987) (citations and internal quota- tions omitted). 2 Amicus curiae briefs in Brown were filed, inter alia, by: the Ameri- can Council on Education and the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities; American Association of University Profes- sors; American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organiza- tions; Committee of Interns and Residents; Joint brief of Harvard Uni- DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 20 In sum, the Petitioner’s request for review has failed to state any compelling reasons for reconsideration of versity, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, George Washington University, Tufts University, University of Penn- sylvania, University of Southern California, Washington University in St. Louis, and Yale University; and Trustees of Boston University. 342 NLRB 483 fn. 1. Brown, and the majority unsuccessfully refer to state- ments in the Employer’s opposition as a basis for grant- ing a hearing. I would instead deny review of the Re- gional Director’s correct application of Brown to dismiss the petition. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation