Phillips 66Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsJan 31, 2020369 N.L.R.B. 13 (N.L.R.B. 2020) Copy Citation 369 NLRB No. 13 NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the bound volumes of NLRB decisions. Readers are requested to notify the Ex- ecutive Secretary, National Labor Relations Board, Washington, D.C. 20570, of any typographical or other formal errors so that corrections can be included in the bound volumes. Phillips 66 and United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Indus- trial & Service Workers International Union, AFL–CIO–CLC. Cases 31–CA–085243 and 31– CA–096709 January 31, 2020 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN RING AND MEMBERS KAPLAN AND EMANUEL On November 25, 2014, Administrative Law Judge Li- sa D. Thompson issued the attached decision. The Re- spondent filed exceptions and a supporting brief, the General Counsel and Charging Party each filed an an- swering brief, and the Respondent filed reply briefs.1 The National Labor Relations Board has considered the decision and the record in light of the exceptions and briefs and has decided to affirm the judge’s rulings, find- ings,2 and conclusions only to the extent consistent with this Decision and Order.3 This case arises out of a campaign by United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial & Service Workers International Union, AFL–CIO–CLC (the Union) to represent health and safe- ty shift specialists (HSS specialists) at the Respondent’s Santa Maria, California facility. The complaint alleges that prior to and after a Board-conducted election in which the HSS specialists voted for union representation, the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (5) of the Act in various respects. 1 By letter dated March 10, 2015, the Board rejected the Charging Party’s exceptions as untimely filed. 2 The Respondent has excepted to some of the judge’s credibility findings. The Board’s established policy is not to overrule an adminis- trative law judge’s credibility resolutions unless the clear preponder- ance of all the relevant evidence convinces us that they are incorrect. Standard Dry Wall Products, 91 NLRB 544 (1950), enfd. 188 F.2d 362 (3d Cir. 1951). We have carefully examined the record and find no basis for reversing the findings. No party has excepted to the judge’s denial of the General Counsel’s request for a notice-reading remedy. In any event, we find such a rem- edy unwarranted. 3 In an April 11, 2019 Order, the Board severed and remanded for further consideration under Boeing Co., 365 NLRB No. 154 (2017), the allegation that the Respondent unlawfully promulgated News Media Guidelines prohibiting employees from speaking to the media about the Respondent’s operations. We shall amend the judge’s Conclusions of Law and remedy and modify her recommended Order to conform to the violation found and to the Board’s standard remedial language. We shall substitute a new notice to conform to the Order as modified. The Respondent owns and operates oil and gas refiner- ies, including the Santa Maria refinery. The Respondent employed five HSS specialists at that facility. Their job duties included safety training, reviewing and updating safety procedures, and providing emergency medical response. In addition, in the event of a safety emergen- cy, the HSS specialist on duty served as incident com- mander, in which capacity he would temporarily assume control over facility operations and coordinate the re- sponse. Once the emergency was over, he became the incident owner and created a report about the emergency. Each HSS specialist worked approximately 42 hours per week, with periodic significant overtime. Because the facility operated around the clock, an HSS specialist was always on duty in case EMT or incident command- er/owner services were needed. In November 2011, the Union filed a representation petition to include the HSS specialists in the existing statewide multifacility bargaining unit. The Respondent opposed the petition, arguing that the HSS specialists were statutory supervisors due to their incident com- mander/owner responsibilities. The Acting Regional Director (ARD) rejected that argument and directed an election. Nevertheless, he found “some evidence . . . that [HSS specialists] may, when acting as an incident com- mander, direct the work of bargaining unit employees.” On January 16, 2012,4 4 days before the election, the Respondent convened a meeting with the HSS special- ists. Human Resources Manager Tiffany Wilson began by stating that the purpose of the meeting was to provide information so that the HSS specialists could make an informed decision about whether to vote for or against the Union. She then explained that the Respondent felt that certain of their job duties were supervisory, that it would strip them of these duties if they joined the Union, and that without such duties, the Respondent might not need to maintain the existing around-the-clock staffing of HSS specialists. She also stated that because the Re- spondent believed the HSS specialists were statutory supervisors, it would have to look at whether other of their job duties also involved supervisory authority. Site Manager Tim Seidel added that the Respondent might have to adjust the HSS specialists’ overtime if they joined the Union, and that it would review their job du- ties to see if the Respondent required around-the-clock staffing rather than an alternative 8-hour daily shift schedule that could minimize overtime. On January 19, 1 day before the election, three of the Respondent’s managers met with four HSS specialists. Incoming Site Manager Jerry Stumbo began by telling 4 Unless otherwise indicated, the following dates are in 2012. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD2 them they had a tough decision about whether to join the Union, but he looked forward to working with them to repair their relationship with management. Human Re- sources Manager Wilson then told them that the Re- spondent wished they would vote against the Union be- cause the Respondent preferred to deal with them direct- ly. Wilson also said that if the HSS specialists voted against the Union, the Respondent would work toward mending fences with them. HSS Specialist Andy Garcia asked, “If we join the Union, you’re not going to work with us?” Wilson did not respond, and Operations and Technical Superintendent Jason Gislason interjected that “what Wilson meant was we can’t talk to you, we will have to go through the Union.” The Union won the election 5–0, and the ARD certi- fied it as the exclusive bargaining representative of the HSS specialists. Around that time, the Respondent was undertaking a full-scale maintenance “turnaround”— entailing a complete shutdown of operations—which required full participation of all employees, including union representatives. The parties therefore agreed to postpone negotiations until May. However, they execut- ed a side letter agreement in which the Respondent agreed to a specific hourly wage rate for the HSS special- ist classification (or its replacement), specified that the focus of the classification would remain health and safe- ty, and promised that it would not lay off any of the em- ployees if the HSS specialist positions were eliminated through bargaining. Beginning in May, the parties bargained about the HSS specialist classification and its terms and conditions of employment for approximately 7 months.5 During this time, each party adhered to certain fundamental posi- tions. Consistent with the ARD’s finding that the HSS specialists may direct the work of other employees when acting as incident commander, the Respondent took the position that it would be inappropriate for unit employees to perform incident commander duties; that without those duties, there was no need for an HSS specialist to be at the facility at all times; and that without an HSS special- ist at the facility at all times, the Respondent would need to reassign around-the-clock EMT duties to outside con- tractors. In accordance with this position, the Respond- ent proposed to abolish the HSS specialist classification and create a new health and safety coordinator (HSC) classification with fewer job duties, different work schedules and, ultimately, lower wages. It proposed transferring two HSS specialists to HSC jobs and demot- ing the other three to operator jobs, which involved 5 The existing statewide collective-bargaining agreement would otherwise govern the employees’ terms and conditions of employment. cleaning and maintenance work and paid lower wages than the proposed HSC positions. In August, the Union agreed that the HSS specialists would no longer perform incident commander duties. Otherwise, it rejected the foregoing proposals and bargained to preserve the status quo. From June to September, the parties reached tentative agreements and traded proposals. In June, they agreed on the HSS specialists’ seniority rankings. In July, the Respondent withdrew its opposition to the Union’s re- quest that the HSS specialists receive an annual salary increase (even though they would be nonsalaried em- ployees under the proposed reclassification); the Re- spondent also offered to pay the employees at their HSS specialist wage rate for 13 weeks following any transfer. In August, the Union agreed that the HSS specialists would no longer perform incident commander duties, and it expressed willingness to cooperate with the Respond- ent to secure a beneficial OSHA certification. In Sep- tember, the Respondent offered to place employees trans- ferred to HSC positions on a shift schedule that would increase their work hours, and to not require those trans- ferred to operator jobs to pass a standard entry examina- tion; however, it also decreased its wage proposals. The next month, the parties did not meet, but they cor- responded. In an October 12 letter, the Respondent re- counted the course of negotiations, identified conces- sions it had made in an effort to reach agreement, and asked the Union to respond to its latest proposal. The Union replied that it was continuing to study that pro- posal and wished to meet again to negotiate on Novem- ber 18. It disagreed with some of the Respondent’s rep- resentations and accused the Respondent of discriminat- ing against the HSS specialists without business justifica- tion because they voted for union representation. The Union nonetheless “reiterate[d] [its] willingness to com- promise” and stated that it “remained committed to reaching an agreement.” On October 26, the Respondent denied discriminating against the HSS specialists, restat- ed its business justifications for its overall proposal,6 and identified what it considered “the parties’ essential areas of disagreement”—job duties, the number of non- operator positions available, and hours of work. The Respondent concluded that it “remain[ed] committed to bargaining in good faith to resolve these (and any other) 6 In its October 26 letter, the Respondent stated that it was “not an- gry that the HSS specialists made a choice [of union representation] which they have the legal right to make. However, now that they have made that choice, the Company must make appropriate changes to its operations to ensure supervisory duties are performed by supervisors; this merely reflects the necessary changes which are legitimate and logical consequences of that choice.” PHILLIPS 66 3 areas of disagreement,” and confirmed that it would meet on November 18. At the November 18 meeting, the Respondent declared that the parties were at impasse due to a lack of progress in negotiations, which the Union disputed. The Re- spondent then presented its “Final Company Proposal,” which tracked its fundamental positions throughout ne- gotiations, and instructed the Union to respond by No- vember 26. However, the Respondent also told the Un- ion that it had “room to move if you agree that there can only be two [HSS specialists transferred to HSC posi- tions].” The union representative responded, “Don’t hold your breath.” Following the November 18 meeting, the Union asked for and received an extension of time to respond to the Respondent’s final offer. The Union rejected the pro- posal on December 4 but disputed that the parties were at impasse and offered to meet for further negotiations. However, it did not make any new proposals. On De- cember 10, the Respondent declared impasse and imple- mented the terms of its final offer, including transferring all HSS specialists to HSC or operator positions. Based on the foregoing facts, we adopt the judge’s findings that the Respondent threatened adverse changes to HSS specialists’ jobs if they voted for union represen- tation in violation of Section 8(a)(1).7 However, as dis- cussed below, we reverse the judge’s findings that the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) by implicitly prom- ising benefits to employees to dissuade them from voting for union representation, Section 8(a)(5) and (1) by bar- gaining in bad faith and unilaterally implementing its final offer in the absence of a valid impasse, and Section 7 We adopt the judge’s finding that Human Resources Manager Wilson and Site Manager Seidel unlawfully threatened the HSS spe- cialists on January 16, but with the following clarifications. First, in agreeing that Seidel’s statement was coercive, we do not rely on the Respondent’s earlier unlawful threat at another facility because no record evidence indicates that the HSS specialists were aware of that threat. Next, we find it unnecessary to pass on the judge’s remark that Seidel’s statement by itself may have been a lawful prediction. We also do not rely on the judge’s citation to Hertz Corp., 316 NLRB 672, 695–696 (1995), where the threats at issue were found objectionable rather than unlawful. Instead, we rely on Times-Herald Record, 334 NLRB 350, 351–352 (2001), enfd. sub nom. NLRB v. Orange Co. Publications, 27 Fed.Appx. 64 (2d Cir. 2001) as support for the judge’s finding that Seidel’s statement was coercive in conjunction with Wil- son’s statement. Finally, in agreeing with the judge that Sec. 8(c) did not protect the Respondent’s January 16 statements, we rely solely on the fact that the threatened changes were wholly within the Respond- ent’s control; we do not pass on the judge’s discussion of whether objective facts supported the Respondent’s position. We find it unnecessary to pass on the judge’s finding that the Re- spondent unlawfully threatened HSS specialists at a January 19 meeting with Operations and Technical Superintendent Gislason, as this finding would not affect the remedy and therefore would be merely cumulative. 8(a)(3) and (1) by implementing its final offer in retalia- tion for the HSS specialists’ union votes. I. THE ALLEGED IMPLICIT PROMISE OF BENEFITS The judge found Wilson’s “mending fences” comment at the January 19 meeting with the HSS specialists to be an implicit promise of benefits that violated Section 8(a)(1). In her view, the comment linked the breakdown in the Respondent’s relationship with the HSS specialists with the latter’s union support. Citing Wilson’s related statement that the Respondent wished the HSS specialists would vote against the Union, the judge determined that the Respondent was improperly offering an improved relationship in exchange for “no” votes. The Respondent excepts to the judge’s finding. Unlike the judge, we find the Respondent’s suggestion that it would work toward mending fences with the HSS specialists was not a promise of benefits. In so finding, we recognize that an employer’s promise of benefits to employees in exchange for their rejection of union repre- sentation need not be unequivocal or precisely detailed in order to violate the Act. See Dyncorp, 343 NLRB 1197, 1198 (2004), affd. 233 Fed. Appx. 419 (6th Cir. 2007). On the other hand, general statements that do not identify potential benefits but merely indicate a desire for an im- proved relationship are not unlawful. See National Mi- cronetics, 277 NLRB 993, 993 (1985). Here, in ac- knowledging its past disagreements with the HSS spe- cialists and opposition to unionization, the Respondent said nothing that would reasonably be understood by employees as a promise to actually improve working conditions, whether in general or in any particular re- spect. Thus, its statements were permissible campaign propaganda rather than an unlawful promise of a quid pro quo.8 8 See Noah’s New York Bagels, 324 NLRB 266, 267 (1997) (em- ployer lawfully alluded to past mistakes, asked for a second chance, and expressed wish to work together with employees without the peti- tioning union); National Micronetics, 277 NLRB at 993 (employer lawfully stated that it “had neglected to keep up with other companies in the past” and asked both for “a second chance to see if [it] could make things better” and for “some time”). Cf. Dyncorp, supra, 343 NLRB at 1198 (employer unlawfully mentioned specific areas of po- tential change and told employees that he recognized that changes were necessary, that it would be foolish for him not to address the issues, and that significant changes would probably be made long before contract ratification); Reno Hilton, 319 NLRB 1154, 1156 (1995) (employer unlawfully asked for “a chance to show its commitment to [employ- ees]” and to “deliver” after reminding them of benefits that it had re- cently unlawfully provided to them). The judge at times referred to the Respondent’s alleged promise of benefits as a threat. We likewise find no unlawful threat under the circumstances here. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD4 II. THE ALLEGED BAD-FAITH BARGAINING The judge found that the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) by bargaining with a closed mind in bad faith, relying on two related rationales. First, the judge found that the Respondent “knew (or should have known)” that its proposal to transfer the HSS specialists to different positions “was not based upon legitimate business justifications.” Second, the judge found that the Respondent bargained with a closed mind by making proposals that were extensions of its preelection threat against the HSS specialists and were consistent with its apparent animus against their organizing activity. The judge expressed no concerns about the Respondent’s overall conduct in negotiations, but she found that the Respondent’s general willingness to bargain did not override the bad faith inherent in its proposals. In its exceptions, the Respondent argues that the totality of its conduct as well as the legitimacy of its business justifica- tions show that it did not engage in bad-faith bargaining. We agree with the Respondent that it did not bargain in bad faith. Nearly 70 years ago, the Supreme Court held that “the Board may not, either directly or indirectly, compel con- cessions or otherwise sit in judgment upon the substan- tive terms of collective bargaining agreements.” NLRB v. American National Insurance Co., 343 U.S. 395, 404 (1952). Those substantive terms result from negotiation over proposals put forward by the parties. Thus, the Board is also prohibited from sitting in judgment on a party’s substantive bargaining proposals. See Rescar, Inc., 274 NLRB 1, 2 (1985) (“[I]t is not the Board’s role to sit in judgment of the substantive terms of bargaining, but rather to oversee the process to ascertain that the par- ties are making a sincere effort to reach agreement.”).9 The essence of bad-faith bargaining is a purpose to frus- trate the possibility of arriving at any agreement, and the Board looks to the totality of an employer’s conduct to determine whether the employer has bargained in bad faith. See, e.g., West Coast Casket Co., Inc., 192 NLRB 624, 636 (1971), enfd. in relevant part 469 F.2d 871 (9th Cir. 1972). Section 8(d) of the Act provides that the duty 9 We recognize that the content of a specific bargaining proposal may become relevant in determining whether a party was making a sincere effort to reach an agreement or whether it was intent on frustrat- ing the very possibility of reaching an agreement. See Reichhold Chemicals, 288 NLRB 69, 69 (1988) (stating that “in some cases spe- cific proposals might become relevant in determining whether a party has bargained in bad faith”). This does not mean, however, that the Board decides that particular proposals are either acceptable or unac- ceptable. Rather, the Board “examine[s] proposals when appropriate and consider[s] whether, on the basis of objective factors, a demand is clearly designed to frustrate agreement on a collective-bargaining con- tract.” Id. to bargain in good faith “does not compel either party to agree to a proposal or require the making of a conces- sion.” Accordingly, even “adamant” insistence on a bar- gaining position “is not of itself a refusal to bargain in good faith.” Atlanta Hilton & Tower, 271 NLRB 1600, 1603 (1984). The judge’s findings that an employer bargains in bad faith based solely on its substantive proposals and the fact that they are consistent with unlawful preelection statements cannot be reconciled with these principles. Indeed, such findings cannot reasonably stand on the record before us, since the evidence shows that both par- ties merely held firmly to their respective proposals, as they were entitled to do under Section 8(d). We there- fore reverse the judge’s findings and dismiss this allega- tion. A. The Respondent’s Overall Good-Faith in Bargaining Initially, we agree with the judge’s implicit finding that there is no evidence of bad faith in the Respondent’s overall negotiating conduct. At the outset of the parties’ bargaining relationship re- garding the HSS specialists at the end of January 2012, the Respondent showed its good faith by executing a side letter agreement with the Union that included several assurances designed to immediately address some of the Union’s concerns. When bargaining commenced in May, the parties quickly focused on several key issues. Consistent with the ARD’s finding that there was “some evidence” that HSS specialists direct other employees when acting as incident commanders, the Respondent took the position that it would be inappropriate for HSS specialists to continue to perform incident commander duties as members of the bargaining unit. Moreover, since it was those duties that required an HSS specialist to be present at the facility at all times, the Respondent also took the position that it was unnecessary to maintain a schedule ensuring that an HSS specialist was always on duty—or, for that matter, to have five HSS specialists. Accordingly, the Respondent proposed changing their duties to eliminate incident command and related work, altering their work schedules, and reducing their num- ber.10 In addition, with incident command and related duties removed from the HSS specialist classification, the Respondent proposed replacing that classification with a new bargaining-unit classification called health and safety coordinator (HSC). The Union, in contrast, sought to retain the status quo, although it also proposed 10 Consistent with the side letter agreement, in which the Respond- ent agreed that the elimination of any HSS specialist jobs would not result in layoffs, the Respondent proposed transferring three employees currently occupying HSS specialist positions to the Operations Depart- ment. PHILLIPS 66 5 adding duties to the HSS specialist classification that would preserve the need for an HSS specialist at the fa- cility at all times, even if the duties of the position were to change.11 From May to November, the parties engaged in 11 bargaining sessions and exchanged several proposals, and it is clear from the record that throughout negotia- tions both the Respondent and the Union engaged in hard but lawful bargaining over the key issues. Thus, the judge found that “throughout all of the bargaining ses- sions, neither party moved from their original positions vis-à-vis the Santa Maria HSS [specialists].” More spe- cifically, the judge found as follows: (a) in June, “there was little movement in the parties’ positions,” and the parties “remained at odds over . . . whether the HSS [specialist classification] warranted 24/7 coverage” and over “the number of individuals needed to perform” the job; (b) in July, “[t]he parties did not move substantially off of their respective positions”; (c) in August, “the par- ties basically regurgitated their previous positions”; and (d) in September, “the parties made little progress,” and the Union “essentially stood on [its] original position.” In other words, both parties did what they were entitled to do under Section 8(d) of the Act: they stood firm on their respective positions. Atlanta Hilton & Tower, su- pra, 271 NLRB at 1603. At the same time, the Respondent also showed it was willing to adjust its proposals, and it reached agreement with the Union on several issues. In June, the parties agreed to a seniority provision that would apply to any displaced HSS specialists. In July, the Respondent pro- posed that HSS specialists transferred to lower-paying operator jobs retain their former HSS specialist salaries for 13 weeks following such a transfer. Also in July, the Respondent agreed to include the HSS specialists in an annual salary increase, as the Union requested. In Au- gust, the parties agreed that HSS specialists would no longer perform Incident commander functions. That same month, the Respondent tentatively agreed to a $2500 lump sum ratification bonus, conditioned on the Union’s agreement to proposed changes in HSS special- ists’ job duties and schedules. In November, after the Respondent presented its final offer to the Union, it granted the Union’s request for additional time to con- sider the offer. The conduct summarized above is not that of an employer intent on frustrating the possibility of reaching agreement. Rather, the Respondent was lawful- ly adamant regarding its core positions while demonstrat- 11 Indeed, as the judge found, the Union proposed in July “to keep all five HSS [specialists] on a 24/7 shift schedule but without the [i]ncident [c]ommand/[o]wner function.” ing its willingness to compromise where it could do so without abandoning those positions. B. The Respondent’s Business Justifications In spite of the evidence that the Respondent met its ob- ligation to meet and confer with the Union in good faith, the judge found that the Respondent bargained in bad faith in part because, in the judge’s view, it had no legit- imate business justifications for its bargaining position. The judge found that the Respondent was not required to strip the HSS specialists of their allegedly supervisory duties following the representation election. She empha- sized the ARD’s finding that the HSS specialists were not statutory supervisors despite “some evidence” that they may have assumed supervisory duties as part of their incident commander function. She also determined that they did not in fact exercise supervisory authority as incident commanders because they only assumed those duties during the initial stages of an emergency, when a “Responsible Supervisor” oversaw their work. Without compelling evidence of the HSS specialists’ supervisory duties, the judge found that the Respondent’s related proposals (i.e., changes in work hours, removal of EMT duties) also lacked justification. In essence, the judge found that the Respondent could not adhere to its bargaining position because its underly- ing rationale for that position was incorrect. This is con- trary to the Supreme Court’s holding in NLRB v. Ameri- can National Insurance Co., supra, 343 U.S. at 404, that “the Board may not, either directly or indirectly, compel concessions or otherwise sit in judgment upon the sub- stantive terms of collective bargaining agreements” (em- phasis added).12 While the judge did not directly pass judgment on the substantive terms of the Respondent’s proposals, she did so indirectly by holding that the Re- spondent could not lawfully propose those terms without an ironclad justification. However, challenging the Re- spondent’s interpretation of the ARD’s decision is grist for the mill of collective bargaining: if the Respondent misread the decision, the Union could point that out at the negotiating table and cite it as a reason for rejecting the Respondent’s proposals. It is not for the Board to decide the good or bad faith of the parties based on the correctness or incorrectness of the reasons they put for- ward in support of their bargaining positions. Otherwise, 12 See also H. K. Porter Co. v. NLRB, 397 U.S. 99, 107-108 (1970) (“It is implicit in the entire structure of the Act that the Board acts to oversee and referee the process of collective bargaining, leaving the results of the contest to the bargaining strengths of the parties.”); Rescar, Inc., 274 NLRB at 2 (“[I]t is not the Board’s role to sit in judgment of the substantive terms of bargaining, but rather to oversee the process to ascertain that the parties are making a sincere effort to reach agreement.”). DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD6 an employer would be at risk of violating Section 8(a)(5) of the Act whenever it based a bargaining proposal on a questionable assessment of its fiscal condition or com- petitive position in the marketplace. Moreover, contrary to the judge’s rationale, it is not a condition of good-faith bargaining that an employer’s proposals be based on “legitimate business justifica- tions.” The Board has held that an employer bargains in good faith when it “reasonably believes” that its proposal “is fair and proper or that [it] has sufficient bargaining strength to force the other party to agree.” Atlanta Hil- ton & Tower, supra, 271 NLRB at 1603 (emphasis add- ed). In other words, if an employer believes it has enough leverage to obtain the union’s agreement, the fact that its proposal may not be based, in the judge’s words, on a “legitimate business justification” does not warrant a finding of bad-faith bargaining. For these reasons, it was not unlawful for the Respondent to stand firm on a position that may have been based on an incorrect inter- pretation of the ARD’s decision. C. The Similarity Between the Respondent’s Proposals and Its Unlawful Preelection Threat The judge also separately found that the Respondent bargained in bad faith because it “operated with a closed mind by advancing proposals that . . . were merely exten- sions of its preelection threats” to change HSS special- ists’ wages, hours, and working conditions if they voted for union representation. By finding bad-faith bargaining based solely on the similarity between the threat and the proposals, the judge impermissibly disregarded several longstanding principles of Board law. First, as already discussed, Board precedent requires an examination of the totality of a party’s conduct to de- termine whether it has met its obligation to bargain in good faith. See, e.g., Public Service Co. of Oklahoma (PSO), 334 NLRB 487, 487 (2001), enfd. 318 F.3d 1173 (10th Cir. 2003); Atlanta Hilton & Tower, supra, 271 NLRB at 1603; West Coast Casket, supra, 192 NLRB at 636. Invoking this principle, the judge relied on “other evidence of Respondent’s bad faith” in finding a viola- tion based on the nexus between the threat and the Re- spondent’s proposals. However, we have reversed the judge’s finding that the lack of a legitimate business jus- tification for the Respondent’s proposals showed bad faith, and there is no evidence that the Respondent did not otherwise bargain in good faith. Thus, there is no “other evidence of Respondent’s bad faith.” Even if the Respondent’s unlawful preelection threat is deemed rele- vant to a bad-faith determination, it cannot constitute the entire basis for a finding of bad-faith bargaining without running afoul of the well-established “total conduct” standard. Second, the just-cited cases also establish that the touchstone of bad-faith bargaining is a purpose to frus- trate the very possibility of reaching an agreement. The mere fact that an employer advances a proposal in collec- tive bargaining that happens to be consistent with an un- lawful preelection statement does not establish that its purpose is to avoid reaching agreement. This is easily shown. Suppose an employer unlawfully threatens, in advance of an election, that unit work will be outsourced if the union wins. Suppose further that the union does win, and in the course of collective bargaining the em- ployer convincingly demonstrates to the union that sub- contracting 20 percent of the unit’s work will make it possible to pay for the increase in wages and benefits the union is demanding. There is no evidence of bad-faith bargaining in this hypothetical. Rather, the employer is genuinely attempting to reach an agreement that accom- modates the union’s demands while achieving a way to pay for them. Under the judge’s theory, however, this employer’s subcontracting proposal would be evidence of bad-faith bargaining solely because of its connection with an unlawful preelection threat. We reject her rea- soning. Third, by focusing exclusively on statements the Re- spondent made before bargaining commenced, the judge disregarded the evidence most directly relevant to decid- ing any allegation of bad-faith bargaining—namely, the party’s conduct during collective bargaining, “both at and away from the bargaining table.” PSO, 334 NLRB at 487. As discussed, the evidence and the judge’s own findings demonstrate that the Respondent engaged in hard but lawful bargaining, adhering firmly to its core positions (as Section 8(d) expressly permits) while show- ing flexibility where doing so would not compromise those positions. Again, “[a] party is entitled to stand firm on a position if he reasonably believes that it is fair and proper or that he has sufficient bargaining strength to force the other party to agree.” Atlanta Hilton & Tower, supra, 271 NLRB at 1603. See also Coastal Electric Cooperative, 311 NLRB 1126, 1127 (1993) (“failure to make concessions, in the absence of other indicia of bad faith, is not a sufficient manifestation of bargaining with intent to avoid agreement”). And there is no evidence that the Respondent did or said anything away from the table during collective bargaining that tended to frustrate the possibility of reaching an agreement with the Union. Finally, once more, the judge’s rationale is impermis- sibly based on the substantive terms of the Respondent’s bargaining proposals regarding the potential transfer of the HSS specialists. By finding evidence of bad faith in the similarity between the Respondent’s proposals and its earlier unlawful threat, the judge effectively barred the PHILLIPS 66 7 Respondent from advancing any proposals related to removal of incident commander duties from the HSS specialists, at least where such proposals would adverse- ly affect the HSS specialists’ wages, hours, and job du- ties. This is precisely what applicable precedent— including Supreme Court precedent—says the Board may not do: sit in judgment on the substantive terms of an employer’s bargaining proposals. See, e.g., NLRB v. American National Insurance Co., supra, 343 U.S. at 404. Again, this does not mean that the content of a bar- gaining proposal may never be deemed relevant to de- termining whether a party was intent on frustrating the possibility of reaching an agreement. Indeed, the Board has held to the contrary. See Reichhold Chemicals, su- pra. Moreover, the Board has found bad-faith bargaining based on statements that clearly demonstrated the em- ployer’s desire to undermine negotiations and ultimately rid itself of the union.13 However, the Respondent’s ex- pressed intention to make changes to HSS specialists’ jobs if they voted to join the bargaining unit was not of this type, and its bargaining proposals aligned with that expressed intent did not evidence a purpose to frustrate the possibility of reaching an agreement. As recognized by the ARD, incident commander duties included direct- ing unit employees during refinery emergencies, and the Respondent did not want to assign such duties to mem- bers of the bargaining unit. The other changes sought by the Respondent were logical corollaries of its proposal to remove those duties from the HSS specialists. We need not belabor the truism that “an employer is entitled to the undivided loyalty of its representatives.” NLRB v. Yeshi- va University, 444 U.S. 672, 682 (1980). Nor is it con- testable that an employer has the right to bargain for its preferred contract terms, provided it acts in good faith. See NLRB v. American National Insurance Co., supra, 343 U.S. at 409 (rejecting Board’s finding that employ- 13 See, e.g., Overnite Transportation Co., 296 NLRB 669, 671 (1989) (employer’s preelection statements—threatening plant closure and loss of jobs if employees selected the Union, equating unionization with dire consequences, stating that it would not sign a contract, and threatening to bargain in bad faith to force a strike—showed that em- ployer was “bent on” bargaining in bad faith), enfd. 938 F.2d 815 (7th Cir. 1991); Port Plastics, 279 NLRB 362, 381–382 (1986) (employer’s unyielding proposals directly reflected its stated preelection intention not to give union “bastards” anything in negotiations); U.S. Ecology Corp., 331 NLRB 223, 223–226 (2000) (employer’s statement to union that employer was unwilling to reach new agreement with union and wanted to force the union out in the hopes that it would bust itself re- vealed employer’s improper motivation), enfd. 26 Fed. Appx. 435 (6th Cir. 2001); NLRB v. Hardesty Co., Inc., 308 F.3d 859, 865-868 (8th Cir. 2002) (employer statements away from bargaining table that deni- grated union and claimed that employees would be better off without union representation showed that employer was bargaining with no intention of reaching agreement), enfg. 336 NLRB 258 (2001). er’s proposal for a particular contract provision was a per se violation of the Act). We simply hold today that an employer does not bargain in bad faith by presenting and adhering to a proposal concerning a specific issue—e.g., as here, a proposal for unit employees to no longer per- form job functions that the employer considers supervi- sory—because the proposal overlaps with an unlawful preelection statement. III. THE ALLEGED PREMATURE DECLARATION OF IMPASSE AND UNILATERAL IMPLEMENTATION OF THE RESPONDENT’S FINAL OFFER The judge found that the Respondent prematurely de- clared impasse and unilaterally implemented its final offer unlawfully in December 2012. Citing Titan Tire Corp., 333 NLRB 1156, 1158–1159 (2001), she reasoned that the Respondent’s bad-faith insistence on proposals that mirrored its unremedied January 2012 preelection threat contributed to the parties’ inability to reach agree- ment and thereby precluded a valid impasse. Excepting, the Respondent argues that the judge incorrectly found that it bargained in bad faith and that the remaining evi- dence shows that the parties understood that they were at impasse after bargaining on many occasions with no movement on key issues. Because we have found that the Respondent did not bargain in bad faith, and because the parties’ course of negotiations shows that they were indeed at impasse, we agree with the Respondent. In determining whether negotiations have reached im- passe, the Board considers several factors, including the parties’ bargaining history, their good faith, the length of the negotiations, the importance of the issues in dispute, and the parties’ contemporaneous understanding of the state of negotiations. See Taft Broadcasting Co., 163 NLRB 475, 478 (1967), review denied sub nom. Ameri- can Federation of Television & Radio Artists, AFL–CIO v. NLRB, 395 F.2d 622 (D.C. Cir. 1968). An impasse finding is warranted where there is “‘no realistic possibil- ity that continuation of discussions . . . would have been fruitful.’” Truserv Corp. v. NLRB, 254 F.3d 1105, 1114 (D.C. Cir. 2001) (quoting Television Artists AFTRA v. NLRB, 395 F.2d at 628) (alteration in Truserv), cert. de- nied 534 U.S. 1130 (2002). Applying the above factors here, the clear pattern and direction of the parties’ deal- ings shows no realistic possibility that further negotia- tions regarding the Respondent’s proposed changes to the HSS specialist position would have been fruitful. Accordingly, the Respondent lawfully declared impasse and implemented its final offer. To begin, we have already found that the Respondent bargained with the Union in good faith, a critical element in determining the existence of impasse. See AMF Bowl- ing Co., Inc. v. NLRB, 63 F.3d 1293, 1299 (4th Cir. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD8 1995) (that employer bargained in good faith “bear[s] significantly” on impasse analysis and is a “powerful fact” in employer’s favor). After executing a side letter agreement that addressed several of the Union’s immedi- ate concerns, the parties met 11 times over approximate- ly 7 months. Although they made modest progress in narrow respects where possible, each side stood firm on its proposals regarding the critical issues, as the judge herself found. It is clear they took the necessary time to understand each other’s positions and attempt to bridge the gaps where possible. The Board and the courts have consistently found valid impasse under similar circum- stances. See, e.g., Calmat Co., 331 NLRB 1084, 1099 (2000) (finding impasse where it was clear after 7 months and 10 bargaining sessions that neither party would modify its position on critical issue); Laurel Bay Health & Rehabilitation Center v. NLRB, 666 F.3d 1365, 1374–1375 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (finding impasse where, after 6 months of negotiations, the parties remained as far apart as ever on critical issue). On this record, we have no reason to reject the Respondent’s representation that its Final Company Proposal was “final” and that it was not willing to make any additional concessions. Impasse may of course be broken by changed circum- stances that revive the duty to bargain. See, e.g., Charles D. Bonanno Linen Service, Inc. v. NLRB, 454 U.S. 404, 412 (1982); Airflow Research & Mfg. Corp., 320 NLRB 861, 862 (1996). However, the parties’ interaction fol- lowing the declaration of impasse further evidences that bargaining would not have been fruitful. At the Novem- ber 18 meeting, the Respondent informed the Union that it would return to the bargaining table “with room to move” if the Union would agree that only two HSS spe- cialists could be transferred to HSC positions. The Un- ion’s representative responded, “Don’t hold your breath,” and the Union’s ensuing silence during the 3 weeks pre- ceding the Respondent’s implementation of its final offer confirms that it had no intention of making any counter- proposals or concessions that might have broken the im- passe. As shown by the parties’ conduct in negotiations, the HSS specialist staffing issue was critically important to each of them. The Respondent reasonably believed that the HSS specialists acted in a supervisory capacity when refinery emergencies triggered their incident commander function. It had a fundamental objection to vesting that function in members of the bargaining unit and thus as- signing leadership of an entire facility during emergen- cies to individuals with divided loyalties. The Respond- ent further reasonably viewed the removal of the incident commander duties as warranting more extensive changes to the HSS specialists’ terms and conditions, including to their classification as HSS specialists. The Union, for its part, eventually agreed to the removal of the incident commander duties but took the position that nothing else of importance should change as a result. Both parties made their positions, and their commitment to those po- sitions, known from the very outset of negotiations, and they firmly adhered to them thereafter. The parties’ pro- tracted lack of progress on these critical issues further supports a finding of impasse. See, e.g., Truserv Corp. v. NLRB, 254 F.3d at 1118; Richmond Electrical Services, 348 NLRB 1001, 1002-1003 (2006); ACF Industries, 347 NLRB 1040, 1041 (2006). We recognize that the parties at times expressed a ge- neric willingness to be flexible in their positions, and each made several limited concessions during negotia- tions. However, these minor deviations from their oth- erwise steadfast positions were insufficient to forestall impasse. A party’s “bare assertions of ‘flexibility’ on open is- sues and its generalized promises of ‘new’ proposals” do not, without more, demonstrate a significant change in bargaining position. Holiday Inn Downtown-New Ha- ven, 300 NLRB 774, 776 (1990). “Rather, there must be substantial evidence in the record that establishes changed circumstances sufficient to suggest that future bargaining would be fruitful.” Serramonte Oldsmobile, Inc. v. NLRB, 86 F.3d 227, 233 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (empha- sis in original). The Union’s “reiterat[ion] [of its] will- ingness to compromise,” “commit[ment] to reaching an agreement” and request to meet again, followed by the Respondent’s answer that it “remain[ed] committed to bargaining in good faith to resolve these (and any other) areas of disagreement,” does not meet this standard. Neither party made specific proposals or counterpro- posals, or indeed, statements with any substance whatso- ever. See Serramonte Oldsmobile, 86 F.3d at 233 (im- passe not avoided where “not a single one of the Union’s statements . . . actually committed the Union to a new position or contained any specific proposals . . . . [T]he Union’s attorney offered only vague generalities and neither explicitly agreed to any of the employer’s pro- posals nor offered any specific counterproposals.”); Erie Brush & Mfg. Corp. v. NLRB, 700 F.3d 17, 24 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (party’s statement that “I do have some give on the arbitration issue . . . [, but] I don’t have a counter at this point” not evidence of changed circumstances sufficient to avoid impasse). Further, the fact that the parties reached a few tentative agreements and expressed willingness to compromise over secondary issues does not mean that either party was prepared to make additional concessions, much less to do so on the key issues on which they were at logger- PHILLIPS 66 9 heads. See, e.g., Truserv Corp. v. NLRB, 254 F.3d at 1115 (although employer “bargained in good faith [and] made substantial concessions, [it] ultimately reached a point when it was simply unwilling to compromise fur- ther”); Television Artists AFTRA v. NLRB, 395 F.2d 622, 627 (D.C. Cir. 1968) (although “minor advances toward agreement were being made all along,” record showed that parties would not budge on key issue). While such evidence of give-and-take between the parties does sup- port a finding that they bargained in good faith, it does not show that further negotiation would have been fruit- ful. For instance, although the Union agreed to the re- moval of incident commander duties from the HSS spe- cialist position, both parties treated this change as a mere precursor to more challenging negotiations, including over the possible elimination of the position and the em- ployees’ reassignment to lower-paying positions. “[A]n impasse is no less an impasse because the parties were closer to agreement than previously, and a deadlock is still a deadlock whether produced by one or a number of significant and unresolved differences in positions.” Taft, 163 NLRB at 478. In sum, despite assertions of flexibility devoid of sub- stance and minor movement on issues of secondary im- portance, the parties took opposing positions on the criti- cal issues, all of which related to the consequences of removing the incident commander function from the HSS specialists. The parties bargained in good faith but were unable to reach agreement on the key issues. The Act requires nothing more. See AMF Bowling, 63 F.3d at 1301 (parties “need not pursue negotiations simply to go through the motions when there is no objectively rea- sonable hope of reaching an agreement”). Accordingly, since bargaining had reached an impasse, the Respondent did not violate Section 8(a)(5) and (1) by implementing the terms of its final preimpasse offer. IV. THE ALLEGED UNLAWFUL RETALIATION Finally, the judge found that the Respondent’s unilat- eral implementation of its final offer also violated Sec- tion 8(a)(3) and (1) on the basis that it was implemented to retaliate against the HSS specialists for pursuing union representation. In support, she relied upon her previous findings that the Respondent had bargained in bad faith and prematurely declared impasse, and she also found that the similarity between the Respondent’s final offer and its January 2012 statement to the HSS specialists about the possible consequences of unionization shows that implementation of the final offer was motivated by antiunion animus. As we have already found, contrary to the judge, that the Respondent bargained in good faith to a lawful im- passe, the only remaining question is whether the simi- larity between the final offer and the preelection threat provides sufficient grounds for this alleged violation. We find that it does not. The Respondent’s good faith in bargaining with the Union until impasse is strong evi- dence negating any inference of continuing animus stemming from the preelection threat. As discussed in more detail above, the Respondent was consistently will- ing to listen to the Union’s proposals, explain its own, and make concessions where it was possible to do so without abandoning its core bargaining position. Over the course of negotiations during the 11 months follow- ing the preelection threat, the Respondent fully explained its valid concern about assigning incident commander functions to members of the bargaining unit, and its ulti- mate reassignment of the HSS specialists was the logical outgrowth of this concern. Throughout negotiations, the Respondent made no statements and engaged in no con- duct that suggested it was acting with anything other than a sincere desire to reach an acceptable agreement with the Union. In these circumstances, the mere similarity between the preelection threat and the Respondent’s final offer does not meet the General Counsel’s burden of showing that the Respondent implemented its final offer in order to retaliate against the HSS specialists for their union votes. See, e.g., Orval Kent Food Co., 278 NLRB 402, 403 (1986) (unlawful statement about withholding merit increases following bargaining insufficient basis for Section 8(a)(3) violation because statement was a “realistic statement of the effects of the bargaining obli- gation,” employer did not bargain in bad faith, and “the evidence [was] insufficient to establish that its withhold- ing of the merit increases was for any reason other than the parties’ failure to agree on this issue”). AMENDED CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. The Respondent is an employer engaged in com- merce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act. 2. The Union is a labor organization within the mean- ing of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. By threatening its HSS specialists on January 16, 2012, that unionization would lead to the loss of job du- ties, work hours, and existing schedules, the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. ORDER The National Labor Relations Board orders that the Respondent, Phillips 66, Santa Maria, California, its of- ficers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall 1. Cease and desist from (a) Threatening employees with adverse changes to their terms and conditions of employment if they select the Union as their bargaining representative. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD10 (b) In any like or related manner interfering with, re- straining, or coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed them by Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action necessary to effectuate the policies of the Act. (a) Within 14 days after service by the Region, post at its Santa Maria, California facility copies of the attached notice marked “Appendix.”14 Copies of the notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 31, after being signed by the Respondent’s authorized repre- sentative, shall be posted by the Respondent and main- tained for 60 consecutive days in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are cus- tomarily posted. In addition to physical posting of paper notices, notices shall be distributed electronically, such as by email, posting on an intranet or an internet site, and/or other electronic means, if the Respondent custom- arily communicates with its employees by such means. Reasonable steps shall be taken by the Respondent to ensure that the notices are not altered, defaced, or cov- ered by any other material. If the Respondent has gone out of business or closed the facility involved in these proceedings, the Respondent shall duplicate and mail, at its own expense, a copy of the notice to all current em- ployees and former employees employed by the Re- spondent at any time since January 16, 2012. (b) Within 21 days after service by the Region, file with the Regional Director for Region 31 a sworn certifi- cation of a responsible official on a form provided by the Region attesting to the steps that the Respondent has taken to comply. Dated, Washington, D.C. January 31, 2020 ______________________________________ John F. Ring, Chairman ______________________________________ Marvin E. Kaplan, Member ________________________________________ William J. Emanuel Member (SEAL) NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 14 If this Order is enforced by a judgment of a United States court of appeals, the words in the notice reading “Posted by Order of the Na- tional Labor Relations Board” shall read “Posted Pursuant to a Judg- ment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board.” APPENDIX NOTICE TO EMPLOYEES POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government The National Labor Relations Board has found that we violated Federal labor law and has ordered us to post and obey this notice. FEDERAL LAW GIVES YOU THE RIGHT TO Form, join, or assist a union Choose representatives to bargain with us on your behalf Act together with other employees for your bene- fit and protection Choose not to engage in any of these protected activities. WE WILL NOT threaten you with adverse changes to your terms and conditions of employment if you select the Union as your bargaining representative. WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner interfere with, restrain or coerce you in the exercise of the rights listed above. PHILLIPS 66 The Board’s decision can be found at www.nlrb.gov/case/31-CA-085243 or by using the QR code below. Alternatively, you can obtain a copy of the decision from the Executive Secretary, National Labor Relations Board, 1015 Half Street, S.E., Washington, D.C. 20570, or by calling (202) 273-1940. Nicole Pereira and Simone Gancanyo, Esqs., for the General Counsel. Michael Chamberlin and Julie Ting, Esqs. (Winston & Strawn LLP), for the Respondent. Michael Weiner, Esq. (Gilbert & Sackman), for the Charging Party. DECISION Statement of the Case LISA D. THOMPSON, Administrative Law Judge. This case PHILLIPS 66 11 was tried in Los Angeles, California, on February 24 through 27, 2014. The trial resumed to conclusion on March 18 and 19, 2014. On July 12, 2012, the United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rub- ber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial & Service Work- ers International Union, AFL–CIO/CLC (the USW, Local 534 or the Union) filed a charge in Case 31–CA–085243 against Phillips 66 (Respondent or Phillips 66).1 This charge was amended on July 25, 2012. On January 18, 2013, the Union filed a charge in Case 31–CA–096709 against Respondent. This charge was amended on March 6 and November 26, 2013, re- spectively. On November 27, 2013, the Regional Director for Region 31 consolidated both charges and issued a complaint and notice of hearing. On December 10, 2013, Respondent filed its answer, denying all material allegations and setting forth its affirmative defenses to the complaint. The consolidated complaint alleges that Respondent: (1) vio- lated Section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act (the Act) when Respondent made unlawful threats/reprisals to its Health and Safety Shift Specialists (HSS) on January 16 and 19, 2012; (2) violated Section 8(a)(5) of the Act when Re- spondent failed to bargain in good faith with the Union by bar- gaining with no intention of reaching an agreement; (3) violat- ed Section 8(a)(5) of the Act by unilaterally implementing its final proposal before reaching impasse; (4) violated Section 8(a)(3) of the Act by retaliating against its HSSs when Re- spondent implemented its final proposal that demot- ed/reassigned the HSSs to other lower paying bargaining unit positions; and (5) violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act when Respondent promulgated and maintained an unlawful work rule that prohibits employees from speaking to the news media. The parties were given full opportunity to participate, intro- duce relevant evidence, examine and cross-examine witnesses, and file briefs. I carefully observed the demeanor of the wit- nesses as they testified. I have studied the entire record, the post-trial briefs, and the authorities cited therein. Based on more detailed findings and analysis below, I find that Respond- ent violated the Act as alleged in the complaint. FINDINGS OF FACT I. JURISDICTION Respondent is a corporation with an office and place of busi- ness in Santa Maria, California. Respondent is engaged in the business of oil and gas refining, marketing, and transportation. During the 12-month period ending September 25, 2012, Re- spondent derived gross revenues in excess of $500,000. During this same time period, Respondent’s Santa Maria refinery sold and shipped goods valued in excess of $50,000 directly from points outside of the state of California. As such, Respondent admits, and I find, that at all material times it was an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act. 1 GC Exh. 1A. Abbreviations used in this decision are: “Tr.” for Transcript; “GC Exh.” for General Counsel’s Exhibit; “CP Exh.” for Charging Party’s Exhibit; “R.Exh.” for Respondent’s Exhibit; “GC Br.” for the General Counsel’s Brief; “CP Br.” for the Charging Party’s Brief; and “R Br.” for Respondent’s Brief. Respondent further admits, and I find, that the following in- dividuals held the positions set forth opposite their names and have been agents of Respondent within the meaning of Section 2(13) of the Act: Jason Gislason Superintendant of Operations Tim Seidel Site Manager Jerry Stumbo Site Manager Tiffany Wilson Human Resources Manager The United Steelworkers Union is a large international union with members in several of Respondent’s facilities nationwide. USW Local 534 represents the majority of the employees at the Santa Maria refinery. As such, Respondent admits, and I find that, at all material times, the Union is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. II. ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Background Facts 1. Overview of Respondent’s Operation. Phillips’ Santa Maria, California refinery is an industrialized facility that processes crude oil into other more useful petro- chemical products. It operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week. There are 130–135 employees at the facility, and it is one of Respondent’s smallest refineries in the United States. Respondent has a standing collective-bargaining relationship with the Union. The parties' most recent collective-bargaining agreement (CBA) is effective from February 1, 2012 to January 31, 2015. The CBA, by its terms, covers operating, mainte- nance, and laboratory employees at Respondent's refineries in Los Angeles, Rodeo, and Santa Maria, California. Almost all of Respondent’s refineries are unionized and most of the Santa Maria employees are represented by the Union. Prior to December 10, 2012, there were five HSSs at the Santa Maria facility: Lionel Senes (Senes), Andy Garcia (Gar- cia), Bernie Gallizio (Gallizio), Alan Lanier (Lanier), and Ste- ven McNeil (McNeil).2 As HSSs, they conducted training, per- mit auditing, fire, CPR, first aid, and annual safety training and procedure reviews. The HSSs also responded to fire, medical, hazmat and gas releases at the facility, and performed emergen- cy medical response (EMT) duties. They also responded to all emergencies at the facility as the Incident Commander. The Incident Command is an emergency management system. If a safety emergency or “incident” occurred within the refinery, the HSS serving as the Incident Commander assumed control over facility operations for the duration of the incident. As Incident Commander, the HSS made all decisions regarding facility operations during the incident and coordinated any safety re- sponse required to mitigate potential risks. The HSSs were also responsible for serving as the Incident Owner. Once the “incident” was safely controlled, as the Inci- dent Owner, the HSS investigated the cause of the incident or near miss at the refinery. At that point, the Incident Owner created incident impact reports where they tracked and docu- 2 Health and Safety Shift Specialists are also called Safety and Emergency Response Specialists and Health and Safety Specialists. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD12 mented each incident/near miss at the refinery, ensured that the documentation was accurate and complete regarding the inci- dent, inputted the report into a computerized system (called the incident impact system), and forwarded the incident to the ap- propriate management official for further handling. Refining incidents rarely occurred, but when they did, they typically lasted for brief periods of time. Only the HSSs served in the role of Incident Commander/Incident Owner. While Respond- ent’s witnesses testified that the role and duties of the Incident Commander were inherently supervisory, as will be set forth in greater detail below, the HSSs controlled the refinery as Inci- dent Commander solely during the “incident.” Once the inci- dent was sufficiently controlled and documented, a Shift Su- pervisor took over responsibility for the incident. The HSSs worked a rotating 28-day shift. A shift set consist- ed of four 12-hour night shifts with a day off; three 12-hour day shifts with a day off; and three 12-hour night shifts. Afterwards, the HSSs would get a week off in between sets of shifts. The HSSs generally worked 42 hours per week. Respondent established a detailed management structure at the Santa Maria facility. It maintained a supervisor over each department (i.e., health, maintenance, engineering, operations) who reported to the Site Manager at the facility. Initially, Jeff Patterson was the safety and emergency response supervisor in Santa Maria. He served as the HSSs’ first-line supervisor. At some point, Patterson was demoted as supervisor, and since January 16, 2012, Glen Pericoli (Pericoli) served as the HSSs’ direct supervisor.3 From approximately July 2010 through July 2012, Jason Gislason (Gislason) was the Operations and Technical Superin- tendent (supervisor) at the Santa Maria refinery. In that role, Gislason was responsible for most of the engineering functions at the refinery. Gislason also oversaw the day to day operations in Santa Maria between Patterson’s demotion and Pericoli’s hiring. He reported to Tim Seidel. Tim Seidel (Seidel) was the Site Manager at the Santa Maria refinery from early 2010 through February 2012. Seidel was Pericoli’s and Gislason’s supervisor. As Site Manager, Seidel was responsible for the daily operational activities of the refin- ery, including health, safety, environmental, and maintenance. After being promoted and transferred to Respondent’s facility in Oklahoma, Seidel left in February 2012, and Jerry Stumbo (Stumbo) took over as Site Manager at the Santa Maria refin- ery. Rand Swenson (Swenson) was the Site Manager at the Ro- deo, California refinery. He also oversaw some of the daily operations in Santa Maria during the early management transi- tions at the facility. Swenson served as Rodeo’s Site Manager 3 The parties stipulated that Glen Pericoli was a supervisor of Re- spondent within the meaning of Sec. 2(11) of the Act in that he had the authority to engage in at least one of the following: hiring, transferring, suspension, layoffs, recall, promotion, discharge, assignment, reward, or discipline of other employees or responsibility to direct them, to adjust their grievances or effectively to recommend such action, and use independent judgment in the exercise of this authority. See Tr. at. 30. from approximately January 16, 2012 through February 2013.4 Tiffany Wilson (Wilson) was the Human Resources (HR) Manager for the San Francisco refinery. In that role, Wilson also performed HR duties for the Rodeo and the Santa Maria refineries. She was responsible for personnel issues at the fa- cilities including labor relations and grievances. 2. Organizing Campaign. In or around September 2011, the Union began organizing the five HSSs at the Santa Maria Refinery. In early November 2011, Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, Lanier, McNeil, and Union Steward Willie Kerns (Kerns) took a petition to unionize to Seidel. According to Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, and McNeil, Seidel refused to accept their petition but Seidel denied their version of events. However, it is unnecessary to resolve this discrepancy, because it is undisputed that Seidel became aware that the five HSSs intended to vote whether to join the Union. It is undisputed that, prior to the NLRB election (discussed below), Respondent held several meetings with the HSSs. The first meeting occurred in November or December 2011, at the firehouse at the Santa Maria facility. Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, McNeil, Wilson, and Swenson were present at the meeting. According to Senes, Garcia, and Gallizio, Wilson introduced Swenson to the HSSs. Swenson asked the HSSs why they were unionizing, to which Senes told Swenson that the HSSs were having problems working with Seidel and were unhappy with some of management’s decisions concerning them. Swenson stated that the HSSs “got the company’s attention” by petition- ing to unionize and that he wished he had spent more time at the Santa Maria refinery. He went on to state that he was there to work with the HSSs to resolve their issues. While Wilson added that she wished that the HSSs would have contacted her with their concerns, Gallizio replied that he previously emailed Wilson about their concerns but received no response from her. According to Senes and Gallizio, Swenson then told the HSSs that he had previously run a refinery with only one su- pervisor, he was not going to do that again, and he was not going to hire any more people. While Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, and McNeil admitted on cross-examination that they were ini- tially mistaken about when this meeting occurred, Swenson was not called to testify and Wilson did not provide any testimony concerning this meeting. Accordingly, Senes, Garcia, and Gal- lizio’s testimony regarding this meeting stands uncontroverted.5 4 The parties stipulated that Rand Swenson was a supervisor of Re- spondent within the meaning of Sec. 2(11) of the Act in that he had the authority to engage in at least one of the following: hiring, transferring, suspension, layoffs, recall, promotion, discharge, assignment, reward, or discipline of other employees or responsibility to direct them, to adjust their grievances or effectively to recommend such action, and use independent judgment in the exercise of this authority. See Tr. at 30. 5 While the statements made during this November/December 2011 Swenson meeting were outside the 10(b) period and have not been alleged as independent 8(a)(1) violations, I admitted this testimony as background evidence of Respondent’s alleged anti-union animus. See East Buffet & Restaurant, Inc., 352 NLRB No. 116, slip op at 40 (2008)(citations omitted)(“employer’s statements which cannot form the basis of a finding of an unfair labor practice ‘may be used as back- ground evidence throwing light on…Respondent’s motivation for con- PHILLIPS 66 13 3. Region 31 Decision and Direction of Election. On November 2, 2011, the Union filed a petition to include the five HSSs at the Santa Maria Refinery in the existing statewide multi-facility bargaining unit. Respondent challenged the appropriateness of the HSSs being included in the bargain- ing unit based on Respondent’s belief that many of the duties the HSSs performed made them “supervisors” under the Act. However, it is important to note Respondent’s rationale for its belief. Respondent argued to Region 31 that the HSSs’ duties and responsibilities: (1) as Incident Commander/Incident Owner, (2) training other employees regarding safety issues/use of safety equipment, (3) as company representative in disciplinary situations involving bargaining unit employees and (4) other “supervisory indicia” made them “supervisors” or “supervisory employees” as defined under the Act. However, in a decision dated December 21, 2011, the Acting Regional Director (ARD) of Region 31 rejected all of Respond- ent’s arguments and concluded that the HSSs were not supervi- sors or supervisory employees under the Act.6 The ARD’s rationale in this regard is particularly important. Specifically, with respect to Respondent’s argument that the HSSs are supervisors when they serve as the Incident Com- mander/Incident Owner (because they are solely responsible for decisionmaking in the facility when an emergency is invoked), the ARD found that emergencies occur infrequently, and as such, the HSSs spent a very small percentage of their overall working time serving in this capacity. Moreover, the ARD not- ed that the HSSs do not act in a supervisory capacity as the Incident Commander. In fact, Respondent’s own written mate- rials revealed that the HSS perform the Incident Commander role only during the initial stages of the incident, and thereafter, hand over control of the incident to their supervisor. The ARD further found insufficient evidence to conclude that the HSS responsibly directed employees or otherwise acted as a supervi- sor when serving as Incident Owner. Regarding Respondent’s argument that the HSSs are super- visors because they train other employees on safety issues, the ARD found that the record proved otherwise. In fact, the ARD determined that the HSSs performed “routine” safety training according to established procedure and the Safety and Emer- gency Response supervisor was ultimately responsible for es- tablishing the training content and procedure. Regarding Respondent’s assertion that the HSSs are supervi- sors because they serve in that capacity during disciplinary meetings, the ARD rejected this argument. Specifically, the ARD determined that: The record is devoid of evidence that the HSS specialists hire, transfer, suspend, lay off, recall, promote, discharge, disci- pline employees or adjust their grievances. The only evidence duct within the 10(b) period.’”); see also Sunshine Piping, Inc., 351 NLRB 1371, 1387 (2007)(citing Tejas Electrical Services, 338 NLRB 416, 416 n.5 (2002))(anti-union statements, even if not themselves alleged to be violations of the Act can be relied on as evidenc to sup- port the employer’s anti-union animus). 6 GC Exh. 13. that HSS specialist reward employees is with respect to an in- centive program that all employees participate in, whereby any employee can recognize a co-worker for good work, and the coworker receives a small trinket in return. The only evi- dence of employee discipline involves a situation where an HSS specialist acted as a witness to an employee infraction, which led to that employee’s discipline. There is no evidence that the HSS specialist sought or recommended the employ- ee’s discipline. The discipline was not issued by the HSS spe- cialist. The record is absent of any examples of disciplinary action issued by, or effectively recommended by, HSS spe- cialists towards other employees.7 Finally, the ARD concluded, contrary to Respondent’s asser- tions, that there was insufficient evidence to suggest that the HSSs were “supervisory employees” or agents of Respondent based upon other “supervisory indicia.”8 Once the ARD’s Decision was issued, it is undisputed that Respondent’s counsel gave Wilson, Seidel, Stumbo, and Gisla- son his interpretation of the ARD’s findings. However, none of Respondent’s management team personally read the ARD’s Decision. Nevertheless, Respondent appealed the ARD’s Deci- sion to the Board, and the Board declined review.9 B. Alleged Pre-Election Threats 1. Alleged Threats to Change/Remove Job Duties and Cut Overtime—January 16, 2012 meeting. On January 16, 2012, four days before the scheduled elec- tion, Respondent held a second meeting with Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, and McNeil at the firehouse at the Santa Maria Refin- ery. Seidel and Wilson were present for management. It is undisputed that Wilson asked the HSSs if they had any ques- tions for management to which the HSSs stated, “no.” Wilson also conveyed to the HSSs that the purpose of the meeting was to give them information so they could make an informed deci- sion on whether to vote for or against the Union. However, all other aspects of this meeting are disputed. According to Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, and McNeil, Wilson told them that management felt that certain aspects of their jobs were supervisory which would be taken away from them if they joined the Union. Wilson also told the HSSs that Respondent may not need to have them work a 24/7 shift. Senes recalled that Wilson told the HSSs, because Respondent felt they were supervisors, management would have to look at other aspects of their job duties to see if they were supervisory. Similarly, Gar- cia recalled that Wilson stated that there would be changes to their jobs if they decided to join the Union because “anything Respondent felt was supervisory would be taken away.”10 McNeil recalled that Wilson essentially told them that if the HSSs supported the Union, they “might lose their jobs,” some of them would be reassigned to eight-hour jobs, they would no longer have the Incident Commander function, others may come in and perform some of their duties, their vacation sched- 7 Id. at 20. 8 Id. at 21–23; see also GC Exh. 14. 9 GC Exh. 15. 10 Tr. at 175. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD14 ules might change, and some of them may be transferred to other jobs. According to McNeil, he understood Wilson to say that “[the HSSs] may not have their jobs if they voted for the Union.”11 Lastly, Seidel told the HSSs that Respondent may have to adjust their overtime if they joined the Union and that that their job duties would be reviewed to see if Respondent needed them on a 24-hour versus an eight-hour shift which would be a way to mimimize overtime. However, Wilson and Seidel denied saying anything that conveyed any negative consequences for the HSSs voting to join the Union. Specifically, Wilson recalled that she told the HSSs that if they voted to join the union, Respondent would need to engage in bargaining with the Union to discuss their wages, hours, and job duties. She also told the HSSs that man- agement believed some of their duties were supervisory. She further explained that, as part of the discussion about their wag- es, hours, and job duties, Respondent would need to discuss their duties with the Union because Respondent could not have bargaining unit employees performing supervisory duties. She denied that she ever told the HSSs that they would lose their jobs, that their hours, shifts, or overtime would be cut or that anything negative would happen if they voted to join the Union. Likewise, Seidel denied that he made any statements relating to anything adverse happening to the HSSs if they voted to join the Union. Seidel noted that the jest of the meeting was to un- derstand why the HSSs wanted to join the Union and to explain to them the election process. According to Seidel, he wanted to ensure the HSSs were aware of what would need to be negoti- ated if they decided to join the Union. However, Seidel admit- ted he told the HSSs that if they voted to join the Union, man- agement would need to discuss their schedules, their rate of pay, and their duties because management believed many of their current duties were supervisory. Seidel denied telling the HSSs that their hours, wages, or overtime would be cut, they would no longer work a 24/7 schedule, or that they would lose their jobs if they voted to join the Union. At this point, it is important to discern precisely what was said by whom during this meeting, a matter that turns on an evaluation of credibility. While this is a close credibility ques- tion, I credit Senes’, Garcia’s, and Gallizio’s testimony over that of Wilson and Seidel. First, there is no dispute, based upon all of the witnesses’ tes- timony, that Wilson and Seidel told the HSSs that management felt that certain aspects of the HSSs’ job duties were superviso- ry, and that those duties would need to be reassigned, because Respondent believed they could not have bargaining unit em- ployees performing supervisory duties. In fact, Wilson and Seidel admitted to these statements. I also find that Senes’, Garcia’s, and Gallizio’s testimony was consistent, specific as to the statements made versus generalized assertions, and support- ed by one another. Although McNeil basically reiterated Senes’, Garcia’s and Gallizio’s testimony about what Wilson and Seidel told them during the meeting, McNeil essentially paraphrased Wilson’s and Seidel’s statements. Because of this, I will not rely on McNeil’s testimony. 11 Tr. at 496–497. However, I do not credit Wilson’s or Seidel’s testimony con- cerning their statements. Although Wilson and Seidel couched their testimony concerning what they told the HSSs by stating that management “would need to discuss” certain of the HSSs’ job duties, schedules, etcetera, with the Union, I find Senes’, Garcia’s, and Gallizio’s version more consistent with Wilson’s and Seidel’s overall testimony that management felt that some of the HSSs’ duties were supervisory, and if so, those duties would need to be removed from them which would necessitate a change in their hours, shifts, and schedules. Most importantly, I found Wilson’s testimony on other areas, particularly on cross-examination, evasive and, at times, unbelievable which called into question her overall testimony and credibility. Accordingly, I find that Wilson told the HSS that: (1) man- agement felt that certain aspects of their jobs were supervisory which would be taken away from them if they joined the Un- ion, (2) Respondent may not need to have the HSS on a 24/7 shift (because without those supervisory duties, they may not have a business need for the HSS to work a 24/7 shift), and (3) because Respondent felt that the HSSs were supervisors, man- agement would have to look at other aspects of their job duties to see if they were supervisory. I also find that Seidel told the HSS that Respondent may have to adjust their overtime if they joined the Union, and their job duties would be reviewed to see if Respondent needed them on a 24-hour versus an eight-hour shift which would be a way to mimimize overtime. 2. Alleged Threats—January 19, 2012 Stumbo meeting. On January 19, 2012, one day before the scheduled election, Respondent held another meeting with Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, and McNeil at the the Santa Maria Refinery. Wilson, Stumbo, and Gislason were present for management. It is undisputed that, as the new Site Manager at the Santa Maria refinery, Stumbo introduced himself and described his background working for Respondent. However, again, every- thing else about this meeting is disputed. According to Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, and McNeil, Stumbo told them that he wanted to mend the relationship between the HSSs and management, but Stumbo denied making this state- ment at the meeting. Stumbo also told the HSSs that they had a tough decision regarding whether to join the Union, but Stumbo did not testify one way or the other about this statement. According to Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, and McNeil, Wilson told them that it was management's preference that they vote “no” for the Union and management preferred to deal directly with the HSSs versus through the Union. Wilson also told the HSSs that if they voted against the Union, management would work toward "mending fences" between management and the HSSs. In response, Garcia replied, "So what you’re saying is, if we join the Union, you're not going to work with us?” to which Wilson did not respond. Garcia described that there was “an awkward silence” after his statement then Gislason interjected, “What Wilson meant was we can’t talk to you, we have to go through the Union.”12 Regarding the “mending fences” comment, none of Re- spondent’s witnesses denied that Wilson made the remark. 12 Tr. at 79, 176–177, 456–458, 498–499. PHILLIPS 66 15 Although Gislason denied that Wilson ever said anything to discourage the HSSs from voting for the Union, he never spe- cifically denied that Wilson made the “mending fences” re- mark. For her part, Wilson admitted that Stumbo told the HSSs that he wanted to repair the relationship between the HSSs and management. However, according to Wilson, she followed up Stumbo’s comment by saying,“if [you] decide to go union, [Respondent] would have a legal obligation to discuss manda- tory subjects of bargaining with the Union on your behalf and [Respondent] would be unable to talk directly with you about wages, hours and working conditions.”13 In response, Gallizio, not Garcia, replied, “So are you saying that you don’t want a relationship with us?” to which Wilson responded “no, that’s not what I’m saying.”14 Again, it is important to discern what was said by whom dur- ing this meeting, which, again, boils down to an evaluation of credibility. Here, I credit Garcia’s testimony concerning the statements made at this meeting. First, Garcia’s testimony is consistent with and corrobated by the testimony of Senes, Gallizio, and McNeil. Second, none of Respondent’s witnesses refuted Garcia’s testimony concerning what Wilson told them, which lends further support toward Garcia’s version of the meeting. Third, Wilson admitted on cross-examination that she told the HSSs that management preferred that they vote “no” on unionizing and would prefer to deal directly with them which, again, supports Garcia’s testi- mony. Moreover, as stated above, Wilson’s credibility is dimin- ished overall as she was extremely evasive in her testimony during cross-examination, particularly when questioned by union counsel, and only after being instructed to answer a ques- tion directly, did she answer counsel’s questions. Fourth, neither Stumbo nor Gislason specifically denied that Wilson told the HSSs that if they voted against the Union, management would work with them to mend fences. Although Wilson testified to a version of this statement by couching it in the content of bargaining with the Union, I find her version incredible. Specifically, if Wilson made the statement which she testified, it defies common sense that Gallizio (according to her version), who has some familarility with working in a un- ionized environment, would have misunderstood her remark to such an extent that he would have replied, “So are you saying that you don’t want a relationship with us?” Rather, it seems more logical that Wilson told the HSSs that management would work to “mend fences” if they voted against the Union, which prompted Garcia to respond the way he did. In fact, it is undis- puted that the HSSs already told Wilson that they were having difficulties with some of management’s decisions concerning the HSSs (the reason they were considering unionizing) so I find it more reasonable for Wilson to have made the “mending fences” remark against that backdrop. Finally, Garcia’s version of events is particularly believable given that Wilson admitted that she told the HSSs that management preferred that they vote against unionization. Accordingly, I find that, after Stumbo introduced himself 13 Tr. at 829–830. 14 Tr. at 830–831. and gave his background, he told the HSSs that: (1) they have a tough decision before them vis-à-vis whether to join the Union, nevertheless (2) he looked forward to working with them to repair their relationship with management. I also find that Wil- son then told the HSSs that: (1) management preferred that they vote against the Union, because management preferred to deal directly with the HSSs versus through the Union, and (2) if they voted against the Union, management would work toward “mending fences” between the HSSs and management. I further find that, after Wilson’s remark about “mending fences,” Gar- cia replied, “so what you’re saying is, if we join the Union, you’re not going to work with us?” to which Gislason interject- ed, “What Wilson meant was we can’t talk to you, we will have to go through the Union.” At some point after the Stumbo meeting, Senes documented the discussions between the HSSs and Wilson and Seidel dur- ing the January 16, 2012 meeting.15 According to Senes, he gave his statement to the Union but he was evasive on when he wrote the statement and could not recall when or to whom in the Union he gave the statement. However, none of the other HSSs recalled reporting Wilson’s or Seidel’s statements during the January 16 meeting to anyone in the Union. C. Alleged Threat of Reprisal 1. January 19, 2012 Gislason meeting. Immediately after the January 19, 2012 meeting, Senes, Gar- cia, Gallizio, and McNeil returned to the firehouse to discuss what happened. Again, this is the only fact that is undisputed. According to Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, and McNeil, several minutes later, Gislason arrived at the firehouse and asked if he could talk to them. Gislason told the HSSs he was concerned about them to which Gallizio replied that he did not like how the meeting went and the HSSs felt that their jobs were being threatened. Gislason replied that their concerns were justified and told the HSSs that everything Wilson and Seidel had previ- ously told them about their jobs was going to happen. Gislason followed up by saying that he was worried about them and their decision to join the Union because Respondent wanted to make their decision to join the Union as undesirable as possible so that other HSSs at other refineries would not vote to join the Union. Sometime after the Gislason meeting, Senes again docu- mented the discussions during the Stumbo and the Gislason meetings.16 Although Garcia, Gallizio, Lanier, and McNeil also signed the statement, neither Senes (nor any of the other HSSs) could recall the exact details or circumstances surrounding when or how they signed the statement. While Senes recalled that he gave this second statement to the Union, he could not recall when or to whom in the Union he gave the statement. Gislason vehemently denied the statements attributed to him during this meeting. According to Gislason, he never met with Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, or McNeil after the Stumbo meeting, because he was previously told that the 24-hour period before an election was protected. As such, Gislason made sure that he had no conversations with the HSSs after the Stumbo meeting. 15 R. Exh. 6. 16 R. Exh. 7. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD16 Rather, Gislason explained that, after the Stumbo meeting, he returned to his office, stayed there for the remainder of the day and never went to the firehouse that day. After closely reviewing the transcript, I found both the HSSs’ and Respondent’s witnesses’ testimony troubling for several reasons. First, while McNeil’s testimony was consistent on direct and cross examination and was corroborated by the testimony of Senes, Garcia, and Gallizio as well as by their signed statement, I find that Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, and McNeil were particularly evasive during cross-examination about when they signed the January 19 statement, to whom within the Union they gave the statement, and the reasons why they did not initially recall or report this meeting. Second, I am particularly troubled by the fact that McNeil recalled all the specific details of the Stumbo meeting in his Board affidavit but never mentioned the Gislason meeting that purportedly occurred 10 minutes later. Specifically, McNeil was asked: Q (by Respondent’s counsel): And in that affidavit, you didn’t mention anything at all about your meeting with Jason Gisla- son on January 19th, that you described here today; did you? A: No. Q: That meeting with Jason Gislason on the 19th, that hap- pened – your testimony was that that happened after a meet- ing with Jerry Stumbo? A: Correct. Q: And you said it was about ten minutes later? A: Yes. Q: And you said it lasted around 10 or 15 minutes in total? A: Correct. Q: And I believe you testified that Jason came down to the firehouse; is that correct? A: Correct. Q: Are you certain that happened on the 19th? A: One hundred percent. Q: And you’re absolutely certain that Jason said the things that you said he said? A: One hundred percent. Q: No doubt in your mind at all? A: No doubt in my mind at all.17 McNeil explained that he forgot to mention the Gislason meet- ing in his Board affidavit because he could not recall all the details of every meeting when asked about them one year after the events occurred. However, I find it unreasonable to believe that, at the time of the Board affidavit, McNeil (and the other HSSs) could recall all the specific details of the Stumbo meet- ing but could not recall anything about the Gislason meeting that purportedly occurred 10 minutes later. Most importantly, the heart of the Gislason meeting supposedly confirmed that the alleged threats and reprisals (made by Wilson and Seidel) would occur if they voted for the Union. Thus, it stretches the imagination that these types of statements did not trigger any- one’s recollection about the Gislason meeting at the time of the Board affidavit. 17 Tr. at 508–509. Moreover, while Garcia described what he recalled of the Gislason meeting in his Board affidavit, he spoke in broad gen- eralities about what occurred. In contract, Garcia described Respondent’s statements during the January 16 and 19, 2012 meetings in specific and concrete terms. In short, I was suspi- cious of the HSSs’ testimony concerning the Gislason meeting. I also found Gislason’s testimony regarding this meeting equally troubling. First, Respondent failed to present any doc- umentary evidence to support Gislason’s testimony that he was in his office during the period in question. Second, although Gislason appeared posed and confident during some of his tes- timony, I found him evasive and inconsistent during other por- tions. For example, I found Gislason disingenuous when he testified that he specifically recalled what Stumbo told the HSSs about his background (a rather insignificant part of the meeting) but could not recall specifically what Wilson or Stumbo told the HSSs about the election process or what would happen regarding their duties, schedules and wages if they joined the Union (the sole purpose of the meeting). On balance, however, I conclude that the Gislason meeting occurred and that Senes’ and Garcia’s version should be credit- ed. First, despite my reservations about certain aspects of their testimony, Senes’ and Garcia’s testimony was corrobated by each other, Gallizio and McNeil. Most importantly, however, I must credit their testimony over Gislason’s because Senes and Garcia were in Respondent’s employ at the time of the hearing and testified while management representatives were present. Under these circumstances, their testimony has a special guar- antee of reliability, because, by offering evidence that essential- ly accuses Respondent of wrongdoing, they put their economic security at risk.18 The HSSs’ version is further supported by evidence, which will be discussed in further detail later in this decision, that Respondent implemented a proposal at another refinery that was remarkably similar to the adverse predictions made to the HSSs in Santa Maria. Thus, what Gislason purport- edly told them (i.e., that Respondent intends to make their vote difficult so that other HSSs will not vote for the Union) has some basis in fact. Accordingly, I find that, after the Stumbo meeting, Gislason: (1) met the HSSs at the firehouse; (2) told the HSSs that Re- spondent intended to follow through on their alleged threats (i.e., to cut their work hours, schedules, and overtime); and (3) Respondent intended to make their decision as difficult as pos- sible in order to discourage them and other HSSs from voting in the Union. 2. Election/Certification On January 20, 2012, Region 31 conducted an election for the HSSs at Santa Maria Refinery. The HSSs voted 5-0 to join the Union. On January 31, 2012, the Regional Director for Re- gion 31 issued a Certification of Representative certifying the Union as the collective-bargaining representative of employees in the following unit: Included: All operating maintenance, laboratory employees, and health and safety shift specialists at the Employer's Santa 18 See Gold Standard Enterprises, 234 NLRB 618, 619 (1978). PHILLIPS 66 17 Maria Refinery. Excluded: All other employees, guards and supervisors as de- fined in the Act.19 D. Alleged Failure to Bargain in Good Faith 1. January 2012 Statewide Bargaining Session It is undisputed that Respondent and the USW met through- out January 2012 in Walnut Creek, California, to negotiate a successor statewide agreement covering employees at Re- spondent’s Rodeo, Santa Maria and Los Angeles refineries. During these negotiations, the Union presented two bargaining proposals to Respondent concerning the Santa Maria HSSs. However, Respondent rejected these proposals because, at that time, the election results for the Santa Maria HSSs had not been certified.20 It is also undisputed that, toward the end of the statewide ne- gotiations, Respondent and the Union entered into preliminary discussions about the Santa Maria HSSs before the Union was certified as their bargaining representative. While the Union asked that Respondent promise to retain all five HSSs in their positions, Respondent rejected this offer because management had not yet evaluated how its business and operational needs would be impacted by the decision. However, after further discussions, on January 30, 2012, the parties executed a side letter agreement regarding the HSSs. In so doing, the parties agreed: Within (30) days following ratification of the 2012 Collective Bargaining Agreement, the Company agrees to meet with the Union to commence bargaining related to the Health & Safety Shift Specialists at the Santa Maria Refinery. At the conclu- sion of the bargaining process, the Company agrees to assign a wage rate of $32.80 plus NOBP [National Oil Bargaining Pattern Increase] to the Health & Safety Shift Specialist posi- tion (title subject to change through the bargaining process). Should any Health & Safety Shift Specialist (title subject to change through the bargaining process) positions be eliminat- ed as a result of the collective bargaining process, the Compa- ny agrees not to lay off any impacted employees. The focus of this job classification will remain Health & Safety and will contain Health & Safety job duties.21 With the January 30, 2012 side letter agreement in place, Re- spondent and the USW reached a tentative agreement concern- ing the statewide collective-bargaining agreement on January 31, 2012. The statewide contract was ratified on February 1, 2012.22 Although the parties were required to begin negotia- tions about the HSSs, they agreed to postpone discussions for several months until after Respondent’s turnaround was com- 19 GC Exh. 16. 20 R.Exhs. 31–32. 21 GC Exh. 18. 22 GC Exh. 17. pleted.23 During the time between February 2012 and when the bar- gaining sessions began (in May 2012), Respondent began re- viewing the duties and responsibilities of the HSSs in light of the ARD’s Decision and the HSSs’ election. In determining whether the HSSs performed any supervisory duties, Wilson believed the Incident Commander/Owner function was supervi- sory in nature. According to Wilson, she was told by counsel that the ARD found that the HSSs did not spend a sufficient amount of time performing the Incident Commander/Owner and other supervisory indicia-type duties to be considered su- pervisors. However, Wilson admitted that she never read the ARD’s Decision which, in reality, specifically found insuffi- cient evidence that the Incident Commander/Owner function or various others duties performed by the HSSs were supervisory in nature. Nevertheless, Wilson asked Stumbo to examine the HSSs’ job duties to determine if any of their duties were supervisory. Stumbo consulted with Supervisor Pericoli and they reviewed all of the HSSs duties. Despite that the ARD conclsuded other- wise, Stumbo concluded that the Incident Commander respon- sibility was a supervisory function which should be removed from the HSSs. According to Stumbo, one of the primary rea- sons for having the HSSs work a 24/7 shift was due to their responsibility to serve as Incident Commander. With this func- tion removed, Stumbo concluded that the HSSs’ remaining duties did not warrant 24/7 shift coverage. Stumbo further de- termined that the HSSs’ remaining duties could be performed on an eight-hour day schedule, so he concluded that Respond- ent only needed one full-time employee to perform the remain- ing HSSs duties. It is undisputed that Stumbo had not read the ARD’s Decision during this time period. Accordingly, despite that the ARD concluded that there was insufficient evidence that the Incident Commander/Owner and EMT duties were supervisory in nature, Respondent, at mini- mum, misinterpreted the ARD’s findings and drew its own conclusions on the HSSs’ duties it believed were supervisory. This decision would prove fatal for Respondent. 2. May-November 2012 Bargaining From May to November 2012, the parties engaged in eleven bargaining sessions and exchanged several proposals regarding the terms and conditions of employment for the HSSs. For the majority of the sessions, Field Director of Local 675 Gary Hol- loway (Holloway), International Union Representative Ron Espinoza (Espinoza), Committee Member Steve Swader (Swader), Garcia, Refinery Committee Member Richard Wingert (Wingert) and Committee Member Bryan Sawtelle (Sawtelle) represented the Union. Wilson and Los Angeles HR Manager Pam Morgan (Morgan) represented Respondent. Mike Welsh (Welsh) served as counsel for management, but he was later replaced by John McLachlan (McLachlan). Gislason also participated in the early session until around July 2012 when he moved to Houston. All of the bargaining sessions took place the Hilton Garden Inn in Santa Maria. 23 A “turnaround” occurs when an operating unit is completely shut down for full scale maintenance. A turnaround requires the participa- tion of all personnel at the refinery, including Union representatives. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD18 It is undisputed that, throughout all of the bargaining ses- sions, neither party moved from their original positions vis-à- vis the Santa Maria HSSs. Specifically, Respondent’s position was essentially that, in reviewing all of the HSSs responsibili- ties, Respondent believed that the Incident Command function was supervisory in nature, which accordingly, did not belong in the bargaining unit position. Because the Incident Command function necessitated having five HSSs work on a 24/7 shift, without this function, Respondent determined that changes to the HSSs position were necessary because Respondent did not have a business need to maintain all five HSSs performing work on a 24/7 shift. In contrast, the Union’s position was essentially to keep all five HSSs in place with all of their duties they maintained prior to the election. To the extent that the HSSs duties without the Incident Command function did not warrant a 24/7 shift, the Union attempted to negotiate duties to include to the HSSs position in order to maintain the 24/7 shift coverage. a. May 2012 Bargaining Sessions It is undisputed that the parties spent the bulk of the May ne- gotiations discussing the HSSs’ job duties. In this regard, Re- spondent presented a proposal for discussion that listed all of the HSSs duties it believed should be part of the bargaining unit position.24 Because Respondent believed it needed to remove any duty it felt was supervisory in nature, Respondent pro- posed, the parties discussed and ultimately exchanged docu- ments concerning the job duties for a newly created bargaining unit position called the Health and Safety Coordinator (HSC) which would replace the HSS position.25 The HSC position was essentially a bargaining unit position that included what Re- spondent believed were the HSSs remaining nonsupervisory duties. Wilson explained to the Union that, with the removal of what Respondent believed were the HSSs’ supervisory duties (i.e., the Incident Command/Owner duties), there was no business justification to have HSSs on 24/7 shift coverage. Without the necessity of 24/7 shift coverage, Wilson explained it was no longer necessary to have five HSSs. Respondent also proposed reassigning the HSSs’ EMT du- ties. In that regard, Respondent explained that, while it be- lieved that these duties were not supervisory in nature, it envi- sioned having outside contractors perform EMT duties, because Respondent believed it needed certified EMTs on a 24/7 basis at the refinery. For its part, the Union strongly maintained that all five of the HSS should remain on shift. Regarding the alleged “threats,” while Holloway was generally aware of the alleged threats and reprisals made by management during the January 16, the Stumbo and the Gislason meetings, he was extremely evasive regarding when he became aware of the threats, who told him about the threats, and whether he had received the HSSs state- ments by the May 2012 negotiations. Nevertheless, it is undis- puted that no one raised the alleged threats during these negoti- ations. 24 GC Exhs. 2, 21–22. 25 GC Exh. 20. b. June 2012 Bargaining Sessions It is undisputed that there was little movement in the parties’ positions during the June bargaining sessions. Initially, the parties discussed the job duties outlined in General Counsel’s Exhibit 22 and who would be performing which job. Respond- ent proposed a list of duties for the HSC position, which did not include the Incident Command/Owner or EMT functions.26 The Union presented a counterproposal, which essentially called for five HSC/HSS to perform the same job duties, including the Incident Command/Owner function, as they previously per- formed on a 24/7 shift schedule.27 In response, Respondent countered by proposing the creation of two HSC positions (versus one HSC as previously recom- mended by Stumbo) that would be staffed on an eight hour day schedule, at an Operator 2 wage rate of $32.80 per hour. This wage rate was less than what the HSS were earning as salaried employees. The three remaining HSSs would be transferred to the Operations department.28 While Respondent believed that it had no business justification to employ five bargaining unit HSS on a 24/7 shift without the Incident Command/Owner function, the Union rejected Respondent’s proposal, asserting that other nonsupervisory duties could be performed on a 24/7 basis that justified employing all five HSSs. Because of this stalemate, the parties shifted their discussions toward filling open positions and job protection for the HSS. The parties ex- changed proposals in that regard and ultimately reached a tenta- tive agreement regarding seniority in the event that any of the HSSs were displaced.29 Accordingly, by the end of the June 2012 sessions, it is un- disputed that the parties remained at odds over: (1) whether the HSS position warranted 24/7 coverage, and (2) the number of individuals needed to perform the position. Moreover, there was no mention of the alleged threats or reprisals made by Wil- son or Seidel. c. July 2012 Bargaining Sessions The parties did not move substantially off of their respective positions during the July 2012 negotiations. However, in an effort to compromise, the Union proposed to have four HSS on a 24/7 shift schedule and one HSC on a day schedule to provide relief coverage.30 However, Holloway admitted that this pro- posal was no different than the status quo—i.e., five HSS on a 24/7 shift schedule which consisted of four HSS working a 24/7 shift and one HSS providing relief coverage. In response, Respondent essentially maintained its position – i.e., to have two HSC on an eight hour day schedule, with the remaining three HSS transitioning into Operations. However, Respondent also proposed providing 13 weeks of wage protec- tion for any of the HSSs who would be transferred to the Oper- ations department.31 The Union rejected both of Respondent’s proposals. At this point, Union referred to and gave Respondent 26 GC Exh. 48. 27 GC Exh. 23. 28 GC Exh. 24. 29 GC Exhs. 28. 30 GC Exhs. 29, 31. 31 GC Exhs. 30, 51. PHILLIPS 66 19 a copy of the ARD’s Decision to support their position that the Incident Command/Owner function was not supervisory in nature (or any of the other duties Respondent believed were supervisory), thus, the HSSs duties need not be removed from them. However, Wilson never read the specifics of the ARD’s rationale during the July negotiations, and as such, the parties maintained their respective positions. After Respondent’s proposals were rejected, it is undisputed that, during the July 5, 2012 session, the Union told Respondent about the alleged threats of reprisals made by Gislason if the HSSs joined the Union. Holloway also read the HSSs’ written statements to Respondent. Although Holloway was aware of the alleged threats prior to July 5, he told Respondent about the alleged threats during this session because, according to him, it was during this session when it became clear to the Union that Respondent intended to carry out their threats. However, I found Holloway’s testimony evasive and inconclusive on this point. Nevertheless, after learning of the alleged threats, Wilson asked Gislason whether he made any threatening statements or remarks that could be construed as threats to the HSSs. Gisla- son denied making any such statements. With no significant movement in negotiations, the Union re- directed the discussion and proposed that Respondent apply its annual salary adjustment to the HSSs. While Respondent disa- greed that the HSSs were now eligible for the increase (because they were now considered bargaining unit versus salaried em- ployees), because they were salaried employees prior to the election, Respondent agreed that the HSSs would receive the adjustment.32 Accordingly, at the end of the July 2012 bargaining sessions, the parties’ positions essentially remained unchanged. The Union proposed to keep all five HSS on a 24/7 shift schedule but without the Incident Command/Owner function, and Re- spondent proposed to create two HSC positions and move the remaining three HSS into Operations at their HSS salary for 13 weeks. As a result of the continued stalemate between the paties, in a letter dated July 6, 2012, Wilson expressed concern about the slow pace and lack of progress in the negotiations and urged the Union to spend more time negotiating over the issues regarding the HSSs.33 d. August 2012 Bargaining Session During the August bargaining sessions, the parties basically regurgitated their previous positions. The Union again proposed to keep all five HSS on a 24/7 shift schedule, except the HSS would not perform the Incident Command/Owner function or assume a leadership role. However, this time, the Union re- quested that the HSSs receive a lump sum payment.34 Re- spondent accepted that the HSS would not assume a leadership role and agreed to the lump sum payment on the condition that the Union agree to accept two HSC positions on an eight hour day shift schedule and move the three remaining HSS into Op- 32 GC Exh. 31. 33 GC Exh. 70. 34 GC Exhs. 34, 36. erations with wage rate protection.35 As such, neither party substantially moved from their original positions. Near the end of the August negotiations, the Union suggest- ed that Garcia review all of the duties of the HSSs and suggest additional duties that the HSSs could perform to justify main- taining round the clock coverage. Respondent agreed to consid- er Garcia’s suggestions. e. September 2012 Bargaining Sessions Again, the parties made little progress in negotiations during the September bargaining sessions. Although Garcia suggested additional duties that could justify maintaining 24/7 coverage, Respondent determined that none of the additional duties pro- vided a legitimate basis to employ five HSS on a 24/7 shift.36 Accordingly, Respondent again proposed to assign two HSC and pay them at the Operator 2 rate and move the remaining three HSS to Operations at the Operator 2 rate. The Union was required to respond to the proposal by September 16, 2012; otherwise, Respondent’s proposal would become effective.37 Once the parties reconvened for another bargaining session, the Union essentially stood on their original position, i.e., to add the HSC to the CBA, as a 24/7 shift position, and maintain all the job duties performed by the HSSs except that of Incident Command/Owner.38 Respondent rejected this proposal. At some point, Respondent suggested and the parties dis- cussed an agreement reached between Respondent and the Un- ion regarding the HSSs at Respondent’s Alliance refinery in Louisiana. There, Respondent and the Union agreed to a pro- posal whereby, after the Alliance HSSs’ unionized, three HSS became HSCs on an eight hour day schedule and two HSS were transferred into Operations. However, this proposal was not acted upon. Meanwhile, Respondent again proposed to have two HSCs work an eight hour day schedule, (which two HSCs to be de- termined by the Union), and transfer the remaining three HSS into Operations.39 Sometime later, Respondent outlined the HSCs’ duties, how many HSSs would become HSCs, how many would move into Operations, and their respective wage rates.40 However, in this proposal, the HSSs moving to Opera- tions would receive the Basic Trainee rate of $23.30 per hour versus the Operator 2 rate as previously proposed.41 Although the Union rejected this proposal and told Respondent’s team that they were following through on the alleged threats to pun- ish the HSSs for unionizing, Respondent withdrew the previ- ously proposed Operator 2 wage rate when the Union failed to respond by the September 16, 2012 deadline. In any event, Respondent denied making good on any alleged threats against the HSSs. Accordingly, by the end of the September negotiations, the parties’ positions still remained unchanged. There were no 35 GC Exh. 37. 36 GC Exh. 76. 37 GC Exh. 52. 38 GC Exh. 38. 39 GC Exh. 54. 40 GC Exh. 39. 41 Id.; see also GC Exh. 52. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD20 bargaining sessions in October. 3. October 26, 2012 Letter On October 26, 2012, Respondent sent a letter to the Union reiterating the business justifications for its bargaining pro- posals.42 Respondent again explained to the Union that it de- termined that the Incident Command function was supervisory because, during an emergency, the Incident Commander/Owner would outrank the Plant Manager. As such, Respondent could not have a bargaining unit employee serving in that role. Therefore, according to Respondent, the Incident Owner duties needed to be assigned to a supervisor to avoid a potential con- flict of interest where a bargaining unit HSS may be required to investigate a fellow bargaining unit employee. Again, this ra- tionale was directly contrary to the ARD’s findings. Respondent further noted that, with the removal of all of the supervisory aspects of the HSSs’ duties, it no longer justified keeping all five HSSs on 24/7 shift schedule. Respondent fur- ther explained that the EMT duties were never a necessary job function for the HSSs, and as such, could be filled by other means. Interestingly, Respondent’s letter noted, “now that they [the HSSs] have made that choice [to join the Union], the Company must make appropriate changes to its operations to ensure supervisory duties are performed by supervisors; this merely reflects the necessary changes which are legitimate and logical consequences of that choice.”43 4. November 18, 2012 Bargaining Session and Respondent’s Final Offer The parties held another bargaining session on November 18, 2012. Wilson explained to the Union that Respondent’s team felt the parties were at impasse because, after numerous ses- sions, neither had essentially moved from their respective posi- tions. To that end, Respondent presented its final offer, which reflected their overall position. In short, Respondent (again) proposed two HSCs work an eight hour day schedule and per- form most of the HSS’s duties except the Incident Own- er/Command and EMT functions. Respondent proposed to transfer the remaining three HSSs into Operations at the Opera- tor 1 wage rate. The Union was required to respond by Novem- ber 26, 2012.44 McLauglin, Respondent’s counsel, told the Union that there was room for movement if the Union agreed to the two HSCs, but Holloway reportedly responded, “Don’t hold your breath.” For his part, Holloway was evasive and inconclu- sive in confirming this remark, stating, “I may have said that. I don’t remember.”45 Following these negotiations, the Union requested an exten- sion of time to respond to Respondent’s proposal to which Re- spondent granted.46 However, in a letter to Respondent dated December 4, 2012, the Union rejected Respondent’s final pro- posal.47 While the Union explained that it did not believe the parties were at impasse, the Union did not offer any additional 42 GC Exh. 56. 43 Id. 44 GC Exh. 40. 45 Tr. at 316, 395, 940–941. 46 GC Exhs. 40–42. 47 GC Exh. 44. proposals.48 Respondent sent a response letter to the Union reiterating its position that there was no business justification for five HSS on a 24/7 shift and its belief that the parties had reached impasse in negotiations. Respondent informed the Union that, as a result of the impasse, it intended to implement its last and final offer effective on December 10, 2012.49 It is undisputed that the Union never passed a proposal that accepted less than five HSS working a 24/7 shift schedule and Respondent never passed a proposal that accepted more than two HSC working an eight hour day schedule and three other HSS transitioning to Operations. E. Unilaterally Implemented Final Proposal On December 10, 2012, Respondent unilaterally implement- ed its November 18, 2012 final offer.50 Senes and Garcia, the two most senior HSSs, were reassigned as Health and Safety Coordinators. They performed duties set forth in General Coun- sel’s Exhibit 40.51 As HSCs, they no longer served as Incident Commander/Owner or performed EMT duties at the refinery. They also worked the day shift versus a 24/7 shift schedule. Gallizio, Lanier, and McNeil, the less senior HSSs respec- tively, were reassigned to the Operations department. After completing probationary training, they became entry level Op- erators, working a 12-hour rotating shift schedule, earning the Operator 1 rate of $23.50 per hour. As Operators, Gallizio, Lanier, and McNeil oversaw decoking procedures, cleaned process areas, signed maintenance work orders, locked out equipment prior to maintenance, and wrote job orders to repair equipment.52 Gallizio, Lanier, and McNeil also served as junior members of the Emergency Response Team, along with 30 other operators. As an Operator, Lanier earned approximately $20,000 less per year versus when he was a HSS. However, as a HSS, Lanier worked approximately 100 hours on his off days. McNeil held the least seniority of all of the HSSs. As an Operator, McNeil worked limited overtime in 2013 and earned approximately $26,000 less per year less versus when he was a HSS. Because of his juniority, McNeil was given the last choice in vacation schedules. As a result, in Oc- tober 2013, McNeil resigned to take a job as a full-time fire- fighter with the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant.53 F. July 2013 Discussions On or about July 1, 2013, the parties began additional dis- cussions concerning the HSSs. At that time, the Union pro- posed to reduce the number of HSSs from five to two and drop the 24/7 shift coverage requirement. However, the Union de- manded a higher wage rate for the HSC and a retroactive wage 48 Id. 49 GC Exh. 45. 50 GC Exh. 40. 51 Id. 52 Decoking is the process of disposing of crude oil by turning it into a granulated type product so it can be safely transported off site. 53 There was no claim in counsel for the General Counsel’s or coun- sel for the Charging Party’s brief that McNeil was constructively dis- charged due to his demotion/reassignment by Respondent. PHILLIPS 66 21 increase for the remaining three HSS who were reassigned into Operations.54 Respondent rejected this proposal. Although the parties continued discussions, they were unable to come to an agreement and negotiations resulted in impasse. G. News Media Policy On December 10, 2012, Stumbo sent an email to all Phillips 66 employees at the Santa Maria Refinery. The email stated: With the recent supply and demand issues in California, and the resulting price increases, it is extremely important for all employees and contractors to not speak to the news media about our operations. Confidentiality is a condition of em- ployment and I urge you to not speculate on market condi- tions or refinery operations. Please be aware of the following guidelines. News Media Guidelines If a Phillips 66 employee or on-site contractor is contacted by a member of the news media, no information exchange is permitted concerning Santa Maria or Rodeo Refinery opera- tions. It is against company policy for anyone but an author- ized company spokespersons (sic) to speak to the news media. This is to ensure that our company's communications to the public are aligned and consistent, and that they are factual and meet all legal and business confidentiality requirements. All media inquiries are to be referred to the designated site spokesperson. Please refer all calls to Kristen Kopp. If you have any questions, please contact your supervisor.55 III. DECISION AND ANALYSIS A. Impermissible Threats and Threats of Reprisals The first issue in this case is whether Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act when it threatened to remove certain job duties, and cut work hours and overtime if the HSSs voted to join the Union. Based upon the evidence, I conclude Re- spondent violated the Act as alleged. 1. Parties’ Positions Citing the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co., 395 U.S. 575 (1969), and the Board’s decisions in Poly-America, Inc., 328 NLRB 667 (1999)(citations omitted) and Noah’s Bay Area Bagels, LLC, 331 NLRB 118 (2000), counsel for the General Counsel (CGC) asserts that Respond- ent’s statements to its HSSs regarding the effects of unioniza- tion violate Section 8(a)(1) of the Act because they were coer- cive threats and/or promises of benefit intended to interfere with/restrain the HSSs from exercising their Section 7 rights. Respondent denies it violated Section 8(a)(1) and maintains that it: (1) made lawful predictions about the potential effects of unionization on the HSSs’ jobs; (2) made no promises of bene- fit but conveyed its legal obligations to bargain with the Union; and (3) made no threats of reprisals against the HSSs for join- 54 R. Exh. 45. 55 GC Exh. 46. ing the Union. 2. Prevailing Legal Authority Under NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co., an employer’s predic- tions of adverse consequences as a result of unionization are either coercive threats in violation of Section 8(a)(1) or lawful expressions about unionization, which are protected by Section 8(c) of the Act. To determine the difference, the proper inquiry is whether, based upon the totality of the circumstances, the employer’s prediction is “carefully phrased on the basis of ob- jective fact to convey the employer’s belief as to demonstrably probable consequences beyond his control.”56 If so, the state- ment is considered a reasonable prediction of adverse conse- quences resulting from unionization and is lawful free speech under Section 8(c) and the First Amendment. On the other hand, if there is any implication that the em- ployer will take action solely on its own initiative for reasons unrelated to economic necessities and known only to him, the statement is no longer a reasonable prediction but a threat of retaliation. These types of statements are not protected by Sec- tion 8(c) or the First Amendment, rather they are unlawful co- ercive threats that violate Section 8(a)(1).57 When analyzing alleged unlawful statements, the Board “view[s] employer statements from the standpoint of employees over who the em- ployer has a measure of economic power,”58 because it “take[s] into account the economic dependence of the employees on their employers, and the necessary tendency for the [employee], because of that relationship, to pick up intended implications of the [employer] that might be more readily dismissed by a more disinterested ear.”59 Thus, for example, where an employer predicts that unionization will result in a loss of benefits when there “is no lawful explanation based on objective facts as to why [the] loss of a benefit would occur,” the employer’s state- ment violates the Act.60 In short, the trier of fact must assess, under the totality of the circumstances, whether the employer conveyed what “could” occur if employees unionized (which would be lawful predictions) versus what “would” occur (which would be unlawful threats). 3. Analysis First, I must determine whether Respondent’s statements to the HSSs on January 16 and 19, 2012, were impermissible threats. With respect to the January 16, 2012 statements, the CGC alleges that Respondent’s remarks to the HSSs that union- ization would result in the loss of/changes to their duties, work hours and schedules constitute unlawful threats, because there was no lawful reason based on any objective fact to explain why these changes would occur. I agree. Specifically, regarding Wilson’s statements, as I previously found in the statement of facts, the credited testimony shows that Wilson told the HSSs that management believed certain of 56 NLRB v. Gissell Packing Co., 395 U.S.575, 589, 618 (1969). 57 Id. 58 Purple Communications, Inc., 361 NLRB No. 43, slip op. at 3 (2014) (citing Mesker Door, 357 NLRB No. 59, slip op. at 5 (2011). 59 Id. (quoting NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co., 395 U.S at 617). 60 Poly-America, Inc., 328 NLRB 667, 669 (1999), affd. in rele- vant part Poly-America, Inc. v. NLRB, 260 F.3d 465 (5th Cir. 2001); see also Noah's Bay Area Bagels, LLC, 331 NLRB 188, 188 (2000). DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD22 their job duties were supervisory which would (not could) be removed if they joined the Union. To that end, I credited Senes’, Garcia’s and Gallizio’s testimony regarding what Wil- son told them during the meeting, because they corroborated each other’s testimony and they spoke in specific and concrete terms versus broad generalities. Relying on a typewritten doc- ument by McNeil, Respondent contends that McNeil’s state- ment confirmed that Wilson told the HSSs that their duties might change if they voted for the Union.61 However, other record evidence does not bear out Respondent’s version of the meeting. In fact, further down in McNeil’s statement, McNeil wrote that Wilson told the HSSs that they “would no longer be the IC [Incident Commander],” “would lose our ‘Incident Own- er’ status for Impacts,” “would lose many of our job require- ments because they were ‘management’ jobs that the company could not ‘lose’ to the Union,” “would lose flexibility in sched- uling vacations . . . ,” and “once [the HSSs] chose to vote Un- ion we would never be able to change back.”62 Even though McNeil indicated that Wilson’s (and Seidel’s) remarks were “artfully worded,” McNeil’s overall impression of the meeting was that: (1) Respondent was trying to “scare [the HSSs] out of going Union,” and (2) the meeting was “not ‘informational’ . . . as Wilson stated . . . but one . . . . laced with veiled threats dis- guised as concern for our ‘well being.’”63 Moreover, it is important to consider the circumstances sur- rounding when Wilson’s (and Seidel’s) statements were made – i.e., in a small office, where the discussion concerned the HSSs livelihood, four days before a vote to join the Union. Thus, viewing Respondent’s statements “from the standpoint of em- ployees over whom the employer has a measure of economic power,” and the “necessary tendency of the former, because of that relationship, to pick up intended implications of the latter that might be more readily dismissed by a more disinterested ear,”64 I find it reasonable to conclude that Wilson’s state- ments, made just four days before the election, impermissibly implied that the HSSs’ job duties, schedules, and work condi- tions would change if they voted in favor of the Union. The CGC also avers that Wilson’s statements concerning the removal of the HSSs’ alleged supervisory duties were imper- missibly coercive as her statements were not based on objective facts beyond Respondent’s control, but rather, on Respondent’s own (self-serving) opinion of the supervisory nature of those duties. Again, I agree. Respondent argues that Wilson made valid predictions about the potential removal of certain of the HSSs’ supervisory du- ties, because those predictions were based upon and “flowed from the objective findings in the ARD’s determination that the HSSs were not supervisors.”65 However, the undisputed evi- dence shows that Respondent, at best, misinterpreted the ARD’s findings and drew on its own inaccurate conclusions when it made its predictions. Specifically, the ARD determined 61 R. Exh. 9. 62 R. Exh. 9. 63 Id. 64 Gissel, 395 U.S. at 617; see also Mesker Door, 357 NLRB No. 59, slip op at 5 (2011). 65 R. Br. at 24–25. that the alleged supervisory duties on which Respondent relied – i.e., the HSSs role as Incident Commander/Incident Owner and during disciplinary meetings – were not supervisory in nature. Yet, despite these findings, Respondent determined, on its own, and subsequently insisted that the HSSs role as Inci- dent Commander/Incident Owner and their role during discipli- nary meetings were supervisory. In fact, at the the hearing, Wilson admitted she was unfamiliar with any of the specific findings made by the ARD, and that she had not even read the decision prior to the January 16 meeting. Moreover, while Wilson believed that HSSs served as super- visors during disciplinary meetings, she could not name one occasion where the HSSs initiated discipline or played any type of supervisory role during those meetings. Incredibly, the HSSs role as supervisors during disciplinary meetings is not con- tained anywhere in their position description. Finally, Wilson admitted that Respondent maintains the exclusive right to as- sign/reassign duties upon which Respondent was not required to bargain. Therefore, the reassignment or removal of the al- leged “supervisory” duties was within Respondent’s complete control. In sum, the record does not provide any support for Wilson’s predictions that Respondent may/might/would have to remove certain “supervisory” duties if the HSSs unionized. Rather, Respondent’s prediction is unsupported by objective evidence, and accordingly, not protected as a lawful expression of opinion under Section 8(c).66 Regarding Seidel’s comments that Respondent may have to adjust/cut the HSSs’ shifts, schedules workhours and/or over- time if they joined the Union, the CGC claims that these state- ments were coercive threats based on the Board’s decision in Hertz Corp., 316 NLRB 672 (1995). In that case, the company held a captive audience meeting with employees immediately prior to the union election. During the meeting, management told employees that if the union was voted in, represented em- ployees may not have their 401K plan benefits, but all pay and benefits were negotiable, and the company would bargain with the union in good faith.67 However, immediately after these statements, management also told employees that they “should be aware that out of 197 or so contracts that . . .Hertz . . .has presently [negotiated with the union], none of those contracts have a 401(K) plan.”68 Hertz argued that its statements regard- ing the 401(K) plan were lawful since employees were told that: (1) the 401(K) plan was a negotiable item, (2) employees may gain, lose or get the same in pay and benefits as a result of negotiations, (3) Hertz would bargain with the union in good faith, (4) no changes had been made in employees benefits during the negotiations, and (5) employees do not automatically lose a benefit if they vote for the union.69 However, the Board adopted the judge’s findings that the company’s statements were unlawful. The judge noted that, given the totality of the company’s statements about the 401(K) plan which was immediately followed by the statement that no 66 See UPS Supply Chain Solutions, Inc., 357 NLRB No. 106, slip op at 4 (2011). 67 Hertz Corp., 316 NLRB at 695–696. 68 Id. at 696. 69 Id. at 695. PHILLIPS 66 23 union had ever been successful in negotiating a 401(K) plan for its represented employees, employees “could reasonably and strongly assume that if they voted for the union, either coverage of employees would automatically be withdrawn . . . or that negotiations for continued coverage under the plan would be futile and unsuccessful.”70 In short, the Board adopted the judge’s findings that the employer violated the Act if it made statements that gave the impression that benefits will automati- cally be lost as soon as employees become represented by a union.71 Like in Hertz Corp., Respondent argues that the HSSs were told that their schedules and hours “might” change but their schedules would have to be bargained with the Union. Howev- er, also like Hertz Corp., Seidel’s statement about reduced schedules, hours, and overtime was immediately preceded by Wilson’s comment that: (1) management felt that certain as- pects of the HSSs jobs were supervisory (despite that the ARD determined they were not) which would be taken away from them if they joined the Union, and (2) with those supervisory duties removed, Respondent may not need to have the HSSs on a 24/7 shift. I find that these statements taken together gave the impression that the HSSs shifts, schedules, and hours would be lost if they voted for the Union. Respondent also relies on the Board’s decision in Wild Oats Markets, Inc., 344 NLRB 717 (2005), to support its position that predicting potential loss of benefits in collective bargaining is lawful if it is a factually accurate observation of a potentially negative outcome of unionization.72 However, in Wild Oats Markets, Inc., the Board found that the company’s flyer to em- ployees which stated, “in collective bargaining you could lose what you have now” considered by itself, constituted a factually accurate observation regarding a possible negative outcome of collective bargaining.73 Contrary to the situation in Wild Oats, Seidel’s statement was not made in a vacuum; rather, it was preceded by Wilson’s comment that certain of the HSSs’ du- ties, which Respondent believed were supervisory, would be removed if they joined the Union. Thus, while Seidel’s state- ment, by itself, may have been a lawful prediction, his state- ment combined with Wilson’s remarks together with the the timing of both statements (made four days before the vote), reasonably inferred an impermissibly coercive threat. Finally, I am further persuaded as to the coercive nature of Seidel’s remarks given that the Board previously found that Respondent unlawfully threatened a lead operator at its Sweeney refinery when Respondent told him it would make the lead Operator a salaried position, which would cut his and his coworker’s pay, if employees voted for the Union. 74Accord- ingly, I find that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act when it threatened to remove certain “supervisory” duties from the HSSs and adjust/cut their schedules, work hours and over- time if they voted for the union. 70 Id. at 696. 71 Id., see also Niagara Wires, 240 NRB 1326 (1979) (citations omit- ted). 72 344 NLRB 717 (2005). 73 Id. (emphasis added). 74 See Phillips 66 Sweeny Refinery, 360 NLRB No. 26, slip op. at 1 (2014). I also conclude that Wilson’s “mending fences” remark made during the January 19 Stumbo meeting was unlawful. On this point, Respondent argues that Wilson never told the HSSs that, if they voted against the Union, Respondent would work to “mend fences” between the HSSs and management. Howev- er, the credited testimony shows, and I previously found other- wise. Alternatively, Respondent avers that, even if Wilson made the remark, her statement was not a promise of any bene- fit but rather a statement conveying Respondent’s legal obliga- tion to refrain from discussing mandatory subjects of bargain- ing directly with the HSSs. I disagree. In Purple Communications, Inc., the Board addressed whether comments made by the company’s CEO to employees constituted an impermissible pre-election implied promise of benefit.75 In that case, the company CEO held several captive audience meetings with employees where he discussed several issues, including the company’s increased productivity stand- ards which took effect immediately prior to the union election. However, during the speech, the CEO also told employees that the company “may have gone too far [with the increased pro- duction standards]” and that the company “[was] looking at the matter” and “needed to recalibrate” the standards. While the judge found the comments lawful generalized expressions of campaign propoganda, the Board reversed finding that the statements were an “implied promise of improvement,” because the CEO’s comments were “directly linked to the recently in- creased productivity standards” which served as one of the central campaign issues for the Union.76 Like the Board in Purple Communications, I decline to find that Wilson’s “mending fences” comment was a generalized expression of Respondent’s duty under the Act. Rather, her statement was was directly linked to the tumultuous relation- ship between the HSSs and management—one of the central reasons why the HSSs considered joining the Union in the first place. Moreover, Wilson’s “mending fences” remark was made immediately after she told the HSSs that management preferred they vote “no” for the Union, which lends additional coercive meaning to her statement. Thus, the context in which both statements were made raises a reasonable inference that Wilson was offering something of benefit (mending fences between the parties) in exchange for the HSSs voting against the Union. While Wilson made no express promise to take any specific action to improve relations between management and the HSSs, again viewing Wilson’s statement “from the standpoint of em- ployees over whom the employer has a measure of economic power,” and the “necessary tendency of the former, because of that relationship, to pick up intended implications of the latter that might be more readily dismissed by a more disinterested ear,” I find Wilson’s “mending fences” remark, made just one day before the election, strongly implied that improved rela- tions might be contemplated if the HSSs voted against the Un- ion. 75 See Purple Communications, Inc., 361 NLRB No. 43, slip op. at 3–4 (2014). 76 Id. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD24 Citing several Federal Court of Appeals decisions,77 Re- spondent contends that, even if the HSSs mistook the “mending fences” comment as a threat, the statement was repudiated by Gislason when he clarified Wilson’s statement.78 However, the key element in the cases cited by Respondent was the fact that the employer did not follow through with the alleged threaten- ing conduct. Here, however, Respondent followed through on the alleged threats – to wit, after the HSSs’ voted for the Union, Respondent did not “mend fences” with the HSSs, rather it removed certain duties from them, changed their schedules and work hours and ultimately, reassigned them to other lower pay- ing positions. Thus, I do not find that Respondent repudiated the alleged threats, it implemented them. Accordingly, I con- clude Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by its implied promise of benefit (to “mend fences” with the HSSs) if they voted against the Union. Finally, with regard to the January 19, 2012 Gislason meet- ing, I find sufficient evidence to conclude Respondent made the threats of reprisals against the HSSs at this meeting. Specifical- ly, I find that Gislason met with the HSSs after the January 19 Stumbo meeting and told them that management intended to follow through on their threats and Respondent intended to make their decision to join the Uion as undesirable as possible to prevent other HSSs at other facilities from unionizing. Respondent argues that the HSSs are less than fully credible regarding the Gislason meeting. In this regard, Respondent asserts that the HSSs’ claims regarding Gislason threats are suspicious because the HSSs waited six months (until July 2012) after the threats were allegedly made (January 19, 2012) before raising the issue with Respondent. Moreover, Respond- ent notes that the HSSs signed a handwritten letter dated Janu- ary 19, 2012 but none of them could precisely recall what hap- pened to the letter, with whom in the Union did they speak about the threats, or the date they gave the letter to the Union. Because of this, Respondent infers that the Gislason threats/meeting never occurred; rather the HSSs’ manufactured the Gislason threats/meeting to support a timely unfair labor practice charge (ULP) in this case. While Respondent’s argument is certainly interesting, it of- fered no evidence to support its assertions. As such, I agree with the CGC that “Respondent’s theory is just that, a theory, highly speculative and unsubstantiated.”79 In fact, I could posit equally speculative and unsubstantiated theories for the delay in raising the Gislason threats – i.e., that the Union was unaware of the alleged threats until immediately prior to beginning ne- 77 See Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. v. NLRB, 156 Fed.Appx. 760, 767 (2005), Kinney Drugs, Inc. v. NLRB, 74 F.3d 1419, 1430 (2d Cir. 1996) and NLRB v. Intertherm, Inc., 596 F.2d 267, 276 (8th Cir. 1979). 78 Cooper Tire, 156 Fed.Appx at 767 (employer’s statement that would reasonably be viewed as an objectionable threat may be cured if employer gives employees a “clear assurance” that it will behave law- fully and will not follow through with the conduct threatened earlier); Kinney Drugs, Inc., 74 F.3d at 1430 (conduct repudiating a threat must be ‘timely, unambiguous, specific in nature to the coercive conduct and free from other proscribed illegal conduct’”), NLRB v. Intertherm, 586 F.2d at 276 (explanation and retraction of unlawful threat two days prior cured the unlawful threat). 79 GC Br. at 37. gotiations with Respondent; or that the Union deliberately withheld the fact that they knew about the Gislason threats to afford them a better tactical advantage during negotiations. I could go on ad nauseum, but the bottom line is, without addi- tional evidence, that I am not persuaded by Respondent’s asser- tions in this regard. Despite the fact that I was not overly impressed with the HSSs’ testimony regarding the specifics on reporting the Gisla- son threats, I am persuaded by the CGC’s argument that the Board affords current employees’ testimony enhanced reliabil- ity when they testify while management representatives are present.80 As the Board has long recognized, testifying against an employee’s pecuniary interest is “a risk not lightly undertak- en.”81 For that reason alone, I credit the HSSs’ version of the Gislason meeting over the testimony of Respondent’s witness- es. Accordingly, I conclude that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act when Gislason told the HSSs that Respond- ent intended to follow through with its threats (i.e., to remove certain “supervisory” duties from the HSSs and adjust/cut their schedules, work hours and overtime) in order to dissuade them and other HSSs from voting for the Union. B. Bargained in Bad Faith 1. Parties’ Positions Next, I turn to the question of whether Respondent failed to bargain in good faith with the Union in violation of Section 8(a)(5) by offering discriminatory proposals which evinced no intent to reach an agreement. Specifically, in Complaint para- graphs 11(b) and (c), the CGC alleges that Respondent bar- gained in bad faith by advancing proposals, where the content of its proposals were not based upon legitimate business justifi- cations, rather, were designed to never reach an agreement and retaliate against the HSSs for voting for the Union. Respondent maintains that it bargained in good faith because it formulated and advanced proposals based upon legitimate business justifi- cations, and when no agreement was reached, lawfully declared a good faith impasse. 2. Prevailing Legal Authority Section 8(a)(5) and 8(d) of the Act defines the obligation of employers to bargain collectively as the “obligation . . . to meet at reasonable times and confer in good faith with respect to wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment.” The obligation to bargain in good faith “does not compel either party to agree to a proposal or require the making of a conces- sion.”82 In fact, a party is “not required to make concessions or to yield any position fairly maintained,” but a party who enters into negotiations with a predetermined resolve not to budge from an initial position demonstrates “an attitude inconsistent 80 See Gold Standard Enterprises, 234 NLRB 618, 619 (1978) (“the testimony of current employees which contradicts statements of their supervisors is likely to be particularly reliable because these witnesses are testifying adversely to their pecuniary interest.”) 81 See Comcast Cablevision, 313 NLRB 220, 224 (1993) (and cases cited therein). 82 See H.K. Porter Co. v. NLRB, 397 U.S. 99, 106 (1970)(quoting NLRB v. American Insurance. Co., 343 U.S. 395, 404 (1952)). PHILLIPS 66 25 with good-faith bargaining.”83 Thus, a sincere effort to reach common ground is the essence of good-faith bargaining.84 To determine whether a party, in this case, the employer, bargained in good faith, the trier of fact must examine the total- ity of the circumstances, including, at times, the substantive terms of the employer’s proposals, because “[s]ometimes, espe- cially if the parties are sophisticated, the only indicia of bad faith may be the proposals advanced and adhered to.”85 In as- sessing the employer’s proposals, the trier of fact must not “sit in judgment upon the substantive terms of collective bargaining agreements,”86 however “[r]igid adherence to disadvantageous proposals may provide a basis for inferring bad faith.”87 Over- all, the trier of fact must consider the context of the employer’s total conduct, “both at and away from the bargaining table. Relevant factors include: unreasonable bargaining demands, delaying tactics, efforts to bypass the bargaining representative, failure to provide relevant information, and unlawful conduct away from the bargaining table,”88 to decide “‘whether the employer is engaging in hard but lawful bargaining . . . or is unlawfully endeavoring to frustrate the possibility of arriving at any agreement.’”89 3. Analysis The CGC’s argument that Respondent engaged in bad faith negotiations is rather complicated. From what I gathered from the CGC’s theory, the CGC avers that Respondent’s bargaining proposals consistently sought to reassign three of its HSSs to lower paying positions in Operations and two other HSSs to a newly created HSC bargaining unit position. Respondent’s business justification for proffering these proposals centered on the fact that once the ARD determined that the HSSs were not supervisors, Respondent was required to reassign/remove cer- tain duties (i.e., Incident Commander/Owner and EMT duties) that were inherently supervisory. Once those duties were re- moved, the HSSs’ remaining duties no longer justified having all five HSSs work a 24/7 shift schedule. So, Respondent creat- ed and reassigned two of its HSSs to the new bargaining unit HSC position and transferred the remaining three HSSs to Op- erations. 83 See Gen. Elec. Co., 150 NLRB 192, 196 (1964), enfd. 418 F.2d 7736 (2d Cir. 1969), discussed in Am. Meat Packing Co., 301 NLRB 835 (1991). 84 NLRB v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 133 F.2d 676, 686 (9th Cir.1943). 85 NLRB v. Wright Motors, Inc., 603 F.2d 604, 609 (7th Cir. 1979). 86 NLRB v. Am. National Insurance Co., 343 U.S. 395, 404 (1952). 87 NLRB v. Blevins Popcorn Co., 659 F.2d 1173, 1187, 1188 (D.C.Cir.1981) (emphasis added). See generally 29 U.S.C. § 158(d). See also Borden, Inc. v. NLRB, 19 F.3d 502, 512 (10th Cir. 1994) (not- ing also that “rigid adherence to disadvantageous proposals may pro- vide a basis for inferring bad faith”). 88 See Hardesty Co., 336 NLRB No 18, slip op. at 3 (2001) (cit- ing Atlanta Hilton & Tower, 271 NLRB 1600 (1974); NLRB v. Stani- slaus Implement & Hardware Co., 226 F.2d 377 (9th Cir. 1955); and NLRB v. Arkansas Rice Growers Assn., 400 F.2d 565, 572 (8th Cir. 1968). 89 Public. Service. Co. of Oklahoma., 334 NLRB 487 (2001) (quot- ing Atlanta Hilton & Tower, 271 NLRB 1600, 1603 (1984)), enfd. 318 F.3d 1173 (10th Cir. 2003). However, the CGC posits that Respondent intentionally mis- interpreted the ARD’s Decision to advance its own nefarious motives – to make good on its prior threats of reprisals for the HSSs unionizing. As such, the CGC claims that Respondent’s reasons for advancing its bargaining proposals were not based upon legitimate business justifications; rather served as a pre- text to cover up its true retaliatory motive (to punish the HSSs for unionizing and to prevent other HSSs from unionizing). Thus, as the CGC’s theory goes, the advancement of Respond- ent’s discriminatory proposals is, by itself, sufficient evidence of Respondent’s bad faith intent to “frustrate the possibility of arriving at [an] agreement.”90 After viewing the employer’s and its substantive proposals, “both at and away from the bargaining table…[looking at] fac- tors including, [the employer’s] unreasonable bargaining de- mands, delaying tactics, efforts to bypass the bargaining repre- sentative, failure to provide relevant information, and unlawful conduct away from the bargaining table,”91 I conclude that the totality of Respondent’s conduct evinced an intent never to reach agreement with the Union sufficient to constitute bad faith “surface bargaining” in violation of Section 8(a)(5). First, I find sufficient evidence in the record to conclude that Respondent operated with a closed mind by insisting on a pro- posal that it knew (or should have known) was not based upon legitimate business justifications. The evidence reveals that, from May through November 2012, Respondent never moved from its original proposal to reassign the HSSs into other bar- gaining unit positions based, primarily, on its own inaccurate interpretation of the ARD’s Decision that the HSSs (and their duties) were not supervisory in nature. Respondent asserts that, based upon the ARD’s Decision, it was required to remove certain duties from the HSSs, primarily the Incident Command- er/Owner and EMT functions, because they were “inherently supervisory in nature.” Unfortunately, the evidence shows the exact opposite. Rather, the ARD concluded that the HSSs were not supervi- sors based upon the Incident Commander/Owner and EMT duties.92 In fact, Respondent’s own written policies undermine its claim that the HSSs are supervisors when serving as Incident Commander/Owner. Specifically, the ARD found, and Re- spondent’s policies dictate that the HSSs assume the Incident Command role only during the initial stages of an emergency; thereafter, an Advance Response Incident Commander (i.e., a supervisor) takes control of the emergency.93 Additionally, the evidence shows that, even while serving as the Incident Owner, the HSSs are supervised by a “Responsible Supervisor” who works closely with the HSSs to document the incident and oversee the investigation.94 Similarly, while Respondent avers that, without the Incident Command/Owner functions, Respondent had no business need to maintain five HSSs on a rotating 24/7 schedule, the evi- dence, in fact, negates Respondent’s business necessity for 90 GC Br. at 49–50. 91 See Hardesty Co., supra at n.165. 92 GC Exh 13. 93 GC Exh. 57. 94 Id. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD26 removing these duties from the HSSs. Moreover, despite Re- spondent’s belief that HSSs served as supervisors during disci- plinary meetings, record evidence failed to show even one oc- casion where the HSSs served in that capacity and that role was not listed in their position description. Respondent’s asserted business reason for contracting out the HSSs’ EMT duties also does not withstand scrutiny. Here, Respondent claims that the EMT duties were not a necessary function for the HSSs, and as such, it was free to contract those duties to a third party. However, Respondent’s own literature indicates that the HSSs were required to have an “EMT Certi- fication or the ability to acquire certification within 30 days.”95 While Respondent claims that other employees were also certi- fied to perform EMT duties, Respondent failed to sufficiently explain why it was required to reassign those duties in light of the ARD’s determination. Respondent further argued that it maintained the exclusive right to assign/reassign duties upon which it was not required to bargain. However, the parties’ collective bargaining agreement (CBA) excluded the HSSs from that management prerogative. Even assuming the HSSs were technically bargaining unit em- ployees, and as such, Respondent was privileged to reassign the EMT duties, Respondent admitted at the hearing that the EMT duties were not inherently supervisory. Thus, again, Respond- ent failed to offer an explanation as to why it was required to remove the EMT duties from the HSSs when the evidence shows it had no business need for doing so. The fact remains that Respondent insisted upon its proposals and business rationale despite the ARD’s determination which nullified its business justification. Even when the Union chal- lenged Respondent’s business justification with the ARD’s rationale, and presented it with a copy of the ARD’s Decision during negotiations, Respondent never reviewed it. In fact, Respondent’s witnesses admitted that they never actually read the ARD’s rationale that certain of the HSSs duties were not inherently supervisory. Furthermore, because Respondent maintained that its HSSs perform duties that are inherently supervisory, when the ARD previously determined they did not, I find that Respondent is essentially unlawfully relitigating issues previously decided by the Board in the underlying representation hearing.96 Accord- ingly, I find that Respondent’s unreasonable bargaining de- mands, even in the face of the ARD’s determinations to the contrary, sufficient to prove it bargained in bad faith. Second, I find that Respondent operated with a closed mind by advancing proposals that, I conclude, were merely exten- sions of its pre-election threats against the HSSs. Respondent notes that the Regional Director for Region 31 previously dis- missed a prior ULP charge, finding that Respondent bargained in good faith with the Union because it provided a “good faith explanation in support of its proposal . . . an opportunity to respond to the proposal . . . . and a legitimate business justifica- 95 GC Exh. 2. 96 See Gross School Bus Service, 356 NLRB No. 81 (2011), citing Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. v. NLRB, 313 U.S. 146, 162 (1941) (cannot relitigate representation cases in unfair labor practice case). tion in making its proposal.”97 However, I am not bound by this determination.98 In fact, record evidence developed at the hear- ing (as set forth above) reveals no legitimate business justifica- tion for the proposals advanced by Respondent. Moreover, although the Regional Director found no causal link between the alleged “coercive pre-election statements” and the “lawful, hard bargaining demonstrate by [Respondent],” I disagree. Rather, I find, and the credited testimony at hearing proves that the HSSs were threatened with specific adverse consequences (i.e., reassigned duties, cut work hours/schedules/overtime) if they unionized; they were again forewarned that those specific reprisals (i.e., reassigned duties, cut work hours/schedules/overtime) would occur if they union- ized, and as soon as the HSSs unionized, Respondent advanced proposals that mirrored those specific adverse consequences (i.e., reassigned duties, cut work hours/schedules/overtime). In addition, the record clearly demonstrates Respondent’s strong preference that the HSSs not unionize and the HSSs were made aware of that fact when the coercive threats were made. Taken together, I believe a sufficient nexus exists to reasonably infer that Respondent’s proposals served as extensions of their pre- election threats. The CGC argues that Respondent was motivated by its anti- union animus (i.e., retaliation for the HSSs having unionized) in advancing its proposals, and that, by itself, is sufficient to show bad faith. However, I cannot go as far as the CGC on this point. The record certainly demonstrates Respondent’s anti- union preference as evidenced by Wilson’s statements to the HSSs to that effect. In addition, Respondent’s situation with the Alliance HSSs, where Respondent reassigned those HSSs into other lower paying bargaining unit positions after they union- ized, raises strong suspicions in my mind regarding Respond- ent’s overall anti-union sentiment. Yet, I am nevertheless reluctant to find, absent Board prece- dent, that Respondent’s anti-union animus, standing alone, is sufficient to infer bad faith. Rather, I do find that, given the nexus between the content of the threats and the content of Respondent’s proposals, sufficient evidence exists to conclude that Respondent’s proposals served as extensions of their pre- election threats which, along with other evidence described in this decision, evinces an intent to bargain in bad faith. Respondent’s conduct immediately prior to negotiations fails to persuade me that it acted in good faith. Here, Respondent claims that, prior to the start of official negotiations, it: (1) pro- vided assurances to the Union that the “focus” of the new bar- gaining unit position would remain health and safety, (2) agreed not to lay off any of the HSSs as a result of the collec- tive bargaining process, and (3) agreed to a specific hourly wage rate for the new job classification. Although Respondent is correct regarding its prenegotiation conduct, I am required to look at the totality of Respondent’s conduct to determine 97 R. Exh. 5. 98 See Kelly’s Private Car Service, 289 NLRB 30, 39 (1998), enfd. sub nom. 919 F.2d 839 (2d Cir. 1990) (“it is well settled that the dis- missal of a prior charge by a Regional Director, even where the identi- cal conduct is involved, does not constitute an adjudication on the merits, and no res judicata effect can be given to those actions.”). PHILLIPS 66 27 whether it harbored an intent to reach an agreement/bargain in good faith. As set forth above, the record contains other evi- dence of Respondent’s bad faith. Citing the Board’s decision in In John S. Swift Co., Re- spondent next claims it maintained an open mind during nego- tiations because it: (1) agreed to the parties’ ground rules for negotiations, (2) paid the HSSs who participated in the negotia- tion sessions, (3) agreed that if any of the HSSs were ultimately displaced, displacement would be based on seniority, (4) ap- proved a salary increase for the HSSs even though, at the time, they were no longer “management” employees, and (5) consid- ered additional duties suggested by Garcia to determine if Re- spondent could support the HSSs 24/7 shift schedule.99 How- ever, none of the items identified by Respondent were major subjects of bargaining which the Board considered in In John S. Swift Co, to determine if the employer engaged in good-faith bargaining. That fact alone distinguishes In John S. Swift Co. from the present case.100 Lastly, while Respondent points out that it met with the Un- ion 11 times between May and November 2012, the quantity or length of bargaining sessions does not establish or equate with good-faith bargaining.101 Overall, I conclude that Respondent’s “[r]igid adherence to disadvantageous proposals” particularly when those proposals were not based on legitimate business justifications but rather served as extensions of Respondent’s unlawful threats, provide sufficient basis for me to infer bad faith.102 Even when the basis of Respondent’s business rationale proved untenable, the evi- dence shows that Respondent insisted on proffering bargaining proposals based on its unreasonable interpretation of the ARD’s findings. Coupled with evidence showing that its proposals served as extensions of its pre-election threats together with evidence of anti-union animus, I find the record shows that Respondent “enter[ed]into negotiations with a pre-determined resolve not to budge from an initial position [which] demon- strates ‘an attitude inconsistent with good-faith bargaining.’”103 Accordingly, I find the totality of Respondent’s conduct during negotiations evinced an intent never to reach agreement with the Union sufficient to constitute bad faith “surface bargaining” in violation of Section 8(a)(5). Finally, I conclude that Respondent failed to bargain in good faith with the Union when it unlawfully declared an impasse. An employer may declare an impasse when “good faith ne- gotiations have exhausted the prospects of concluding an agreement” such that further bargaining would be futile.104 Once this point is reached, an employer does not violate the Act by making unilateral changes that are reasonably comprehend- ed within his pre-impasse proposals.105 However, an employer 99 In John S. Swift Co., 124 NLRB 394 (1959). 100 Id. 101 NLRB v. American National Insurance Co., 343 U.S. 395, 404 (1952). 102 NLRB v. Blevins Popcorn Co., 659 F.2d at 1187–1188. 103 See Gen. Elec. Co., 150 NLRB 192, 196 (1964), enfd. 418 F.2d 7736 (2d Cir. 1969), discussed in Am. Meat Packing Co., 301 NLRB 835 (1991). 104 Taft Broadcasting Co., 163 NLRB 475, 478 (1967). 105 Id. violates his duty to bargain if, when negotiations are sought or are in progress, he unilaterally declares impasse and institutes changes in existing terms and conditions of employment.106 Moreover, if unremedied unfair labor practices exist, “a lawful impasse cannot be reached” and the employer “cannot unilater- ally implement its last offer” in the course of bargaining lead- ing up to the declaration of impasse.107 In Titan Tire Corp., the Board dealt with a situation almost identical to the facts in this case. In that case, the company and the Union held several negotiating sessions in an effort to reach an agreement on a successor contract at the company’s Des Moines, Iowa facility. The parties failed to reach an agreement prior to the expiration of the contract, so the Union began a strike. During this time, the company’s chairman held a press conference with employees. At the conference, the chairman told employees that the company would move its equipment from Des Moines to Brownsville, Texas which “would be irre- versible . . . if there was no settlement” with the Union. It was undisputed that moving the company’s equipment would re- duce the number of employees at the Des Moines facility from 650 to 300. Meanwhile, after several negotiating sessions, the company notified the Union that it submitted and, subsequently imple- mented its last, best and final offer. The employer argued that the parties were at a bargaining impasse and, therefore, its im- plementation action did not violate the Act. However, the Board, agreeing with the judge, concluded that the company’s statements about relocating equipment and jobs from Des Moines to Brownsville were threats in violation of Section 8(a)(1). Moreover, because of these threats, the unrem- edied unfair labor practices the employer committed prevented the parties from reaching an agreement because “[the chair- man’s] . . . threats to move equipment from, and reduce bar- gaining unit jobs at, the Des Moines plant substantially under- cut the Union's position at the negotiating table on an issue that was of high priority to the bargaining unit,” i.e., restoring jobs.108 As such, the Union was forced to bargain about restor- ing versus protecting unit jobs, which “put additional pressure on the bargaining committee to ‘rectify the wrong.’” Therefore, the Board found that no good faith impasse could be reached, and the company violated Section 8(a)(5) by unilaterally im- plementing its final offer, because the company’s unlawful conduct/unfair labor practices “contributed to the parties' ina- bility to reach agreement.”109 Like in Titan Tire, Respondent threatened to cut the HSSs’ duties, work hours and schedules if they voted to join the Un- ion. I previously found these statements were coercive pre- election threats violative of Section 8(a)(1). However, after the HSSs unionized, Respondent proffered proposals that mirrored their pre-election threats. Thus, the Union was forced to bargain over restoring versus protecting the HSSs’ jobs. As such, when 106 Id. 107 See Titan Tire Corp., 333 NLRB 1156, 1158 (2001) (lawful impasse cannot be reached in the presence of unremedied unfair labor practices and the employer “cannot ‘parlay an impasse resulting from its own misconduct into a licesnse to make unilateral changes). 108 Id. at 1159. 109 Id. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD28 Respondent, after several negotiating sessions, unilaterally implemented its final proposal (that in effect implemented its prior threats), I find that Respondent failed to bargain to a good faith impasse because their unlawful conduct “contributed to the parties’ inability to reach an agreement.”110 Respondent nevertheless argues that a lawfully impasse was reached since neither party moved from their original positions after 12 negotiation sessions over a seven-month period.111 Here, Respondent notes that the Union never moved from its position that all five HSSs should maintain all of their duties on a 24/7 shift schedule, and Respondent never moved from its position to reassign two HSSs to a newly created HSC bargain- ing unit position and transfer the remaining three HSSs into Operations. In addition, Respondent cites to a myriad of Board and District of Columbia Circuit cases for the proposition that a party’s disagreement on any single key issue is sufficient to support a lawful impasse.112 However, all of the cases cited by Respondent are distinguishable from Respondent’s circum- stance, because Respondent’s unlawful proposals in this case “contributed to the parties’ inability to reach an agreement.”113 Thus, even if the Union maintained its original position, Re- spondent’s conduct “demonstrat[ed] an unwillingness to com- promise further,” sufficient to find that no good faith impasse could have occurred.114 Accordingly, Respondent violated Sec- tion 8(a)(5) when it failed to bargain in good faith with the Union to a lawfully declared impasse. C. Respondent Retaliated Against the HSSs by Unilaterally Implementing its Final Offer Next, I turn to the question of whether Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) of the Act when it unilaterally implemented its final offer in the absence of a lawful impasse. In so doing, Re- spondent reassigned Senes and Garcia to lower paying HSC bargaining unit positions and transferred Gallizio, Lanier, and McNeil into lower paying Operator 1 positions. Based upon the evidence, I find the violations alleged. 1. Parties’ Positions The CGC argues that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) of the Act by implementing its final proposal containing adverse terms and conditions of employment in retaliation for the HSSs unionizing. Respondent counters by arguing it never discrimi- nated against the HSSs based upon their protected concerted activity (i.e., unionizing); rather it simply implemented its last, best and final offer, based on legitimate business need, after lawfully declaring impasse. 110 Titan Tire, 333 NLRB 1156 at 1159. 111 While Respondent claims the parties bargained over an 11-month period, the parties essentially bargained over a seven month period from May through November 2012. 112 See CalMat, 331 NLRB 1084, 1098 (2000), Erie Brush Mfg Corp. v. NLRB, 700 F.3d 17, 21–23 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (impasse demon- strated based on lack of agreement over two issues regarding union security and arbitration), see also R. Br. at 37–38. 113 See Titan Tire Corp., supra at n.189. 114 See Tru-Serve Corp. v. NLRB, 254 F.3d 1105, 1117 (D.C. Cir. 2001), American Federation of Television and Radio Artists v. NLRB, 395 F.2d 622, 627 (D.C. Cir. 1968). 2. Prevailing Legal Authority An employer violates Section 8(a)(3) of the Act by imple- menting adverse terms and conditions of employment in retalia- tion for its employees exercising their Section 7 rights.115 In order to establish discriminatory retaliation under Section 8(a)(3), the General Counsel must show that the HSSs’ protect- ed activity (unionizing) was a substantial or motivating factor for the adverse action taken by Respondent. Respondent, then, must show that it would have taken the same action even in the absence of the HSSs’ protected activity.116 Although the Gen- eral Counsel carries the ultimate burden to prove that the em- ployer’s anti-union animus was a “substantial or motivating factor” in Respondent’s decision to implement the adverse action, the presence of prior unfair labor practices committed by the employer,117 statements by management officials evinc- ing a discriminatory intent,118 and findings that an employer's proffered reasons for the disparate terms are a pretext119 are factors which demonstrate the employer’s anti-union motive. 3. Analysis In this case, I find sufficient evidence that Respondent reas- signed the HSSs to lower paying bargaining unit positions in response to their protected concerted activity. For Respond- ent’s showing, it maintains it unilaterally implemented its final proposal after a good faith impasse in negotiations occurred between Respondent and the Union. However, I have previous- ly found Respondent unlawfully declared impasse based upon bad faith negotiations.120 Respondent further maintains that it implemented its final offer based upon its legitimate business rationale for the proposals it advanced during negotiations. However, again, I have previously rejected this argument. Respondent points to Wilson’s, Gislason’s, and Stumbo’s testimony where they deny that the proposals advanced were motivated in any way by anti-union sentiment. However, I have previously found their testimony incredible on this point. In fact, Wilson admitted that she told the HSSs that “manage- ment” preferred that they vote against the Union, and I credit the HSSs’ testimony that Gislason told them that “manage- ment” intended to implement its pre-election threats and make their vote as undesirable as possible to discourage them from unionizing. In addition, I find credible evidence of Wilson’s anti-union animus when she promised that management would “mend fences” with the HSSs if they voted against the Union. 115 See Williamette Industries, 341 NLRB 560, 562–563 (2004)(finding 8(a)(3) violation where employer changed employee shift schedules and reduced overtime in retaliation for employees elect- ing union). 116 See Wright Line, 251 NLRB 1083, 1089 (1980), enfd. 662 F.2d 899 (1st Cir. 1981), cert denied 455 U.S. 989 (1982). 117 Williamette Industries, supra at n.189. 118 See Peabody Coal Co., 265 NLRB 93, 99–100(1982)( 8(a)(3) vi- olation exists where employer with history of 8(a)(1) conduct told employees that new benefits were withheld because they were “trying to get into the union”), enfd in relevant part 725 F.2d 357, 366 (6th Cir. 1984). 119 See Phelps Dodge Mining Co., 308 NLRB 985, 996–997 (1982) (citing Shattuck Denn Mining Co. v. NLRB, 362 F.2d 466, 470 (9th Cir. 1966)). 120 See Titan Tire Corp., supra at n.189. PHILLIPS 66 29 Also contrary to Respondent’s arguments, I find ample evi- dence in the record to support that Respondent’s proposals were motivated by anti-union animus. First, as discussed in detail earlier in this decision, Respondent's proposals throughout bar- gaining mirrored its pre-election threats to eliminate job func- tions, reduce shift work and overtime, and reassign their EMT duties if the HSSs unionized. Moreover, the HSSs were warned that if they voted for the Union, not only would Respondent make their decision as undesirable as possible but it threatened to remove certain of their duties, change their schedules and cut their work hours if they voted for the Union. In fact, that is exactly what happened after the HSSs unionized. Similarly, Respondent essentially admitted that the unioniza- tion of the HSSs was the sole reason for advancing its bargain- ing proposals. Specifically, in its October 26, 2012 letter to the Union, Respondent told the Union that the changes Respondent sought to make to the HSSs’ employment terms was the “legit- imate and logical consequences” of their choice to join the Union.121 In other words, the necessity to reassign them to bargaining unit positions would not have occurred but for their vote to join the Union. Although Respondent may have meant that it was implementing its final proposal since the parties could not agree on the employment terms now that the HSSs chose to unionize and were bargaining unit employees, this fact was already known to the parties at the time. As such, I query the need to insert the language in the letter in the first place. Rather, because I have previously found Respondent’s business rationale for its proposals unfounded, Respondent’s letter is indicative of its antipathy against the HSSs for unionizing. Respondent asserts that it held no union antipathy in advanc- ing its proposals regarding the Santa Maria HSSs because it is accustomed to working with the Union at its other larger, Cali- fornia refineries. According to Respondent, it could not have held any anti-union animus against the five Santa Maria HSSs for unionizing because including them into the bargaining unit, when it has over 3,000 unionized employees, would not warrant a “full-scale campaign to ‘punish’ and ‘make an example’ of the HSSs. While Respondent’s facilities nationwide employ over 3,000 unionized employees, the credited testimony reveals that Respondent wanted to prevent the HSSs, both at Santa Maria and other refineries, from unionizing. In fact, the evi- dence reveals that, after the HSSs at the Alliance refinery un- ionized, their duties were ressigned, schedules cut, and ulti- mately, they were transferred into other bargaining unit posi- tions. Moreover, the fact that Respondent held a long standing rela- tionship working with the Union fails to negate that Respondent resisted the HSSs’ effort to unionize. Finally, as discussed above in Section B, I find that Respondent’s rationale for its business justification in advancing its proposals was pretextual as it was not based on a legitimate business need. Therefore, based on the foregoing, I find sufficient evidence to conclude that Respondent’s anti-union animus toward the HSSs unionizing was the motivating factor in its decision to insist on and implement its final proposal. In so doing, Re- spondent violated Section 8(a)(3). 121 GC Exh. 56. D. News Media Guidelines Finally, I turn to the question of whether Respondent violat- ed Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by maintaining and enforcing its news media policy. 1. Parties’ Positions Citing the Board’s decision in Crowne Plaza Hotel, 352 NLRB 382 (2008), the CGC argues that Respondent’s news media policy violates Section 8(a)(1) of the Act because it could reasonably be interpreted as prohibiting employees in exercising their Section 7 rights. Respondent maintains that the policy: (1) does not expressly prohibit union activity; (2) cannot reasonably be interpreted to prohibit employees from discuss- ing their terms or working conditions, and/or (3) serves clear legitimate business purposes. 2. Prevailing Legal Authority In Double Eagle Hotel & Casino, 341 NLRB 112, 115 n. 14 (2004), the Board noted that the ability to discuss terms and conditions of employment with fellow employees is the most basic of Section 7 rights. Thus, it is well settled that employees have a protected right to discuss and to distribute information regarding wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of em- ployment.122 Because of these inherent protections, the Board has scrutinized employer work rules that restrict employees’ Section 7 rights. The Board set out a framework for evaluating whether an employer’s work rule, such as Respondent’s news media poli- cy, violates the Act. First, the rule must be examined to deter- mine whether it explicitly restricts Section 7 activity. If it does, the rule is unlawful.123 If the rule does not explicitly restrict Section 7 activity, the rule must be evaluated to determine whether: (1) employees would reasonably construe the lan- guage in the rule to prohibit Section 7 activity; (2) the rule was promulgated in response to union activity; or (3) the rule has been applied to restrict the exercise of Section 7 rights. If any of these circumstances apply, the rule infringes on employees’ rights under the Act.124 3. Analysis. Respondent’s news media guideline states that, if employees are contacted by the media, “no information exchange is per- mitted concerning Santa Maria or Rodeo Refinery operations.” Employees are informed that it is “against company policy for anyone but an authorized company spokespersons (sic) to speak to the news media.” The CGC argues that this language violates the Act because, absent clarification, employees could reasona- bly construe these guidelines to prohibit them from discussing labor disputes, wages, or other terms and conditions of their employment. I agree. In Crowne Plaza Hotel, 352 NLRB 382 (2008), the Board dealt with language in an employer’s news media policy similar 122 Mobile Exploration & Producing U.S., Inc., 323 NLRB 1064, 1068 (1997), enfd. 156 F.3d 182 (5th Cir. 1998). 123 Lafayette Park Hotel, 326 NLRB 824, 828 (1998), enfd. 203 F.3d 52 (D.C. Cir. 1999), and Lutheran Heritage Village-Livonia, 343 NLRB 646 (2004). 124 Lutheran Heritage, supra. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD30 to that found in this case. In Crowne Plaza Hotel, the compa- ny’s news media rule prohibited employees other than the Gen- eral Manager or a designated representative from discussing “any incident that generates significant public interest or press inquiries."125 The employer argued that it maintained this poli- cy to impress upon employees that only the General Manager may speak on its behalf and give the company’s “official com- ment” regarding media inquires. In finding the policy unlawful, however, the Board deter- mined that the terms “any incident” and “significant public interest” were overly broad to reasonably encompass and re- strict communications concerning labor disputes.126 Moreover, the Board found that, because the rule was so broadly worded, the rule not only prohibited employee communication with the media when the media sought the employer's “official com- ments,” but could be construed to prevent all employee com- munications with the media regarding a labor dispute; thus, was susceptible to the reasonable interpretation that it barred Sec- tion 7 activity.127 Like in Crowne Plaza Hotel, Respondent argues that its news media guideline was intended to prohibit employees, other than a designated spokesperson, from speaking to the media on its behalf about confidential company operations (i.e., recent supply and demand issues in California and the resulting price increases). However, Respondent’s news media guideline suffers the same deficits as the policy in Crowne Plaza Hotel. Specifically, because Respondent’s ambiguous rule prohibits all “information exchange” about “company operations,” and those terms are ill defined, the guideline, as written, could also en- compass and prohibit communications about “wages,” “labor disputes,” and other terms and conditions of employment.128 Because Respondent’s guideline fails to define its terms so as to clarify what communication is permissible, I find that Re- spondent’s rule reasonably tends to chill protected activity.129 Accordingly, Respondent’s news media guideline violates Sec- tion 8(a)(1) of the Act. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. Respondent Phillips 66 is an employer engaged in com- merce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act. 2. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by: (a) Making unlawful, impermissible coercive threats to its HSSs on January 16, 2012, that unionization would result in a loss of/changes to certain duties, schedules and work hours. (b) Making unlawful threats to its HSSs on January 19, 2012, that impermissibly implied a promise of benefit to the HSSs if they voted against the Union. 125 Crowne Plaza Hotel, 352 NLRB 382, 385–386 (2008). 126 Id. at 386. 127 Id. 128 Id. 129 See Trump Marina Casino Resort, 355 NLRB 585, slip op. at 1 (2010)(Board found employer’s rule which prohibited employees from releasing statements to news media without prior approval and author- ized only certain representatives to speak with the media was unlawful- ly overbroad and could reasonably be construed to restrict Sec. 7 activi- ty). (c) Promulgating and maintaining an overly broad news me- dia guideline that employees could reasonably understand to prohibit them from speaking to the media about labor disputes, wages, and other terms and conditions of employment. 3. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) by: (a) Failing to bargain in good faith with the Union from May through November 2012 when Respondent offered proposals with no intention to reach agreement. (b) Failing to bargain in good faith with the Union when Re- spondent unilaterally declared impasse in negotiations. 4. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) by: (a) Retaliating against its HSS for unionizing when Re- spondent unilaterally implemented its final proposal that reas- signed two HSSs to the position of Health and Safety Coordina- tor and demoted the three remaining HSSs to the position of Operator 1. REMEDY Having found that Respondent has engaged in certain unfair labor practices, I find that the Respondent must be ordered to cease and desist and to take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act. The CGC requests remedies in addition to those the Board generally grants for the above violations. The Board has broad discretion to fashion a just remedy to fit the circumstances of each case it confronts.130 The Supreme Court has interpreted Section 10(c) as vesting the Board with discretion to devise remedies that effectuate the policies of the Act.131 The complaint requests that the notice to employees of the violations found here be read to its employees at a mandatory meeting during working hours. I decline to grant this enhanced remedy. First, the CGC cites to no Board precedent to support this special remedy. Second, while I find the violations Re- spondent committed are serious, they are not “so numerous, pervasive, and outrageous” such that additional remedies are required “to dissipate fully the coercive effects of the unfair labor practices found.”132 The Charging Party Union requests that the notice to em- ployees be mailed or emailed since some employees affected by Respondent’s unlawful conduct no longer work for Respond- ent. Given that former HSS Steven McNeil was directly affect- ed by Respondent’s unlawful conduct and he no longer works for Respondent, I grant Charging Party’s request. The complaint also requests an extended bargaining order under Mar-Jac Poultry, 136 NLRB 785 (1962). Respondent did not provide argument as to why Mar-Jac Poultry should not apply. Because the circumstances of this case present inequities similar to those in Mar-Jac, I find it applies and will recom- mend the requested remedy of a six (6) month extension to bargain with the Union as the recognized bargaining repre- sentative in the appropriate unit. On these findings of fact and conclusions of law and on the entire record, I issue the following recommended133 130 Maramont Corp., 317 NLRB 1035, 1037 (1995). 131 Sure-Tan, Inc. v. NLRB, 467 U.S. 883, 898–899 (1984). 132 Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc., 318 NLRB 470, 473 (1995). 133 If no exceptions are filed as provided by Sec. 102.46 of the Board’s Rules and Regulations, the findings, conclusions and recom- PHILLIPS 66 31 ORDER The Respondent, Phillips 66 of Santa Maria, California, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall 1. Cease and desist from (a) Threatening its former Health and Safety Shift Special- ists or any other employee with a loss of/change to their duties, schedules, work hours or any other term or condition of em- ployment if they decide or select to join the Union. (b) Impliedly promising its former Health and Safety Shift Specialists or any other employee unspecified benefits in ex- change for their vote against the Union. (c) Promulgating, maintaining and/or enforcing an overly broad news media guideline that employees could reasonably understand would prohibit them from exercising their Section 7 rights. (d) Failing and refusing to bargain in good faith with the Union over the terms and work conditions of the Santa Maria HSSs in the absence of a lawfully declared impasse. (e) Reassigning employees Lionel Senes, Andrew Garcia, Bernard Gallizio, Allen Lanier, and Steven McNeil or any other employee to lower paying bargaining unit positions because they voted to join the union, or otherwise discriminating against any employee for joining and/or supporting the Union or for engaging in any other protected concerted activity. (f) In any like or related manner interfering with, restrain- ing, or coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guaran- teed them by Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action necessary to effec- tuate the policies of the Act. (a) On request, bargain with the Union as the exclusive rep- resentative of the unit over the former Health and Safety Shift Specialists Senes’, Garcia’s, Gallizio’s, Lanier’s, and McNeil’s terms and conditions of employment, including their reassign- ments into lower paying bargaining unit positions. (b) Within 14 days from the date of the Board’s Order, offer full reinstatement to employees Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, Lanier, and McNeil to their former positions as Health and Safety Shift Specialists, or, if that job no longer exists, to a substantially equivalent position, without prejudice to their seniority or any other rights and privilege previously enjoyed, and to make em- ployees Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, Lanier, and McNeil whole for any loss of earnings and other benefits suffered as a result of the discrimination against them for exercising their Section 7 rights.134 Backpay shall be computed in accordance with Ogle Protection Service, Inc., 183 NLRB 682 (1970), enfd. 444 F.2d 502 (6th Cir. 1971), with interest at the rate prescribed in New Horizons for the Retarded, 283 NLRB 1173 (1987)(adopting the Internal Revenue Service rate for underpayment of Federal taxes), compounded daily as prescribed in Kentucky River Med- ical Center, 356 NLRB No. 8 (2010). Backpay due each em- ployee should not be reduced by any interim earnings the em- ployees may have generated during the backpay period pursu- ant to Community Health Services, Inc. d/b/a Mimbres Memo- mended Order shall, as provided in Sec. 102.48 of the Rules, be adopt- ed by the Board and all objections to them shall be deemed waived for all purposes. 134 See n.53 in this decision. rial Hospital & Nursing Home, 361 NLRB No. 25 (2014). (c) Within 14 days from the date of the Board’s Order, Re- spondent shall also be required to remove from its files any and all references to the unlawful reassignment of the affected em- ployees, and, within three (3) days thereafter, notify Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, Lanier, and McNeil in writing that this has been done and that the reassignment will not be used against them in any way. (d) Rescind or revise its news media guideline to remove any language that prohibits or may be read to prohibit employ- ees from exercising their Section 7 rights. (e) Furnish, publish and/or distribute, either personally or by mail to all current employees and by mail to all former employ- ees, new news media guidelines that: (1) do not contain the unlawful language, or (2) advises that the unlawful provisions have been rescinded, or (3) provides the language of lawful provisions that describes, with specificity, which types of con- duct or communication is proscribed by the Agreement and the conduct/communication that is protected by the Act. (f) Within 14 days after service by the Region, post at its Santa Maria facility, copies of the attached notice marked “Ap- pendix”135 in both English and Spanish. Copies of the notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 31, after being signed by the Respondent’s authorized representa- tive, shall be posted by the Respondent and maintained for 60 consecutive days in conspicuous places including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. In addition to physical posting of paper notices, the notices shall be distrib- uted electronically, such as by email, posting on an intranet or an internet site, and/or other electronic means, if the Respond- ent customarily communicates with its employees and former employees by such means. Respondent also shall duplicate and mail, at its expense, a copy of the notice to all former employ- ees who were affected by its unlawful conduct. Reasonable steps shall be taken by the Respondent to ensure that the notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. In the event that, during the pendency of these proceedings, the Respondent has gone out of business or closed the facility in- volved in these proceedings, Respondent shall duplicate and mail, at its own expense, a copy of the notice to all current em- ployees and former employees employed by the Respondent at any time since January 1, 2011. (g) Within 21 days after service by the Region, file with the Regional Director a sworn certification of a responsible official on a form provided by the Region attesting to the steps that Respondent has taken to comply. Dated, Washington, D.C. November 25, 2014 APPENDIX NOTICE TO EMPLOYEES POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 135 If this 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 read “Posted Pursuant to a Judgment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board.” DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD32 An Agency of the United States Government The National Labor Relations Board has found that we violated Federal labor law and has ordered us to post and obey this notice. FEDERAL LAW GIVES YOU THE RIGHT TO Form, join, or assist a union Choose representatives to bargain with us on your behalf Act together with other employees for your bene- fit and protection Choose not to engage in any of these protected activities. WE WILL NOT threaten any employee with a loss of/change to their duties, schedules, work hours or other terms and condi- tions of their employment if they select the Union to represent them. WE WILL NOT impliedly promise anything of benefit to any employee in exchange for voting against being represented by the Union. WE WILL NOT maintain, promulgate or enforce any news me- dia guideline that employees reasonably would believe bars or restricts them from communicating with the media in exercis- ing their Section 7 rights. WE WILL NOT refuse to bargain with the Union in good faith or unlawfully and unilaterally declare impasse during negotia- tions. WE WILL NOT reassign, transfer or demote employees Lionel Senes, Andrew Garcia, Bernard Gallizio, Allen Lanier, and Steven McNeil or any other employee because of their protect- ed concerted activities on behalf of the Union. WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner interfere with, re- strain, or coerce you in the exercise of the rights guaranteed you by Federal labor law. WE WILL rescind or revise our news media guideline to make it clear to you employees that our media guidelines do not re- strict you from communicating with the media in exercising your Section 7 rights. WE WILL notify employees of the rescinded or revised news media guidelines in writing, including providing you with a copy of any revised guidelines, acknowledgement forms or other related documents, or specific notification that the guide- lines have been rescinded. WE WILL bargain with the Union in good faith over the for- mer Health and Safety Shift Specialists’ terms and conditions of work, including their reassignment out of their positions into lower paying bargaining unit positions. WE WILL reinstate employees Lionel Senes, Andrew Gar- cia, Bernard Gallizio, Allen Lanier, and Steven McNeil to their former positions as Health and Safety Shift Specialists, or, if that job no longer exists, reinstate them to a substantially equivalent position, without prejudice to their seniority or any other rights and privilege previously enjoyed, and to make em- ployees Senes, Garcia, Gallizio, Lanier, and McNeil whole for any loss of earnings and other benefits suffered as a result of the discrimination against them for exercising their Section 7 rights. WE WILL reimburse employees Lionel Senes, Andrew Garcia, Bernard Gallizio, Allen Lanier, and Steven McNeil for wages lost resulting from their reassignment to other lower paying bargaining unit positions when they unionized and we unilaterally and unlawfully declared impasse in bar- gaining with the union and implemented our final proposal effective December 10, 2012. WE WILL remove or expunge all records of and references to Senes’, Garcia’s, Gallizio’s, Lanier’s, and McNeil’s reas- signment to lower paying bargaining unit positions when they unionized, and we unilaterally and unlawfully declare impasse in bargaining with the Union and implement our final proposal effective December 10, 2012. PHILLIPS 66 The Administrative Law Judge’s decision can be found at www.nlrb.gov/case/31-CA-085243 or by using the QR code below. Alternatively, you can obtain a copy of the decision from the Executive Secretary, National Labor Relations Board, 1099 14th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20570, or by calling (202) 273-1940. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation