Servomation Mathias Pa, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsDec 21, 1972200 N.L.R.B. 1063 (N.L.R.B. 1972) Copy Citation SERVOMATION MATHIAS, PA, INC 1063 Servomation Mathias Pa, Inc and Local 1199, Drug and Hospital Union , Retail, Wholesale and Depart- ment Store Union , AFL-CIO Case 29-CA-2527 December 21, 1972 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MILLER AND MEMBERS JENKINS AND KENNEDY On June 23, 1972, Administrative Law Judge' Henry L Jalette issued the attached Decision in this proceeding Respondent filed exceptions and a supporting brief Thereafter, it filed a Motion to Dismiss Complaint The General Counsel filed an Opposition to Motion to Dismiss Complaint Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its authority in this proceeding to a three-member panel The Board has considered the attached Decision, Respondent's exceptions and brief, and the entire record in the case and finds merit in certain of Respondent's exceptions relating to the jurisdiction of the Board The Board has decided not to assert jurisdiction in this case It therefore adopts only those findings of the Administrative Law Judge that are consistent with this Decision and does not adopt his conclusions and recommendations The Administrative Law Judge found that Re- spondent entered into a contract, effective from September 1971 until August 31, 1972, with the State University of New York at Stony Brook, New York (SUNY), to supply cafeteria food and related services to students, faculty, and guests on the university campus, that SUNY is not an "employer" as defined in Section 2(2) of the Act and therefore is not within the Board's jurisdiction, 2 that Respon- dent is not a joint employer with SUNY, and that Respondent's food service operation is not so essential to SUNY's educational purposes as to be, with SUNY, outside of the Board's Jurisdiction The Administrative Law Judge recommended that the Board assert jurisdiction He further found that Respondent was a successor to the previous food service contractor, Prophet Foods, that the Charging Union had been the collective-bargaining representa- tive for Prophet Food's employees, and that Respon- dent had a continuing duty to bargain with the Union under Section 8(a)(5) of the Act, as alleged in the complaint 3 He therefore recommended that the Board order Respondent to bargain, upon request, with the Union At the outset we must meet the jurisdictional issue 4 There is no dispute that SUNY, as part of the University System of the State of New York, is not an included "employer" under the Act Whether the Board will assert jurisdiction over a SUNY contrac- tor depends on the relationship of the contractor's services to operations of the State University, an institution which is excluded from the Act's jurisdic- tion 5 That relationship depends in large part upon the degree of control exercised by SUNY over Respondent The facts show that such control was extensive SUNY has 12,500 students on an 1,100-acre campus on Long Island, 50 miles distant from New York City Six thousand of the students reside on campus SUNY owns five cafeterias for the use of the students, their families, and guests Respondent, a multistate food service supplier, supplied food and services for this limited group It also provided like service for special state programs, such as high school equivalency, paid by SUNY The campus cafeterias could each accommodate about 1,000 persons The only other commercial food service on the campus was a cafeteria, buffet, and snack bar operated by the Student Union, having about the same capacity as a Respondent-operated cafeteria There was credible testimony that the only other food facilities, about 1-1/2 miles distant from the campus, were inadequate to serve students' needs 6 i The title Trial Examiner was changed to Administrative Law Judge effective August 19 1972 2 Sec 2(2) of the Act excludes from the definition of employer any wholly owned Government corporation or any State or political subdivision thereof 3 The Administrative Law Judge also found that Respondent had no duty to honor the collective-bargaining agreement that had existed between the predecessor employer Prophet Foods and the Union He therefore dismissed that allegation of the complaint The General Counsel did not file exceptions A We do not need to decide the issue whether Respondent and SUNY are joint employers 5 Slater Corporation 197 NLRB No 183 The Prophet Co 150 NLRB 1559 6 We credit the testimony of Herbert Davis corroborated by that of Roger Phelps We find no probative the seemingly contrary testimony of James Soch which the Administrative Law Judge foreclosed Respondent from developing at the hearing but nevertheless relied on in his Decision Davis at the time of the hearing, was manager of one cafeteria operated by Respondent He had been employed by Respondent s predecessor and before that, had been the Student Union building manager He had been in the food service business for more than 10 years had lived in the area 40 years and had visited all of the nearby off campus eating places within the recent past Davis testified that there were only a few off campus public eating places that they accommodated an insignificant number of people and that their facilities would be inadequate in the event of a shutdown of campus cafeterias Roger Phelps director of university housing and a witness for the General Counsel testified similarly Phelps said that he did not believe that the off campus facilities could meet mealtime needs The testimony of James Soch Respondent s director of food services was that off campus food facilities were adequate for residential students Respondent s attorney sought to question Soch (Respondent s witness) as to whether such facilities could feed all students at one time The Admimstra tive Law Judge sustained objection to the question and rejected Respon dent s offer of proof that off campus eating facilities were inadequate to (Continued) 200 NLRB No 136 1064 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Early in its contract term Respondent operated four cafeterias with 90 employees At the time of the hearing, it operated but one, employing only man- agement personnel Respondent had undertaken to supply food service on a cash basis by which students were to pay Respondent directly for food Students were free to use or not to use the facilities SUNY owned and maintained the capital equip- ment and food service facilities It made them available to Respondent without charge SUNY employed maintenance personnel assigned exclu- sively to servicing such facilities Respondent 's food service contract required it to comply with detailed specifications and conditions established by SUNY Such specifications covered, inter alia, the number of days and hours of operation, number of cafeteria lines to be provided, the kind of detergents to be used, type and amount of insurance coverage , and the University audit of Respondent's accounts and register tapes Under the contract SUNY had the right to supervise Respondent ' s operation with respect to a host of details including quality and quantity of service, method of service, cleanliness , appearance and behavior of Respondent 's employees , opening and closing hours, safety , and sanitation SUNY closely controlled the food service by requiring Respondent to submit menus 2 weeks in advance, and SUNY had the right to revise them The kind, amount, and size of food items, as well as meal combinations that Respondent could provide, were itemized in the contract The contract provided for a food committee , formed by SUNY, to evaluate Respondent 's performance and recommend changes Under this provision SUNY employed students who served on the committee to check on the quality of food service , review complaints , and suggest changes Respondent 's labor relations were similarly con- trolled by SUNY As part of its bid Respondent was required to submit, for university review and approv- al, its table of organization , listing the names and qualifications of management personnel Further, the University had the right to dismiss Respondent's managers for conduct it considered unacceptable The contract contained the understanding that the staff of Respondent 's predecessor would be given first consideration for employment Respondent was required to submit ajob grade, wage scale, and fringe benefit program to be offered to the food service staff Respondent was required to abide by an hour and minimum wage scale for students , as established by SUNY The record amply demonstrates that SUNY re- tained a substantial degree of control over the services and labor relations of Respondent The Administrative Law Judge 's contrary view is conclu- sionary and not based on a factual analysis of Respondent's contract relationship to SUNY 7 In The Slater Corporation, 197 NLRB No 183, and in The Prophet Co, 150 NLRB 1559, the Board declined to assert jurisdiction over food service contractors supplying services to state universities The relation- ship of the food service contractor to the state university in this case is similar to the relationships in the earlier cases We therefore find that it would not effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdic- tion Accordingly, we shall dismiss the complaint 8 ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board hereby orders that the complaint herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed in its entirety MEMBER JENKINS, concurring I concur in the result reached by my colleagues meet the University s needs on the ground that the witness was not competent to testify on the offer Thereafter in his Decision the Administrative Law Judge relied on Soch s statement In view of the fact that Such s testimony was incomplete , we cannot find it probative of the issue which the Administrative Law Judge considered proved by Soch s testimony 9 The decision in Herbert Harvey Inc 171 NLRB 238 cited as authority by the Administrative Law Judge for asserting jurisdiction is inapposite We base our decision on facts showing a high degree of control exercised by SUNY over Responaent contractor The facts in Herbert Harvey do not parallel these In that case unlike this one the exempt employer retained much less control over operations of the respondent contractor 8 After the Administrative Law Judge issued his Decision Respondent moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that its contract with SUNY had not been renewed and that it would have no presence at Stony Brook after August 31 1972 In view of our dismissal of the complaint on jurisdictional grounds we find it unnecessary to pass on the merits of Respondent s Motion to Dismiss Complaint TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE HENRY L JALETTE, Trial Examiner This case involves allegations that Respondent is a successor-employer obligated to recognize and bargain with the above-named Union, certified as a representative of the employees of a predecessor-employer and obligated to honor the collec- tive-bargainmg agreement entered into between the Union and the predecessor-employer Respondent's refusal to recognize and bargain with the Union and its refusal to honor the collective-bargaining agreement are alleged to constitute conduct violative of Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act The charge was filed on September 16, 1971, and pursuant thereto complaint issued on December 20, 1971 Hearing was held on February 22 and 23, 1972, in Brooklyn, New York Upon the entire record, including my observation of the SERVOMATION MATHIAS, PA, INC 1065 witnesses, and after due consideration of the brief filed by Respondent, I make the following 1 FINDINGS OF FACT I INTRODUCTION Respondent is a food service contractor engaged in providing cafeteria food and related services in various States, including the State of New York In July 1971, Respondent entered into a contract to provide its services to State University of New York at Stony Brook (hereinaf- er referred to as SUNY) By entering into this contract, Respondent was to follow another food service contractor, Prophet Foods Company, which had been providing food service to SUNY since August 1970 Prophet Foods had itself followed yet another food service contractor, ABC- Gladieux Corporation, which had provided food service to SUNY during the period from 1968 to 1970 During the time ABC-Gladieux was food service contractor at SUNY, the Union herein had been certified by the Board as bargaining representative of its employees 2 When Prophet Foods followed ABC-Gladieux as food service contractor, it honored the certification, recognized the Union, and negotiated a collective-bargaining agreement This agree- ment was for a term from January 8, 1970, to August 31, 1972, and when Respondent followed Prophet Foods as food service contractor at SUNY, employing the same employees previously employed successively by ABC- Gladieux and Prophet Foods, the Union requested recognition and that Respondent honor the collective- bargaining agreement Respondent refused, and this proceeding followed Respondent defends its refusal to recognize the Union on several grounds Respondent contends that the Board should not assert jurisdiction herein because its food service operations involved herein are intimately connected with the operations of SUNY, an institution exempt from the Board's jurisdiction Should jurisdiction be asserted, Respondent contends it is not a "successor-employer " Should it be found to be a successor, Respondent contends it has no obligation to bargain with the Union because the certified unit is inappropriate II JURISDICTION A The Facts SUNY is part of the university system of the State of New York and is exempt from the jurisdiction of the Board under Section 2(2) of the Act Stony Brook where SUNY is located is on Long Island in Suffolk County, New York, 50 miles east of New York City SUNY has approximately 12,500 students on an 1,100-acre campus, which includes 26 residential colleges within 5 quadrangles that house 6,000 students Included among the campus facilities owned by SUNY are five cafeterias for the use of students and faculty and their families and guests Although the public may use the cafeterias, they are not solicited to do so SUNY does not operate these cafeterias , it contracts with food service companies such as Respondent to provide the food service The contract SUNY entered into obliges SUNY to provide and maintain the cafeteria facilities, including all necessary equipment The food service company undertakes to provide food service to students and faculty according to specified rates The contract contains somewhat detailed provisions governing the operation of the cafeterias Thus, it contains detailed provisions about the menus to be offered, specifies meal service hours, sets forth various meal plans to be offered to the users of the cafeteria, and specifies the price of meals The contract gives SUNY the right of supervision of Respondent's performance "with respect to the quality and quantity of food service, the method of service, the cleanliness , appearance, and behavior of the contractor's employees, opening and closing hours, and generally with respect to safety, sanitation and the maintenance of said premises " With respect to Respondent's labor force, the contract provides that all management personnel shall continue service only as long as their work is acceptable to SUNY, and all personnel of Respondent are subject to dismissal for conduct considered unacceptable by SUNY 3 As part of its contract proposal, Respondent was required to submit to SUNY a job grade, wage rate, and fringe benefit program to be offered to its staff All personnel are required to undergo a complete physical examination The contract requires Respondent to provide work opportunities for students at an hourly rate equal to the New York minimum wage and specifies the maximum number of hours they can work The minimum wage provision never came into play because Respondent's rate of pay exceeded the minimum wage The contractor is required to submit monthly operating profit and loss statements, and to keep complete account- ing records of its operations under the agreement, including a record of daily sales and receipts SUNY has the right to examine and audit the contractor's records The first food service contractor about which the record contains evidence is ABC-Gladieux Corporation which had the food service contract from September 1, 1968, to August 31, 1970 At that time , SUNY had in effect a mandatory food plan pursuant to which resident students were required to subscribe to food service and the cost thereof was part of a student's fees Under this system, ABC-Gladieux contracted to provide each student with 21 meals per week at a specified daily rate No cash was paid to ABC-Gladieux by the students, rather, ABC-Gladieux was paid by SUNY Prophet Foods replaced ABC-Gladieux, and the contract it entered into with SUNY also provided that Prophet 1 Respondent filed a posthearing motion to dismiss the complaint in its entirety In light of the Supreme Court s decision in N L R B v Burns International Security Service Inc 406 U S 272 decided May 15, 1972 the motion to dismiss is granted as to the complaint allegation respecting Respondents refusal to honor the collective bargaining agreement between the Union and the predecessor-employer In all other respects the motion to dismiss is denied for the reasons given herein 2 The certification issued on June 3 1970 Case 29-RC-1458 3 There is no evidence this provision was ever invoked in Respondent s case When Prophet Foods was food service contractor SUNY objected to the employment of a student ( for reasons apparently not related to his work performance) and its objection was honored An objection to the employment of three management people was not honored 1066 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Foods would provide each student 21 meals per week at a specified daily rate, which varied depending on the number of students subscribing to the meal plan Effective March 7, 1971, as a result of student com- plaints about the quality of the food they were receiving, resident students were no longer required to subscribe to the meal plan, rather, SUNY adopted an optional meal plan which permitted students to remove themselves from the mandatory meal plan and a cash plan was substituted pursuant to which students purchased their own meals When this optional meal plan was adopted, the number of students subscribing to the meal plan dropped from 3,500 to 500 Respondent's contract with SUNY is for the period from September 1971, to August 31, 1972 The contract provides that Respondent is responsible for collecting directly for all charges for food service rendered with certain exceptions and, in effect, is based on an optional meal plan for resident students The adoption of an optional meal plan has had a significant impact on the operations of the food service contractors Thus, during the time Prophet was food service contractor, it operated all 5 cafeterias and em- ployed as many as 250 employees, however, when Respondent became the food service contractor it began by operating 3 cafeterias, later opened a fourth and employed as many as 90 employees, but gradually ceased operating 3 of the 4 so that at the time of the hearing, although the University was on a full-time basis, Respon- dent was operating only 1 cafeteria employing only management personnel and no unit employees The 5 SUNY-owned cafeterias can each feed 1,000 students and are adequate for the entire resident student body Since most of the students are obviously not eating in the cafeterias, they must be eating elsewhere The dormitories which house the students have minimal eating facilities (e g, a kitchenette for each 100 students designed for casual cooking), and even where there are no such facilities, they are cooking in their rooms In addition, there is a cafeteria in the Student Union building operated by the Student Union On the campus, there are food vendors purveying a variety of foods and on the perimeter of the campus there are restaurants and fast food operations According to Herbert Davis, manager of one of Respondent's cafeterias, the restaurants and other food service operations near the campus are inadequate to serve the student body of SUNY, but his opinion appears to be at odds with that of James Soch, Respondent's director of food service, who testified "there are food facilities available that could feed, oh, I would say the entire residential students on the campus at different areas " B Analysis and Conclusions As indicated above, Respondent is a food service contractor engaged in providing cafeteria food and related services in various States, including the State of New York Respondent is a Maryland corporation with its principal office and place of business in Baltimore, Maryland In the course and conduct of its operations, it annually receives revenues in excess of $500,000 from all its food service operations and it annually causes to be transported in interstate commerce equipment, food, and materials valued in excess of $50,000 On the basis of these facts, it is clear that Respondent is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act, and that it meets the Board's standards for the assertion of jurisdiction However, the complaint herein is predicated on Respon- dent's operations as a food service contractor at SUNY, a State-operated institution exempt from the Board's juris- diction, and Respondent contends that the food service it provides is a function so intimately connected with SUNY's exempted operations that it would not effectuate the purposes of the Act for the Board to assert jurisdiction herein In support of this position, Respondent relies, in the main, on The Prophet Co, 150 NLRB 1559 and The Horn and Hardart Company, 154 NLRB 1368 I find both cases factually distinguishable from the instant case 4 In Herbert Harvey, Inc, 171 NLRB 283, the Board asserted jurisdiction over a contractor providing mainte- nance services to the World Bank, an exempt institution The Board there distinguished not only Horn and Hardart and The Prophet Co, supra, but also distinguished their progenitor, Crotty Brothers, Inc, 146 NLRB 755, wherein the Board declined to assert jurisdiction In Crotty Brothers, 70 percent of the student body were resident students subscribing to a mandatory food plan, there was no other establishment within 1 mile where students could obtain their meals, and the college exercised substantially complete control over Crotty's operations and labor relations policies In Horn and Hardart, the food service was principally for patients, menus were prepared by the hospital dieticians who also decided the times at which food was to be served to patients, and the contractor's employees in the perform- ance of their duties were subject to direction by members of the hospital's supervisory staff In Prophet Co, almost one half of the students subscribed to a board plan (which was mandatory for resident students) and 79 percent of the contractor 's sales was made under student meal contracts for which the university paid a fixed fee for each subscribing student There were no comparable eating facilities for students within reasonable distance of the campus Although, as I have indicated, I find the facts of those cases distinguishable from the facts herein, I do not rely on any differences in the food service contracts While I do not have the contracts in those cases before me, it seems evident that they are not essentially different from the contract in this case But I find nothing in the contract to justify a finding that SUNY has such control over Respondent's operations and labor relations policies to extend SUNY's exemption to Respondent or to find SUNY to be anoint employer In myjudgment, the control 4 Respondent also relies on an unpublished Decision and Order by a denied a request for review of a dismissal of the petition I find these cases Regional Director in Slater Corporation Case 6-RC-5923 in which also factually distinguishable and for the reasons set forth above I deem apparently no request for review was made and on Slater Corporation A them not to be controlling Subsidiary of ARA Services, Inc, Case 11-RC-3386, in which the Board SERVOMATION MATHIAS, PA, INC retained over Respondent's operations by SUNY is typical of that retained over cost -plus-fixed fee contractors and is of the type deemed insufficient by the Board to warrant a refusal to exercise its j unsdiction 5 Insofar as Respondent 's labor relations policies are concerned, it is clear that they are a matter for it to determine , and not SUNY This is shown by the fact that when Prophet Foods negotiated a collective-bargaining agreement with the Union herein, SUNY did not inter- vene , participate , or inject itself into the negotiations in any manner , all that SUNY did was send an observer to a couple of meetings The cases differ in the essentiality of the food service insofar as the students are concerned In the cases relied on by Respondent, resident students were required to sub- scribe to a meal plan and the cost was part of tuition and fees This was the situation here before Respondent became the contractor, but, since March 1971, the mandatory food plan has been abolished and the cafeterias are operated on a cash basis Except for some insubstantial special programs , SUNY does not pay Respondent for meals to students The cafeterias are operated on an a to carte cash basis , and students are free to use or not to use the facilities Respondent contends that here, as in the cited cases, there are no comparable eating facilities for the students I have pointed out above what alternative facilities do exist and they appear to me to be adequate to the needs of the student body The most convincing proof of their adequa- cy is the fact that since abolition of the mandatory food plan students have opted to eat elsewhere In my judgment, there can be no more significant proof that the food service operation is not essential to the exempt operations of SUNY than the fact that students are not using the cafeterias , only one of five being in use , and that one being operated by management personnel only Moreover, in acquiescing to the abandonment of the mandatory meal plan, SUNY appears to have concluded that providing food service in a campus setting is not essential to the educational purposes of the university Respondent submits in its brief that in view of the investment in the five cafeterias it must be presumed that SUNY will not permit such facilities to remain idle In support of this, Respondent has submitted a letter from SUNY to Respondent stating, inter alia, that "It is our intent at the present time to institute a compulsory board plan for all entering freshmen beginning with fall 1972 " I attach no weight to this letter which is dated December 14, 1971, and which was not properly offered into evidence at the hearing in February 1972 But even were the letter in evidence I would not deem it sufficient to warrant a finding that food service is essential to SUNY's operation I just don't see how one could close his eyes to the fact that facilities asserted to be essential have lain idle for several months with no indication that students , for whom the services are designed , have protested the lack of adequate food service facilities For the foregoing reasons, I find that the food service operations of Respondent at SUNY are not essential to 5 See Herbert Harvey supra fn 8 and cases cited therein 6 There is no evidentiary support for the employment figure of 400 which 1067 SUNY's exempt operations and I shall recommend that the Board assert jurisdiction herein III THE REFUSAL TO BARGAIN A The Successor Issue Respondent and Prophet Foods are both engaged in the food service business on a nationwide scale , both contract- ed with SUNY to provide the same service at the same cafeteria facilities , and although Respondent used its own supervisors its employees were all former employees of Prophet Based on identical considerations , the Supreme Court affirmed the Board's finding in Burns, supra, that Burns was a successor to Wackenhut Respondent contends , however, in effect, that its operations at SUNY have only a semblance of the operations of its predecessors Respondent contends that the facts and circumstances of the food service operation have changed so materially in 1971-72 from what it was in 1969-70, or 1970-71 that no successorship can result As Respondent puts it , "Certainly, the basic precepts of quantum mechanics are applicable to the circumstances obtaining herein, namely, that at some point a significant quantitative change constitutes a qualitative change " The facts and circumstances relied upon by Respondent are that in 1969-70, when ABC-Gladieux was the food service contractor, the food service contract was based on a mandatory food plan serving a substantial percentage of the university community, using all of SUNY's cafeteria facilities , and employing nearly 400 employees Prophet Foods similarly operated all the cafeterias , employed about 400 employees , and, at least initially, operated on the basis of a mandatory food plan s Under a mandatory food plan, although there are cash sales, the major receipts of the food service contractor are from SUNY Respondent contrasts the foregoing with the evidence that it never operated all the cafeterias , never employed over 90 employees , and that, as a result of the abandon- ment of the mandatory food plan , it operated only on a cash basis Respondent also adverts to the evidence that whereas Prophet operated on a four-shift basis, it operated, at least for a time , on a continuous 9 a in to 7 p in basis I am not persuaded that any of the differences adverted to by Respondent warrant a finding that it was not a successor to Prophet Respondent is still contractually obligated to render the same service at the same facilities and the work force that it gradually acquired consisted exclusively of former Prophet employees , employed in the same job classifications , and performing the same duties as had been performed by Prophet employees Neither the change to a full cash operation , already partly in effect while Prophet was still the contractor, nor the change in hours of operation can be deemed differences of such consequences as to justify a finding that there has been a change in the employing industry The evidence that at the time of hearing Respondent was operating only one cafeteria and employing no unit personnel does not require a different conclusion The gravamen of the complaint is that in August 1971, when Respondent uses in its beef 1068 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Respondent took over the food service operation, and thereafter, when Respondent's work force numbered about 90 former employees of Prophet, Respondent refused to recognize the Union It is at that point in time that one must evaluate Respondent's status as a successor-employ- er In its argument against a finding of successorship, Respondent injects an assertion about the Union's majon- ty status Thus, it states that "Although the bulk of Servomation's rank and file employees in the early fall were former Prophet employees, their number never constituted a majority of the projected numbers of workers Servomation would have had to employ had its operations ever been comparable to ABC-Gladieux's or even Proph- et's " I don't know on what Respondent bases this assertion It had contractually agreed with SUNY to give first preference in employment to former Prophet employ- ees, and, in discussions with the Union, it had gone so far as to agree to follow seniority in hiring based on employment not only by Prophet, but also by ABC- Gladieux On the basis of these facts, Respondent had a pool of about 300 former Prophet and ABC-Gladieux employees to draw from Finally, Respondent contends that a finding of succes- sorship must discount its quantum mechanics theory and must be predicated on a finding that the circumstances under which Respondent is operating are temporary only, which would require a further finding that the food services would again be substantial in volume and therefore an important part of SUNY's operations and intimately related to its operations as an exempt institu- tion, so that jurisdiction should not be asserted herein on the principle discussed under the jurisdiction heading above Such a result would misconceive the meaning behind my finding that Respondent's operations are not essential to SUNY's operations as an exempt institution Stated briefly, my finding in this case is that the facts herein demonstrate clearly, contrary to the facts in the cases cited by Respondent in support of its argument against a finding of jurisdiction, that a food service operation at a university is no more essential to the university's exempt operations than are the maintenance services in issue in Herbert Harvey, supra, and, even if SUNY reinstituted a mandatory food plan and all cafeterias were reopened, I would not withhold the exercise of jurisdiction B The Appropriateness of the Unit The certified unit is as follows All cafeteria and kitchen employees employed by the Employer at the State University, Stony Brook, New York, excluding all office clerical employees, guards, and supervisors as defined in the Act, and all part-time employees who work 8 or less hours per week Under this unit description, students at SUNY employed by the food service contractor would be included in the unit and would be eligible to vote Whether or not students did vote in the election held when ABC-Gladieux was food service contractor does not appear in the record Nor does it appear whether the Union and Prophet discussed the inclusion or exclusion of students as such when they negotiated a contract They evidentiy discussed part-time employees because they mutually agreed to exclude from the unit part-time employees working less than 12 hours per week, rather than 8 as specified in the certification (Because of this modification by the parties to the certification, the complaint alleges that the appropriate unit is as modified As the modification was not substantial and did not render the unit inappropriate I find the appropriate unit to be that which excludes part-time employees working less than 12 hours per week) In the absence of a specific exclusion of students, I conclude that they have been included in the unit as part-time employees Respondent contends that the inclusion of the students renders the unitper se inappropriate I find no meet to this contention As Respondent points out, in Scope Associated, 172 NLRB 1789, the Board excluded student janitors on the ground their major economic interest was in studies in preparation for a different occupation and thus they had no community of interest in their employment with employees who worked full-time and were dependent on their employment for a livelihood However, the exclusion of students in any given case does not mean that their inclusion would render a unit inappropriate As the Court pointed out in N L R B v Certified Testing Laboratories, 387 F 2d 275 (C A 3), where the Court sustained the Board's exclusion of student employees, "We do not imply that had the Board reached the opposite result, its position would have been untena- ble " In Simon Bros Co, 173 NLRB 906, the Board excluded some college students and included others who worked regular part-time in contact with regular employ- ees It appears here that the students work alongside regular full-time employees in the same classifications on a regular part-time basis Moreover, the contract between the Union and Prophet contains provisions relating to part- time employees which are applicable to students and which reflect a shared community of interest in working condi- tions between students and regular employees during that period of their lives when the students are employed by the food service contractor Under all the circumstances, the inclusion of the students in the unit did not render the unit inappropriate IV THE EFFECT OF THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES UPON COMMERCE The activities of the Respondent set forth in section I and II, above, occurring in connection with its operations described therein, have a close, intimate, and substantial relationship to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow of commerce THE REMEDY Having found that Respondent has engaged in unfair labor practices in violation of Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act, I shall recommend that it be ordered to cease and desist therefrom and to take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act As noted earlier, Respondent had no unit employees at the time of the hearing In such a circumstance, a SERVOMATION MATHIAS, PA, INC bargaining order would be inappropriate It appears, however, that such situation is temporary, and I shall recommend that, in the event Respondent resumes operations with employees in the appropriate unit, Respon- dent bargain, upon request , with the Union , and, if an understanding is reached , embody such understanding in a signed agreement CONCLUSIONS OF LAW I Servomation Mathias Pa, Inc, is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act, and it will effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction over its operations at State University of New York at Stony Brook 2 Respondent is a successor to Prophet Foods Compa- ny 3 Local 1199, Drug and Hospital Union, Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union , AFL-CIO, is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act 4 All cafeteria and kitchen employees employed by 1069 Respondent at the State University , Stony Brook, New York , excluding all office clerical employees, guards, and supervisors as defined in the Act, and all part-time employees who work less than 12 hours per week, constitute a unit appropriate for the purpose of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act 5 Local 1199, Drug and Hospital Union, Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, AFL-CIO, is the exclusive representative of the employees of Respondent in the above-described unit within the meaning of Section 9(a) of the Act 6 By refusing to recognize and bargain with the aforesaid Union, Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(5) and ( 1) and Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act 7 Respondent 's refusal to honor the collective -bargain- ing agreement between the aforesaid Union and Prophet Foods did not constitute an unfair labor practice within the meaning of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act [Recommended Order omitted from publication Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation