T-Mobile USA, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsApr 2, 2020369 N.L.R.B. 50 (N.L.R.B. 2020) Copy Citation 369 NLRB No. 50 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. T-Mobile USA, Inc. and Communications Workers of America, AFL–CIO. Cases 14–CA–155249, 14– CA–158446, 14–CA–166164, and 14–CA–162644 April 2, 2020 DECISION, ORDER, AND NOTICE TO SHOW CAUSE BY CHAIRMAN RING AND MEMBERS KAPLAN AND EMANUEL On June 28, 2016, Administrative Law Judge Sharon Levinson Steckler issued the attached decision. The Re- spondent filed exceptions and a supporting brief, and the General Counsel and the Charging Party each filed an an- swering brief. 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,1 and conclusions only to the extent consistent with this Decision, Order, and Notice to Show Cause.2 We agree with the judge, for the reasons she states, that on June 2 and 4, 2015,3 the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) by telling employees that they could not talk about the Union during worktime in working areas despite per- mitting discussions of other subjects “not associated or connected with their work tasks” during worktime in working areas. Jensen Enterprises, Inc., 339 NLRB 877, 1 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 preponderance of all the relevant evidence convinces us that they are incorrect. Stand- ard 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. In the absence of exceptions, we adopt the judge’s findings that the Respondent violated Sec. 8(a)(1) by: (1) in mid-June or early July 2015 and on December 11 and 21, 2015, interrogating customer service rep- resentative (CSR) Jerrica Croxson about her friendship with a known un- ion supporter, her support for the Union, and her involvement in planning a union event; (2) on December 11 and 21, 2015, creating an impression of surveillance of Croxson’s union activity; (3) on December 11, 2015, telling Croxson that it was disappointed in her for engaging in union ac- tivity; (4) on December 11, 2015, threatening Croxson with loss of cor- porate awards because she engaged in union activity; and (5) on Decem- ber 11, 2015, telling Croxson that not supporting the Union would make her life easier. Also in the absence of exceptions, we adopt the judge’s dismissal of the allegations that the Respondent violated Sec. 8(a)(1) by: (1) in mid-June or early July 2015, telling Croxson that engaging in un- ion activity was detrimental to her success; (2) in mid-June or early July, 2015, interrogating Croxson about her support for the Union; (3) on De- cember 11, 2015, asking Croxson if she thought her supervisory coach was stupid by thinking she was unaware of her union activity; and (4) on December 14, 2015, singling out Croxson for closer supervision because of her union activity. 878 (2003).4 We also agree with the judge that, on June 4, the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) by surveilling employees and interrogating employees about their union activity and, in early June, telling CSR Jerrica Croxson that it was creating a seating chart to isolate employees because of their union activity and by subsequently main- taining and implementing that seating chart to isolate cer- tain employees because of their union activity.5 The judge found that on August 20, the Respondent’s security guard unlawfully told CSR Abigail Parrish, when no other employees were present, that she could not dis- tribute union flyers outside of the west entrance to the Re- spondent’s building while off duty.6 The Respondent ex- cepts, contending that it effectively repudiated the unlaw- ful statement less than an hour later when the Respond- ent’s chief of human resources, Larissa Wray-Tolbert, emailed Parrish that the security guard was “in error” and that “[t]here’s no prohibition against your distributing un- ion literature in a non-working area during non-working time.” We find merit in the Respondent’s exception. Under Passavant Memorial Area Hospital, an employer effectively repudiates unlawful conduct if the repudiation is timely, unambiguous, specific in nature to the coercive conduct, and free from other proscribed illegal conduct. 237 NLRB 138, 138 (1978); see also TBC Corp., 367 NLRB No. 18, slip op. at 2–3 (2018). The Respondent’s conduct met that standard.7 Wray-Tolbert’s email repudi- ating the security guard’s statement was timely, unambig- uous, and specific in nature to the coercive conduct. It 2 We shall modify the judge’s recommended Order to conform to our findings and to the Board’s standard remedial language, and we shall substitute a new notice to conform to the Order as modified. 3 All dates hereinafter are in 2015 unless otherwise indicated. 4 The judge mistakenly found that the Respondent told employees that they could not talk about the Union in “nonwork” areas instead of “working” areas. We correct this inadvertent error. In finding this violation, Member Emanuel notes that the allegation is solely that the Respondent unlawfully told employees that they could not talk about the Union during worktime in working areas despite permit- ting discussions of other nonwork-related subjects in working areas. There is no allegation, nor would he find, that the Respondent’s June 4 statement to employees that they could not distribute union literature in working areas was unlawful, or that the Respondent would have acted unlawfully if it had prohibited solicitation during working time. 5 We find it unnecessary to pass on whether the maintenance and im- plementation of the seating chart also violated Sec. 8(a)(3) because it would not materially affect the remedy. 6 There is no allegation that Parrish sought to distribute union leaflets inside the Respondent’s building while off duty. Although on a separate occasion Parrish distributed union leaflets in the Respondent’s lunch- room, that was during her lunchbreak. 7 Chairman Ring and Member Emanuel express no opinion with re- spect to whether the Passavant requirements represent a proper standard for effective repudiation of unlawful conduct, but they agree that the Re- spondent’s actions met the Passavant standard in this case. 2 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD informed Parrish—the only employee to whom the secu- rity guard made the coercive statement—that the security guard was “in error” and that she was free to distribute union literature in nonworking areas during nonworktime. There is no evidence that any other employees knew about this incident. The judge found the repudiation ineffective because the Respondent’s email to Parrish did not tell her that the Re- spondent would not repeat its action. But the email was clear and to the point: the security guard was wrong, and Parrish was free to resume the activity the guard had wrongly prohibited. The reasonable takeaway from the email was that the prohibition would not be repeated. The judge also determined that the repudiation was ineffective because it did not occur in a context free of other unlawful conduct. However, the Respondent’s other unfair labor practices were relatively remote in time and did not in- volve unlawful restrictions on distribution of union litera- ture. Those other unfair labor practices would not have affected how Parrish would have reasonably read Wray- Tolbert’s email informing her that the security guard erred by preventing her from engaging in protected activity. Lastly, the judge noted that the security guard’s directive to Parrish occurred while the Respondent was complying with the terms of a settlement agreement resolving other unfair labor practice allegations. Even assuming the Re- spondent’s contemporaneous compliance with a settle- ment agreement is relevant here, this also would not have had any bearing on how Parrish would have reasonably understood Wray-Tolbert’s email. An effective repudiation disavows unlawful conduct and obviates the need for further remedial action. Passa- vant Memorial Area Hospital, 237 NLRB at 138–139. There is no dispute that the Respondent’s security guard unlawfully interfered with Parrish’s Section 7 rights. However, after learning of the security guard’s statement to Parrish, the Respondent took immediate action to rec- tify the situation and make it known to Parrish, unequivo- cally, that she could distribute union literature in non- working areas during nonworktime in accordance with the Respondent’s policy. Moreover, there is no evidence that the security guard, or anyone else, repeated this type of coercive conduct. Under all the circumstances, employees would not reasonably conclude that the Respondent would prohibit them from distributing union literature in non- work areas during nonworktime. We do not believe that further remedial action by the Board would be any more effective than Wray-Tolbert’s August 20 email to Parrish in preventing the security guard’s coercive statement from interfering with employees’ Section 7 rights. Accord- ingly, in light of the Respondent’s effective repudiation, we dismiss this allegation. On May 29, while not on the clock, CSR Chelsea Befort attempted to use her work email to send a message to her 595 coworkers encouraging them to join the Communica- tions Workers of America, which was engaged in a multi- year organizing campaign at her facility. Befort’s email also advised her coworkers to contact her outside of work- ing hours with any questions and invited them to attend a union event the following night. However, she received an automated notice that the email was not sent to anyone because the Respondent’s system limits emails from being sent to more than 100 recipients; the notice instructed Be- fort to “try to resend with fewer recipients.” Over the course of the day, while not on the clock, Befort success- fully sent her email eight separate times, each time to fewer than 100 recipients, to reach all of her coworkers. On June 2, after learning about Befort’s emails, the Re- spondent sent an email to all CSRs and met separately with Befort. The email and meeting addressed, among other things, employee email use and union talk during worktime. The Respondent asserted that Befort’s email violated its Acceptable Use Policy, Enterprise User Standard, and No Solicitation or Distribution Policy. The judge relied on Purple Communications, Inc., 361 NLRB 1050 (2014), to find that the Respondent discriminatorily applied those policies to proscribe Befort’s right to use the Respondent’s email and computer system to engage in Section 7 activity. The judge then determined that, in response to Befort’s protected activity under Purple Communications, the Re- spondent’s June 2 email unlawfully announced rules pro- hibiting employees from sending “mass communications” to other employees, discussing the Union during work- time, and using social media unless “off the job.” The judge also applied Purple Communications to find that, in the June 2 meeting, the Respondent unlawfully told Befort that employees could not send “mass emails” or union-re- lated emails to other employees’ work email addresses. Recently, the Board overruled Purple Communications and announced a new standard that applies retroactively to all pending cases. Caesars Entertainment d/b/a Rio All- Suites Hotel & Casino, 368 NLRB No. 143, slip op. at 8- 9 (2019). In that decision, the Board held, in relevant part, that “an employer does not violate the Act by restricting the nonbusiness use of its IT resources absent proof that employees would otherwise be deprived of any reasonable means of communicating with each other, or proof of dis- crimination.” Id., slip op. at 8 (emphasis added). Although the Board in Caesars Entertainment reaf- firmed that an employer cannot discriminate against Sec- tion 7 activity in applying a policy that prohibits employ- ees’ nonbusiness use of its IT resources, we reverse the judge and dismiss the allegation that the Respondent T-MOBILE USA, INC. 3 discriminatorily applied its Acceptable Use Policy, Enter- prise User Standard, and No Solicitation or Distribution Policy against Section 7 activity.8 As the Board stated in Register Guard, “in order to be unlawful, discrimination must be along Section 7 lines. In other words, unlawful discrimination consists of disparate treatment of activities or communications of a similar character because of their union or other Section 7-protected status.” 351 NLRB 1110, 1118 (2007), enfd. in part and remanded sub nom. Guard Publishing v. NLRB, 571 F.3d 53 (D.C. Cir. 2009). Here, the Respondent sent the CSRs numerous emails on such nonwork-related subjects as free popcorn and hockey tickets, nacho day in the cafeteria, upcoming salsa and lip-syncing contests, deaths in employees’ families, condolence cards, baby showers, and birth announcements to foster employee morale. In addition, a non-supervisory senior representative had emailed the entire facility about a lost phone charger, and the administrative assistant to the facility’s director had twice emailed all employees about a birthday card signing for the Respondent’s CEO. How- ever, the Respondent never permitted emails in favor of a specific union or against union activity. Instead, the type of emails that the Respondent sent, or permitted employ- ees to send, were not in any way connected to Section 7 activity and were not similar in character to Befort’s emails. In particular, the comparator emails cited by the General Counsel as disparate-treatment evidence were, by and large, emails that the Respondent sent for its own busi- ness-related interests of improving the camaraderie among its work force or helping to reunite a lost item with its owner. There is no evidence that the Respondent permit- ted employees to send mass emails for their personal ben- efit, much less to further any organizational purpose. In short, the General Counsel failed to satisfy his burden of proving that the Respondent discriminatorily enforced its Acceptable Use Policy, Enterprise User Standard, or No Solicitation or Distribution Policy against Section 7 activ- ity.9 As stated above, Caesars Entertainment recognizes a limited exception that permits employees to access their employer’s IT resources for nonbusiness use, even absent discrimination, where the employees would otherwise be deprived of any reasonable means of communication with each other. The parties have not had an opportunity, on 8 No party excepted to the judge’s finding that the complaint alleged only that the policies were discriminatorily applied, not that they were facially unlawful. 9 In Caesars Entertainment, the Board did not address what impact, if any, the standard announced in Kroger Ltd. Partnership I Mid-Atlan- tic, 368 NLRB No. 64 (2019), for evaluating allegations of discrimina- tory denial of access to nonemployee union agents has on the the facts of this case, to address this exception to the rule of Caesars Entertainment. Accordingly, we sever and re- tain for further consideration complaint paragraphs 6, 7(a), and 7(c), as to which the lawfulness of the Respond- ent’s conduct is dependent on whether Befort engaged in protected activity under Caesars Entertainment by send- ing her emails, and we issue below a notice to show cause why the allegations in those complaint paragraphs should not be remanded to the judge for further proceedings in light of Caesars Entertainment, including, if necessary, the filing of statements, reopening the record, and issuance of a supplemental decision. AMENDED CONCLUSIONS OF LAW Substitute the following for Conclusion of Law 9. “9. On June 2 and 4, 2015, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by telling employees that they could not discuss the Union during work time in working areas de- spite permitting discussions of nonwork-related subjects during work time in working areas.” Substitute the following for Conclusion of Law 15. “15. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by creating and maintaining a seating chart to isolate employ- ees because of their Union activities and sympathies.” Delete Conclusions of Law 5, 6, 7, 8, and 10 and renum- ber the subsequent paragraphs accordingly. ORDER The National Labor Relations Board orders that the Re- spondent, T-Mobile USA, Inc., Wichita, Kansas, its offic- ers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall 1. Cease and desist from (a) Telling employees that they cannot talk about the Union during worktime in working areas despite permit- ting discussions of other nonwork-related subjects during worktime in working areas. (b) Coercively interrogating employees about their un- ion or other protected concerted activities. (c) Placing employees under surveillance while they engage in union or other protected concerted activities. (d) Creating the impression that it is engaged in surveil- lance of its employees’ union or other protected concerted activities. (e) Telling employees that they will be isolated by a seating chart because they engaged in union or other pro- tected concerted activities. discriminatory-enforcement standard in Register Guard. 368 NLRB No. 143, slip op. at 8 fn. 68. We find it unnecessary to pass on that issue here because the comparator emails cited by the General Counsel are clearly “not similar in nature to those that [the Respondent] prohibited,” in light of the Respondent’s stated purpose for sending those emails or permit- ting others to send them. Kroger, 368 NLRB No. 64, slip op. at 2 fn. 5, 10. 4 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD (f) Isolating employees by implementing and maintain- ing a seating chart because they engaged in union or other protected concerted activities. (g) Threatening employees with loss of corporate awards if they engaged in union or other protected con- certed activities. (h) Telling employees that it is disappointed with them because they engaged in union or other protected con- certed activities. (i) Telling employees that not engaging in union or other protected concerted activities would make their lives easier. (j) 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 Wichita Call Center in Wichita, Kansas, copies of the attached notice marked “Appendix.”10 Copies of the no- tice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Re- gion 14, after being signed by the Respondent’s author- ized representative, shall be posted by the Respondent and maintained 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, the 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 Respondent to ensure that the notices are not altered, defaced, or covered 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 employees and former em- ployees employed by the Respondent at any time since June 2, 2015. (b) Within 21 days after service by the Region, file with the Regional Director for Region 14 a sworn certification of a responsible official on a form provided by the Region attesting to the steps that the Respondent has taken to com- ply. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that complaint paragraphs 6, 7(a), and 7(c) are severed and retained for further consid- eration. Further, NOTICE IS GIVEN that cause be shown, in writ- ing, filed with the Board in Washington, D.C., on or be- fore April 16, 2020 (with affidavit of service on the parties 10 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 to this proceeding), why complaint paragraphs 6, 7(a), and 7(c) should not be remanded to the administrative law judge for further proceedings consistent with the Board’s decision in Caesars Entertainment, including, if neces- sary, the filing of statements, reopening the record, and is- suance of a supplemental decision. Any briefs or state- ments in support of the response shall be filed on the same date. Dated, Washington, D.C. April 2, 2020 ______________________________________ John F. Ring, Chairman _____________________________________ Marvin E. Kaplan, Member _____________________________________ William J. Emanuel, Member (SEAL) 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 vi- olated 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 ac- tivities. WE WILL NOT tell you that you cannot talk about the Un- ion during worktime in working areas despite permitting discussions of other nonwork-related subjects during worktime in working areas. United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board.” T-MOBILE USA, INC. 5 WE WILL NOT coercively interrogate you about your un- ion or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT place you under surveillance while you engage in union or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT create the impression that we are engaged in surveillance of your union or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT tell you that you will be isolated by a seat- ing chart because you engaged in union or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT isolate you by implementing and main- taining a seating chart because you engaged in union or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT threaten you with loss of corporate awards if you engage in union or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT tell you that we are disappointed with you because you engaged in union or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT tell you that not engaging in union or other protected concerted activities would make your lives easier. WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce you in the exercise of the rights listed above. T-MOBILE USA, INC. The Board’s decision can be found at www.nlrb.gov/case/14-CA-155249 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. William F. LeMaster, Esq. ,for the General Counsel. Mark Theodore, Esq. and Irina Constantin, Esq., for the Re- spondent. 1 Charge 14–CA–155249 was filed on July 1, 2015, and amended on September 23, 2015. Charge 14–CA–158446 was filed on October 19, 2015. Charge 14–CA–162644 was filed on October 26, 2015 and Glenda Pittman, Esq. and Meron Kebede, Esq., for the Charging Party. DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE SHARON LEVINSON STECKLER, Administrative Law Judge. This case was tried in Wichita, Kansas, on March 15 and 16, 2016, upon charges1 filed by the Communication Workers of America, AFL–CIO (Union) against T-Mobile USA, Inc. (Re- spondent). The General Counsel issued a complaint on Septem- ber 28, 2015 and subsequent Consolidated Complaints on Octo- ber 23, 2015, December 23, 2015, and February 19, 2016.2 Respondent filed timely answers to the complaint, including on March 4, 2016 to the Third Consolidated Complaint (Com- plaint), which denies all wrongdoing. The Third Consolidated Complaint (Complaint) alleges Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act, which will be discussed in 3 groups. The first group alleges Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) with the following rules: (1) The portion of the Acceptable Use Policy for Information and Communication Resources, limiting use of computers to legitimate business purposes, which did not include junk mail and chain letters, was disparately enforced. (2) About June 2, by e-mail, Respondent promulgated and maintained rules against sending “mass emails” to other em- ployees, prohibited discussing the union during work time, and prohibited employees from using social media while at work, all of which were overly broad and disparately enforced. The second group also alleges violations of Section 8(a)(1): (1) About June 2, Respondent: prohibited employees from sending “mass e-mails;” prohibited employees from talking about the union during working time although permitting em- ployees to discuss other subjects (and again on June 4); and, prohibited employees from sending Union-related emails to employees’ work email addresses. (2) About June 4, Respondent: interrogated employees about their union membership, activities and sympathies; and, en- gaged in surveillance of employees by congregating with em- ployees in a break area that was out of the ordinary. (3) Between mid-June and early July, Respondent: threatened employees with unspecified reprisals; interrogated employees about their union activities, sympathies and membership as well as other employees; asked if employees were friends with a known Union supporter; and, restrained and coerced employ- ees by creating a seating chart to isolate union supporters.3 (4) About December 11, Respondent: created an impression of surveillance by telling employees that Respondent saw photos of employees engaged in union activities outside of work; told employees that it was disappointed that employees engaged in Union activity; interrogated employees about their union amended on December 2, 2015. Charge 14–CA–166164 was filed on December 16, 2015 and amended on February 12, 2016. 2 All dates are 2015 unless otherwise indicated. 3 General Counsel, in its brief, withdrew complaint ¶10(e). 6 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD activities and sympathies by asking employees if they intended to be outspoken about the Union and whether they changed their stance on the Union; threatened employees that they would not be considered for an award because of Union activ- ities and sympathies; and threatened unspecified reprisals by telling employees that their time with Respondent would be more difficult if they were outspoken about the Union. (5) About December 21, Respondent: created an impression of surveillance by telling employees they were creating turmoil and must be getting paid by the Union to keep support going; and, interrogated its employees by asking if they were involved in planning a Union event. (6) The third group alleges two violations of Section 8(a)(3): The first alleges that Respondent imposed a seating chart due to employees’ union sympathies and activities. The second al- leges Respondent imposed more onerous working conditions upon employee Jerrica Croxson by requiring that she adhere to a detailed work schedule. (7) Upon the entire record, including my observation of the demeanor of the witnesses, and after considering the briefs filed by General Counsel, the Union and Respondent, I make the following FINDINGS OF FACT JURISDICTION At all material times, Respondent has been a corporation, with an office and place of business located in Wichita, Kansas. It is engaged in telecommunications business operations throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. T-Mobile USA, Inc., 363 NLRB No. 171, slip op. at 11 (2016). In conducting its opera- tions during the 12-month period ending August 31, 2015, Re- spondent derived gross revenues in excess of $100,000 and pur- chased and received goods and materials valued in excess of $5,000 directly from points outside the State of Kansas. At all material times, T-Mobile has been an employer engaged in com- merce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act. At all material times, the Union has been a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. STATEMENT OF FACTS4 I. RESPONDENT’S BACKGROUND AND OPERATIONS The Wichita Call Center employs approximately 600 cus- tomer service representatives (CSRs), who take calls at their 4 Although I have included citations to the record to highlight partic- ular testimony or exhibits, my findings and conclusions are not based solely on those specific record citations, but rather upon my review and consideration of the entire record for this case. My findings of fact en- compass the credible testimony, evidence presented, and logical infer- ences. The credibility analysis may rely upon a variety of factors, in- cluding, but not limited to, the context of the witness testimony, the weight of the respective evidence, established or admitted facts, inherent probabilities, and reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the rec- ord as a whole. Double D Construction Group, 339 NLRB 303, 303–305 (2003); Daikichi Sushi, 335 NLRB 622, 623 (2001) (citing Shen Auto- motive Dealership Group, 321 NLRB 586, 589 (1996)), enfd. 56 Fed. Appx. 516 (D.C. Cir. 2003). Credibility findings regarding any witness are not likely to be an all-or-nothing determination and I may believe that workstations. The hours of operation are 7:30 a.m. until mid- night each day. The CSRs are organized in one of two groups: General Care and Onboarding. The CSRs assigned to General Care assist customers with their questions about their accounts and devices and sell services. The Onboarding CSRs, estab- lished in March 2015, handle customers who are within their 30- day onset of service. CSRs are expected to keep their headsets on except when they are on break or at lunch. The headsets are not wireless. Despite the tethering with the headsets, CSRs who are not answering calls talk freely with each other about any and all subjects. Usually 15 CSRs, a senior representative and a coach com- prise a team. The CSRs and the senior representative, who is not considered in supervision or management, report to the coach. Each team is located in working area known as a pod. The seat- ing arrangement in each pod locates the CSRs’ cubicles on an outer ring. The CSRs are seated facing outward. The senior rep- resentative and coach sit in the center of the pod. (GC Exh. 5). The pods within the Call Center are separated by taller walls and walkways go to the pods. Multiple pods play music, sometimes to the point where customers complain about the loudness of the music. The coach, who is considered part of the management team, reports to the team manager. The Director of the Wichita Call Center is Jeff Elliott. The Union has been trying to organize the Wichita Call Center since 2009. Two unfair labor practices settlements deal specifi- cally with the Wichita Call Center. The first, approved on Sep- tember 2, 2011, settled solicitation and interrogation allegations and included a non-admissions clause. The second Wichita settlement, approved July 28, 2015, did not include a non-admissions clause. It settled allegations that Respondent interrogated employees, made threats of unspecified reprisals, and told employees that they could not discuss or en- gage in activities with other employees regarding wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment. It also settled two disciplinary actions taken against Jerrica Croxson (Crox- son), an alleged discriminatee in the current case. (GC Exh. 27.) If Respondent spots union activities at the Wichita Call Cen- ter, it generates a TPA (Third Party) Report. Senior Manager a witness testified credibly regarding one fact but not on another. Daikichi Sushi, 335 NLRB at 622. When a witness may reasonably be assumed to be favorably disposed to the party, an adverse inference may be drawn regarding any factual question on which the witness is likely to have knowledge. International Automated Machines, 285 NLRB 1122, 1123 (1987), enfd. 861 F.2d (6th Cir. 1988). This is particularly true where the witness is the Respondent’s agent. Roosevelt Memorial Medical Center, 348 NLRB 1016, 1022 (2006). Testimony from current employees tend to be particularly relia- ble because it goes against their pecuniary interests. Gold Standard En- terprises, 234 NLRB 618, 619 (1978); Georgia Rug Mill, 131 NLRB 1304 fn. 2 (1961); Gateway Transportation Co., 193 NLRB 47, 48 (1971); Federal Stainless Sink Division, 197 NLRB 489, 491 (1972). T-MOBILE USA, INC. 7 Human Resources Business Partner5 Larissa Wray-Tolbert (Wray-Tolbert) first explained the TPA Report covered any third-party contact or events, including union activity, which might disrupt the Call Center operations. For example, Respond- ent instructs security guards to monitor and report any union ac- tivities to the Human Resources department. Upon further ex- amination, Wray-Tolbert admitted one to two TPA reports per week are written, and all TPA Reports discuss union activities.6 An example is when an employee complains of being upset or harassed. Another was if the “third party” was present at the end of the driveway. Wray-Tolbert then forwards the TPA by email to corporate headquarters and other human resources personnel in Wichita. She also sends to “retail partners” in the area, such as Metro PCS. One TPA Report example occurred on November 10. A CSR told a few team members in her pod that food was “out back.” When the senior representative asked why, the CSR said it was with the Union. In the same report, the TPA Report noted Union activity, with signs and flyers. The flyers were attached. An- other TPA Report stated that the guard, during rounds, asked someone to remove a coat hanging over Respondent’s stop sign. II. EMAIL USAGE AND RESPONDENT’S ACCEPTABLE USE POLICY FOR INFORMATION AND COMMUNCATIONS RESOURCES A. CSRs Routinely Use Electronic Communications at Work The CSRs routinely use computers as part of their jobs. The computer system has instant messaging (IM) for immediate com- munication within the facility, which employees use routinely. Employees also have sent emails throughout the facility. The employees send and receive emails with other CSRs, coaches, senior representatives, and team managers. They also receive emails from the director. (Tr. 45, 106). Some of the emails are Respondent notifications to employees when fresh popcorn or slushies are available or for nacho day in the cafete- ria. Other Respondent emails ask employees to participate in a salsa7 contest or a lip sync contest,8 or offer free hockey tickets. An employee who could not find a telephone charger sent an entire email to the facility. Another employee sent notification of birthday plans for another employee throughout the facility. The facility sent notification of birth announcements to all em- ployees; some employees would respond for congratulations through the “Reply All” function, which would send the email to all recipients. Other CSRs testified that they use the “Reply All” function for distribution lists to the entire facility. Director Elliott testified that the birth announcements were business-related because “[w]e are like a family . . . . It is our people.”9 Baby showers also may take place in which the staff 5 Wray-Tolbert’s position is chief of human resources at the Wichita Call Center. Her department covers employee relations, payroll, benefits and other human resources functions. 6 General Counsel’s subpoena duces tecum to Respondent requested all TPA Reports for a specific period. Respondent produced those rele- vant to the allegations and I granted, in relevant part, Respondent’s mo- tion to quash the subpoena for the additional TPA Reports. In his brief, General Counsel urges me to reconsider my ruling and order production of the additional TPA Reports. I decline to do so as the record contains sufficient information to make the findings of fact. 7 Food, not dancing. holds a potluck dinner and people voluntarily purchased joint gifts. A bowling party invitation, if done for recognition of a work group, would be considered business-related. If an em- ployee has a death in the family, Elliott has sent out emails to notify about the passing and upcoming services. The employees may also be notified by email if a card if available for signing. Employees also access social media while at work. CSR Chelsea Befort said that, during work, she scrolled through her Facebook on her phone to check the newsfeed. She also ob- served others using social network applications. If a customer had problems using a social network, Befort used her own phone and application to assist the customer. CSR Taylor Lowery used her social media between calls, on breaks, and while talking on her own phone and observed others doing the same; she was never told to stop. CSR Abigail Parrish testified that she used Facebook while on working time if during downtime and she was not taking a customer call. B. Respondent’s Acceptable Use Policy10 Respondent’s Acceptable Use Policy, spanning six pages, co- vers the use of its information and communications resources. The policy was last revised in 2014. It applies to all electronic devices and all manner and means of communications operated by Respondent. Respondent reserves the use of the devices for “legitimate business purposes.” Legitimate business purposes include internal email, Yammer “and other tools . . . to discuss work-life balance, traffic and carpool arrangements, weather conditions,” and charitable events in which Respondent is in- volved. The policy also permits “incidental and infrequent per- sonal use” by approved personnel and such use cannot interfere with use for legitimate business purposes. The policy then gives a list of non-legitimate uses. The complaint alleges that one portion among the non-legiti- mate uses of this Policy, within Section 3.4 of the rule, violates the Act: Prohibited use of T-Mobile’s information and communication resources are not legitimate business purposes. Prohibited uses include, but are not limited to: . . . To distribute or store junk mail and chain letters . . . (GC Exh. 11, p. 2.) Other listed non-legitimate uses include pornography, com- munication of threats, anything related to gambling, anything de- rogatory that encompasses any protected class, and any use 8 For this contest, a team or members of a team submits a video of themselves lip syncing a song, with the winner receiving a trophy and a case of Red Bull energy drink. 9 Respondent argues that the record contains no evidence of mass emails for birth announcements. (R. Br. at 28–29.) I find, however, that Respondent’s admissions, corroborated by employee testimonies, are sufficient to find birth announcements and death notifications were emailed. 10 All policies discussed were promulgated before the six-month stat- ute of limitations but were maintained throughout the relevant time pe- riod. 8 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD advocating or soliciting for causes “not related to T-Mobile busi- ness.”11 Director Elliott contends that the emails regarding Respondent offering food and notifying employees about lost items are busi- ness related, not personal. The business purpose regarding the lost item was that it was lost on site and Respondent would help recover the item. In addition, Respondent does not monitor for other non-business uses by employees. The policy contains active computer links at the end of the legitimate uses section. These links include: Enterprise User Standard; the Employee Handbook, which includes no solicita- tion and no distribution rules; and the Code of Business Conduct. The Enterprise User Standard’s stated purpose is to ensure se- curity and protection of Respondent’s information assets. It dis- cusses anti-malware controls, information backup, passwords, and security for cellular telephones and laptops. Section 3.4 of the Enterprise User Standard states: (1) Users must follow the appropriate authorization process for requesting an account granting specified access and permis- sion levels. Most authorization processes start with a Remedy ticket and specific approvals from T-Mobile Management. Contact your manager or the Help Desk for more information. (2) All access that is not explicitly authorized is forbidden. (3) Users are responsible for all acts associated with their UserID. Wray-Tolbert testified that this access limitation includes dis- tribution lists, which are groups of employees set up in the com- puter system to distribute emails to the selected group, such as all CSRs or all employees at the Wichita Call Center.Respondent contends the standard is necessary to prevent all employees from emailing each other at the same time. III.. CSR SENDS AN EMAIL TO OTHER CSRS A. On May 29, a CSR Sends Email About a Union Activity CSR Chelsea Befort worked at the Wichita Call Center from October 7, 2013, to July 21, 2015. Lillian Maron and Angel Meeks were respectively her team manager and her coach. Her last position was with the new onboarding department, which was responsible for contacting new customers within 30 days of starting service. She clocked out for lunches, but not for breaks. On Friday, May 29, during her break times, Befort sent out a series of emails, with the subject line “Raise Your Voice,” to fel- low CSRs. Each email contained the following text: Dear T-Mobile Wichita Employees, For far too long now, our voices have been silences. We are told we do not have the right to discuss work conditions in an organized manner. Enough is enough. It is time to make a change! Join the movement! Feel freeto contact me with anyquestions, but please dosoout- sideofworkinghours. 11 In T-Mobile, USA, Inc., 363 NLRB No. 171, slip op. at 1–2, fn. 5 (2016), Respondent did not except to Administrative Law Judge Dibble’s findings that two portions of the Acceptable Use Policy were unlawful: Section 3.3., if the resources are used in ways reasonably considered Some of us that are currently involved will be meeting at North Rock Lanes tomorrow night. Please join us to meet our team and have some fun! Sincerely, Chelsea Befort T-Mobile CSR1 Wichita, KS [phone number omitted] When Befort sent the first email, at the beginning of her lunch break, she addressed it to all CSRs at the Wichita Call Center, attempting to use the Call Center’s distribution list for all CSRs. When that did not work, Befort began selecting CSRs off the list and re-sent the email. After Befort returned from lunch, she re- turned to her computer and found an automated message that her email could not be delivered because she could only send it to 100 recipients at a time. Upon discovering this limitation, she examined the Wichita CSR list and selected approximately the first 100 CSRs for re-sending the email. However, that email also exceeded 100 recipients. Befort made numerous attempts before she was successful in reaching her target audience and no more than 100 recipients. After she clocked out at the end of her shift, she sent more emails to cover the remainder of the CSRs. Although Befort was on break, she knew some CSRs would be working when they received the emails. B. On June 2, Respondent Sends an Email in Response to Befort’s Email 1. Respondent discovers Befort sent the email Several CSRs forwarded Befort’s email to management. Wray-Tolbert found that a TPA Report was necessary because the email disrupted work and pertained to “third party Union ac- tivity.” (Tr. 351.) Wray-Tolbert emailed a TPA Report about the email, with the email attached. On Monday, June 1, Call Center Director Elliott discovered that the email had been sent out multiple times and “multiple employees complained,” which, in his opinion, made the email a disruption. (Tr. 377.) Elliott and Wray-Tolbert testified that Befort’s email violated a number of policies. Based upon the legitimate use portion of the Acceptable Use Policy, Befort’s email was junk mail and so- licitation; it also did not pertain to company business. Based upon General Counsel’s subpoena, Respondent could not find any other documents showing it applied its Acceptable Use Pol- icy. Respondent also stated that Befort’s email violated distribu- tion access limitation provided in the Enterprise User Standard (GC Exh. 18), in that Befort did not have access to the employee or CSR lists for the Wichita Call Center. Because the Enterprise User Standard further prohibits any access that was not explicitly authorized, Befort, who was not authorized to use the CSR list, should not have been able to send out the “mass communica- tion.” Because some of the emails were rejected due to size, they were mass emails. As a result, Respondent also considered it disruptive, offensive or harmful to morale; and Sec. 3.4, in relevant part, for any use that advocates, disparages or solicits for religious causes, po- litical causes or non-company related outside organizations. T-MOBILE USA, INC. 9 junk mail as well.12 However, had the number been smaller, Re- spondent admittedly may not have known that Befort sent the email. Wray-Tolbert also testified that the email violated the prohib- ited activities listed in the employee handbook for no solicitation or distribution. That policy prohibits “Solicitation of any kind by employees on Company premises during working time of ei- ther the employee engaged in soliciting or the employee being solicited.” The emails also would be read by CSRs who were working, making the emails disruptive to production. Despite its availability of metrics, Respondent presented no evidence that the metrics of that day were disturbed. 2. Director Elliott responds to Befort’s email Elliott decided to send an email to all Wichita Call Center em- ployees. On June 2, Elliott’s email, using the distribution list for all Wichita Call Center employees, stated: Team, It has been reported to us that on Friday an employee sent hun- dreds of you emails about the union. Many of you told us it was disruptive and unwanted communication. We apologize for any disruption or inconvenience this may have caused. I’d like to take this opportunity to remind you that it is not appropriate for employees to send emails to large numbers of employees. We don’t allow mass communication for any non-business purpose since this disrupts the workplace and distracts employ- ees from their work. Also, it is not appropriate to solicit other employees for any purpose when employees are working. We certainly recognize employees’ rights to support the union, but we ask that they do so without violating these policies. Since this email addressed union issues, I’d like to take this op- portunity to respond. It is not the case that anyone’s voices have been silenced. And no one is telling employees that they don’t have a right to discuss work issues—you know employ- ees around here aren’t shy about discussing anything. Employ- ees have countless opportunities to communicate with others when they are not working—about the union or anything else. They can talk with others in break areas, before work, or after work. They can talk from home, or text while eating out. They can use social networks—off the job, of course. But it is not appropriate to solicit or discuss other issues when you are sup- posed to be working. Employees have a right to support the union, and an equal right not to. And employees have a right to discuss the union--as long they are not working—and a right to refuse to discuss the union. Employees have a right to sign authorization cards, and employees have a right to refuse to sign authorization cards. But before you sign, make sure you understand what it means to sign a card. And if you have an questions about the union, its claims, or authorization cards, feel free to ask your Coach, your Manager or me. We’d be happy to answer any questions you may have. 12 Upon employment, Befort electronically signed an acknowledge- ment that she received the Employee Handbook and would promptly read it. Jeff (GC Exh. 7). Befort, responding through the “Reply All” function, stating that she thought the employees were not supposed to talk to their coaches and managers about unionization. (R. Exh. 21.) The social media policy, cited by Elliott, states employees can occasionally use personal social media on the work computer or during work hour as long as it does not interfere with job respon- sibilities and is consistent with the other policies. (Tr. 327.) C. On June 2, Respondent, by Manager Maron and Coach Meeks, Meets with Befort When Befort returned from her lunch break, Coach Angel Meeks told her to put her phone in “auxiliary” for a team meet- ing. Meeks and Befort met with Team Manager Maron in a small conference room at the front of the Call Center. Although Meeks was present, she added nothing to the meeting. Team Manager Maron told her the meeting was about the email.13 Befort asked if the meeting would lead to discipline, which Maron denied. According to Befort, Maron stated that CSRs could not send mass emails and anything union-related could not be sent while “on the clock.” Befort told them that she was sure she did not send any emails while she was clocked in, which Maron corroborated. Maron told her that other represent- atives opened and read the email while they were clocked in, which was the problem. Maron also said the email was soliciting and anything union-related could not be done by email. She also told Befort that she could not discuss the union within the work- ing areas; anything union related would have to outside of the working areas and off the clock. Maron’s reasons were that it was solicitation and could not be done on “company time.” Maron told her the company recognized her right to support the union, but she needed to do so without violating company poli- cies. Maron told her she could use work email for these mes- sages as long as it was not disruptive, to which Befort responded that she understood. Maron’s version differs from Befort’s on the content of the conversation. Wray-Tolbert provided Maron with talking points (R. Exh. 23) and instructions for her discussion with Befort. Maron could not recall receiving talking points for discussions with any other employee. (Tr. 459–460.) Maron later admitted she talked with Wray-Tolbert before her conversation with Be- fort. Maron claimed she could not recall a great deal about this conversation and then said that the instructions were primarily to have the conversation with Befort. The talking points were the following: • It was reported to us that on Friday you sent emails to hundreds of employees in the Wichita Call Center. Sev- eral employees told us it was disruptive and unwanted communication. We don’t allow non-business related mass communication for any purpose since this disrupts the work place and distracts employees from their work. 13 About June 1, Maron learned she would be in charge of the onboarding section. Human Resources directed her to conduct the meet- ing with Befort. 10 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD • Your email was also inconsistent with T-Mobile’s non- solicitation policy. You may solicit concerning union issues during non-working time, but you may not so- licit while the person you are soliciting is supposed to be working. You had to be aware that many employees were actively working when you sent these emails, so this working time solicitation also was inconsistent with our non-solicitation policy. • We certainly recognize your right to support the union, but we ask that you do so without violating these poli- cies. Of course, you can communicate with employees about the union in break areas, and when you and oth- ers are not working; you can communicate about the union in the parking lot and away from work. Wejust ask that you do so while following these policies. • Question: Can I use e-mail to communicate about the union? • Answer: Yes, but your use of company systems for these purposes has to be while neither you nor the per- son you are communicating are working, and under circumstances which are not likely to disrupt work at the call center and not in a manner that is inconsistent with these rules. (R. Exh. 23.) Maron specifically denied each alleged unlawful statement from her conversation with Befort. Maron admitted that she told Befort that she could not discuss the union when she was work- ing or others were working, and further defined working as talk- ing to customers. (Tr. 420.) Maron initially maintained that she read verbatim the provided talking points but on cross-examina- tion admitted that she had at least some variations. (Tr. 462.) After her meeting with Maron and Meeks, Befort returned to her computer and noticed she had an email in her inbox from Director Elliott, which is addressed above. Befort, Alyssa Jones (also known as AJ), and Taylor Lowery testified that, before they received Elliott’s email, Respondent never communicated that the employees were prohibited from sending mass emails or from discussing any topics, outside of common sense re- strictions, during work time, nor did Respondent communicate that employees could not use social media unless they were “off the job.” In her experience, Befort, with Meeks present, partici- pated in conversations during time between calls about social ac- tivities and shared items from their Facebook accounts. Lowery talked during work time, with supervisors present, about families and weekend activities. For example, Lowery also discussed clothes with Coach Meeks. IV.. ON JUNE 4, TEAM MANAGER MARON CONDUCTS A TEAM MEETING IN BEFORT’S POD A. Prequel: Human Resources Prepares Maron for a Meeting about Flyers On June 3, someone distributed union leaflets within the pod where Befort worked. According to Maron, Wray-Tolbert again instructed her to conduct a meeting and provided her with the talking points. Wray-Tolbert told her the pamphlets found in Meek’s pod on each CSR’s desk were “third party, Union.” (Tr. 465.) Maron again received talking points: • Yesterday, someone left leaflets on each of the work stations in the pod. • We just wanted to remind you that it is not appropriate to distribute materials while you are working or while the recipient is working, and such materials are not to be left or distributed in any work areas of the call cen- ter. • We certainly recognize your right to support the union, or not to support a union. And we want to make it clear that you can distribute materials regarding the union in nonworking areas, and when you are not working. • We were told that the leaflet talked about employees having a voice. You know you have that now. You can go to any Coach or Manager in the call center with questions or concerns. • And when you raise issues we hear them. • In just the last few weeks, based on employee input, we doubled the amount of time off the company can grant so that about 80% of requests can now be granted. • Company-wide, employees asked for a stock purchase program, and we gave you one. • And in response to questions about pay increases, we provided increases across the company-two last year and one coming up this month. • We were also told that the document suggested that with a union, employees could make decisions about metrics, insurance, leave and wages. • When there is a union, they don’t make decisions about these issues. They can only ask. And while they can promise you anything about these issues (and often do), the thing is that the union cannot, and will not guarantee you any particular outcome. With a union you can get more, less or the same. • Just ask the TMUS technicians in Connecticut who voted in a union. With the union they had the same benefits, the same leave, and the same work standards as technicians elsewhere. But the union agreed to cap any wage increases while no one else in the company had a cap. Maybe that is why the engineering employ- ees have filed a petition to get rid of the union. (R. Exh. 24.) B. Maron Conducts the Meeting in the Pod On June 4, Team Leader Maron told the CSRs to put their phones into auxiliary mode. Once all the CSRs did so, Maron gathered the CSRs, including Befort, Taylor Lowery (Lowery) and AJ, in the middle of the pod and began talking about the email and discussions about the union. Coach Meeks apparently was present. T-MOBILE USA, INC. 11 Maron discussed a flyer that was previously distributed on the CSRs’ desks. Employees testified that Maron had a folder in her hands and would refer to the folder throughout the speech, but did not appear to be reading. Maron, however, testified that she read verbatim and answered questions. Employees testified that Maron said the employees were not allowed to discuss the union within the working area and could not distribute flyers or other materials related to the union within the working area; those activities could be performed in the lunchroom, break areas, or outside of work. Maron reiterated that employees had a right to be for or against a union, but liter- ature could be distributed in non-working areas, if the person dis- tributing was not working.14 In response to the issues raised in the flyer, Maron said employees had a voice in their work and that the CSRs could see talk to their manager or coach. She gave examples of the company giving increased time off requests and stock options. According to Befort, Maron stated that items on the flyer, such as metrics, insurance and wages, would not be changed by the union because those things would be up to management. How- ever, on cross-examination, Befort said Maron stated the union could ask for changes and that the union, not the employees, would be making the decisions for the employees. Maron also talked about some of Respondent’s engineers in Connecticut, who were represented by a union. Maron said the union agreed to cap wages and reference that these employees filed a petition to end union representation. C. Sequel: After the Meeting, Some CSRs Take a Break and Coach Meeks Goes too When the meeting concluded, the CSRs were permitted an ad- ditional 10-minute break. Many of the CSRs are smokers and went outside to picnic tables near the smoke shack. The CSRs who went out included Befort, AJ, Lowery, Holly Robinson, Darryl, and Jalen Jones. Coach Meeks, who does not smoke, also went to the smoke shack area with the CSRs. Befort and AJ said Meeks had not joined them on a break before, leading AJ to ask Meeks, “Why are you coming outside with us on our break? You don’t ever come outside.” Meeks said, “I just want to come with you guys.” (Tr. 122.) Meeks remained with them during the entire break.15 Befort pulled out her telephone to type notes of the meeting and send the notes to herself via text message so that she would not forget what happened. Befort attempted to show AJ the notes to confirm nothing had been forgotten, but Coach Meeks was close by. Befort and AJ were whispering. Meeks said to AJ, “You don’t have to whisper, you can talk to me.” Befort testified that, as a result of Meeks’ proximity, she was unable to share with AJ the information on her phone. The CSRs returned to their phones and were permitted then to take their regularly scheduled breaks. After changing the codes on their phones to break, the same individuals, including Coach Meeks, returned to the smoke shack. By this time, Befort sent an e-mail to AJ about making plans to meet later to discuss what 14 Lowery testified that she said the flyers brochures, pamphlets, or leaflets about the union needed to stay in drawers and out of sight until off work property and out of work hours. happened in the meeting. AJ read the message and handed her phone to Robinson to read it. After Robinson, AJ slid the phone over to Lowery, who was moving her mouth while she read the message. Lowery moves her mouth as she reads. Coach Meeks then said to AJ and Lowery, “What are you guys looking at?” AJ said it was a picture. Meeks said, “It’s not a picture because Taylor’s moving her mouth.” AJ said it was a picture with words. Meeks said she wanted to see it and AJ said it was not work appropriate. Meeks said AJ showed her things all the time that were not work appropriate. Meeks moved around to the table towards AJ and Lowery and started to reach for the phone. However, Lowery gave the phone to AJ, who then pulled up a picture with words on it. She then handed the phone to Meeks. The break was over and they returned to work. V. GUARDS CONFRONTCSR PARRISH WHILE DISTRIBUTING FLYERS OUTSIDE THE CALL CENTER At the time of these events, Abigail Parrish was employed as a CSR. She is now a part-time organizer for the Union. While employed by Respondent, Parrish distributed flyers outside the building, in the lunchroom and in the smoke shack. She also distributed flyers at the end of the driveway on the public ease- ment. On Thursday, August 20, Parrish, on her day off, passed out flyers when a security guard confronted her. She went to the call center with another volunteer and union staff to pass out flyers on the public easement next to the driveways on the south side of the building. After checking with Tammy Chaffee, a Union organizer, Parrish moved onto the property itself rather than staying on the easement. She went to the east (front) entrance and stayed there for a few minutes handing out flyers. A guard came out of the east entrance and told her that she could not be distributing flyers because she was on private property. Parrish told the guard she was an employee and offered to show him her employee identification badge. He did not ask to see her badge, said, “Uh, ok,” and returned to the building. Parrish stayed at that entrance until she ran out of flyers, and then picked up more. She relocated to the west entrance. She handed out some flyers at the smoke shack and started to leave. As she started to leave, two people were exiting the building sep- arately. One was a coach and the other was another security guard, wearing the standard uniform of a white buttoned shirt, black pants and his security name tag. Parrish noticed that his name tag identified him as “J. Wiegand.” As Wiegand approached Parrish, he said in a loud voice, “Abby, you can’t be passing out flyers. It’s solicitation.” He told her it was company policy. Parrish thought he was talking about Respondent’s policy. Parrish told him it was not solicita- tion and he insisted it was covered by the company’s solicitation policy, so she needed to stop. At some point, Wiegand told Par- rish that she could not pass out flyers for a food truck or a party, so she could not pass out flyers for anything else. Parrish was concerned matters might escalate and left. 15 AJ testified she saw other coaches and managers in these break areas, but she never saw Coach Meeks on break with them before this time or afterwards. 12 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD In its Employee Handbook, Respondent maintains a rule re- garding distribution, which permits employees to distribute “non-work related materials in non-work areas during non-work time.” Wray-Tolbert reported that Wiegand, upon seeing her in a hallway, reported the incident. No TPA Report was generated about Parrish’s activity; however, a TPA report was generated about the handbilling at the southeast and southwest entrance. The Report stated four outside participants were involved and that number included employee Parrish. Within an hour after receiving Wiegand’s report, Wray-Tol- bert sent Parrish, and only Parrish, the following e-mail: We understand that a security guard approached you in the smoking area and told you that you were not allowed to hand out leaflets in that area. The security guard was in error. There’s no prohibition against your distributing union literature in a non-working area during non-working time. Please let me know if you have any questions. (GC Exh. 10). Upon returning to work on August 22, Parrish received Wray- Tolbert’s email. VI. ALLEGATIONS INVOLVING COACH BELINDA SPENCER AND RENIOR REPRESENTATIVE CROXSON Croxson is a senior representative at the Wichita Call Center, where she has been employed for over 4 years. The position is considered a stepping stone for someone to potentially become a leadership position, such as coach or trainer. The senior repre- sentatives engage with CSRs and answers telephone calls from customers that have escalated—when customers ask to speak to supervisors. Senior representatives also assist in ensuring appro- priate staffing at lunches and breaks. Twice per week for each CSR on their teams, the senior representatives also conduct side- by-side CSR reviews, listening to customer calls in real time. The senior representative gives positive and negative feedback to the CSRs. As a result, senior representatives are expected to be away from their desks approximately 80 percent of the time. A senior representative normally has flexibility in her schedule to answer these calls. The senior representative also is responsi- ble to ensure the team meets metrics of credits/adjustments, schedule and sales. (Tr. 482.) At the relevant time, Croxson was supervised by Coach Belinda Spencer and Team Manager Maron. Spencer main- tained that she and Croxson had “huddles” almost daily. In the huddles they discussed the agenda, meetings, coaching and pri- oritization of Croxson’s tasks. Spencer also stated she had at least weekly career development meetings with Croxson. Before joining Spencer’s team, Croxson had been an active supporter of the Union. These activities included advocating for the union, wearing union t-shirts, and discussing the Union with 16 I credit that Spencer believed Croxson made an effort to show she was not involved with the Union. 17 On August 21 and 22, while Spencer was on medical leave, the substitute coach gave Croxson two coachings respectively: one for fail- ing to take an escalated call and another for failing to answer a CSR’s questions sufficiently. her prior supervisor and now Belinda Spencer. She appeared in flyers for the Union. Croxson also was the subject of an unfair labor settlement in which Respondent resolved allegations that Croxson suffered discipline due to her union activities and sym- pathies. A. Croxson Hides Her Union Sympathies Croxson and Spencer had discussions about the Union since mid-March 2015, when Spencer became Croxson’s coach. Ac- cording to Croxson, these discussions took place after work in the pod, one to two times per week. The conversations started with coaching and segued into Croxson’s goals and perceptions of working for Respondent. Spencer said the discussions about the union began when Croxson came to her team and Croxson talked about her relationship with her previous coach. Spencer also said that Croxson believed the company had a negative per- ception of her and she no longer wanted a part of the union be- cause she wanted to save her job. (Tr. 489–490.)16 Around April, Spencer’s pod was moved from general care to onboarding duties. Spencer and Croxson continued in their re- spective roles. Spencer was off work during the last two weeks of May. Croxson took medical leave for 12 days at the end of May and the conversations continued after that time.17 When Spencer returned from leave, she discovered that the pod was physically moved. No seating arrangement was made for the new location. When both Spencer and Croxson were back from their respec- tive leave, Spencer asked Croxson if she saw Befort’s May 29 email. According to Croxson, Spencer also asked Croxson whether she attended the bowling event that Befort sent out. Croxson said that she just had surgery, so “why would I go bowl- ing?” (Tr. 218.) Spencer also asked Croxson if she had seen Befort’s response -mail. Croxson said, “Well, everybody got it,” and walked away. Spencer testified that she only asked Croxson if she read the email, because she heard Befort was coming to her team and that it caused disruption within the Call Center. Spencer denied asking Croxson about the bowling event. (Tr. 494.)18 Croxson also testified that, during June and early July, Spen- cer frequently asked her whether she remained friends with Be- fort. She further testified that Spencer asked about her support for the Union during this time. B. Discussion and Implementation of the Seating Chart One topic was whether certain Union supporters would bid to move into Spencer and Croxson’s team and how Croxson should treat them so that no favoritism occurred. Every six months, CSRs and senior representatives have an opportunity to bid into a different team. Potentially a team could have 15 new members. Coaches also bid for a manager’s team. The process is called “realignment.” The ultimate realignment is based upon an indi- vidual’s ranking on metrics. This particular realignment was 18 Spencer later testified that the procedure for changing teams, bid- ding, took place in late June or early July, so at that time Spencer could not have known whether Befort was joining her team. I therefore dis- credit Spencer’s denial. T-MOBILE USA, INC. 13 scheduled for July 31 and Croxson bid to remain on Spencer’s team. About early June, Spencer and Croxson learned who their new team members were for the realignment. Spencer asked Croxson whether she worked with any of them in the past, and if so, what were their strengths and weaknesses. According to Croxson, a few CSRs coming to the team were known union supporters: Be- fort; AJ; and Holly Robinson. At hearing, Spencer also identified two CSRs as known union supporters who already were on her team and staying: “Daniva” and Cheryl Bell. Spencer denied knowing Robinson was a supporter but knew AJ and Robinson were dating. Spencer and Croxson started discussing where to seat them. Spencer said she did not want them sitting by Croxson because she wanted to ensure no one thought she showed any favoritism due to their union relationship. In addition, Spencer said that AJ and Robinson should not be seated near each other because they were union supporters.19 Spencer testified that, although she consulted with Croxson, she did not recall any of Croxson’s spe- cific input about the seating chart, and denied making the state- ments reported by Croxson. On July 23, Spencer sent an e-mail to all team members com- ing to the team. She attached a seating chart, which was imple- mented. It directly placed AJ and Robinson on opposite sides of the pod, with Spencer, located in the middle of the pod, between them. Daniva was placed in a corner away from AJ and Robin- son, but at the end of the pod and near Croxson’s desk. She was four seats away from AJ and another four seats away from Bell. Bell was placed near Croxson, on the same side as Robinson and four seats away from Robinson. (GC Exh. 17.) C. Croxson Attends a Union Meeting and Spencer Finds Out From December 1 to 3, Croxson attended a Union event in Washington, D.C. She only told Spencer and her manager, Maron, that she was going to Washington but left out it was Un- ion- related. Croxson told Spencer that she was going with friends, the trip was paid for, and Spencer had questions about it. Croxson said she was going to stay with a friend. She returned to work on December 4. Spencer asked about how the trip was and Croxson said, “Great.” Croxson next conversed on this topic with Spencer after an- other team member, Cheryl Bell, wore to work a purple souvenir sweatshirt from Washington.20 Spencer saw Bell’s sweatshirt made a joke with them about Croxson buying Bell a sweatshirt but not one for her. Spencer asked Croxson whether she had seen Bell in Washington. Neither Croxson, who was present, nor Bell 19 Befort was not included in the chart because, by that time, she was leaving Respondent’s employ. 20 Spencer was fuzzy about the dates of the next conversation. At first, she said it was a week later, and then said December 5 or 6. 21 Spencer said that the Union Facebook page appears regularly on her Facebook page; however, that was not revealed during her discus- sions with Croxson. 22 Over the years, Croxson received several peak award nominations. The ultimate award was a trip to Hawaii. 23 Spencer denied the entire conversation. However, her voice trailed off while answering some of the questions. Spencer’s testimony would have one believe that Croxson made up the entire conversation. Given said anything back. After another coach told Spencer about a picture on the Union’s Facebook page, Spencer later viewed it.21 Spencer determined that Croxson was at the same conference as Bell and felt disappointed that Croxson lied to her about going to the conference. On December 11, Spencer told Croxson to stay at the end of the shift. Croxson said she did not have time to stay. Spencer directed Croxson outside the pod, into the hallway, and said, “Do you think I’m stupid? Do you think I don’t that you were with Cheryl in Washington?” Spencer said she saw pictures of the trip and knew it was a union trip. Spencer said that Croxson was going to ruin her hard work at bettering the company’s percep- tion of Croxson and that she thought Croxson was no longer a union supporter. Spencer said that Croxson should not get her hopes up to win any peak nomination22 (the highest award in the company) because of her union support. She asked Croxson if she intended to be more outspoken about the union and what her thoughts were about the union. Spencer also told Croxson, who was considering moving out of state, that she should not make her last few months with the company harder than they needed to be by being an outspoken union supporter.23 On December 14, on Croxson’s next day at work, Croxson noticed that Spencer ignored her when she came to work. When they met for the regular beginning of shift meeting between them, Croxson noticed that Spencer was micromanaging her work, something that Spencer had not done before this time. Spencer gave her hourly segments in which to accomplish cer- tain tasks. Croxson took notes, which she discarded after the end of the shift. Spencer did not repeat this conduct after this date.24 Spencer testified the meeting was approximately 30 minutes at the beginning of the shift. Spencer does not dispute that she had a conversation with Spencer about her duties that day, but states the conversation took place because she recently attended a coaches’ meeting about the job duties of the senior representa- tives and achieving goals. Spencer testified that told Croxson, because “they” were having problems getting everything done, these measures were to manage “our day” and try to put structure to it. Spencer testified that she handed Croxson a preprinted sen- ior representative form, which outlined various duties and some- time targets within the shift. (Tr. 515; R. Exh. 30.) The form apparently was blank. Spencer said it was something that Crox- son could copy and use. Spencer did not request that Croxson return the completed form at the end of the shift. The form was never discussed again. 25 On the same date, Respondent initiated a “focus group” eval- uation on Croxson.26 The focus group questioned members of Spencer’s demeanor and her stated efforts to help Croxson rehabilitate her image, I discredit this denial. 24 Croxson testified that the scheduling was not onerous. 25 Spencer later testified that the team was meeting all the metrics for December but she wanted to strive for a higher goal. Apparently, no true problem existed in getting everything done if the team met its metrics. Further, if the team was having problems, one would assume that Spen- cer would have continued to follow up with Croxson about the form. This contradictory testimony is sufficient for me to discredit Spencer’s testimony here. 26 Maron testified that Croxson approached her and asked for the fo- cus group. Croxson did not testify to requesting a focus group and, given 14 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Croxson’s pod about what Croxson was doing well and what could be improved.27 Maron met with Spencer28 and CSRs to ob- tain feedback. Two CSRs allegedly reported to Maron that they believed Croxson was trying to get Spencer in trouble. Other information found that one CSR, who could not work with Crox- son and took a leave of absence allegedly due to Croxson’s be- havior, said to Croxson that she was a cancer to the team and she was out to get Spencer. Some information highlighted areas in which Croxson did well. On Friday, December 18, Croxson wore a black union t-shirt, with a hash tag and “Justice for T-Mobile.” Spencer commented, “Is that your guys’ hash tag? If I view that, am I going to see all the pictures of your trip and everything?” Croxson said, “I don’t hash tag” and walked away. On Saturday December 19, Spencer did not work. However, another union supporter arranged for others to wear union t-shirts that day and left a box of doughnuts in the break area, signed TU. On the same day, two CSRs used Christmas wrapping to deco- rate Spencer’s desk, wrapping every item on her desk. They also wrapped a Union t-shirt and placed it on Spencer’s desk. Crox- son denied involvement but admitted she checked with the Un- ion about whether anything untoward was occurring. On Monday, December 21, Spencer unwrapped the items on her desk and found the t-shirt. Spencer asked Croxson if she was involved, which Croxson denied. Before lunch, Spencer told Croxson that she did not want to talk about anything legal, that anything she said about the union was as a friend. She also com- mented that someone on the team was causing drama and some- one was getting paid by the Union to keep the drama coming. Spencer also said that someone was a mole, giving information about Respondent to the union. Croxson again said she had noth- ing to do with any of it and was not trying to cause extra drama. As Croxson started to walk away, Spencer said, “You just don’t get it. Never mind.” Croxson characterized Spencer’s tone of voice as accusatory, with heavy emphasis each time on “some- one.” Later that evening, Spencer and Croxson had another conver- sation in the pod, with Spencer’s tone now characterized more conciliatory. Spencer told Croxson she was sorry if anything she said was taken the wrong way. She also commented about an- other CSR, Bahja Parker, who recently began wearing a union t- shirt. Spencer said that “going union” would not help Parker do her job properly. Croxson said that the Union was not about that. Spencer also asked whether Croxson had anything to do with everyone wearing their t-shirts or bringing in doughnuts, which Croxson denied. Spencer denied both conversations. LEGAL ANALYSIS I. ALLEGED DISCRIMINATORY ENFORCEMENT OF RULES IN RESPONSE TO BEFORT’S EMAIL A. Applicable Law Section 7 provides employees with the right to self-organiza- tion and collectively bargaining, as well as the right to act the atmosphere in her pod, it is difficult to believe that Croxson would ask for one. 27 Maron testified that she conducted focus groups for all of her teams and sometimes more frequently with realignments. together for their mutual aid or protection. These rights have long been interpreted to “necessarily encompass [ ] the right ef- fectively to communicate with one another regarding self-organ- ization at the jobsite.” Beth Israel Hospital v. NLRB, 437 U.S. 483, 491 (1978). These rights include employee communica- tions regarding their terms and conditions of employment. Cen- tral Hardware Co. v. NLRB, 407 U.S. 539, 542-543 (1972); Parexel International, LLC, 356 NLRB 516, 518 (2011), citing Aroostook County Regional Ophthalmology Center, 317 NLRB 218, 220 (1995), enfd. in part 81 F.3d 209 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (dis- cussions regarding wages, the core of Section 7 rights, are the grist on which concerted activity feeds). An employer violates Section 8(a)(1) of the Act if it maintains workplace rules that would reasonably tend to chill employees in the exercise of their Section 7 rights. See Lafayette Park Ho- tel, 326 NLRB 824, 825 (1998), enfd. 203 F.3d 52 (D.C. Cir. 1999). The analytical framework for assessing whether mainte- nance of rules violates the Act is set forth in Lutheran Heritage Village-Livonia, 343 NLRB 646 (2004). Under Lutheran Herit- age, a work rule is unlawful if “the rule explicitly restricts activ- ities protected by Section 7.” Id. at 646 (emphasis in original). If the work rule does not explicitly restrict protected activities, it nonetheless will violate Section 8(a)(1) if “(1) employees would reasonably construe the language 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.” Id. at 647. Rules cannot be construed in isolation and must be given a reasonable reading. The Roomstores of Phoenix, LLC, 357 NLRB 1690 fn. 3 (2011); Lutheran Heritage, 343 NLRB at 646. However, any ambiguity in the rule must be construed against the drafter as employees should not have to decide what infor- mation is not lawfully subject to prohibition. Hyundai America Shipping Agency, 357 NLRB 860, 861–862 (2011); Lafayette Park, 343 NLRB at 825. B. The Policies Were Discriminatorily Applied to Befort’s Email The Complaint only contends that the Policy was discrimina- torily applied and does not question whether it is facially lawful. The Policy was not promulgated in response to Section 7 activi- ties. However, I find that the policies and rules were applied disparately to Befort’s union activity. To further this discussion, I look to recent Board law regarding emails and some traditional principles. 1. Applicable law regarding emails Employees who have “rightful” access to their employer’s email system for work purposes also have the right to use that system for Section 7 communications during nonworking time. Purple Communications, 361 NLRB 1050, 1050, 1063 (2014). This rule applies when employees have been granted access to the employer’s email system in the course of their work and the employer is not required to provide this access. Id., slip op. at 1. 28 Spencer did not testify about giving feedback on Croxson or any knowledge of a focus group at that time. T-MOBILE USA, INC. 15 To rebut the presumption that employees have a right to access the employer’s email system during nonworking time, an em- ployer justifies restricting these rights by demonstrating that spe- cial circumstances are necessary to maintain production or disci- pline. The employer’s restrictions should be based upon the na- ture of its business. The restrictions also should be narrowly tai- lored to meet the employer’s special circumstances and still bal- ance with employees’ Section 7 rights. Further, the restriction must be uniform and consistently enforced. Purple Communi- cations, supra. The theoretical mere assertion of an interest to support restrictions are not sufficient and: [A]n employer’s interests will establish special circumstances only to the extent that those interests are not similarly affected by employee email use that the employer has authorized. Id., slip op. at 14. Disparate treatment would show an employer enforces its pol- icy “against statutorily protected activity while not enforcing it against other similar activity under similar circumstances.” Sta- bilus, Inc., 355 NLRB 836, 839 (2010) (disparately enforced t- shirt policy). A recent example was disparate enforcement of a no-talking rule during work time after the union filed a represen- tation petition, despite previously allowing discussion of other nonwork related topics. Pier Sixty, LLC, 362 NLRB 505, 525– 526 (2015). Respondent here permitted notification of other so- cial functions, with its rationale that these employees were “fam- ily” and then compares discussion about the union by employees as “third party.”29 2. Acceptable use policy The CSRs have a right to use the email and computer system for personal use, including social media. However, Respondent contends that the CSRs’ use of the “reply all” function was not proven at hearing. On the contrary, none of Respondent wit- nesses contradicted the employee witnesses that the “Reply All” function was used in response to baby showers and death notices. Respondent’s actions, therefore show it discriminated based upon the content of Befort’s email, which reflects union activi- ties and sympathies. Respondent argues that Befort’s email had all the characteris- tics of junk email, commonly known as spam. The Acceptable Use Policy does not define junk mail as spam. However, spam is a reasonable term when applied to email and “junk mail.” Spam has various but similar definitions. The definition of “junk mail” is similar: unsolicited mail that consists mainly of promotional materials, catalogs, and requests for donations. See www.merriam-webster.com/diction- ary/junk%20mail (2016). Respondent, offering a definition from the Oxford Dictionary, says spam is “sending the same message indiscriminately to (large numbers of recipients).” (R. Br. at 27, citing 2011 version). The more recent Oxford 29 Respondent’s policies allow for discussion of work-life conditions, but apparently not all perceptions on work life. Elliott’s statement im- pliedly shows disparate treatment of employees engaged in union activ- ities. Birth announcements are about the T-Mobile family, but employ- ees communicating about the union to each other are not part of our fam- ily, just a third party. It suggests that Respondent considers union in- volvement as disloyalty. See: Chino Valley Medical Center, 359 NLRB Dictionary definitions are “irrelevant or inappropriate messages sent on the Internet to a large number of recipients” or “unwanted or intrusive advertising on the Internet.” See www.oxforddic- tionaries/us/definition/american _english/spam.com (June 16, 2016). Another definition states spam is “e-mail that is not wanted; e-mail that is sent to large numbers of people and that consists mostly of advertising.” See www.merriam-web- ster.com/dictionary/spam (2016). The theme connecting the Oxford and Merriam-Webster def- initions of spam and junk mail are sending to a large number of people (at least for spam) and consists of advertising. Befort’s email, while arguably sent to a large number of people, was not advertising. Although unsolicited, the email did not consist of promotional materials, catalogs or requests for donations. Be- fort’s email, based upon these commonly accepted definitions, was not junk mail or spam, so Respondent’s application of the policy was not warranted. 3. Enterprise user standard Respondent also argues that Befort violated its Enterprise User Standard by creating an impermissible “work around” be- yond her system access limitations. She bypassed the warnings and sent emails to groups of 100 or less when she discovered she did not have proper permission to the user list for all CSRs. Re- spondent contends that, by restricting access to certain levels of employees, it has not given “access to its email system where it has not chosen to do so.” (R. Br. at 26–27), citing Purple Com- munications, 361 NLRB 1050, 1063. This parsing of Purple Communications addresses when the employer has not chosen to give any access. The issue is “whether the employer applied uni- form and consistently enforced control over its email system to the extent such controls are necessary to maintain production and discipline.” Purple Communications, 361 NLRB 1050, 1051. The standard for establishment of uniform and consistently en- forced restrictions are those that an employer can prove would interfere with the email system’s efficient functioning. Id., slip op. at 15. Examples are large attachments or audio/video seg- ments. Id. Respondent did not prove that its enforced restrictions were necessary for production and discipline, nor did it prove the email interfered with its email system’s efficient functioning. As General Counsel points out, Respondent has no evidence that it ever enforced this limitation before Befort’s email. Respondent also admitted that it would not have known if the email was sent to smaller groups first. The email was not large and contained no large attachments, such as the audio or video attachments cited in Purple Communications. It further stated that it needed to avoid employees sending emails at the same time to each other, yet provided no examples of such occurring or what would cause the email system to crash. Respondent also claims the email was disruptive to production 992, 993, 1000 (2013), affd. 362 NLRB 283 (2015) (telling employees that they would lose the family atmosphere and flexibility of scheduling if they selected the union violated Section 8(a)(1); also announcing that employees ended the family atmosphere because they voted for the un- ion); Holiday Inn-JFK Airport, 348 NLRB 1, 3–4 (2006) (employer’s statement that “we’re all family” implied that employees who support union threatened the “family” atmosphere). 16 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD because some employees complained. Even assuming some em- ployees found the email offensive, it is irrelevant to determining disruption due to protected speech. See Boulder City Hospital, 355 NLRB 1247, 1249 (2010); Consolidated Diesel Co., 332 NLRB 1019, 1020 (2000), enfd. 263 F.3d 345 (4th Cir. 2001). Respondent also differentiates its own facility-wide emails about salsa and lip sync contests as business-related interests in fostering employee morale; in contrast Befort’s email is not busi- ness-related purpose because it was intended to create support for the Union. Respondent cites Kallail v. Alliant Energy Corpo- rate Services, Inc., 691 F.3d 925, 931 (8th Cir. 2012). The case involves a plaintiff who sued under the Americans with Disabil- ities Act when she requested a reasonable accommodation to no longer rotate shifts. The court stated that avoiding employee complaints and maintain morale were legitimate business rea- sons for a scheduling decision. Id. (emphasis added). It did not balance the employer’s right to promote morale or property rights with employees’ Section 7 rights.30 Further, the idea that social events promote morale is aspirational, but, beyond the tes- timony that employees generally like these events, Respondent does not demonstrate with any of its metrics that slushies, pop- corn, and lip sync contests actually elevate employee morale at this facility beyond the moment of the event. I instead find that an email about a social and informative Un- ion event may be no more disruptive during “working time” than notification about leaving one’s workstation to get popcorn or slushies or finding out about colleague’s death. Befort’s email specifically told its recipients to contact her when they were not working. Respondent also does not monitor other personal mes- sages, which are permitted, so Respondent apparently is not aware of whether employees receive messages during work that might be, according to its terms, “disruptive.” Respondent there- fore does not demonstrate that the email was so disruptive that it warrants enforcement of this rule. See Anderson-Rooney Oper- ating Co., 134 NLRB 1480, 1491, 1492 (1961) (employer argued union talk more disruptive than other talk). The enforcement was therefore discriminatory.31 4. Solicitation policy Respondent further contends that Befort also violated its So- licitation policy, which prohibits solicitation to other employees while they are working. Because some CSRs received and read the email during working time, Respondent maintains the policy was violated. This position conflicts with Purple Communica- tions. Using an email system is not treated as just solicitation due to its unique features. It may defy classification as a work or non- work area. Purple Communications, supra, slip op. at 14. Fur- ther, reading of personal email on working or nonworking time has become blurred due to the structure of the technology work- place in which the CSRs operate. Purple Communications, 361 NLRB 1050, 1064 fn. 72. Respondent does not demonstrate that it has significantly limited email usage during working time when anyone else sends a personal email. In this respect, Re- spondent’s reliance upon the solicitation policy is misplaced. 30 Respondent also cited a sexual harassment case. Wimberly v. Shoney’s Inc., 1985 WL 5410 (S.D.Ga. 1985). Because this interpretation was put forth against union activity but not before, it is discriminatory. In addition, Befort’s email does not meet the accepted defini- tion of solicitation. “[S]olicitation and distribution of literature are different organizational techniques and their implementa- tion pose[d] different problems both for the employer and for employees.” Stoddard-Quirk Mfg. Co., 138 NLRB 615, 619 (1962) (emphasis in original). Solicitation is viewed as an oral request. Id. at 617-618. Solicitation is a concrete effort to obtain a signature on an authorization card directed from one person to another. ConAgra Foods, Inc. v. NLRB, 813 F.3d 1079, 1089 (8th Cir. 2016). Befort asked the CSRs to attend a social func- tion to find out more about joining the union. Befort encourages CSRs to “Join the movement!” This statement is vague: It does not necessarily imply asking employees to sign cards in respect to joining a movement when voices are silenced about “discuss- ing” in an organized manner. Nonetheless, Respondent applies the rule. Because it misclassifies the email as solicitation, Re- spondent disparately enforces the rule against the email. C. Allegations Based Upon Elliott’s June 2 email Three allegations arise based upon Elliott’s email. General Counsel maintains all three rules stated in Elliott’s June 2 email are overly broad and were disparately enforced. The three alle- gations are: promulgating and maintaining rules against sending “mass emails” to other employees; prohibiting discussing the un- ion during work time; and prohibiting employees from using so- cial media while at work. As all were promulgated in response to Befort’s email, Elliott’s new rules were promulgated in re- sponse to Section 7 activities. 1. “Mass communications” by email I find that this rule would be reasonably interpreted by em- ployees to limit communications about Section 7 rights and was promulgated in response to Section 7 activity. Employees have a presumptive right to use their employers email systems for Sec- tion 7 communications during nonworking time. UPMC, 362 NLRB 1704, 1707 fn. 12 (2015); Purple Communications, 361 NLRB 1050, 1063 (2014). First, Respondent contends a permissible systemwide email is one an employee may send to recover lost items, such as a charger. Respondent claimed, because it occurred on its prop- erty, it was responsible. This discriminates based upon the con- tent of the email—employees can email a large group to recover lost electronics, but not about the Union. Because of this incon- sistency, Respondent does not rebut the presumption that it has “special circumstances” to limit the content of the email. See UPMC, 362 NLRB 1704, 1707–1708. Second, the rule is vague. A CSR can send one email to 99 recipients without receiving a message from the system. Are one set of 99 emails a mass communication? One cannot tell from Elliott’s email. Because the definition of “mass communica- tions” is missing, the rule would be subject to interpretation. In the paragraph addressing “mass communications,” nothing about the Union is mentioned. The next paragraph, however, 31 The Union suggests that the correct analysis for these rules should be the same as those applied to verbal talking. Because the Board has not directed use of such a test, I am bound by current Board precedent. T-MOBILE USA, INC. 17 talks about what Respondent perceives as employee rights for Union discussions. Taken as a whole, an employee would rea- sonably find that this rule particularly pertains to communica- tions about the Union. The rule therefore is overly broad and was promulgated in response to Section 7 activity. It therefore violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. 2. Discussing the Union during worktime The portion of Elliott’s email at issue is: Employees have countless opportunities to communicate with others when they are not working—about the union or anything else. They can talk with others in break areas, before work, or after work. They can talk from home, or text while eating out. An employer violates Section 8(a)(1) by prohibiting employ- ees from speaking with each other about terms and conditions of employment, unless it can prove a specific legitimate and sub- stantial business justification. Central States Southeast and Southwest Areas, 362 NLRB 1280, 1281 (2015). The language is ambiguous, and an employee reasonably would be unable to determine whether he could talk about the union, or anything else, during working time in a working area. As the record re- flects employee discuss other matters unrelated to work during work time, these statements establish an unlawful no talking rule, directed at Union activity. See Pier Sixty, LLC, 362 NLRB 505, 525-526 (2015), citing Sam’s Club, 349 NLRB 1007, 1009 (2007); Anderson-Rooney Operating Co., 134 NLRB 1480, 1491-1492 (1961). Because the language is ambiguous and the rule was promulgated in response to union activity, the rule is both overly broad and discriminatory. See Care One at Madison Avenue, 361 NLRB 1462 (2014) (coercive memo in response to union activity). 3. Social media Social media may be used as a method to communicate about Union and/or protected concerted activities. See: Pier Sixty, LLC, 362 NLRB 505 (2015); Bettie Page Clothing, 361 NLRB 876 (2014); Triple Play Sports Bar and Grille, 361 NLRB 308 (2014). Respondent’s social media policy states employees can occasionally use personal social media on the work computer or during work hours as long as it does not interfere with job re- sponsibilities and is consistent with the other policies. (Tr. 327). Until Elliott’s email, which he issued in response to Befort’s email, employees would reasonably interpret Respondent’s rule to permit Section 7 activities on the work computer or during work hours as long as it did not interfere with their job duties. Elliott’s email changes the policy to using social networks “. . . off the job, of course.” The next sentence applies his version of the rules to solicitation and distribution. This new “off the job” limitation is in direct conflict with Re- spondent’s social media policy. An employee would reasonably be confused by Elliott’s iteration, as the policy previously per- mitted use of social media on the computer or during work hours. This ambiguity is construed against Respondent. Whole Foods Market, Inc., 363 NLRB No. 87 (2015); Mercedes-Benz U.S. In- ternational, Inc., 361 NLRB 1018, 1025-1026 (2014). Elliott’s statement also would reasonably be interpreted by employees as “working hours” rather than “working time.” Rules prohibiting solicitation during working time are p resumptively lawful because “. . . that term denotes periods when employees are performing actual job duties, periods which do not include the employee’s own time such as lunch and break periods.” Our Way, 268 NLRB 394, 394–395 (1983). However, a solicitation rule is presumptively invalid when solic- itation is prohibited during the employee’s own time. Our Way, 268 NLRB at 394. An employer may ban solicitation in working areas during working time; however, the ban cannot be extended to working areas during nonworking time. UPS Supply Chain Solutions, Inc., 357 NLRB 1295, 1296 (2011). By stating “off the job,” Respondent’s rule prohibits solicitation via social me- dia in the working areas of the company, without regard to whether employees are taking breaks in the area. Because the rule does not extend to nonworking time in work areas, Elliott’s new social media rule is overly broad and violates Section 8(a)(1). UPS Supply Chain, supra. It was promulgated in re- sponse to Union activity, which also is violative. II.. RESPONDENT’S JUNE 2 MEETING WITH BEFORT The allegations here are that Respondent: prohibited employ- ees from sending “mass e-mails;” prohibited employees from talking about the union during working time although permitting employees to discuss other subjects; and, prohibited employees from sending Union-related emails to employees’ work email addresses. I first determine credibility and then address the alle- gations. A. Credibility I first must decide credibility for Befort and Maron, both of whom testified about the meeting. I credit Befort’s testimony because of her forthright demeanor. Respondent failed to cor- roborate Maron’s testimony when it did not call Coach Meeks to testify. I take an adverse inference because Meeks did not tes- tify. Roosevelt Memorial Medical Center, 348 NLRB 1016, 1022 (2006) (an adverse inference may be drawn from a party’s failure to call a witness who may reasonably be assumed to be favorably disposed to a party, and who could reasonably be ex- pected to corroborate its version of events, particularly when the witness is the party’s agent). I find that Maron’s testimony is less credible than Befort’s. Maron tended to shade her testimony, such as when she insisted on direct that she read the talking points verbatim, and later ad- mitted to at least variations and interruptions from Befort. Fur- ther, in Befort’s version, Maron’s statements to Befort also con- flicted, because she told her the emails could not be disruptive but confirmed she could send them. However, earlier in the con- versation, Maron said she could send send emails because they were considered solicitation, which is consistent with Respond- ent’s position as to why the email allegedly violated Respond- ent’s policies. B. Statements Made to Befort The Board considers the totality of the circumstances in as- sessing the reasonable tendency of an ambiguous statement or a veiled threat to coerce. KSM Industries, 336 NLRB 133 (2001); Mediplex of Danbury, 314 NLRB 470, 471 (1994). The test is objective. ManorCare of Kingston, PA, LLC v. NLRB, ___ F.3d (D.C. Cir. May 20, 2016). In assessing whether a statement con- stitutes a threat, the appropriate test is “whether under all 18 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD circumstances the employer’s conduct reasonably tended to re- strain, coerce or interfere with employees’ rights guaranteed by the Act.” Mediplex of Danbury, 314 NLRB at 471–472. “[T]test of interference, restraint, and coercion under Section 8(a)(1) of the Act does not turn on the employer’s motive or on whether the coercion succeeded or failed.” American Tissue Corp., 336 NLRB 435, 441 (2001), citing NLRB v. Illinois Tool Works, 153 F.2d 811, 814 (7th Cir. 1946). The “threats in question need not be explicit if the language used by the employer or his repre- sentative can reasonably by construed as threatening.” NLRB v. Ayer Lar Sanitarium, 436 F.2d 45, 49 (9th Cir. 1970). Regarding Respondent’s prohibition against employees send- ing “mass e-mails,” I find that this statement is violative for the same reasons that Elliott’s email also promulgated an overly broad rule and was discriminatory: An employee would reason- ably believe she could not send an email to a group of employees. Regarding prohibiting employees from talking about the un- ion during working time although permitting employees to dis- cuss other subjects, the evidence demonstrates that employees were permitted to talk about anything during their working time as long as they attended to calls first. If two employees did not have calls, the employees could speak with each other about any subject. Telling Befort that she could not discuss the Union ex- cept outside working areas alone is discriminatory and coercive. See Pier Sixty, supra. Maron also stated that Befort was prohibited from sending Union-related emails to employees’ work email addresses. Alt- hough Maron gave conflicting messages, the conflict makes the statements confusing. The main message Befort received, how- ever, was she could not use Respondent’s email to send messages about the Union. Based upon the above analysis involving Pur- ple Communications, I find that this statement is coercive be- cause an employee would believe she did not have a right to use the email system to communicate about Union or other protected activities. III. RESPONDENT’S JUNE 4 MEETING WITH BEFORT’S TEAM Other employees testified about the meeting, but Befort’s ver- sion was the most complete, so I rely primarily upon her testi- mony. As before, Respondent did not call Coach Meeks to tes- tify and Maron’s testimony is therefore uncorroborated. I further credit the employees that Maron did not read verbatim and gave her own interpretations of what she had on the talking points. As on June 2, Maron told employees that they could not talk about the Union during working time in nonwork areas, despite allow- ing conversations on other subjects during working time in work- ing areas. For the reasons stated above, this statement again vi- olated Section 8(a)(1). IV. RESPONDENT’S ALLEGED JUNE 4 SURVEILLANCE AND INTERROGATION BY COACH MEEKS I credit the employees’ version of what occurred that day. The testimony was fairly consistent, with only a few minor varia- tions. As noted above, Meeks was not called to testify and I make an adverse inference because she did not testify. I first address the alleged surveillance, then interrogation. 32 The case is further differentiated because here the employees were not engaged in open union activities when they left for break. A. Meeks Engaged in Surveillance Respondent defines surveillance as photographing, videotap- ing or openly conducting recordkeeping of employees participat- ing in open union activities. National Steel and Shipbuilding Co., 324 NLRB 499 (1997), enfd. 156 F.3d 1268 (D.C. Cir. 1998). Such conduct constitutes only one form of surveillance. Surveillance is supervisors watching “employees engaged in Section 7 activity by observing them in a way that is out of the ordinary and thereby coercive.” Aladdin Gaming, LLC, 345 NLRB 585, 585–586 (2005), rev. denied sub nom. Local Joint Executive Bd. of Las Vegas v. NLRB, 515 F.3d 942 (9th Cir. 2008). It depends upon the nature and duration of the supervi- sors’ observation. Id. Factors showing the observation was co- ercive include the duration of observation, the employer’s dis- tance while making the observation and whether the employer engaged in other unlawful activity. Id. at 586. Meeks engaged in overt surveillance “to prevent known union supports from engaging in organizational activities at times and places when and where they were lawfully entitled to do so.” Teksid Aluminum Foundry, 311 NLRB 711, 714–715 (1993). The timing of Meeks’ actions, immediately after a meeting with the employees about a union leaflets, alone suggests that she wanted to determine what the employees would do. Although Meeks did not smoke, Meeks went to the break area with the employees, something she never did before and did not do again. Some of the employees who went to the area were known union sympathizers. Meeks was obviously watching for the employ- ees’ reactions to the meeting and what was happening between the employees, particularly as she observed Lowery reading the phone message and attempted to ascertain what was happening. Meeks’ conduct was different than other non-smokers who went to this break area because Meeks was a first time, last time visi- tor. Respondent contends that Meeks could not have known that the employees would discuss union sympathies and activities af- ter the team meeting about the flyers.32 I disagree. A number of the employees who went to this break area, including Befort, were known union sympathizers and activists. The topic of the meeting immediately preceding the break involved Respond- ent’s answer to the union flyers. Meeks, who never took breaks, obviously wanted to hear if the employees had any response. Compare Aladdin Gaming, LLC, 345 NLRB 585, 585–586 (2005) (supervisors not engaged in surveillance when they nor- mally took breaks in the open lunch area and was not accompa- nied by any other unlawful action). Her conduct is similar to the supervisor who, during the em- ployees’ nonworking time, went to a smoking area more fre- quently after a unionization campaign started; the employees who gathered there were either known or suspected union sym- pathizers. Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc., 318 NLRB 470, 502–503 (1995). No reason was given for the Fieldcrest supervisor’s more frequent visits. Id. Similarly, Respondent offered no rea- son why Meeks suddenly decided to take a break with these em- ployees. Also see Liberty House Nursing Homes, 245 NLRB 1194, 1200 (1979) (“preemption of nonworking time . . . T-MOBILE USA, INC. 19 constituted a pronounced impediment to the employees’ right to utilize the only opportunity during working hours in which they could engage in section 7 activity . . . without violating Respond- ent’s announced rules”). B. Meeks Interrogated Employees While on Break The test for determining whether an employer unlawfully in- terrogated an employee is whether, under all of the circum- stances, the interrogation reasonably tends to restrain, coerce or interfere with the free exercise of rights guaranteed by the Act. Pan-Oston Co., 336 NLRB 305, 307 (2001), citing Rossmore House, 269 NLRB 1176 (1984). Among the factors the Board may consider are: (1) whether there is a history of employer hostility to or dis- crimination against protected activity; (2) the nature of the information sought; (3) the identity of the questioner; (4) the place and method of interrogation; (5) the truthfulness of the employee’s reply. Intertape Polymer Corp., 360 NLRB 957, 957 (2014), enfd. in rel. part, 801 F.3d 224 (4th Cir. 2015). The nature of the relationship between the supervisor and em- ployee also may be considered if relevant. Id. Either the words or context must suggest an element of coercion. Stablius, 355 NLRB at 850. Although Meeks was a low-level supervisor, she was a direct supervisor, which tends to make questioning more threatening. Intertape Polymer, supra. Meeks offered no justification to the employees for her questions. Id. The place of Meeks’ question- ing was the break area, where employees are permitted to engage in union and other protected activities during their nonworking time. Meeks questioned what the employees were saying, even when the employees made a point of whispering, which was an attempt to insinuate herself into the discussion. After Meeks de- manded to know what the message on the phone was, the em- ployees lied about what was on the phone and AJ changed the phone screen to conform, which demonstrates a lack of truthful- ness in response to her questioning. The questioning was de- signed to interfere with the employees’ Section 7 rights. In light of her concurrent unlawful surveillance, the above factors and circumstances demonstrate that Meeks’ questioning was coer- cive and violated Section 8(a)(1). See: Hydro-Dredge Accessory Co., 215 NLRB 138, 149 (1974) (in light of other violations, em- ployer’s interrogation was “inextricably interwoven” with em- ployer’s interest in keeping employees away from the union); G.R.I. Corp., 216 NLRB 34 (1975) (not isolated considering other unfair labor practices; interrogation does not have to be stated as a query). V. CSR PARRISHSENT AWAY BY A GUARD In this section, I first discuss whether Wiegand was an agent for Respondent. Because I find Wiegand was an agent, I discuss 33 Security guards have access to the email and instant messaging systems, which they may use to notify CSRs when the guards find a park- ing issue, such as parking in an impermissible spot. The guards send instant messages (IMs) to employees for food deliveries or mail left with the alleged violation and whether Respondent cured the violation when it sent Parrish an email about the incident. A. Guards Are Respondent’s Section 2(13) Agents 1. Facts regarding guard duties During the relevant time, Respondent contracted with Guards- mark for security guards. The security guards are stationed at the front of the building and at the back exit. They stop people from entry if proper identification is not presented. If employees lose their identification tags, they go to security, which issues a temporary badge and ensures they are able to access the facility. Guards patrol the outside and inside of the Call Center to ensure that the facility is secure. The guards make rounds in the parking lots to check vehicles and around the building through her shift. During orientation, guards inform new employees of their duties, including require- ments for employee identification and parking permits, plus their roles in emergencies and first aid. Employees are also told to contact security if see anything suspicious.33 Several TPA Reports reflect that the guards stopped union protesters on the edge of the company’s property when they have put clothing on top of stop signs and requested them to move their cars from Respondent’s parking lot. Wray-Tolbert testified contradictorily about the guard’s duties. She first stated that, if a guard sees someone who should not be on the property, the guard will tell the person to leave and, if necessary, call the po- lice. On the other hand, she later testified the guard was sup- posed to notify Wray-Tolbert or Elliott to obtain further instruc- tion in how to handle the matter. However, guards did not con- tact Human Resources in every instance, nor did the TPA Re- ports reflect such instruction. 2. Analysis regarding agency status The Board uses common law agency principles to determine whether an individual is an employer’s agent. SAIA Motor Freight, Inc., 334 NLRB 979 (2001). The burden of proof of agency status is upon the party asserting it—here, General Coun- sel. CNP Mechanical, 347 NLRB 160, 169 (2006). The question is whether the person in question demonstrates either actual or apparent authority. Station Casinos, Inc., 358 NLRB 637, 645 (2012). For apparent authority to exist, a third party “must have a reasonable basis . . . to believe that the principal has authorized the alleged agent to perform the acts as to which agency is al- leged.” Poly-America, Inc., 328 NLRB 677 (1999), enfd. in rel. part, 260 F.3d 465 (5th Cir. 2001). If employees would reason- ably believe that the person in question reflects company policy and acts upon the employer’s behalf, “[a]n employer may properly be held responsible” for that person’s conduct. CNP Mechanical, Inc., 347 NLRB 160, 169 (2006). Also see Tortillas Don Chavas, 361 NLRB 101, 109 (2014). Agency must be es- tablished with regard to the specific conduct that is alleged to be unlawful. Ace Heating and Air Conditioning Co., 364 NLRB No. 22, slip op. at 3 (June 15, 2016); Station Casino, supra, citing In re Cornell Forge Co., 339 NLRB 733 (2003). Even in the the front desk The guards also use IMs with reminders to make sure that employees’ car windows are closed when rain was predicted, and notifi- cations that an employee left car lights on or had a flat tire. 20 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD absence of specific instructions, agency status can be properly found. Poly-America, Inc. v. NLRB, 260 F.3d at 486-487. An employer may be held liable for unfair labor practices committed by security guards acting in their official capacity. Saint John’s Health Center, 357 NLRB 2078, 2095-2096 (2011) (security guards acting under direct authority from upper man- agement violated Section 8(a)(1) by threatening to have employ- ees charged with trespassing for distributing pro-union literature) (citing Opryland Hotel, 323 NLRB 723 fn. 3 (1997); Bakersfield Memorial Hospital, 315 NLRB 596 (1994); Southern Maryland Hospital Center, 293 NLRB 1209 (1989)). Here, substantial ev- idence shows the guards monitor who enters and exits the prop- erty. They also detain people at the front desk and require iden- tification. These facts demonstrate apparent authority. Cooking Good Div. of Perdue Farms, Inc., 323 NLRB 345, 351 (1997) (security guards placed in a position to stop individuals from en- tering premises were cloaked with apparent authority), enfd. in rel. part, 144 F.3d 830 (D.C. Cir. 1998). I do not adhere to Re- spondent’s argument that the guards have been instructed to no- tify Human Resources with encounters with “third parties,” which apparently includes employees engaged in union activi- ties. The testimony on this point shifted. No Respondent witness discussed the first guard who confronted Parrish and decidedly took action without any contact with Human Resources person- nel. Despite Respondent’s argument that the guards are told per TPA Reports not to engage employees, nothing in the TPA Re- ports suggests that the guards ever see the TPA Reports or com- plete them. An employee would reasonable believe that Wiegand was act- ing as an agent on behalf of Respondent regarding who could access the property. B. The Guard, as Respondent’s Agent, Violated Section 8(a)(1) Although Respondent admits Wiegand was incorrect, he still required Parrish to leave and she complied. I agree with General Counsel that, although Wiegand incorrectly enforced Respond- ent’s rule regarding employees on the property on nonworking time in a nonworking area, Respondent’s agent violated the Act. Harrison Steel Castings Co., 262 NLRB 450, 455 fn. 6 (1982). C. The Violation Is Not Cured Under Passavant To relieve itself of liability for unlawful conduct, Respond- ent’s repudiation must be timely, unambiguous, specific to the coercive conduct and free from other proscribed unlawful con- duct. Passavant Memorial Area Hospital, 237 NLRB 138 (1978). I agree with Respondent that Wray-Tolbert’s email was timely, unambiguous and specific to the conduct. It also assured Parrish of her rights to continue what she was doing. However, the email did not tell Parrish that Respondent would not repeat its actions, which failed to cure the violation. Consolidated Die- sel Co. v. NLRB, 263 F.3d at 354–355. Respondent also contends it was free from other proscribed conduct until possibly December, or over four months, and the incident was isolated. Further, no unfair labor practices occurred until unrelated claims of December. Respondent’s cases are dif- ferentiated factually. In Broyhill Co., 260 NLRB 1366–1367 (1982), the Board relieved the employer of a notice posting after an employer made its own posting, which followed the Board’s language and affirmatively stated what employees’ rights were. The employer there also had not violated the Act in any other way. In Raysel-IDE, Inc., 284 NLRB 879, 891 (1987), the em- ployer also committed no other violative conduct. Here Respondent ignores the settlement agreement, approved July 28, 2015, regarding this particular facility. Given the date, the posting to cure the previous violations had not been available for employee viewing for the full 60 days. In addition, Respond- ent’s more recent unfair labor practice violations, for violative rules, surveillance, interrogation, and coercive statements as dis- cussed above, occurred on June 2 and 4, less than two months before the confrontation with Wiegand. More unfair labor prac- tices were to follow. I therefore find that the violation committed by Respondent’s agent was not cured due to its failure to assure Parrish that such conduct would not occur again, and Respondent had other un- cured proscribed conduct. VI. SECTION 8(A)(1) AND (3) ALLEGATIONS INVOLVING SPENCER AND CROXSON A. Credibility Spencer had difficulty with the timing of events. For example, she said she talked about the Befort email with Croxson in early June because she knew Befort would be assigned to her team; yet she later testified that she did not know whether Befort was joining her team until weeks later. Spencer’s testimony at times was tinged with a certain level of angst when discussing what one might perceive as Croxson’s betrayal of Spencer’s hard work to rehabilitate her. I therefore credit that Croxson told Spencer she wanted to change her perception within the company. I dis- credit Croxson on her explanation that she was not involved with decorating her coach’s office as she checked with the Union rep- resentative as to its legality. B. Alleged Coercive Statements in the Summer of 2015 The Complaint alleged that, in mid-June or early July, Spencer threatened Croxson with unspecified reprisals by telling her that Union activities were detrimental to success and interrogated whether employees still affiliated with Union and what sympa- thies were. It also alleged that in late June, Spencer allegedly interrogated her by asking if she was still friends with a known Union supporter, Befort. I disagree with General Counsel’s position here. I credit that Spencer told Croxson that she would assist her in rehabilitating her image. However, based upon the credited facts, Croxson opened the door to this discussion by telling Spencer that she was interested in doing so. I find no violation here. Regarding the alleged interrogation, General Counsel explains the facts that Spencer asking Croxson if she supported the Union and why she supported in the first place. As with the statement immediately above, I find that it does not exceed what Croxson was apparently willing to reveal and no violation occurred. Croxson testified that Spencer asked frequently whether she was still friends with Befort, who was known by this time from her email as an open Union supporter. I credit Croxson, although she did not specify when these conversations took place. Given Spencer’s belief that she was rehabilitating Croxson’s image T-MOBILE USA, INC. 21 within the company, Spencer’s questioning of the friendship in- tended to gauge whether Croxson was following Spencer’s ad- vice about discontinuing her ties with the Union. It exceeds what Croxson discussed before, which makes the statement coercive. C. Chart Allegations Respondent denies the statement and discrimination based upon the seating chart. Spencer was vague with her denial here and I therefore do not credit this denial. Regarding Spencer’s statement to Croxson, Spencer likely believed that, because Croxson was no longer involved with the Union, she could freely discuss creating the seating chart with her intent to isolate union supporters. The statement is coercive because it conveys Re- spondent’s plan to keep union supporters away from each other, even in one pod. Bowling Transportation, Inc., 336 NLRB 393, 400 (2001), affd. 352 F.3d 274 (6th Cir. 2003), rehg. en banc denied (6th Cir. 2004) (telling employee he is disciplined be- cause of union and/or protected concerted activity violates Sec- tion 8(a)(1); Yale-New Haven Hospital, 309 NLRB 363, 367– 368 (1992) (friendly statements may still be threatening and show intent to take action). The seating chart places four identified union supporters were placed with four seats between each in a U-shaped pod. The chart alone provides circumstantial evidence: Unlike the LSAT questions, everyone must sit somewhere. However, the chart’s outcome was dictated by Spencer’s stated intent to isolate. I con- sider her statement to Croxson with the chart as evidence of dis- crimination. I therefore find the statement violated Section 8(a)(1) and the implementation of the seating chart violated Sec- tion 8(a)(3) and (1). D. The Allegations Regarding Croxson and Spencer’s December 11 Conversation Based upon the conversation that day, General Counsel al- leges six Section 8(a)(1) violations. I credit Croxson’s version of what happened. A factor throughout this conversation was that Spencer believed Croxson was no longer involved with Union activities and therefore was no longer an open supporter. I find that Spencer, who admitted that she was “disappointed” with Croxson’s lying, was more disappointed than she wanted us to believe. I find five of the six statements violated the Act. First, Spencer asked Croxson if she thought she was stupid about being aware of Croxson’s union activity. That portion of the statement is more of a prelude to the remaining conversation and sounds more like Spencer’s opinion, protected by Section 8(c), rather than a coercive statement. The remainder of the con- versation, however, is a different story. The second allegation maintains Spencer created an impres- sion of surveillance. An employer creates an impression of sur- veillance when it indicates it is closely monitoring the degree of an employee’s union activities: Spencer’s statement that she found out and saw Croxson’s picture at the Union events in Washington, D.C. implies that Spencer is monitoring the Face- book page on which the pictures appeared. The underlying prin- ciple for finding an impression of surveillance is that “employees should be free to participate in union organizing campaigns with- out the fear that . . . management [is] peering over their shoul- ders, taking note of who is involved in union activities, and in what particular ways.” Flexsteel Industries, Inc., 311 NLRB 257 (1993). The test is whether an employee would reasonably as- sume from the statement that her union activities have been placed under surveillance. Id., citing Rood Industries, 278 NLRB 160, 164 (1986). The standard is objective. Quickway Transportation, Inc., 354 NLRB 560, 568 (2009), reaffd. 355 NLRB 678 (2010). Because a reasonable employee would not know how Spencer came to view the Facebook pictures, a rea- sonable employee would assume from the statement that unlaw- ful surveillance was taking place. Promedica Health Systems, Inc., 343 NLRB 1351, 1352 (2004). The third allegation is that Spencer coercively told Croxson that she was disappointed with Croxson for engaging in Union activities. The circumstances surrounding the statement were coercive as it was not the only statement Spencer made. A rea- sonable employee would believe that Spencer’s disappointment would lead to some form of reprisal, which makes the statement unlawful. Print Fulfillment Services LLC, 361 NLRB 1243, 1243–1244 (2014); General Electric Co., 246 NLRB 1103, 1106 (1979). The fourth allegation is Spencer asking if Croxson intended to be outspoken about the Union and whether her stance had changed. As Spencer previously believed that Croxson was no longer involved with unionization, Croxson was no longer an open supporter until Spencer saw the pictures. Even if Croxson was an open supporter, the information Spencer sought was be- yond what Spencer could see on Facebook. Grand Canyon Uni- versity, 362 NLRB 57, 57 (2015). In considering all the circum- stances, I find that this questioning constitutes unlawful interro- gation. The fifth allegation is that Spencer threatened Croxson that she would not be considered for corporate awards, such as the peak awards, due to her union activities. Spencer’s statement is a threat of employer’s retaliatory quid pro quo for union activity and violates Section 8(a)(1). See generally Metro-West Ambu- lance Service, Inc., 360 NLRB 1029 (2014) (threats that em- ployee will not advance because of union activities violative). Lastly, Spencer told Croxson that she should make her re- maining time easier by not supporting the Union. In light of all the circumstances, telling an employee that not supporting the Union would make your life easier coercively implies a benefit for refraining from union activities, which violates Section 8(a)(1). E. 8(a)(3) Allegation that Respondent Made Croxson Adhere to a More Onerous Work Schedule Singling out employees for closer supervision due to union activity violates the Act. T&T Machine Co., 278 NLRB 970, 973 (1986). I assess based upon a dual motive analysis per the bur- den shifting process established in Wright Line, 251 NLRB 1083 (1980), enfd. 662 F.2d 899 (1st Cir. 1981), cert. denied 455 U.S. 989 (1982). The General Counsel must establish four elements by a preponderance of the evidence. First, General Counsel must show the existence of activity protected by the Act. Second, he must prove that Respondent was aware that the employees had engaged in such activity. Third, General Counsel must show that the alleged discriminatee(s) suffered an adverse employment ac- tion. Fourth, there must be a link, or nexus, between the 22 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD employees’ protected activity and the adverse employment ac- tion. Proving these four elements creates a presumption that the adverse employment action violated the Act. To rebut the pre- sumption, Respondent bears the burden of showing that the same action would have taken place even in the absence of the pro- tected conduct. Wright Line, 251 NLRB at 1089. See also Manno Electric, Inc., 321 NLRB 278, 280 fn. 12 (1996). Crediting Croxson’s version, the timing suggests that Spencer engaged in this conduct because Spencer discovered Croxson’s union activities, which is direct evidence of knowledge. Timing also supports a finding of animus. Respondent also puts forth questionable reasons for initiating any actions regarding Crox- son’s performance of this day. Respondent adduced evidence to try to show that Croxson was not a good senior representative, thereby needing a guide to help her throughout her workday. However, evidence shows conflict- ing evidence of interpersonal relations issues at worst. Spencer admitted that the team was not having any problems meeting their metrics in December, which lessens the need for providing Croxson with a detailed list of tasks to accomplish in a specific time frame. These reasons demonstrate that Respondent likely had animus towards Croxson’s activities, rather than trying to assist her to organize her day. The question then becomes whether this condition was truly onerous. In Aladdin Gaming, LLC, 345 NLRB at 624, the complaint alleged an employee was forced to change break time earlier, which caused the employee more onerous working conditions. Because the events took place on one day, the administrative law judge determined the change was de minimis and too insignifi- cant to constitute an adverse employment action. In contrast, a guard moved to the same post for consecutive days was consid- ered a more onerous work assignment. Yale-New Haven Hospi- tal, 309 NLRB at 371–372. I agree with the logic of Aladdin Gaming: Because the con- versation and assignment took place only on one day, the “to do” list event is not sufficient to be an unfair labor practice. I there- fore recommend dismissal of this allegation. F. Two Allegations Regarding Croxson and Spencer’s December 21st Conversation One allegation maintains that Spencer created an impression of surveillance by telling Croxson someone was creating turmoil and must be getting paid by the Union to keep support going. The second allegation alleges that Spencer interrogated Croxson when she asked whether Croxson was involved in planning a un- ion event. As previously noted, an impression of surveillance is creating when a manager implies close monitoring of union activities. Spencer implied she was keeping an eye on “someone,” and specified activities. Although Spencer knew that Croxson had a paid trip to Washington, nothing indicates that Croxson or Bell, who also went to Washington for the conference, were paid to continue supporting the Union. See Flexsteel, supra. Because I find that this statement was sufficient to create an impression of 34 If no exceptions are filed as provided by Sec. 102.46 of the Board’s Rules and Regulations, the findings, conclusions, and recommended surveillance, I do not reach the question whether “creating tur- moil” also created an impression of surveillance. Regarding the allegation of interrogation of whether Croxson was involved in recent union activities at the facility, Spencer again went beyond Croxson’s open conduct to question what she was doing. Croxson denied the activity. As the facts of this case demonstrates a history of hostility towards union activity and the questioning was performed by the immediate supervisor in a one-on-one conversation, I find that Spencer unlawfully interro- gated Croxson whether she participated in doughnut distribution and other Union activities. See Rossmore House, supra. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW On these findings of fact and conclusions of law and on the entire record, I issue the following recommended34 1. Respondent admits, and I find, that it is an employer under the Act as defined in Section 2(2), 2(6), and 2(7). 2. Communication Workers of America, AFL–CIO is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. Respondent admits, and I find that the following are super- visors within the meaning of Section 2(11) and/or agents within the meaning of Section 2(13): a. Jeff Elliott, Wichita Call Center Director; b. Lillian Maron, Team Manager; c. Larissa Wray-Tolbert, Senior Manager Human Resources; and, d. Angel Meeks and Belinda Spencer, Coaches. 4. J. Wiegand, security guard, is an agent within the meaning of Section 2(13) of the Act. 5. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by dispar- ately enforcing its Acceptable Use Policy, Enterprise User Standards, and No Solicitation rules against Union activity. 6. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by promul- gating and maintaining “mass communication” prohibitions, no talking rules, and restrictive social media policies, because em- ployees engaged in Union activity. 7. Since June 2, 2015, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by promulgating and maintaining overly broad “mass communication” prohibitions, no talking rules, and restrictive social media policies. 8. On June 2, 2015, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by telling employees they could not send “mass emails” about the Union. 9. On June 2, 2015, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by telling employees that they could not discuss the Un- ion in working areas despite permitting discussions of other top- ics in the working areas. 10. On June 2, 2015, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by telling employees they could not use their work email to send any messages about the Union. 11. On June 4, 2015, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by surveilling employees in a nonwork area during non- working time to discover their Union or protected concerted ac- tivities and sympathies. Order shall, as provided in Sec. 102.48 of the Rules, be adopted by the Board and all objections to them shall be deemed waived for all purposes. T-MOBILE USA, INC. 23 12. On June 4, 2015, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by interrogating its employees about their Union or pro- tected concerted activities and sympathies. 13. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by inter- rogating its employees about their friendship with known Union adherents to determine employees’ Union activities and sympa- thies. 14. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by telling employees that it was creating a seating chart to isolate employ- ees because of their Union activities and sympathies. 15. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) of the Act by creating and maintaining a seating chart to isolate employees because of their Union activities and sympathies. 16. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) by coercively threat- ening employees with loss of corporate awards in order to per- suade them to cease engaging in union or other protected con- certed activities, telling employees that it is disappointed because they engaged in Union or other protected activities, and telling employees to makes their lives easier in order to persuade them to cease engaging in Union or other protected concerted activi- ties. 17. On December 21, 2015, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by creating an impression of surveillance and interrogating employees about their Union activities and sympa- thies. 18. The Act was not violated in any other way. REMEDY In addition to traditional remedies, General Counsel requests that a responsible official for Respondent read the notice to em- ployees during work time with a Board agent present. To prove the necessity of this enhanced remedy, General Counsel relies on prior litigation and settlements. The Board orders extraordinary remedies, such as public no- tice readings, when the remedies are necessary dissipate the co- ercive effects of the unfair labor practices. In re Federated Lo- gistics and Operations, 340 NLRB 255, 256 (2003), rev. denied, enfd. 400 F.3d 920 (D.C. Cir. 2005). To warrant an extraordi- nary remedy, the unfair labor practices are “numerous, pervasive and outrageous.” Id., citing Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc., 318 NLRB 470, 473 (1995) (internal quotations omitted). More recently, a notice reading was warranted for serious and persistent multiple unfair labor practices. Affinity Medical Center, 362 NLRB 654, 654 1 (2015). The notice reading is “a minimal acknowledge- ment of the obligation . . . imposed by law and provides employ- ees with some assurance that their rights under the Act will be respected in the future.” Id. Also see Farm Fresh Co., 361 NLRB 848 (2014). The Union has engaged in a long campaign to organize Re- spondent’s facilities. It has filed unfair labor practice charges.35 The Board recently found that Respondent maintained several unlawful rules in its handbook. The Board ordered that Re- spondent post a notice at locations “where the unlawful rules and 35 General Counsel requested admission of a number of unfair labor practice charges filed against Respondent at this location. I denied ad- mission because the charges themselves do not show whether Respond- ent engaged in violative conduct. policies have been or are in effect.” T-Mobile USA, 363 NLRB No. 171, slip op. at 6 (2016). In an unpublished decision where no exceptions were filed, the Board affirmed Judge Biblowitz’s findings that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) at two facilities, one in Maine and one in South Carolina. T-Mobile USA, Inc., available in Westlaw, 2015 WL 53502027 (September 14, 2015), affirming JD(NY)- 34-15 (August 3, 2015). The two violations were: Respondent maintained an unlawful rule, “Notice and Acknowledgement of Duty to Cooperate and Confidentiality,” at the two facilities; and a statutory supervisor reconfirmed the rule to employees with admonitions of discipline, up to and including termination, for discussing complaints filed with Respondent. Because the Board had no exceptions on which to rule, I do not rely upon this deci- sion. Two settlements deal specifically with the Wichita Call Cen- ter. The first, approved on September 2, 2011, settled solicitation and interrogation allegations and included a non-admissions clause. The second Wichita settlement, approved July 28, 2015, did not include a non-admissions clause. It settled allegations that Respondent interrogated employees, made threats of un- specified reprisals, and told employees that they could not dis- cuss or engage in activities with other employees regarding wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment. It also settled two disciplinary actions taken against Jerrica Crox- son, an alleged discriminatee in the current case. (GC Exh. 27). The unfair labor practices here did not rise to the level of those in Federated Logistics, in which a reading was ordered. 340 NLRB at 257–258. There the unfair labor practices included nu- merous violations of Section 8(a)(1) and (3). The Section 8(a)(1) violations included maintaining and enforcing an overly broad no solicitation/no distribution rule, threats regarding futility of bargaining and shutting down the plant, interrogation, and sur- veillance. Many of the violations were committed by the highest ranking official and chilled employee rights. I also consider Farm Fresh, supra, in which four employees in a potential bar- gaining unit of 50 were terminated during an organizing cam- paign fraught with surveillance, impressions of surveillance, and numerous threats. In comparison, the 2011 Wichita settlement is too remote in time and Respondent made no admission of wrongdoing. Re- spondent admitted wrongdoing in the 2015 Wichita settlement, but for a much smaller number of violations. Even including the 2015 Wichita settlement with the current violation, they do not rise to the level of those in Federated Logistics36 or Farm Fresh. The recent Board case, which may have applied to Wichita, in- cluded 15 violations, but all were related to unlawfully over- broad rules and therefore relied little on evidence of chill. See 363 NLRB No. 171. General Counsel has not demonstrated that the unfair labor practices here chilled the employees’ in their Section 7 rights and activities. Also see Vista del Sol Healthcare, 363 NLRB No. 135 (2016). Traditional remedies should be suf- ficient to ensure employees understand the violations and their 36 The Board also ordered a broad cease and desist order pursuant to Hickmott Foods, 242 NLRB 1357 (1979). Federated Logistics, 340 NLRB at 257. 24 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD rights under the Act. Metta Electric (Metta II), 349 NLRB 1088 (2007). ORDER The Respondent, T-Mobile, USA, Wichita, Kansas, its offic- ers, agents, and representatives, shall 1. Cease and desist from (a) Selectively and disparately enforcing its Acceptable Use Policy, Enterprise User Standards, and No Solicitation rules against Union activity. (b) Promulgating and/or maintaining overly broad work rules, such as “mass communication” prohibitions, no talking rules, and restrictive social media policies. (c) Selectively and disparately promulgating and maintaining rules regarding “mass communication,” no talking, and restraints on use of social media because employees engaged in Union ac- tivity by email. (d) Telling employees that they cannot engage in “mass com- munications,” no talking or engage in social media due to Union or other protected concerted activity. (e) Telling employees that they cannot talk about the Union or other protected concerted activities while on working time while permitting discussion of any other subject in the working area. (f) Coercively interrogating employees about union or other protected concerted activities. (g) Placing employees under surveillance while they engage in union or other protected concerted activities. (h) Creating the impression that it is engaging in surveillance of employees’ union or other protected concerted activities. (i) Telling employees that they will be isolated by a seating chart because they engaged in union or other protected concerted activities. (j) Isolating employees by creating a seating chart because they engaged in union or other protected concerted activities. (k) Coercively threatening employees with loss of awards in order to persuade them to cease engaging in union or other pro- tected concerted activities. (l) Coercively telling employees that it is disappointed be- cause they engaged in union or other protected concerted activi- ties. (m) Coercively telling employees to make their lives easier in order to persuade them to cease engaging in union or other pro- tected concerted activities. (n) In any like or related manner interfering with, restraining, 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 effectu- ate the policies of the Act. (a) Rescind or revise the following rules and notify employ- ees in writing: a. “Mass Communications” rule; 37 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 b. “No talking” in work area during working time while allow- ing other conversations in the work areas during working time; and, c. Social media, as stated in Elliott’s June 2, 2015 e-mail. b. Within 14 days after service by the Region, post at its Wichita Call Center in Wichita, Kansas, copies of the attached notice marked “Appendix.”37 Copies of the notice, on forms pro- vided by the Regional Director for Region 14, after being signed by the Respondent’s authorized representative, shall be posted by the Respondent and maintained for 60 consecutive days in conspicuous places including all places where notices to employ- ees are customarily posted. In addition to physical posting of pa- per notices, the notices shall be distributed electronically, such as by email, posting on an intranet or an internet site, and/or other electronic means, as Respondent customarily communicates with its employees by such means. Reasonable steps shall be taken by Respondent to ensure that the notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. In the event that, dur- ing the pendency of these proceedings, Respondent has gone out of business or closed the facility involved in these proceedings, Respondent shall duplicate and mail, at its own expense, a copy of the notice to all current employees and former employees em- ployed by the Respondent at any time since June 2, 2015. Dated Washington, D.C. June 28, 2016 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 be- half Act together with other employees for your benefit and protection Choose not to engage in any of these protected activi- ties. WE WILL NOT make or maintain overly broad rules that restrain you in the exercise of the rights set forth above by making or maintaining rules, such as “mass communications,” talking with each other, or using social media. WE WILL NOT restrain you in the exercise of the rights set forth above by selectively or disparately make or maintain rules, such as “mass communications,” talking with each other, or using so- cial media because you engaged in union or other protected con- certed activities. WE WILL NOT apply the Acceptable Use Policy, Enterprise User Standards, and the Solicitation Policy selectively and United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board.” T-MOBILE USA, INC. 25 disparately to emails regarding union or other protected con- certed activities while not restricting nonunion-related emails. WE WILL NOT establish and maintain rules that you cannot use social media except when you are “off work.” WE WILL NOT tell you that you may not send “mass emails” or any emails about the Union or other protected concerted activi- ties. WE WILL NOT tell you that you may not talk about the Union in the working area during working hours when we allow em- ployees to talk about other subjects in the working area during working hours. WE WILL NOT place you under surveillance while you engage in union or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT create an impression of surveillance that we are watching your union and/or protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT coercively interrogate you about your union or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT order you off the property when you are distrib- uting Union literature in nonworking areas during your non- working time. WE WILL NOT threaten you with loss of corporate awards if you continue to support the Union. WE WILL NOT tell you that we are disappointed with you be- cause you engaged in union or other protected concerted activi- ties. WE WILL NOT tell you that we are creating a seating chart to isolate employees because employees engaged in union or other protected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT implement a seating chart that is designed to isolate employees because they engaged in union or other pro- tected concerted activities. WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner restrain or coerce you in the exercise of the rights guaranteed you by Section 7 of the Act. WE WILL, within 14 days of the Board’s order, rescind our rules regarding “mass communications,” no talking in work ar- eas during working time, and social media, and WE WILL notify you in writing that we have done so. T-MOBILE USA, INC. The Administrative Law Judge’s decision can be found at www.nlrb.gov/case/14-CA-155249 or by using the QR code be- low. 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. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation