The Baltimore Transit Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsJan 11, 195192 N.L.R.B. 1260 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation In the Matter of THE BALTIMORE TRANSIT COMPANY AND THE BALTI- MORE COACH COMPANY,1 EMPLOYERS and BROTHERHOOD OF RAILROAD TRAINMEN , SAM MCMURRAY LODGE 1016, PETITIONER Cases Nos. 5-RC-672 and 5-RC-673.-Decided January 11, 1951 ,DECISION, ORDER, AND DIRECTION OF ELECTION Upon petitions duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a consolidated hearing was held in these cases before Harold G. Biermann and John A. Reynolds, Jr., hearing officers. The hearing officers' rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed.2 Pursuant to the provisions of, Section 3 (b) of the Act, the Board has delegated its powers in connection with these cases to a three- member panel [Chairman Herzog and Members Murdock and Styles]. Upon the entire record in these cases, the Board finds : 1. The Employers are engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. The labor organization involved claims to represent certain em- ployees of the Employers. 3. A question affecting commerce exists concerning the representa- tion of employees of the Employers within the meaning of Section 9 (c) (1). and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act.3 4. The Petitioner was certified by the Board in 1946 as the repre- sentative of a unit consisting substantially of all office and clerical 1 The names of the Employers appear as amended at the hearing. 2 At the hearing , the Employers moved to dismiss the petitions filed in these cases on the ground that both petitions concerned employees whose representation was allegedly waived .by the Petitioner and who are excluded from the coverage of the existing collective bar- gaining contract between the parties . In Case No . 5-RC-673 , the Employers assert the further ground that the petition was not filed in conformance with Section 203:53 . subsec- tions 4 and 5, Series 5, National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regulations and does not present an issue cognizable under Section 9 (a) or Section 9 (h) of the Act. For reasons hereinafter stated under paragraphs numbered 3 and 4 , the motion to dismiss in Case No. 5-RC-672 is denied and the motion to dismiss in Case No. 5-RC-673 is granted. 3 The Employers contend that the representation of the employees affected by the instant petition was considered by the parties during negotiations preceding the signing of the existing contract and that the Petitioner "waived" representation rights as to these employees . We do not agree . The Board has never recognized such an oral waiver and; in any event , no evidence appears in the record that such a waiver was made by the Petitioner . Furthermore , the exclusion of these employees from the existing contract, under the Board's established policy, does not bar this petition . See Philadelphia Com- pany and Associated Companies, 84 NLRB 115. 92 NLRB No. 183. - 1260 THE BALTIMORE TRANSIT COMPANY 1261 employees of the Employers, excluding confidential, professional, and technical employees, and all supervisors .4 Since the certification of the Petitioner, the parties have executed several bargaining contracts and during the course of these contractual relationships have added certain fringe groups to the established bargaining unit by mutual agreement. The Petitioner, in Case No. 5-RC-672, now requests the Board to add to the established unit a group of employees in the classification of radio dispatchers.' In Case No. 5-RC-673, the Pe- titioner seeks representation of certain employees now classi- fied as college trainees.6 The Employers oppose both these requests on the ground that the employees involved are within the definition of supervisory personnel found in Section 2 (11) of the amended Act. The Employers have five employees in the classification of radio dispatcher. One other employee works as a relief radio dispatcher but spends a portion of his time as a traffic checker and is included in the present bargaining unit represented by the Petitioner. The radio dispatchers work three shifts daily with a 6-day workweek, and are paid a. weekly salary as are the remainder of the clerical personnel of the Employers.7 The radio room, in which the dispatchers are lo- cated, is situated in a portion of the Employer's main office building, and is under the general supervision of the superintendent of radio and mobile supervision who, in turn, reports to the general transpor- tation manager. The dispatchers, accordingly, operate as a func- tional part of the Employers' transportation division. In general the duties of the radio dispatcher consist of providing effective liaison between the operators of the Employers' vehicles and supervisory personnel in order that a continuous and efficient flow of The Baltimore Transit Company and the Baltimore Coach Company , 67 NLRB 117. The Board found appropriate a unit consisting of all office and clerical employees includ- ing trouble clerks at the power division , receiving clerk at the shop division, auditing department ( detail -department ) clerk , and auditing department (payroll group) clerk, but excluding confidential , professional , and technical employees , all pensioned employees,. the part-time telephone operator in the telephone exchange, the secretary -stenographer to the head of information and service department , the transit man and chainman in the engineers department , and all supervisors . The radio dispatcher and college trainee classifications were not in existence at the time of the Board decision and certification. 'The Petitioner , while requesting an election among the group of radio dispatchers does not seek to represent these employees separately and requests that, if successful in such an election , the dispatchers be merged into the unit it now represents. 'The Petitioner does not request an election for the employees in the classification of college trainees but, in the event the Board finds these employees to be nonsupervisory personnel , desires only a determination that the college trainees are within the scope of the present bargaining uiat. The Employers , in their motion to dismiss , contend the petition is therefore not in conformance with the Board 's Rules and Regulations or the terms of the Act. We do not pass upon this question in view of our determination .that the college trainees are not eligible for inclusion in the existing unit. Cf., however, Continental Oil Company, 85 NLRB 827 , 88 NLRB 19. 7 The dispatchers ' shifts run from 7 : 30 a. in. to 3: 30 p. in. ; 3 : 30 p . in. to 11 : 30 p. in. ; and 11 : 30 p. in. to 7: 30 a. in . Two dispatchers are assigned to each of the daytime shifts while one dispatcher works the evening shift. 1262 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD service be maintained. Each of the radio dispatchers holds' a radio telephone communication license issued by the Federal Communica- tions Commission, and the radio room is equipped with a microphone and a number of telephones. According to the Employers it is the responsibility of the radio dispatcher "to receive telephone and radio messages relating to various Company operations in which.departure from normal operating procedures occur and to take all necessary steps to restore normal operating procedure or to substitute other procedures to accomplish as closely as possible adherence to normal conditions. Incidental to the restoration of operations, they further take steps to -clear up conditions which may have resulted from the departure -from normal operations. Included are the handling of accidents, in- cidents, delays, blockades, fires, vehicle failures, fare box failures, vehicle diversions, power failures, rail and wire breaks." 8 When a -disruption of service occurs on one of the operating lines, the radio dispatcher is notified of the incident by the vehicle operator by tele- phone. The dispatcher then notifies 'a mobile or radio supervisor by two-way radio and the supervisor proceeds to the location of the in- cident and assumes control of the situation and the personnel involved. If substitute service is necessary, the dispatcher telephones the oper- ating base to which the vehicle is assigned, and if an emergency truck is necessary, the dispatcher notifies that unit by radio or telephone .9 The dispatcher is required by Federal regulations to "log" each radio -communication he sends, and also keeps and maihtains records as to the time, type, and location of the trouble calls. Approximately 40 percent of the dispatcher's time is spent in the performance of clerical duties of this nature. - The control and direction of the Employers' operations, by the unique nature of the transportation industry, requires supervision not alone at the operating bases from which vehicles are dispatched, but along the transit lines stretching throughout the city. To provide this control and direction of vehicles on the lines and the employees ' who operate them, the Employers maintain a staff of street supervisors who are stationed throughout the areas in which the streetcar and bus 8 The Employers , at the hearing , introduced a job description from which the above quotation is taken. It was stipulated by the parties that this job description was prepared after the hearing in this proceeding had commenced. The dispatchers have a number of other duties of the same general type. In the event of an accident involving property or personal injury, they notify the head of the claim -department and on his instructions may contact a claim. Investigator to proceed to the scene of the accident . They also notify the mobile supervisors of any fire alarms reported in the area of the Employers ' operating lines and keep a record of position of the money truck used to make collections from the operating bases. Their duties further . include taking readings from weather instruments and checking the clocks at the operating bases by telephone for deviations from the master clock. The duties of the dispatchers vary somewhat according to the shift on which they work and the nightshift dispatcher performs a larger portion of the clerical work. THE BALTIMORE TRANSIT COMPANY 1263 routes are ]ocated.la In the interests of speed and greater mobility in meeting emergencies, a group of 17 "radio" or "mobile" supervisors is utilized. These radio supervisors work in company cars equipped with. two-way radio sets and are assigned among 7 city zones. As noted heretofore, the radio supervisors are contacted by the radio dis- patchers when a trouble call from an operator has been received and proceed to the location of the breakdown where they take charge. The Employers contend that the radio dispatchers are supervisors as defined in the amended Act, because they responsibly direct the work of other employees. The Petitioner, on the other hand, asserts that the radio dispatchers perform primarily clerical work which involves only the application of established procedures, and may therefore appropriately be included in the existing unit of clerical personnel. There seems no question that the supervisory status of these employees rests upon the authority concerned in that portion of the dispatcher's duties involving the issuance of directions to operating employees and the supervisory staff, and no contention is made herein that the dis- patchers have the power to hire, discharge, lay off, or discipline other employees 11 In fact, inasmuch as the dispatchers are isolated in the radio room, there is no opportunity for these employees to observe the performance of operators on the routes .12 The transmission of messages by the dispatchers to the mobile super- visors informing the supervisors of the existence of an emergency situation at a certain location, it seems patent, does not constitute "responsible direction" within the meaning of the Act. The Employ- ers, however, assert that the dispatcher does not merely receive and transmit radio and telephone messages but determines the proper steps to be taken in an emergency and directs employees to take appropriate action. Thus, on calls from a bus operator who is stalled by a street obstruction, the dispatcher may tell the operator to detour around the roadblock and proceed upon his route. In the case of vehicles disabled while operating on a route, the dispatcher, according to the Employers, way order out additional- equipment from the operating base to sub- stitute for the inoperative car. When an operator reports ice on the tracks or street in a particular locality and a general storm condition '()For a detailed discussion of the supervisory staff of the Employers particularly as regards the operating bases , see The Baltimore Transit Company and The Baltimore Coach Company , 92 NLRB ( Case No. 5-RC-677). n The Employers , at the hearing , also argued that the radio dispatchers have authority effectively to recommend discipline . The record does not support this contention which was based upon the statement that if an operator refused . to follow the suggestions of a dispatcher , the operator's supervisor could be notified by the dispatcher and discipline would then be determined by the base supervisor. This situation , it is admitted , has never arisen. In any event we do not consider it to involve effective recommendation under the terms of the Act. 18 While the mobile supervisors report in to the radio room at the beginning of their shifts, there was no contention that this constituted supervision of these supervisors. 1264 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD is not present, the dispatcher may contact the nearest base to send out a sand spreader.' In all these instances, it is the contention of the Employers, the radio dispatchers direct the activities of other person- nel by the use of discretionary action. We do not agree. The record shows that the great majority of the calls received by the radio dis- patchers involve incidents for which there is a settled and specified procedure to be followed.' The dispatcher, in most instances, merely relays information to a mobile supervisor who proceeds to the location of the trouble and as- sumes charge. In instances where immediate advice is required by the operator, the dispatcher follows the routine procedure indicated by his instructions. The evidence is conflicting on the question as to whether the dispatcher, on his own initiative, may send equipment out to replace or supplement vehicles in regular operation. In any event, the type of direction here supplied by the radio dispatcher is concerned primarily with equipment rather than personnel. We have previously held that where the direction and control exerted by the individual is over the movement of equipment and the direction of personnel occurs only as an incidental result, the statutory definition of "supervisor" does not apply 15 Accordingly, we find that the Employers' radio dispatchers are not supervisors as defined -in Section 2 (11) of the amended Act, and, upon the entire record, we find that the dispatchers have a sufficient community of interest with other clerical employees to be included in. the existing bargaining unit. As no question of representation exists at the present time in the basic unit, we shall direct an election among the. Employers' radio dispatchers, excluding supervisors as defined in the Act and all other employees. If a majority of the employees voting in the election cast their ballots for the Petitioner, they will be taken to have indicated their desire to be a part of the present bargaining unit and the Peti- tioner may bargain for radio 'dispatchers as a part of that unit. The Petitioner in Case No. 5-RC-673 requests our determination that it may bargain for employees classified as "College Trainees" as part of the existing clerical unit. In June and July of 1949, the Employers inaugurated a program for training personnel for posi- tions in a managerial or supervisory capacity with the organization. At that time 17 college graduates were selected after interviews and 18 When general storm conditions prevail over the city, a set, procedure is followed by the dispatchers in dealing with the situation. 14 The evidence is conflicting as to whether these instructions are to be found in written and complete form. The record seems clear , however, that these instructions exist in one form or another and are used by the dispatchers as general guides for procedure. 15 See The Baltimore Transit Company and The Baltimore Coach Company , footnote 10, supra ; New England Transportation Company, 90 NLRB 539 ; and Gate City Transit Linea; Inc., 81 NLRB 79. THE BALTIMORE TRANSIT COMPANY 1265 screening conducted at various colleges by representatives of the Em- ployers. Of this group, 9 men are admittedly ineligible for inclusion in the clerical unit now represented by the Petitioner and are not con- cerned herein.16 The remaining 8 employees in this classification in- elude 5 individuals who are at present assigned to clearly nonsuper- visory positions, and 3 employees who are assigned to jobs which the Employers 'contend are supervisory. Each of the men selected for the college training program was in- formed, at the time he was first employed, that on the completion of his training period he would be assigned a position in the supervisory staff of the Employers' organization. The trainees were first assigned to the personnel section where, for a short period, they were given instruction in selection and training procedures and the operation of the various types of equipment in use by the Company. Following this period, the men were stationed at the Employers' operating bases for it week for observation of the operation and maintenance work done at those locations. The men were then assigned to the traffic sec- tion where they were instructed in the extent and type of service rendered by the Employers. The training period also included a series of lectures and classes conducted by the department heads on the operation and functions of the different sections and groups within the Employers' operations. Upon completion of this preliminary training, the college trainees were assigned to temporary positions which were principally with the traffic section of the operating department. In the course of their training, they have been shifted to other temporary jobs in other sec- tions and departments, which, in many instances, involve the making of studies and surveys on different aspects of the Employers' business. At the present time, five of the trainees are still occupying temporary positions of this type while three men have received permanent ap- pointments to positions which are allegedly of a supervisory nature. The Employers contend that all trainees will be assigned to permanent supervisory positions within the next year. The three permanently assigned college trainees are all classified as supervisory assistants and are assigned to the treasury department, transportation section, and the safety and training group of the per- sonnel section, respectively. The supervisory assistant in the treas- ury department directs certain activities of the teller's section and the assistant treasurer's office and the personnel of those sections. He also 10 Of the original group of trainees, eight men were graduate engineers who were assigned to the engineering section and are, as a result, clearly ineligible for inclusion in the unit. An additional trainee is assigned to the labor relations group of the personnel section as a supervisory assistant, where his work is- concerned with labor relations work of a curddential, riature'regiiiring his exclusion from the present bargaining unit. 1266 ' DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD maintains a number of records, designates the banks to which daily deposits are to be made, is responsible for the preparation of certain tax data and proxy materials necessary for annual stockholders' meet- ings. The supervisory assistant in the transportation section assists in the preparation of the section's budget, makes studies- and analyses of problems in that section, and participates in meetings of the base managers at which operational policies are discussed and determined. The supervisory assistant in the safety and training group super- vises several intermediate clerks in the preparation and analysis of accident statistics, reviews and analyzes reports pertinent to the group, assists the superintendent of safety and training in conducting safety meetings and planning fire-prevention programs, and participates in accident investigations and the study and planning of accident-pre- ventive measures. Those college trainees who are now temporarily assigned to admit- tedly nonsupervisory positions are attached to the legal department, the general traffic engineering section of the operating department, and the statistical section of the accounting department, respectively.17 In general they are engaged in extra work and special studies supple- mental to that performed by permanent employees in those depart- ments. Upon consideration of the entire record, we are of the opinion that employees in the classification of college trainees do not share working conditions and interests common to the clerical personnel now repre- sented by the Petitioner. In this respect, we note that they constitute a limited group with special qualifications, who are participating in a course of training which is not available to the remainder of the cleri- cal staff of the Employers. Although these employees, at the present time, do not appear in all cases to possess supervisory authority, we are of the opinion that their interests have been, and are now greatly divergent from clerical personnel now represented by the Petitioner.- We shall therefore deny the request of the Petitioner to include the col- lege trainees in the bargaining unit it represents and we shall dismiss the petition in Case No. 5-RC-673. ORDER IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the petition filed in Case No. 5-RC-673 be, and it hereby is, dismissed. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] 17 The college trainee assigned to the legal department has been on indefinite leave by reason of illness, since a date shortly following his appointment to that position . Accord- ingly , a full description of his duties is not available. 18 Compare The Peal Manufacturing Company, 80 NLRB 827. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation