The Kroger Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsFeb 14, 195193 N.L.R.B. 274 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation 274 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD THE KROGER COMPANY and AMALGAMATED MEAT CUTTERS AND BUTCHER WORKMEN OF NORTH AMERICA, LOCAL 534, A. F. L., PETITIONER. Case No. 14-RC-1266. February 14,1951 Decision and Direction of Election Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before Milton 0. Talent, hearing officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3 (b) of the Act, the Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel [Chairman Herzog and Members Houston and Reynolds]. Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds : 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. The labor organization involved claims to represent certain em- ployees of the Employer. 3. A question affecting commerce exists concerning the representa- tion of employees of the Employer within the meaning of Section 9 (c) (1) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. 4. The Petitioner seeks a unit composed of all meat department em- ployees in eight rural grocery stores in the Employer's District 405, situated in the State of Illinois. Alternatively, it requests a unit of the meat department employees in all the stores, both.rural and urban, in that district. The Employer opposes a unit limited to the eight' stores, on the ground that they may not appropriately be set apart from other nearby rural stores beyond the district'boundary. It also opposes both the proposed units because it asserts that only a unit composed of meat department employees in all of its Illinois stores which are under the jurisdiction of its St. Louis branch would be ap- propriate in this case. The Employer, which operates 2,400 stores in 20 States,. functions on two administrative levels in the St. Louis area; a branch and the districts which it embraces. The St. Louis branch, which handles purchasing, storage, accounting, and personnel matters, is comprised of 11 districts, 5 within, the City of St. Louis, 3 in other parts of Mis- souri, and 3 in southern Illinois (including District 405). Separate sales records are kept for the various districts. Each district is under the supervision of a district manager responsible for sales and promo- tional policies, any local purchasing, and physical conditions in all stores in the district. Although the Employer claims that its dis- tricts. are fluid, and that then would soon be reorganized, its repre- 93 NLRB No. 32. THE KROGER. COMPANY 275 sentative admitted at the hearing that no specific plans for redis- tricting had been prepared. There are 20 stores in District 405; 7 are in East St. Louis, an in- dustrial city; one is in Washington Park, apparently a suburb of East St. Louis; 4 are in Belleville, an industrial city of approximately 35,000 population ; and the remaining 8 are in small, rural towns at the eastern end of the district. There now exists three bargaining units among the employees in District 405. One embraces both meat and grocery department em- ployees in the East St. Louis stores; the Washington Park store, and one of the Belleville stores; a second is limited to the meat department employees in the remaining three Belleville stores; and the third is composed of the grocery clerks in the same three Belleville stores. The first two units are covered by current contracts between the Em- ployer and the Petitioner; the third by an agreement between the Em- ployer and Local 219, Retail Clerks International Association, AFL. There are eight employees in the requested unit ; two head meat cutters; three journeyman meat cutters; one apprentice meat cutter; and two meat clerks. The head meat cutters and the journeymen cut, display, and sell the meat. The head cutters also order the meat and are responsible to the store managers for the profitable operation of the, meat department. Where a journeyman works alone in a store, the store manager does the buying and is responsible for the depart- ment. The apprentice meat cutter differs from the journeyman only in degree of skill and experience. The record shows neither the ex- tent or nature of his training, nor the term of his apprenticeship. The two meat clerks do no cutting, but devote between 75 and 90 percent of their time to meat department work. It is true, as the Employer points out, that because the eight stores. in question do not comprise a separate administrative grouping within, the Employer's organizational structure, the scope of the proposed unit does not conform to the unit pattern which the Board ordinarily seeks to establish for chain store employees.' However, where past bargaining has proceeded without regard for administrative, or dis- trict lines, the Board cannot feasibly ignore established units and im- pose a disruptive finding upon a fixed bargaining pattern 2 Here, the Employer and two unions have themselves chosen to bargain along other lines, and have thus made impossible the optimum unit coex- tensive with District 405. The eight stores here considered, being the only remaining ones in that District not now included in any unit, are therefore the residue in an otherwise appropriate unit. As such, they constitute, in scope, an appropriate unit. 1 Schaffer Stores Co ., The, 88 NLRB 1446; Kroger Company ( St. Louis Branch office),- 88 NLRB 194 1 American Stores Company , 82 NLRB 882. 276 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD We find no merit in the Employer's argument that because the parties have in the past ignored district lines, the Board must now do likewise and join certain stores in an adjoining district to those here involved. Although there is no interchange between the employees in the eight rural stores and those in the other stores in District 405, and the two groups are otherwise distinguished by certain minor differences in their working conditions, the appropriateness of the eight store unit in this case rests upon its residual character, and not on other factors. No persuasive reason appears, therefore, for crossing the administra- tive boundaries which normally delineate the scope of appropriate units for this type of employee. For this same reason, we also reject the Employer's further contention that these meat department em- ployees may only be represented in a broader unit of such employees embracing some, but not all, of the districts in its St. Louis branch. No issue is raised respecting the composition of the unit. The Board ha's long recognized the craft skills of meat department employees in chain grocery stores, and for that reason has placed them, upon request, in bargaining units apart from other store employees 3 The record here shows no reason for departing from that practice in this case. Accordingly, we find that all meat department employees in the Employer's stores in Trenton, Waterloo, Mascoutah, Lebanon, Dupo, Carlyle, New Athens, and Breeze, all in the State of Illinois, excluding all other employees, guards, professional employees, and all super- visors as defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropriate for the pur- poses of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of of the Act 4 [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] 3 The Kroger Company, 77 NLRB 370; Colonial Stoves, Incorporated, 84 NLRB 558 s Uncontradicted testimony of the Employer's representative shows that head meat cutters have supervisory authority within the meaning of the Act. Head meat cutters are therefore excluded from the unit as supervisors. The record also shows that the head meat cutter in the Carlyle store is the sole meat department employee assigned here. As be has no subordinate working under hun and therefore has no occasion to exercise any supervisory authority, he is included in the unit 1 'CONTINENTAL CAN CO., INC. and UNITED STEELWORKERS OF AMERICA, C. I. 0., PETITIONER, Case No. 5-RC-184. February 14, 1951 Decision and Direction of Elections Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before John J. A. Reynolds, Jr., hearing officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. 93 NLRB No. 31. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation