The Plumbing Contractors Association of Baltimore, Maryland, Inc., et al.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 30, 195193 N.L.R.B. 1081 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation THE PLUMBING CONTRACTORS ASSN. OF BALTIMORE, MD., INC. 1081 cence, that there is mo warrant in this case for setting aside the elec- tion. Upon the basis of the foregoing, we find, contrary to the Regional Director, that the objections filed by the Petitioner do not raise sub- stantial or material issues. Accordingly, we hereby overrule the objections. As no collective bargaining representative was chosen in the election, we shall dismiss the petition. Order r IT IS III.ImEnv OIWEI{ :D that the petition filed herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed. Denton Slecpivy flainieat ,lfills, Inr, 93 NLRB 329, Inteinational Harvester Com- pany, R'ctit Pullman lyon s, 93 NLRB No 48 In view of our findings herein, i,e do not pass upon the other issues raised by the Emploler in its exceptions THE PLUMIING CONTRACTORS ASSOCIATION OF BALTIMORE, MARYLAND, INC., ET AT..; FREDERICK C. KNIESE; EDWARD J. MCCANN & CO.; WILLIAM J. HENSLER and UNITED ASSOCIATION OF JOURNEYMEN AND APPRENTICES OF THE PLUMBING AND PIPE FITTING INDUSTRY OF THE UNITED S'I'A'ITS AND CANADA, LOCAL No. 48, AFL, PETITIONER. Cases Nos. 5-RC-96, 5-RC-94, 5-RC-95, and 5-RC-700. March 30, 1951 Decision , Order , and Direction of Election Upon separate petitions i duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing in these consolidated cases was held before P.alph Winkler, hearing officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby aflirnied. 2 On February 1:3, 1951, the Board heard oral argument 3 at Washing- ton, I). C., In which the Petitioner, The Plumbing Contractors Asso- ciation of Baltimore, Maryland, Inc., hereinafter called the Associa- tion, and the Intervenors' participated. I At the hearing, the Petitioner requested permission to withdrawn its petitions in Cases Nos. 5-RC-94 and 700 The healing officer referred this request to the Board. In the absence of objections thereto, the request is hereby granted. 2 The Intervenors moved at the hearing to dismiss the petitions herein, on various grounds discussed hereinafter. The hearing officer referred this motion to the Board For the reasons set forth in Seetion 1, infra, the motion is granted as to the petition in Case No 5-RC-95. For the additional reasons set forth hereinafter, the motion is otherwise denied 3 Case No 3-TJA-626, which was consolidated with this proceeding for purposes of oral argument , is Revered herefrom See Plumbing and Heating Contractors Association of Olean, New York, 93 NLRB 1099, decided this day 4 Because of the alleged novelty of certain of the issues in this proceeding, and because certain of the Intervenors represent employees of the Employers other than the employees designated in the petitions, the Board permitted the following labor organizations to intervolic' ITltPrniltlfnal Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron workers; 93 NLRB No. 177. 1082 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds : 1. The business of the Employers : (a) Edward J. McCann & Co., hereinafter called McCann, is en- gaged in business as a plumbing contractor in Baltimore, Maryland. During 1949, McCann purchased supplies and equipment valued at approximately $35,000; all such purchases were made from supply houses located in Baltimore, Maryland. Approximately 90 percent of the supplies and equipment sold by such supply houses was manu- factured outside the State of Maryland. During the same period, Mc- Cann's gross income amounted to approximately $78,000. It does not appear that any of such income was derived from work per- formed outside Maryland, or from work performed within Maryland for firms over which the Board would assert jurisdiction. We find, therefore, that while McCann's operations affect commerce within the meaning of the Act, it would not effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction over McCann a Nor do we find merit in the Petitioner's contention that jurisdiction should be asserted over McCann as part of the Association. Although McCann is not a member of the Association, it customarily adheres to the terms of the collective bargaining, agreements negotiated between the Petitioner and the Association, has agreed in advance to adhere to the terms of such agreements, would join the Association if asked, and would prefer to bargain through the Association. The Associa- tion, however, will not act as the bargaining agent of any employer which is not a member of the Association, irrespective of such non- member's desires or his adoption of the terms of the Association agree- ments. As the Board has recently reiterated, the basic requirement for inclusion in a multiemployer unit, and hence for basing jurisdic- tion upon the totality of the operations of all the employers in the unit, is "participation in joint bargaining as a group." 6 It is not sufficient that an employer customarily adopts the terms of the agreement nego- tiated by the multiemployer group, or agrees in advance to be bound thereby. As McCann has not participated in group bargaining through the Association, we must base our jurisdictional findings as to McCann on McCann's individual operations, rather than on the operations of the Association. Accordingly, we shall dismiss the peti- tion as to McCann. International Hod Carriers ', Building and Common Laborers ' Union of America ; Brick- layers, Masons and Plasterers ' International Union of America ; United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America ; Sheet Metal Workers' International Association ; International Union of Operating Engineers ; International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders and Helpers of America ; and International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs , Warehousemen and Helpers. 5 The relevant criteria established by the Board for asserting Jurisdiction are set forth in Stanislaus Implement and Hardware Company, Limited , 91 NLRB 618; Hollow Tree Lumber Company, 91 NLRB 635; Federal Dairy Co., Inc., 91 NLRB 638; Dorn's House of Miracles, Inc., 91 NLRB 632; and The Rutledge Paper Products , Inc., 91 NLRB 625. Pacific Metals Company, Ltd., et al., 91 NLRB No. 127. THE PLUMBING CONTRACTORS ASSN. OF BALTIMORE, MD., INC. 1083 (b) The Association is a Maryland corporation organized for the purpose, among others, of engaging in collective bargaining on behalf of its members.? All the members of the Association are engaged in business as plumbing contractors in Baltimore, Maryland. Certain of them also operate in other areas of Maryland and in other States, and at least one 8 maintains offices in other States. Some of the mem- bers of the Association also engage in other types of building con- struction activity and, in connection therewith, maintain membership in other similar employer associations. During 1949, the members of the Association made purchases of supplies and equipment valued in excess of $3,250,000. Of this amount, in excess of $750,000 repre- sented supplies and equipment shipped directly to members of the Association from outside Maryland. The remaining purchases were made from supply houses located in Maryland; approximately 90 per- cent of the supplies and equipment sold by such supply houses was manufactured outside the State of Maryland. During this same period, the gross income of the members of the Association amounted to more than $9,350,000; of this amount, more than $325,000 was de- rived from work performed by Association members outside the State of Maryland, and more than $500,000 from work performed within Maryland for firms over which the Board would assert jurisdiction. On the basis of the foregoing, we find that the operations of the members of the Association, considered as a group,9 affect commerce within the meaning of the Act,10 and that the totality of such opera- The following 22 Employers are members of the Association : Brown & Shilling, Inc. ; H E. Crook Company, Inc. ; Albert M. Diem ; Harry Elgin & Sons, Inc. ; Federal Plumbing & Heating Co , Inc ; Wesley Freeman, Inc. ; Groener-Kaspar Company ; Frank J. Knell ; Millette R. Linsley, t/a M It. Linsley Plumbing & Heating ; J. W. Marchant ; Francis R. McKewin ; Mechanical Contractors, Inc. ; Lloyd E. Mitchell, Inc. ; The Paul-Rice Engineer- ing Co , The George A. Peters Company ; Poole and Kent Company, Riggs, Distler & Company, Inc ; The Sidney Sappington Corp. ; The George H. Schuman Co., Inc. ; Standard Engineering Co, Inc., Edwin B. Tack, Inc. ; and Wm. E. Wood Company. 8 Riggs, Distler & Company, Inc., which we find is a multistate enterprise within the meaning of The Borden Company, Southern Division, 91 NLRB 628. We reject the Intervenors' contention that in order to assert jurisdiction over a group of employers associated for the purposes of collective bargaining, the Board must find that the operations of each member of the group affect commerce and satisfy the minimum iequirements of the Board's jurisdictional policy. Avondale Dairy Co., et al., 92 NLRB 99, Cleveland Builders Supply Go, 90 NLRB 923; Carpenter & Skaer, Inc, 90 NLRB 417 It is true, as the Intervenors assert, that an individual employer may be able to invoke or defeat the jurisdiction of the Board merely by joining or withdrawing from an employer association Pacific Metals Company, Ltd., et al., 91 NLRB 696; Johnson Optical Company, et al, 87 NLRB 539. Such action, to be effective, must however be taken at an appropriate time. Purity Stores, Ltd., 93 NLRB 199; Engineering Metal Products Corporation, 92 NLRB 823 In any event, we do not believe that the possibility that employers may join or quit associations for that reason is sufficient ground to deny the benefits of the Act to labor organizations and employers where, as in the instant case, the employers involved are willing to participate in, and be bound by, group action. There is no suggestion in the present record that the instant Employers joined the Association in order to bring their operations within the Board's jurisdiction. to We find without merit the Intervenors' contention that, as building construction is a purely local activity, the operations of the Association members do not affect 1084 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD tions more than satisfies the minimum criteria established by the Board for the assertion of jurisdiction herein.ri The Intervenors urge, nevertheless, that the Board should create' an exception to its established jurisdictional policy and, because of certain other asserted basic policy considerations, should reaffirm its alleged historic policy 12 of declining to assert jurisdiction over the building and construction industry. They assert, in this connection, that if the Board assumes jurisdiction over the industry, and directs elections in this and other pending cases, the result will be to disturb existing arrangements in the industry. They point out that, although jurisdictional disputes are common in the industry, the National Joint Board for Settlement of Jurisdictional Disputes in the Building and Construction Industry, hereinafter called the Joint Board ,13 which was established with the knowledge of this Board, for the purpose of considering and deciding such disputes, has heretofore enjoyed sub- stantial success in adjusting them, and in avoiding work stoppages commerce International Brotherhood of Electrical iVoikeis, Local 501, et at, V N L. It B, 181 F 2d 34 (C. A 2), cert. granted 71 S Ct 278 (December 11, 1950). The cases cited by the Intervenors, holding that building construction is a purely local activity, were decided on the basis of the more limited commerce definition contained in the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U S C A, Sec 203 (b), and hence are not controlling with respect to the jurisdiction of this Board See Earl A101lillian Company, 81 NLRB 639 11 See cases cited in footnotes 5 and 8, supra. ,2 The Board did not, under the Wagner Act, customarily assert jurisdiction over the building and construction industry See Johns-Jianville Corporation , 61 NLRB 1. Since the enactment of the amended Act in 1947, however, the Board has treated this industry the same as any other industry, asserting jurisdiction when the facts in the case pointed to a substantial effect on commerce, and declining to assert juiisdiction when the facts in the case indicated otherwise Examination of the legislative debate in 1947 made it clear that Congress intended us to do so See, for example, Edward Besch d .Sons, 92 NLRB 520, i1'hite Constriction and Engineering Company, Ire, 92 NLRB 53 , Denver Building and Construction Trades Council (William G Churches), 90 NLRB 378; Guy F. Atkinson and J A Jones Con- struction Company, 90 NLRB 143, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 501, A. F. of L, and William Patterson (Samuel Langer), 82 NLRB 1028, enf 181 F. 2d 34 (C A 2), cert granted 7L S Ct 278, Denver Building and Construction Trades Council et at (Gould & Picisner), 82 NLRB 1195, set aside on other grounds, 186 F 2d 326 (C A, D C ), cert granted 71 S Ct 281, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, et at (Wadsworth Building Company, Inc ), 81 NLRB 802, enf 184 F. 2d 60 (C A 10) ; Local 711, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of Anie, ica, A F of L et al (liatson's Specialty Store), 80 NLRB 533, enf 181 F. 2d 126 (C A 6), cert granted 71 S Ct 277; Ozark Dam Constructors, 77 NLRB 1136 The history of the Board's policy with respect to this industry is thus different from its history with respect to the hotel industry The legislative history is esen mole contrasting, for Congress has indicated a des" e • that w e not exercise jurisdiction over hotels Cf. Hotel Association of St Louis, 92 NLRB 1 388 iJ The Joint Board is composed of four labor members selected by the Building and Construction Trades Department of the American Federation of Labor, tour employer members selected by national associations or general and specialty contractors, and an impartial chairman It is empowered to consider and decide only such disputes as are referred to it by the affected international unions or employers Its rules and pioceduies prohibit work stoppages pending its decision in a dispute. It has, however, no direct power to enforce its decisions , but must rely on the voluntary cooperation of the unions and employers which have agreed to be bound thereby. Direct action to enforce such decisions can be taken only by the unions themselves, either individually, or concertedly through the American Federation of Labor or its Building and Construction Trades Department ; i e , by concerted activity against a recalcitrant employer , or suspension or expulsion of a recalcitrant union. C; THE PLUMBING CONTRACTORS ASSN. OF BALTIMORE, MD., INC. 1085 based thereon. They contend that if the Board asserts jurisdiction, conducts elections, and issues certifications to labor organizations in this industry, the Joint Board's power to adjust disputes will be im- paired, work stoppages based on such disputes will increase, and the policies of the Act to promote collective bargaining and the peaceful settlement of disputes will be frustrated. They also assert that the, certification of one craft union in the industry would place noncer- tified unions in such a disadvantageous position that the Board, in the exercise of its discretion, should refuse to certify any unions in the industry. Otherwise, they assert, all unions in the industry, in order to protect themselves, would be forced to seek certification, thereby inundating the Board with an overwhelming volume of cases. Although the Board has asserted jurisdiction over the building and construction industry in both unfair labor practice and representation cases, the representation cases have involved either multicraft units of construction employees on large projects of substantial duration," or shop employees.15 The Board is here for the first time confronted with the question of whether it should direct an election in a proposed single craft unit of employees employed in the actual construction operations. As the Board has pointed out in earlier cases involving the building and construction industry,1e the legislative history of the amended Act clearly establishes the intent of Congress in 1947 that the Board should assert jurisdiction in that industry for the purpose of pre- venting certain unfair labor practices by labor organizations. Con- sistent with that intent, the Board has asserted jurisdiction in unfair labor practice cases arising under Section 8 (b) (4) of the Act, when such assertion was appropriate on the basis of the commerce facts established therein.'' In addition, however, to proscribing certain conduct by labor organizations, Section 8 (b) (4) excepts from such proscription, or grants certain benefits to, a labor organization which has been cetrtifed pursuant to Section (9) (c).18 Section 8 (b) (2), when read in conjunction with Section 8 (a) (3), grants to a labor organization which has been certified pursuant to Section 9 (e) (1) the right to enter into and enforce a union-security contract. If, as we think it must, the Board is to continue in appropriate cases to process complaints and issue cease and desist orders against labor organizations in the building industry, it would be most inequitable for the Board, at,the same time, to deny to labor organizations the 14 See. foi example Ozorl, Dam Conctrue,tors. supra 15 See, for example. While Constiuctson and Fngiueerenq Company, Inc. supra. '-See Denier Building and Con,truction Trades Council (Wallucnx G. Churches), supra, and eases cited therein 17Inteinational Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. Local 501, A. F. of L, and William Patterson ( Samuel Lange ). supra , Denver Building and Construction Trades Council et al (Gould et Premier), supra. 11 See General Box Company, 82 NLRB 678 1086 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD benefits which accrue from certification when, in appropriate cases, our jurisdiction is invoked. We do not believe that Congress intended that in this industry the Board would wield the sword given it by the Act, but that labor organizations desiring it should be denied the shield of the Act. We believe, rather, that in providing that certain benefits would flow from certification, Congress intended that the shield should go with the sword, and that the Board should to this end assert jurisdiction in representation and union-security authoriza- tion cases to the same extent and on the same basis as in unfair labor practice cases. Unless and until Congress, for reasons of policy, provides otherwise by appropriate legislation, we must proceed on that basis. We could not take, any other course without flouting the will of Congress as now expressed in the 1947 statute. Moreover, we do not believe that the results which the Intervenors fear will necessarily flow in fact from our decision here. The Inter- venors are mostly concerned about the effect of our decision on the operations of the Joint Board. As we have said, the Joint Board was organized to settle jurisdictional disputes voluntarily submitted to it by employers and unions. Nothing in this decision will prevent, or interfere with, such voluntary submission by employers and unions to the Joint Board, or their voluntary compliance with its awards.19 The Intervenors contend, however, that certification will encourage raiding by certified unions of the jurisdiction of noncertified unions, and that the Joint Board and the noncertified unions will be powerless to prevent such raiding or to enforce any award which the Joint Board might make in favor of a noncertified union as against a certi- fied one. They point out that in its original petition, although not in the amended petition on which the case was heard, the Petitioner sought a unit of employees performing certain specified "work tasks." They also point out that the current contract between the Petitioner and the Association specifies that certain work tasks shall be per- formed by members of the Petitioner. They assert that certification of the Petitioner as the representative of the employees in the pro- posed unit would also be a certification that the members of the Peti- tioner were entitled to perform all of the specific work tasks enumer- ated in the original petition and the contract, some of which tasks, the Intervenors assert, are in dispute or are rightfully within the jurisdiction of certain of the Intervenors. They further assert that if the Petitioner were thus certified, it could bargain with the Asso- ciation for, and the Association could assign to the Petitioner's mem- bers, all of the work tasks thus enumerated, or even all of the work i'As Section 8 (b) (4) prohibits only engaging in, or inducing, or encouraging employees to engage in a strike or boycott, a mere award by the Joint Board, and voluntary compliance with that award, could not, contrary to the contention of the Intervenors, result in a violation of any of the provisions of Section 8 (b) (4). THE PLUMBING CONTRACTORS ASSN. OF BALTIMORE, MD., INC. 1087 which it was within the power of the Association to assign. They contend that if a contract were concluded assigning to members of the Petitioner work tasks which were in dispute or rightfully within the jurisdiction of another craft, any attempt to enforce an award of the Joint Board against the certified union, or any attempt by a non- certified union to protect its rights, would be outlawed by Section 8 (b) (4) (C) and (D) .20 Thus, the Intervenors argue, the value of the Joint Board as an agency for the peaceful settlement of jurisdic- tional disputes would be impaired. We believe that the Intervenors misapprehend the effect of a Board certification in a representation proceeding. As the Board has here- tofore held '21 and as we here reiterate, a Board certification in a repre- sentation proceeding is not a jurisdictional award; it is merely a de- termination that a majority of the employees in an appropriate unit have selected a particular labor organization as their representative for purposes of collective bargaining. It is true that such certifica- tion presupposes a determination that the group of employees in- volved constitute an appropriate unit for collective bargaining pur- poses, and that in making such determination the Board considers the general nature of the duties and work tasks of such employees. How- ever, unlike a jurisdictional award, this determination by the Board does not freeze the duties or work tasks of the employees in the unit found appropriate. Thus, the Board's unit finding does not per se preclude the employer from adding to, or subtracting from, the employees' work assignments. While that finding may be determined by, it does not determine, job content; nor does it signify approval, in any respect, of any work task claims which the certified union may have made before this Board or elsewhere.22 While a certified union may be able, through collective bargaining, to secure a contract assigning to its members certain specified work tasks which may impinge upon the claimed jurisdiction of other 20 Section 8 (b) (4) (C) prohibits a labor organization or its agents from engaging in the conduct proscribed by Section 8 (b) (4) (see footnote 19, supra ), when an object thereof is "forcing or requiring any employer to recognize or bargain with a particular labor organization as the representative of his employees if another labor organization has been certified as the representative of such employees under the provisions of section 9." Section 8 (b) (4) (D) prohibits a labor organization or its agents from engaging in such conduct when an object thereof is "forcing or requiring any employer to assign particular work to employees in a particular labor organization or in a particular trade, craft, or class rather than to employees in another labor organization or in another trade, craft, or class , unless such employer is failing to conform to an older or certification of the Board determining the bargaining representative for employees performing such work." 21 General Analine & Film Corporation, Ansco Division, 89 NLRB 467 . We reject the contention that the General Analine case should be overruled , and that the appropriate unit should be defined in terms of work jurisdiction , so limited as not to impinge upon the jurisdiction of othet unions n The Petitioner has acknowledged that if it is certified in this proceeding it will not, by virtue of such certification , attempt to assert or gain the right to claim for its members any specified work tasks. 1088 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD unions, such a contract may also be secured without certification, as witness the current contract between the Petitioner and the Associa- tion. There is, therefore, no necessary connection between a certifi- cation and a contract assigning work tasks; nor would a Board certi- fication stimulate the result feared by the Intervenors. We also believe that the Intervenors misapprehend the meaning and effect of Section 8 (b) (4) (C) and (D) of the Act, and are therefore unduly concerned. Section 8 (b) (4) (C) prohibits the proscribed conduct when it has as an object forcing or requiring an employer to recognize or bargain with a noncertified, rather than the certified union, as the representative of the employees in the unit with respect to which the certification was issued. Accordingly, so long as the noncertified union was merely seeking to secure a reassignment of work to employees outside that unit, and was not seeking or claiming to represent the employees within the unit, Section 8 (b) (4) (C) would not be applicable. Section 8 (b) (4) (D), on the other hand, constitutes an absolute prohibition against certain types of economic action by unions when engaged in for an object which falls within the scope of the Joint Board's jurisdiction, i. e., securing the reassignment of work tasks, except that under certain circumstances a certification might legalize conduct by or on behalf of a certified union which would have been unlawful if engaged in by or on behalf of a noncertified union 23 While certification of a union may give it certain immunities under Section 8 (b) (4) (D), a noncertified union with a rival jurisdictional claim would be in no worse position as a result of such certification. It is true that a jurisdictional strike by a noncertified union, even if the purpose of such strike were to enforce an award of the Joint Board against the certified union, would violate Section 8 (b) (4) (D). But this would be equally true if neither union were certified; for there has been no ruling by the Board that the legality of a jurisdictional strike depends on whether the union against which it was directed was or was not certified. Thus, contrary to the Intervenor's conten- tion, the certification of one union would not, under present Board rulings, increase the disabilities of other noncertified unions under Section 8 (b) (4) (D). We are therefore of the opinion that the di- rection of an election in this case, and the possible resulting -certifica- tion of the Petitioner, will have no adverse effect upon the ability of the joint Board to continue its present highly desirable efforts to secure the voluntary settlement of jurisdictional disputes, or upon the enforcement of its awards. 23 We do not in this proceeding purport to define the meaning or limits of the phrase " order or certification of the Board determining the bargaining representative for employees performing such work ," as used in Section 8 ( b) (4) '(D). THE PLUMBING CONTRACTORS ASSN . OF BALTIMORE , MD., INC. 1089 Moreover , assuming arguendo that, as the Intervenors apprehend, this Board's assertion of jurisdiction in representation cases in the building and construction industry might unstabilize labor relations in that industry, or might adversely affect the operations of the Joint Board, we are not free, in the absence of a mandate from Congress to. accord special treatment to that industry , to take such considerations into account in determining whether or not to exercise this Board's authority under the Act. If, as the Intervenors predict, favorable action on the petition in this case will precipitate a flood of petitions, from other unions in the building and construction industry, the Board would no doubt be confronted with serious administrative andi budgetary problems. However, we cannot accord special treatment to this industry, for jurisdictional purposes because of such a possible increase in case load. A like argument could be made for withholding the exercise of this Board 's jurisdiction over any one of a number of other industries . Should the budgetary problem become a real one,, the Board will have no alternative but to submit it to the President and Congress for solution. Congress may then see fit to indicate in, appropriate legislation whether it desires the Board to continue to, assert jurisdiction over this and other cases in the building and con- struction industry. Unless and until Congress so directs us, we can- not presume to exercise an administrative discretion which we do not possess . If the results which the Intervenors fear should in fact flow from our decision , or if other problems not now foreseen should arise therefrom, whatever relief may be thought appropriate must be sought from Congress, and not from this Board. Accordingly, on the basis of all of the foregoing considerations, we, find that it will effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction over the Association. 2. The Petitioner is a labor organization claiming to represent cer- tain employees employed by the members of the Association. The Intervenors are labor organizations affiliated with the Building and Construction Trades Department of the American Federation of Labor. 3. The question concerning representation : The Petitioner is currently recognized by the Association as the collective bargaining representative of the employees in the proposed unit. The Petitioner and the Association are parties to a collective bargaining agreement running from April 1, 1950, to March 31, 1951, and from year to year thereafter , in the absence of timely notice to, modify or terminate. None of the Intervenors seeks to represent the, employees in the proposed unit. We find, contrary to the contention of the Intervenors, that the Act does not, under these circumstances,, require that the petition be dismissed. The assertion by the Petitioner, 943732-51-70 1090 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD of its majority status, and the filing of a petition expressing its desire to secure a certificate, is itself sufficient to raise a question' concerning representation.24 The Intervenors also assert as bars to the petition (1) a contract be- tween the Association and the District Council of Baltimore and Vicinity, International Hod Carriers, Building and Common Laborers of America; (2) a contract between the Sheet Metal Contractors Asso- ciation of Baltimore, Maryland, to which certain members of the Association also belong, and Local Union No. 122 of Sheet Metal Workers' International Association of Baltimore, Maryland, and vicinity; and (3) the current agreement with respect to the Joint Board. As the original petition herein was filed before the execution or automatic renewal of the foregoing agreements, We find that none of them constitutes a bar to this proceeding.25 We find it unnecessary, therefore, to consider the other reasons advanced by the Petitioner for holding that such agreements do not constitute a bar. We find, accordingly, that a question affecting commerce exists con- cerning the representation of employees of the Association members, within the meaning of Section 9 (c) (1) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. 4. The appropriate unit : The Petitioner seeks a unit of all plumbers, plumbers' apprentices, and gasfitters employed by the members of the Association in Balti- more, Maryland, and vicinity. The Petitioner and the Association have engaged in collective bargaining with respect to this proposed unit for more than 20 years. The plumbers sought by the Petitioner, who must undergo a 5-year apprenticeship training program before they can qualify as licensed journeymen plumbers, 28 are engaged in performing duties traditionally associated with their eraft.27 Al- though each of the Association members employs some employees other than those sought by the Petitioner, and certain of such em- ployees work with the plumbers on occasion in the performance of their duties,28 there is no interchange between the various groups of employees.28 24 General Bow Company, supra. 25 The Westinghouse Air Brake Company, 85 NLRB 1133 ; International Harvester Co. ( McCormick Works ), 85 NLRB 1260. 28 There are no separate gasfitters as such, but some of the journeymen plumbers are also qualified as gasfitters. 24 The fact that the employees in the proposed unit may perform some duties which may not be strictly within the limits of their recognized craft does not destroy their identity as a separate craft group when, as here , the substantial majority of their duties are within the recognized scope of their craft Detroit Branch, Reliance Steel Division, Detroit Steel Corporation , 90 NLRB No. 62. "This fact does not derogate from the right to separate representation of craftsmen otherwise entitled thereto Danly Machine Specialties , Inc, 90 NLRB No. 14. 29 The other employees are separately represented by other labor organizations affiliated with the Building and Construction Trades Department of the American Federation of Labor. THE PLUMBING CONTRACTORS ASSN. OF BALTIMORE , MD., INC. 1091 Thus, the unit sought by the Petitioner is composed of the type of craftsmen which the Board has consistently held may constitute a separate appropriate bargaining unit, even in the face of a bargaining history on a broader. basis 30 The Intervenors contend, however, that a single craft unit is inappropriate in the building and construction industry'31 because of the alleged integrated nature of the building construction operation. As the Intervenors assert, the construction of a building involves a series of successive operations by each of the crafts involved, in which the work of each craft must precede or follow the work of other crafts in a specified order, and is dependent for the performance of its work upon the performance by the other crafts of their particular work. We do not believe„however, that the degree of integration established by the record in this case is so great that the employees sought by the Petitioner have become an integral part of an assembly line operation ..32 Rather, although their skills may be used in the production of the end product, they remain a separate group of craft employees whose work is neither repetitive nor syn- chronized with assembly line operations.33 In addition, the pattern of bargaining on a craft basis in the area, and the long history of separate representation of the very employees sought herein, is further evidence of the appropriateness of the proposed single craft unit.34 In any event, as none of the other labor organizations involved seeks to repre- sent the employees sought by the Petitioner, the question of the ap- propriateness of some unit other than the single craft unit sought by the Petitioner is not squarely before us. On the basis of the foregoing, and the entire record in this case, we find that all plumbers, plumbers' apprentices, and gasfitters em- ployed by the members of The Plumbing Contractors Association of Baltimore, Maryland, Inc., in Baltimore, Maryland, and vicinity, ex- cluding supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropri- ate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. 5. Stability of employment : During the period from January 1, 1950, through October 31, 1950, approximately three-quarters of the employees in the appropriate unit worked in that unit during more than 50 percent of the number of weeks in the said period. During the same period, indeed, more "United States Rubber Company, 91 NLRB No. 213; General Electric Company, 89 NLRB 726; Robertshaw -Fulton Controls Company, 88 NLRB 1508 ; General Electric Company, 77 NLRB 1198. 31 We find without merit the Intervenors' further contention that a multi -employer unit, such as is involved herein, is not an appropriate unit within the meaning of Section 9 (b). Association of Motion Picture Producers , Inc., et al., 85 NLRB 902. 32 Cf. Ford Motor Company, 78 NLRB 887. 83 See The Plomb Tool Company, 87 NLRB 134. 31 Laycob Hat Company, 88 NLRB 257 . Cf. National Tube Company, 76 NLRB 1199; The Permanente Metals Corporation, 89 NLRB 804. 1092 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD than half the employees in the unit worked in the unit more than 80 percent of the number of weeks in the period. On these facts, we find that employment in the unit is sufficiently stable to permit an election to be held therein. Order IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the petitions' in Cases Nos. 5-RC-94, 90, and 700 be, and they hereby are, dismissed. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] F. BURKART MANUFACTURING COMPANY i and INTERNATIONAL UNION, UNITED AUTOMOBILE, AIRCRAFT & AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT WORK- ERS OF AMERICA, C. I. 0., PETITIONER. Case No. 14-RC-1257. March 30, 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 O. Talent, hearing officer . The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby afrined.2 At the hearing the Employer made a motion , joined in by Uphol- sterers International Union of North America, A. F . L., and its Local 702, one of the Intervenors herein, that the petition should be dis- missed upon the ground that the Petitioner had caused , fomented, and incited a strike at the Employer 's plant in order to entrap the Employer and the Upholsterers International Union of North Amer- ica, A. F. L., and its Local 702, into reopening and revising a pres- ently existing contract between them and that by reason thereof the Petitioner should not be permitted to take advantage of the situa- tion created by it to file and have considered the instant petition. This motion was referred to the Board. If the Employer and the Intervenor Upholsterers International Union of North America, 'The Employer's name appears as amended at the hearing 2 The hearing in this matter was scheduled for 10 a in, December 4, 1950 In view of the fact that all parties were not present at the appointed time, the hearing officer granted a recess of 1 hour. At approximately 11 a. in , the hearing officer proceeded with the hearing having denied the motions of Upholsterers International Union of North America, A F L., and its Local 702, one of the Intervenors lieiem, and the Employer to continue the hearing because no iepresentative had appeared for Hod Carriers, Building and Common Laborers Union of America, AFL, which apparently had an interest in this proceeding Under the circumstances. particularly as the Hod Carriers had received due notice of the hearing, we do not find that the hearing officer abused his discretion in so proceeding See Howard County Lumber Co , Inc, 86 NLRB 512. 3 hood Bay Salmon Company, 83 NLRB 656 , Parks-Belk Company of Elazabethton, 77 NLRB 429, and cases cited theiein 93 NLRB No. 183. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation