Lead Opinion
Enforcement denied by published opinion. Judge WILKINSON wrote the majority opinion, in which Judge WILLIAMS joined. Judge MOTZ wrote an opinion, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
OPINION
In this case we must decide whether the National Labor Relations Board (“the Board”) properly asserted jurisdiction over petitioner ARA Services, Inc. (“ARA”).
We agree with ARA The contract between ARA and UNCG grants UNCG veto authority over any modification of ARA’s wages, fringe benefits, and staffing levels. The Board’s exercise of jurisdiction over ARA thus forces collective bargaining where control over the basic subjects of negotiation lies not with the employer, but with a political subdivision statutorily exempt from the Board’s jurisdiction. Accordingly, we deny enforcement of the Board’s bargaining order.
I.
On March 1, 1993, the Communication Workers of America (“CWA”) filed a petition with the NLRB seeking to represent certain of ARA’s employees at UNCG. At the time, ARA’s provision of food services at UNCG was governed by a five-year contract, covering 1989 to 1994 (“the 1989 agreement”). Under this agreement, ARA received a fixed fee for each student who purchased a meal plan, with the fee level set by a line-item budget that was negotiated annually between ARA and UNCG.
ARA opposed CWA’s petition on jurisdictional grounds, contending that under the 1989 agreement UNCG controlled ARA’s terms of employment. ARA urged the Board to decline jurisdiction based on its exception for private employers whose employment relations are substantially regulated by exempt entities. On April 2,1993, the Regional Director of the NLRB rejected ARA’s jurisdictional arguments. The Director ruled that UNCG did not control ARA’s wages or staffing levels to the necessary degree, and that the annual budget renegotiation showed UNCG did not have “absolute veto power or final say-so” over ARA’s employment terms. On September 29, 1993, a divided panel of the NLRB summarily affirmed the Regional Director’s ruling and asserted jurisdiction over ARA
ARA and UNCG executed a new five-year contract on June 24, 1994 (“the 1994 agreement”), the terms of which make up the substance of this appeal. The 1994 agreement took effect on August 1,1994, following expiration of the 1989 contract. The current accord increases UNCG’s control over ARA’s employment terms by restricting ARA’s ability to unilaterally alter its wages, fringe benefits, or staffing levels. In light of the changes effected by the 1994 agreement, ARA urged the Board to reconsider its decision asserting jurisdiction. On December 27, 1994, the Board granted ARA’s motion to reopen the record, but summarily held that ARA could still engage in meaningful collective bargaining under the 1994 contract.
By this time, CWA had prevailed in a representation election and had been certified as the bargaining representative. ARA, though, refused to bargain with CWA, based primarily on its view that the Board lacked jurisdiction. CWA filed a charge, and on January 27, 1995, the Board granted summary judgment against ARA, finding that it had violated the Act by refusing to negotiate. ARA appeals from the Board’s bargaining order.
II.
The National Labor Relations Act exempts from its coverage “State[s] or political subdivision[s] thereof.” 29 U.S.C. § 152(2). The
In Res-Care, Inc.,
When the exempt subdivision directly controls wage and benefit levels and other employment terms, the Board has declined to assert jurisdiction. NLRB v. Career Systems Development Corp.,
By contrast, when the exempt subdivision’s controls over the employment terms are only of the effective variety, involving overall budgetary restrictions within which the employer can adjust individual salary and benefit levels, the Board has exercised jurisdiction. Career Systems,
Whether a given case involves direct or effective restrictions by an exempt entity may be a close call. One thing, however, seems clear. The Board has declined jurisdiction where the exempt subdivision possessed a right of approval over any change in individual wages and benefits. In cases where the Board assumed jurisdiction, the employer retained. some discretion over wages, and also enjoyed substantial flexibility regarding fringe benefits and other conditions of employment. E.g., Career Systems Devt. Corp.,
III.
The Board asks that we enforce its order asserting jurisdiction over ARA under the Res-Care standard. The Board contends it properly applied Res-Care here, because ARA possesses sufficient control over the terms and conditions of employment to enable it to engage in meaningful collective bargaining. We think, however, that the terms of the ARA/UNCG relationship compel the opposite conclusion.
The 1994 agreement between ARA and UNCG falls squarely within the category of direct restrictions, the kind that normally prompt the Board to refuse jurisdiction.
This is hardly the stuff of meaningful collective bargaining, at least as the Board has construed that standard in its rulings. The Board has never asserted jurisdiction in circumstances like this, where the contract specifies precise wage and benefit levels and the exempt governmental entity reserves the right to approve any changes therefrom. Indeed, “[i]n each of the six cases in which the Board has declined jurisdiction, the employer’s contract with the government agency set out exact levels for wages and fringe benefits, which the employer could not alter without the approval of the agency.” Human Development Ass’n,
The only decision cited by the Board in its most recent opinion in this ease, Dynaelectron Corp.,
The arguments raised by the Board on this appeal are similarly unpersuasive. The Board contends that in light of the historical relationship between ARA and UNCG, the University will presumably endorse any reasonable adjustments in wages and benefits brought about by collective bargaining. We cannot accept this invitation to look past the substance of the parties’ own agreement. Regardless of the actual relationship between the parties, the agreement plainly vests ultimate discretion in setting wages and benefits with UNCG. When an exempt entity reserves the veto power possessed by UNCG here, the Board has not allowed the possible approval of proposed changes to trump the express contractual terms. See Hicks v. NLRB,
The Board also points to a clause in the 1994 contract allegedly obligating UNCG to approve any proposed changes as long as they are “consistent with sound fiscal management.” Although the agreement does contain this phrase, it does not do what the Board contends. Instead, it embodies exactly the opposite presumption, namely that UNCG possesses the right to reject any proposed adjustments when doing so would be consistent with UNCG’s sound fiscal management — “The University reserves the right to approve or modify or deny any proposed increase or modification in wages or benefits consistent with sound fiscal management.” This interpretation is borne out by the immediately preceding sentence, which reiterates that “[gjranting approval to request[s] for increases is at the sole discretion of the University.” In essence, then, the clause identified by the Board only reaffirms what the 1994 agreement communicates throughout — that UNCG possesses ultimate control over ARA’s wages, benefits, and staffing levels.
We recognize that the Board enjoys considerable discretion in exercising its jurisdiction. E.g., Career Systems,
IV.
During the pendency of this appeal, the Board issued its decision in Management Training Corp., 317 N.L.R.B. No. 190 (July 28, 1995), a ruling that substantially modifies the Board’s jurisdictional inquiry. In Management Training, the Board decided to eschew its Res-Care analysis and instead to assert jurisdiction whenever an employer technically falls within the statutory definition, regardless of whether an exempt political subdivision actually controls the employ
While a remand may be appropriate when the Board has not made clear whether it intends for a new rule to apply retroactively, NLRB v. Food Store Employees Union,
Courts consider several factors when deciding whether to retroactively enforce rules announced in NLRB adjudications to eases pending on appeal.
When a Board decision “creates a new rule ... by overruling past precedents relied upon by the parties,” the propriety of its retroactive application is called into question. District Lodge 64 v. NLRB,
Along with the impact of retroactive application on the parties, courts must also consider the statutory interest in applying a new administrative rule to a case on appeal. See Oakes Machine,
Under the new rule, the Board will assert jurisdiction over employers even if control over the basic employment terms lies with a statutorily exempt political subdivision. The Board’s whole basis for refusing jurisdiction in such situations prior to Management Training, however, was that the assertion of jurisdiction would conflict with the policies underlying the statutory exemption. Several courts had in fact suggested that asserting jurisdiction where an exempt political subdivision regulates the employment conditions would not only contradict the Board’s jurisdictional standards, but would violate the statutory exemption itself. See Board of Trustees of Memorial Hosp. v. NLRB,
Whatever the future resolution of this question, the parties in the present ease deserve finality. More than two and a half years have already been consumed by this litigation, encompassing some six NLRB rulings of one kind or another. Remanding for yet another round of administrative proceedings and possible court appeals would not serve the ends of justice. It is clear that the Board’s bargaining order is not sustainable under the standards on which the Board has ruled and on which the parties have relied. For these reasons, enforcement of the Board’s order is denied.
ENFORCEMENT DENIED.
Notes
. The Board’s opinion reads:
Employer’s motion to reopen the record is granted. However, having considered Employer’s proffered evidence, we find that Employer retains the ability to meaningfully bargain with Petitioner over economic and non economic terms and conditions of employment of Employer’s employees at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. See, generally, Dynaelectron Corp.,286 NLRB 302 (1987). Accordingly, we reaffirm ou[r] September 29, 1993 Order asserting jurisdiction over Employer.
. The parties devote considerable attention in their briefs to the terms of the old 1989 agreement, which was the subject of the Board’s initial rulings in this case. The 1994 agreement displaced the 1989 contract, however, and the latter is now moot. The Board ruled on the 1994 agreement in its most recent opinion asserting jurisdiction over ARA. We thus focus our analysis on the current accord.
. In recent rulings on retroactivity principles, the Supreme Court has indicated that statutes and administrative rules ordinarily apply only prospectively absent clear intent to the contrary, see Landgraf v. USI Film Products, - U.S. -,
. Our good dissenting colleague contends a remand to the Board is required. The cases cited to support this proposition are inapposite. None of them mandates the needless exercise of a remand and possible further appeals when it is manifest that the retroactive application of a new NLRB rule would be improper.
Here, as we have noted, retroactive application of the new rule would be improper because: (1) this litigation has already consumed substantial time and resources; (2) the new rule was "an abrupt break with well-settled policy" reflected in decades of Board rulings and court precedent, UFCW, Local No. 150-A,
Finally, the Board’s new pronouncement in Management Training was of a broad prescriptive nature, adopted without any prior notice to these parties. Although the adjudicatory process of an agency may sometimes proceed in this fashion, the retroactive application of new rules can work
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I concur in parts I through III of the majority opinion in which the court refuses to enforce the National Labor Relations Board’s order, based as it was on the old (Res Care) rule. However, I respectfully dissent from part IV in which the majority determines in the first instance that the new (Management Training) rule should not be applied retroactively in this case. I do so because controlling precedent requires that we remand to the Board so that it can determine in the first instance if a new Board rule is to be applied retroactively.
More than twenty years ago, when considering another NLRB case, the Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision, directed:
[ A] court reviewing an agency decision following an intervening change of policy by the agency should remand to permit the agency to decide in the first instance whether giving the change retrospective effect will best effectuate the policies underlying the agency’s governing act.
NLRB v. Food Store Employees Union,
Furthermore, in Blackman-Uhler Chem. Div., Synalloy Corp. v. NLRB,
Accordingly, it is not merely, as the majority states, that it “may be appropriate” to remand to the Board “when [it] has not made it clear whether it intends for a new rule to apply retroactively,” Maj. Op. at 135; rather, this course is mandatory. There is simply no Supreme Court or Fourth Circuit precedent for not remanding to the Board so that it can determine in the first instance if its new rule should be applied retroactively. Moreover, the Food Store Employees principle is entirely consistent with, indeed virtually required by, the recognized primacy Congress has bestowed on the National Labor Relations Board with respect to its own rules. See e.g., Garner v. Teamsters, Chauffeurs, and Helpers Local Union No. 776,
In light of the above controlling authority, cases from other jurisdictions are of little relevance here. However, it is worth noting that not even the out-of-cireuit authority relied on by the majority support its holding that a reviewing court can refuse to remand for the Board’s determination, in the first instance, on the retroactivity question. For example, NLRB v. Viola Industries-Elevator Div., Inc.,
Similarly, none of the other cases discussed in the majority opinion support the conclusion that a reviewing court can determine if retroactive application of a new NLRB rule would work a manifest injustice before any Board determination on this point. Instead, all of these cases describe the standards to be used by a reviewing court after the Board has determined in the first instance that the new rule will be applied retroactively. In one of the cited eases, the court expressly remanded to the Board to make this initial determination. Retail, Wholesale and Dept. Store v. NLRB,
The majority’s decision to usurp the Board’s role by determining in the first instance if a new Board rule should be applied retroactively disrupts the orderly process of administrative litigation. Such a decision is thus not only contrary to Food Store Employees, Blackman-Uhler, National Posters,
That rule is to the effect that a reviewing court, in dealing with a determination or judgment which an administrative agency alone is authorized to make, must judge the propriety of such action solely by the grounds invoked by the agency.
Securities & Exch. Comm’n v. Chenery Corp.,
Indicative of just how contrary the majority’s holding is to controlling precedent, not even the employer, which so mightily benefits from it, maintains that this is the proper course. Although the employer, ABA Services, Inc., does argue that application of the new rule would be “manifestly unjust” and urges us not to apply it, ABA never asserts that it is inappropriate for the Board to make the retroactivity vel non determination in the first instance. Indeed, ABA cites and quotes Food Store Employees and our cases following it and concedes that the Board “must have the opportunity to express its opinion on retroactivity.” ABA Supplemental Brief at 8. The Board has never been given this opportunity. It certainly has never found that retroactive application of its new rule is appropriate in this case.
If given the opportunity, the Board might conclude, as the majority does, that retroactive application of the new rule in this case would result in manifest injustice. On the other hand, if presented with this opportunity, the Board, which is more familiar with the National Labor Belations Act and its underlying policies than any court can ever be, see Garner,
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from Part IV of the majority opinion. I would remand the case to the Board so that it could determine in the first instance whether its new rule should be applied retroactively in this case.
Significantly, in indicating that remand to the NLRB for its retroactivity determination was necessary, the Court in Food Store Employees, citing Bradley v. School Board,
