Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge HARRY T. EDWARDS.
Aroostook County Regional Ophthalmology Center (“ACROC” or “Company”) petitions for review of a National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB” or “Board”) order finding that it committed several unfair labor practices in violation of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA” or “Act”).
See Aroostook County Regional Ophthalmology Center,
The Board found ACROC guilty of unfair labor practices for promulgating and enforcing overly restrictive rules limiting the right of employees to discuss office business and work grievances. The Company was also found to have violated the Act in firing employees who violated the rules, and then in denying reinstatement to employees who refused to adhere to unlawful conditions imposed by management.
We find that the disputed rules contained in ACROC’s Office Policy Manual do not improperly infringe upon employee rights under the NLRA. Likewise, we find that ACROC was justified in firing employees for good cause. However, we uphold the Board’s finding that ACROC improperly imposed illegal conditions upon the rehiring of the fired employees. Accordingly, the petition for review and cross-pétition for enforcement each are granted in part and denied in part.
I. Background
Dr. Craig Young, an ophthalmologist, founded ACROC in 1977. Although Dr. Young remains the primary manager of the operation, ACROC employs several physicians to perform eye surgery and to otherwise treat patients who use the Center. The non-physician staff at ACROC is not unionized, and it is undisputed that there has been no union activity or solicitation among these employees.
ACROC’s main facility is in Presque Isle, Maine. All of the surgery performed by *211 ACROC’s physicians is done either at the “ambulatory surgery center” at the Presque. Isle facility or, if general anesthesia is required, in a hospital in Presque Isle. ACROC has additional facilities elsewhere in northern Maine, which are operated a few days each month by ACROC personnel who travel from the Presque Isle area in the morning and return the same night.
ACROC’s offices are run pursuant to an “Office Policy Manual.” Two of the provisions in that manual are at issue in this petition. One states:
No office business is a matter for discussion with spouses, families or Mends.
Aroostook County Regional Ophthalmology Center Office Policy Manual at 4 (“OPM”), reprinted in Appendix (“App.”) 80. The other states:
All grievances are to be discussed in private with the office manager or physicians. It is totally unacceptable for an employee to discuss any grievances within earshot of patients.
Id. at 21, reprinted in App. 97.
On May 29, 1992, four ACROC employees were fired for conduct inconsistent with the foregoing rules. The day before, Dr. Young had changed the work schedules of an ophthalmic technician and three registered nurses in order to accommodate an emergency surgical procedure. Under the revised schedule, the locations to which the employees were to report on May 29 were altered, and two of the employees were required to work from 8 a.m. until 2 p.m. without a lunch break.
When the employees heard of the schedule adjustment, they expressed dissatisfaction and exasperation over the inconvenience caused by the change; they also complained that work schedules at ACROC were often altered. On- the evening of May 28, Dr. Young heard from several independent sources that the employees had voiced their complaints within earshot of ACROC patients.
Dr. Young met with the four employees on the morning of May 29. He criticized their behavior over the prior year and he recounted what he had been told about their actions the day before. After a short discussion, Dr. Young fired the employees for misconduct; however, he then told the staff members that they could retain employment with ACROC if they agreed to certain conditions. Two of those conditions, one of which required the employees to bring all complaints to Young and no one else, aind the other of which compelled the employees to stop gossiping and complaining amongst themselves, are at issue in this case. Two of the employees rejected Dr. Young’s offer; the others opted to retain their employment with ACROC. 2
•The employees who rejected Dr. Young’s offer filed charges with the NLRB, alleging that the company had committed several unfair labor practices pursuant to section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA.
3
Following issuance of a complaint, an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) found the Office Policy Manual provision limiting discussion of business with spouses, families, or Mends to be a
prima facie
violation of section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA, because “employees have the right to seek the assistance of, among others, ‘spouses, families or Mends’ on matters pertaining to their terms of employment.” Order,
Even though the ALJ took issue with ACROC’s policies, he found that the Company did not violate the NLRA in firing the *212 employees, because they were not engaged in protected concerted activity at the time they were fired, and, in any event, the discharge of the employees for discussing their grievances in front of patients was not unlawful. However, the ALJ found that the conditions ACROC placed on the rehiring of the employees violated the NLRA, because the purpose of the conditions was to prevent employees from discussing among themselves dissatisfaction with their employment conditions.
On review, the Board went much further than the ALJ, not only embracing the unfair labor practices cited by the ALJ, but also declaring that the Office Policy Manual provision limiting the discussion of work issues in front of patients and the staff firings violated the Act. According to the Board, changes in work schedules “are directly linked to hours and conditions of work — both vital elements of employment — and are as likely to spawn collective action as the discussion of wages.” Order,
II. Discussion
As a threshold matter, we reject ACROC’s argument suggesting that, in light of
United States v. Lopez,
— U.S. -,
We turn then to the merits to determine whether there is substantial evidence to support the Board’s findings and conclusions.
Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB,
A. ACROC’s Policy Manual
1. The Restriction on Discussion of Office Business
The Board adopted the ALJ’s determination that ACROC’s rule prohibiting employees from discussing “office business” with “spouses, families or friends” was a
prima facie
violation of section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA because “employees have the right to seek the assistance of, among others, ‘spouses, families or friends’ on matters pertaining to their terms of employment.” Order,
The Board does not question ACROC’s right to require employees to protect patient privacy; so if the rule means what the Company says, it follows that its promulgation and enforcement were not unfair labor practices. In the absence of any evidence that ACROC is imposing an unreasonably broad interpretation of the rule upon employees, the Board’s determination to the contrary is unjustified.. If an occasion arises where ACROC is attempting to use the rule as the basis for imposing questionable restrictions upon employees’ communications, the employees may seek review of the Company’s actions at that time. However, the rule on its face is not unlawful.
2. The Restriction on Discussion of Grievances
According to the Board, ACROC’s rule requiring grievances to be discussed in private with Company managers or physicians “is an overly broad restriction of the employees’ statutory right to engage in protected concerted activity.” Order,
The Supreme Court has noted that, “in the context of health-care facilities, the importance of the employer’s interest in protecting patients from disturbance cannot be gainsaid.”
Beth Israel Hosp. v. NLRB,
As to the rule’s other element, that employees’ discussions of grievances be conducted in private conversations with management level staff, we find that such a requirement seems designed merely to provide a reason *214 able and fair procedure for resolution of employment disputes. This requirement is entirely reasonable when read in context with the accompanying provision that employees should not discuss grievances within earshot of patients, implying that the rule’s purpose is to ensure that employee complaints are presented to management in an appropriate manner without disruption to ACROC’s clients. Moreover, the Board has again presented no evidence indicating that the rule has actually been applied to restrict employees from discussing grievances among themselves or from otherwise engaging in lawful protected concerted activity. In fact, ACROC affirmatively encouraged discussions among employees that did not include physicians or management, for example, through the implementation of “teams” of nurses and technicians. Accordingly, the Board’s findings to the contrary on these points must be overturned.
B. The Treatment of ACROC Employees
1. The Firing
In assessing ACROC’s actions in firing the four employees, both the ALJ and the Board focused on whether the employees’ actions to which Dr. Young objected constituted protected concerted activity. The ALJ found no evidence to suggest that the employees “engaged in any of the behavior at issue “with the object of initiating group action,’ ” id. at 228, and, thus, found that the employees’ behavior was not protected by the NLRA The Board reversed the ALJ’s determination, noting that, because the employees were discussing vital elements of their employment, such communications are protected by the NLRA because they could “spawn collective action.” Id. at 220.
We neither understand nor endorse the Board’s “spawning” theory, which, on its face, appears limitless and nonsensical. Certainly, discussion of employment conditions, such as scheduling, could be protected concerted activity; however, adoption of a per se rule that any discussion of work conditions is automatically protected as concerted activity finds no good support in the law.
In this case, an argument could be made that the employees’ complaints were concerted activity because the topic of schedule changes is potentially relevant to a labor dispute,
see
29 U.S.C. § 152(9) (1994), particularly because schedule changes had been the subject of ongoing discussions between ACROC employees and management.
See, e.g., NLRB v. Washington Aluminum Co.,
In the setting of a small medical office, it is inherently bad conduct for medical staff personnel to complain about their jobs while they are tending patients. Indeed, it cannot be doubted that such misconduct is extremely serious, because it has the great potential to unsettle patients. It is hardly reassuring for a patient, concerned over his or her personal well-being, to be confronted by a medical attendant who seems distracted because of displeasure over the work environment.. Such grousing in the presence of patients is plainly inconsistent with the reasonable demands of caretaking, and, therefore, it cannot constitute
protected
activity.
Cf. Baptist Hosp.,
2. The Conditional Rehiring
Although the Company committed no unfair labor practice when it fired the employees, substantial evidence supported the Board’s determination that the conditions imposed by the Company for rehire were unlawful. Dr. Young conditioned the rehiring of the fired employees upon their agreement that they would bring all of their complaints to Dr. Young, that they would avoid any discussions with particular employees, and that they would cease all “gossiping and complaining” amongst themselves. The effect that these conditions likely would have had on the employees’ ability to engage in behavior that is protected under the NLRA is so obvious that ACROC has not seriously attempted to defend the legitimacy of the conditions as imposed. Instead, ACROC claims that the employees should have understood that Dr. Young did not really mean what he said; rather, they should have understood that his harsh terms were intended to impose the more reasonable demand that employees discuss their grievances outside the presence of patients. See Brief for the Petitioner at 41-43. Neither the ÁLJ nor the Board were convinced by this argument, and neither are we. Thus, the finding of the Board that ACROC violated the NLRA by placing improper conditions on the rehiring of fired employees must stand.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, the petition for review is granted in part and denied in part, and the Board’s cross-petition for enforcement is granted in part and denied in part.
So ordered.
Notes
. Upon consideration of the record and the parties’ briefs, we have determined, sua sponte, to decide this appeal without oral argument pursuant to D.C. Circuit Rule 34(j). Accordingly, appellant’s motion for reconsideration of this court's order dispensing with' oral argument is denied.
. One of the remaining employees left ACROC in July 1992 for reasons unrelated to Dr. Young's discussion with the fired employees.
. Section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA, 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1) (1994), states that employers commit an unfair labor practice if they "interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in section 157.” Section 157 guarantees employees the right, inter alia, "to engage in ... concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection.” 29 U.S.C. § 157 (1994).
. ACROC’s offices are very different from the large hospital environments considered in cases such as
Beth Israel,
in which the Court held that the Board could invalidate an employer’s rule barring protected solicitation in hospital areas, such as the cafeteria, which "function[ed] more as an employee-service area than a patient-care area.”
. We also reject the Board’s argument that the employees could not he dismissed unless they were involved in flagrant, violent, or extreme behavior. First, it is far from clear that complaining in front of patients while treating them is not
extreme
behavior. Second, the NLRA does not impose such a stringent limitation upon employers. Section 10(c) of the NLRA allows employers to discharge employees for cause: "No order of the Board shall require the reinstatement of any individual as an employee who has been suspended hr discharged ... if such individual was suspended or discharged for cause.” 29 U.S.C. § 160(c) (1994). The Supreme Court has acknowledged that the legislative history of the NLRA makes it clear that the specific purpose of section 10(c) is to protect the employer from having to rehire such an individual " 'whether or not the acts constituting the 'cause for discharge were committed in connection with a concerted activity.' "
NLRB v. Local Union No. 1229, IBEW,
