Oрinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
Contractors’ Labor Pool (CLP) challenges a Board determination that CLP’s policy of refusing to hire applicants whose recent wages were 30% higher or lower than its starting wages was discriminatory within the meaning of § 8(a)(3) of the National Labor Relations Act. Also challenged is the Board’s conclusion that CLP discriminated against several paid union organizers in assignment because, according to petitioner, they were not its “employees” or, alternatively, because of a “disabling conflict,” they were engaged in unprotectеd activity. We agree with petitioner’s first challenge but reject its second and therefore grant the petition in part and deny it in part.
I.
CLP, a nonunion company, supplies, on a temporary basis, several thousand construction workers a year to various contractors in Arizona, California, Oregon, Washington, Nevada, and Colorado. 1 It operates 15 offices in those states. Essentially, it employs a permanent labor pool from which contractors draw skilled and unskilled workers as needed. Its management believes that its success depends on its ability to keеp a large number of reliable employees. Accordingly, it has *1054 adopted various measures to improve employee retention (and productivity) since its inception in 1987.
For instance, it sought to improve its applicant screening process in the early 1990s by examining applicants’ driving records and references with greater care. And beginning in 1989, an applicant was asked to specify an acceptable hourly rate. If the figure was substantially higher than CLP was willing to pay, that person would not be hired for it was assumed that the employee would soon become dissatisfied and quit. Petitioner’s CEO Thomas McCune testified that short-term employees, moreover, were prone to substandard work and accidents.
In 1993 the company conducted a worker retention study that served to further refine petitioner’s hiring policy. The available data indicated that workers who had previously earned wages that were either 30% higher or lower than CLP’s wages would be significantly less likely to work for the company for 100 hours or more within a 40-day period. The study predicted that adopting a 30% rule (precluding applicants whose prior wages deviated by 30% from CLP’s starting salary) would eliminate some eligible workers. But it would cause CLP’s important retention rate to rise 3.5%. Accordingly, in 1994 CLP adopted the 30% hiring standard. In the first full year following adoption of the 30% rule the percentage of applicants deemed ineligible for hire increased from 70 to 75%, but CLP’s retention rate increased from 57.6 to 63.9%, workers compensation costs were significantly reduced, and the company’s safety record showed substantial improvement.
The ALJ specifically determined that petitioner’s implementation of its 30% rule was not motivated by antiunion animus; instead CLP had pursued a legitimate business objective. The Board adopted that recommended finding. Nevertheless, the ALJ and the Board concluded that petitioner’s 30% rule operated to exclude workers in a number of western labor markets who previously had worked on jobs covered by a union collective bargaining agreement. 2 The effect was most pronounced in Southern California; CLP’s top hourly rate for journeymen electricians was $18.00 in that market whereas the average union scale was $26.00. In Seattle, on the other hand, the ALJ concluded that the differential wаs less.
Petitioner contends that union rates are not 30% higher than CLP’s in Idaho, parts of Washington state and Denver, Colorado. It cites an ALJ determination to that effect — at least respecting Denver — in a companion case against it, in which the judge recommended against a finding of an § 8(a)(3) violation.
See CONTRACTORS LABOR POOL, INC. (IBEW LOCAL UNION 68),
The ALJ concluded, and three of the four Board members agreed, relying upon the Supreme Court’s decision in
N.L.R.B. v. Great Dane Trailers, Inc.,
B.
The second issue in the ease—the Board’s finding of petitioner’s discriminatory assignment of two union organizers— also has its genesis in the early 1990s when Local 441 began targeting CLP as рart of the broader campaign against nonunion employers on the West Coast. The Local employed what is called “salts,” paid organizers sent to job sites ostensibly to obtain employment but with the objective of inducing union organization. The ALJ determined that some of these salts were instructed not only to uncover unfair labor practices but to provoke them. As one organizer put it, their presence on a job-site was not necessarily “to build their damn job,” but if organizing tactics were unsuccessful to “bankrupt the contractors.”
In re W.D.D.W. Commercial Sys.,
As part of this salting campaign Local 441 President Vaughn Hedges applied for employment with CLP in 1992 without making the company aware of his union affiliation. After successfully passing the screening test he was referred to CLP customer Aztech Electric in California and reported to its construction site in November 1992. Four days later he was released from work at Aztech by foreman Adamik. Aztech claimed that Hedges had completed a particular project and it wanted to give additional work to some regular employees. After being told that he was being laid off, Hedges started talking about the union and how it would be best for the employees if Aztech Electric unionized. He then signed his timecard, left the site, and went to his truck, where he picked up some union literature and began to distribute it to other electricians. Adamik then told Hedges to leave the jobsite and Hedges complied.
Hedges did not talk to CLP about the incident until the next day. The staff manager Margo Nezrab accused Hedges of distributing literature on CLP’s time after he had been laid off. Hedges admitted this was true. Nezrab then added that CLP gets contracts from companies like Aztech precisely because it is a nonunion employer. She made it clear that union literature was not welcome on the job, but did suggest that Hedges would continue to get work if available. Hedges received his paycheck later that week. CLP never contacted him regarding work again, and testimony revealed that a “DNU (Do Not Use) until wе talk” was entered into Hedges’ CLP computer file after the episode.
In re W.D.D.W. Commercial Sys.,
Shawn Smith was also a Local 441 member at the time these events occurred. In September 1992, Local 441 Business Manager Doug Saunders told him to apply with CLP. He applied and was accepted for employment. Smith was let go from his second assignment with Aztech Electric on *1056 November 25, 1992, the day after Hedges was released, also because his job had been completed. The ALJ noted that Az-tech foreman Adamik was aware of his union affiliation and intent to distribute union literature. Smith, like Hedges, received a “DNU” code and was not referred another job.
Based on this record, the ALJ determined that CLP’s actions against these employees would be violative of § 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act, but decided that because Local 441 paid union organizers purposed to engage in activities inimical to the employers’ operations, a “disabling conflict” had been created. Accordingly, the salts were no longer “employees” within the meaning of § 2(3)
of
the Act. The Board majority disagreed, holding that even if a disabling conflict had existed between Local 441 and CLP, which would mean their activity was “unprotected,” the salts nevertheless had statutory employee status under
N.L.R.B. v. Town & Country Elec., Inc.,
II.
A.
Sectiоn 8(a)(3) makes it unlawful for an employee “by discrimination in regard to hire or tenure of employment or any term or condition of employment to encourage or discourage membership in any labor organization.” 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3) (emphasis added). Petitioner’s main challenge is to the Board’s determination that the 30% rule is “inherently destructive” of employees’ § 7 rights to engage in protected activity, and therefore the employer’s motive — whether to encourage or discourage membership in any labor organization — is irrelevant. (All but two employees are affectеd by this determination.) In support of this challenge, petitioner raises two arguments; its 30% rule is not inherently *1057 destructive and, in any event, the Board’s explicit finding that the employer’s motivation, in adopting the 30% rule, was not tainted by antiunion animus makes a § 8(a)(3) violation analytically impossible.
The contention that the 30% rule is not inherently destructive is not completely fleshed out.
Petitioner points to Chairman Hurtgen’s dissent which argued:
[Tjhere is no showing of discrimination and thus the Great Dane analysis ... does not even apply. Respondent did not discriminate along Section 7 lines. Rather, Respondent CLP drew a line between high-wage earners and low-wage earners. A high-wage earner with a nonunion background (e.g., based on skill and experience) was not eligible for hire. A nonhigh-wage earner with a union background was eligible for hire. Thus there was no discrimination prohibited by the Act.
In re W.D.D.W. Commercial Sys.,
Petitioner emphasizеs, however, that its company-wide 30% rule does not adversely impact applicants recently covered by union contracts in
all
of its labor markets. In other words, as we would re-characterize petitioner’s argument, an employer’s practice can hardly be described as
inherently
destructive of § 7 rights if its very destructiveness depends on independent variables—in this case actual evidence of the differential between petitioner’s starting wages and the union wages in any particular locality. In the line of Supreme Court cases that have endorsed Board findings thаt particular practices are inherently destructive, and therefore § 8(a)(3) violations are made out without further evidence of an employer’s anti-union animus, those practices can be regarded as having an
inevitable
negative impact on union adherents—without regard to any other facts.
See, e.g., N.L.R.B. v. Great Dane Trailers, Inc.,
Still, given the record confusion as to the actual situation in petitioner’s various labor markets as well as the imprecise nature of both petitioner’s and the Board’s arguments on this issue, we think it preferable not to decide whether petitioner’s practice could be described as inherently destructive and instead to pass on to petitioner’s main point: that once the *1058 Board found explicitly that it had acted without an antiunion animus it was not possible for the Board to rely on the inherently destructive ratiоnale.
The keystone of the Board’s decision is its rebanee on a discrete quotation from Great Dane:
First, if it can reasonably be concluded that the employer’s discriminatory conduct was ‘inherently destructive’ of important employee rights, no proof of an antiunion motivation is needed and the Board can find an unfair labor practice even if the employer introduces evidence that the conduct was motivated by business considerations.
Great Dane Trailers,
In
Great Dane
an employer refused to pay strikers vacation benefits accrued under an expired collective bargaining agreement yet at the same time paying equivalent benefits to non-strikers. The Court of Appeals had refused to enforce the Board’s order because of a lack of explicit evidence of the employer’s antiunion motivation. The Supreme Court acknowledged that although the employer’s practice was clearly discriminatory (on its face) and that it was obviously “capable of discouraging membership in a labor organization” the statute usuaby requires more — specific evidence of an antiunion purpose.
N.L.R.B. v. Great Dane Trailers,
That аrticulation makes clear that certain employer practices permit the Board to draw what is often referred to as “secondary inferences,”
see, e.g., N.L.R.B. v. Universal Camera Corp.,
The intervenors, but not the Board’s decision, rely heavily on another rather old Supreme Court case,
Republic Aviation Corp. v. N.L.R.B.,
Admittedly, the holding in
Republic Aviation
and the rather unsatisfactory explanation of that case in
Radio Officers’
does not seem consistent with the
Erie Resistor, Great Dane, Metropolitan
line of cases. We think
Republic Aviation
should be regаrded as something of an anomaly. It stands for the limited proposition that if an employer adopts an illegal rule (a violation of § 8(a)(1) as a matter of law) and then fires an employee for transgressing the rule, it automatically violates § 8(a)(3) even though it adopted the rule for wholly benign reasons.
See Republic Aviation,
In sum, the Supreme Court’s long-standing interpretation of § 8(a)(3) is plainly at odds with the Board’s reasoning in this case. Indispensable to a determination of a violation of § 8(a)(3) — at least outside the Republic Aviation exception — is a finding that an employer acted out of an anti- (or “pro-) union motivation.” Whatever legitimate inference that might be drawn from petitioner’s adoption of the 30% rule the Board certainly cannot conclude explicitly that petitioner’s motivation is benign and then hold that its practice independently violates § 8(a)(3).
It also follows that the Board may not draw support for its decision from the disparate impact line of cases under Title VII. For one thing, the statutory language is different. Title VII is broader than § 8(a)(3), for it is unlawful for an employer
*1060 (1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin; or
(2) to limit, segregate, or classify his employees or applicants for employment in any way which would deprive or tend to deprive any individual of employment opportunities or otherwise adversely affect his status as an employee, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.
42 U.S.C.A. § 2000e-2(a). Second, as we have noted, the Court has never imported that concept into its cases interpreting § 8(a)(3). Indeed, the Court has been reluctant to extend the disparate impact theory to other laws prohibiting discrimination even where the statutory language bears greater resemblance.
See, e.g., Hazen Paper Co. v. Biggins,
III.
There remains the question whether the Board’s finding that petitioner discriminated against Hedges and Smith is vulnerable. That finding led to a Board determination that petitioner violated § 8(a)(3) quite independently of its 30% rule. Petitioner’s main argument, that these two “salts,” and other paid organizers, as a matter of law were not petitioner’s employees under the NLRA, but were rather employees of the union, is foreclosed essentially by the Supremе Court’s opinion in
Town & Country Electric, Inc.,
To be sure, as we have recently noted in
Casino Ready Mix, Inc. v. N.L.R.B.,
During the unfair labor practice hearing, however, petitioner, as we have noted, did hear testimony which showed that Hedges and Smith were salts—although we are not told how they interacted with other salts or what was their actual conduct. From that testimony, alone, petitioner alternatively argues that its backpay liability should be tolled from the time it discovered Hedges and Smith were salts. This is an untenable proposition. An employee does not lose his protected status
merely
because he is a salt. Rather, he may lose it if he engages in unprotected activity that emanates from disabling conflicts arising in connection with salting.
See Casino Ready Mix,
In support of this argument, petitioner relies on Chairman Hurtgen’s dissent that argued petitioner should be at least entitled to litigate that issue in a subsequent backpay proceeding—a position that the majority rejected. Whatever the merits of the Chairman’s position, 6 we may not consider it—let alone the broader argument petitioner makes—because we are without jurisdiction to consider the issue. As the intervenors point out, this tolling question was not raised to the Board and “[n]o objection that has not been urged before the Board ... shall be considered by the сourt, unless the failure or neglect to urge such objection shall be excused because of extraordinary circumstances.” 29 U.S.C. § 160(e).
Petitioner contends that Chairman Hurtgen satisfied this requirement by raising the backpay tolling issue in his dissent. The company relies on § 10(e)’s passive voice as an indication that Congress did not require that the parties themselves actually raise the issue before the Board, as long as the members themselves engage in its discussion. CLP, however, offers no support for its view and probably for good reason—there is not any. The company had full opрortunity to present the argument regarding backpay tolling in a motion for reconsideration, and the mere inconvenience of severing the issues or delaying a petition for review does not constitute an extraordinary circumstance.
See Woelke & Romero Framing, Inc. v. N.L.R.B.,
For the foregoing reasons, the petition for review is partially granted and partially denied, and the Board’s cross-application for enforcement of its order is partially granted.
So ordered.
Notes
. The ALJ’s list of states, which takes account of CLP’s offices at the time of the hearing (held on various days between September 11, 1995 and November 8, 1996), does not include Colorado. However the Board granted CLP's motion to add to the record
CONTRACTORS LABOR POOL, INC. (IBEW LOCAL UNION 68),
. The consolidated charges in this case were brought by local unions in two of the states of operations: Orange County in Southern California, San Mateo and Contra Costa counties in Northern California, and the Seattle area in Washington.
. However, the ALJ found that CLP had first learned of Local 441’s salting activities somewhat earlier because of an unfair labor practice charge against another company. In response, CLP distributed guideline literature to its employees on how to deal with such campaigns through lawful means, recognizing Local 441 specifically as a union intent on generating unfair labor practice litigation to hurt the company financially.
. The Board in dicta split on whether Local 441's behavior constituted a disabling conflict.
See, e.g., Sunland Construction Co.,
. Of course, in most instances finding an employer’s discriminatory intent against union workers in regard to hire or tenure of employment will demonstrate intent to encourage or discourage union membership. The facts in
Great Dane,
paying accrued benefits to nonunion employees while extinguishing the same benefits for union employees, are a prime example.
See Great Dane Trailers,
. We do not believe the majority adequately responded to Chairman Hurtgen’s dissent on the tolling issue. The three members argued that CLP already had the opportunity to prove that it relied on a disabling conflict in defending against the unfair labor practice charges in this proceeding, and precluded CLP a second opportunity to do so on remand or in subsequent compliance proceedings.
See In re W.D.D.W. Commercial Sys.,
