We are asked to review and enforce an order of the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB” or “Board”) charging Dunbar Armored, Inc. (“Dunbar”) with violating Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA” or “Act”), U.S.C. § 158(a)(5) and (1), by refusing to bargain with the United Plant Guard Workers of America (“Union”), the certified representative of a unit оf Dunbar employees. Dunbar admits refusing to bargain, but insists that the Board’s unit determination was inappropriately narrow because it consisted of employees at only one of Dunbar’s branch offices. Because the Board’s unit determination was permissible, we now grant its application for enforcement.
Background
Dunbar oрerates a nationwide armored car courier service out of its headquarters in Baltimore, Maryland. Its primary business is the transport and safekeeping of money and other valuable items. The company’s Mid-Atlantic Region consists of terminals and offices in Baltimore (the main regional office) and Timonium, Maryland; Cinnaminsоn and Kenilworth, New Jersey; Scranton, York and Allentown, Pennsylvania; and New York City.
In February 1998, the Union petitioned the NLRB seeking to represent a unit of eighty-five drivers, guards and vault employees at Dunbar’s terminal in Cinnamin-son. Dunbar objected, claiming that its Cinnaminson facility does not constitute an appropriate unit because its entire аrmored car operations are functionally integrated within the Region: employees from the different branch offices perform identical tasks, are governed by uniform company policies and procedures dictated by the regional headquarters in Baltimore and often work side by side with employees from different branches. Dunbar instead proposed a Region-wide unit — or one including just Cinnaminson, Kenilworth, Allentown, and Baltimore — as more suitable. After a hearing, the Board’s Regional Director decided in favor of the Union. Dunbar Armored, Inc., 4-RC-19348. The Board then denied Dunbar’s request to review the decision, and in early May 1998, a majority of the unit employees at Cinna-minson voted in favor of the Union in a secret-ballot election. The Regional Director then issued a Certification of Representation designating the Union as the collective bargaining representative of the Cinnaminson unit.
Following certification, Dunbar refused to bargain and the Union filed an unfair labor prаctice charge asserting violations of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. While it concedes its refusal to bargain, Dunbar challenged the Union’s certification on the ground that a single-site unit at Cinnamin-son was inappropriately narrow. The Board rejected Dunbar’s claim without reviewing the unit determination and, in its Decision and Ordеr of September 30, 1998, ordered Dunbar to negotiate with the Union concerning the Cinnaminson workforce. Dunbar Armored, Inc.,
Dunbar now appeals the Board’s decision,
Discussion
Standard of Review
While our review is meaningful, it is decidedly deferential: “The Board’s reasonable inferences may not be displaced on review even though [we] might justifiably have reached a different conclusion....” U.S. Marine Corop. v. NLRB, 944 F.2d
Bargaining unit dеterminations are firmly committed to the Board’s discretion. See 29 U.S.C. § 159(b);
Under these standards, Dunbar obviously faces an uphill battle in reversing the Board’s unit determination as inappropriate: “(T)he issue as to what unit is appropriate for bargaining is one for which no absolute rule of law is laid down by statute, and none should be by decision. It involves of necessity a large measure of informed discretion, and the decision of the Board, if not final, is rarely to be disturbed.” Packard Motor Car Co. v. NLRB,
Single-Site Unit Determination
For employers who operate multiple facilities, the Board has long maintained that a single facility (or site) is a “presumptively appropriate” unit for collective bargaining purposes. See Aaron’s Office Furniture,
Initially, Dunbar asserts that, regardless of the factors, the Board impermissibly ignored its own practice of rejecting single-site units in the armored car industry. See American Courier Corp.,
Single-Site Factors
In claiming that the single-site presumption has been rebutted, and that the Regional Director therefore erred in approving the Cinnaminson unit, Dunbar focuses on two of the relevant factors: central control of labor relations as opposed to local autonomy and degree of employee interchange among the branches. However, having reviewed the record evidence, we believe the Regional Director’s decision is sustainable. While the Cinnaminson facility may not be the only suitable bargaining unit, we do not believe it is an inappropriate one.
Degree of Centralized Control/Local Autonomy
Dunbar’s first claim is that its evidence of the centralized management by the Mid-Atlantic Region headquarters undercuts the Director’s conclusion that the Cinnaminson branch was sufficiently autonomous. The еmployer relies primarily on the fact that all ultimate personnel decisions (including hiring, firing, serious discipline and transfers) are made by the regional manager in Baltimore. Additionally, the wage scale and basic company policy are set in Baltimore, as is the designation of pick-up and delivery routes. Dunbar asserts that the Cinnaminson branch manager has virtually no authority other than implementing the decisions and policies of the Baltimore office. This, the employer argues, rebuts the presumption in favor of a single-site unit. See American Courier Corp.,
However, the Regional Director’s findings contradict Dunbar’s assertion. In its decision, the Director specified that “[i]ni-tial interviews for employment and promotions, low level discipline, route assignments, overtime assignments, employee evaluations and promotions and vacation scheduling are all within the exclusive domain of the branch management.” From this, the Director concluded that “there is
The record confirms that the Director’s factual findings are suppоrted by substantial evidence, and we do not second guess them. See Union-Tribune Pub. Co. v. NLRB,
Employee Interchanges
Dunbar next argues that because drivers and guards from other Dunbar branch facilities frequently stop at the Cinnamin-son facility and often come in contract with its employees, the employee interchange factor weighs against a single-site unit. See NLRB v. Pinkerton’s Inc.,
However, a closer examination of the record confirms the Director’s conclusion that the actual extent of employee interchange at Cinnaminson is not significant and it does not rebut the single-site presumption. First, the jewelry shows do not occur often. Moreover, as the Director noted, because Dunbar has not presented any evidence that the employees assigned to those shows came from any particular group of branch offices (or even regions), the shows do not suggest any other appropriate unit within Dunbar, and therefore failed to show that Cinnaminson was inappropriate. Next, Dunbar’s figure of 1600 “temporary transfers” is based primarily on the fact that a handful of drivers from other branches regularly stop to load or unload their trucks at the Cinnaminson terminal. Dunbar argues that because these drivers come within the jurisdiction of Cinnaminson during the thirty to ninety minutes it takes to load or unload their trucks, they should be considered temporarily transferred. The Regional Director rejected this argument, and her decision is supported by Board precedent indicating that this kind of contаct does not rise to the level of “interchange.” See Courier Dispatch Group,
Other Factors
Because the parties do not strongly dispute the other factors, we need only address them briefly. They include: the bargaining history of the parties; the similarity of employee skills, functions and working conditions; and the distance between locations. First, the Regional Director held that because the parties have no bargaining history to the contrary, this factor weighs in favor of the single-site unit sought by the Union. See Overnite Transportation,
Conclusion
Dunbar has not demonstrated that the Board’s Regional Director acted arbitrarily or irrationally in determining that the employees of the Cinnaminson facility constituted an appropriate bargaining unit. Upon review of the record, we are convinced that the Regionаl Director could permissibly conclude that the presumption in favor of single-site bargaining units has not been overcome. For these reasons, the Board’s application for enforcement of its order is granted.
Notes
. Dunbar’s other regions are Washington Metropolitan, Virginia, Northeast, Midwest, Southwest and Northwest.
. The Union has intеrvened in support of the NLRB, and seeks enforcement of the Order.
. Section 9(b) of the Act provides in part:
The Board shall decide in each case whether, in order to assure to employees the fullest freedom in exercising the rights guaranteed by th[e] Act, the unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining shall be the employer unit, craft unit, plant unit, or subdivision thereof....
29 U.S.C. § 159.
. We note that neither American Courier Corp.,
. We note that Board precedent indicates that employee contact of the kind described by Dunbar can bе considered "interchange” where there is evidence that a significant portion of the workforce is involved and that the workforce is actually supervised by the local branch. See Purolator Courier, 265 NLRB at 661 (interchange factor met where 50% of workforce came within jurisdiction of other branches on daily basis and "receive[d] a grеater degree of supervision from supervisors at other terminals than they d[id] from the supervisors at their own terminals.”). Dunbar has failed to make such a showing here. See Walgreen v. NLRB,
