Wе are asked to review a decision by the Labor Board which holds rather surprisingly that none of the captains, first mates, or chief engineers of riverboat gambling casinos is a supervisor within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 152(11); NLRB v. Health Care & Retirement Corp. of America,
The two riverboats in question are lаrge, expensive ships, valued at $60 and $80 million respectively. The smaller one carries 1000 passengers and the larger 1300. Each boat sails eight times a day for an hour at a time, cruising the Des Plaines River for a mile out and back from Joliet, Illinois. The crew consists of a captain, first mate, chief engineer, and 7 to 10 deckhands (including an oiler). A number of other employees also work on the boats (cooks, bartenders, waiters, croupiers, security personnel, and so forth), with the result that there is a total of about 150 to 200 employеes of Empress on each boat when it is sailing. Yet according to the Labor Board the only supervisor of the employees on the boats (including the officers) is the head of Empress’s Marine Operations department, a shore-based gentleman named Gehrke. Although the boats are manned 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and do not sail only during business hоurs, Gehrke works a normal business day, though he does carry a beeper when he’s not in his office.
In this age of instantaneous communication, not all supervisors need be present every minute in the workplace that they are supervising. Children’s Habilitation Center, Inc. v. NLRB,
Some of the regional director’s findings, such as that the captains conducted no interviews of job applicants after 1995, are flat wrong, and others are incomprehensible, such as classifying some post-1995 interviews of applicants as “meetings” without indicating the difference between meeting1 and interviewing an applicant. Hе laid great and mistaken emphasis on the fact that the officers don’t have the final say in hiring or firing. This is true of most supervisors; a decision to hire or fire is often reviewed by several layers of management. What is critical is the weight of the first-line supervisor’s recommendation in the final decision, and on this the regional director’s opinion is completely unsatisfactory because of his unexplained failure to consider the company’s current practices. He found, for example, that all job interviews “are conducted by the Pоrt Captains, Port Engineers, or Marine Operations Manager,” yet he also (and correctly) found that the positions of Port Captain and Port Engineer had been abolished. Gehrkе’s uncontradicted testimony was that the captains and first mates interviewed job applicants and that he relied heavily on their recommendations, and no more was neсessary to show that those officers are supervisors, for the statutory term embraces not only individuals who have the authority to hire but also those who have the authority “effectively to recommend such action.” 29 U.S.C. § 152(11); see NLRB v. Winnebago Television Corp.,
Another disturbing feature of the regional director’s decision (and the Board’s silent affirmance) is the failure to consider the significance of the very low ratio of supervisors to nonsupervisory employees that the decision produced: one supervisor for hundreds of employees. The ratio of supervisors to supervised is а factor much emphasized in the eases, NLRB. v. GranCare, Inc.,
The evidence of significant delegation of supervisory functions such as hiring and discipline to the officers, especially the captains and first mates, is evidence that Gerhke cannot manage the riverboat casino operation all by himself. His most obvious incapacity — his practical inability to intervene in the event of an emergency on one of the boats when it is sailing up or down the river' — is actually the least important. The cases distinguish between supervision and the exercise of professional judgment, NLRB v. Health Care & Retirement Corp. of America,
The evidence for the supervisory status of the captains and chief mates is conclusive; the status of thе chief engineers is less clear, but as the regional director’s opinion does not trace a rational connection between the facts bearing on the responsibilities of the chief engineers and the conclusion that they are not supervisors, the Board’s order must be set aside with respect to them also and the case remanded to the Board. E.g., International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 150 v. NLRB,
The petition for review of the Board’s order is therefore granted and enforcement of its order denied.
