The issue before the court is whether the National Labor Relations Board abused its discretion either procedurally or substan *1251 tively by approving an informal post-complaint settlement agreement over the objection of the charging parties. We uphold the Board’s decision.
George Ryan Company and Municipal Engineering and Construction Corporation, both members of the Evansville Contractors Association, filed charges with the National Labor Relations Board alleging that Teamsters Local Union No. 215 had violated §§ 8(b)(1)(A), 8(b)(4)(i) and (ii)(B), and 8(e) of the National Labor Relations Act. 29 U.S.C. § 158(b)(1)(A), 4(i) & (ii)(B), (e). 1 Based on these charges, the Board’s Regional Office issued complaints against the union, which were then consolidated. These complaints alleged that the union had violated § 8(e) by including in its collective bargaining agreement with the Association a provision binding all subcontractors of the contracting employers to the terms of the agreement, 2 and, further, by demanding that Ryan cease doing business with a subcontractor who had no contract with the union. The alleged violations of § 8(b)(4)(B) and § 8(b)(1)(A) were various union efforts to enforce the illegal provision of the contract: a strike of one of Ryan’s job sites, threats of physical injury to employees and supervisors of Municipal if they continued to work at a Municipal job site, physical blockage of entry to the Municipal job site, and threats of reprisals and bodily harm to employees and supervisors of Municipal who filed charges or gave testimony under the Act.
After the hearing before an Administrative Law Judge had commenced, the General Counsel’s representative and the union attorney announced on the record that they had reached an informal settlement agreement. The agreement provided that the union would not “enter into, maintain, give effect to, or enforce Section 1 of Article IX of our contract with Evansville Contractors Association, Inc.,” the provision described above, and declared that provision “unenforceable and void.” The agreement also provided that the union would not induce employees of Ryan or of any other employer to strike for the purpose of forcing any employer to cease doing business with the subcontractor involved in this case or with any other employer. The union also undertook not to try to achieve the same objective by threatening, coercing, or restraining Ryan or any other person engaged in commerce or in an industry affecting commerce, and not to threaten, coerce, or restrain employees in the exercise of their rights under § 7 of the Act. See note 1 supra.
Attorneys for the companies objected to the agreement, primarily on the ground that it permitted the union to enforce §§ 2 and 3 of Article IX of the collective bargaining agreement, 3 “union standards” provisions which they argued had the same effect as the voided provision. They also argued that the promise not to interfere with employees’ § 7 rights was an inadequate remedy for the § 8(b)(1)(A) violation. *1252 After listening to these objections, 4 the ALJ approved the informal settlement agreement, stating only that she was doing so “in light of its satisfaction to the counsel for General Counsel, who is, after all, in charge of . the prosecution of this case.”
The companies then asked the Board for leave to appeal the ALJ’s approval of the informal settlement agreement pursuant to 29 C.F.R. § 101.9(d)(2), and all sides filed written submissions before the Board. The Board issued a telegraphic order summarily denying the companies’ request for leave to appeal. The companies then petitioned this court to review the decision of the Board. 5
The companies here contend that approval of the informal settlement by the ALJ and the Board was beyond the limits of their discretion both procedurally and substantively. According to the companies, the Board and its AU were required to explicate more fully the reasoning behind their decisions and to accord the companies, as charging parties, a larger role in the resolution of this dispute. The companies also argue that various substantive provisions of the settlement agreement are inadequate to remedy the violations charged.
I.
The Board’s discretion with respect to the approval of informal settlement agreements, while not without limit, is broad. In enforcing the Act the Board is not providing a “private administrative remedy,” but is acting in the public interest to prevent unfair labor practices and ensure overall industrial harmony through efficient use of Board resources.
See Amalgamated Utility Workers v. Consolidated Edison Co.,
II.
Procedurally, petitioners ask us to remand to the Board for either further explication of its decision or an evidentiary hearing. The federal case law delineating the rights of charging parties dissatisfied with a settlement agreement reached by the Board and the charged party varies widely from circuit to circuit.
See
14 A.L.R.Fed. 25, 53-60 (1973). In
UAW v. NLRB,
The case at bar is distinguishable because, although the companies did have an opportunity to state their objections before the AU on the record, the attorneys for the General Counsel and the union presented no arguments countering those advanced by the charging party, and the AU gave no indication of her reasons for approving the settlement despite the charging party’s objections. No doubt she should have articulated such reasons. The question before us is whether her failure to do so, coupled with the Board’s like failure in denying leave to appeal, requires remand.
We hold that remand for articulation of reasons is unnecessary under the circumstances of this case. The charging parties’ opportunity to state their objections before the AU and, in greater detail, in briefs before the Board provided them with sufficient opportunity to participate in the approval of the settlement in view of the nature of the substantive objections to the settlement. An administrative agency is generally required to articulate its reasons because effective judicial review of agency actions is thereby facilitated.
See NLRB v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
As to the companies’ request for a remand for an evidentiary hearing, such a hearing is not required unless there is a dispute about a material fact.
See, e. g., NLRB
v.
Oil, Chemical, & Atomic Workers International Union, supra
note 7,
*1254 III.
The companies’ primary substantive contention is that the settlement inadequately remedies the alleged § 8(e) violations because it allows the union to achieve the prohibited ends of § 1 of Article IX of the collective bargaining agreement through enforcement of §§ 2 and 3 of that Article.
Agreements to force cessation of business with other employers that have “primary,” as opposed to “secondary,” goals are permissible even though the terms of § 8(e) do not draw a distinction,
9
NLRB v. Enterprise Association of Pipefitters,
In the case at bar the settlement agreement enforces a permissible union standards provision. While § 1 of Article IX of the collective bargaining agreement required the companies to make all subcontractors party to the collective bargaining agreement, §§ 2 and 3 served only to dissuade the companies from contracting out union work by requiring them to reimburse subcontractors’ employees for any difference between the rate paid them and the rate specified in the collective bargaining agreement for the companies’ employees.
The companies also argue that the Board should have invalidated § 5 of Article XI of the collective bargaining agreement, which permits the union to use “economic recourse” to remedy any breach of the contract. This argument, however, is based on the incorrect assumption that §§ 2 and 3 of Article IX can be justified only by the construction industry proviso of § 8(e),
see
note 9
supra,
and thus cannot be enforced through economic action.
See Los Angeles Building & Construction Trades Council,
239 N.L.R.B. No. 42, at 19-22 (Nov. 13, 1978). Inasmuch as those sections constitute valid union standards provisions with primary objectives, economic recourse is permitted so long as it is directed to benefitting union members in their relations with their employer rather than to achieving union objectives elsewhere.
See NLRB v. Enterprise Association of Pipefitters, supra,
The companies’ other arguments are equally without merit. That the settlement does not provide for a “consent decree” or the entry of a court order if the union breaches the terms of the settlement is not a reason for overturning it. If it is breached, it can be set aside and the case heard on the merits.
See Oshkosh Truck v. NLRB, supra,
Petition for Review Denied.
Notes
. Those subsections of § 8 make it an unfair labor practice for a union (1) to coerce employees in the exercise of their rights under § 7 of the Act, which include the right to organize and engage in other concerted activities for mutual protection and the right to refrain from such activities, (2) to strike or refuse to handle particular goods, to encourage others to do so, or to coerce anyone in commerce in order to force someone to cease dealing with another or to bargain with an uncertified labor representative, unless the union’s acts constitute an otherwise lawful primary action, or (3) to enter into an agreement with an employer under which the employer agrees to cease doing business with someone else.
. “This Agreement shall bind all sub-contractors while working for the Employer who is a party to this Agreement. Any Employer who sub-lets any of his work on any project he has in the territory covered by this Agreement must let same subject to this Agreement.” Article IX, § 1.
. Article IX . . .
Section 2. Should any employee or any subcontractor be paid less than the rates provided herein, then the signatory Employer shall be required to reimburse such employee for any deficiencies in rate which accrue.
Section 3. No deficiency accrued shall be retroactive for more than thirty (30) days prior to the contractor receiving written notice from the Union that such deficiency exists.
. 29 C.F.R. § 101.9(d)(1) requires only that an ALJ give the objecting party “an opportunity to state on the record or in writing its reasons for opposing the settlement.”
. Our jurisdiction is based on § 10(f) of the Act.
See International Ladies’ Garment Workers Local 415 v. NLRB,
. Even though distinguishing
UAW, Oshkosh Truck
also cast doubt on its continued validity by rejecting the Third Circuit’s broad approach in
Marine Engineers’ Beneficial Ass’n v. NLRB,
.
We do not accept the position of the D.C. Circuit, which requires only that the Board either provide the charging party a reasonable opportunity to be heard on its objections or state on the record its reasons for accepting the settlement. See International
Ladies’ Garment Workers Local 415 v. NLRB, supra
note 5,
. The companies also contend that the ALJ totally abnegated all independence in approving the settlement under review. It is undisputed that the judicial branch of the Board constitutes a semi-independent branch of the agency. 2 K. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 10.06, at 35 (1958); K. Davis, Administrative Law of the Seventies § 10.06 (1976). Yet although the ALJ here may not have acted independently, there is no showing that the Board, after consideration of the detailed briefs provided by all the various parties, failed to *1254 come to an independent decision regarding the merits of the companies’ objections.
. Section 8(e) does include a proviso permitting secondary agreements in the construction industry, but that proviso is not relied on here.
. If the union attempts to administer §§ 2 and 3 coercively for secondary purposes, it would violate its commitment in the settlement agreement not to violate § 8(b)(4)(B) of the Act.
See NLRB v. Enterprise Ass’n of Pipefitters,
