Hughes Properties, Inc. (the Employer) petitions for review of an order of the National Labor Relations Board requiring it to cease and desist from prohibiting union solicitation by its off-shift employees in one of its public bars. The Board filed a cross-application for enforcement of its order. We enforce the order.
. The Employer operates a large casino, known as Harolds Club, in Reno, Nevada. It had in force a rule barring (1) any solicitation by employees during working hours and (2) distribution of literature by employees during working hours or at any time in areas open to the public. The episode which gave rise to these unfair labor practice charges occurred when an off-duty games dealer, Gary Fisher, who was also an official of the Professional Association of Gaming Employees (the Union), discussed union membership with six other games dealers. 1 The Union was attempting to organize games dealers. The discussion in question took place during off-duty time in a public bar which was adjacent to, and slightly raised from, the casino’s gambling area. It was not unusual for off-duty employees to meet in the bar since the Employer, by giving employees free drink tokens, encouraged employees to spend off-duty time there. Fisher promoted the Union to the employees at his table and then passed around authorization cards. The Employer’s floor manager interrupted the meeting and instructed Fisher to stop his activity or leave. After a brief discussion, Fisher left. The Union then filed an unfair labor practice charge with the Board claiming that the interruption violated section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1).
We must decide, therefore, whether the Employer enforced and maintained an overly broad no-solicitation rule which interfered with the employees’ rights to organize under section 7 of the NLRA, 29 U.S.C. § 157. Such issues arise with some frequency from clashes between employees asserting their rights to organize and employers asserting their rights to control their businesses. The long history of both Board and court decisions on employer no-solicitation policies bears witness to the tension between these two interests. The Supreme Court comprehensively reviewed this history in
Beth Israel Hospital v. NLRB,
Early in its administration of the NLRA, the Board fashioned general rules defining
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the presumptive validity or invalidity of solicitation bans. The Supreme Court upheld the validity of these rules in
Republic Aviation Corp. v. NLRB,
The basic presumptive rules that
Republic Aviation
approved are quite simple. A ban on all solicitation during working hours is presumptively valid, but a ban on all solicitation during non-working hours is presumptively invalid.
Id.
at 803 & n. 10,
In the hospital context, the Board applied these principles to hold that a ban on employee solicitation in a cafeteria during non-working hours was overly broad.
Beth Israel Hospital,
In this case, the Administrative Law Judge viewed the bar area as analogous to the selling floor of a department store and applied
Marshall Field
to hold that the ban on solicitation and its enforcement in the bar area was valid. The Board, without disputing the AU’s factual findings, applied the same case differently. It viewed the bar area as analogous to a restaurant within a retail sales operation. It held that a ban on solicitation could not be enforced here because the solicitation was conducted in a manner consistent with the purpose of the restaurant and the employees’ conduct was not disruptive.
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The guiding principle the Board applied permits solicitation in a facility, as a restaurant, on an employer’s premises so long as the solicitation comports with the normal use of the facility and is not disruptive. The Board correctly points out that its decision in this case is consistent with all of its decisions that have upheld enforcement of no-solicitation rules during non-working hours when working employees might be the target and hence service might be disrupted.
Marriott Corp.,
Our inquiry is limited to “whether the Board’s factual findings are supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole and whether the Board’s application of those findings is rational and consistent with the Act.”
Construction Erectors, Inc. v. NLRB,
The Employer argues that to approve the Board’s decision in this case would conflict with our decision in
NLRB v. Silver Spur Casino,
As an alternative basis for overturning the Board’s decision, the Employer asks us to hold that even though the employees of the bar were not actually targets of the organizational effort, the Employer at the time was under the good faith impression that they might be, and, therefore, the Employer should not be guilty of an unfair labor practice. This was the alternative basis for the ALJ’s decision. It is, however, contrary to settled authority; an employer’s belief, whether reasonable or unreasonable, is not the determinative factor in deciding whether there has been an interference with employees’ rights under
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section 7.
NLRB v. Litho Press,
The petition for review is denied and the Board’s order is enforced.
Notes
. The facts are set forth in greater detail in the Board’s and Administrative Law Judge’s decisions which are reported at
Hughes Properties, Inc.,
