OPINION
Trafftech entered into collective bargaining agreements with two different unions and, according to one version of events, promised each of them the same work on an exclusive basis. The International Brotherhood of Workers, Local 71 objected to sharing the work (as apparently did the other union, but its objection is not before us) and filed a grievance with the company. When the parties failed to resolve the grievance, the union sued, asking the district court to enforce an arbitration clause in the collective bargaining agreement. The district court granted summary judgment to the union, permitting it to enforce the arbitration clause.
Characterizing the dispute as a representational matter outside the jurisdiction of the federal courts, Trafftech appeals. By the exprеss terms of the collective bargaining agreement, however, Trafftech and Local 71 committed grievances of this sort to resolution by arbitration. The fact that Trafftech may have entered into another collective bargaining agreement regarding some of the same work does not necessarily make the dispute a representational one committed exclusively to the National Labor Relations Board. Because § 301 of *692 the Labor Management Relations Act gives the federal courts concurrent jurisdiction to enforce an arbitration clause like this one, we affirm.
I.
Trafftech is a road and highway construction contractor. Under § 8(f) of the National Labor Relations Act, a company in the building and construction industry may enter into a collective bargaining agreement with a union to provide a pool of employees for the company. 29 U.S.C. § 158(f).
Consistent with this provision, Trafftech entered into collective bargaining agreements under § 8(f) with two different unions. In 1990 (and most recently in 2001 through a renewal of the agreement), Trafftech agreed with the Laborers District Council of Ohio of the Laborers International Union of North America, Local 860 to provide its members with certain work, including “the construction of all ... highway lighting [and] signal lighting.” D. Ct. Op. at 3 n. 2,
On May 12, 2003, Local 71 filed 11 grievances with Trafftech under the collective bargaining agreement and sought arbitration to resolve the dispute. With respect to each violation, Local 71 identified the grievance and the section of the collective bargaining agreement that it violated. The 11 grievances coverеd the waterfront of labor-management disputes, though the parties agree that most of the disputes stem in one way or another from Traff-tech’s practice of giving some electrical-related work on traffic signals and highway lighting to Local 860 members rather than to Local 71 members. In response, Trafftech filed a representation petition with the National Labor Relations Board, maintaining that the grievances should be interpreted as a claim by Local 71 that it is the majority representative of all of Traff-tech’s electrical workers, a claim that “called for an election to be conducted by the Board.” Trafftech Br. at 6. Soon thereafter, Local 71 also filed a charge with the Board, arguing that Trafftech had violated §§ 8(a)(1), (2) and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act by (in the words of the Board) “refus[ing] to process grievances, ... reassigning] bargaining unit work, and ... failing] to follow the exclusive hiring hall procedures as set forth in the parties’ contract.” JA 178.
On June 16, 2003, Local 71 filed this action, seeking to compel arbitration of its grievances under § 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act. On April 15, 2004, the district court, with the agreement of the parties, chose to place the case in abеyance and to defer to the Board’s preferences in resolving the complaints already before it. On November 30, 2004, the Board informed the parties that it would “administratively defer[ ] in light of [the district court’s] concurrent jurisdiction of cases involving breaches of collective bargaining agreements under [§ ] 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act.” D. Ct. Op. at 8-9 (internal quotation marks omitted). At that point, Trafftech moved the district court to dismiss the case on the ground that the district court did not have subject matter jurisdiction to consider Local 71’s complaint or in the alternative to re-defer to the Board.
*693 The district court rejected Traffteeh’s motion. Because the federal-court complaint turned on alleged “violations of contracts between [an] employer[] and [a] labor organization[ ],” thе court concluded that § 301 gave it concurrent jurisdiction over the matter and permitted it to grant the motion to compel arbitration. Id. at 12. “There is simply no evidence in the record,” the court noted, “that [Local 71] seeks to represent the employees of [Local 860]”; to the contrary, “Local 71 is seeking an interpretation of the Agreement which may, or may not, be understood as providing thе plaintiff with the contractually bargained for hiring and work assignment exclusivity it alleges.” Id. at 14. As a result, the district court granted summary judgment for Local 71 on its § 301 claim, compelling arbitration of the grievances.
II.
Section 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act empowers district courts to hear “[s]uits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization.” 29 U.S.C. § 185(a). As a componеnt of that authority, a district court may “grant the union specific enforcement of an arbitration clause in a collective-bargaining agreement.”
Buffalo Forge Co. v. United Steelworkers,
Like the district court, we believe that this arbitration claim “is governed by the contract.” Loсal 71 filed 11 grievances with the union. In doing so, it identified the section of the collective bargaining agreement that each grievance violated, and when the company refused to address the grievances, the union invoked its rights under Article I, §§ 5-8 of the collective bargaining agreement. Those sections say that if the parties cannot resolve grievances on their own, “the parties shall jointly request Federal Mediation & Conciliation Service to .... hear the grievance.” D. Ct. Op. at 4. Local 71 followed the procedures required by the collective bargaining agreement to arbitrate the grievances. Traffteeh refused to arbitrate, and Local 71 therefore permissibly filed this claim under § 301(a) seeking an order compelling Traffteeh “to participate in the arbitration procedure of these grievances.” JA8.
In one sense, Traffteeh does not disagree with any of the premises of this analysis. It concedes that the district court may compel arbitration if it has jurisdiction over the case. And it does not dispute that the traditional requirements for jurisdiction exist here, namely that the collective bargaining agreement governs these grievances and permits arbitration of them.
Traffteeh resists thе conclusion that normally flows from these premises on the ground that
Garmon
preemption applies, giving the Board exclusive jurisdiction over this dispute.
See San Diego Bldg. Trades Council v. Garmon,
Of course, unlike a traditional Garmon preemption сlaim, Local 71 did not invoke its rights under these provisions of the National Labor Relations Act in bringing this claim; it raised violations only of the collective bargaining agreement and sought relief only under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act. Trafftech responds that it has asserted a claim with the Board under § 8(f) to test Local 71’s majority status, and, having done so, argues that the federal courts must defer jurisdiction over thеse grievances until the Board has resolved the representational dispute. We disagree.
Carey v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
The employer in
Carey,
it is true, had not taken the step of filing a representational matter before the Board — as Traff-tech has done. But that happenstance does not make a difference: As
Carey
acknowledged, either party could apply for a remedy before the Board and the federal court action could proceed even if one of them did pursue this route of relief.
Id.
at 268,
Since
Carey,
this court has drawn the following dichotomy between disputes implicating the exclusive initial jurisdiction of the Board under
Garmon
and those implicating the concurrent jurisdiction of the federal courts under § 301. When a
*695
dispute is “primarily representational” under § 7 or § 8 of the National Labor Relations Act, “simply referring to the claim as a ‘breach of contract’ [is] insufficient for the purposes of § 301 federal courts’ jurisdiсtion,” but “matter[s] primarily of contract interpretation, whi[ch] potentially implicate] representational issues,” remain within the federal courts’ § 301 jurisdiction.
Paper Workers Int’l Union v. Air Prods. & Chems., Inc.,
Our sister circuits have embraced a similar jurisdictional division between primarily representational and collaterally representational labor-management disputes.
See Pace v. Honolulu Disposal Serv., Inc.,
Trafftech’s arguments fall on the wrong side of this line. Local 71 permissibly characterized its action as a dispute arising under the collective bargаining agreement. And while Trafftech’s filings with the Board raised representational issues under § 7 and §'8 of the National Labor Relations Act, they did not convert Local 71’s complaint into one that is primarily representational in nature.
Nor do Trafftech’s arguments implicate two types of situations in which a dispute will be treated as primarily representational: where the Board has already exercised jurisdiction oyer a matter and is either considering it or has already decided the matter,
see, e.g., Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers v. Iowa Elec. Light & Power Co.,
Traffteeh persists that we said otherwise in
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers v. Olympic Plating Industries, Inc.,
This case presents a poor analogy to that situation. While the § 301 claim presented to us relates to 11 alleged breaches of the collective bargaining agreement, which turn on an interpretation of that contract as well as on the particular facts of each alleged violation, the representational matter before the Board merely queries whether a majority of the employees working on electrical work for traffic-signal and highway-lighting construction support Local 71. While the question before the Board is clearly representational, the issues presented to us are more akin to what the Supreme Court called “a controversy as to whether certain work should be performed by workers in one bargaining unit or those in another.”
Carey,
As far as our precedents are concerned,
Paper Workers International Union v. Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.,
Trafftech’s preferred rule — that the federal courts should stay their jurisdictional hand whenever a party files a petition with the Board asserting that an issue implicates representational issues — either would be unmanageable or would too readily undermine Congress’s creation of concurrent jurisdiction under § 301. By simply characterizing its dispute as representational, regardless of the Board’s interest in the dispute and regardless of the Board’s decision itself to defer jurisdiction (as here), a party to a collective bargaining agreement could avoid (or at least delay) *697 having to answer for alleged violations of that contract in federal court. No precedent supports this end run around § 301.
Trafftech, lastly, complains that because Local 860 has filed complementary grievances that have gone to arbitration, it is possible that enforcement of the arbitration clause on behalf of Local 71 may result in contradictory federal-court rulings. This consideration seems to go to the heart of Trafftech’s concerns but not of ours.
Carey,
for one, acknowledged in a similar situation that even if the arbitration did not bind both unions, it still had the potential to resolve the dispute — and that remained a benefit of permitting arbitration to proceed.
See
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
