Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge GINSBURG.
The International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 147, petitions for review of a Decision and Order of the National Labor Relations Board dismissing a complaint issued by the General Counsel against Tidewater Construction Co. The complaint alleged that Tidewater violated §§ 8(a)(1) & (3) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(1) & (3), by refusing to consider for hire six applicants, who Tidewater claims were lawfully locked out. We hold that the Board failed adequately to explain why evidence presented by the Union did not demonstrate that Tidewater had unlawfully refused to consider the applicants due to antiunion animus.
I. Background
Tidewater does heavy industrial and highway bridge construction in the southeastern United States. Until December, 1993 Tidewater was a member of the Virginia Association of Contractors and was a party to successive collective bargaining agreements between the Union and the VAC. Pursuant to this arrangement, Tidewater hired heavy equipment operat
To aid in the process of hiring replacements, Tidewater created a “lockout list” of: (1) the 25 striking employees; (2) 40 other individuals who had been on the Excelsior list of those eligible to vote in the representation election in March, see Excelsior Underwear Inc.,
Tidewater hired 40 replacement workers but refused to consider for employment six applicants who were on the lockout list because they had been eligible to vote in the March election. Those applicants were falsely told they were being denied employment because there was no work available. One of the six rejected applicants would not have been on an updated Excelsior list.
The Union filed an unfair labor practice charge with the Board, and the General Counsel filed a complaint alleging that Tidewater violated §§ 8(a)(1) & (3) of the Act by failing to consider for hire the six applicants. An Administrative Law Judge dismissed the complaint, see Tidewater Constr. Co. and Int’l Union of Operating Eng’rs., Local 147, 333 N.L.R.B. No. 147 at 4-7,
[W]e find that the lockout did not become unlawful because [Tidewater] expanded the lockout beyond current employees who had participated in the strike and refused to consider for hire six job applicants who, by virtue of their prior history of employment in the bargaining unit, were eligible to vote in a Board election held 9 months prior to the start of the lockout....
Id. at 1. The Board concluded that Tidewater’s reliance upon an outdated Excelsior list to determine the scope of the lockout was reasonable. Id. at 1-2. In dissent, Member Liebman pointed to evidence of antiunion animus and rejected Tidewater’s argument that extension of the lockout to all employees eligible to vote in the representation election brought legitimate economic pressure to bear in support of its bargaining position. Id. at 3.
II. Analysis
The court reviews the Board’s decision deferentially. We uphold its findings of fact if they are supported by substantial evidence, see Pac. Micronesia Corp. v. NLRB,
The Board has recently set forth the elements of a refusal-to-consider violation as follows:
To establish a discriminatory refusal to consider ... the General Counsel bears the burden of showing ... (1) that the respondent excluded applicants from a hiring process; and (2) that antiunion animus contributed to the decision not to consider the applicants for employment. Once this is established, the burden will shift to the respondent to show that it would not have considered the applicants even in the absence of their union activity or affiliation. If the respondent fails to meet its burden, then a violation of Section 8(a)(3) is established.
FES (A Division of Thermo Power) and Plumbers and Pipefitters Local 520 of the United Assoc., 331 N.L.R.B. No. 20,
As the Union shows on review, the Board, having correctly framed the dispos-itive question, failed reasonably to address it. In particular, the Board failed adequately to consider three indications that Tidewater was motivated by antiunion animus.
First, the Union argues that the Board unreasonably disregarded Tidewater’s inability to explain why 10 of the 16 individuals who were neither strikers nor on the Excelsior list were included on the lockout list. See Southwest Merch. Corp. v. NLRB,
The ALJ, whose reasoning the Board adopted, noted that after “numerous shifts in position” Tidewater had still provided “no explanation for the inclusion of 10 of the. 16 names” on the list. 333 N.L.R.B. No. 147 at 6. The ALJ ultimately concluded that their being listed did not evidence antiunion animus because the 10 individuals did not apply for employment and there was “no proof that the 10 were even union, members.”. Id. Whether the 10 applied for employment, however, is irrelevant to whether their unexplained inclusion on the list bespeaks antiunion animus.
The Board also argues that Tidewater’s inability to explain why the 10 were on the list does not “alone ... sustain a finding of unlawful motivation.” Perhaps not. On the question of animus, however, as we shall see, the Board did not have this evidence “alone” — which may be why neither the Board nor the ALJ gave this rationale in their respective decisions.
Second, the Union argues that the Board failed to explain why Tidewater’s statements to the six applicants were not also evidence of an antiunion animus, and how, in light of these false statements, the Board’s decision cpuld be reconciled with Eads Transfer, Inc.,
Tidewater falsely told each of the applicants “there was no work available” rather than telling them they were locked out, as it now claims they were. Tidewater Constr. Co., 333 N.L.R.B. No. 147 at 6. From this misrepresentation the Board could have inferred that Tidewater had an unlawful motive. See Property Resources Corp. v. NLRB,
The Board’s decision in this case also appears to be in' some tension with its decision in Eads Transfer, though perhaps not in direct conflict, as the Union claims. There the Board said:
[A]n employer can only justify its failure to reinstate economic strikers “for legitimate and substantial business reasons” based on a “lockout” by its timely announcement to the strikers that it is locking, them out in support of its bargaining position. For only after the employer has informed the strikers of the lockout can the strikers knowingly reevaluate their position and decide whether to accept the employer’s terms and end the strike or to take other appropriate action. In the absence of notification, we conclude that an employer’s failure to reinstate economic strikers based on a claimed lockout on their unconditional offer to return to work is inherently destructive of employee rights ... and is a violation of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act.
Third, the Union claims the Board gave an inadequate explanation why Tidewater’s lockout of the 10 individuals who appeared only on the outdated Excelsior list was not evidence of antiunion animus. Yet again, we agree.
The Supreme Court in American Ship Building held that absent antiunion animus an employer may lawfully lockout its employees.
For the purpose of this case, the Union concedes that Tidewater could have locked out anyone on an Excelsior list compiled at the time of the lockout. The Union argues, however, that because all of Tidewater’s employees before the March election were members of the Union —■ as Tidewater well knew — Tidewater’s use of a list that was 10 months old was evidence of antiunion animus.
The Board held that Tidewater could lock out any employee having a “reasonable employment nexus with the bargaining unit” and that, because there is no way to “defíne with absolute accuracy the outer limits of a former employee’s reasonable expectation of reemployment in a bargaining unit with a fluctuating work force,” Tidewater could rely upon the outdated Excelsior list. 333 N.L.R.B. No. 147 at 1-2. The non-sequitur in this is apparent: Because an Excelsior list is an approximation even when first made, the Board allows an employer still to use it when it is further removed from being accurate by the passage of ten months. The logical gap is equally glaring: The Board has not said why it does not require the use of an updated list. Would such a requirement would be too burdensome? To be sure, Tidewater made this and other claims in its brief to the ALJ, but neither he nor the Board adopted Tidewater’s argument or gave any other reason for their complacency on this score.
III. Conclusion
Because the Board failed in three respects adequately to explain why it did not find convincing evidence of Tidewater’s antiunion animus, the Decision and Order of the Board is vacated and this matter is
So ordered.
Notes
Insofar as the Union contends that Tidewater also violated the Act by placing on its lockout list individuals who never sought employment with Tidewater and never knew they were on the list, the. Board properly dismissed the complaint. Tidewater's actions neither abridged the § 7 rights of these individuals nor discouraged them from union activity.
