The Electrical Contractors’ Association of Chicago bargains with Local 134 of the Electrical Workers Union on behalf of its members, one of which is Lid Electric. When appointing the Association as its agent for collectivе bargaining, Lid elected to be bound by the agreement then in effect between the Association and the Union, as well as any amendments to or extensions of that agreement. (The “Principal Agreement” or “Inside Agreement” is the main collective bargaining agreement. There are some additional pacts that we need not describe, so we refer simply to the “Agreement.”) Lid’s assent remains in force to this day, but it has refused to implement one rule that the Association and the Union promulgated: that a drug-testing program adopted in 2001 be applied to all employees of each participating firm. When Lid declined to test any employees other than the electricians rеpresented by the Union, a grievance was filed and led to an order by the Electrical Joint Arbitration Board (the EJAB) that the Union would not refer any members to Lid for employment until Lid complied. Lid then commenced this proceeding for judicial review of the award. The district judge held that the award is invalid.
Both the Union and the EJAB have appealed. Why the arbitrators should be a defendant, Lid has never explained. Nor do we know why Lid omitted the Association as a party. If anyone has violated Lid’s rights, it is the Association— which, by Lid’s lights, is a faithless agent. Yet the EJAB has not complained about its status as a litigant, and neither the Union nor the EJAB has protested the Association’s absence. As a practical mattеr, this appeal will determine everyone’s rights (the Union, Association, and EJAB are contractual partners), so there is no reason to insist that the cast of characters be altered. Moreover, the controversy remаins. live despite the expiration of the Agreement that was in force when the EJAB issued its award. See
Cox Corp. v. NLRB,
Lid’s grant of authority to the Association provides:
the undersigned firm does hereby authorize Electrical Contractors’ Association of City of Chicago, Inc., ÑECA as its collective bargaining representative for all matters contained in or pertaining to the current and any subsequent approved Inside labor agreement between the Electrical Contrs. Assoc., NECA, City of Chicago and. Local Union 134, IBEW. In doing so, the undersigned firm agrees to comply with, and be bound by, all of the provisions contained *942 in said current and subsequеnt approved labor agreements. This authorization, in compliance with the , current approved labor agreement, shall become effective on the 27 day of September, 1996. It shall remain in effect until terminated by the undersigned employer giving written notice to the Electrical Contrs. Assoc., ÑECA, City of Chicago and to the Local Union at least one hundred fifty (150) days prior to the then current anniversary date of the applicable approvеd labor agreement.
This language authorizes the Association to adopt, on Lid’s behalf, any provision “pertaining to” the electricians’ wages, working conditions, and other matters normally covered by a collective bаrgaining agreement. Lid must implement “all” provisions of the agreements, not just those it approves. And we must take it that the Association and Union did adopt the drug-testing program as a protocol to the 1999 Agreement. The 1999 Agreement sрecifies a program to be negotiated later. The record is not clear just how these negotiations were completed; it may well be (as Lid contends) that the .negotiators were the same eight persons who make up the EJAB (four from management, four from labor). Negotiating details do not matter, for two reasons: first, the Agreement itself authorizes the EJAB to amend as well as to interpret the document; second, both the Association and the Union hаve embraced the drug-testing protocol, and ratification puts it into force no matter how the text came into being.
The Union was willing to have the electricians tested but not to be singled out. So it insisted on a form of most-favored-nations clause: the electricians would submit to drug testing only if the employers tested their other workers too. The Association assented; and Lid, as a member, is bound if the program became one “of the provisions containеd in said current and subsequent approved labor agreements.” Lid insists that the program' is not a “provision” of the Agreement, but the EJAB thought otherwise, and in doing so did not exceed the wide latitude allowed to a labor arbitrator. See
Major League Baseball Players Ass’n v. Garvey,
Lid believes, however — and the district court held' — ’that even if the drug-testing plan is part of the Agreement, the Union and Association have no authority to make *943 rules binding on other employees. Unions represent workers in units certified by the National Labor Relations Board; they do not speak for workers in gross. The Union cannot waive any rights of persons outside the bargaining unit or negotiate contracts on their behalf. True enough, but irrelevаnt. The Agreement (with the drug-testing rider) does not purport to establish legal obligations for anyone other than the Association’s members and the electricians the Union represents. It does not have to. The Agreement binds Lid itself; no more is necessary. The Union and Association jointly created, not an undertaking by non-unit employees to submit to tests, but an obligation that Lid administer drug tests to all of its employees. The Association acted as Lid’s agent when agreeing that Lid (like other members) would conduct thеse tests. None of Lid’s non-unit employees is obliged to submit; but Lid must attempt to secure their cooperation using the tools of persuasion at its disposal. For employees without term contracts (that is, employees at will), Lid cаn credibly threaten discharge. It is Lid’s own disregard of its promise to implement the Agreement in full that the EJAB penalized by the termination of referral services. Lid could have adopted a drug-testing regimen for its other workers unilaterally; the еmployees would have had no legal complaint (with one exception discussed below). Choices that Lid could make on its own it also could delegate to the Association to make as its agent in the course of collective bargaining (and in exchange for something employers value). Transferring bargaining chips to an agent for many employers may strengthen the hand of all.
Labor law permits collective bargaining agreements to reаch beyond the certified unit of workers. How employers treat non-unit workers is a permissive subject of bargaining. Neither union nor employer is required to negotiate about permissive subjects (that’s what it means to call them “permissive” rather than “mandatory”), see
NLRB v. Borg-Warner Corp.,
What the Association cannot do on Lid’s behalf, however, is commit Lid to violate rules of positive law. Nor may an arbitration аward require unlawful acts. See
George Watts & Son, Inc. v. Tiffany & Co.,
The judgment of the district court is vacated, and the case is remanded with instructions to enter an order enforcing the arbitral award, except to the extent that it requires Lid to violate the bargaining rights of workers represented by other unions.
