When the Lincoln Park Zoological Society (“the Society”) took over the operation of the Lincoln Park Zoo from the Chicago Park District, it refused to recognize Public Service Employees Union, Local 46 (“the Union”) as the bargaining representative of the Zoo employees. The Union complained to the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”), which ordered the Society, as a successive employer, to recognize the Union as the exclusive bargaining representative of the employees. Deferring to the considered judgment of the NLRB, which found that the Union’s historical relationship with the Zoo employees and its contractual relationship with the Park District were sufficient to prove that it represented a majority of the Zoo employees, we affirm the order of the NLRB.
I.
On January 1, 1995, the Society, up to this point primarily a fund-raising organization, took over the operation of the Zoo from the Chicago Park District. The Zoo employs between 70 and 80 persons, who, prior to the shift in control, were part of the 2,500 employee Park District workforce, which was represented en masse by the Union. Because workers for the Park District are considered public sector employees, negotiations between the Park District and the Union are covered by the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act (“IPLRA”), 5 Ill. Comp. Stat. 315/1 et seq. (West 1997). The Park District has entered into successive collective bargaining agreements with the Union since at least 1984, the year in which the IPLRA became effective. When the Society, a private entity, assumed control of the Zoo, the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 151 et seq., became the law governing labor negotiations between the Zoo employees and management.
Subsequent to this shift in management, the Society refused to recognize the Union
Perhaps because the Society hired at least 75 percent of the Zoo staff, it does not dispute on appeal the Board’s finding that it is a successive employer to the Park District. What it does take issue with is the NLRB’s recognition of the Union as a representative of the majority of the employees. The ALJ treated the question as a matter of course:
The Union’s representative status in this case is easily supported by established presumptions as well as statutory authority. Since at least 1984 the Union has been voluntarily recognized as the bargaining representative of the Zoo’s employees, and that recognition has been embodied in successive bargaining agreements. The preamble to the latest agreement between the Chicago Park District and the Union contains a statement that the Park District “is convinced that a substantial majority of the employees covered by this Agreement desire the Union to represent them for purposes of collective bargaining and contract administration.” Indeed the Union’s pre-1984 representative status was legislatively recognized by the State of Illinois in Section 9(c) of the IPLRA.[1 ] Moreover, since the IPLRA itself provides essentially the same safeguards as the National Labor Relations Act, the Zoo’s employees had the same recourse to alter their representation as they would had they been covered under the National statute. There is, in any event, no record evidence that anyone sought to question the Union’s majority status before the Respondent’s takeover of the Zoo. In these circumstances, I find that the Union was the lawful bargaining agent of the Zoo employees at the time of takeover.
On appeal, the Society argues that the NLRB erred in extending comity to a bargaining representative who achieved its status under the IPLRA, as opposed to the NLRA. Moreover, petitioner argues that a showing of historical support cannot give rise to a presumption of majority support.
II.
Deferential to the NLRB’s expertise, we uphold the NLRB’s conclusions of law unless “they are ‘irrational or inconsistent with the Act.’ ” Rock-Tenn Co. v. NLRB,
Generally, a successor employer is obliged to bargain with a union that represented the employees of its predecessor if it carries on the newly acquired business in
Under the NLRA, a binding bargaining relationship may be established between a employer and a labor union by one of two methods: NLRB certification pursuant to an election or voluntary recognition of the union by the employer. See Exxel/Atmos, Inc. v. NLRB,
First, we must consider whether the rebuttable presumption of majority status is applicable where there is no certification, but only voluntary recognition. Mindful of our deferential posture towards the NLRB, which reached this result “easily,” we conclude that voluntary recognition does indeed establish this presumption. That the successorship doctrine applies to instances of voluntary recognition is a position that has been endorsed and enforced for some time now by the NLRB, which must be shown to be at odds with the NLRA or irrational to be reversed. See, e.g., JMM Operational Services,
Next, we must consider whether the historical and contractual relationship between the Park District and the Union under the IPLRA is consistent with the federal concept of voluntary recognition. Implicit in the process of voluntary recognition are protections for both employer and employee. First, in an instance of voluntary recognition it is presumed that the employer will always have an initial chance to refuse to recognize a union. Second, at the time of voluntary recognition, there is generally some showing of majority support, short of an election, by the employees (e.g., a majority card showing). See Exxel/Atmos,
Accordingly, the Union enjoys the rebutta-ble presumption that it is a representative of the majority of Zoo employees. The Society has presented no evidence to contradict this presumption. Therefore, by refusing to bargain with the Union, the Society is in violation of the bargaining obligations of the NLRA.
III.
At oral argument, the Society’s counsel emphasized the fact that this case involves a transition from a public to private employer,
For the reasons articulated above, we AFFIRM the decision of the NLRB and order its enforcement.
Notes
. Section 9(c) reads: "Nothing in this Act shall interfere with or negate the current representation rights or patterns and practices of labor organizations which have historically represented public employees for the purpose of collective bargaining ... unless a majority of employees so represented express a contrary desire pursuant to the procedures set forth in this Act.” 5 Ill. Comp. Stat. 315/9(c) (West 1997). Public employees may petition the Board for decertification of a bargaining representative pursuant to section 9, which empowers the Board to hold an election to determine majority representation. See 5 Ill. Comp. Stat. 315/9 (West 1997).
. Four contracts between the Park District and the Union contain the following identical language: “WHEREAS, the Union has traditionally represented District employees and the District is convinced that a substantial majority of the employees covered by this Agreement desire the Union to represent them for purposes of collective bargaining and contract administration matters.”
. Counsel appeared to be hinting that additional protections for the successor employer were warranted because of the potential political nature of the prior state-union relations. In doing so, petitioner's counsel relies on two NLRB decisions implicating the successorship doctrine in transitions from public to private ownership: JMM Operational Servs., Inc.,
