The threshold issue in these consolidated petitions for review of an order of the National Labor Relations Board and the Board’s cross-application for enforcement is whether M & M Backhoe Service, Inc., voluntarily recognized the union’s majority status and converted the relationship between the company and the union from one governed by section 8(f) of the National Labor Relations Act to one governed by section 9(a).
The Act gives employees the right to select their own union representation.
See
29 U.S.C. § 159(a). Employers must bargain in good faith with unions,
see id.
§ 158(a)(5), but only if the union has been “designated or selected ... by the majority of the employees in a unit appropriate for such purposes,”
id.
§ 159(a). The Supreme Court underscored the importance of worker self-determination decades ago in
International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union v. NLRB,
An exception, speсific to the construction industry, permits employers to enter into pre-hire agreements with unions without any showing of majority support.
See
29 U.S.C. § 158(f). As we explained in
Nova Plumbing,
the exception adapts the law to conform with “the unique nature of the industry: Construction companies need to draw on a pool of skilled workers аnd to know their labor costs up front in order to generate accurate bids; union organizing campaigns are complicated by the fact that employees frequently work for multiple companies over short, sporadic periods.”
Pre-hire agreements differ from the typiсal collective bargaining agreement. Under section 8(f), either party may repudiate the terms of a pre-hire agreement when it expires.
See John Deklewa & Sons,
A union may convert its relationship with the employer to one governed by section 9(a) if it demonstrates suрport from a majority of employees in the unit. Local 487’s attempt to do just that raises the principal issue in the case.
M & M is a small, Florida-based construction contracting company founded by president Robert Miley. Miley had been a member of Local 487 for more than twenty-seven years before starting M & M in 1991. From M & M’s inception, the company operated under a series of pre-hire agreements with Local 487. The last agreement permitted either party to terminate it by notifying the other party at least sixty days before June 30, 2002, its expiration date.
On March 26, 2002, Miley notified the union by letter that M & M would terminate the pre-hire agreement when it expired. The union’s business manager, Gary Waters, promptly instructed a member of his staff, James Allbritton, to visit M & M’s worksite and to have the employees sign authorization cards recognizing the union. Allbritton collected signed authоrization cards from all seventeen of M & M’s employees on March 27 and 28.
On March 29, Waters faxed Miley a letter notifying him that the union had support from the majority of M & M’s employees and requesting “voluntary recognition from your firm and 9(a) status under the National Labor Relations Act.” The letter asked Miley to sign the attached Rеcognition Agreement, which stated that M & M “acknowledges and agrees, based on a showing of signed authorization cards, that a majority of its employees have authorized the Union to represent them in collective bargaining” and that M & M “hereby recognizes the Union as the exclusivе bargaining agent under Section 9(a) of the National Labor Relations Act.” The letter stated that if Miley did not sign the Recognition Agreement, the union would petition the NLRB for a representation election.
Miley responded on April 2. He agreed to a collective bargaining sessiоn with the union and invited Waters to contact him about scheduling the session. Miley did not sign the Recognition Agreement at that time. On April 3, Waters called Miley and left a telephone message about the Recognition Agreement. The next day, Waters sent Miley another letter. The letter thanked Miley for agreeing to a collective bargaining session, but noted that Miley’s previous letter alone was not sufficient to achieve the union’s goals because “to change our bargaining relationship from 8(f) to 9(a) status under the National Labor Relations Act, you must voluntarily recognize that the union has majority status by signing the previously provided agreement.” Miley signed and returned the Recognition Agreement later that day. Before signing the Recognition Agreement, Miley did not request proof that Local 487 in fact had authorization cards from the majority of M & M’s employees.
In June 2002, Miley attended twо meetings in which the union negotiated with M & M and three other local contractors. At these meetings, the union demanded an increase in employer payments to the union’s health care fund. The other three employers agreed to the increases the union requested. Miley wrote Waters a letter refusing those terms, explaining that “any increase at this time would be cost prohibitive.” In response, Waters made a counterproposal and requested documents from M & M to establish Miley’s claim of financial hardship.
*1050 On June 30, three days after Waters sent his counterproposal, the pre-hire agreemеnt between M & M and the union expired of its own terms. The union believed that M & M had voluntarily recognized it and had concomitant obligations under section 9(a) to maintain the status quo while continuing to bargain in good faith. M & M proceeded as if the section 8(f) agreement had expired and it had nо obligations to the union. In the early part of July, M & M changed its overtime policies and hired new employees without going through the union hiring hall as required by the pre-hire agreement. In response, Waters sent another letter, requesting information about the non-union hires. Also in July, M & M stopped making рayments to union funds that the pre-hire agreement had required it to support.
On these facts the Board decided that Local 487 had become M & M’s employees’ section 9(a) representative and that M & M had violated section 8(a)(5) of the Act by withdrawing recognition of the union, refusing to provide information to it, and unilaterally changing the terms and сonditions of employment. See M & M Backhoe Serv., Inc., 345 N.L.R.B. No. 29, 2005 NLRB LEXIS 452 (Aug. 27, 2005) (“NLRB Decision ”). M & M urges us not to enforce the Board’s order because it conflicts with Nova Plumbing.
Generally, a union seeking to convert its section 8(f) relationship to a section 9(a) relationship may either petition for a representation election or demand reсognition from the employer by providing proof of majority support.
See J & R Tile, Inc.,
We held in
Nova Plumbing
that an offer of proof could not substitute for actual proof.
This case is like
Nova Plumbing
in the following respects: the union offered to prove to the employer that it had majority support; and the employer recognized the union without examining the union’s proof. But there is a critical difference. Unlike
Nova Plumbing,
in which there was no evidеnce that the union actually had majority support, here the record shows — as the Board found — that a majority of employees voluntarily signed union authorization cards signifying their support of Local 487. In fact, all seventeen of M & M’s eligible employees signed author
*1051
ization cards during the final week of March 2002. An employеr who recognizes a union after the union offers to provide evidence of its majority status cannot revoke that recognition solely because the employer never took the union up on its offer — provided that the union actually had majority support. To rule otherwise would be to allow the employer to frustrate the employees’ section 7 rights by turning its back to the union’s evidence.
See NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co., Inc.,
M & M’s efforts to avoid this result deserve only a few words. The company claims that its president did not know the import of the Recognition Agreement when he signed it. The Board and the Administrative Law Judge found otherwise, and for good reason. Local 487 twice demanded recognition in unmistakable terms.
Cf. Western Pipeline, Inc.,
Because the union achieved section 9(a) status, M & M violated section 8(a)(5) when it breached its duty to bargain with Local 487, failed to provide information necessary for the union to act as the employee representative, and unilaterally changed employment conditions. The Board also found that M
&
M violated section 8(a)(1) by threatening, coercing, discriminating against, and conducting surveillance of its employees. No useful purpose would be served by reciting M
&
M’s objections to these findings, all of which turn on issues of credibility resolved against the company. We have сonsidered and rejected each of M & M’s objections. As to the Board’s additional finding that the company violated section 8(a)(3) by taking adverse employment actions to discourage union membership and activity, the Board evaluates employer motivation under the
Wright Line
test.
See Tasty Baking Co. v. NLRB,
* * m¡ * * *
Local 487’s petition for review claims that the Board should have held M
&
M liable for ceasing its contributions to the union’s pension, vacation, and apprenticeship trust funds. The union maintains four trust funds: health and welfare, pension, vacation, and apprenticeship. M & M cut off its contributions to all four. The Board ruled in the union’s favor with respect to the health and welfare fund but, over the dissent of one member, refused to consider the other three funds because its General Counsel had not raised them in the complaint.
See NLRB Decision,
345
*1052
NLRB No. 29,
The union’s charge did not mention the vacation and apprenticeship funds. It alleged that M & M had “failed and refused to make fringe benefit contributions to the pension, welfare funds, thereby unilaterally changing terms and conditions of employment.” The General Counsel’s complaint removed the reference to the “pension” fund. The relevant paragraph of the cоmplaint reads: “Since on or about July 1, 2002, [M
&
M] has ceased remitting health and welfare fund contributions, and on or about that same date and thereafter, [M
&
M] changed other terms and conditions of employment of employees in the Unit.” Given the alteration of the charge, the Board hаd good reason to conclude that the company was not on notice that its contributions to the other three funds were at issue. As the Board recognized, it “may not make findings or order remedies on violations not charged in the ... complaint or litigated in the subsequent hearing.”
Chicago Local No. 458-3M v. NLRB,
The union also argues that M & M’s non-payments to the pension, vacation, and apprenticeship trust funds were fully litigated before the ALJ. The only mention of the three funds during the hearing, or at least the only mention the union cites, was in connection with an M & M stipulation during the testimony of the union’s business manager. Counsel for the company stipulated that balance sheets the General Counsel sought to introduce reflected contributions the company made into the funds and that after a particular date there were no documents reflecting further contributions. The stipulation may have assisted in making the case against the company for its failure to contribute to the health and welfare funds. But we cannot say the Board abused its discretion in determining that at the time of the stipulation the company was not on notice that the other three funds were at issue and that if the General Counsel thought otherwise, the General Counsel should have moved to amend the complaint pursuant to the NLRB’s procedural rules. See 29 C.F.R. § 102.17.
For the foregoing reasons the petitions for judicial review are denied and the cross-application for enforcement is granted.
So ordered,.
