This is yet another case in a long series in which the National Labor Relations Board has found that a company violated sections 8(a)(1), 8(a)(3) and 8(a)(5) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(1), (3) and (5), and then has issued a so-called
Gissel
bargaining order even though no representation election had ever been held, a considerable amount of time had elapsed between the violations and the order and there had been considerable employee turnover. The Board defends its choice of remedy primarily by arguing that a “hallmark” violation of the Act may in and of itself justify the issuance of a bargaining order under the law of this circuit and
NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co., Inc.,
This case is before us on the Board’s application to enforce. We enforce— though not without some doubts — as to the violations found and all remedies ordered with the exception of the order to bargain. We remand the question of the bargaining order because we think that the Board’s analysis, based as it was on the fact that one of the company’s violations was of “hallmark” status, fell short of the standards imposed upon the Board by the Act, by the Supreme Court, and by us.
Facts
Windsor Industries, Inc. (the Company) is an importer and wholesale distributor of small electronic products such as radios. Its operations take place at Melville, New York, in a single facility comprised of a shipping and receiving area, a warehouse area, a repair or technicians’ room, and offices. David Fink and Mickey Hiller are vice presidents in charge of operations and sales, respectively. Nick Cianflone and Pat Carrington are supervisors. On April 7, 1980, at lunchtime, Business Representative Girard Jones and Executive Vice President Gerald Hustick of the Nаtional Organization of Industrial Trade Unions (the Union) visited the Company parking lot and began speaking to employees. They spoke first to employee Joseph Benzola, who signed an authorization card, and also obtained a signed card from employee Jack Roberts, who told them he would do anything possible to help organize the shop. They also gave two cards to employee Mildred Reph, one for her and one for her son, Al, who also worked for the Company. On the 7th and 8th of April, the Union obtained, apparently with the active support of Benzola and Roberts, signed authorization cards from eight of the fifteen unit employees.
On April 10, Company vice president Hiller observed Roberts receiving a blank authorization card from one of the Union representatives. Hiller also observed Benzola, Roberts and others talking to the Union representatives during lunch and breaktimes.
Also on April 10, the Company received from the Union a telegram stating that the Union had signed a majority of Windsor employees and demanding immediate recognition. The following morning a group of employees decided to request a meeting with Company vice president Fink to tell him what benefits they wanted and what grievances they had. That afternoon twelve employees, including Benzola and Roberts, met with Company representatives. Before the meeting, the employees met to draft a list of issues to raise with management. Benzola was holding this list when the Company representatives arrived.
Fink began the meeting by reading prepared remarks from index cards. He stated that he had been advised that he could not threaten employees for union activities or promise benefits to try to sway them, nor could he ask what was wrong. He did say that he always had an open dоor, that he did not want “a third party to come between us” and that he did not think employees needed or should pay for “outside representation.” He denied that there would be reprisals, but added that he wanted employees to know what they were “getting into.”
Benzola then read the list of benefits which the employees had already prepared. Fink, as advised by counsel, responded that he could not promise anything. One employeе suggested that the Friday lunch-break be lengthened fifteen minutes so that employees could cash their paychecks. Fink answered that that sounded reasonable and that he would look into it. Benzola raised the issue of medical benefits and Fink said he would look into that. There were other suggestions regarding vacations, raises and sick days. Fink and Hiller said that they would look into these but again could not make any promises. Roberts requested that the Company post a list of holidays at the timeclock, to which Hiller responded that the request was reasonable *863 and that he would take care of it. When the meeting closed Benzola handed Fink the previously prepared list of grievances. Another employee who had been taking notes of the meeting handed them to Fink saying that the notes reflected what the employees wanted; Fink accepted the list and said he would look intо the requests. Again Fink repeated that he could make no promises.
After the meeting, Benzola left the premises and went to speak to Union representative Hustick, who was in his car outside the Company parking lot. Company representatives apparently watched from inside the plant as the two men conversed.
On April 14, the Company, as Hiller had promised, posted a list of paid holidays next to the timeclock. The list included no additional holidays. On April 15, two working days after the grievance meeting, supervisor Cianflone told Benzola and Roberts that work was slow and that they were being laid off until further notice or until work picked up again. When asked how long the layoff would last, Cianflone said that he did not know. The Company had never previously laid off an employee, and an employee whose seniority was identical to Benzola’s was not laid off. On May 29, after charges of unfаir practices were filed, the Company offered Benzola reinstatement. Benzola did not respond to this offer. On June 4, the Company offered Roberts reinstatement which he accepted on June 9.
On August 3, 1981, the Administrative Law Judge found that the Company violated section 8(a)(1) of the Act by soliciting grievances from employees and promising to remedy them in order to induce them to refrain from supporting the Union. The AU further found that the Company violated sections 8(a)(1) and (3) by laying off Benzola and Roberts in order to discourage Union membership. The AU concluded that the Company had violated sections 8(a)(1) and (5) by refusing to recognize and bargain with the Union, and recommended, among other things, that the Company be ordered to bargain with the Union. In support of this recommendation the AU declared, citing and quoting Gissel and various Board cases, that there was “misconduct going to the very heart of the Act,” and that the unlawful layoff of two employees in the “relatively small employee complement,” together with the solicitation of employee grievances and the promising of benefits the day after receiving the Union’s demand, tended to “undermine majority strength and impede the election process.”
The Board majority, acting some sixteen months after the AU issued his decision, adopted his Rulings, Findings and Conclusions, as well as his recommended оrder, without adding anything in respect to the bargaining order. Chairman Van de Water and Board member Hunter did not agree that the Company’s unlawful conduct was “so pervasive and likely to have a lingering impact that a fair election could not be held once [the Company] ... complied with the Board’s traditional remedies,” and therefore declined to join in the bargaining order.
The Violations
We find that there was substantial evidence to support the finding that the lаyoffs of Benzola and Roberts were unlawful. The key question facing the AU was whether the Company’s action was motivated by a desire to discourage Union activity, and, as we have often said, a ruling on motivation “cannot lightly be overturned.”
NLRB v. Advanced Business Forms Corp.,
We have more of a problem with the finding of a section 8(a)(1) violation through the solicitаtion of grievances from employees and the promise to remedy them. The mere holding of a “gripe session” during an organizing campaign is not per se unlawful, and it seems to us that very little more occurred. Nonetheless even the Company does not argue that it did not make implied promises during the April 11 meeting. Rather, it argues that in a meeting on May 9 it clearly and unequivocally placed the employees on notice not only that no promises would be made, but also that no benefits would be forthcoming. The Company also stresses that it never implemented (except for the de minimis posting of a list of holidays already enjoyed by employees) any of the implied promises.
While this court has recognized the limited impact of implied as opposed to overt promises,
NLRB v. Chester Valley, Inc.,
The Bargaining Order
Gissel
approved the Board’s imposition of bargaining orders in two classes of cases involving employer violations. The Court first identified those cases, described in
Gissel
as “exceptional,” which were “marked by ‘outrageous’ and ‘pervasive’ unfair labor practices.”
Gissel,
*865
Gissel
also recognized a second tier of “less extraordinary cases marked by less pervasive practices which nonetheless still have the tendency to undermine majority strength and impede the election processes,” and which might therefore call for the issuance by the Board of a bargaining order.
As our discussion of the violations should suggest, we do not view Windsor’s solicitation of grievances and its implied promises to remedy them as “outrageous” so as to fall within the first category of
Gissel
cases. While the unlawful layoffs violation, if not “outrageous,” is certainly a “hallmark” violation as that term has come to be used in this circuit,
see NLRB v. Jamaica Towing, Inc.,
Here, the Board relies principally on the facts that this was a small bargaining unit and that the layoffs were a hallmark violation. It argues that under the dictum in
Jamaica
Towing,
2
Before addressing these contentions, we note that the Board in this case relied entirely on the ALJ in issuing its order. In other words, the Board itself made no independent findings, nor did it conduct its own analysis. No case in this circuit that we have found has ever faced squarely the question whether with respect to bargaining orders, it is proper for the Board to adopt the ALJ’s findings and reasoning, without more. A panel in the Third Circuit had hеld that the Board itself must state the reasons for a bargaining order even though the ALJ has provided a statement of the considerations prompting him to recommend it.
Kenworth Trucks of Philadelphia, Inc. v. NLRB,
In this circuit we have consistently and closely reviewed NLRB justifications for bargaining orders, often remanding for the Board to explain “just what it considers to have precluded a fair election and why, and in what respects the case diffеrs from others where it has reached an opposite conclusion.”
NLRB v. General Stencils, Inc.,
It was, as noted, dictum in
Jamaica Towing,
that indicated that “highly coercive” or “hallmark” violations presumptively would support a bargaining order, “unless some significant mitigating circumstance exists.”
Our most recent decisions continue in this vein. In
Heads and Threads Company,
The law of this circuit is that hallmark violations alone do not support a bargaining order, and that not only mitigating circumstances but the lapse of time, employee turnover and other significant factors must be examined.
3
The Board’s responsibility in these “less extraordinary” cases is to make the determination whether or not the employer’s practices have had “the tendency to undermine majority strеngth and impede the election processes.”
Gissel,
Enforced in part and remanded in accordance with opinion.
Notes
. Of course, these observations do not apply to cases in which the employer already is under a duty to bargain as a result of a Board-conducted election and subsequent union certification. If, after a union is certified, the employer refuses to bargain in goоd faith and the NLRB issues a bargaining order as a result of this refusal, the passage of time or employee turnover by no means play the same role.
NLRB v. Patent Trader, Inc.,
.
Jamaica Towing
held that the violations there were in the category of "less serious violations which must either be numerous or be coupled with some other factor intensifying their effect before they will fall within Gissel's second category and support an order to bargain,”
. One fact which must certainly be taken into account is whether or not a majority of the employees signed union authorization cards.
Compare United Dairy Farmers Cooperative Ass'n v. NLRB,
