This is an application for enforcement of a National Labor Relations Board bargaining order. The United Rubber, Cork, Linoleum and Plastic Workers of America, AFL-CIO-CLC (union) held an election among employees of respondent Michigan Rubber Products, Inc. (company) on July 19, 1979. The union won the election by a vote of 38 to 31, and the company filed objections to the manner in which the election was conducted. The Regional Director issued a Report and Recommendation on Objections on August 15, 1979, recommending that the company’s objections be overruled and the union certified. The company then filed exceptions to the report, arguing that the Regional Director should have conducted a hearing. The Board certified the union on October 16, 1979, adopting the Regional Director’s findings and recommendations. On October 19, 1979, the union requested the company to bargain with it, which the company refused to do. The union filed an unfair labor practice charge with the Board. The Board’s General Counsel filed a complaint with the Board and later moved for summary judgment, which the Board granted on August 12, 1980. The Board ordered the company to bargain with the union. 1
The Board filed this application for enforcement of its August 12, 1980 order on May 3, 1983. The parties have not bargained during the intervening three years. Upon an examination of the record, and after careful consideration of respondent’s arguments against enforcing the Board’s order, we order enforcement.
I.
Respondent first argues that the Board’s enforcement action is barred by laches because the Board delayed almost three years *113 after its bargaining order was filed before bringing this enforcement proceeding. The Board explains that the delay “result[ed] from a breakdown in communications between the office that referred the case for enforcement and the office responsible for seeking enforcement.”
The Board cites two cases in which the Supreme Court ordered enforcement of a bargaining order in the face of lengthy delays. While neither case is precisely on point they are nonetheless persuasive.
First the Board cites
NLRB v. Pool Manufacturing Co.,
The Board also cites
NLRB v. Katz,
We do not doubt that at some point laches would apply against the Board for inordinate delay in bringing an action. The Supreme Court has, however, indicated that delays of over two years are not intolerable. To hold otherwise would tend to penalize the union for the Board’s delinquency — though at some point it could become incumbent upon the union to urge the Board into action.
Here, however, there is no allegation that the delay has in any way prejudiced respondent, or given the Board, or union, an unfair advantage. Absent such a change in the relative positions of the parties the doctrine of laches will not apply.
Armco, Inc., v. Armco Burglar Alarm Co.,
Respondent argues that the question of harm is not dispositive, that the Board has an affirmative obligation to show that its order does justice to respondent’s current employees. The company argues that it would now be an injustice to “force” representation on the employees. Respondent cites
NLRB v. Eanet,
*114
Respondent’s contention is in addition refuted by
NLRB v. DIT-MCO Inc.,
Mere administrative delay affords no defense to an unfair labor practice charge. This policy of the law preserves the position of the contending parties as of the time of the election, not their posture at the close of litigation. If, in some instances, the rights of the majority are subjected to minority control, relief lies in seeking a change in representation through a new election following the statutory period of one year.
Id. at 781 (citations omitted).
Accordingly, we find that the Board’s action is not barred by laches.
II.
Respondent contends that the union election was invalid and the Board improperly issued a bargaining order because 1) the Board’s agent at the election exhibited favoritism towards the union; 2) the union committed illegal electioneering at the polls; and 3) the union made misrepresentations at a time when respondent could not effectively respond. The question for review is whether the Board abused its discretion in issuing the bargaining order.
See NLRB v. Holland American Wafer Co.,
A.
The first claim that the Board agent improperly showed a pro-union bias is based on three incidents which occurred at the company on election day. The election was held in two shifts to accommodate the company’s employees, who worked morning and afternoon shifts. The election was held in the company’s lunchroom, and the ■voting booth and ballot box were removed between voting periods. In addition to the Board agent there were present, during the polling periods, two union observers and two company observers.
Respondent’s first complaint is that the Board agent stationed a union observer at the door to the voting area and instructed him to admit the employees into the voting area one at a time. Respondent contends that this gave the impression of prejudice towards the union and appeared to give the union control of the voting process. 2
However, the Board agent apparently issued her instruction to the observers as a group, and not to the union observer in particular, who happened to perform the task because he was standing closest to the door at the time. There is evidence that it was necessary to have someone control the flow of traffic in order to avoid congestion, because there was only one door in and out of the lunchroom. At the same time, a company observer stationed himself by the ballot box, which negated any suggestion of partiality towards the union. The Board was justified in concluding that the placement of these observers had no impact on the votes cast in the election.
The company’s second complaint is that following the morning polling session a union representative carried the metal voting booth to the agent’s car, while the agent carried the ballot box and election kit. As the Board agent and the union representative left the voting area they were accompanied initially by two company managers, the company and union observers, and another union representative. The two union representatives and one observer accompanied the agent to her car.
*115
Respondent argues that this situation gave the appearance of fraternization, and compares it to a case in which the Board set aside an election because the Board agent was seen between voting periods having a beer with a union representative,
3
and a case where the agent was seen at a restaurant where a union organizational meeting was taking place and the agent was introduced at the meeting.
Provincial House, Inc. v. NLRB,
We would like to be specific about the precise conduct which we feel carried the activity of the NLRB representative past the point of arguably defensible conduct, so as to represent a per se violation of the Board’s neutrality rule. That point in our view came when the NLRB representative allowed himself to be introduced to the union organizational meeting.
The third incident which respondent complains of occurred shortly before the afternoon polling session. An anti-union cartoon had been placed in a locked, glass-enclosed company bulletin board some 75 feet from the polling area, and a second one on a wall some 200 feet from the polling area. The company was within its rights in so displaying the cartoons, but the Board agent nonetheless instructed a company observer and a union observer to remove them. The observers did this with the help of the company personnel director, who unlocked the glass case.
The company argues that this action compromised the Board’s neutrality. It cites
Glacier Packing Co.,
Again, we disagree. The case here is much weaker for the Board agent’s compromise of neutrality. The union and company observer together removed the cartoons, with help from the company personnel director. This bipartisan action should have negated any inference of impartiality on the part of the Board. There would have been more of an appearance of bias if the Board agent had removed the cartoons herself, as in Glacier. The Board found that its agent was overzealous; however, the Board did not abuse its discretion in determining that it was highly unlikely that the action could have had any effect on the outcome of the election.
B.
Respondent next argues that the election should be set aside because the union conducted illegal electioneering at *116 the polls. The company cites two incidents. First, during the morning voting session a union observer said something in response to a comment made by an employee who had already voted. There is no evidence as to the content of the exchange. The Board agent told the observer not to talk to the employees, and the incident was not repeated.
A second incident occurred during the morning session, when two employees who had already voted left the voting room and stopped to talk to two other employees. The Board agent ordered those employees who had already voted to leave, and they did so. There is no evidence as to whether the two employees outside the voting area were waiting to vote, no evidence that the two leaving the voting area were union supporters, and no evidence regarding the content of the conversation.
Respondent argues that under
Milchem, Inc.,
C.
Respondent argues that the election should be set aside on the basis of campaign misrepresentations made by the union. The first question here is the correct test for determining when an election should be set aside on the basis of campaign misrepresentations. Respondent urges a test first enunciated in
Hollywood Ceramics Co.,
The Board initially reviewed the company’s objections to the election at issue here under the
Hollywood Ceramics
test. Under the Board’s current practices, however, as announced in
Shopping Kart Food Market, Inc.,
A few days before the election the union sent to the company’s employees two pieces of campaign literature, a sheet entitled “Bombs Away”, and a six-page pamphlet called “Lookout Below”. The materials outline scare tactics and false promises which the union says management uses to keep unions out. The literature is illustrated with drawings of bombs, and management personnel scheming against the union and employees. The materials refer to “the company” and “the boss” generally, and never to respondent Michigan Rubber or its managers by name. Apparently these materials are produced for dissemination whenever an election is to be held for any employer, and are not aimed at any specific employer.
Respondent’s management first received this material three days before the union election. On the next day respondent sent out the last of its campaign literature, which warned employees of the risks of having a union. Respondent also held an employees’ meeting prior to the election, during which management refuted some of the statements made in the union literature. The company now argues that all that it was able to do was to make a general denial of wrongdoing, but that such a denial could not be an effective response to the union literature, under Hollywood Ceramics. Respondent cites no authority on this point.
The union literature did not make any material misrepresentations about respondent Michigan Rubber Products. Moreover, the fact that the company had time to send out campaign literature and to hold an employees’ meeting before the election wholly undercuts respondent’s claim that the union’s communications were made so shortly before the election that the company had no time to correct them. Accordingly, even under Hollywood Ceramics, the Board was justified in deciding not to set aside the election.
III.
The Regional Director (RD) may conduct a hearing upon objections to an election if such objections raise substantial and material factual issues, under 29 C.F.R. § 102.69(d), and the Board may order the RD to conduct a hearing on a party’s exceptions to the RD’s order if the exceptions raise such questions, under 29 C.F.R. § 102.69(f).
See NLRB v. Tennessee Packers, Inc.,
It is incumbent upon the party seeking a hearing to clearly demonstrate that factual issues exist which can be resolved by an evidentiary hearing. * * * Mere disagreement with the Regional Director’s reasoning and conclusions do [sic] not “raise substantial and material issues.” * * * To request a hearing a party must, in its exceptions, define its disagreements and make an offer of proof to support findings contrary to those of the Regional Director.
The RD here did not hold a hearing on respondent’s objections, and the Board adopted the RD’s Report. The Board did not order a hearing on respondent’s exceptions to the RD’s Report. Respondent argues that it was entitled to a hearing and that the Board’s order should consequently not be enforced. We find that the company’s objections and exceptions did not present a prima facie case for setting aside the election, and that the RD and the Board therefore properly denied respon *118 dent a hearing. There is little disagreement as to the facts of the incidents at issue, only as to the legal conclusions to be drawn from them. The company does appear to allege that the two employees who spoke with other employees after the first two had finished voting were union supporters. However, there is no evidence to support this among the company’s affidavits which it presented to the RD. There is a controversy as to how many employees who were eligible to vote actually saw the election observers remove the anti-union cartoons, and how many saw the union representative carrying the polling booth to the Board agent’s car, but the dispute is immaterial in light of the RD’s proper conclusion that these activities did not compromise the Board’s neutrality. Respondent has not offered proof of any fact which, if true, would require that the election be set aside.
Respondent also complains that the RD did not forward to the Board the complete record of his investigation, such as investigatory files, in support of his report. Respondent claims that the Board therefore abused its discretion in adopting the RD’s Report and that this is grounds for denying enforcement.
See ATR Wire, supra.
We fail to see how respondent could have been prejudiced by an incomplete record, however, when its allegations challenging the RD’s Report were insufficient grounds for setting aside the election even if true.
See Kitchen Fresh v. NLRB,
We find all of respondent’s arguments against enforcing the Board’s order to be without merit. Accordingly we grant enforcement of the Board’s order.
Notes
. Reported at
. Respondent cites
Summa Corp. v. NLRB,
.
Athbro Precision Engineering Corp.,
.
Shopping Kart
was overruled by
General Knit of California, Inc.,
