This case comes before us on the National Labor Relations Board’s application for enforcement of an unfair labor practice order that the Board issued against GATX Logistics, Inc. For the reasons that follow, we grant the Board’s application for enforcement.
I.
In July 1994, GATX, a nationwide logistics company, hired David Landstrom as a contract driver for its warehouse facility in Normal, Illinois. Early the following October, GATX hired Landstrom as a full-time employee, on probationary status for the first ninety days of his employment. Landstrom primarily worked as a “hot parts” driver at GATX, delivering time critical components to the nearby Mitsubishi Motors plant.
At some time in October, GATX manager John Nabakowski learned that in September, Landstrom had been using a restricted-access company telephone during working hours to make personal long-distance calls to his home. By its own account, GATX decided at that time to fire Landstrom. The company said nothing at all to Landstrom, however, opting to keep him in the dark until a replacement driver was hired. In the meantime, an oblivious Landstrom was permitted to continue making long-distance calls on the company telephone. Finally, on November 22, Landstrom was summoned to Nabakowski’s office and told that his services were no longer required. When Landstrom asked why the company was letting him go, Nabakowski at first said that he did not owe Landstrom an explanation, but eventually he cited the unauthorized telephone calls as the reason. Landstrom offered to pay for the calls, but Nabakowski told him that the decision to fire him had been made by Mike Millet, another manager. Landstrom later *355 spoke with Millet, who attributed the discharge to the telephone calls, Landstrom’s “attitude,” and the inquiries Landstrom had made about late paychecks and the possibility of retroactive compensation for the lower hourly wage he had earned as a contract driver for GATX.
GATX terminated Landstrom one day after his replacement, Gilbert Karnes, reported for work at the Normal facility and — coincidentally, the company maintains — three days after Landstrom engaged in protected union-related activity at the' Normal warehouse. Landstrom had arrived for work on November 19 wearing a jacket which on its back bore a large logo of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers and on its front a small logo of the Machinists Union Local 852 together with Land-strom’s name. Landstrom subsequently ran into a group of warehouse employees that included Nelson (“Hodgie”) Teichmann, an assistant manager overseeing the “flow through” of inbound and outbound freight. According to Landstrom, Teichmann looked at the logo on the front of Landstrom’s jacket and remarked, “That won’t go over too well here.” Tr. 60. Landstrom proceeded to hand a “Union Yes” bumper sticker to two of his fellow drivers, one of whom accepted it with the observation that “it might come in handy....” Id. When Landstrom turned to leave, Teichmann (again, by Landstrom’s account) told him, “That’s an awfully big target you have on your back.” Id. A short time later, Teichmann had a conversation with track driver Richard Schlosser, who had witnessed this exchange. Schlosser testified that he thought Teichmann looked upset, and when he asked Teichmann what was wrong, Teichmann mentioned Landstrom’s jacket and the bumper stickers and indicated “there was no way, no damn way that there was going to be a [ujnion” at GATX and he would “see to that.” Tr. 111-112. When Nabakow-ski fired Landstrom three days later, Teich-mann was present in Nabakowski’s office.
Landstrom filed a charge with the NLRB asserting that he had been the victim of unfair labor practices, and after conducting an investigation the General Counsel filed a complaint on his behalf with the Board. Administrative Law Judge George Aleman conducted an evidentiary hearing and issued a decision concluding that GATX had indeed engaged in unfair labor practices. The ALJ credited Landstrom’s testimony vis á vis Teichmann’s remarks about the union insignia on Landstrom’s jacket and found that those remarks amounted to threats of unspecified reprisal. To that extent, GATX “ha[d] interfered with, restrained, and coerced Landstrom in the exercise of the rights guaranteed him by Section 7 of the [National Labor Relations] Act, and ha[d] engaged in an unfair labor practice within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) and Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act.”
GATX Logistics, Inc.,
The Board subsequently overruled GATX’s exceptions to the ALJ’s decision and affirmed his findings, making only minor (and for our purposes immaterial) modifications to the relief ordered. 323 NLRB. No. 46,
II.
At the outset, GATX argues that the Board has misallocated the burden of proof in unlawful discharge cases. The Board outlined the analytical framework for such cases in
Wright Line, a Div. of Wright Line, Inc.,
[W]e shall henceforth employ the following causation test in all cases alleging violation of Section 8(a)(3) or violations of Section 8(a)(1) turning on employer motivation. First, we shall require that the General Counsel make a prima facie showing sufficient to support the inference that protect *356 ed conduct was a “motivating factor” in the employer’s decision. Once this is established, the burden will shift to the employer to demonstrate that the same action would have taken place even in the absence of the protected conduct.
Id.
at 1089 (footnote omitted). The ALJ applied this framework here.
Both
Wright Line
and the Supreme Court cases endorsing its framework, however, make clear that the General Counsel in fact does bear the threshold burden of persuading the factfinder that the employee’s union activities contributed to the discharge decision.
Wright Line
itself notes that “this shifting of burdens does not undermine the established concept that the General Counsel must establish an unfair labor practice by a preponderance of the evidence.”
The NLRB’s approach in Transportation Management is consistent with § 7(c) because the NLRB first required the employee to persuade it that antiunion sentiment contributed to the employer’s decision. Only then did the NLRB place the burden of persuasion on the employer as to its affirmative defense.
Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs, Dep’t of Labor v. Greenwich Collieries,
*357
We do not believe that the Board’s opinion in this case' relieved the General Counsel of the burden of persuasion. Notwithstanding the Board’s reference to the
Wright Line
language regarding evidence “sufficient to support the inference” that antiunion animus contributed to the discharge decision (323 N.L.R.B. No. 46,
GATX poses a variety of objections to the manner in which the Board evaluated the evidence before it, contending broadly that the Board violated its duty to consider all of the evidence in the record by making conclusions that purportedly lack support in the record. It notes, for example, that the ALJ in certain instances chose not to credit certain testimony that the company offered even in the absence of other evidence controverting that testimony. In other instances, the company complains, the ALJ relied on evidence for propositions wholly separate from the purposes for which that evidence was offered. We need not undertake an exhaustive recitation of these objections nor respond to each in detail. We have carefully reviewed the record in light of GATX’s arguments and have found no error that would cast doubt upon the Board’s factual determinations.
Finally, we reject the notion that the Board improperly substituted its own business judgment for that of GATX in discrediting the non-discriminatory rationale that the company offered for Landstrom’s discharge. We have observed on many occasions that courts do not sit as “super-personnel departments” charged with deciding whether an employer’s decisions were “right” or “wrong”; our sole mission, in the typical discrimination case, is to decide whether the employee was discharged (or subjected to other adverse action) on the basis of criteria that Congress has deemed impermissible.
E.g., Kariotis v. Navistar Int’l Transp. Corp.,
III.
Finding GATX’s objections to be without merit, we GRANT the Board’s application and Enforce its order.
Notes
. The company suggests that if the General Counsel's initial obligation is limited to presenting a "prima facie case" that merely raises an "inference” that the discharge violated the statute, then we should be looking not to the dual-motive framework that
Wright Line
derived from
Mt. Healthy City School Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Doyle,
.
Wright Line’s
reference to " a
prima facie
showing sufficient to support the
inference
that protected conduct was a 'motivating factor' in the employer’s decision,”
