This case requires us to further refine the principles that govern the relationship between the rights of employees under Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (the “NLRA” or the “Act”) and the state law property rights of employers. We do so in the fairly unique context of California’s limitation of those property rights in favor of rights of expression.
See PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins,
BACKGROUND
The parties have stipulated to the determinative facts. Gary E. Calkins and Anna Rosa Calkins are the sole proprietors and operators of the Indio Grocery Outlet, a supermarket located in Indio, California (“Respondent”). Respondent operates the store pursuant to a “Store Operator Agreement” with Canned Foods, Inc. (“CFI”). CFI leases the real property and the building from its owner, Read Properties. The Store Operator Agreement and an amendment thereto give Respondent the right to operate the Indio store.
Respondent is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act. The United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 1167, United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, AFL-CIO-CLC (the “Union”), is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act.
The Indio store is a free-standing building open to the general public, with a parking lot on the west and south sides of the building for use by customers and employees of the Indio store. The parking lot has two entrances and is surrounded on three sides by a public sidewalk with an approximately 140 by 62 foot grass lot located on the east side of the parking lot separating a portion of the parking lot from the public sidewalk. The Indio store has two entrances which can be accessed only through the parking lot. A walkway runs along the front of the store. The Indio store is not part of a shopping mall. Across the public sidewalk, the property is bordered on three sides by public streets, and on one side by California Highway 111.
Respondent avers that on each entrance to the Indio store a sign is posted which states, “Trespassers, solicitors or distribution of literature by non-employees is prohibited on this property” and that Respondent posted the signs when it began operating the Indio store in March 1994. Respondent further avers that Union official Frank Mott was made aware of the policy in September 1994, before the start of the picketing and handbilling campaign. Persons other than customers and employees of the store are excluded from the premises.
The Indio store employees are not represented by the Union or by any union. Eleven picketers representing the Union first came onto Respondent’s parking lot on September 30, 1994. When asked to leave the parking lot, the picketers relocated to the public sidewalk.
On December 13, 1994, Union representatives again engaged in peaceful picketing and handbilling in the Indio store parking lot and on the walkway in front of its *1084 entrance, as well as on the public sidewalk. One picketer was stationed by each door to the Indio store, several walked around the parking lot in front of the store, and the rest remained on the public sidewalk. The picketers, approximately nine in total, distributed leaflets to Respondent’s customers and employees that read, in English and Spanish: “Don’t Shop Canned Foods Grocery Outlet Indio. SUPPORT YOUR UNION NEIGHBORS! UFCW Local 1167” and listed the names and addresses of four Union supermarkets in the Indio area. The picketers also carried signs that read, in English and Spanish, “Please Do Not Shop Grocery Outlet. UFCW Local 1167.”
Gary Calkins requested that the picketers leave the parking lot and walkway in front of the store. The picketers refused. Approximately 10 to 15 minutes later, Cal-kins and three Indio store employees stood at the entrance to the store and distributed handbills of their own to customers entering the store. Respondent’s handbills read: “WE ARE NOT ON STRIKE!! Thank you for shopping at Indio Grocery Outlet.” 2
Calkins summoned the Indio Police Department to the property and requested that the police remove the picketers from the walkway and parking lot in front of the store. The police declined to arrest or interfere with the picketers. Calkins informed the picketers that if they did not leave, he would request that the police make a citizens’ arrest. The picketers relocated to the public sidewalk. Calkins advised the picketers that if they returned to the store premises, he would request the Indio police to arrest them. Later the same day, after the picketing had ended, the Union was informed by the Indio Police Department that Calkins had requested that the police make a citizens’ arrest of picketers who came on his property. The Union then decided to file a charge with the NLRB, which it did two days later, and not to return to the property until after its resolution.
On March 29, 1995, the Union representatives nevertheless returned to engage in peaceful picketing and handbilling un store premises. Again, Calkins asked them to leave. One of the picketers, Joe Duffle, advised Calkins that the picketers had a right to be on his property because the Board had issued a complaint. Calkins again summoned the police and requested that they make a citizen’s arrest. They did, after unsuccessfully requesting that the picketers voluntarily leave the property. Duffle was cited by the Indio Police Department for trespassing, but the case was later dropped.
As of July 1995, approximately seven to nine picketers remained on the public sidewalk surrounding the parking lot adjacent to Highway 111. The picketers distributed leaflets to the general public and to customers and employees at the parking lot entrance.
ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEEDINGS
The Union filed two unfair labor practice charges against Respondent. The first, filed on December 15, 1994, contended that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act in September and December 1994, by having Union representatives threatened with arrest if they picketed and handbilled on Respondent’s property. The second^ filed on April 5, 1995, contended that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by having Duffle arrested on March 29, 1995.
On March 20, 1995, the Board issued a complaint and notice of hearing. An
*1085
amended complaint issued on April 25, 1995, consolidating the two charges. The parties waived a hearing before an administrative law judge and moved to transfer the proceeding to the Board for decision. The motion was granted, and the parties submitted a Stipulation of Facts to the Board. The Board rendered its decision on June 30, 1997.
See Calkins d/b/a Indio Grocery Outlet,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The National Labor Relations Board “has the primary responsibility for developing and applying national labor policy,” and its rules are accorded “considerable deference.”
NLRB v. Curtin Matheson Scientific, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
I
To determine whether to grant enforcement of the Board’s Order, a close review of its findings and conclusions is essential. First, the Board found that the Union agents’ picketing and handbilling constituted conduct protected by the NLRA.
See Calkins,
Second, the Board found that Respondent lacked a property interest that entitled it to exclude individuals from its property.
See id.
at *6-7. The Board stated that “in cases in which the exercise of Section 7 rights by nonemployee Union representatives is assertedly in conflict with a respondent’s private property rights, there is a threshold burden on the respondent to establish that it had, at the time it expelled the Union representatives, an interest which entitled it to exclude individuals from the property.”
Id.
at *6 (quoting
O’Neils Markets, Inc., d/b/a Food for Less,
Finally, the Board concluded that
Lechmere, Inc. v. NLRB,
The Order requires Respondent to cease and desist from the unfair labor practices found and from, in any like or related manner, interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed them by Section 7 of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 157. See id. at *8. The Order also requires Respondent to post copies of a remedial notice, reflecting the Board’s findings and guaranteeing that it will not have Union representatives arrested for picketing and distributing Union literature on Respondent’s property, and that it will not interfere with, restrain, or coerce its employees in the exercise of their Section 7 rights. See id.
Respondent argues that the Board’s reliance on state property law constitutes an analytical error that impermissibly overrides federal labor law. Relying on Lech-mere, Respondent contends that the Union representatives did not have a right protected under Section 7 to conduct their consumer boycott activities on Respondent’s property, and that consequently, its actions did not violate Section 8(a)(1). We must therefore review the Board’s resolution of the asserted conflict between state property law and federal labor law.
II
Section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA provides that “[i]t shall be an unfair labor practice for an employer to interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in section [7 of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 157].” 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1). The core activity protected by Section 7 is the right of employees to “self-organization, to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection....” 29 U.S.C. § 157. “By its plain terms, thus, the NLRA confers rights only on employees, not on unions or their nonemployee organizers.”
Lechmere,
However, “insofar as the employees’ ‘right of self-organization depends in some measure on [their] ability ... to learn the advantages of self-organization from others,’ ” nonemployees
4
have a “derivative right” to engage in organizational activities under Section 7.
See id.
(citing
NLRB v. Babcock & Wilcox Co.,
As a general rule, the NLRA does not give nonemployees the right of access to employer’s private property to exercise their Section 7 rights. Thus, the “essential issue” in the exercise of derivative Section 7 rights is often “the degree to which trespass is necessary to exercise Section 7 rights.”
United Food and Commercial Workers, Local No. 880 v. NLRB,
In
Lechmere,
nonemployee union members engaged in an organizing campaign targeted at employees of a retail store situated on the Lechmere Shopping Plaza in Newington, Connecticut. Union members attempted to distribute handbills in the shopping plaza’s private parking lot, but were barred from the property by the store owner. The Board applied the balancing test it had announced in
Jean Country v. Local 305,
[I]n all access cases our essential concern will be [1] the degree of impairment of the Section 7 right if access should be denied, as it balances against [2] the degree of impairment of the private property right if access should be granted. We view the consideration of [3]the availability of reasonably effective alternative means as especially significant in this balancing process.
Id.
at 536,
The Supreme Court, rejecting the Board’s balancing test, reversed. It concluded that the employer had not engaged in an unfair labor practice. The Court held that Section 7 of the NLRA does not protect nonemployee union organizers’ access to an employer’s property except in the rare case where “the inaccessibility of employees makes ineffective the reasonable attempts by nonemployees to communicate with them through the usual channels.”
At first blush,
Lechmere
appears to create a bright line rule that in all cases, employers may exclude nonemployees from their property (subject to the rare inaccessibility exception).
Lechmere
does not suggest, however, that the NLRA mandates exclusion; the decision simply recognizes that “arguable Section 7 claims do not pre-empt state trespass law.”
Connecticut law, which governed the shopping center in
Lechmere,
protected the owner’s right to exclude others, including union organizers, as trespassers.
See Cologne v. Westfarms Assocs.,
Lechmere
did not speak to the situation where, as here, an employer’s state law property right does not entitle it to exclude organizers. The Board has recognized that in such cases, nonemployees’ exercise of Section 7 rights creates no conflict as against any right of the employer. Although an employer’s property rights “must be given appropriate respect, an employer need not be accorded any greater property interest than it actually possesses. Thus, the analysis that applies when Section 7 rights and property rights conflict is not appropriately invoked as to an employer that possesses only a property right that, under the law that creates and defines the employer’s property rights, would not allow the employer to exclude the individuals.”
Bristol Farms,
In the administrative proceedings, the Board invoked the rule it has applied consistently since
Lechmere,
that Respondent had a threshold burden to establish an interest entitling it to exclude individuals from its property; and that in the absence of such an interest, “there is in fact no conflict between competing rights requiring an analysis and an accommodation under
Lechmere.” Calkins,
Therefore, to evaluate the rights of the parties before us, we must examine two questions: first, whether the Union members engaged in protected Section 7 activity; and second, whether Respondent possessed a property interest under California law entitling it to exclude that activity.
Ill
A
Respondent first argues that the Union members’ conduct was not protected under Section 7 because whether conduct is protected turns not only on its purpose but also its location. This argument erroneously conflates the question of the scope of access to private property with the question of the nature of the protected conduct. It is well settled that
*1089
whether
conduct is protected by Section 7 of the NLRA, and
where
it may be exercised, are distinct inquiries.
See Eastex, Inc. v. NLRB,
The Board has the responsibility in the first instance to delineate the precise boundaries of Section 7’s mutual aid or protection clause.
See, e.g., Eastex,
Lechmere
does not mandate a contrary result.
Lechmere
addressed the degree of access required for nonemployees’ exercise of derivative activities on private property, but it did not alter whether consumer boycott activity in itself is protected by Section 7.
See United Food, Local No. 880,
Moreover, this Court has identified Section 8(b)(7)(C) as the source of the specific right to engage in consumer boycott activity, noting that it “contains a proviso which allows a union to lawfully picket an ‘employer for the purpose of truthfully advising the public (including consumers) that the employer does not employ members of, or have a contract with, a labor organization.’ ”
NLRB v. Musicians Union, AFM Local 6,
B
We next consider whether Respondent’s state law property rights encompass an interest which entitle Respondent to exclude Union organizers from the property. When interpreting state law, we are bound by the decisions of a state’s highest court.
See Arizona Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. v. Berkeley,
Article I, section 2 of the California Constitution provides: “Every person may freely speak, write and publish his or her sentiments on all subjects, being responsi
*1090
ble for the abuse of this right. A law may not restrain or abridge liberty of speech or press.” Cal. Const. art I, § 2. The California Supreme Court has held that its state constitution provides broader free speech rights than does the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
See Robins v. Pruneyard Shopping Ctr.,
Against this backdrop, California courts have granted broad protections to the peaceful exercise of free speech rights over property owners’ exclusive control of their property. In
Robins,
the California Supreme Court held that “sections 2 and 3 of article I of the California Constitution protect speech and petitioning, reasonably exercised, in shopping centers even when the centers are privately owned.”
Id.
at 910,
Since then, the California courts have recognized that speech is protected not only in “shopping malls” but also on the privately-owned sidewalk of a standalone grocery store.
See Lane,
*1091
An exception, within which Respondent claims to fall, is made for businesses found to be “modest retail establishments.”
See Robins,
In
Planned Parenthood,
petitioners were engaged in antiabortion speech, leafleting, and demonstration activity in the private parking lot and driveway of respondent’s medical clinic.
Thus, in each case, the courts have distinguished supermarket-type stores, which
*1092
invite the public at large to shop and congregate, from medical clinics which do not invite the general public or have other attributes of a public forum.
Planned Parenthood
even implies that the presence of a retail pharmacy in the medical center might have affected its characterization because such a tenant would invite members of the public to shop and generally avail themselves of its merchandise.
In the only non-abortion protest case in this area,
Bank of Stockton,
The Board found that Respondent is not a modest retail establishment exempt from California’s open access principles. The evidence in the record reflects that Respondent operates a large supermarket grocery outlet that is open to the general public for the purpose of browsing and shopping. The nature and extent of public invitation to the property is broad: the store is prominently located on California Route 111, a major state highway; customers need not make advance appointments to shop; and use of the property is not limited to specific clientele or purposes. Though the parking lot is designated for the use of employees and customers, there is no evidence that a customer who browses the store’s merchandise but does not ultimately purchase items is considered a trespasser or is otherwise unwelcome to park and enter for that purpose.
The sole fact that might support Respondent’s contention that its property is not unconditionally open to the public is the factually disputed evidence that in the summer of 1995, signs were posted on the property proclaiming: “Trespassers, solicitors or distribution of literature by non-employees is prohibited on this property.” Even if true, however, posting a sign does not permit the supermarket owner to avoid his constitutional obligation.
See Robins,
Thus, we conclude that the California Supreme Court would hold that “[w]hatever ‘modest retail establishment’ means, it does not include ... a ‘large supermarket-type grocery store.’ ”
Bank of Stockton,
Respondent additionally asserts that general state trespass principles entitle him to exclude uninvited visitors. We reject this contention. “The essence of the cause of action for trespass is an ‘unauthorized entry’ onto the land of another.”
Cassinos v. Union Oil Co.,
IV
Respondent further argues that our decision in
Sparks Nugget, Inc. v. NLRB,
Sparks Nugget was decided before Thunder Basin, however, in which the Supreme Court made clear that an inquiry into the property owner’s right to exclude is a threshold determination, and may explain why we failed to plainly speak to the property interests underlying the accommodation question. Nevertheless, were we to explicitly consider Sparks Nugget’s property interest under Nevada law, we would conclude that Lechmere’s accommodation analysis was properly invoked. Nevada law, unlike that of California, does not extend special protection to free speech interests at the expense of store owner’s property interests. 7 Instead, like the Connecticut law that underlay Lech-mere, Nevada law allowed the casino owner to exclude the union members from its property. 8 As a result, the Sparks Nugget *1094 court properly invoked Lechmere’s accommodation principles notwithstanding its lack of an express discussion of Nevada property interests.
Because California and Nevada property law are materially different,
Sparks Nugget
does not control the accommodation analysis to be applied to California shopping mall and supermarket owners, as that result would restrict access of protected Section 7 activity where California state constitutional law guarantees that no other free speech may be restricted. Such a result is not the import of
Lechmere, Sparks Nugget,
or Section 7 of the NLRA.
See Thunder Basin Coal Co.,
Respondent additionally argues that
Sparks Nugget
protects its right to exclude the Union representatives on the ground that it distinguishes between direct and derivative Section 7 activity. We reject this claim.
Sparks Nugget
holds that Lechmere’s inaccessibility exception, permitting nonemployee union representatives to come on private property only when necessary to reach employees, is not applicable in the context of reaching consumers because consumers are not isolated on company property.
V
Finally, Respondent argues that the need for a uniform, national labor law precludes Section 7 rights from being defined by individual state trespass laws. Because we accord deference to Board’s interpretation of the NLRA, we lastly consider whether the Board’s determination that accommodation of Section 7 activity depends in the first instance on an employer’s state property rights is rational and consistent with the Act.
One purpose of Section 7 is to guarantee employees’ rights to engage in concerted activities for “mutual aid or protection.” 29 U.S.C. § 157. As discussed in Part II, Section 7 activity is subject to widely disparate accommodation on private property depending on the state in which the activity is exercised. To the extent that state law permits employers’ exclusion of Section 7 conduct, the NLRA does not mandate accommodation.
See Thunder Basin Coal,
A principal concern over “state interference with federally protected conduct” is the risk that the state will misinterpret the federal law, resulting in the “prohibition of protected conduct.”
Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
We find no reason to believe that California’s provision of additional access conflicts with the federal scheme. As one prescient commentator noted: “If states choose to modify their property laws, and to subtract from the owner’s bundle of property entitlements, the federal interest in access then pushes against an open door. There is no federal justification for barring states from allowing access when the only reason federal law did not provide the access was a deference to supposed state law opposing it.” Michael H. Gottesman,
Rethinking Labor Law Preemption: State Laws Facilitating Unionization,
7 YALE J. ON REG. 355, 417 (Summer 1990). This analysis fully accords with NLRA preemption principles.
9
“The NLRA contains no express preemption provision.”
Building and Construction Trades Council v. Associated Builders and Contractors,
In this case, allowing state law to provide greater accommodation of Section 7 activity does not conflict with the NLRA because it does not “set forth standards of conduct inconsistent with the substantive requirements of the NLRA.”
See id.
at 225,
CONCLUSION
We uphold the Board’s rule, that in cases in which the exercise of Section 7 rights by nonemployee Union representatives is assertedly in conflict with a respondent’s private property rights, the respondent bears a threshold burden to establish that it had, at the time it expelled the Union representatives, an interest which entitled it to exclude individuals from the property. We also uphold the Board’s finding that the Indio Grocery Outlet was not a modest retail establishment, and its conclusion that under California law Respondent had no right to exclude the public from the property. We further uphold the Board’s findings in this case, that the Union was engaged in conduct protected by Section 7 of the Act. Therefore, we GRANT enforcement of the Board’s order concluding that Respondent’s interference with the Union’s protected conduct consti *1096 tuted a violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA.
ORDER ENFORCED.
Notes
. In smaller type, Respondent’s handbills also included the following text:
Dear Valued Customer:
Thank you for your patronage! We want to be sure you know that none of the people outside picketing are Indio Grocery Outlet employees. We are all happily employed and are receiving competitive wages and benefits from our employer. This is a family owned and operated store and we are all inside the store ready to serve you as always. Come back and see us again soon, and PLEASE BRING YOUR FRIENDS. The Employees of the Indio Grocery Outlet.
The handbill was signed by thirteen Indio store employees.
. Section 8(b)(7) provides in relevant part: "It shall be an unfair labor practice for a labor organization or its agents ... to picket or cause to be picketed, or threaten to picket or cause to be picketed, any employer where an object thereof is forcing or requiring an employer to recognize or bargain with a labor organization as the representative of his employees, or forcing or requiring the employees of an employer to accept or select such labor organization as their collective bargaining representative...." 29 U.S.C. § 158(b)(7). Section 8(b)(7)(C) provides that nothing in that subsection "shall be construed to prohibit any picketing or other publicity for the purpose of truthfully advising the public (including consumers) that an employer does not employ members of a labor organization.” 29 U.S.C. § 158(b)(7)(C).
. "Nonemployees” denotes union representatives who are not employees of the targeted employer.
See O’Neil’s Markets v. NLRB,
. We reject Respondent's contention that
Lane
is no longer good law due to its reliance on
Logan Valley.
While Respondent is correct that
Hudgens
overruled
Logan Valley
to
*1091
the extent that the First Amendment no longer protects peaceful picketing exercised in a shopping center, California appellate courts have invoked the California constitution as a source of protection for speech in shopping centers and other public settings.
See Bank of Stockton,
.
The cases upon which Respondent relies are inapposite, and none support the proposition that free speech activity on privately owned shopping center property constitutes trespass.
See Cassinos,
. The Nevada Supreme Court has not construed its state constitutional free speech provision, article I, section 9 of the Nevada Constitution, in the context of accommodation of speech on private property. Its only decisions addressing accommodation principles among speech and property rights have relied equally upon the First Amendment and the Nevada Constitution without distinguishing between them.
See Culinary Workers Union, Local No. 226 v. Eighth Judicial District Court,
.Moreover, Nevada state law restricts picketing during the pendency of a labor dispute,
see
Nev.Rev.Stat. § 614.160 ("it is unlawful
*1094
for any person to picket on private property without the written permission of the owner ...
even if
the private property is open to the public as invitees for business.”) (emphasis added); unlike California law, which recognizes a labor exception to California's criminal trespass laws.
See
Cal. Ann. Penal Code § 522.1(a) (West 1999). We recognize that the Nevada provision has not been construed by the Nevada courts and accordingly does not assist us in determining the Nevada Supreme Court’s construction of the state law.
See Venetian Casino Resort,
. Certainly, California’s constitutional and common law guarantees of free speech are not a ''regulation”
per se
subject to traditional preemption analysis.
See Building and Construction Trades Council,
