Northeast Utilities Service Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board

35 F.3d 621 | 1st Cir. | 1994

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 94-1006

             NORTHEAST UTILITIES SERVICE CORPORATION,
                           Petitioner,

                                v.

                 NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD,
                           Respondent.

                                           

         INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF ELECTRICAL WORKERS,
                     LOCAL 455, AFL-CIO-CLC,
                            Intervenor

                                           

           ON PETITION FOR REVIEW AND CROSS-APPLICATION
                  FOR ENFORCEMENT OF AN ORDER OF
                THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD

                                           

                              Before

                  Selya and Cyr, Circuit Judges,
                                               
                   and Zobel,* District Judge.
                                             

                                           

     Gregory  B. Nokes,  with whom  Kevin D. O'Leary,  William H.
                                                                 
Narwold, and Cummings & Lockwood were on brief for petitioner.
                                
     Margaret Gaines Neigus, Supervisory Attorney, National Labor
                           
Relations  Board,  with  whom  Frederick  L.  Feinstein,  General
                                                       
Counsel, Linda Sher, Acting  Associate General Counsel, Aileen A.
                                                                 
Armstrong, Deputy  Associate General  Counsel, Peter  D. Winkler,
                                                                
Rosemary  Pye,  National  Labor  Relations  Board,  Marshall   T.
                                                                 
Moriarty, and Maskele and Moriarty were on brief for respondent.
                                  

                                           

                        September 20, 1994
                                           

                    

*  Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.

          ZOBEL,  District  Judge.   Northeast  Utilities Service
          ZOBEL,  District  Judge.
                                 

Corporation (the "Company") petitions for review of a final order of the National Labor  Relations Board (the "Board").   The Board cross-applies  for  enforcement  of  that  order,1   pursuant  to sections 10(e) and (f)  of the National Labor Relations  Act (the "Act"),  29 U.S.C.A.    160(e),(f)(West  1973).   The only  issue before this Court  is whether  the Board  had substantial  record evidence  to conclude  that certain  of the  Company's employees, known as  Pool Coordinators ("PCs") and  Senior Pool Coordinators ("SPCs"), are  neither "supervisors" within section  2(11) of the Act  nor  managerial employees  and  therefore  may constitute  a collective bargaining unit.

                                I.

           International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 455 (the "IBEW"), filed  a petition with the Board  seeking to be certified  as exclusive  collective bargaining  representative of the PCs and SPCs.  The Company opposed the petition on the ground that  these employees were exempt  from the Act  because of their supervisory and managerial status.   Based on evidence  presented at preelection hearings, the regional director found that neither PCs  nor SPCs  were  supervisors or  managers.   Accordingly, she directed  an election.  The  Company filed a  timely "Request for Review" which the Board rejected as raising no substantial issues warranting reconsideration.

                    

1  The Board's November 24, 1993, Decision and Order  is reported at  313 N.L.R.B. No.  65 (Nov. 24,  1993).  It  rests on findings issued April 8, 1993.  

                               -2-

          The IBEW  prevailed in the election held  May 11, 1993, whereupon the  regional director  certified it as  the collective bargaining  representative of  the  PCs and  SPCs.   The  Company declined  the IBEW's subsequent  request to bargain collectively; it  still insisted  that the  PCs and  SPCs were  supervisors and managers exempt from the  proposed bargaining unit.  On  June 17, 1993,  the IBEW  filed  an unfair  labor  practice charge.    The Board's  general  counsel then  issued  a  complaint and  amended complaint  on the charge that  the Company refused  to bargain in violation of section  8(a)(1) and (5) of  the Act, 29  U.S.C.A.  

158(a)(1),(5)(West 1973).   He subsequently moved to transfer the proceedings to the Board  and for summary judgment.   On November 24,  1993,  the Board  granted the  motion,  as it  found  no new evidence  or  special  circumstances   that  would  cause  it  to reexamine its  representation decision.   It  therefore concluded that the Company's refusal to bargain violated the Act.

                               II.

          In the  late  1960s New  England's  electric  utilities created  the  New England  Power  Pool  ("NEPOOL") to  centralize control of the region's  power supply.  NEPOOL is  an association of roughly one hundred utility companies in the six-state region, which  in   turn  operate   approximately  three   hundred  power generating  plants.   NEPOOL  is  divided  into three  divisions, NEPOOL  billing,  which manages  transactions within  the system; NEPLAN,  which forecasts  future  power needs;  and NEPEX,  which controls daily power generation and transmission.

                               -3-

          The Company  is responsible for staffing  each division pursuant  to  a  service  contract  with  NEPOOL.    All  support functions  are  provided  by   the  Company  as  well,  including personnel   management,  accounting  and  purchasing.    Vacation schedules, exempt  payment plans, hiring,  evaluation and  firing practices  are  uniformly prescribed  by  the Company  throughout NEPOOL's divisions.  Thus,  every employee of a  NEPOOL operating division is an employee of the Company.

          NEPEX in Holyoke, Massachusetts, is the master dispatch and control center  for bulk  power throughout New  England.   It regulates the  day-to-day production, sale and  purchase of power by  each  of  the   approximately  three  hundred  NEPOOL  member utilities.   Because of the  complexity of this  task, NEPEX does not communicate directly with each of the component power plants, but   instead  relays   instructions  through   four  "satellite" operations.   The  satellites  are regionally  organized:   Rhode Island, Eastern Massachusetts and Vermont are within the "REMVEC" satellite;  Connecticut  and  Western  Massachusetts  within  the "CONVEX" satellite;  New Hampshire  and  Maine each  has its  own satellite organization.   CONVEX employees are  also employees of the Company but the other satellites are independently staffed. 

                               III.

          The employees at issue work in the  NEPEX control room, the  nerve center  of all  NEPEX operations.   The  PCs  and SPCs (collectively  "Coordinators") are  responsible  for  buying  and selling  power  among the  member  utilities  as economically  as

                               -4- possible while avoiding power outages.  They decide which  plants will operate  at what times and  at what power levels.   They set and implement maintenance  schedules for  both generating  plants and transmission elements.  If control room equipment should need repair  or maintenance, they  may order  those services  from the plant's engineers,  in accordance with  priorities set in  one of fourteen "Operating  Procedures" promulgated  by NEPOOL to  guide the Coordinators in their several responsibilities.

          The  control   room  is  in  constant   operation;  the Coordinators work in  teams of three -- one SPC and two PCs -- in twelve-hour  shifts.   During "business hours," from 8:30 a.m. to 4:00  p.m. on weekdays, a supervisor  and assistant supervisor of control  room operations  also work  at the  plant; at  all other times  they are on  call.  They  audit and  formally evaluate the Coordinators' overall performance, sometimes  with input from the SPCs.   During nonbusiness hours,  the PCs  and SPC are  the only employees on duty. 

          The PCs alternate each shift between two positions, the "generation/load"  PC and  the  "transmission/security" PC.   The generation/load PC buys and  sells "contract" and "economy" power from all member and nonmember plants, and reserves  enough unused capacity  to ensure  continued operation  in the  event  that the largest single generator shuts down.  

          The transmission/security  PC monitors the  New England bulk power system, prepares for power coverage in  the event of a plant  shutdown, and has final authority to approve or disapprove

                               -5- transmission outage applications.    This  employee also has  the authority  to  dispatch  power uneconomically  if  such  dispatch contributes  to  overall   system  reliability.    Further,   the transmission/security   PC   monitors  the   system   to  prevent cascading, that is, to ensure that no single transmission element in   the  system   overloads  any  other   transmission  element. Ultimately, the security PC  may direct limited power  outages by reducing  voltage or "shedding load" to prevent a more widespread blackout. 

          The  SPC's duties are similar to those of the PCs', but rather   than   looking   at   the    system's   minute-to-minute requirements, the  SPC forecasts the system's  needs from several hours to one day in advance.  Witnesses for the Company testified the  SPC is "in  charge" of the  shift.  As  the more experienced employee in the  control room,  the SPC may  attempt to  moderate disputes  between  the generation/load  and transmission/security PCs  but there  was  no evidence  that  the  SPC gave  orders  or instructions.   On the contrary, the record suggests that the SPC is too  busy with his/her  own duties  to oversee the  PCs' work. Except for informal discussions with the control room supervisor, the SPC does not evaluate PCs' performance and is not responsible for discipline, termination of  employment, or for approving time sheets or leave.  During nonbusiness hours, if a PC cannot report to  work, the SPC contacts a shift replacement from a preexisting "spares" list.

          Although NEPEX PCs and SPCs are paid at a higher salary

                               -6- grade than  satellite operators, they have no  authority to hire, fire,  evaluate  or  promote   satellite  employees.    Should  a satellite operator refuse to  comply with NEPEX instructions, the PC or  SPC would not  have the power  to discipline or  recommend discipline.   Instead,  the  NEPEX coordinator  would relate  the incident  to  NEPEX  upper  management who  would  contact  upper management at the satellite and attempt to resolve the matter.

          Both  PCs  and  SPCs have  substantial  authority  with respect to NEPEX's day-to-day functions, but even in this respect their discretion  is limited by the directives  in fourteen NEPEX Operating Procedures.  The Procedures define the broad parameters to  be followed  as  the  PCs  and  SPCs  conduct  the  dispatch. However,  not every facet of  every procedure is  dictated by the Operating Procedures and Coordinators  are often expected to rely upon  their own  knowledge,  skills and  experience  to make  the system work.

                               IV.

           Supervisors are excluded from the Act's  definition of "employees"  and hence may not  be included in  a bargaining unit designated by the  Board.   29 U.S.C.A.     152(3), 159(b)  (West 1973).  Section 2(11) of the  Act, 29 U.S.C.   152(11), defines a "supervisor" as

            [A]ny individual having authority, in the
            interest  of  the   employer,  to   hire,
            transfer,   suspend,  lay   off,  recall,
            promote,  discharge,  assign, reward,  or
            discipline     other     employees,    or
            responsibly to direct  them, or to adjust
            their   grievances,  or   effectively  to
            recommend such action,  if in  connection

                               -7-

            with the foregoing  the exercise of  such
            authority is  not of a  merely routine or
            clerical nature, but requires the  use of
            independent judgment. The  statute is read in  the disjunctive, "with  the existence of any one of the statutory  powers sufficient to confer supervisory status  regardless  of the  frequency  of its  exercise."   Maine
                                                                 

Yankee  Atomic Power  Co. v.  NLRB,  624 F.2d  347, 360;  NLRB v.
                                                                 

Magnesium Casting Co., 427  F.2d 114, 117 (1st Cir.  1970), aff'd
                                                                 

on other grounds, 401 U.S. 137 (1971).
                

          We   are   especially   deferential   to   the  Board's determination  of  supervisory  status because  we  recognize the Board's  competence  and experience  in applying  the Act  to the complexities  of industrial life.   NLRB v.  Erie Resistor Corp.,
                                                                

373  U.S. 221,  236  (1963);   Maine  Yankee,  624  F.2d at  360.
                                            

Further,  the  "infinite  and  subtle  gradations  of  authority" existing in the workplace  entitle the Board to wide  latitude in determining   which  employees  fall  within  the  definition  of "supervisor."   Marine Eng'rs Beneficial Ass'n  v. Interlake S.S.
                                                                 

Co., 370 U.S.  173, 179  n.6 (1962); Goldies,  Inc. v. NLRB,  628
                                                           

F.2d 706, 710 (1st Cir. 1980).    Our deference is not unlimited, however;  we will  only  affirm the  Board's  decision if  it  is supported by  "substantial evidence," drawn from  the totality of the record.   Universal Camera  Corp. v. NLRB, 340  U.S. 474, 488
                                             

(1951); Maine Yankee, 624 F.2d at 360.
                    

          The  Company concedes  that the  PCs and  SPCs have  no authority to "hire, transfer,  suspend, lay off, recall, promote, discharge,   assign,  reward,  or  discipline  other  employees."

                               -8- Instead,  it  contends  that  the  Coordinators  are  supervisors because  they  "responsibly  .   .  .  direct"  CONVEX  satellite employees and NEPEX engineers, and the exercise of that authority requires the use of independent judgment.

          PCs   and  SPCs   are  unquestionably   highly  trained employees  who use  independent  judgment to  make and  implement complex technical decisions that affect the entire region's power supply.  They  do not, however, "responsibly . .  . direct" other employees  within the meaning of the statute.  "To be responsible is to be answerable for the  discharge of a duty or  obligation." Maine Yankee, 624  F.2d at 361 (quoting  Ohio Power Co. v.  NLRB,
                                                                

176 F.2d 385, 387 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 338 U.S. 899 (1949)).
                                          

The uncontroverted evidence established that the PCs and SPCs are not answerable for the conduct of satellite operators.  The NEPEX coordinators  are  permitted  merely to  report  CONVEX  employee failures to NEPEX upper management, and it is upper management at the satellite that  is ultimately responsible for the  actions of CONVEX operators.  By the  same token, although PCs and  SPCs use independent  judgment  within  the  guidelines  of  the Operating Procedures to determine  whether and when to  direct engineers to service control  room equipment, there  is no evidence  that they answer for engineering or equipment failures.

          The  Company maintains  that  the SPCs,  as the  senior employees  in the  control  room during  nonbusiness hours,  also supervise  PCs.  However, its assertion that SPCs were in "charge of the shift" in  the control room supervisor's absence,  is also

                               -9- not  supported by the evidence.   Nothing in  the record suggests that they had ultimate responsibility for the plant's performance during  nonbusiness  hours,  in  fact  the  record  notes that  a supervisor is always  on call.   Moreover, SPCs  do not  evaluate PCs'  performance,  although  the  control  room  supervisor  may request SPCs'  input.  SPCs do  not have authority to  hire or to assign work;  only as a matter  of routine may they  fill an open shift  from a preexisting list.   If the  SPCs moderate disputes, the outcome is not ultimately their responsibility.  Finally, and most  importantly, SPCs are simply  not held accountable  if a PC disobeys a direct order, misquotes a price or causes a blackout.

          Petitioner relies heavily on  Maine Yankee, 624 F.2d at
                                                    

347,  in which we reversed the Board's determination that a power plant's  Shift  Operating  Supervisors ("SOSs"),  who  had duties similar to those of  the Coordinators here, were not  supervisors under the Act.  Its reliance is misplaced.  In that case we found that  the SOSs  did  responsibly direct  other employees  because "should anything  go wrong with  respect to the  plant's electric power output,  '[the SOS] is  the one  that would have  to answer why.'"   Id. at  361.  The  Coordinators in this  case may direct
           

CONVEX  operators, but  they  are not  responsible  for what  the satellite  employees actually do.   Further, in Maine Yankee, the
                                                            

Board  ignored  or  depreciated   evidence  that  the  SOSs  used independent judgment in their direction of other employees.  Here the Board implicitly recognized  that the Coordinators are highly trained   employees  with  substantial   discretion,  within  the

                               -10- Operating Procedures,  to instruct  other employees.   The Board, however,  refused to take the further step of concluding that PCs and SPCs  were responsible for  other employees' actions,  and in that, we conclude, it was correct.

                                V.

          The  Company   also  argues  that  PCs   and  SPCs  are managerial employees and therefore  exempt.  The Act  itself does not explicitly exclude  managers, but they have been  excluded by judicial  interpretation  because   managers'  interests  are  so aligned with  the interests of the employer  that managers cannot be deemed  employees for the purposes  of the Act.   NLRB v. Bell
                                                                 

Aerospace Co., 416 U.S. 267, 283-89 (1974).  Managers are defined
             

as those  who "'formulate  and effectuate management  policies by expressing   and  making   operative  the   decisions   of  their employer.'"  NLRB v. Health Care  & Retirement Corp.,  114 S. Ct.
                                                    

1778,  1782  (1994) (quoting  Bell Aerospace,  416 U.S.  at 288);
                                            

Boston  Univ. Chapter, Am. Ass'n of Univ. Professors v. NLRB, 835
                                                            

F.2d 399, 400 n.3 (1st  Cir. 1987).  Generally, employees  may be excluded from a bargaining unit on the basis of managerial status only  if  they "represent[]  management  interests  by taking  or recommending  discretionary actions  that effectively  control or implement employer policy."  NLRB v. Yeshiva University, 444 U.S.
                                                       

672, 683 (1980).

          The  Company's  argument   is  unpersuasive  given  the paucity  of evidence tending to show managerial powers in the PCs or SPCs.  Management policy at NEPEX is embodied in the Operating

                               -11- Procedures formulated  by the Operations Committee.   There is no evidence that  PCs  or  SPCs  have  a role  in  the  creation  or implementation  of  the  Operating  Procedures.    Certainly  the Coordinators may  sometimes depart from the  Procedures, but they do  not have the  authority to issue  new ones.   Finally, at the core  of the managerial question is the alignment of workers' and employer's  interests.  Other than the common goal of keeping the lights on,  the  record shows  no  such congruence  of  interests between the  Company and  the Coordinators sufficient  to warrant the latter's exemption from the Act.

                               VI.

          It  is the function of this Court to review the Board's decision in accordance  with the "substantial evidence" test.  It is  the Board's  "primary function  to determine  those who  as a practical  matter  fall  within  the statutory  definition  of  a 'supervisor.'"   Interlake S.S. Co.,  370 U.S.  at 179 n.6.   The
                                   

Board undoubtedly  had substantial  evidence on the  record as  a whole to conclude that the PCs  and SPCs did not meet the current definition  of "supervisors."   However, when  the Board  and the courts  set  upon  the task  of  defining  a  supervisor for  the purposes of the statute, neither contemplated the type  of quasi- professional,  quasi-overseer employee  encountered in  this case and others in the  public utilities setting.   It may profit  the Board to reexamine its views in this field. 

          The  Company's petition  for review  is denied  and the Board's application for enforcement of its order is granted.

                               -12-

          Affirmed.
          Affirmed
                  

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