Lead Opinion
At midnight between August 30 and 31, 1994, ownership of a unionized long-term nursing care facility changed over from the Lutheran Home of the Good Shepherd (“Lutheran Home”) to the Northern Montana Care Center (“Care Center”), a corporate subsidiary of Northern Montana Health Care, Inc. (NMHCI).
Before the transition in ownership, the facility had employed 157 employees, 74 of whom were in job classifications that were part of the established bargaining unit. Prior to August 30, the Care Center conducted a hiring process in which employees had to reapply for their positions. By the time of the transition, 54 of the 76 positions that were part of the bargaining unit were filled by Union members.
On September 2, 1994, the United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local No. 8 (“Union”) sent the Care Center a demand for recognition of the bargaining unit that had been in place at the facility. On September 12, 1994, the Care Center responded, asserting its good faith doubt
On September 16, 1994, the Union filed an unfair labor practice charge against the Care Center, stating that the Care Center was refusing to recognize and bargain with the Union in violation of section 8(a)(5) of the NLRA. The charge asserted that the Care Center was a successor to the Lutheran Home’s bargaining obligation. The NLRB Regional Director investigated the charge, which served to administratively “block” the Care Center’s petition, and issued a complaint against the Care Center and NMHCI as a single employer alleging that the Petitioners had violated their suc-cessorship obligation to bargain with the Union.
After a three day trial, the ALJ issued his decision on September 20, 1995, finding that the Care Center was a successor employer, rejecting its claim that it held a good faith doubt regarding the Union’s majority status, and holding that it violated its duty to bargain with the Union. The ALJ also held that housekeeping, maintenance, and dietary employees who were on the Hospital payroll but worked regularly at the Care Center were properly included in the bargaining unit; however, the ALJ agreed with the Care Center’s contention that the licensed practical nurs-. es were supervisors and should be excluded from the bargaining unit. Finally, the ALJ found that the NMHCI, the Care Center, and the Hospital were a single employer and therefore imposed a bargaining obligation as well as a duty to cease and desist all unfair labor practices upon all three entities. On October 17, 1997, the NLRB affirmed the ALJ’s decision in all substantial respects except that it held that the licensed practical nurses were not supervisors and that they therefore were properly included within the bargaining unit.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Decisions of the NLRB are upheld on appeal if its findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence and it correctly applied the law. NLRB v. District Council of Iron Workers of Calif,
DISCUSSION
Under Fall River Dyeing & Finishing Corp. v. NLRB,
Supervisory status of charge nurses
The Care Center is divided into east and west wings, and a charge nurse is always present on each wing. The primary responsibility of the charge nurse is to assess patient care needs and assure that appropriate treatment is administered. This includes directing certain aspects of patient care and assigning tasks to employees. Five licensed practical nurses work at the Care Center, and all regularly serve as charge nurses. However, if a licensed practical nurse is the charge nurse on one wing, a registered nurse must serve on the other.
Petitioners assert that, in the capacity of charge nurses, licensed practical nurses supervise the certified nurses aides and that they therefore should be excluded from the bargaining unit. The NLRA defines supervisory status as follows:
The term “supervisor” means any 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 with the foregoing the exercise of such authority is not of a merely routine or clerical nature, but requires the use of independent judgment.
29 U.S.C. § 152(11) (1999). “Section 2(11) powers exercised in a manner that is ‘merely routine or clerical’ are not sufficient to show supervisory status.” NLRB v. Bakers of Paris, Inc.,
In Providence Alaska, we held that registered nurses who in their capacity as charge nurses were responsible for assigning employees to tasks and patients, assessing staffing needs, calling in employees and authorizing overtime, asking employees to go home when the facility was overstaffed, approving breaks, coordinating patient care, and providing routine guidance to other employees were not supervisors within the meaning of the NLRA. Providence Alaska,
Employees on the Hospital’s payroll
Petitioners also challenge the inclusion in the bargaining unit of a number of employees in dietary, housekeeping, and maintenance job classifications who worked predominantly at the Care Center but were on the Hospital’s payroll, and raise this as a defense to their failure to bargain. See NLRB v. Burns,
We uphold the NLRB’s finding. These employees worked at the Care Center, were subject to the Care Center’s personnel policies and procedures, and were paid according to the Care Center’s pay matrix. The fact that these job classifications were moved to the Hospital’s payroll did not alter the employees’ community of interest with other employees working at the Care Center, particularly given the Board’s finding that the Care Center, the Hospital and NMHCI constituted a single employer. This finding was supported by substantial evidence in the record regarding the “interrelation of operations, common management, centralized control of labor relations and common ownership” of the three entities. South Prairie Const. Co. v. Operating Eng’rs,
The NLRB properly found that the change in the composition of the bargaining unit was negligible and that the previous unit remained appropriate. Similar variances have been found insubstantial in other cases.
Good faith doubt as to the Union’s continued majority support
The Board’s finding that the Care Center was a legal successor to the Lutheran Home entitles the Union to a presumption of continued majority support, which in turn requires continued recognition and bargaining unless the employer can demonstrate a good faith doubt based on objective evidence of the Union’s majority support. See Fall River Dyeing & Finishing Corp.,
We uphold the NLRB’s finding that evidence of employee dissatisfaction with the union was minimal and that the organizing campaign itself did not provide sufficient grounds for doubting the Union’s majority support. See Decor Noel, Inc.,
In fact, most of the evidence presented by petitioners supported their claim of a good faith doubt regarding their successorship obligations, not as to whether the Union had majority support among the
Failure to name the Hospital
We differ in only one respect with the NLRB. Because only NMHCI and the Care Center were named in the General Counsel’s complaint, the Hospital cannot be bound by the enforcement order. Even though the three entities constitute a single employer, and their interests are therefore almost identical, due process is violated when a separate corporate entity has no notice that its interests will be adjudicated and that it will be bound by the order that the NLRB issues. Although “[a]etions before the Board are not subject to technical pleading requirements that govern private lawsuits[,]” NLRB v. IBEW,
CONCLUSION
The decision and order of the NLRB is AFFIRMED and the petition for enforcement is GRANTED, except that the order may not be enforced against the Hospital.
Notes
. NMHCI is a nonprofit corporation which provides acute and extended health care services. It incorporated the Care Center as a corporate vehicle to own and operate the Lutheran Home facility. In addition to the Care Center, NMHCI operates another subsidiary, the Northern Montana Hospital ("Hospital”), which at the time relevant to this case was located one mile from the Care Center. The President and CEO of NMHCI serves in the same capacity for the Hospital and Care Center, and the administration, human resources, recordkeeping, and support services functions for the Care Center were performed largely by Hospital staff.
. The NLRB also found that the successor bargaining obligation ensued ten days earlier than the date set by the ALJ. Petitioners do not contest this finding on appeal.
. The main difference between the two cases is that in Providence Alaska the registered nurses provided guidance to and coordinated the schedules of other registered nurses, while in this case the licensed practical nurses mostly guide and coordinate the work of certified nurses aides. This difference does not affect the result; other circuits have reached similar conclusions in cases involving licensed practical nurses who served as charge nurses and allegedly supervised nursing assistants. See NLRB v. Graneare, Inc.,
. The fact that certified nurses aides are permitted, at least by some licensed practical nurses, to change assignments without approval also weighs against a finding that preparation of daily assignment sheets demonstrated supervisory status. See Providence Alaska, 121 F.3dat552.
. In reaching our conclusions, we have taken into account the difference in the conclusions reached by the ALJ and the NLRB regarding licensed practical nurses, including the fact that neither adjudicator relied on credibility determinations.
. The "secondary indicia" of supervisory authority are only relevant "[i]n borderline cases.” NLRB v. Chicago Metallic Corp.,
. See David Wolcott Kendall Memorial School v. NLRB,
. In the case cited by petitioners in which the Tenth Circuit considered an organizing drive as evidence of the union's lack of majority support, the organizing drive had been unsuccessful and many other factors were present (for example, the hiring of permanent replacements and the union's abandonment of the workforce). See NLRB v. Oil Capital Electric, Inc.,
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I concur in all of the majority opinion except for the determination that licensed practical nurses are not supervisors. The duties of licensed practical nurses in a long-term care nursing home, such as the Northern Montana Health Care Center, differ markedly from those in an acute care facility, such as the one involved in Providence Alaska Medical Center v. NLRB,
Nonetheless, because the number of employees involved was insubstantial, the employer was not relieved of its responsibility to bargain with the unit. See David Wol-cott Kendall Memorial School v. NLRB,
Thus, I concur in the judgment, but respectfully disagree with some of the rationale upon which it is based.
