R. W. Harmon & Sons, Inc. (Harmon or petitioner) seeks review of two orders of the National Labor Relations Board (Board) asserting jurisdiction over petitioner’s activities. Harmon is a corporation engaged in providing school bus and other charter bus transportation services in nine states. It presently provides school bus services to approximately seventy-three public school districts. The challenged Board orders *250 arose out of petitioner’s refusals to bargain with Service Employees Union Local 513 (union), which represents school bus drivers in Wichita, Kansas and O’Fallon, Missouri. 1
Harmon contests the Board’s jurisdictional authority on two grounds. It argues, first, Harmon’s activities are essentially local in character and do not affect interstate commerce; and, second, each school board so fully controls employment conditions and restricts Harmon’s ability to engage in meaningful collective bargaining with its bus drivers, that Harmon shares the school board’s governmental exemption from Board jurisdiction, as provided in section 2(2) of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 29 U.S.C. § 152(2). Petitioner also argues that the Board abused its discretion when it abandoned its former test for asserting jurisdiction over school bus operators.
The two cases consolidated here involve Harmon’s contracts to provide school bus transportation in the Sedgwick County school district in Wichita, Kansas and the Fort Zumwalt school district in O’Fallon, Missouri. In both contracts the school districts require that drivers possess valid chauffeur’s licenses and meet state qualifications for school bus drivers. The school districts have authority to reject applicants for bus driver positions, and the contracts allow the school districts to recommend that Harmon dismiss, discipline, or transfer drivers to other routes. Additionally, the school boards establish the bus routes and route schedules. Harmon hires and trains the drivers, determines their wage rates and benefits, and regularly monitors and supervises their performance.
In 1978 the union filed representation petitions with the Board’s Regional Director, seeking certification as the collective bargaining representative of Harmon’s bus drivers in both school districts. Following the representation hearings, the Regional Director ordered elections, rejecting Harmen’s contentions that its operations were purely local in character or were so controlled by the school districts that the Board could not assert jurisdiction over it. The union won the elections and was then certified as the drivers’ exclusive bargaining representative.
When Harmon refused to bargain, the union filed unfair labor practice charges. In its defense Harmon again asserted that the Board lacked jurisdiction. In both cases the Board granted summary judgment against Harmon because it found the company raised no issues it had not or could not have litigated in prior representation proceedings. It also found that by refusing to bargain, Harmon violated sections 8(a)(1) and (5) of the NLRA, 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1) and (5). This appeal followed.
We first consider the jurisdictional issues. Harmon argues that because its business is essentially local in character its labor activities do not affect interstate commerce. Congress vested the Board with the “fullest
jurisdictional
breadth constitutionally permissible under the Commerce Clause.”
NLRB v. Reliance Fuel Oil Corp.,
Petitioner next argues that the Board should decline to exercise jurisdiction because of the extent to which the school districts, which are exempt under NLRA section 2(2), control the conditions of employment. The Board may exercise its jurisdiction only over statutory employers, employees, and labor organizations. Section 2(2) exempts from the definition of “employer” any “state or political subdivision thereof.” 29 U.S.C. § 152(2). Courts have interpreted section 2(2) to prohibit the Board from asserting jurisdiction over private employers that perform services for exempt governmental entities if the employer does not “retain sufficient control over the employment relationship to engage in meaningful collective bargaining.”
Board of Trustees of Memorial Hospital v. NLRB,
Whether an employer retains sufficient control over the employment relationship is a question of fact. We must accept the Board’s resolution of the question “unless unsupported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole, or unless arbitrary or capricious.”
Id.
at 903;
accord, NLRB v. St. Louis Comprehensive Neighborhood Health Center,
Harmon contends that the school districts’ authority to reject job applicants and to recommend dismissal of a driver effectively eliminates Harmon’s ability to engage in meaningful collective bargaining. We disagree. Courts view the absolute power to hire and fire workers as a relevant but not essential indication of an employer-employee relationship, e.
g., NLRB v. E. C. Atkins & Co.,
Harmon also emphasizes that it cannot bargain about bus routes, time schedules, and days of operation because the school districts specify those terms. The jurisdictional test, however, does not require an employer to control all terms and conditions of employment, but only enough control to bargain effectively. Since Harmon controls wages and benefits — the bread and butter issues of collective bargaining — it. can engage in meaningful bargaining.
Finally, Harmon argues that the Board abused its discretion when it abandoned its earlier “intimate connection” test. Prior to
National Transportation Service, Inc.,
Harmon makes various arguments that the Board abused its discretion in abandoning the “intimate connection” prong of the test, including that it should have followed the rulemaking procedures of the Administrative Procedure Act. See 5 U.S.C. § 553. We need not address Harmon’s claims because it did not raise them until the unfair labor practice proceedings. A party cannot raise an issue in an unfair labor practice proceeding or on appeal that could have been, but was not, raised in the representation hearing.
3
St. Anthony Hospital Systems v. NLRB,
The Board’s order is therefore enforced.
Notes
. To obtain judicial review of a Board decision in either a representation proceeding or an election, an employer must refuse to bargain with the employee representative, which will result in an unfair labor practice charge against the employer.
Magnesium Casting Co. v. NLRB,
. Although Harmon presently does not provide vacation time, insurance, or retirement plans, it admits it has the authority to grant these benefits.
. Although the Fort Zumwalt representation hearing took place before the Board decided National Transportation Service, the Wichita hearing occurred after that decision. At the Wichita hearing Harmon referred to National Transportation Service, but did not argue that the Board’s decision in that case was an abuse of discretion.
. 29 C.F.R. § 102.67(f) (1981) provides, in pertinent part:
“Failure to request review shall preclude such parties from relitigating, in any related subsequent unfair labor practice proceeding, any issue which was, or could have been, raised in the representation proceeding.”
