Defendant-Appellant McElroy’s, Inc. (“McElroy’s”), a mechanical contractor, and Sheet Metal Workers’ International Association, Local Union No. 77 (now merged with Plaintiff-Appellee Local Union No. 2, hereinafter “Union”) entered into a pre-hire agreement authorized by § 8(f) of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”). See 29 U.S.C. § 158(a). McElroy’s and the Union performed under the contract for nearly three years when McElroy’s notified the Union that it intended to terminate the agreement on its expiration date. The Union insisted that under the terms of the agreement — specifically the “interest arbitration” clause— McElroy’s was obligated to negotiate for renewal of the contract. After McElroy’s refused to negotiate, the Union submitted the dispute to arbitration before the National Joint Adjustment Board (“NJAB”), a private alternative dispute resolution body. The NJAB held a hearing on the matter and then directed the parties to execute a three-year renewal agreement with specified terms. McElroy’s refused to comply and the Union filed an action in federal district court to enforce the NJAB’s decision. See 29 U.S.C. § 185(a). The District Court determined that the agreement required interest arbitration 1 and enforced the NJAB’s decision imposing a renewal agreement. McElroy’s appeals. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we AFFIRM the District Court’s order.
I. Background
The pre-hire agreement includes an expiration date of May 31, 2005. The agreement is based on the standard Sheet Metal Workers pre-hire agreement and includes an “extension clause” and an “interest arbitration clause.” The extension clause, Article XIII, Section 1(A), provides that the agreement “shall continue in force from year to year” after the expiration date “unless written notice of reopening is given [to the other party] not less than ninety (90) days prior to the expiration date.” If such notice is given, the agreement continues in force and effect “until conferences relating thereto have been terminated by either party, provided, however, that the contract expiration date ... shall not be effective in the event proceedings under Article X[,] Section 8 are not completed prior to that date.” Article X, Section 8 is the interest arbitration clause, which provides that “any controversy or dispute arising out of failure of the parties to negotiate a renewal of this agreement shall be settled” pursuant to the procedure set forth in that section. Relevant to this appeal, if “negotiations for renewal of this Agreement become deadlocked ... either party may submit the dispute to the [NJAB]” for arbitration.
2
The unanimous
On February 25, 2005, McElroy’s faxed a letter to the Union giving notice of its intent to terminate the agreement on the expiration date, May 31, 2005. The same day, in response to this notice, the Union mailed a letter to McElroy’s seeking to reopen negotiations in accordance with Article XIII. McElroy’s did not respond. The Union made several additional written requests to McElroy’s to negotiate a renewal agreement, but McElroy’s either ignored or denied all of these requests. As a result, on May 26, 2005, five days prior to the agreement’s expiration date, the Union submitted the dispute to the NJAB.
The NJAB scheduled a hearing for June 27, which McElroy’s elected not to attend. Instead, McElroy’s submitted a letter and memorandum to the NJAB setting forth its view that it had no obligation to bargain with the Union. On June 28, the NJAB issued an order directing McElroy’s and the Union to execute a new three-year pre-hire agreement with terms as set forth in the NJAB’s order.
On July 28, 2005, after McElroy’s refused to execute a renewal contract, the Union filed suit in federal district court to enforce the NJAB’s order. The District Court (1) rejected McElroy’s argument that either party unilaterally could terminate the agreement on its expiration date; (2) held that the interest arbitration provision of Article X applies to this case because there was a “controversy or dispute arising out of failure of the parties to negotiate a renewal of the agreement”; (3) honored the finding of the NJAB that the procedural requirements for arbitration through the NJAB had been met; and (4) enforced the NJAB’s order to execute a renewal agreement but removed from the renewal agreement the interest arbitration clause under Article X, Section 8. McEl-roy’s appeals.
II. Discussion
McElroy’s argues, first, that it had an absolute right to terminate the agreement upon the contractual expiration date without any obligation to negotiate for a renewal agreement, and second, that it was under no obligation to arbitrate the dispute under the interest arbitration clause because there was no “negotiation” for renewal of the contract resulting in a “deadlock” that could trigger Article X, Section 8 procedures. The ultimate question thus posed is whether the agreement bound McElroy’s to engage in interest arbitration.
See AT & T Techs., Inc. v. Comm’ns Workers of Am.,
McElroy’s claims the national labor policy, as set forth in the NLRA, 29 U.S.C. § 151 et seq., and decisions of the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”), permit a party to a pre-hire agreement unilaterally to terminate an agreement on its expiration date without any obligation to negotiate a renewal agreement. While we agree that McElroy’s is under no statutory obligation to negotiate a renewal contract, we conclude that the terms of the pre-hire agreement — specifically the extension and interest arbitration clauses — create a contractual obligation to do so when one party timely gives notice of reopening. Nothing in the NLRA, the NLRB’s decisions, or this Court’s precedent releases McElroy’s from this bargained-for contractual obligation.
Section 8(f) of the NLRA, 29 U.S.C. § 158(f), allows employers engaged primarily in the building and construction industry to enter into pre-hire agreements. In a pre-hire agreement, the employer agrees to hire union members or union referrals for the purpose of working on anticipated jobs during the contract period.
See Am. Metal Prods., Inc. v. Sheet Metal Workers Int’l Ass’n, Local Union No. 104,
Prior to the NLRB’s decision in
John Deklewa & Sons, Inc.,
McElroy’s interprets the pre-hire agreement to create two options upon expiration: unilateral termination under the rule in
Deklewa
or negotiation for renewal. A plain reading of the terms of the agreement indicates that McElroy’s interpretation is incorrect. As explained, the agreement includes an extension clause and an interest arbitration clause. Article XIII,
Read together, these articles provide two options upon the expiration of the agreement: automatic renewal on a yearly basis, or, if notice is given ninety days prior to the expiration date, negotiation of a renewal agreement. If one party provides the requisite ninety days’ notice of a desire to reopen negotiations, the other party has an obligation to negotiate. In negotiations, of course, the parties may mutually agree not to enter into another agreement at all, they may enter into an agreement with different terms, or they may enter into an identical agreement. If, however, the parties “fail[ ] ... to negotiate a renewal of [the] agreement” after one party timely seeks renewal, and negotiations thereby have become “deadlocked,” either party may submit the dispute to the NJAB for arbitration. While the dispute is pending resolution before the NJAB, Article XIII prevents the original agreement from expiring. The NJAB has the authority to issue a decision that is final and binding on the parties. In short, these provisions create a duty on behalf of each party to negotiate and, in the absence of agreement, obligates them to accept the decision of the NJAB. One party’s notice of intent to “terminate” the agreement on expiration does not affect the parties’ contractual obligations thereunder.
Our conclusion is buttressed by the fact that other circuits interpreting language materially indistinguishable from that in the present agreement have reached the same conclusion.
See Sheet Metal Workers Int’l Ass’n, Local Union No. 24 v. Architectural Metal Works, Inc.,
Nevertheless, McElroy’s argues that the interest arbitration clause- — -providing for arbitration when “negotiations for renewal ... become deadlocked” — does not apply on these facts because it never entered into negotiations with the Union to renew the agreement and thus there was no “deadlock” per se. In other words, McEl-roy’s persists, absent
active
negotiation, the
Dekewla
rule allows a party unilaterally to terminate the agreement on its expiration date. This argument is valid only if the parties have no obligation to negotiate a renewal agreement in the first place. As we held above, the agreement obligates the parties to negotiate a renewal agreement or to have one imposed upon them if one party timely gives notice of a desire to renew the agreement. A party cannot avoid this obligation by refusing to engage in negotiations.
See Beach Air Conditioning,
Here, the District Court was correct to enforce the NJAB’s order directing the parties to enter into a renewal agreement. The Union served McElroy’s with notice of reopening more than ninety days prior to expiration of the agreement; negotiations became “deadlocked” when McElroy’s refused to negotiate; and the Union submitted the case to arbitration pursuant to Article X, Section 8 prior to expiration of the agreement.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons we Affirm the order of the District Court.
Notes
. Interest arbitration is the arbitration of new contract terms.
See Interstate Brands Corp. v. Bakery Drivers & Bakery Goods Vending Machs., Local Union No. 550,
. Article X, Section 8(a) provides an extensive procedure pursuant to which the parties are to resolve their disputes. Generally, if renewal negotiations become deadlocked, notice to that effect must first be given to the Sheet Metal International Association and the Sheet Metal & Air Conditioning Contractors Nation
. McElroy’s argues that this Court should follow the approach taken by the Ninth Circuit in
Sheet Metal Workers International Ass'n, Local Union No. 150 v. Air Systems Engineering, Inc.,
