In Sylvania Electric Products, Inc. v. NLRB, 1 Cir., 1961,
The Board, adopting the trial examiner’s report, held that by refusing to furnish the requested information the employer had failed to bargain in good faith, in violation of section 8(a) (5). It ordered the employer to furnish to the union “the costs or estimated costs” of the proposed improvements. In this petition to set aside the Board’s order and cross-petition for enforcement, the Board, and the union, as intervenor, contend alternatively that our decision in Sylvania, supra, is distinguishable, and that it should be overruled.
In
Sylvania,
supra, the Board reasoned, “As the premiums paid by the Respondent constitute wages, it logically follows that the premium cost data requested by the Union relates directly to the matter of wages.” We responded that “to define an employer’s contribution to a noncontributory welfare program as ‘wages’ to the employees * * * would expand the concept of wages so far as to break down if not destroy, the distinction in the Act between ‘wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment,’ as to which there is a mutual mandatory duty to bargain collectively, and those matters as to which ‘each party is free to bargain or not to bargain, and to agree or not to agree,’ ” citing NLRB v. Wooster Division of Borg-Warner Corp., 1958,
We see nothing in the Disclosure Act inconsistent with our earlier view. The Act does not purport to expand the scope of “wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment” under the National Labor Relations Act. In fact, it does not purport to affect the course of collective bargaining relations at all. Rather, the Disclosure Act seems designed to protect the rights of employees covered by actual, not proposed, welfare programs, by compelling the employer who administers them to make disclosures of the sort owed by a fiduciary to cestuis que trustent.
The Board takes a narrower view. It now asserts that meaningful bargaining as to “wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment” may require a party to disclose information on matters that do not themselves fall within that phrase. More particularly, the Board says that a party who withholds information that would significantly aid the bargaining process, only for the sake of keeping the other in the dark, may not be, and is not in this case, bargaining in good faith. We accepted that principle in Boston Herald-Traveler Corp. v. NLRB, 1 Cir., 1955,
*593
An employer is not required to disclose welfare plan cost information for the purpose of bargaining about whether he is receiving the best coverage for his money, because he is not obliged to discuss this matter with the union.
Sylvania,
supra. However, when the union makes the same demand in order better to evaluate the desirability of an increase in welfare benefits as against an equivalent increase in take-home pay,
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matters as to which the employer must bargain, the Board might properly conclude that the information, though collateral, was so necessary to effective negotiation that withholding it without good reason was inconsistent with the duty to “exert every reasonable effort to make and maintain agreements.” NLRB v. Truitt Mfg. Co., supra, at 152,
The order of the Board will be enforced.
