The sole issue in this appeal, as phrased by petitioner, is whether its unfair labor practices had “such a severe impact ... as to preclude the possibility of a fair election,” i.e., whether the National Labor Relations Board erred in ordering petitioner to recognize and bargain with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. Petitioner maintains that a bargaining order is not an appropriate remedy because the Board’s decision fails to provide adequate analysis of the continuing effects of the Exchange Bank’s admitted unfair labor practices and does not explain why some lesser remedy could not redress the wrong. Petitioner also argues that there are “changed circumstances” at the Bank. We find that the Board has properly articulated its reasons for imposing the remedy, and agree that on the facts, the Board did not err in imposing the bargaining order.
I.
There is no real dispute concerning the facts of this case or the unfair labor practices committed by petitioner. Petitioner, the Exchange Bank, is located in Mayfield, Kentucky. In early February, 1979, several of the Bank’s employees approached the Bank manager and expressed dissatisfaction with their wages and working conditions. The Bank refused to meet their requests for improved wages and working conditions, and instead threatened them individually with discharge and made unlawful promises of benefits. The employees then began an organizational drive which led to the formation of the “Exchange Bank Collective Bargaining Group” on February 25, 1979. Ten of petitioner’s twelve unit employees signed authorization cards authorizing the Group to represent them for collective bargaining purposes.
Learning of these developments, the Bank chairman accosted the two employees designated as president and vice president *62 of the Group on the following day, demanded their keys and refused to allow them to enter the Bank. Shortly thereafter six of the remaining ten unit employees left the Bank and commenced a strike to protest the unlawful discharges. The Bank hired replacements for the discharged and striking employees and on March 7 informed the Group by letter that it would not recognize or bargain with it. The following week, the strikers retained an attorney who relayed to the Bank their unconditional request to return to work; he was informed they had been permanently replaced.
Frustrated by the Bank’s refusal to recognize them, eight members of the Group disbanded it on April 10 and signed authorization cards for the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM). On April 25, the IAM notified the Bank of the designation and demanded recognition, but the Bank again refused to recognize or bargain with the union.
In June, an employee who had signed an IAM authorization card prepared and circulated a petition requesting a wage increase. In response, the Bank’s manager summoned her to his office, where he and the Bank chairman interrogated and threatened her about her union activities and stated that her conduct had caused them to postpone instituting a merit raise system for another six months.
The AU and the Board found on the basis of the facts that the Bank violated sections 8(a)(1), (3) and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(1), (a)(3) and (a)(5) by (1) coercively interrogating and threatening employees concerning their union activities; (2) warning employees not to discuss with each other individual conversations with management regarding wages and working conditions; (3) promising wage increases and other benefits to discourage union activities; (4) creating the impression of surveillance of union activities; (5) attempting to force employees to quit because of protected concerted activities; (6) telling employees that their union activities would make it difficult for them to find employment elsewhere; (7) discharging the two Group leaders for their union activities; (8) refusing to bargain collectively with the employees’ bargaining representative; and (9) refusing to reinstate the unfair labor practice strikers when they offered unconditionally to return to work at the Bank. The Board fashioned a threefold remedy for these unfair labor practices. First, the Bank was required to cease and desist from these unlawful practices. Second, the Board ordered the Bank to offer immediate and full reinstatement and lost earnings to the two discharged union leaders as well as to the six unfair labor practice strikers who were unlawfully denied reinstatement. Finally, the Board ordered the Bank to recognize and bargain with the IAM, retroactive to April 1979, and to embody in a signed contract any agreement reached. The bargaining order is the only remedy challenged by the Bank.
II.
In
NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co.,
Because the bargaining order is an extraordinary remedy, we have scrutinized very closely the Board’s decision to impose it without holding a new election.
See, e.g., NLRB v. Rexair, Inc.,
The Bank does not challenge the Board’s specific findings that it committed “egregious and pervasive” unfair labor practices during the union campaign. Rather, the Bank contends that the Board has failed to support its conclusion that a bargaining order is the only satisfactory remedy in this case because its findings and analysis were inadequate and because of “changed circumstances” at the Bank. We disagree.
The Board’s analysis in this case concentrates on “the present effects of past coercive unfair labor practices or present coercive unfair labor practices,” as we required in
United Services for the Handicapped v. NLRB,
[W]hen we consider the serious nature of [the Bank’s] unlawful conduct which, as noted above, consisted, inter alia, of threats of discharge and the discharge of the two leading union adherents, and which resulted in the dissolution of one labor organization and the attempted destruction of majority support for another, we are convinced that the lasting effects of such conduct cannot easily be eradicated by the mere passage of time.
Decision of the Board at 10 (footnotes omitted). The Board’s analysis included citations to
NLRB v. Jamaica Towing, Inc.,
A bargaining order is designed as much to remedy past election damage as it is to deter future misconduct. If an employer has succeeded in undermining a union’s strength and destroying the laboratory conditions necessary for a fair election, he may see no need to violate the cease- and-desist order by further unlawful activity. The damage will have been done, and perhaps the only fair way to effectuate employee rights is to re-establish the conditions as they existed before the employer’s unlawful campaign.
Decision of the Board at 11 (quoting
Gissel,
The Bank’s arguments concerning “changed circumstances” since the imposition of the bargaining order are similarly flawed. It is well established that the validity of a Board order is rarely affected by subsequent events.
See NLRB v. Katz,
The Board’s analysis of the present lingering effects of the Bank’s past unfair labor practices and of the reasons why a bargaining order, and not some other remedy, is necessary to remedy the wrong passes muster under the heightened level of scrutiny to which we have held bargaining orders must be subjected. Therefore, we affirm the Board’s decision and enforce the order to bargain.
