Thе United Steelworkers of America filed a grievance alleging that The Mead Corporation’s retirement incentive program violated the collective bargaining agreement between the Union and the Company. The Union now appeals the district court’s order finding the grievance not subject to arbitration and thus refusing to compel arbitration. For the following reasons, we reverse the judgment of the district court.
I
The Mead Corporation operates a mill in Kingsport, Tennessee, the employees of which are represented by the United Steelworkers оf America. On January 26, 1991, the Union and the Company entered into the collective bargaining agreement that governs this dispute. The agreement includes a promise by the Unión not to strike, and establishes a grievance and arbitration procedure. In regard to the scope of arbitration, Article XIII, Section 3 provides:
Only grievances charging that the Company has violated this Agreement and involving the interpretation of, or compliance with, this Agreement will be recognized, and such grievances to be recognized must be presented within thirty (30) days after occurrence. Wagеs and wage rates are a matter for negotiation only and shall not be subject to this procedure.
Also implicated in this dispute are the following five provisions of the agreement, which address recognition of the Union, man *130 agement rights, seniority, retirement, and amendment of the agreement, respectively.
First, Article I provides that the “Company recognizes the Union as the exclusive representative for the employees of the Kingsport Mill.”
Second, Article II provides that “[a]ll other rights not specifically nullified by this Agreement are retained by the Company.”
Third, Section 2 of Article XIX, the article on seniority, essentially requires the Company in increasing and decreasing the work force to honor first the departmental seniority rights of employees within affected departments, and then the plant seniority rights of employees displaced from their departments because of low department seniority.
Fourth, Article XXV, Section 1 provides:
The Company agrees to maintain, during the term of this Agreement, a retirement plan as agreed upon with the Union. The terms and conditions of the agreed upon retirement plan are set forth in the document entitled the Mead Retirement Plan for Hourly Employees of the Kings-port Mill....
It is further agreed that the retirement benefits of the plan will not be reduced during the term of this Agreement.
Finally, Article XXVIII, the article on amendment, provides:
This Agreement is complete in writing and excludes all matters from further negotiation for the duration of this Agreement, whether or not previously mentioned, and except as specifically provided to the contrary herein. Further, this Agreement shall not be amended, changed, altered, or qualified, except by an instrument in writing duly signed by the parties signatory hereto/
In the summer of 1992, while suffering economic difficulties and after being advised by consultants that its maintenance work force was too large, the Company proposed to the Union a plan to offer cash bonuses to the Company’s maintenance employees on the condition that they agreed to retire. After nеgotiation's with the Union, the Company amended the proposal so as to offer smaller cash incentives on the same condition to non-maintenance employees as well. Unsatisfied with this arrangement, the Union filed a grievance alleging that the incentive program violated the collective bargaining agreement. The Company, however, refused to submit to arbitration on the ground that the grievance did not involve interpretation of the agreement, and indicated that it would begin offering the incentive bonuses, pursuant to its amended proposal, on Octоber 1.
II
On September 21, the Union brought suit pursuant to Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, 29 U.S.C. § 185, seeking to enjoin the Company’s implementation of the incentive program pending arbitration of the Union’s grievance. Following a hearing, the district court found that the retirement incеntive program was not within the scope of the collective bargaining agreement, and therefore was not subject to the grievance and arbitration process. Accordingly, the court denied the Union’s motion for preliminary injunctive relief.
The Union then moved for reconsideration of its motion, summary judgment on the issue of arbitrability of the grievance, and an order compelling arbitration. In a final order dated December 17, the district court noted initially that its role was limited to determining whether the arbitration provision of the agreement was susceptible of an interpretation that would make the grievance arbitrable.
United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.,
III
The Union contends that the district court erred in finding that the retirement incentive *131 bonus dispute was not arbitrable. Spеcifically, the Union identifies four different provisions of the agreement that potentially govern this dispute. First, the Union maintains that by implementing the retirement incentive program, the Company unilaterally introduced a new condition of employment. The introduction of this new condition, the Union argues, violated the article on amendment, which provides that the agreement is complete and shall not be amended except by an instrument signed by the parties. Second, the Union asserts that the program alters the retirement plan as agreed upon by the Union and Company, and thus violates the article on retirement. Third, because the Company offered the bonuses directly to the employees, the Union contends that the program violates the Company’s promise to recognize the Union as the employees’ sole bargaining representativе. Finally, according to the Union, as the retirement incentive program is designed to enable the Company to avoid resorting to mandatory layoffs, the program also implicates the article on seniority, which requires the Company in reducing its work force to lay off the least senior workers first. The Union concludes that because resolution of its grievance requires interpretation of these provisions of the agreement,' this dispute is within the scope of the arbitration process.
The Company responds that the district court properly ruled that a grievance concerning the retirement incentive bonus program does not involve interpretation of, or compliance with, the agreement, and thus is not covered by the arbitration process. In the alternative, the Company asserts that if its implementation of the retirement incentivе program did give rise to an arbitrable grievance, such a grievance must arise from the Company’s obligation to maintain a retirement plan as agreed upon with the Union. Article X, Section 10.1 of that retirement plan, the Company notes, provides that the “Company may amend the Plаn at any time and to any extent,” and thus arguably gives the Company the unilateral right to amend the plan notwithstanding the terms of the article on retirement. Similarly, the Company contends that because its right to offer a retirement incentive bonus is not “specifically nullified” by the collective bargaining agreement, the article on management rights also preserves the Company’s right to make such an offer. According to the Company, therefore, because the Union could not prevail in the arbitration it seeks to compel, the district court did not err in dismissing the Union’s suit.
IV
The guiding principles for determining whether a grievance is arbitrable are well established: (1) a party cannot be forced to arbitrate any dispute that it has not obligated itself by contract to submit to arbitration; (2) unless the parties clearly and unmistakably provide otherwise, whether a collective bargaining agreement creates a duty for the parties -to arbitrate a particular grievance is an issue for judicial determination; (3) in making this determination, a court is not to consider the merits of the underlying claim; and (4) where the agreement contains an arbitration clause, the court should apply a presumption of arbitrability, resolve any doubts, in favor of arbitration, and should not deny an order to arbitrate “unless it may be said with positive assurance that the arbitration clause is not susceptible of an interpretation that covers the asserted dispute.”
See AT & T Technologies, Inc. v. Communications Workers,
*132
Here,. because the agreement between the Union and the Company contains an arbitration clause, we apply the presumption of arbitrability to the Union’s grievance. We consider next whether this arbitration clause is the type of broad clause to which the presumption is particularly applicable. In
Communications Workers v. Michigan Bell Tel. Co.,
Under the terms of the agreement’s article on retirement, thе Company promises to maintain a “retirement plan as agreed upon with the Union,” and promises that “the retirement benefits of the plan will not be reduced during the term of this agreement.” According to the Union, the first of these promises must mean something more than simply that the Company will not reduce the benefits provided by the plan. If not, the Union argues, the second promise would merely restate the first. Without considering the underlying merits of the Union’s claim, we note that the retirement article is certainly susceptible of the Union’s proposed reading. Thus, regardless of whether the retirement incentive program reduces the employees’ retirement benefits, the Company’s implementation of the program arguably constitutes a failure to maintain the agreed-upon retirement plan. As the Seventh Circuit has recognized under similar circumstances, resolution оf this issue would require a court to construe the term “maintain” and would lead to a consideration of the merits of the dispute.
See Local 232, Allied Indus. Workers v. Briggs & Stratton Corp.,
Because the Company failed to produce forceful evidence of a purpose to exclude the Union’s grievance from arbitration, we believe that the district court erred in finding the grievance not subject to the arbitration process and refusing to compel arbitration of this dispute. Notably, we have determined from considering only the arbitration clause and the article on retirement that the Union’s grievance is governed by the agreement. As a result, we need not address the Union’s further claims that the grievance is also governed on its face by the articles on amendment of the agreement and recognition of the Union, and that the grievance implicates the article on seniority.
*133
Finally, the Company’s alternative, contractual аuthority arguments are wholly without merit. According to the Company, even if the Union’s grievance over the bonuses is arbitrable, the Company should not be compelled to arbitrate because the Union could not prevail in such arbitration. We disagree. The Supreme Court has explicitly stаted that the courts “ ‘have no business weighing the merits of the grievance.’ ”
AT & T Technologies,
V
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is reversed.
