American Feather Products Corp.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsApr 11, 1980248 N.L.R.B. 1102 (N.L.R.B. 1980) Copy Citation 1102 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD American Feather Products Corporation and Chica- go and Central States Joint Board, Amalgamat- ed Clothing and Textile Workers Unions, AFL- CIO and Alyce Westhoff. Cases 33-CA-3482, 33-CA-3540, 33-RC-2209, and 33-CA-3537 April 11, 1980 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN FANNING AND MEMBERS PENELLO AND TRUESDALE On September 5, 1979, Administrative Law Judge James M. Fitzpatrick issued the attached Decision in this proceeding. Thereafter, the Re- spondent and the Union filed exceptions and a sup- porting brief, and the Union and the General Counsel filed briefs in support of the Administra- tive Law Judge's Decision. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the Na- tional Labor Relations Board has delegated its au- thority in this proceeding to a three-member panel. The Board has considered the record and the at- tached Decision in light of the exceptions and briefs and has decided to affirm the rulings, find- ings,' and conclusions 2 of the Administrative Law Judge and to adopt his recommended Order, as modified herein. AMENDED REMEDY We adopt the remedy set forth by the Adminis- trative Law Judge in his Decision with the follow- ing modification. The Administrative Law Judge found, inter alia, and we agree, that the Respondent unlawfully failed to pay former strikers a retroactive cost-of- living increase paid all other employees and cover- ing a period during most of which the former strik- ers were at work. He neglected, however, to rec- ommend that the Respondent be ordered to make the former strikers whole for the losses thus unlaw- fully sustained. We agree with the Union that his failure to do so was error. Therefore, we shall order the Respondent to make whole its employees who were on strike between November 9 and 13, i The Respondent has excepted to certain credibility findings made by the Administrative Law Judge. It is the Board's established policy not to overrule an administrative law judge's resolutions with respect to credi- bility unless the clear preponderance of all of the relevant evidence con- vinces us that the resolutions are incorrect. Standard Dry Wall Products. Inc., 91 NLRB 544 (1950). enfd. 188 F.2d 362 (3d Cir. 1951). We have carefully examined the record and find no basis for reversing his findings. 2 Member Penello concurs in setting aside the results of the election held in Case 33-RC -2209, but he does so only on the basis of the Administrative Law Judge's conclusion that each of the Unionl's five specific written objections should be sustained. For reasons set forth in his dissenting opinion in Daylon Tire Rubber (o., 234 NLRB 504 (1978), Member Penellodoes not rely on the "Additional Objectionable Conduct" discussed by the Adminis- trative I.aw Judge as further grounds for setting aside the election. 248 NLRB No. 147 1977, for any loss of pay they may have suffered as a result of the Respondent's failure to pay them the cost-of-living adjustments for work performed during the period of July 1 through December 31, 1977, with interest thereon as prescribed in Florida Steel Corporation, 231 NLRB 651 (1977). (See, gen- erally, Isis Plumbing & Heating Co., 138 NLRB 716 (1961)). AMENDED CONCLUSIONS OF LAW As set forth in the Administrative Law Judge's Decision, sections (g) and (h) of Conclusion of Law 4 do not properly reflect the nature of the 8(a)(1) violations to which they relate. Consequent- ly, we substitute the following for those sections of Conclusion of Law 4: "(g) Assuring a strike replacement that her job was secure as the strikers would never be reemployed;" "(h) Demoting or terminating a supervisor because of the supervisor's failure to take steps to interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed them under Section 7 of the Act." ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Re- lations Board adopts as its Order the recommended Order of the Administrative Law Judge, as modi- fied below, and hereby orders that the Respondent, American Feather Products Corporation, Maquo- keta, Iowa, it officers, agents, successors, andas- signs, shall take the action set forth in the said rec- ommended Order, as so modified: 1. Substitute the following for paragraph l(h): "(h) Demoting or terminating its supervisors be- cause of their failure to take steps to interfere with, restrain, or coerce its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed them under Section 7 of the Act." 2. Insert the following as paragraph 2(c) and re- letter the subsequent paragraphs: "(c) Make whole its employees who went on strike between November 9 and 13, 1977, for any loss of pay they may have suffered from its failure to pay them the cost-of-living adjustment for work performed during the period of July I through De- cember 31, 1977, with interest thereon to be com- puted as described in the section of the Board's Decision and Order entitled 'Amended Remedy."' 3. Substitute the attached notice for that of the Administrative Law Judge. AMERICAN FEATHER PRODUCTS 1103 APPENDIX NOTICE To EMPLOYEES POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government After a hearing at which all parties participated, the National Labor Relations Board has found that we violated the National Labor Relations Act. We have been ordered to post this notice and to abide by its terms. WE WILL NOT threaten to close the plant if employees select a union to represent them. WE WILL NOT announce or grant pay in- creases in order to prevent employees form supporting a union. WE WILL NOT solicit grievances or correct them in order to prevent employees from sup- porting a union. WE WILL NOT assist or recognize any com- mittee of employee representatives for the pur- pose of dealing with conditions of employment unless it is certified as a representative by the National Labor Relations Board. WE WILL NOT separate work stations of em- ployees in order to prevent their talking about unions. WE WILL NOT interrogate employees about union activities. WE WILL NOT induce supervisors to influ- ence relatives against the Union in order to protect the supervisor's job. WE WILL NOT tell strike replacements their jobs are secure because strikers will never be reemployed. WE WILL NOT demote or terminate our su- pervisors because they failed to take steps to interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employ- ees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed them under Section 7 of the Act. WE WILL NOT discriminate against strikers by failing to include their names on our prefer- ential hiring list. WE WILL NOT discriminate against strikers by withholding from them cost-of-living pay increases for work they have already per- formed. WE WILL NOT in any other manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization, to join or assist Chicago and Central States Joint Board Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union, AFL-CIO, or any other labor organization, and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargain- ing or other mutual aid or protection, or to re- frain from any and all such activities. WE WILL .put Brenda Melton on our prefer- ential hiring list effective November 14, 1977, notify her of this, recall her to the job she would have gotten if she had been on the list since then or, if that job no longer exists, to a substantially equivalent one, without prejudice to her seniority or other rights and privileges. WE WILL offer Alyce Westhoff immediate and full reinstatement to her former job as su- pervisor or, if that job no longer exists, to a substantially equivalent one, without prejudice to her seniority or other rights and privileges. WE WILL pay Brenda Melton and Alyce Westhoff for any earnings they lost as a result of our discrimination against them, plus inter- est. WE WILL make whole our employees who went on strike between November 9 and 13, 1977, for any loss of pay they may have suf- fered from our failure to pay them the July 1- December 31, 1977, cost-of-living adjustment for the time they were at work during that period. WE WILL recognize and, upon request, bar- gain with Chicago and Central States Joint Board Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union, AFL-CIO, as the exclusive representative since October 10, 1977, of all production and maintenance employees in our Maquoketa, Iowa, plant, with respect to rates of pay, wages, hours and other terms and con- ditions of employment, and, if an understand- ing is reached, embody such understanding in a signed agreement. AMERICAN FEATHER PRODUCTS CORPORATION DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE JAMES M. FITZPATRICK, Administrative Law Judge: In this case a majority of employees in a new plant gave au- thorization cards to the Union which then asked for, and was refused, recognition by the Company. The Union also asked the Board to hold an election but before it was held the Company did a variety of things, which I find unlawful, to dissuade employees from supporting the Union. The Union lost the election. As found below, the election should be set aside and the Company required to bargain with the Union. The earliest of these proceedings commenced with the representation petition (Case 38-RC-2209) filed on Octo- ber 11, 1977, by Chicago and Central States Joint Board, Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union, AFL-CIO (the Union), seeking Board certification as the 1104 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD collective-bargaining representative of the production and maintenance employees in the Maquoketa, Iowa, plant of American Feather Products Corporation (the Company or Respondent). On December 9, 1977, the Board conducted an election which the Union lost. On December 14, the Union filed objections to conduct af- fecting the results of the election and also filed unfair labor practice charges (Case 38-CA-3482) against Re- spondent. On January 24, 1978, a complaint issued based on these charges alleging that Respondent had commit- ted unfair labor practices proscribed by Section 8(a)(l) and (3) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended (the Act). On the same day the Board's Regional Direc- tor ordered a hearing on the objections. On January 25, 1978, Alyce C. Westhoff, an individ- ual, and on January 26, 1978, the Union filed additional unfair labor practice charges (Cases 38-CA-3437 and 3540, respectively) against Respondent. On March 10 these were consolidated with the earlier case and a con- solidated complaint issued alleging 8(a)(l), (3), and (5) violations by Respondent. On March 27 the objections case was consolidated with the unfair labor practice cases. On June 20 and again at the hearing the consoli- dated complaint was further amended to allege additional violations of Section 8(a)(l). Respondent answered the complaints, admitting jurisdictional allegations but deny- ing the alleged unfair labor practices. The issues were heard before me at Maquoketa, Iowa, on July 10-14 and August 2 and 3, 1978. At the close of the hearing Respondent moved to dismiss the complaint on grounds the evidence was insufficient to sustain it. For the reasons set out below, I deny the motion. Based on the entire record, including my observation of the witnesses and considerations of the briefs filed by the parties, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. THE EMPLOYER Respondent, an Iowa corporation, is engaged at Ma- quoketa, Iowa, in the manufacture and sale of pillows, comforters, and slumber bags. It annually sells and ships from its Maquoketa plant directly to points outside Iowa finished products valued over $50,000 and also purchases and causes to be delivered to that plant directly from points outside Iowa goods and materials valued over $50,000. Respondent is an employer engaged in com- merce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. II1. THE UNION The Union is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. III. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Background 1. The Chicago operation For many years Respondent operated a plant and also office and sales facilities in Chicago. Its production and maintenance employees there were represented by a local of the Furniture and Bedding Workers Union. With the passage of time the Chicago plant became obso- lete and inadequate for the business. In the mid 1970's, in response to this inadequacy, Respondent's principal offi- cers began searching for a new location. The search ended with their determination in early 1976 to locate a new plant in Maquoketa, Iowa. The decision was also made to separately locate company offices and sales de- partment at a new location in Chicago. During April, May, and June, 1977 Respondent's offices were gradually moved from the old plant to the Merchandise Mart in Chicago. 2. The move to Iowa New plant facilities in Maquoketa were constructed during the months of August through October 1976, with various phases of construction continuing thereafter for many months. In mid-December Respondent took possession of the new plant, although construction con- tinued, and on March 1, 1977, finally closed its Chicago plant. In the meantime, hiring and training of new em- ployees in Maquoketa commenced and some processing of synthetic fibers began. At the Maquoketa plant, operations were arranged into three departments; the pillow sew department, the com- forter and sleeping bag department, and the Garnett de- partment (for processing synthetic fiber). Although some production began as early as March 1977, it was not until July and August that significant production other than synthetic fibers got underway. Sewing employees were chiefly occupied in training. 3. Management structure Respondent's principal officials, Elias Buchman, presi- dent, and his son-in-law, Aaron Turk, vice president and sales manager, are headquartered in the company offices in Chicago and are only intermittently at the Iowa plant. In Maquoketa during the early months of operation local management included Tony Macri, manager; Sherry Vondran, assistant plant manager; Heather Edwards, su- pervisor of the pillow sew department; Alyce Westhoff, supervisor of the comforter and sleeping bag department; and John Miller, supervisor of the Garnett department. Burnis Curry, who was then in Iowa only part time, was also involved in setting up the operation. During July and August 1977, by which time production had gotten underway on the slumber bag line, he was involved in preparing timestudies for that operation. On September 18, 1977, Curry officially became co-manager of the plant with Macri, apparently as a prelude to his later be- coming full plant manager and in anticipation of Macri's planned retirement. From September on, Curry was the effective onsite manager of the Iowa operation, subject to the supervision of Turk, who appeared intermittently and with some frequency, and of Buchman, who spent most of his time in Chicago. 'That Union is not involved in the present matter And the Charging Union here was not involved with Respondent's Chicago operation AMERICAN FEATHER PRODUCTS 1105 4. Employee orientation In late October 1976, while the Maquoketa plant was still under construction, Respondent advertised for new applicants. The response was substantial. On October 28 a management group including Turk and Curry came to Maquoketa to interview and test applicants. They estab- lished temporary headquarters at Cressy Construction Company where three machines were set up for the test- ing. After the interviewing and testing Buchman spoke to the applicants in groups of 30. For orientation purposes he showed and commented on a film of Respondent's Chicago operation. He also gave a rundown of what em- ployee benefits might be expected. He told them that an incentive program was in effect for the sewing and cut- ting of pillows but that the Company planned to estab- lish incentive rates in other departments in Maquoketa. He also stated the number of holidays which the Compa- ny would grant and he indicated there would be a cost- of-living wage adjustment program as in the Chicago plant. He announced that the starting rate for machine operators would be $2.70 per hour, to be increased to $2.90 per hour after completion of a 90-day probationary period, and that by then the employees should be able to go on an incentive program. 2 Buchman repeated this performance three or four times with different groups over a period of several days. From the foregoing it is apparent that management led the Maquoketa employees to hope for incentive pay rates and cost-of-living adjust- ments. Early in this recruiting process Sherry Vondran, Alyce Westhoff, and Heather Edwards were hired and designated as supervisors. Westhoff testified that on one of the mornings that Buchman gave his orientation talk he met with the three of them in Cressy's office and in- structed them not to hire potential union organizers or applicants with strong union backgrounds and that he also told them he wanted any and all talk of unions to be reported to him immediately. Buchman denied making such statements and Vondran testified that nothing was said about unions. Heather Edwards, who apparently was in Australia at the time of the hearing, did not tes- tify. On this credibility conflict I credit Buchman's denial because he is corroborated by Vondran. Applicants who were hired were put through exten- sive training. It is not clear precisely when this training program began. By March 1, 1977, the Chicago plant had closed and a transitional period followed during which operations in Maquoketa were limited because of construction, incomplete setup of machines, and lack of equipment and materials. In April employees began inquiring about the expected raises. Presumably these were directed to the hoped-for cost-of-living increases and incentive pay rates. Employ- ees who completed the 90-day probationary period were automatically given the 15-cent-per-hour raise. 2 Regarding the eslablihmlenl of incentie wage rates, nothing was done, so far as the employees ssere concerned, until October, after the Union had requested recognilion and petitioned for a Board election 5. The employee manual Around May 1, 1977, management distributed to em- ployees an employee manual setting forth rules and regu- lations for working in the plant. A covering letter signed by Buchman and Turk described the purpose of the rules and regulations and assured the employees that better company profits would mean better pay for them, as fol- lows: No business can be successful unless there are rules are to be adhered to. They prevent confusion and result in better production. With better production comes better profits, and better profits end up with employees sharing these profits through better pay, etc. One section of the manual set forth the Company's plan for cost-of-living adjustments. In a word, the plan pro- vided an adjustment of 2 cents per hour upward or downward for each point of change upward or down- ward in the Consumer Price Index for Iowa, with a maximum change of 10 cents per hour for each year. As Buchman later testified, Respondent in this manner promised the employees in very specific terms a program of cost-of-living adjustments. The covering letter for the manual also declared an open door policy for communication between employees and management. In this connection the letter stated: Please read the manual carefully and if you have any questions or suggestions to better your condi- tions please let us know. This is our desire: To work with you at all times. We cannot solve any of your problems unless you tell us what those prob- lems are. So please don't hesitate to make sugges- tions and understand that we have an open door policy with management/employee relationship. It should be noted that at the time this open door policy was announced there was no hint of employee interest in a union. 6. Slowness regarding wage increases In spite of the general reassurances of more money, none was immediately forthcoming. By June employee restiveness reached the point where management was constrained on June 20 to issue a bulletin explaining why employees had not received raises. Four reasons were given, the first and most important being that increases in pay depend on costs and, if labor costs are too high, raises cannot be made. The bulletin stated that the labor costs in the Maquoketa plant were higher than in the old Chicago plant because of the inherent inefficiency of in- experienced employees. It read in part as follows: Although these costs are coming down gradually with your on-the-job experience, we still have a way to go until we get to that point where our costs for labor should be. We know that eventually we will reach that point but until we get there it is impossible to offer across-the-board increases. You as an employee should realize this and try to get 1106 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD these costs down so that we can offer you justifi- able increases. The second explanation was, in substance, that the staff was not sufficiently experienced to produce a qual- ity product which could influence customers to give the Company more business. The third explanation dealt with the failure of employees to cooperate with supervi- sors. The fourth explanation was the increase in absen- teeism resulting in an increase in the cost of products produced. Finally, the bulletin gave the following assur- ance: Raises are governed by costs and cannot be given without such costs being "in line." We are well aware of the fact that it is difficult to "make ends meet" in our present economy with the way prices are going up and by striving for perfection on your part we will all reach our goals in time. The time has not yet come, but we hope it will be soon. It is apparent from the bulletin that by the third week of June enough employees were expecting raises to cause management to make an elaborate explanation why raises were not forthcoming. During July and August Curry completed the timestudies which were a necessary predi- cate to instituting piecework rates. But nothing was said to the employees about implementing them. If the June bulletin had any soothing effect on the employees, such was not permanent. By August employee dissatisfaction on a variety of counts, including compensation, stimulat- ed discussions about a union. B. The Union Campaign 1. Organizing activity and company knowledge The rank-and-file employees at the Maquoketa plant were newly hired local residents of that area. So far as the record indicates no employees transferred from the Chicago plant to the Iowa plant. The Chicago union made no effort to follow Respondent to its new loca- tion. 3 Interest in a union among the Iowa employees began in August 1977 at the time Curry was making his times- tudies. The surveillance involved disturbed some of the women, particularly Carol Frees who, together with Donna DeMoss, began talking about a union. These con- versations occurred between the two of them and with several others in the plant area, in the restrooms, in the lunchroom, and in the parking lot. In early August Lotus Mutert, in a conversation with Heather Edwards, her supervisor in the pillow sew de- partment, about working conditions, including being stared at (an apparent reference to Curry's timestudies), conflicting instructions, and reassignments, stated that, if they had a union, they would not have to have such con- ditions. Edwards replied that they could not get a union in because Buchman would not be able to afford the a Contrary to the contentions of the General Counsel and the Union, I consider the collective-bargaining agreement of Respondent and the Fur- niture and Bedding Workers, as well as Respondent's employment prac- tices in Chicago, to be irrelevant to issues in the different bargaining unit in Iowa. wages and would shut down and they would lose their jobs. I base this finding on the uncontradicted testimony of Mutert. I credit her because of her forthright manner even though she did not recall, without prompting from counsel, Edwards' comment about loss of jobs. Also, the fact that she did not report the conversation in her affi- davit given a Board agent on February 2, 1978, is not a reason for discrediting her considering her apparent lack of legal knowledge and the limited scope of the affidavit which dealt only with events in October and November. In so finding I place no reliance on the lack of testimony from Heather Edwards who, according to the statements of counsel, was in Australia at the time of the hearing and who apparently was equally accessible (or inaccessi- ble) to all parties. I find that Heather Edwards' comment was an unlawful threat violative of Section 8(a)(l) of the Act. In the third week of August, Alyce Westhoff separat- ed DeMoss and Frees, who persisted in excessive talking, by reassigning DeMoss to a different location. She ex- plained to them the necessity for the move. They both complained that if a union were in the plant she would not be able to reassign DeMoss. Westhoff testified that she then replied, "Well, I told her then to be quiet about union and if she wouldn't be I'd have to report her and she'd be out of a job."4 Feeling that there was sufficient employee interest to warrant organizing DeMoss contacted the Teamsters and also Amalgamated (the Charging Party Union in the pre- sent matter) in the person of Edward Burns, organizer for the Union, who set up a meeting at the home of Frees for the evening of October 4. Approximately a dozen employees, including DeMoss, Frees, and two daughters of Alyce Westhoff (Connie Westhoff and Catherine Jebsen), attended that meeting. They asked Burns questions and he instructed them in the procedures for organizing, including the signing of union authoriza- tion cards. Some of those present executed authorization cards. The next day Burns supplied Frees with additional blank authorization cards for soliciting the signatures of others. This further solicitation took place for the most part on October 5 and 6. Even before the meeting with Burns, top management knew of employee interest in the Union. As early as Sep- tember 26, employee Jean Bowden had told Assistant Manager Sherry Vondran that there was union activity among the employees. Vondran in turn informed Macri and they both informed Curry. Curry then informed Turk and Buchman in Chicago. At each step higher level management informed the lower part not to say anything to anyone or to do anything. As later events showed, these standards of noninterference were not adhered to. Turk told Curry they would seek legal counsel. But no steps along this line were taken immediately, because of the Buchman family difficulties mentioned below. 4 The complaint does not allege, nor does the General Counsel con- tend, that Westhoff violated Sec. 8(a( ) on that occasion AMERICAN FEATHER PRODUCTS 1107 2. The Buchman family tragedy On September 23, Elias Buchman's son was killed overseas. As a result of this personal tragedy, Elias Buchman was inactive in Respondent's business until about October 10. Turk assumed responsibility for the entire business but he too was much absorbed in family problems and arrangements following the death of his brother-in-law. In Iowa, Curry was defacto running that end of the business. 3. Union majority status a. The appropriate unit The complaint alleges, the answer admits, and I find that all production and maintenance employees employed by Respondent at its Maquoketa, Iowa, facility, but ex- cluding all office clerical employees, confidential em- ployees, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropriate for collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act. b. The Union 's request and the Company's refusal to bargain By October 6 the Union believed it had in hand au- thorization cards from a majority of employees in an ap- propriate unit and on October 7 sent Respondent a re- quest for recognition and bargaining on behalf of the em- ployees. Curry received the request October 10. On Oc- tober 11 Respondent refused to recognize and bargain with the Union. That same day the Union filed the peti- tion putting in motion procedures for the Board election held December 9, 1977, which the Union lost. c. The size of the unit On October 7, the earliest date on which, according to the General Counsel, the Union possessed authorizations from a majority of employees, 74 employees were em- ployed in the unit. On October 10, the day Respondent received the Union's request for recognition, 72 were employed in the unit. d. The card majority At the hearing, 51 signed authorization cards were re- ceived in evidence. In addition, pursuant to permission given during the hearing, the General Counsel in his post-hearing brief moved the admission of the authoriza- tion card of employee Catherine Jebsen. I hereby grant the motion and receive the card of Jebsen. 5 I find these 5 In addition to Catherine Jebsen, card signers employed on October 7 include Donna DeMoss, Sandra Becker, Donna Daniels, Patricia Ralston. Mary Ruggeberg, Hazel Short, Debbie Starr, Carol Frees, Nina Kilburg. Herman Barten, Margaret Bonny, Myrna Green, Marjorie Shelton, Krista Wells, Marilyn Edwards, Marjorie Clark, Barbara Edwards, Ellen Hanson, Rebecca Miller, LaVonne Pahl, Ruth Peters, Robert Pollack, Kathy True, Clara Weimerskirch, Cheri Pahl, Audrey Current, Joyce Koos, Robert Winegar, Robin Gibson, Janet Howell, Karen DeLong, Lotus Mutert, Maxine Easton, Mary Andresen, Myron Armbruster, David Burkey, Helen McCutcheon, Denise Powers, Darlene Rimmer. Betty Michels, Brenda Melton. Franklin Campbell, Connie Westhoff. Sylvia Johnson. Sandra Kenniker, Gary Widel, Ronald Stoner. Pamela Said, Linda Rorah, Brenda Palmer, and Deborah Graham Graham was 52 cards were valid authorizations. I further find that on October 7 the Union held valid authorizations from 52 of the 74 employees in the unit and on October 10 held valid authorizations from 51 of the 72 employees in the unit. In its brief Respondent disputes the validity of the cards by arguing in general terms that, "In case after case it was revealed on cross-examination that the indi- vidual did not know what they were signing." Having heard the evidence and reviewed the record, I conclude that with these 52 cards each of the signers knew they were signing an authorization card for the Union. Respondent further argues that the testimony of Donna DeMoss, Lotus Mutert, Betty Michels, and Carol Frees, each of whom testified to the validity of cards of other employees, should be discredited on the ground that affidavits supplied by the General Counsel for cross- examination referred to attachments which in fact were not attached to the affidavits. At the conclusion of the direct examination of DeMoss, counsel for the General Counsel supplied Respondent's counsel with two affida- vits from her. Apart from that, the record contains no reference to the contents of those affidavits or any at- tachments thereto and neither affidavit was offered or re- ceived in evidence. There is no basis for discrediting DeMoss. On direct examination Mutert testified she could not recall making a list of those employees from whom she obtained authorization cards and on cross-examination she repeatedly reaffirmed that she could not recall making such a list. Her affidavit, on the other hand, reads in pertinent part, "I got seven employees to sign cards. The list of these persons is attached." The affida- vit has no such attachment and there is no explanation for the discrepancy. The Board agent who took the affi- davit did not testify. According to Mutert, he wrote out the affidavit as she verbally answered his questions, she then read it over and signed it under oath. Respondent's counsel also points out that a number of points prejudi- cial to Respondent made in her direct testimony are not included in the affidavit. It should be noted, however. that the affidavit does not purport to be all inclusive and covered only her responses to questions asked by the in- vestigator. After careful consideration, I conclude that the discrepancies do not seriously impeach the testimony of Mutert at the hearing. It was given in a forthright, nonevasive manner under the scrutiny of all present and should be credited. Similarly, the testimony of Michels was the basis for the admission of a number of authorization cards. She too testified she made no list of the employees who had signed cards for her and had not given the Board investi- gator such a written list. Counsel for the General Coun- sel informed the record that he never had such a list in his possession. Michels had given a Board investigator two pretrial affidavits, one of which was offered in evi- dence. This affidavit stated in pertinent part, "I had about 14 persons sign cards and return them to me. The names are on a sheet of paper, a copy of which is at- terminated on October 8 All the others continued to be emplosed on October 10 1108 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD tached hereto." No list of names was attached to the affi- davit. In this conflict between pretrial affidavit and testi- mony at the hearing, I credit the latter and find that the affidavit was obviously erroneous. Like Mutert, Michels testified in a forthright, nonevasive manner and I credit her testimony. The fact that she was confused about the official identity of the person to whom she gave the affi- davit does not, in my view, erode her credibility. Frees also gave a pretrial affidavit indicating that the employees from whom she obtained signed authorization cards were named in a list attached to her affidavit. But no such list was attached to the affidavit. However, she identified a separate piece of paper as the list referred to in her affidavit. She described it as a list she had created "off the top of her head" while being interviewed for the affidavit on February 1, 1978. It obviously is a rough work paper listing names of those she signed up as well as those who Mutert, Michels, DeMoss, and Connie Westhoff signed up. Frees testified, as did DeMoss, Mutert, and Michels, in a forthright manner. I find that the nature of the list of employees and the fact that it was not physically attached to her affidavit form no basis for doubting her credibility. One of the cards solicited by Michels, to which Re- spondent objected and which nevertheless was received over objection, was the card of Brenda Melton. The sig- nature on the card obviously differs from that made by Melton on her withholding tax form in Respondent's files, thus raising serious doubt as to the validity of the authorization card. However, Melton credibly testified, and also demonstrated at the hearing, that she signs her name both ways. Examination of her various signatures and consideration of her testimony, including the forth- right manner in which she testified, leave no doubt that she signed the union authorization card on October 5, 1977. In its brief Respondent also makes the general asser- tion that in its organizing the Union engaged in a pattern of misrepresentations which was accepted by the em- ployees. This record, however, reveals no misrepresenta- tions by the Union and no pattern of misrepresentations by anyone engaged in the organizing. Respondent asserts that, "The record shows that employees signed their Union cards who were deaf, as well as being unable to speak or understand English." Only one card signer, Brenda Palmer, was deaf. Palmer reads and writes Eng- lish. She was solicited, in writing, by Connie Westhoff and, after reading the blank card, filled it out and signed it. Two other employees who were not competent in English were also solicited. The card of only one of these was offered in evidence and it was rejected. In my view Respondent's argument is without merit. All 52 authorization cards received in evidence were executed on or before October 7. Of these, 43 were re- ceived without objection and the signers thereof clearly were a majority of the 74 employees on the company rolls as of October 7. There were 42 employees whose cards were received without objection were on the com- pany rolls as of October 10 when the Union requested recognition and this number plainly was a majority of the 72 employees on that date. Accordingly, I find that on both these dates the Union represented a majority of the employees in the appropriate unit. 1. Respondent seeks legal counsel When Curry received the Union's October 10 request for recognition and bargaining, he notified Buchman and Turk in Chicago. They instructed him to do nothing until they had obtained legal advice. The next day (which was the same day the Union petitioned for an election) they consulted with Attorneys Sidney Libit and Irwin Thall in Chicago about the Union's request and also about whether three types of wage increases (a cost- of-living program, an incentive program, and a general raise) should be implemented. The attorneys approved implementation of cost-of-living adjustments as well as incentive pay programs on the ground both had been normal practice in the Chicago plant. But they advised against the general wage increases even though such raises had generally been planned earlier and Buchman and Turk felt they had made a commitment to the Ma- quoketa employees in the bulletin distributed about the first of May. Finally, the attorneys counseled against any communications, threats, promises, or actions respecting the labor relations situation. 2. The decision to grant a general wage increase On October 12, Buchman and Turk came to Maquo- keta. During the afternoon they, along with Curry, met with the supervisors respecting the nature of employee complaints. Late that evening Buchman, Turk, and Curry, notwithstanding the advice of counsel the day before, decided to implement a 15-cent-per-hour general wage increase on the ground that business conditions jus- tified the raise. 3. Contact with the Union regarding the wage increase On the morning of October 13, Turk returned to Chi- cago to consult again with Attorneys Libit and Thall about the decision to grant the wage increase. During the consultation Libit telephoned Arthur Loevy, then ad- ministrative assistant to the manager of the Union at its offices in Chicago. Libit identified himself and stated he was calling because the Company wanted to give a wage increase at Maquoketa. In the course of their conversa- tion Libit said the increase had been planned in the past and he mentioned a written policy indicating that a raise was appropriate. Loevy responded that if the law al- lowed the increase the Union would not object, but, absent a past policy legally justifying the increase, the Union would not consent. Libit suggested he send Loevy a copy of their written policy. Loevy replied that upon receiving the document he and union counsel would review it and, if it appeared company policy justified the increase, it could be put into effect, but if the policy did not, then it could not be put into effect. According to Loevy, the conversation ended at that point. It was implicit in Loevy's remarks that the Union would review what Respondent would send them and then get back to Libit with some answer. But it is also true that at that point Loevy raised no clear objection. AMERICAN FEATHER PRODUCTS 1109 Apparently no reference was made respecting the immi- nence of the raise. On concluding his conversation with Loevy, Libit told Turk that the Union had raised no objection and had asked for some documentation. Turk immediately tele- phoned Buchman in Maquoketa and told him there were no objections to the raises. Libit did not immediately forward anything to the Union. On October 25 he sent Loevy a letter referring to their telephone conversation and enclosing a copy of the June 20 bulletin posted in the Maquoketa plant which had discussed the question, "When do we get our next raise?" and which set out four general considerations in- volved in any management decision to grant a raise. In the meantime, however, on October 13 and 14 Buchman had announced the raises to the employees. 4. The meetings with employees On October 13 and 14, Buchman met with employees at the plant, at first individually and then, when that proved impractical, in groups. He informed them there would be a 15-cent-per-hour wage increase, that there would be a cost-of-living increase, and that incentive programs in the form of piecework rates would be estab- lished. Then, according to his testimony, "after I told them what we planned to do, I did ask them if they had any problems that I could help them solve or if they had any problems in the plant that I could be of assistance to them, or if they had any complaints." This invitation evoked a variety of employee complaints, including the lack of vending machines, the production quota system in effect, excessive heat in the plant, the movement of employees from one job to another, the unfinished lunch- room, the lack of employee lockers, the lack of floormats on which to stand, the lack of a convenience box in the ladies' restroom, and comments respecting the incentive system. Many of the complaints were old ones which then in the process of being handled, such as, for exam- ple, the lockers and the floormats. On October 14, Respondent also posted a notice in the plant announcing that as of the first week of November employees would receive the 15-cent-per-hour across- the-board increase as previously promised because, "We had the biggest shipping month in the history of the Company during September." The notice also announced an immediate cost-of-living increase of 6 cents per hour to be in the paychecks of October 14 and establishment of piecework rates for various departments effective Oc- tober 17.6 Thereafter the increases were put into effect on the dates announced. 5. The grievance and suggestion system Management followed up the solicitation of grievances by establishing a procedure for handling them. On Octo- ber 17, pursuant to Curry's instructions, the supervisors had groups of employees in the plant select a spokesman 6 It is not entirely clear which departments were to be affected by piecework rates. Probably the pillow line and the comforter and sleeping bag line were involved. In Chicago only the pillow line had piecework rates, but Buchman from the beginning intended to use them more widely in Iowa after Curry had made his timestudies. for grievance purposes. Each spokesman chosen then composed a list of the gripes of employees in that group and promptly met with Curry for the purpose of present- ing them to him and seeking a resolution. The list of grievances and suggestions included many items that had long concerned employees, including cleaner restrooms, convenience machines in the women's restroom, food vending machines, a cleaner eating place, and recogni- tion of seniority. Some affirmative suggestions also were made. Curry's response to the grievances was a promise that they would be taken care of over a period of time. Thereafter, the spokesmen met collectively with Curry each month for the purpose of airing complaints and sug- gestions. This system resulted in correction of a number of items complained of, such as refurbishing of the lunch- room and the restrooms, installation of employee lockers, and implementation of piecework rates. 6. Resolution respecting solicitation of grievances and system for handling grievances With respect to Buchman's meetings with employees on October 13 and 14, 1 find that he invited them to inform him of their grievances. This invitation must be assessed in the context of the pending union request for recognition and its petition for an election. Implicit in the invitation was the assurance that management would do something affirmative regarding complaints. Solicita- tion of grievances in this manner was a clear violation of Section 8(a)(l) of the Act. Alberts, Inc., 213 NLRB 686, 690, 691 (1974). It is no justification that Respondent had an announced open door policy whereby employees could come to the front office on any matter. This was not a manner of leaving the door open for an employee to come in of his own volition. Here the president went to the employees and affirmatively solicited their griev- ances. This unlawful program was further implemented on October 17 by the selection under management direction of employee representatives who then collected griev- ances and conveyed them to the plant manager, and who subsequently met periodically as a committee with the plant manager for conveying employee complaints and suggestions and working out resolutions for the prob- lems. This was a representative function. In setting it up, management engaged in a type of interference violative of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. C & W Lektra-Bat Co., 232 NLRB 776 (1977). Although no violation of Section 8(a)(2) of the Act was alleged in the complaint, and an unfair labor practice under that section was not litigated during the hearing, the circumstances of the 8(a)(l) vio- lation warrant a remedy appropriate in typical assistance cases. Accordingly, I will order Respondent to disestab- lish the employee representative and committee system. 7. Resolution respecting the granting of benefits The announcing and implementing of increases in compensation were violations of Section 8(a)(l) of the Act. Each of the increases had in general terms been promised employees long before the advent of the Union. What the employees viewed as slowness in imple- AMERICAN FE THER PRODUCTS I110 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD menting them had also long been a matter for complaint and undoubtedly one reason they eventually sought union representation. Assuming, without finding, that even if the Union had not appeared on the scene man- agement at some point would have put the increases into effect, there is no persuasive showing why they were precipitously announced and implemented immediately following the Union's demand for recognition and its pe- tition for an election. Such timing compels the inference that the purpose of the improvements was to discourage employee interest in the Union. N.L.R.B. v. Exchange Parts Company, 375 U.S. 405 (1964). There is no apparent sound business reason which required these measures in mid-October or why management's promises, already long delayed, could not have waited until after the elec- tion. Respondent's asserted justifications do not dispel the inferences which flow from the timing. Thus, no reason appears why the incentive (or piecework) rates could not have been put into effect upon completion of Curry's ti- mestudies in August when Buchman and Turk approved them. yet no implementation occurred then or in Sep- tember. Even assuming that decisional paralysis set in September 17 as a result of the untimely death of Buch- man's son, there obviously had been no rush before that to install a piecework system. If no compelling business reason required implementation prior to mid-October, it would seem none required implementation before the election. Argument urged by Respondent to justify the other increases, such as increased productivity in Sep- tember and the rising cost of living, provide no logical basis for the sudden mid-October implementation of piecework rates. In these circumstances, the outstanding union demand for recognition and the pending election are weighty factors in assessing Respondent's motive. When consideration is also given to Respondent's ad- mitted knowledge that lack of incentive rates was a chronic employee complaint, its admitted preference for a nonunion operation, and its various unfair labor prac- tices indicating union animus, particularly its concurrent solicitation of grievances, the conclusion is inescapable that the incentive pay measures were launched in mid- October for the purpose of eroding employee support for the Union and affecting the results of the election. Emery Air Freight Corporation, 207 NLRB 572, 575-576 (1973); .- ce Manufacturing Co.. Inc. Division of A-T-O, Inc., 235 NL RB 1023, 1026-27 (1978). Respecting the cost-of-living adjustments, the same conclusion is required, there being no evidence other than the timing as to why after many months this long dormant policy was suddenly activated following the Union's demand and petition by retroactively giving a 6- cent-per-hour raise for work done in March, April, May, and June. As an excuse for the delay Buchman pleaded inefficiency and confusion resulting from the move to Iowa. But such inadequacy, if true, does not reveal a lawful motive for presenting employees with the increase during the critical period. The same reasoning applies to the general raise of 15 cents per hour, which Respondent asserts was promised in June. It was not promised for mid-October. Rather the June "promise" was an explanation as to why in June a general increase had not yet been granted. At that time, four reasons were given: (1) That labor costs were too high, (2) that quality needed improving, (3) that better cooperation with management was required, and (4) that attendance would have to improve. Although Buchman generalized that by October 14 labor costs were low enough to justify the general increase, no documentation was offered to support that position. If labor costs in fact were down, it is reasonable to assume business records would so demonstrate. Absent some more concrete expli- cation, the generalization that costs were lower is insuffi- cient to outweigh the persuasive factor timing. Also, no evidence shows that the other explanatory points in the June "promise" were satisfied. Thus, the record does not reveal whether quality of product had improved or whether employees were cooperating better with management. And as for attendance, Curry's testi- monly indicates it continues to be a problem. Thus, Re- spondent's own preconditions for a general wage in- crease were not shown to have been satisfied. In support of its position, Respondent can point to business records showing increasing production during September which is consistent with its October 14 an- nouncement that September had been its biggest shipping month. It is also true that the employees had manage- ment's past assurances that wage increases would be forthcoming when conditions warranted them. And it is further true that during the latter part of September and early October top management was deactivated by per- sonal problems. Turk and Buchman resumed their managerial activities around the time the Union requested recognition and pe- titioned for an election. Then Buchman announced the three types of increases. This timing, it seems to me, warrants the same inference of unlawful motive for all three increases, even though the across-the-board in- crease had in general terms been planned and promised months earlier. Ameri-Crete Ready Mix Corporation, 207 NLRB 509, 512 (1973); Buffet Restaurants, Incorporated, 201 NLRB 515, 519 (1973); Tonkawa Refining Co., 175 NLRB 619, 620 (1969). In sum, the only reasonable con- clusion from the total record, including the evidence of Respondent's opposition to the Union, is that the three improvements in compensation were launched in an effort to undercut employee interest in the Union. .. L.R.B. v. Exchange Parts, supra. This is not to say that a lawful course was crystal clear to management, particularly in view of past assur- ances to the employees. But Buchman and Turk sought legal counsel and were advised, at least regarding the general increase, to take no action. In the long policy session on the night of October 12 various options were open to management. In decisively settling on, and then acting on, a course during the critical period, they acted at their peril. N.L.R.B. v. Exchange Parts, supra. Unfor- tunately, they made the wrong selection. 8. Separation of DeMoss and Frees In September and October 1977, Donna DeMoss and Carol Frees both worked under the supervision of Alyce Westhoff and often worked next to each other. The two talked with each other so much that Westhoff separated AMERICAN FEATHER PRODUCTS 1111 them twice in September. In mid-October, she again sep- arated them on orders from Vondran. The General Counsel contends the October separation violated Sec- tion 8(a)(1) because the purpose was to interfere with their protected rights to talk about the Union. I agree. One day in mid-October, according to the uncontra- dicted testimony of Alyce Westhoff, she split the women working under her into groups of threes in order to handle a rush order. This resulted in DeMoss and Frees working together. Vondran then directed Westhoff to separate them. When Westhoff asked why, Vondran re- plied that they were talking, that management felt they were the instigators of the Union (as indeed they were), and that she was to keep them apart, never let them work together or talk, and to keep on their backs in order to make them quit. Respondent had adequate legal grounds for separating DeMoss and Frees out of concern that they would talk instead of work. But that is not the reason for the Octo- ber separation. There is no objective evidence they were then talking instead of working. Westhoff, who was close to the problem, was apparently content for them to work together. Vondran's purpose in separating them was to prevent any conversation between them about the Union, including legally protected conversations not ob- structive of their work, and further to have their supervi- sor ride them in order to force their resignations. 9. Interrogations by Curry The General Counsel contends that, in individual talks with two employee representatives on October 17, Curry violated Section 8(a)(1) by in effect interrogating them about union activity and by giving an impression that union activities were under surveillance. Betty Michels testified credibly, and I find, that on October 17 Curry, in speaking with her in the office as the chosen employee representative of her group, stated, "As you probably know, there is something going on at the plant. Maybe you know about it, maybe you don't." I find this was unlawful because the remark put Michels in the position where she reasonably would feel obligat- ed to make a response about whether there was or was not union activity in the plant and about whether she knew of it or not. In the circumstances the remark was an interrogation. The General Counsel contends that Curry thereby gave the impression that union activities were under surveillance. I disagree because union activ- ity in the plant was open and notorious and because it is normal for management to observe what goes on in the plant. This was not a case of management officials seek- ing out a union meeting at another location and observ- ing what was going on or giving the impression to an employee that such type of observations were being made. In meeting in the office with Frees, also a chosen em- ployee representative, Curry, at or about the same time, according to her credited testimony, asked her if there was any response among employees to the raises which Buchman had announced. Obviously this was an interro- gation. I find it was unlawful because Curry was asking her whether the unfair labor practices of announcing and granting raises, which were undertaken for the purpose of combating unionism, had had any impact. Thus, Curry was asking her whether there was less interest in the Union following the raises. 10. Alyce Westhoff pressures daughters On the last Friday in October as Alyce Westhoff was finishing her work, Vondran approached her about the Union, asking her if she had heard about the organizing, and telling her that such a young company could not have a union, and if a union did come in, the plant would close. Vondran reminded her she was a supervisor and asked her to find out from her daughters (Connie Westhoff and Catherine Jebsen), who were also em- ployed at the plant, how far the organizing had pro- gressed and how strongly the employees felt about it. Over the weekend Westhoff did nothing about this. On Monday Curry called her into the office, saying that a union would hurt the Company, and that he had tried to do everything he could for the employees but they had stabbed him in the back. He asked Westhoff if she knew her own position. She replied she did. He then in- quired whether she had spoken with her daughters and learned who started the organizing and who had passed out cards. He advised her she would be in a better posi- tion with the Company if she cooperated. Westhoff then told him she could not ask her daughters for the infor- mation, that she, Westhoff, was a company person, but wanted to stay out of union affairs. Nevertheless, just before the strike began on Novem- ber 9, Alyce Westhoff asked her daughters to become less active in the Union because of her own embarassing position. She and her daughters argued, each holding to their respective views. The foregoing findings are based on the credited testi- mony of Alyce Westhoff. Vondran and Curry each denied speaking to her in the manner she reported. But her daughter Connie Westhoff 7 corroborated her ac- count that she did in fact attempt to persuade her to limit her union activities. Thus, although she did not interro- gate her daughters, she did, in a sense, follow through on what Vondran and Curry told her respecting the danger of plant closing and harm to the Company and her own position by asking her daughters to ease up on their union activities. Even though Vondran and Curry did not obtain the information they sought, they set Alyce Westhoff on a course which interfered with the protect- ed rights of her daughters. While it is true that ambiva- lence was an inherent aspect of Alyce Westhoffs situa- tion, whether or not Vondran and Curry spoke as she claims, the fact that she acted in a manner consistent wih their words lends support to the conclusion that they ut- tered them. Based on the foregoing, I find that Vondran and Curry through Alyce Westhoff interfered with the protected rights of Connie Westhoff and Catherine Jebsen in viola- tion of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. 11. Allen Campbell's threat of surveillance The complaint alleges that in October or early No- vember Allen Campbell, a supervisor and agent of Re- 7 Catherine Jebsen, the other daughter, did not testify 1112 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD spondent, threatened employees with surveillance of their union activities. Respondent denies the conduct and also that at the time in question Campbell was a supervi- sor or its agent. In support of the allegation the General Counsel of- fered the uncontradicted testimony of Connie Westhoff that in early November she had a conversation on the Garnett line with Allen Campbell in which he told her that comanager Tony Macri had just told him that if he heard anything about the union from any of the employ- ees he should report it to Macri, including who was in- volved. Macri denied he so instructed Campbell. The threshold question is whether Campbell was then a supervisor or agent. It is undisputed that he was for- mally made a supervisor on December 12. Respondent denies he was a supervisor or agent prior thereto. Campbell, who was no longer employed by Respon- dent at the time of the hearing, testified for the General Counsel on the first day of hearing but was not asked about the conversation. Connie Westhoff, who testified on the fourth hearing day, placed the conversation in early November. I find this was prior to November 9 when the employees, including Connie Westhoff, went on strike. She also testified that Campbell was not a su- pervisor, that John Miller was. Campbell himself testified he was not a supervisor prior to December 12. He was hired February 8, 1977. At that time involved here he worked as a garnett ma- chine operator for which he was paid at a higher rate than most other hourly employees. Some of his duties prior to December 12 were supervisory in nature, such as occasional shifting of employees along the Garnett line to handle a buildup of work in one area. But he did this on instructions from Curry. In this he appeared to be a conduit for transmitting directions from Curry to em- ployees on the line. On one occasion he recommended dismissal of an employee, but not effectively. His testi- mony respecting other duties often associated with super- visors, such as handing out paychecks and approving time off, appears to relate to the period after he was for- mally made a supervisor. The same is true of the testimo- ny of other witnesses who described his supervisory duties. In addition, Curry testified categorically that Campbell was not a supervisor prior to December 12. Campbell's wife Norida, who was hired in November as a strike replacement, generalized that his duties were the same before and after December 12. I do not credit her testimony on this. She appeared to be biased against Re- spondent and on cross-examination was shown to be un- reliable. Considering all the evidence on the question, I find that at the time of his talk with Connie Westhoff in early November Campbell was not a supervisor. Counsel for the General Counsel contends further that Campbell's conduct may be imputed to Respondent be- cause employees could reasonably believe he was a su- pervisor. But Connie Westhoff, the only employee who testified about the conversation in early November, did not consider him a supervisor at the time. Thus, it ap- pears that here, unlike Clevenger Logging, Inc., 220 NLRB 768, 778 (1975), relied on by counsel, Respondent had not at that time "clothed him with sufficient appar- ent authority to make Respondent responsible." Accord- ingly, I find that in early November Campbell was not an agent of Respondent within the meaning of the Act. Being neither a supervisor nor an agent at the time, his conduct is not attributable to Respondent. 12. The strike From November 9 through 13 the employees went on strike and picketed the plant. Throughout the hearing all parties considered the strikers to be economic strikers. Respondent continued operating using supervisors, non- striking employees, and replacements newly hired during the strike to perform production work. The day after the strike ended and the strikers offered to return to work Respondent placed the strikers (with the exception of Brenda Melton) on a preferential hiring list. 8 13. Discrimination against Brenda Melton Brenda Melton began working for Respondent on July 25, 1977, and continued until October 28 when she re- signed to take what she hoped would be a better paying job. She was disappointed in the new job and, on Monday, November 7, went to Curry's office seeking her old job. According to her, she asked him if anyone had been hired for her position. He replied, "No." She then asked if there was any chance she could have it back. Curry said, "Yes," but that he would have to talk with Supervisor John Miller to see when she could start. Curry said she should call Miller the next day and he would let her know. According to Curry, when she asked him if she could have her job back he said he would have to check with Miller first to see if there was an opening and if Miller wanted her back and that she should call Curry the fol- lowing morning for an answer. She never called him back. Insofar as these two versions conflict, I credit Melton because, as found below, she called back and spoke with Miller. Moreover, in view of her conversation with Miller the next day and the events which followed, the practical consequences are the same even if Curry is credited. The following morning, November 8, according to her uncontradicted testimony, Melton telephoned Miller. He told her they were still undecided, that he had to talk with Curry, and he would let her know that evening by sending her a message with her friend Linda Rorah. Around 6 p.m. that evening Rorah came by her house and gave her a message from Miller to report for work the following morning, Wednesday, November 9. I credit this account by Melton. Miller did not testify and there is no explanation for his not testifying. In these cir- cumstances the inference is warranted that if he had tes- tified about these matters his testimony would not have supported Respondent's case. It is also true that Rorah did not testify and there is no explanation for her ab- 8 In a posl-hearing motion the Union seeks reinstatement of the strikers or, in the alternative, reopening of the record to receive evidence about the strike, citing Drug Package Cmpan., Inc., 241 N.RB No. 44 (1979). The General Counsel and Respondent opposed the motion I deny the motion. The holding i Drug Package is limited to the facts therein and is not authority for reinstatement of economic strikers in the present matter AMERICAN FEATHER PRODUCTS 1113 sence. Her testimony, although significant, was not as important as Miller's. Moreover, she was not under the same degree of control by a party as Miller in view of his position as one of Respondent's supervisors. On the morning of Wednesday, November 9, Melton came to the plant to go to work. When she arrived she found the employees on strike and picketing in front of the plant. She joined the picket line for the next 3 days. On Friday, November 11, Respondent handed out pay- checks for work previously performed to employees on the picket line, including Melton. On Sunday, November 13, each striker, including Melton, signed a letter addressed to Respondent uncondi- tionally requesting reinstatement. International Represen- tative Burns delivered these letters to Curry the follow- ing day, November 14. Also on November 14, Turk sent letters to 45 strikers, but not to Melton, acknowledging receipt of the requests for reinstatement, advising that the employee's position had been filled, and also that the employee was being placed on a preferential hiring list. When she did not receive such a letter, as the other strikers did, Melton contacted the Union and on Decem- ber 6 Union Attorney Ronald Willis by letter protested the failure to reinstate or place her on a preferential hiring list. Finally, at the hearing Melton stated that she wished reinstatement. Respondent contends (a) that Melton was never re- hired and therefore was not an employee entitled to rein- statement, and (b) there is no proof of discriminatory motive. Both defenses lack merit. As found above, Melton was instructed to report for work on November 9. With that instruction, although not yet working, she became an employee entitled to the protection of the Act. But for the picketing, a protected activity, she would have worked November 9. Failure to treat her in accordance with the law following that ac- tivity was discrimination which discouraged membership in the Union and was in violation of Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act. The Laidlaw Corporation, 171 NLRB 1366 (1968). 14. Statements to Allen Rowan Allen Rowan first worked for Respondent from Feb- ruary to June 1977. On November 11, he was hired as a strike replacement. On the afternoon of that day he had the following conversation with Macri: Well, I just asked him what the strike was all about and stuff and he said that he didn't really care to talk about it because they had troubles with the union in Chicago and that he didn't really care to talk about it because Mr. Buchman was about to close the doors the way it was. Macri denied the conversation occurred. I credit Rowan as the more disinterested witness because at the time he testified adverse to Respondent's interest he was still em- ployed by Respondent. Although Macri was by then re- tired, he had been associated with Respondent for 40 years. The General Counsel contends this was a threat of re- taliation for employee union activity. I agree because there is no clear evidence in the record that a decision to close had already been made. Components, Inc., 197 NLRB 163 (1972); Gissel Packing Co., Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 395 U.S. 575, 616-619 (1969). Rowan also testified credibly and without contradic- tion that about a week before the election on December 9, while he and Everett Bowling were working together on comforter mats, Bowling asked him to talk to some of the girls working with him about voting against the Union because the Company desperately needed the notes. He indicated that, if the Union won, the strikers would be back in the plant and the strike replacements (which would include Rowan) would lose their jobs. The General Counsel contends these remarks were at- tributable to Respondent and were unlawful. As with Campbell, the threshold question is supervi- sory status. It is undisputed that, on December 19, Bowl- ing was formally made a supervisor for the feather, re- ceiving, and shipping departments. Respondent contends he was not a supervisor prior thereto. At issue here is his status during the first day or two of December. At the time Bowling spoke, Rowan did not know whether or not he was a supervisor. Both were then doing the same work. Bowling's normal job at the time was operating a Garnett machine during the second shift from 4 o'clock to 12:30. He, along with Campbell, was among the highest paid hourly workers and, like others on the second shift, received extra pay for night work. According to Curry he himself was the only supervi- sor during the evenings. Sometimes he was not present for the entire shift. Even if Bowling was not a supervi- sor, he, as a Garnett machine operator, was the most im- portant person on the line because the work of others de- pended on his. Curry gave Bowling the necessary work orders and through him relayed them to employees working on the line. These employees typically shifted positions along the line of their own volition according to the need. On occasion Bowling would shift them for the same reason. He also acted as relief man when an employee left to go to the restroom. On payday he dis- tributed paychecks. Although Bowling bordered on being a supervisor, I find that in early December he was, at most, a leadman in an operation which more or less functioned on its own. His working of the Garnett machine was a key- stone in the operation, but was not a supervisory func- tion. Between the other employees and Curry he acted as a conduit. His shifting of employees from one position to another was occasional and something they often did on their own. In this he acted as a leadman. His distribu- tion of checks was a mechanical function. As with Campbell, I find the evidence insufficient to establish that when Bowling made the remark to Rowan he was a supervisor or an agent of Respondent within the meaning of the Act. Accordingly, his words may not be imputed to Respondent. 15. Statements to Norida Campbell According to the uncontradicted testimony of Norida Campbell, a few days before the election on December 9 Bowling told a group of several employees who were cleaning up "that he sure hoped that the Union didn't AMERICAN FEATHER P ODUCTS 1114 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD get in because if it did the plant was going to close its doors. They wouldn't stand for it .... He told us that Mr. Buchman and Mr. Curry had told him that if the Union got in they would definitely close the doors." I find this statement is not attributable to Respondent be- cause Bowling is not shown to be a supervisor or its agent at that time. Norida Campbell then went to Curry and reported what Bowling had said. She asked Curry whether the jobs of the strike replacements were secure. He replied that they need not worry, that their jobs were secure, that the strikers would never come through the door again. Although this was reassuring to her insofar as her job was concerned, it was a misstatement of the rights of the strikers and a prediction that Respondent would discrimi- nate against them. The inescapable effect of the state- ment was to discourage Campbell from engaging in pro- tected activity should she wish to do so. Accordingly, I find that Curry thereby violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. 16. Discrimination against Alyce Westhoff As noted earlier herein, Alyce Westhoff's regular as- signment was supervisor of the comforter and slumber bag line. When the strike began all supervisors per- formed nonsupervisory work, Westhoff, Heather Ed- wards, and Sherry Vondran being assigned to sewing pil- lows. With the recruitment of strike replacements, Edwards and Vondran resumed full-time supervisory functions. On November 14, the day after the strike ended, Von- dran directed Westhoff to report to Edwards and not to resume supervision of the comforter and slumber bag line, that Vondran herself would supervise that line. At that point Westhoff ceased to be a supervisor. Her demo- tion was underscored when shortly after this, but still in November, Norida Campbell asked Westhoff for instruc- tions. Instead of giving them, Westhoff referred her to Vondran who said, referring to Westhoff, "Thank God she finally took the hint." Westhoff and the other supervisors who performed rank-and-file jobs during the strike continued to receive the pay of supervisors. After the other supervisors re- turned to their normal duties, Westhoff continued in non- supervisory work sewing pillows in Edwards' depart- ment, but she continued to receive her supervisory pay. In all other respects she ceased to be a supervisor. Inas- much as compensation was only one attribute of her status, I find that on November 14 she was demoted to nonsupervisory status. I also find, for the reasons stated hereinafter, that she was demoted because her daughters were active in the union movement. Sometime in December, Allen Campbell asked Ed- wards why Westhoff was sewing instead of supervising. Edwards replied that management was wondering about her loyalty, and her possible sympathy toward the Union since her daughters were involved in it, and, not know- ing what to do with her, just relieved her of supervisory duties and had her sew. And about a week before the election Curry told Campbell that he and Bowling would be promoted after the election and also that they were not sure of Westhoff's loyalty and were going to make a change there also. Sales of comforters and sleeping bags follow a seasonal pattern. In early December, Respondent's sales of these products dropped drastically. But production did not en- tirely cease and at least by mid-December Respondent had already settled on Rhoda Scott to succeed Westhoff as supervisor of the comforter and slumber bag line. As noted earlier herein, Allen Campbell was formally made a supervisor on December 12. That evening he and his wife Norida were told by Scott that she had been pro- moted to Westhoff's job and had known about the pro- motion for some time. On January 6, 1978, Curry called Westhoff to the office and told her he was going to have to let her go because they were ceasing production of comforters and slumber bags for lack of business and those doing that work would be reassigned. He denied he was firing her. But he also refused to allow her to continue to work as a sewer. When she asked if she would be recalled, he told her she would not be called back, but he would give her a good recommendation and would not oppose her claim for unemployment compensation. He complimented her supervision, as well as her sewing, and wished her luck. At the end she asked if she was being discharged because of her daughters' union activity. He denied such a reason, saying he respected her daughters' views. For the reasons set out below I find she was discharged, as well as demoted, because her daughters were active in the Union. It is undisputed that Westhoff was a good supervisor. Respondent explains her demotion and eventual termina- tion by the seasonal decline in business, contending that her services as a supervisor were not needed and her sewing was substandard. Her sewing was not the best, but neither was it the worst, and it was not so bad but that Respondent kept her at it for several weeks at a high supervisory rate of pay. It is understandable that management would not want to continue paying supervisor pay for journeyman work. But at her termination, although she asked, Curry gave her no option to continue at any pay rate. The seasonal decline in business may have warranted some delay in reactivating a supervisor for the comforter and slumber bag line, yet Curry gave Westhoff no hope of recall. A permanent cessation of that production was not even contemplated because a successor for that slot was already chosen. It is obvious that management wanted to be rid of her. It is also obvious that business considerations did not require her termination. Curry would have us believe that out of regard for Westhoff's supervisory capabilities he purposefully forced her to go elsewhere rather than keep her in a sub- ordinate position. But that does not wash because Re- spondent had a foreseeable future need for those supervi- sory talents. He even lied about that in order to squelch her hope for recall. Other evidence clearly establishes the antiunion moti- vation for demoting and discharging her. Thus, in late October, Vondran, reminding her she was a supervisor, tried to get her to unlawfully interrogate her daughters about the status of union organizing. When a day or so AMERICAN FEATHER PRODUCTS 1115 later Curry unsuccessfully attempted to reap a harvest from those efforts, he advised her she would be in a better position if she cooperated. She refused to inform on her daughters. And, in early December, Edwards and Curry indicated to Allen Campbell that management doubted her loyalty in view of her daughters' unionism and that a change was coming. Her refusal to unlawfully trample on the protected rights of her daughters was the only objective basis Respondent had for doubting her loyalty. From this it is clear that if her daughters had not been prounion Westhoff would have been neither demot- ed nor discharged. She was thus subjected to discrimina- tion in regard to her employment because of her daugh- ters' union activities in violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. Russell Stover Candies, Inc., 223 NLRB 952 (1976), enfd. 551 F.2d 204 (8th Cir. 1977). 17. Withholding accrued pay from strikers On January 27, 1978, Respondent continued with its program of retroactive cost-of-living adjustments by paying employees an additional $1.04 per hour for work performed in the period July 1 through December 31, 1977. But it withheld this money from employees who, although otherwise eligible to receive it, had gone on strike November 9. Respondent claims it could not pay what it withheld because of objections and charges pending before the Board. Yet it paid nonstrikers. In reality Respondent has no defense and its selective withholding of the increase from strikers was a coercive and discriminatory violation of Section 8(a)(l) and (3) of the Act. Indiana & Michigan Electric Company, 236 NLRB 986 (1978). IV. OBJECTIONS TO CONDUCT AFFECTING RESULTS OF ELECTION As already noted, the Union filed timely objections following the December 9 election. The conduct which it is claimed was objectionable is also included in the al- legations of unfair labor practices on which findings have been made above. A. Objection I The Union's first objection is that during the critical period Respondent granted employees a wage increase to discourage support for the Union. As found above with respect to the alleged 8(a)(l) unfair labor practices, the mid-October wage increases were for that purpose. This was objectionable conduct. Tonkawa Refining Co., 175 NLRB 619. I recommend that Objection I be sustained. B. Objection 2 The second objection is that Respondent changed the working conditions of employees in order to discourage support for the Union. As found above with respect to the alleged 8(a)(1) allegations, prounion employees DeMoss and Frees, who normally worked together, were separated in mid-October in order to prevent them from lawfully discussing the Union and to facilitate su- pervisory harassment aimed at forcing their resignations. Such unlawful restrictions during the critical period were incompatible with the holding of a free election. In addition, beginning on October 13, Buchman launched a program of soliciting employee grievances about working conditions and instituted procedures for funneling these to management. Management followed by correcting many of the conditions complained of. This whole ploy, including the methods and results, al- tered working conditions and could have affected the re- sults of the election. I recommend that Objection 2 be sustained. C. Objection 3 The third objection is that Respondent told employees who had engaged in protected activity that they were no longer employees and did not have jobs. No evidence of direct statement to employees involved in union activi- ties was offered. However, shortly before the election, Curry, in reassuring Norida Campbell that her job was secure, led her to believe that Respondent did not con- sider those who had engaged in the strike to be employ- ees. I find this was objectionable conduct sufficiently close to the wording of Objection 3 to warrant sustaining that objection. I so recommend. D. Objection 4 The fourth objection asserts that Respondent discrimi- nated against employees for engaging in union activity. Immediately following the strike and before the election, Respondent discriminated against Alyce Westhoff by ef- fectively demoting her from her supervisory status. This graphically pointed up for all employees prior to the election the adverse consequences to her of her daugh- ters' support for the Union. Accordingly, I recommend that Objection 4 be sustained. E. Objection 5 The fifth objection is that Respondent threatened plant closure if employees voted for the Union. As found above respecting alleged 8(a)(1) violations, the record contains numerous verbal statements to employees by management officials during the critical period indicating company intent to close the plant if the Union won the election. Accordingly, I recommend that Objection 5 be sustained. F. Objection 6 The sixth objection is that the Company discriminated against employees engaged in protected activities by fail- ing to reinstate or recall them. Following the strike, but prior to the election, Respondent unlawfully failed to place Brenda Melton on its preferential hiring list. I therefore recommend that Objection 6 be sustained. G. Additional Objectionable Conduct The record reveals additional conduct by management during the period between the Union's petition for an election and the holding of the election, which conduct also is objectionable. Incidents of such include Curry's unlawful interrogation in mid-October of employee rep- resentatives Betty Michels and Carol Frees. In addition, around the end of October and the beginning of Novem- ber, Vondran and Curry, in attempting to influence 1116 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Alyce Westhoff to unlawfully interrogate her daughters about union activities, set Westhoff on an unlawful course pursuant to which she endeavored to dissuade her daughters from further union activities on the ground that it would embarrass her in the eyes of higher man- agement. These are further incidents of objectionable conduct. Respondent's objectionable conduct during the critical period was extensive and of a sufficiently serious nature to utterly destroy the laboratory conditions necessary for a fair election. Accordingly, I recommend the election be set aside. V. THE EFFECTS OF THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES The unfair labor practices found herein, which include the objectionable conduct during the critical period, are unfair labor practices within the meaning of the Act. They have a close, intimate, and substantial relationship to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and ob- structing commerce and the free flow of commerce. Respondent's unfair labor practices have been perva- sive and aggravated, particularly in the period between petition and election, so that the union majority existing when it asked for recognition and bargaining has been wiped out so effectively that it is unlikely that the labo- ratory conditions essential for a fair election will be pos- sible in the foreseeable future. In these circumstances em- ployee authorization cards are a more reliable indicator of employee sentiment than a rerun election. N.L.R.B. v. Gissel Packing Co., Inc., 395 U.S. 575. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. Respondent is an employer within the meaning of Section 2(2) of the Act and is engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 2. The Union is a labor organization within the mean- ing of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. All production and maintenance employees em- ployed by Respondent at its Maquoketa, Iowa, facility, excluding all office clerical employees, confidential em- ployees, guards, and supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropriate for collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act. 4. Respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the above-described bargaining unit in the exercise of rights guaranteed them in Section 7 of the Act, thereby committing unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by: (a) Informing various employees on a number of occa.. sions that, if the employees selected a union to represent them, Respondent would close the plant. (b) Announcing and granting increases in pay during a union organizing campaign for the purpose of dissuading employees from supporting the Union. (c) Soliciting employee grievances respecting working conditions during a union organizing campaign, establish.- ing an employee representative and committee system for funneling grievances and suggestions to management for resolution, and correcting the conditions complained about for the purpose of dissuading employees from sup- porting the Union. (d) Separating the work stations of employees in order to interfere with their lawful communication with each other about union matters. (e) Interrogating employees about union activities. (f) Causing a supervisor to pressure relatives to aban- don support of the Union in order to protect the supervi- sor's employment. (g) Assuring a strike replacement that her job was secure and that the strikers would never be reemployed. (h) Discriminating against a supervisor by first demot- ing her and then terminating her because her daughters were active on behalf of the Union. 5. Respondent discriminated against employees re- specting terms and conditions of employment, thereby discouraging membership in a union, and committing unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(l) and (3) of the Act by: (a) On and after November 14, 1977, failing to place Brenda Melton on its preferential hiring list. (b) On January 27, 1978, withholding from employees who engaged in a strike during the period November 9 through 13, 1977, the cost-of-living adjustments in pay for work performed during the period July I through December 31, 1977. 6. At all times since October 7, 1977, the Union has been the exclusive bargaining representative of the em- ployees in the above-described appropriate unit within the meaning of the Act. 7. By refusing since October 10, 1977, to recognize and bargain with the Union as the exclusive representa- tive of employees in the aforesaid unit, Respondent has engaged in, and is engaging in, unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. 8. These unfair labor practices affect commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. THE REMEDY Having found that Respondent engaged in unfair labor practices, I recommend it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act. I recommend that Respondent be ordered to place Brenda Melton on its preferential hiring list as of No- vember 14, 1977, to recall her to the position to which she would have been recalled had she been on the list since November 14, 1977, or, if such position is no longer available, to a substantially equivalent one, and to make her whole for any loss of earnings incurred as a result of not being on the preferential hiring list. I also recommend that Respondent be ordered to offer Alyce Westhoff immediate and full reinstatement to her former supervisory job or, if that job is not available, to a substantially equivalent position, without prejudice to her seniority and other benefits and privileges, and that she be made whole for any loss of earnings incurred as a result of being terminated on January 6, 1978. Backpay for Melton and Westhoff is to be computed in the manner prescribed in F. W. Woolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289 (1950), with interest as prescribed in Flor- AMERICAN FEATHER PRODUCTS 1117 ida Steel Corporation, 231 NLRB 651 (1977). 9 I further recommend that Respondent be required to preserve and make available to Board agents, upon request, all perti- nent records and data necessary in analyzing and deter- mining whatever backpay may be due. I also recommend that Respondent be ordered to dis- establish its system of employee representatives and com- mittees for communicating and resolving employee com- plaints and suggestions. Inasmuch as Respondent's violations of Section 8(a)(l) and (3) of the Act undermined the union majority with the result that an election is a less reliable guide to em- ployee free choice than the authorization cards by which they designated the Union as their representative, and because Respondent, in refusing to recognize and bargain with the Union while engaging in those unfair labor practices, also violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act, I recommend that Respondent be required to recognize and bargain with the Union as well as to remedy the other unfair labor practices found. Federal Prescription Service, Inc.., and Drivex Co., 203 NLRB 975 (1973), enfd. as modified 496 F.2d 813, 819 (8th Cir. 1974). I further recommend that Respondent post appropriate notices. Upon the foregoing findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the entire record in this case, and pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act, I hereby issue the following recommended: ORDER 0' The Respondent, American Feather Products Corpo- ration, Maquoketa, Iowa, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall: 1. Cease and desist from: (a) Threatening to close the plant if employees select a union to represent them. (b) Announcing or granting increases in pay for the purpose of dissuading employees from supporting the Union. (c) Soliciting employee complaints, or correcting them, for the purpose of discouraging employee support of a union, or assisting or recognizing any committee of employees for the purpose of dealing with employee grievances or other conditions of employment unless and until such organization has been certified by the Board as a representative of the employees. (d) Interfering with lawful communication among em- ployees about a union by separating employee work sta- tions, or otherwise. (e) Interrogating employees about union activities. (f) Inducing supervisors to influence relatives to aban- don support of a union in order to protect the supervi- sor's employment. (g) Assuring strike replacements of job security by stating that strikers would never be reemployed. 9 See, generally. is Plumbing & Heating Co., 138 NLRB 716 (1902) In In the event no exceptions are filed as provided by Sec. 10246 of the Rules and Regulations of the National Labor Relations Board, the findings, conclusions, and recommended Order herein shall, as provided in Sec 102.48 of the Rules and Regulations, he adopted by the Board and become its findings, conclusions, and Order, and all objections thereto shall be deemed waived for all purposes (h) Discriminating in the employment of supervisors because their relatives support a union. (i) Discriminating against strikers by failing to place their names on a preferential hiring list. (j) Discriminating against strikers by withholding cost- of-living pay increases for work performed. (k) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in the exercise of their rights to self-organization, to form labor organizations, to join or assist a labor organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection as guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act, or to refrain from any or all such activities. 2. Take the following affirmative action which it is found will effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Notify Brenda Melton forthwith that she is being placed on, and place her on, its preferential hiring list as of November 14, 1977, recall her to the position to which she would have been recalled had she been on the list since November 14, 1977, or, if such position no longer exists, to a substantially equivalent one, and make her whole for any loss of earnings incurred as a result of not being on the list in the manner set forth in the sec- tion entitled "The Remedy." (b) Offer Alyce Westhoff immediate and full reinstate- ment to her former supervisory position or, if that posi- tion no longer exists, to a substantially equivalent posi- tion, without prejudice to her seniority or other rights and privileges, and make her whole for any loss of earn- ings in the manner set forth in the section entitled "The Remedy." (c) Preserve and, upon request, make available to the Board or its agents, for examination and copying, all payroll records, social security payment records, time- cards, personnel records and reports, and all other re- cords necessary to analyze the amount of backpay due under the terms of this Order. (d) Recognize and, upon request, bargain collectively with Chicago and Central States Joint Board Amalga- mated Clothing and Textile Workers Union, AFL-CIO, as the exclusive bargaining representative since October 10, 1977, of all employees in the appropriate bargaining unit found herein, and, if an understanding is reached, embody such in a signed agreement. (e)Post at Respondent's plant in Maquoketa, Iowa, copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix."' Copies of said notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 33, after being duly signed by Re- spondent's authorized representative, shall be posted by it immediately upon receipt thereof, and be maintained by it for 60 consecutive days thereafter, in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by Respondent to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. " In the event that this Order is enforced by a Judgment of a United States Court of Appeals. the words in the notice reading "Posted by Order of the National Labor Relations Board" shall read "Posted Pursu- ant to a Judgment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board 1118 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD (f) Notify the Regional Director for Region 33, in writing, within 20 days from the date of this Order, what steps Respondent has taken to comply herewith. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that unfair labor practices al- leged in the complaint but not specifically found herein are hereby dismissed. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation