Adams & Associates, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board ( 2017 )


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  •      Case: 16-60333   Document: 00514157708    Page: 1   Date Filed: 09/15/2017
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT      United States Court of Appeals
    Fif h Circuit
    FILED
    September 15, 2017
    No. 16-60333
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    ADAMS AND ASSOCIATES, INCORPORATED; MCCONNELL, JONES,
    LANIER & MURPHY, L.L.P.,
    Petitioners Cross-Respondents
    v.
    NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD,
    Respondent Cross-Petitioner
    On Petition for Review and Cross-Application
    for Enforcement of an Order of the
    National Labor Relations Board
    Before HIGGINBOTHAM, GRAVES, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
    JAMES E. GRAVES, JR., Circuit Judge:
    Adams and Associates, Inc. (“Adams”) and McConnell, Jones, Lanier &
    Murphy LLP (“MJLM”) petition for review of an order of the National Labor
    Relations Board, holding them liable for unfair labor practices in violation of
    the National Labor Relations Act, 
    29 U.S.C. § 151
     et seq. Adams and MJLM
    operate a Job Corps Youth Training Center in Sacramento, California, under
    a contract with the Department of Labor. The allegations in this case arose
    from Petitioners’ successorship to the former contractor, Horizons Youth
    Services, LLC (“Horizons”). During the period in which it operated the Center,
    Horizons had a collective-bargaining agreement with Sacramento Jobs Corps
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    Federation of Teachers, AFT Local 4986, American Federation of Teachers (the
    “Union”). The Board’s order found that Adams violated Sections 8(a)(3) and (1)
    of the Act by discriminatorily refusing to hire five incumbent employees in
    order to avoid an obligation to bargain with the Union; and violated Sections
    8(a)(5) and (1) by unilaterally imposing initial terms and conditions of
    employment on the unit employees and banning Union president Genesther
    Taylor from the Center. The Board further found that MJLM and Adams are
    joint employers and are jointly and severally liable for the aforementioned
    violations. The Board cross-petitions for enforcement of its order. For the
    reasons that follow, we deny the petition for review and grant the Board’s cross-
    petition for enforcement of the order.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    MJLM and Adams jointly bid for a contract with the Department of
    Labor (“DOL”) to operate the Job Corps Center in Sacramento (the “Sacramento
    Center” or the “Center”). The Job Corps program administered by the DOL
    provides academic and vocational training to economically disadvantaged youth,
    ages sixteen to twenty-four, at residential centers throughout the United States.
    Both companies have contracts to operate various Job Corps centers across the
    country. In early February 2014, the DOL awarded the primary contract to
    MJLM to operate the Center with Adams as its subcontractor for residential,
    wellness, recreation, counseling, and career services. MJLM has “overall
    responsibility for management of the Center” and “directly handles education
    and training, maintenance, finance, and administration.” Horizons had been
    operating the Center since 2009. Its collective-bargaining agreement (“CBA”)
    with the Union covered all bargaining unit employees, which included “[a]ll
    full-time Residential Advisors (RA), Non-Residential Advisors, and Day
    Residential Advisors employed at the [Center].” Horizons employed 26
    bargaining unit RAs, who oversaw the students residing in the Center’s
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    dormitories. The most recent agreement between Horizons and the Union was
    effective by its terms until June 2013, but had been extended to March 9, 2014.
    Transition Process Begins
    In early February 2014, MJLM and Adams opened a shared transition
    office in the Sacramento Center. Both Adams and MJLM personnel participated
    in the transition. From Adams, the transition management team consisted of
    Executive Director Jimmy Gagnon, Executive Director of Human Resources
    Valerie Weldon, and Deputy Center Director Kelly McGillis; from MJLM,
    Partner Sharon Murphy, HR Director Joyce Barrett, and Center Director Erica
    Evans participated. Adams’ CEO Roy Adams (“Roy”) and Vice President for
    Human Resources and General Counsel Tiffinay Pagni provided additional
    support from Adams’ headquarters. Evans had been the Horizons Center Director
    and was hired by MJLM to fill that same position. McGillis directly reported
    to Evans.
    On February 11, the Union notified MJLM that it was the exclusive
    collective-bargaining representative of the unit employees and requested
    information concerning the hiring process. On February 13, Adams responded
    to the Union and stated that it would be responsible for hiring and employment
    of the Center’s RAs. That same day, Gagnon met with a group of Horizons RAs
    to announce the transition and advise them about the hiring process. Former
    Horizons RA and Union President Taylor attended the meeting. She later
    testified that Gagnon told the RAs that they had been “doing a really good job”
    and that “aside from disciplinary issues, he was 99 percent sure that [they]
    would all have a job” after the transition. Gagnon also stated that Adams
    planned to reduce the number of RAs from twenty-six to fifteen, but would also
    hire five people in the new position of Residential Coordinator (“RC”). RCs would
    have roughly the same job duties as RAs, but would also fill in for dormitory
    supervisors and shift managers when necessary. The Horizons employees were
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    then invited to apply for up to two available positions and given twenty-four
    hours to return completed applications. They were permitted to review job
    descriptions at the meeting, but Taylor’s request for copies of the job descriptions
    was denied. Fourteen incumbent RAs applied for the fifteen available RA
    positions.
    The following day, the Union demanded that Adams recognize and
    bargain with it as the representative of the RAs. Adams did not respond. Also
    on that day, Taylor visited the transition office to submit her employment
    application. She again requested copies of the job descriptions and asked
    Gagnon additional questions about the transition. Gagnon said that he was
    unable to provide copies or answer any of her questions and directed her to
    contact Pagni. Taylor also asked McGillis for a blank employment application
    for a Horizons RA on medical leave. McGillis referred Taylor to Weldon.
    The Hiring Process
    The transition period was put on hold for two weeks during a contract
    appeal and resumed in late February. Although Adams led the hiring process,
    both Adams and MJLM personnel interviewed applicants and made hiring
    recommendations. Gagnon made the final hiring decisions. In filling RA positions,
    Adams was required to follow Executive Order 13495 Non-Displacement of
    Qualified Workers under Service Contracts (“EO 13495”). EO 13495 incorporated
    a right of first refusal for displaced employees and required successor contractors
    to offer employment to all “qualified” incumbent employees of the predecessor
    contractor. EO 13495 also required the successor to issue employment offers
    no later than 10 days prior to the commencement of operations. To comply with
    EO 13495, Adams, through Pagni, created a “Justification for Disqualification
    of Potential Employment” form (“Disqualification Form”), which the transition
    team used to document the reasons for not hiring any incumbent applicants.
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    It is Adams’s practice in such transitions to hire management personnel
    first, in part so that they can provide input on the performance of incumbent
    employees. A new contractor is typically not given access to the former
    contractor’s personnel records and that was the case at the Sacramento Center.
    Horizons, however, did provide a list of all its current employees, including
    their job titles and hire and seniority dates (“Horizons List I”).
    After Adams hired former Horizons dorm manager, Lee Bowman,
    McGillis shared Horizons List I with Bowman and sought her feedback on RA
    applicants. 1 Bowman placed an asterisk next to the names of incumbent RAs
    she recommended for hire and a dot next to those whom she did not recommend
    hiring. McGillis also annotated the list with Bowman’s comments. Horizons
    List I was later copied with Bowman’s dots and asterisks, but not McGillis’
    annotations, into another list (“Horizons List II”). McGillis testified that the
    purpose of duplicating the list was to eliminate a comment regarding an
    employee on medical leave, out of concern that it violated the individual’s
    privacy rights under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
    Gagnon rewrote McGillis’ other annotations into Horizons List II, which
    McGillis signed with the original date. Horizons List I no longer existed at the
    time of trial.
    Based on Bowman’s comments, McGillis completed Disqualification
    Forms for five incumbent applicants, whom Adams did not hire: Genesther
    Taylor, Shannon Cousins-Kamara, Andre Lang, Macord Nguyen, and Azaria
    Ting. According to McGillis, the forms did not automatically disqualify the
    applicant, but were simply one piece of information Adams considered in hiring.
    Adams completed Disqualification Forms for nine of the fourteen incumbent
    1 Gagnon and Murphy conducted the same process with other former Horizons managers
    hired during the transition.
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    RA applicants. The transition team nonetheless interviewed all fourteen. For
    each applicant, interviewers filled out an Interview Evaluation Form and
    submitted it to Gagnon and Weldon. Applicants were rated in nine categories
    on a scale of one to four, with one being excellent and four being unsatisfactory.
    McGillis interviewed Taylor on February 28 and recommended that she
    not be hired. McGillis admitted that sometime after the interview, she
    amended Taylor’s Interview Evaluation Form, downgrading several of Taylor’s
    interview scores from 2 (average) to 3 (below average). According to McGillis,
    she made the changes because she realized after interviewing other applicants
    that she had scored Taylor “much higher than she deserved.”
    McGillis also interviewed Cousins-Kamara. McGillis testified that
    Cousins-Kamara provided a lot of information, including that she had been
    “awarded a dorm of the month recognition month after month and was
    employee of the month,” which “sounded almost too good to be true.” Former
    RA Andre Lang, however, testified that he had worked with Cousins-Kamara
    in the Shasta dorm and that all the information Cousins-Kamara related was
    true. McGillis completed an Interview Evaluation Form for Cousins-Kamara,
    but after speaking with Bowman, she shredded the initial form and replaced it
    with a second form recommending against hiring.
    By late February or early March, when there were only a few RA
    positions left to fill, Gagnon and Weldon had a conversation about four RA
    applicants for whom Disqualification Forms had been completed, but who
    interviewed well and received good scores: Diane Calahan, Andre Lang,
    Vincente Moran, and Jill Ostrowski. Weldon testified that she told Gagnon,
    “We can’t not hire these employees . . . just because they are part of the Union.”
    Gagnon decided to extend offers to all four, although later rescinded the offer to
    Lang after a background check indicated a potential discrepancy in employment
    dates for a position he held before working at Horizons.
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    Adams ultimately hired nine incumbent RAs for the fifteen available
    positions. Adams filled the remaining RA positions with non-bargaining unit
    Horizons substitute RAs and a Horizons custodian. Four of the five substitute
    RAs had been employed by Horizons for only a few months. Because Adams had
    hired a majority of former bargaining unit employees, it incurred an obligation
    to bargain with the Union.
    Post-Hiring Events
    On March 4, after it became clear that Adams had incurred a bargaining
    obligation, Roy sent an email to hiring committee members, including Pagni,
    Gagnon, and Weldon, which stated: “Unfortunately, we hired the majority of
    the union members at Sacramento and we, therefore, must negotiate a
    Collective Bargaining Agreement and incur other associated union legal costs.”
    The following week, Roy visited the Sacramento Center and pulled Weldon aside
    to ask her what happened. She related her conversation with Gagnon regarding
    the four incumbent RAs whose interviewers had recommended hiring. Weldon
    testified that Roy “was very angry and he said that we screwed up. The Union
    was now involved and he was not happy.”
    In late March, Weldon was sent back to Sacramento to gather additional
    information about various non-hires because Pagni felt that the documentation
    of their disqualification may not have been sufficient to comply with EO 13495.
    While Weldon was there, she received an email from Pagni with instructions
    for gathering supplemental information. Pagni wrote that the information
    provided by Evans was not “really helpful” and that she “also mentioned the
    union in her comments. Union involvement was not questioned or used as a
    DQ’ing factor for these individuals and cannot be used in these further
    supporting documents. We need to take any mention of union out.”
    On March 22, Roy sent a “Memorandum for Personnel Files of Tiffinay
    Pagni and Valerie Weldon” to Pagni. The memorandum, titled “Significant
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    Performance Concerns,” stated that Roy was “very concerned about the
    performance of Executive level Human Resource staff with oversight
    responsibility for the transition at the Sacramento Job Corps Center.” Among
    the priorities for the transition that were not achieved, he listed “[w]ithin
    compliance guidelines, avoid union recognition” and “[p]rotect the company
    from expensive union-related costs.” The memorandum concluded:
    Despite repeated direction, guidelines, forms, discussions, HR staff
    experience, qualifications, 10 years of union avoidance responsibility
    and, quite frankly, common sense, the company HR department
    failed to achieve minimum performance at the Sacramento
    transition.
    On March 27, Pagni sent an email to Weldon, forwarding Roy’s
    Memorandum and providing additional performance feedback. Pagni stated
    that “[w]e were . . . expected to assure disqualification information was well-
    documented and defensible and to avoid union recognition in order to protect
    the company from significant union related expenses and challenges. Neither
    of these things happened[.]” Pagni further commented that “[i]n preparing a
    recent summary of individuals who applied versus those who were hired, there
    are ample incumbent Sub RA’s on the list. These incumbent employees could
    have been used to fill the RA positions without acknowledging the union. Roy
    raised this issue repeatedly.” On April 25, Pagni presented Weldon with a Final
    Written Warning, copying Roy and Adams President of Operations Susan
    Larson. One of the performance concerns raised was that Weldon had failed to
    conduct “Union Avoidance activities pursuant to policy, including training[.]”
    Commencement of Operations and Changes to Employment Terms and
    Conditions
    Petitioners began operating the Center on March 11. Staff were employed
    under new terms and conditions. Specifically, Petitioners had ceased to give
    effect to the CBA’s progressive discipline, just cause, and grievance provisions;
    implemented at-will employment, new disciplinary policies and procedures,
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    and a mandatory arbitration policy for employment-related disputes; modified
    the terms of the existing probationary period; replaced existing health benefits
    with a new plan; and changed some RAs’ schedules from fixed shifts to rotating
    shifts. Adams also assigned RA work to employees in the new RC position,
    which was not part of the bargaining unit. Adams notified new hires of these
    changes in their offer letters and employment agreements.
    Between April and September, Adams discharged four RAs: Sheila
    Broadnax, Rolando Aspiras, Bienvenido Viloria, and Vincente Moran. They
    were discharged without recourse to the CBA’s progressive discipline process.
    Adams did not notify the Union about the discharges.
    Union Negotiations
    On March 11, the Union renewed its demand for recognition and
    bargaining. On March 28, Adams recognized the Union as the bargaining
    representative for RAs and agreed to bargain. Adams, however, refused to allow
    Taylor access to the Center to attend bargaining sessions. As a result, the first
    three bargaining sessions were held at the Union’s office. After the third
    session, Adams agreed to allow Taylor access to the Center. The fourth session
    took place there.
    Procedural History
    The Union filed charges with the NLRB alleging that Adams had
    committed multiple violations of the NLRA. Thereafter, the Board’s General
    Counsel (“General Counsel”) issued a consolidated, amended complaint against
    Adams and MJLM as joint employers. The complaint alleged that Adams
    violated the Act by refusing to hire Cousins-Kamara, Lang, Nguyen, Taylor,
    and Ting in order to avoid a bargaining obligation, and additionally refused to
    hire Taylor because of her union activity. Further, the complaint alleged that
    Adams impermissibly made unilateral changes in the terms and conditions of
    employment; discharged Broadnax, Aspiras, Viloria, and Moran without prior
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    notice to the Union or an opportunity to bargain; and refused to bargain with
    the Union in good faith by barring Taylor from the Center and by refusing to
    meet at reasonable times and places.
    The case was tried before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) over
    seven days in early 2015. The ALJ heard testimony from several witnesses and
    admitted numerous documents in evidence. On June 16, 2015, the ALJ issued
    a decision agreeing with the General Counsel in almost every respect. She
    determined, inter alia, that a corporate successorship avoidance plan formed the
    overarching basis for hiring during the transition and that Adams’s asserted
    reasons for not hiring the five incumbent RAs were “patently pretextual.” The
    ALJ, however, rejected the General Counsel’s argument that Adams was a
    “perfectly clear” successor as of February 13, 2014, the date of Gagnon’s first
    meeting with the RAs. Nevertheless, the ALJ found that Adams had forfeited
    its right to unilaterally set initial terms and conditions of employment by
    unlawfully discriminating against incumbent employees to avoid a bargaining
    obligation. The ALJ declined to address the General Counsel’s alternative
    theory that Taylor had not been hired due to her union activity, but noted that
    were she to address it, she would find that Taylor’s union activity was part of
    the basis for Adams’s decision not to hire her.
    On May 17, 2016, a three-member panel of the Board affirmed the ALJ’s
    decision and adopted the ALJ’s findings and recommendations with two
    modifications. Unlike the ALJ, the Board determined that Adams was a “perfectly
    clear” successor as of February 13. The Board also held that Taylor had been
    denied employment on account of her Union activities, as well as to avoid a
    bargaining obligation.
    As a remedy for these violations, the Board has ordered Adams and
    MJLM to offer instatement to the five incumbent RAs who were not hired
    (Cousins-Kamara, Nguyen, Taylor, Lang, and Ting), offer reinstatement to the
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    four RAs later discharged (Broadnax, Viloria, Aspiras, and Moran), and make
    all the discriminatees whole. Further, upon request from the Union, Adams
    and MJLM must rescind the unilateral changes to employment terms and
    conditions and restore the status quo ante until the parties reach a new
    collective-bargaining agreement or lawful impasse. To remedy the unilateral
    transfer of bargaining unit work from the RA to RC position, the Board ordered
    Petitioners to recognize the Union as the exclusive collective-bargaining
    representative of the RCs, and to make the RCs whole for any losses.
    On May 27, 2016, Adams and MJLM jointly petitioned for review of the
    Board’s order. The Union has intervened and filed a brief in support of the
    Board. Meanwhile, Adams moved for reconsideration, which the Board denied
    on July 29, 2016. On November 11, 2016, the Board cross-petitioned for
    enforcement of its order.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “We review the Board’s factual findings under a substantial evidence
    standard and its legal conclusions de novo.” El Paso Elec. Co. v. N.L.R.B., 
    681 F.3d 651
    , 656 (5th Cir. 2012). But we defer to the legal conclusions of the Board
    “if they have a reasonable basis in the law and are not inconsistent with the
    Act.” Valmont Indus., Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    244 F.3d 454
    , 464 (5th Cir. 2001).
    “Substantial evidence is ‘such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind would
    accept to support a conclusion.’” J. Vallery Elec., Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    337 F.3d 446
    ,
    450 (5th Cir. 2003) (quoting Universal Camera Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    340 U.S. 474
    ,
    477 (1951)). “It is more than a mere scintilla, and less than a preponderance.”
    UNF W., Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    844 F.3d 451
    , 456 (5th Cir. 2016) (quoting El Paso
    Elec., 681 F.3d at 656). “Although the reviewing court is ‘obligated to consider
    evidence that detracts from the Board’s finding,’ the ALJ’s decision stands ‘if a
    reasonable person could have found what the ALJ found, even if the appellate
    court might have reached a different conclusion had the matter been presented
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    to it in the first instance.’” Id. at 456–57 (citations omitted). The ALJ’s credibility
    determinations are binding unless: “(1) the credibility choice is unreasonable,
    (2) the choice contradicts other findings, (3) the choice is based upon inadequate
    reasons or no reason, or (4) the ALJ failed to justify [her] choice.” Id. at 457
    (quoting Asarco, Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    86 F.3d 1401
    , 1406 (5th Cir. 1996)).
    III.    DISCUSSION
    Adams argues that the Board’s findings are not supported by substantial
    evidence. Specifically, Adams argues the Board erred by (1) concluding there
    was substantial evidence of antiunion animus during the transition period;
    (2) concluding that Adams was a “perfectly clear” successor to Horizons’ CBA
    with the Union; (3) ordering as a remedy that Adams recognize the Union as the
    bargaining representative of employees in the RC position; (4) concluding Adams
    violated the Act by enforcing its site access rule against Taylor; and
    (5) concluding that Adams and MJLM are joint employers under the NLRB.
    MJLM contests only the joint employer finding. We address each argument in
    turn.
    A. The Record Contains Substantial Evidence of Antiunion Animus
    A “successor is under no obligation to hire the employees of its
    predecessor,” but this prerogative is “subject, of course, to the restriction that
    it not discriminate against union employees in its hiring.” Fall River Dyeing &
    Finishing Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    482 U.S. 27
    , 40 (1987). “[T]o establish a violation
    of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) in cases where a refusal to hire is alleged in a
    successorship context, the General Counsel has the burden to prove that the
    employer failed to hire employees of its predecessor and was motivated by
    antiunion animus.” 2 Planned Bldg. Servs., Inc., 
    347 N.L.R.B. 670
    , 673 (2006),
    2   Sections 8(a)(1) and (3) provide in relevant part:
    (a) It shall be an unfair labor practice for an employer–
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    overruled on other grounds by Pressroom Cleaners & Serv. Emps. Int’l Union,
    Local 32BJ, 361 N.L.R.B. No. 57 (Sept. 30, 2014). Once this is shown, “the
    burden then shifts to the employer to prove that it would not have hired the
    predecessor’s employees even in the absence of its unlawful motive.” 
    Id. at 674
    .
    A violation can be established by factors such as:
    substantial evidence of union animus; lack of a convincing
    rationale for refusal to hire the predecessor’s employees;
    inconsistent hiring practices or overt acts or conduct evidencing a
    discriminatory motive; and evidence supporting a reasonable
    inference that the new owner conducted its staffing in a manner
    precluding the predecessor’s employees from being hired as a
    majority of the new owner’s overall work force to avoid the Board’s
    successorship doctrine.
    U.S. Marine Corp., 
    293 N.L.R.B. 669
    , 670 (1989), enforced sub nom. U.S. Marine
    Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    944 F.2d 1305
     (7th Cir. 1991) (en banc). Antiunion animus
    need not be the sole motivating factor for the employer’s refusal to hire, only
    “a substantial or motivating factor in the adverse action.” N.L.R.B. v. Transp.
    Mgmt. Corp., 
    462 U.S. 393
    , 401 (1983), abrogated on other grounds by Dir., Off.
    of Workers’ Comp. Programs v. Greenwich Collieries, 
    512 U.S. 267
     (1994).
    “Motive is a factual matter . . . and the Board reasonably may infer motive from
    the circumstances surrounding the employer’s actions, as well as from direct
    evidence.” Asarco, Inc., 
    86 F.3d at 1408
    .
    Adams argues that the Board’s finding of antiunion animus in the
    transition hiring process is infirm because it relied solely on “[s]uspicion,
    (1) to interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of rights
    guaranteed in section 157 of this title; . . .
    (3) by discrimination in regard to hire or tenure of employment or any term or
    condition of employment to encourage or discourage membership in any labor
    organization.
    
    29 U.S.C. § 158
    (a). “[A] violation of § 8(a)(3) constitutes a derivative violation of § 8(a)(1).”
    Metro. Edison Co. v. N.L.R.B., 
    460 U.S. 693
    , 698 n.4 (1983).
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    conjecture, or theoretical speculation,” N.L.R.B. v. Mini-Togs, Inc., 
    980 F.2d 1027
    , 1032 (5th Cir. 1993). We disagree.
    First, Roy’s own statements and actions evince an intent to avoid
    bargaining with the Union. Adams does not deny that Roy explicitly voiced
    displeasure at the transition team’s failure to avoid Union recognition. 3 Adams
    asserts, however, that these statements merely voice a preference for avoiding
    Union recognition and do not support the conclusion that Adams acted
    consistently with that preference. It analogizes to the comments at issue in
    Brown & Root, Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    333 F.3d 628
     (5th Cir. 2003). That case also arose
    in the successorship context. There, we determined that a project manager’s
    statement during a confrontational meeting with incumbent employees that
    “Brown & Root was non-union and would remain that way” was insufficient,
    without more, to support a finding that Brown & Root’s hiring decisions were
    in fact motivated by antiunion animus. 
    Id.
     at 638–39. Adams’s reliance on
    Brown & Root is misplaced. Roy’s statements did not merely express a personal
    preference. They indicate that the CEO of Adams himself intended for the
    company to avoid recognizing the Union. Furthermore, this corporate strategy
    was so important that Roy seriously disciplined senior officers of the company
    for failing to carry it out.
    3  These statements appeared in an email that Roy wrote to Gagnon, Weldon, Pagni,
    and others, shortly after it became clear that Adams had incurred an obligation to bargain
    with the Union. Adams argues that the Board erroneously relied on this email and other
    communications involving Pagni and/or Weldon, because they constituted inadmissible
    evidence protected by the attorney-client privilege. Both Pagni and Weldon are licensed
    attorneys and Pagni has a dual role as Adams’s senior HR executive and General Counsel.
    Adams raised this same objection to the ALJ, who conducted an in camera review of the
    documents and determined that they pertained principally to human resources or labor
    relations, and not to legal advice. Therefore, the ALJ concluded they were not privileged
    communications. Based on our independent review of these communications, we agree. See
    EEOC v. BDO USA, L.L.P., 
    856 F.3d 356
    , 364 (5th Cir. 2017) (“[W]here business and legal
    advice are intertwined, the legal advice must predominate for the communications to be
    protected.” (citation omitted)).
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    Roy’s statements are also not the only ones indicative of a corporate
    strategy of successorship avoidance. Pagni’s emails to Weldon reveal that
    Adams’s top HR executive was well aware of this corporate strategy. And she
    explicitly discussed one method of carrying it out—selecting non-bargaining
    unit substitute RAs to fill RA positions, a tactic that Pagni said “Roy raised . . .
    repeatedly.” Weldon also testified that it was “widely known” that Roy wanted
    the company to avoid Union recognition. In addition, the record demonstrates
    that the transition team sanitized records to remove references to the Union,
    altered records, and shredded documents pertaining to the five bargaining unit
    RAs who were not hired. These acts support the inference of a coordinated effort
    to avoid hiring unit employees and an attempt to paper over that objective.
    Adams protests that members of the transition team denied that they
    were under direct orders not to hire bargaining unit employees. This, however,
    is only a challenge to the ALJ’s credibility determinations. The ALJ discredited
    the testimony of Adams’s witnesses on a number of points, based on their
    demeanor and equivocation at the hearing, as well as the “overwhelming
    evidence” of antiunion animus. These credibility determinations are binding
    unless unreasonable, contradictory to other findings, or unjustified. UNF W.,
    Inc., 844 F.3d at 456; El Paso Elec., 681 F.3d at 665. The ALJ provided her
    reasons for each credibility determination and the record as a whole supports
    them. Adams’s argument that it cannot be liable for its union avoidance activities
    because it ultimately recognized and bargained with the Union is similarly
    unpersuasive. As the ALJ noted, the fact that Adams’s plan to avoid successor
    status failed does not negate the substantial evidence that it existed. See Great
    Lakes Chem. Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    967 F.2d 624
    , 628 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (rejecting the
    same argument because “the more reasonable inference is that the [e]mployer’s
    discriminatory design ultimately failed, not that it wasn’t tried”).
    15
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    Adams also contends that it had non-discriminatory reasons for not hiring
    the five incumbent RAs. But it offered those same reasons to the ALJ, and she
    determined that they were “patently pretextual.” The ALJ found that Adams
    struggled to provide meaningful rationales for disqualifying the incumbent
    bargaining unit candidates and had to send Weldon back for “further after-the-
    fact evidence,” with instructions to sanitize documents by deleting any reference
    to the Union. While each of these candidates had multiple years of experience
    on the job, Adams instead hired non-unit Horizons substitute RAs, some with
    only a few months of experience, and a Horizons custodian.
    Furthermore, the ALJ made several credibility determinations in arriving
    at her conclusions. As discussed above, such determinations require deference
    except in unusual circumstances. Here, the ALJ provided thorough explanations
    for her determinations, which are eminently reasonable. For example, McGillis
    and Gagnon offered several reasons for not extending an offer of employment
    to Taylor, including her alleged poor performance during the interview and
    Bowman’s comment that she “doesn’t get much done.” But at trial, McGillis
    and Taylor offered starkly different versions of the interview. The ALJ found
    Taylor’s testimony to be “straightforward, convincing, and unflinching.” By
    contrast, she found McGillis’s testimony to be “laced with examples of shredding,
    back dating and signing forms to make them look like originals when they were
    actually manufactured at a later time, [and] writing over interview forms in
    an attempt to cover up original impressions.” McGillis also admitted that she
    retroactively lowered Taylor’s interview scores by adding an extra loop to her
    “2s” to make them look like “3s.” The ALJ found McGillis’s proffered explanation,
    that she realized she had scored Taylor “much higher than she deserved,”
    unconvincing. Furthermore, McGillis’s additional explanation that her changed
    opinion was based on Taylor’s “very disruptive” visits to the transition office,
    during which she was performing her duties as Union president, was itself
    16
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    evidence that Taylor’s union activity contributed to McGillis’s and others’
    negative impressions of her. 4 As for Bowman, the ALJ described her testimony
    as “incredible” and her demeanor “somewhat uncooperative with a pronounced
    lack of interest in providing truthful testimony.”
    We have reviewed the ALJ’s findings and credibility determinations as to
    Adams’s claimed reasons for refusing offers to Taylor, Cousins-Kamara, Lang,
    Nguyen, and Ting and we see no reason to disturb them. As discussed above,
    the ALJ’s credibility determinations are binding except in rare instances.
    Asarco, 
    86 F.3d at 1406
    ; see also N.L.R.B. v. Walton Mfg. Co., 
    369 U.S. 404
    , 408
    (1962) (explaining that the deferential standard of review is appropriate because
    the “[the ALJ] . . . sees the witnesses and hears them testify, while the Board
    and the reviewing court look only at cold records”). We are satisfied that the
    ALJ’s and the Board’s findings as to the Section 8(a)(3) and (1) violations are
    reasonable and supported by the record as a whole. Accordingly, we affirm
    them. See Valmont Indus., 
    244 F.3d at 470
    .
    B. Adams’s Unilateral Imposition of Initial Terms and Conditions of
    Employment Violated the Act
    The Board determined that Adams’s unilateral changes to mandatory
    terms and conditions of employment violated Sections 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act,
    based on two alternative theories. 5 First, through its unlawful refusal to hire
    Horizons employees in an effort to avoid bargaining with the Union, Adams
    4 Gagnon also testified that he decided not to hire Taylor based, in part, on “[his]
    interactions with her” and “[his] observations of her interactions” with others. The Board
    found that it was undisputed that all of Gagnon’s interactions with Taylor and all of Taylor’s
    interactions with others that Gagnon observed took place while Taylor was acting in her
    capacity as Union president. We agree with the Board that the evidence supports the General
    Counsel’s allegation that Adams refused to hire Taylor, in part, because of her union activity
    and we affirm the Board’s finding of a separate Section 8(a)(3) violation on this ground.
    5 Section 8(a)(5) of the Act provides that an employer engages in unfair labor practice
    by “refus[ing] to bargain collectively with the representatives of his employees, subject to the
    provisions of section 159(a) of this title.” 
    29 U.S.C. § 158
    (a)(5).
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    forfeited its right as a successor employer to set initial employment terms.
    Second, by failing to announce its intent to change employment terms prior to,
    or simultaneously with, its expressed intent to retain Horizons employees,
    Adams became a “perfectly clear” successor with an obligation to bargain with
    the Union. Adams directly challenges only the Board’s second theory—that
    Adams was a “perfectly clear” successor.
    Although a successor employer is ordinarily free to set initial terms on
    which it will hire its predecessor’s employees, when a successor evinces a
    “perfectly clear” intention to retain the predecessor’s employees, it must consult
    with their bargaining representative before fixing its own terms. N.L.R.B. v.
    Burns Int’l Sec. Servs., Inc., 
    406 U.S. 272
    , 294–95 (1972); see also Spruce Up
    Corp., 
    209 N.L.R.B. 194
    , 195 (1974) (clarifying that the “perfectly clear” caveat
    applies where, inter alia, successor “has failed to clearly announce its intent to
    establish a new set of conditions prior to inviting former employees to accept
    employment”), enforced sub nom. N.L.R.B. v. Spruce Up Corp., 
    529 F.2d 516
    (4th Cir. 1975) (per curiam).
    The Board’s finding that Adams was a “perfectly clear” successor was
    based on Gagnon’s meeting with the RAs on February 13, in which he told them
    that they had been “doing a really good job” and that “aside from disciplinary
    issues, he was 99 percent sure that [they] would all have a job” after the
    transition. The Board determined that Gagnon’s comments during that meeting
    “manifested an intent to retain the incumbent RAs.” Further, it determined
    that Adams had not clearly announced its intent to establish new employment
    terms prior to or simultaneously with the February 13 meeting.
    Adams does not deny that it is a successor employer. Neither does it
    dispute the Board’s finding that Gagnon’s comments at the February 13
    meeting created an expectation that Horizons bargaining unit employees
    would retain their employment after the transition. It contests only the Board’s
    18
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    finding that Adams did not give prospective employees clear notice of its intent
    to establish new employment conditions. Adams points to various statements
    Gagnon made during the February 13 meeting, which Adams contends put the
    RAs on notice that their employment would be under different terms: the
    reduction in the number of RAs, the introduction of the new RC position, and
    Adams’s provision of its own health insurance plan. 6 We observe that none of
    these statements explicitly announced that Adams intended to change the terms
    and conditions of the RAs’ employment. Ultimately, we find it unnecessary to
    resolve whether or not these comments placed the RAs on constructive notice
    because we have already determined that Adams discriminatorily failed to hire
    the employees of its predecessor in order to avoid incurring a bargaining
    obligation.
    Under these circumstances, Adams forfeited its right to set initial terms.
    “[A]n employer that attempts to avoid successorship th[r]ough discriminatory
    hiring practices forfeits its right to set initial terms and conditions of
    employment.” Pressroom Cleaners, 361 N.L.R.B. No. 57, at *1; see also N.L.R.B.
    v. Katz, 
    369 U.S. 736
    , 743 (1962) (“We hold that an employer’s unilateral change
    in conditions of employment under negotiation is similarly a violation of s[ection]
    8(a)(5), for it is a circumvention of the duty to negotiate which frustrates the
    objectives of s[ection] 8(a)(5) much as does a flat refusal.”). Consequently, Adams
    6  Adams additionally argues that Horizons employees were placed on notice by the
    proposed staffing model that MJLM and Adams included in their joint proposal to the DOL.
    Adams does not assert, however, that Horizons employees were privy to the DOL proposal.
    Consequently, any information contained in the proposal is immaterial to our inquiry, which
    is conducted from the employees’ perspective. See Fall River, 
    482 U.S. at
    43–44; N.L.R.B. v.
    Hous. Bldg. Servs., Inc., 
    936 F.2d 178
    , 180 & n.1 (5th Cir. 1991) (per curiam). Adams also points
    out that the offer letters and employment agreements provided to new hires apprised them
    of different terms and conditions. But this information was provided only after the February
    13 meeting and is therefore insufficient to satisfy the notice requirement. See, e.g., Canteen
    Co., 
    317 N.L.R.B. 1052
    , 1054 (1995), enforced sub nom. Canteen Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    103 F.3d 1355
     (7th Cir. 1997).
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    was obligated to maintain the status quo by honoring the substantive terms of
    the CBA and to bargain with the Union about all changes to mandatory subjects
    of bargaining.
    We therefore affirm the Board’s finding of Sections 8(a)(5) and (1) violations
    for Adams’s unilateral imposition of new terms and conditions of employment.
    We also affirm the Board’s ordered remedy that Adams, upon request by the
    Union, retroactively restore the CBA’s terms and rescind the unilateral changes
    Adams made until such time as it and the Union reach an agreement on new
    terms or a lawful impasse based on good-faith negotiations.
    In its Reply, Adams argues that this remedy is improper because it
    subsequently recognized and bargained with the Union. As a threshold matter,
    arguments made only in a party’s reply brief are forfeited. See Tradewinds
    Envtl. Restoration, Inc. v. St. Tammany Park, LLC, 
    578 F.3d 255
    , 260 n.3 (5th
    Cir. 2009). But even if Adams had not forfeited this argument, we would still
    enforce this part of the Board’s order.
    There is substantial agreement among our sister circuits that “[i]n such
    cases the Board may impose a status quo ante remedy to restore the situation
    to what it would have been absent the successor’s unfair labor practices.” See
    U.S. Marine Corp., 
    944 F.2d at 1320
     (collecting cases); see also Love’s Barbeque
    Rest. No. 62, 
    245 N.L.R.B. 78
    , 82 (1979), enforced in part sub nom. Kallmann v.
    N.L.R.B., 
    640 F.2d 1094
     (9th Cir. 1981); accord Pressroom Cleaners, 361 N.L.R.B.
    No. 57, at *1–2. Adams cites no decision from this court, or any other, denying
    enforcement of the traditional Love’s Barbeque remedy because the employer
    began complying with its obligations under the Act at some point after its initial
    violations. And one of the Board’s decisions that Adams does cite demonstrates
    the flaw in its logic.
    In Pressroom Cleaners, the Board clarified that in showing compliance
    with a Love’s Barbeque remedy, “the employer is not permitted to show . . . that
    20
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    it would have agreed to different terms, or reached impasse earlier, if it had
    bargained lawfully in the first place.” 361 N.L.R.B. No. 57, at *3. Pressroom
    Cleaners indicates that Adams’s subsequent participation in the bargaining
    process does not dissipate its initial violation of unilaterally imposing its own
    terms and conditions of employment. Nor does it make bargaining unit employees
    whole but for Adams’s unfair labor practice. Accordingly, we hold that restoring
    the status quo ante is an appropriate remedy for Adams’s unlawful conduct.
    C. The Board Did Not Err in Ordering Adams to Recognize the Union
    as the Bargaining Representative for the RCs
    Adams argues that the Board erred by ordering it to rescind its unlawful
    transfer of bargaining unit work from the RA to the RC position and to recognize
    and bargain with the Union as the exclusive representative of RCs. Adams
    asserts that this is an extraordinary remedy akin to a Gissel bargaining order.
    Such orders bypass a union election and direct an employer to begin bargaining
    with the union immediately. See N.L.R.B. v. Gissel Packing Co., 
    395 U.S. 575
    ,
    582–86 (1969). The propriety of Gissel orders are limited to exceptional cases
    where the employer’s attempts to circumvent the election process indicate that
    the Board’s traditional remedies cannot ensure a fair election. 
    Id.
     at 610–15.
    The Board rejected this argument in denying Adams’s motion for
    reconsideration. See Adams & Assocs., Inc., Nos. 20-CA-130613 & 20-CA-138046,
    
    2016 WL 4087594
    , at *2 (N.L.R.B. July 29, 2016). The Board held that an order
    to recognize and bargain with the union is the traditional remedy for an
    employer’s unlawful unilateral transfer of bargaining unit work to a non-unit
    position. 
    Id.
     (citing Dixie Elec. Membership Corp., 
    358 N.L.R.B. 1089
    , 1094 (2012),
    vacated, 361 N.L.R.B. No. 107 (Nov. 19, 2014), enforced sub nom. Dixie Elec.
    Membership Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    814 F.3d 752
     (5th Cir. 2016), and Mt. Sinai Hosp.,
    
    331 N.L.R.B. 895
    , 912 (2000), enforced sub nom. N.L.R.B. v. Mt. Sinai Hosp., 8
    F. App’x 111 (2d Cir. 2001) (per curiam)).
    21
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    We conclude that the Board’s remedy is sufficiently within its broad
    discretion to fashion. See Fibreboard Paper Prods. Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    379 U.S. 203
    , 216 (1964) (“The Board’s [remedial] power is a broad discretionary one,
    subject to limited judicial review.”). Furthermore, Adams’s analogy to Gissel is
    misplaced. Gissel orders remedy pre-election unfair labor practices. Here, the
    Union was the duly elected bargaining agent for RA bargaining unit work. The
    Board found that the duties of RC and RA employees are substantially identical.
    Adams does not dispute this. Transferring bargaining unit work to non-unit
    personnel is a mandatory subject of bargaining; an employer’s unilateral transfer
    of such work violates the Act. Hampton House, 
    317 N.L.R.B. 1005
    , 1005 (1995)
    (“[O]nce a specific job has been included within the scope of the bargaining unit
    by either Board action or the consent of the parties, the employer cannot remove
    or modify the position without first securing the consent of the union or the
    Board.”). The traditional remedy for such a violation is to order the employer
    to recognize the union as the bargaining representative for employees in the
    non-unit position to which the unit work was transferred. See, e.g., Mt. Sinai
    Hosp., 8 F. App’x at 116 (enforcing order requiring employer to include in
    bargaining unit all employees in non-unit position to which employer unlawfully
    transferred work); Great Lakes Chem. Corp., 
    967 F.2d at
    262–63 (same).
    Adams attempts to sidestep this remedy by arguing that the RC position
    is a supervisory position pursuant to Section 2(11) of the NLRA and thus exempt
    from bargaining. See Dynasteel Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    476 F.3d 253
    , 257 (5th Cir.
    2007) (“The NLRA generally only protects employees, thereby excluding
    supervisors from its protections.”). Adams has the burden of demonstrating a
    job position’s supervisory status. 
    Id.
     at 257–58. The ALJ found, and the Board
    affirmed, that RCs are not supervisory employees because “[t]here is no dispute
    that RCs have no authority to hire, transfer, suspend, layoff, discharge, recall,
    promote, reward, or assign duties,” nor can they “meaningfully recommend
    22
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    such actions.” See 
    29 U.S.C. § 152
    (11). Adams renews the same argument that
    the Board rejected, namely that RCs are supervisors because they “oversee the
    dorm area, regularly fill in for managers and supervisors, and manage staff on
    occasion.” We agree with the Board that the RCs’ intermittent substitution for
    supervisors without any other indicia of supervisory authority does not
    transform them into supervisors. See Masterform Tool Co., 
    327 N.L.R.B. 1071
    ,
    1071 (1999) (“[T]he exercise of some ‘supervisory authority’ in a merely . . .
    sporadic manner does not confer supervisory status.”).
    D. The Board Did Not Err in Finding that Adams Violated the Act by
    Refusing to Grant Taylor Access to the Center
    Adams challenges the Board’s finding that it committed a Section 8(a)(5)
    violation by barring Taylor from access to the Center for collective-bargaining
    sessions. As Union president, Taylor was the Union’s chosen representative for
    bargaining with Adams. When Horizons operated the Center, bargaining sessions
    typically took place there. But Adams denied Taylor access to the Center, citing
    its facility access rule:
    Former staff and students, regardless of reason for separation, will
    not be allowed on Center without the prior authorization of the
    Center Director or his/her designee.
    No group or individual who has been previously barred from the
    Center or whose purpose can reasonably be expected to create
    controversy or disturbance among staff members or students, or
    who might interfere with their welfare or training, will be allowed
    on-Center.
    As a result, the first three collective-bargaining sessions took place off-site at
    the Union’s office. After the third session, Taylor was permitted on the Center.
    The fourth session took place there.
    “It is well established that each party to a collective-bargaining
    relationship has both the right to select its representative for bargaining and
    negotiations and the duty to deal with the chosen representative of the other
    23
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    party.” See Fitzsimons Mfg. Co., 
    251 N.L.R.B. 375
    , 379 (1980), enforced sub
    nom. Int’l Union, United Auto, Aerospace & Agr. Implement Workers of Am. v.
    N.L.R.B., 
    670 F.2d 663
     (6th Cir. 1982). The General Counsel relies on Modern
    Management Services, LLC, 361 N.L.R.B. No. 24, 
    2014 WL 4076358
     (Aug. 18,
    2014), enforced sub nom. Modern Mgmt. Servs., LLC v. N.L.R.B., No. 14-1160,
    
    2016 WL 3040484
     (D.C. Cir. May 18, 2016), and KSL Claremont Resort, Inc.,
    
    344 N.L.R.B. 832
     (2005), to argue that a ban on union representatives who are
    also former employees constitutes a refusal to bargain with the Union’s chosen
    representative in violation of Section 8(a)(5) of the Act. In both cases, the Board
    found Section 8(a)(5) violations stemming from an employer’s refusal to allow a
    former employee access to its facility to carry out union-related responsibilities.
    But Adams asserts that it should not be liable because there was no
    evidence that its enforcement of its facility access rule was either selective or
    disparate. Adams cites us no authority indicating that non-selective enforcement
    of its rule is material. The probative facts are that Taylor was the Union’s
    chosen representative and that she was denied access to the location typically
    used for bargaining sessions. Moreover, Adams does not contend that her
    presence would create ill will and render good-faith negotiations impossible,
    such that it would be justified in refusing to meet with her. See KSL Claremont,
    344 N.L.R.B. at 835.
    Adams also argues that liability is inappropriate because Taylor’s
    inability to be on-site did not actually hinder bargaining. But a Section 8(a)(5)
    violation does not require a showing that the employer absolutely impeded the
    bargaining process. In Modern Management, the Board found a Section 8(a)(5)
    violation despite evidence that the employer was willing to bargain, and had
    bargained, with the former employee as union representative at other locations
    than the employer’s facility. The ALJ found that Taylor’s presence as Union
    president was of paramount importance to the Union. Prior to her ban from
    24
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    the Center, bargaining sessions ordinarily took place there. It was undoubtedly
    less convenient to hold sessions elsewhere, particularly for any current Center
    employees who might wish to participate.
    Because there is substantial evidence, i.e., more than “a mere scintilla,”
    UNF W., 844 F.3d at 456, supporting the Board’s finding that Adams refused
    to bargain in good faith by denying Taylor access to the Center, we affirm.
    E. The Board’s Finding that Adams and MJLM Are Joint Employers
    Is Supported by Substantial Evidence
    Adams and MJLM contest the finding that they are joint employers,
    jointly and severally liable for unfair labor practices.
    As an initial matter, MJLM spends a significant portion of its brief
    arguing that the Board’s purportedly new joint-employer test, announced in
    Browning-Ferris Industries of California, Inc., 362 N.L.R.B. No. 186 (Aug. 27,
    2015), is arbitrary and capricious. Whatever the merits of that test may be, it
    is not properly before us. The ALJ and the Board relied on the test for joint-
    employer status propounded in N.L.R.B. v. Browning-Ferris Industries Inc.,
    
    691 F.2d 1117
     (3d Cir. 1982), which we have previously endorsed, see Tex. World
    Serv. Co., Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    928 F.2d 1426
    , 1432 (5th Cir. 1991). Under this test,
    joint employers “share or co-determine those matters governing essential terms
    and conditions of employment.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Browning-Ferris Indus. Inc., 
    691 F.2d at 1124
    ); see also Laerco Transp., 
    269 N.L.R.B. 324
    , 325 (1984). “To establish
    joint employer status there must be a showing that the employer meaningfully
    affects matters relating to the employment relationship such as hiring, firing,
    discipline, supervision, and direction.” Laerco Transp., 269 N.L.R.B. at 325.
    “Whether a joint employer relationship exists is ‘essentially a factual issue.’”
    Tex. World Serv., 
    928 F.2d at 1432
     (quoting Boire v. Greyhound Corp., 
    376 U.S. 473
    , 481 (1964)). The relevant time period for assessing joint-employer status
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    is the period in which the unfair labor practices occurred—here, the transition
    period. 
    Id.
    The ALJ relied on the following facts demonstrating joint-employer
    status: (1) Adams and MJLM jointly developed the wage structure for all staffing;
    (2) MJLM personnel were involved in the interviewing and hiring process of
    Adams’s employees; (3) MJLM exclusively determined the holiday schedule for
    all Center employees; (4) MJLM reserved the right to take personnel action
    against Adams staff for violation of Center rules or policies; (5) Adams Deputy
    Center Director McGillis reported directly to MJLM Center Director Evans;
    and (6) Adams shared interview forms, standard operating procedures, and job
    descriptions with MJLM during the transition. The Board adopted these
    findings in full. It also noted that “MJLM does not contend that it neither knew,
    nor should have known, of Adams’ unlawful actions. Nor does it contend that
    it took all measures within its power to resist those actions.”
    By contrast, the ALJ found that, in general, Adams is solely responsible
    for setting the staff schedule for its employees and for ensuring that its staff
    meets all hiring criteria required by the DOL; there is no evidence that MJLM
    retains authority over hiring, supervision, and direction of Adams employees;
    and the two companies have separate benefits packages and disciplinary policies.
    On balance, this is a close case for joint-employer liability. Our standard
    of review, however, is deferential. We must uphold the Board’s decision if it is
    reasonable, even if we might have reached a different conclusion had the matter
    been presented to us in the first instance. UNF W., 844 F.3d at 456–57. There
    is sufficient evidence in the record to support the Board’s finding.
    First, there is the joint development of the wage structure, which MJLM
    and Adams submitted in their proposal to the DOL. A significant factor in
    determining whether one company has immediate control over another
    company’s employees is influence over wages. See Tex. World Serv., 
    928 F.2d 26
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    at 1432 (citing Clinton’s Ditch Coop. Co. v. N.L.R.B., 
    778 F.2d 132
    , 138 (2d Cir.
    1985)). Adams disputes that MJLM had any role in setting wages for Adams
    employees. But in an affidavit, which the ALJ credited, Gagnon stated that the
    two companies “jointly developed” the wage structure. The ALJ also relied on
    the joint proposal to the DOL in finding that the companies jointly developed the
    wage structure for all staffing at the Center. The ALJ’s credibility determination
    is reasonable.
    Second, it is undisputed that MJLM was involved in the hiring process
    for Adams employees during the transition period. Influence over hiring
    decisions is another significant factor in the joint-employer determination. See,
    e.g., id. at 1433; N.L.R.B. v. W. Temp. Servs., Inc., 
    821 F.2d 1258
    , 1266 (7th Cir.
    1987). MJLM personnel, including MJLM Partner Murphy, conducted interviews
    of Adams applicants and made hiring recommendations. During the transition
    period, MJLM and Adams also daily reviewed the latest hiring data and open
    positions remaining to be filled. These activities are indicative of coordination
    in hiring during the relevant period.
    Third, in the subcontract agreement between MJLM and Adams, MJLM’s
    exclusive determination of the holiday schedule for Center staff is some evidence
    of its influence over the terms and conditions of employment for Adams
    employees. See Quantum Res. Corp., 
    305 N.L.R.B. 759
    , 760–61 (1991). We agree
    with Petitioners, however, that the reservation of MJLM’s right to discipline
    Adams staff for violation of Center rules and policies is insufficient to establish
    a joint-employer finding, absent evidence that the right was ever exercised. See
    Am Prop. Holding Corp., 
    350 N.L.R.B. 998
    , 1000 (2007) (“In assessing whether
    a joint employer relationship exists, the Board does not rely merely on the
    existence of such contractual provisions, but rather looks to the actual practice
    of the parties.”).
    27
    Case: 16-60333    Document: 00514157708      Page: 28   Date Filed: 09/15/2017
    No. 16-60333
    Fourth, the direct reporting structure between McGillis, the highest
    ranking Adams representative on site, and Evans, the Center Director, reflects
    the reality of the companies’ joint relationship in operating the Center and the
    coordination necessary to ensure a seamless operation. The ALJ found that
    McGillis and Evans consulted on matters such as students, dormitories, career
    and social counseling, and policies of the Center. Similarly, Weldon and MJLM
    HR Director Barrett shared an office during the transition and “consulted with
    each other on human resources matters.”
    Finally, Adams shared interview forms, standard operating procedures,
    and job descriptions with MJLM during the transition. Pagni described Adams’s
    relationship with MJLM as not only a subcontractor but also a mentor. Adams
    operates roughly sixteen Job Corps Centers as the prime contractor. The
    Sacramento Jobs Corps Center was Adams’s first experience as a subcontractor.
    At the Sacramento Center, the companies decided “to be under the same
    umbrella.” Consequently, forms that Adams typically utilized were given to
    MJLM to revise and use. This is further evidence supporting the Board’s joint-
    employer finding. See Browning-Ferris Indus., 
    691 F.2d at 1125
     (sharing of
    forms for record keeping purposes indicative of joint-employer status).
    Adams and MJLM rely heavily on two NLRB decisions: Laerco
    Transportation, 
    269 N.L.R.B. 324
     (1984), and TLI, Inc., 
    271 N.L.R.B. 798
     (1984).
    Both cases involved servicing relationships, in which one company contracted
    for labor provided by another. Although the contracting company in each case
    exercised some control over the supplier’s labor force, the Board found that the
    control was minimal and routine in nature; it did not meaningfully affect the
    terms and conditions of employment. See Laerco Transp., 269 N.L.R.B. at 325–
    26; TLI, Inc., 271 N.L.R.B. at 799. Petitioners argue that MJLM also exercised
    only minimal control of a routine nature over Adams employees and did not
    materially affect the terms and conditions of their employment.
    28
    Case: 16-60333    Document: 00514157708       Page: 29   Date Filed: 09/15/2017
    No. 16-60333
    Laerco and TLI are distinguishable. None of the aforementioned factors
    was present in those cases. The nature of Petitioners’ relationship as prime
    contractor and subcontractor jointly operating the Sacramento Center is
    different than the customer/supplier relationships at issue in Laerco and TLI.
    And the record as a whole demonstrates that the level of control MJLM
    exercised over Adams Center employees rose above the minimal showing in
    Laerco and TLI. Moreover, MJLM’s influence over Adams employees, including
    its participation in the hiring process and the management reporting
    structure, is far from routine in nature.
    In sum, there is substantial evidence in the record to support the Board’s
    joint-employer finding. Under the Board’s precedent, the burden then shifts to
    MJLM in seeking to escape liability “to show that it neither knew, nor should
    have known, of the reason for the other employer’s action or that, if it knew, it
    took all measures within its power to resist the unlawful action.” Capitol EMI
    Music, 
    311 N.L.R.B. 997
    , 1000 (1993), enforced sub nom. Capitol EMI Music,
    Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    23 F.3d 399
     (4th Cir. 1994). MJLM has not made this showing.
    Accordingly, the Board’s finding of joint liability is appropriate.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    Because we find that, on the record as a whole, substantial evidence
    supports the Board’s findings and conclusions, the Petition for review is
    DENIED. The Board’s Cross-Petition for enforcement of its order is GRANTED.
    29
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-60333

Judges: Higginbotham, Graves, Higginson

Filed Date: 9/15/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

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