Gary A. Bloom v. NLRB ( 2000 )


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  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 97-1582
    ___________
    Gary A. Bloom,                           *
    *
    Petitioner,                *
    *
    v.                                * Petition for Review of an
    * Order of the National
    National Labor Relations Board,          * Labor Relations Board.
    *
    Respondent,                *
    *
    Office and Professional Employees        *
    International Union, AFL-CIO Local 12, *
    *
    Intervenor on Appeal.      *
    ___________
    Submitted: October 22, 1999
    Filed: April 4, 2000
    ___________
    Before WOLLMAN, Chief Judge, BEAM, and HANSEN, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    WOLLMAN, Chief Judge.
    This matter returns to us on remand from the Supreme Court. We affirm the
    decision and order of the National Labor Relations Board (Board) and deny the petition
    for review.
    I.
    Petitioner, Gary Bloom, the Office and Professional Employees International
    Union, Local 12 (Local 12), and the Board come before us for the third time. For a
    background of the case, we refer to our opinions issued during the earlier stages of this
    litigation: Bloom v. NLRB, 
    30 F.3d 1001
    (8th Cir. 1994) (Bloom I), and Bloom v.
    NLRB, 
    153 F.3d 844
    (8th Cir. 1998) (Bloom II), vacated, 
    525 U.S. 1133
    (1999).
    Local 12 represents the bargaining unit of clerical employees at Group Health,
    Inc., where Bloom worked as such an employee. The collective bargaining agreement
    between Local 12 and Group Health contained a union security clause that required all
    employees to become “members” of the union in good standing within thirty-one days
    of their hiring. The membership language comes from section 8(a)(3) of the National
    Labor Relations Act (Act), which allows an employer in agreement with a union “to
    require as a condition of employment membership” in the union. See 29 U.S.C. §
    158(a)(3) (1998). The statute further provides, however, that such an employer shall
    not discriminate against an employee for nonmembership if the employer “has
    reasonable grounds for believing that membership was denied or terminated for reasons
    other than the failure of the employee to tender the periodic dues and initiation fees
    uniformly required” as a condition of membership.1 See 
    id. Bloom brought
    to the Board’s attention certain practices of Group Health and
    Local 12 and, after an investigation, the Board’s General Counsel issued a complaint
    against them for unfair labor practices. All parties waived a hearing before an
    1
    A member for statutory purposes may be what is termed a “nonmember
    employee,” who can be required to pay only the “agency fee,” comprised of that
    percentage of fees and dues expended for a union's activities as the workers’ exclusive
    collective bargaining representative in dealings with the employer.                See
    Communications Workers v. Beck, 
    487 U.S. 735
    , 762-63 (1988).
    -2-
    administrative law judge and proceedings were transferred to the Board upon stipulated
    facts, which essentially are as follows: A few months after Bloom had begun to work
    for Group Health, Group Health began to deduct fees for full union membership from
    his paycheck and remit them to Local 12. When Bloom, who did not wish to join the
    union, failed to return a form to authorize these paycheck deductions and requested an
    breakdown of dues and fees used in calculating the agency fee from Local 12, the union
    sent him a letter threatening to seek his discharge if he did not become a member.
    While this matter was pending before the Board, Local 12 and Group Health reached
    an informal settlement, which the Board’s General Counsel recommended for approval
    as remedying the complaint’s allegations. The Board then issued an unpublished order
    approving the settlement and dismissing the complaint. Bloom, unsatisfied, petitioned
    us for review.
    We denied enforcement of the Board’s order because the union security clause
    that had been unlawfully interpreted and applied to mislead employees remained in the
    bargaining agreement. See Bloom 
    I, 30 F.3d at 1004
    . We concluded that the
    settlement’s requirement that Local 12 and Group Health post a temporary notice
    stating that the clause would no longer be enforced as written did not alone sufficiently
    effectuate the purposes of the Act and policies of the Board. See 
    id. at 1005.
    Because
    the clause had been literally enforced and the settlement provision for notice provided
    no measures to effectively inform employees of their minimum union obligations under
    Communications Workers v. Beck, 
    487 U.S. 735
    (1988), we found that the policies and
    purposes of the Act were not being fulfilled. See Bloom 
    I, 30 F.3d at 1004
    -05. We
    noted that one of the policies of the Act is to preserve voluntary unionism. See 
    id. at 1003;
    Pattern Makers’ League v. NLRB, 
    473 U.S. 95
    , 104 (1985). We concluded that
    Local 12’s attempt to pressure Bloom into joining the union by threatening to bring
    about his discharge constituted a violation of this policy, a violation that was not
    adequately addressed by the settlement. We therefore held that the Board was required
    to impose a more stringent settlement condition--that the clause be expunged, see 
    id. at 1005--and
    we remanded the case to the Board for the entry of that relief.
    -3-
    The matter reached us again when Bloom petitioned for review of a third2
    settlement and corresponding Board decision and order. This third settlement provided
    for a new union security clause and for notice procedures that included: (1) the posting
    of a notice by Local 12 to all employees that fees and dues would not be deducted from
    an employee’s paycheck without the employee’s written authorization, and (2) for
    individual notice by Local 12 to certain classes of employees--current nonmembers and
    new hires within the statutory limitations period--about their right to refrain from union
    activities. The security clause now reads:
    All Employees of the Employer subject to the terms of this Agreement
    shall, as a condition of continued employment, become and remain
    members in the Union, and all such Employees subsequently hired shall
    become members of the Union within thirty-one (31) calendar days,
    within the requirements of the National Labor Relations Act. Union
    membership is required only to the extent that Employees must pay either
    (i) the Union’s initiation fees and periodic dues or (ii) service fees which
    in the case of a regular service fee payer shall be equal to the Union’s
    initiation fees and periodic dues and in the case of an objecting service fee
    payer shall be the proportion of the initiation fees and dues corresponding
    to the proportion of the Union’s total expenditures that support
    representational activities.
    The posted notice will provide that Local 12 will not accept deductions of dues and
    fees without prior written authorization, that Bloom personally has been reimbursed
    those fees wrongfully deducted, and that Local 12 will not enforce the security clause
    by requiring employees to sign a membership application or checkoff authorization
    form. In this area, Group Health’s duties mirror those of Local 12; thus Group Health
    and Local 12 act as checks on each other. Additionally, Local 12 will provide the
    2
    Bloom had petitioned for review of a second Board order approving a second
    settlement. While retaining jurisdiction over his petition, we granted a motion to
    remand to the Board for amendment of that second settlement, making the order now
    at issue the one that approved the third version of the settlement.
    -4-
    qualifying classes of employees with individual notice that contains detailed
    information regarding Beck’s minimum requirements, ensuring that at least some
    workers will know that they have a right to be objecting nonmembers who will be
    charged for only the percentage of dues and fees that are spent for the union’s
    representational activities. This notice will also explain that those workers who
    become objecting nonmembers within thirty days of receipt of the notice will receive
    a refund.
    Concluding that the Board, Local 12, and Group Health had not done enough to
    alleviate our concerns about Local 12’s attempt to extract full union membership from
    employees such as Bloom, we again denied enforcement. We found that even though
    it tracked the language of section 8(a)(3), the rewritten security clause still failed to
    effectuate the Act’s purposes and policies, as well as our mandate in Bloom I, by
    continuing to rely on language that was misleading, coercive, and repugnant to an
    employee’s right under Beck to pay only the agency fee. See Bloom 
    II, 153 F.3d at 850
    .
    Having found the rewritten security clause wanting, we then ordered that the
    clause be deleted in its entirety and that it be replaced by a provision of our own
    making, which spelled out in some considerable detail what we concluded the Act, as
    interpreted in Beck and Pattern Makers’, requires. See Bloom 
    II, 153 F.3d at 851
    .
    Local 12 thereupon filed a petition for writ of certiorari.
    In Marquez v. Screen Actors Guild, Inc., the Supreme Court held that the
    negotiation of a clause that tracks the language of the Act is neither arbitrary nor in bad
    faith, concluding that the Court’s limiting gloss from NLRB v. General Motors Corp.,
    
    373 U.S. 743
    (1963), and Beck is incorporated into that statutory language. See 
    525 U.S. 33
    , 45-48 (1998). Thus, a union does not violate the duty of fair representation
    solely by using language in a security clause that is guided by the Act’s section 8(a)(3),
    -5-
    such as the term “membership,” even though employees may not understand what these
    terms of art mean without further explanation. See 
    id. at 46.
    Thereafter, the Court granted Local 12’s petition for writ of certiorari and
    vacated and remanded Bloom II for further consideration in light of Marquez, 
    525 U.S. 1133
    , 
    119 S. Ct. 1023
    (1999).
    II.
    Marquez holds that the language of a union security clause may mirror the
    statutory terms of art. See 
    Marquez, 525 U.S. at 46
    . A clause that tracks section
    8(a)(3)’s language can be enforced as written “because by tracking the statutory
    language, the clause incorporates all of the refinements that have become associated
    with that language.” 
    Id. at 46.
    To the extent that the statute’s language does not
    comport with ordinary usage, those terms have become terms of art, encompassing
    those nonmember rights outlined in General Motors and Beck. See 
    id. at 46.
    Thus,
    unions and employers may rely on these terms of art, such as “membership,” in the
    negotiation of union security clauses.
    The Court also noted that the Board, in a development that should guide
    employers and unions in lawfully enforcing security clauses, is currently in the process
    of defining the content of what notification unions must give to employees about their
    rights under Beck and General Motors. See 
    id. at 43.
    Indeed, in California Saw &
    Knife Works, the Board held that a union that seeks to apply a union security clause
    to bargaining unit employees also has an obligation under the duty of fair representation
    to notify nonmembers of their Beck rights when they become subject to the clause. See
    
    320 N.L.R.B. 224
    , 231 (1995), enforced sub nom. International Ass’n of Machinists
    & Aerospace Workers v. NLRB, 
    133 F.3d 1012
    (7th Cir. 1998).
    -6-
    We turn then, to the question whether the Board’s approved remedy as a whole
    adequately effectuates the Act, giving the Board’s decision the deference it is
    warranted. See Pace Industries, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    118 F.3d 585
    , 593 (8th Cir. 1997). In
    its supplemental order, the Board evaluated the settlement based on the factors outlined
    in Independent Stave Co., Inc., 
    287 N.L.R.B. 740
    (1987), and elucidated how the
    settlement furthers the Act’s policies, discussing both the new language in the
    collective bargaining agreement and the notice procedures outlined in the settlement.
    See Group Health, Inc., 325 N.L.R.B. No. 49, 
    1998 WL 45147
    , at *1 (Feb. 02, 1998)
    (Board’s order and decision discussing factors and approving third settlement).
    We conclude that, in light of Marquez, the Board’s determination that the
    settlement adequately effectuates the Act’s purposes and policies must be upheld. The
    Board’s order results in a settlement that requires that the offending clause be rewritten,
    that more notice of employee rights under section 8(a)(3) be given, and that Local 12
    cease its attempts to unlawfully coerce employees into joining the union. Local 12 and
    Group Health have agreed to be bound by the settlement. The language of the new
    clause tracks the language of section 8(a)(3) and indicates that employees have options
    other than full membership in the union. Furthermore, and again in light of Marquez,
    we cannot say that the procedures approved by the Board for notifying employees of
    their rights under Beck are a patent attempt to achieve ends other than those envisioned
    by the Act. See Pace 
    Industries, 118 F.3d at 593
    . The new clause and the notice
    methods endeavor to maintain the rights of the workers to refrain from union activities
    as well as to freely join the union.
    We vacate our opinion in Bloom II, affirm the Board’s order, and deny the
    petition for further review.
    -7-
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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