Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge HENDERSON.
KAREN LeCRAFT HENDERSON, Circuit Judge:
Petitioner Comau, Inc. (Comau) seeks review of a decision of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB, Board) affirming the finding of an administrative law judge (ALJ) that Comau committed an unfair labor practice (ULP) in violation of section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act (Act), 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1), (5). See Comau, Inc., 356 NLRB No. 21, 2010 WL 4622509 (Nov. 5, 2010). The Board filed a cross-application for enforcement. For the reasons set forth below, we grant Comau's petition and vacate the Board's finding that Comau committed a ULP by unilaterally changing its employees' healthcare benefits.
Headquartered outside Detroit, Michigan, Comau designs and builds automated assembly lines and specialty tools for the automobile industry.
Between January 2008 and December 2008, Comau and the Union held more than twenty negotiating sessions over a new collective bargaining agreement. Comau General Counsel Edward Plawecki and Director of Labor Relations Fred Begle were Comau's chief negotiators; Peter Reuter was the Union's chief negotiator. Early in the negotiations, Comau stated that it intended to seek economic concessions from the Union and that any new agreement must either be cost-neutral or reduce Comau's costs. In particular, Comau hoped to reduce its healthcare costs
The healthcare issue became a sticking point between Comau and the ASW. In August 2008, the Union offered to insure Union members through a Union sponsored plan (Union Plan).
One of the cost issues of the Union Plan proposal involved who would pay so-called "trailing" or "trailer" costs associated with changing from the Old Plan to the Union Plan. The Old Plan was a self-insured healthcare plan under which Comau paid for each claim as it arose. That is, instead of paying its insurance carrier a fixed monthly premium, it paid the insurance carrier the cost of healthcare services it in fact incurred. Under the Union Plan, Comau would instead make fixed monthly contributions. If Comau transferred Union members to the Union Plan, Comau would continue to pay claims for healthcare services provided to Union members under the Old Plan for approximately three to six months after the transfer due to the lag time between when the claim arose and when the insurance carrier sought payment. Thus, during this period, Comau would continue to pay the monthly per-employee contribution to the Union Plan and pay claims under the Old Plan. The latter payments are the trailing or trailer costs.
After failing to reach an agreement on healthcare benefits and other issues, Comau declared impasse on December 3, 2008, and gave notice that same day to the Union and separately to Union members
On the same day it declared impasse, Comau "notifie[d] the Union that it [was] prepared to continue negotiations in order to agree upon and reach a successor [collective bargaining agreement]." Notice of Imposition of Last Best Offer (Dec. 3, 2008). Comau and the Union resumed negotiations on December 8, 2008. Between December 8 and March 1, 2009, the parties met approximately ten times, generally with subcommittees focused on the healthcare benefits issue. The meetings involved primarily the amount Comau would contribute per employee to the proposed Union Plan. Over the course of these meetings, the parties grew closer on Comau's per-employee contribution and, on February 20, 2009, the Union presented a proposal that matched Comau's proposed contribution amount of $835. The agreement on Comau's per-employee contribution did not resolve all differences between the parties regarding healthcare benefits, however, and the parties remained divided over whether to break down the contribution amount into different categories depending on an employee's family size, how to adjust Comau's contribution amount if healthcare costs increased and the duration of the agreement.
As set forth in Comau's last best offer, the Company Plan went into effect on March 1. Nevertheless, on March 20, the full bargaining committees of both parties met as they had yet to agree on a new collective bargaining agreement. At the meeting, Comau proposed that the Union pay all trailing costs associated with transitioning to the proposed Union Plan. Shortly after Comau made its proposal, the parties adjourned the meeting and held no further negotiating sessions.
Earlier, on March 5, the Union filed its first ULP charge resulting from Comau's unilateral implementation of its last best offer. In a subsequent amendment, the Union amplified its charge,
Letter from Ronald Meisburg, General Counsel, NLRB, to Edward J. Pasternak (Aug. 31, 2009) (General Counsel Letter).
On May 19, 2009, the Union filed the ULP charge against Comau that underlies this case. The second charge originally alleged only that Comau had bargained in bad faith by having proposed on March 20 that the Union pay trailing costs, failed to provide requested financial information and refused the Union's request to continue negotiations. It made no mention of Comau's implementation of the Company Plan. On July 28, 2009, however, the Union amended the second charge to include the allegation that Comau "bargained in bad faith by . . . [u]nilaterally implementing a new health insurance plan about March 1, 2009, in the absence of bona fide bargaining impasse." Amended Charge Against Employer, Case No. 7-CA-52016 (NLRB July 28, 2009). The Regional Director filed a complaint against Comau based on the ASW's second ULP charge, including its allegation regarding the implementation of the Company Plan.
After conducting a hearing, an ALJ concluded that Comau's unilateral implementation of the Company Plan constituted an unfair labor practice in violation of section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the NLRA.
"[Our] review of NLRB decisions is deferential" and we will vacate a Board decision "only if the Board's factual findings are not supported by substantial evidence, or the Board acted arbitrarily or otherwise erred in applying established law to the facts of the case." Pirlott v. NLRB, 522 F.3d 423, 432 (D.C.Cir.2008) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). "The Board cannot `ignore its own relevant precedent but must explain why it is not controlling.'" Manhattan Ctr. Studios, Inc. v. NLRB, 452 F.3d 813, 816 (D.C.Cir.2006) (quoting B B & L, Inc. v. NLRB, 52 F.3d 366, 369 (D.C.Cir.1995)). "Where an agency departs from established precedent without a reasoned explanation, its decision will be vacated as arbitrary and capricious." Pirlott, 522 F.3d at 432 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
The Board concluded that Comau violated section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act by unilaterally implementing the Company Plan on March 1, 2009, at which time Comau and the Union were not at impasse. Section 8(a)(5) of the Act makes it an unfair labor practice for an employer "to refuse to bargain collectively with the representatives of his employees."
If parties reach a bargaining impasse, however, "an employer does not violate the [Act] by making unilateral changes that are reasonably comprehended within his pre-impasse proposals."
The issue here is not whether an impasse existed: the Board does not dispute that an impasse existed on December 22, 2008,
The Company Plan was also unquestionably one of the terms and conditions implemented pursuant to Comau's last best offer. Article 10 of the offer specifically addressed "Hospitalization, Medical, Dental, and Vision Care" and it provided details about the Company Plan such as premium amounts and available coverage for dependents. Imposed Last Best Offer at 21-28. Article 10.09 was entitled "Blue Cross Medical Coverage Plans (Effective March 1, 2009)" and it provided that "[a]ll regular full time ASW employees who have been with [Comau] ninety (90) days or more will be eligible to elect medical coverage under the plans [available pursuant to Company Plan]." Id. at 23-24.
In its notice to ASW members dated December 8, Comau informed them that, while some changes in its last best offer were "effective December 22, 2008," "the effective date of [the] change [to the Company Plan] will be March 1 of 2009." Letter from Management to ASW Employees at 1 (Dec. 8, 2008). Despite the different "effective" dates, Comau was clear that the changes were "being implemented" as part of its last best offer, which, as noted above, expressly provided for implementation on December 22, 2008. Id. The different "effective" dates merely reflected the fact that the mechanics of transferring ASW members from the Old Plan to the Company Plan required extensive preparation. As the ALJ found, between December 2008 and March 1, 2009, Comau was required to take "a number of steps to make it possible to switch the unit employees from [the Old Plan] to the [Company Plan]." See Comau, 356 NLRB No. 21, 4. Despite the required additional steps and the parties' continued negotiations after December 22, Comau was explicit that it was implementing the Company Plan— along with the other terms contained in its last best offer—on December 22. Even Peter Reuter, the Union's chief negotiator, recognized that the required delay in the Company Plan's effective date did not alter the implementation date of the change. At the hearing before the ALJ, he testified that because "the health insurance changes contained in Comau's 12/22/08 implemented offer had an effective date of 3/1/09," Comau and the Union continued bargaining on healthcare changes "between implementation and 3/1/09." Hearing Transcript at 193-94.
Based on these facts, we conclude that the change to the Company Plan was "reasonably comprehended" in Comau's last best offer and that Comau unilaterally implemented the offer—including the change to the Company Plan—on December 22, 2008. See Brooks Bros., 261 NLRB 876, 881-83 (1982) (employer "implement[ed]. . . a program of dental insurance immediately before [a] November 21 [union] election" even though program was not "effective [until] January 1"); cf. NLRB v. Plainville Ready Mix Concrete Co., 44 F.3d 1320, 1333-34 & n. 11 (6th
The Board's contrary conclusion results from its finding that Comau did not "implement" the Company Plan until it "became effective" on March 1, 2009. The Board adopted the ALJ's reasoning, including his "point of no return" phraseology that "[a] change in terms of employment cannot reasonably be viewed as `implemented' for unit employees at a time when that change is not being applied to a single one of those employees and the employer has not passed a `point of no return' committing it to making the change at all." Comau, 356 NLRB No. 21, 10. According to the ALJ, "what [Comau] did in December 2008 regarding healthcare amounted to an announcement of intent to implement the [Company] [P]lan on March 1—not the implementation of such a plan." Id. The Board takes the same position before us. See Respondent's Br. 29. Earlier Board decisions, however, recognize that an employer can implement a change in employment terms and conditions before the change is effective or otherwise "being applied to a single one of [its] employees." See ABC Auto. Prods., Corp., 307 NLRB 248, 249-50 (1992) ("the unilateral change was effectively implemented when it was announced" even though announcement occurred four days before change became effective); Brooks Bros., 261 NLRB at 881-83; cf. Daily News of L.A., 315 NLRB 1236, 1237-38 (1994) ("[W]henever the employer by promises or by a course of conduct has made a particular benefit part of the established wage or compensation system, then he is not at liberty unilaterally to change this benefit either for better or worse during. . . the period of collective bargaining." (emphasis added)).
The ALJ, whose reasoning and supporting authority the Board adopted without amplification, relied on two cases—Bryant & Stratton Business Institute, 327 NLRB 1135 (1999), and PRC Recording Co., 280 NLRB 615 (1986)—to support his "point of no return" theory but neither does so. In PRC Recording Co., the Board found that assuming arguendo an impasse existed, it was "instantaneously broken by the continuation of further bargaining" and therefore did not justify the employer's "initiation" of a change that it kept secret both from the union and from its employees. 280 NLRB at 640 (emphasis added). In Bryant & Stratton, the ALJ concluded that an employer "stat[ing] that it `intends' to implement [a change]" at a future date is different from the employer "say[ing] that the [change] was implemented immediately." 327 NLRB at 1149 (emphasis added). Neither case suggests that
Moreover, the Board's application of the "point of no return" test would lead to an arbitrary outcome at odds with the purpose of the Act. For example, as Comau points out, if an employer implemented a last best offer providing for wage increases at set future intervals, the "point of no return" analysis, carried to its logical conclusion, would suggest that the employer could later rescind the promised wage increases if bargaining resumed in the interim. After all, wage increases due to take place in the future are no more "past the point of no return" than a new health insurance plan set to take effect at some future date.
The ALJ, however, attempted to distinguish the two situations but we find his reasoning wholly unpersuasive. He cited Daily News to support his proposition that "if [an] employer has implemented [a] new wage plan" under which "raises . . . will not be triggered until later dates," "it has passed the point of no return and cannot simply choose to ignore its obligation to provide the raises when the triggering dates arrive." Comau, 356 NLRB No. 21, 10 n. 21 (emphasis added). The ALJ is of course correct that if an employer implements such a plan, it cannot withhold future pay raises. But he assumes the answer to the underlying question at the heart of this case: namely, when does an employer implement a change? If a change is considered implemented only when it becomes effective, then promised wage increases would never be safe from future rescission—a result the ALJ refused to countenance. If, on the other hand, the new wage plan can be considered "implemented" even if specific pay raises "will not be triggered" until some future date, id., then there is no reason for treating the Company Plan at issue in this case any differently. In other words, the ALJ's own reasoning with respect to the wage-plan hypothetical compels the conclusion that Comau's healthcare plan was fully "implemented" on December 22, 2008, notwithstanding the later "triggering date[ ]" for its specific healthcare changes. Id.
For the foregoing reasons, we grant Comau's petition for review and deny the Board's cross-application for enforcement.
So ordered.