Court Opinion

ID: 9465908
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-05 00:59:31.186222+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:39:26.392426
License: Public Domain

GEE, Circuit Judge,
specially concurring:
I concur in most of the majority opinion and in its result.
Unlike the majority, however, I find myself unable to reconcile the quoted language from Formco with the Board’s reasoning and result in this case. It was my belief that in Formco the Board issued a clear warning not to trifle with its processes by misstatements about them in representation election campaigns, a belief reinforced by its language immediately following that quoted in the main opinion:
As we stated in Thiokol Chemical Corporation, supra, a case in which an employer had reprinted an outdated Board document, “A Layman’s Guide to Basic Law Under the National Labor Relations Act” (1962 edition), to misstate the presently existing law as to the rights of economic strikers:
“We think the [dissenter’s] reliance on the Union’s ‘opportunity to correct’ the misrepresentation is misplaced. It is questionable whether any partisan in a campaign can credibly and effectively correct a misstatement, buttressed by official documents, about the legal principles applies by the public agency administering the statute. In any event, we deem it more salutary not to attempt any such evaluation.”
Our concern is with the protection of the integrity of our own processes, lest any voter be left with the impression that this Board is biased in favor of any party in an election. We are unwilling to condone any campaign statement which even implies such bias. Accordingly, Objection 1 is hereby sustained, and we shall set the election aside and direct that a new one be conducted.
Formco, Inc., 96 L.R.R.M. 1393,1394 (1977).
In view of my understanding of Formco, I find the Board’s action in this matter enigmatic. Instead of either acknowledging or overruling Formco, the Board simply ignores it. This it has power to do, however, no matter how confusing such behavior may be. Nor am I able to conclude its order is not supported by substantial evidence. I therefore concur.