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OUTLINE OF JOINT TRAINING SESSION

NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF AGRICULTURE EMPLOYEES BASIC JOINT UNION-MANAGEMENT LABOR RELATIONS TRAINING 2014 NATIONAL CONVENTION April 7, 2014 St. Louis, MO. Trainers: Kim D. Mann, Esquire, General Counsel, NAAE Peter B. Brownell and Joanne Adams, Labor Relations Specialists,

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OUTLINE OF JOINT TRAINING SESSION

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  1. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OFAGRICULTURE EMPLOYEESBASIC JOINT UNION-MANAGEMENTLABOR RELATIONS TRAINING2014 NATIONAL CONVENTIONApril 7, 2014St. Louis, MO Trainers: Kim D. Mann, Esquire, General Counsel, NAAE Peter B. Brownell and Joanne Adams, Labor Relations Specialists, APHIS Labor Relations

  2. OUTLINE OF JOINT TRAINING SESSION Introduction A. Axioms/Addages (KM) I. Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute A. Congressional Findings and Statutory Purpose (KM) B. Employee Rights (KM) -- Conditions of Employment (PB) C. Management Rights (PB) D. Exclusive Representatives’ Rights and Duties (KM) E. Scope of Union Representation (KM) 1. Collective Bargaining (PB) 2. Grievance Representation and Procedures (KM) -- Past Practices (BP) 3. Unfair Labor Practices (JA) 4. Formal Discussion (JA) 5. Investigative (Weingarten) Meeting (KM) 2

  3. II. Collective Bargaining Under The Statute A. Duty to Bargain in Good Faith (KM) B. Subjects of Bargaining (JA) 1. Conditions of Employment 2. Seven/Eight Exceptions 3. I&I Proposals 4. Appropriate Arrangement 5. Ground Rules 6. Post-Negotiations Review C. Failure to Negotiate an Agreement (PB) 1. Negotiability Disputes 2. Impasse 3. Failure/Refusal to Negotiate D. Waiver of Union Negotiating Rights (KM) E. Mid-Term Bargaining (KM) F. Right to Information ( KM) G. Official Time (PB) 3

  4. III. Hypotheticals(KM/ JA) A. GOV Misuse B. Shift Changes C. Short Staffing 3a

  5. TOOLS • 1. Know what tools you have available • human resources • books, Internet, hand-outs • thinking outside book (Cong., customers, media) 2. Know the hierarchy • within NAAE • within Management • use it, ask! • the human tools 4

  6. 3. Know written materials • Yellow Book • the outline, handouts, Broida • formerly the “Red Book,” now the “Green Book” • the law • the statute and regulations (CFRs) • what are these? • FLRA internet site • how to use it (FLRA decisions) 4. Common sense • turn to Union reps first if any doubt 5

  7. ADAGES/AXIOMS • 1. Much of employment relations is common sense • but built upon basic understanding of law 2. You get the labor relations you deserve • if you treat Mgmt. reps with civility, courtesy, Mgmt. likely to reciprocate • my experience: depends upon who is running the show • as Labor Relations Chief • as Labor Relations Specialists assigned to your Region • as Dept. Admin. 6

  8. 3. Perfect is the enemy of the good • if you insist on extracting last ounce out of management, you will lose • if your goal is absolute 100% victory, you will end up frustrated and may achieve nothing 4. Good is enemy of the excellent • but don’t settle for mediocrity, for any “ok” result • if you settle for only what is a mediocre success, you will achieve only mediocrity • if you do not put your best effort into achieving a realistic goal, you will fall short • how do you maximize your effort and your chances? 7

  9. I. STATUTE A. Congressional Findings and Purpose – Unions/negotiations in public interest – participation and protection of rights promotes public interest, Agency mission, dispute settlement 8

  10. B. Employee Rights – whose rights? • every Agency employee except supervisors/ managers – join/not to join – serve as Union rep, collectively bargain • conditions of employment 9

  11. C. Management Rights –exclusive rights • mission, budget, organization, number of employees, internal security, hire, assign, direct, lay off, discipline, assign work, contract out work, determine personnel, fill positions, and emergencies • no right to bargain over substance (“exclusive”) – permissive rights at election of Agency • numbers, types, and grades • technology, methods, and means • E.O. 13522 10

  12. D. Union’s Rights and Duties – exclusive representative – duty of fair representation – represent all employees – exception: conflict of interest – standard = not arbitrary, discriminatory, bad faith 11

  13. E. Scope of Union Representation • – 5 Areas: • negotiations • ULPs • grievances • formal discussions • Weingarten meetings 1. Collective Bargaining • – Definition • meet at reasonable times, bargain in good faith • only with respect to conditions of employment • execute written documents • no obligation to reach agreement – only Union members ratify – Agency-head review 12

  14. 2. Grievances • – Definition: any complaint • by any (b.u.e.) employee or Union concerning employment OR • by any employee, Union, or Agency concerning (i) effect, interpretation, breach of contract OR (ii) violation/misrepresentation of law or regulation relating to employment conditions 13

  15. – Represents entire b.u.e. • – Grievance Procedures: • collective bargaining agreement (Article 16) • time frames critical • start at first-line supervisor level informally • move next to Labor Relations Specialist in Regional Office if dissatisfied as Step 1 • if Dep. Administrator’s Step 3 decision does not resolve, Union may invoke arbitration 14

  16. – Right to Information: • submit written § 7114(b)(4) request • e.g. data, documents, reports, memos, letters, email • regular course of business • reasonably necessary • only union has this right • tolls grievance-filling deadline and allows amending filed grievance 15

  17. – Practical Applications • resolve workplace disputes about Contract matters, or specific law, rule, or regulation violation • ensure uniform treatment of b.u.e.s • protect Contract rights of Union and b.u.e.s • establish precedent • maintain workplace peace 16

  18. – Practical Applications (cont.) • also resolve disputes about “past practices” • rises to level of contract (i.e., enforceable) • must be open, continuous, unchallenged, affect conditions of employment • change in “past practice” requires notice to Union & negotiation • unless practice is contrary to laws 17

  19. Past Practice Exercises Are any of the following past practices? • As the result of contamination in its regular water supply, the Employer provided bottled water to b.u.e.s for 16 months before it discontinued supplying water ___ Past Practice ___ No Past Practice • The Agency has hours of duty between 7:00 AM and 6:00 PM. Some employees have been allowed to start work as early as 6:00 AM ___ Past Practice ___ No Past Practice 18

  20. Past Practice Exercises (cont.) • The U.S. Naval Academy unilaterally terminated a long standing (years old) practice of allowing Academy employees to use its boats for recreational purposes ___ Past Practice ___ No Past Practice • The Employer’s Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) determinations were found to be inaccurate and as a result it had been paying more premium pay than it should for the past 5 years ___ Past Practice ___ No Past Practice 19

  21. Past Practice Exercises (cont.) • An employee has openly used her GOV for the past three months to run to the bank to deposit her monthly pay checks. Another employee in her Port has done the same thing ___ Past Practice ___ No Past Practice 20

  22. – Exclusions from Grievance Procedures: • prohibited political activities violation • insurance • national security • position classification not resulting in pay/grade reduction • testing and certification results • termination of benefits (in certain circumstances) • non-selection (for promotions, voluntary transfers) except for procedural irregularities • termination of probationaries, unless permitted by law • performance or other discretionary award 21

  23. – Exclusions from Grievance Procedures when Employee selects Statutory Appeals procedure: • RIFs (to MSPB) • EEO complaints (to EEOC or court) • prohibited personnel practices (to MSPB) • adverse actions (to MSPB) – Option to grieve or use statutory appeals procedures • choose one or the other, but not both 22

  24. 3. ULPs • – 8 Agency actions constitute ULPs • interfere with employee rights under Statute • encourage/discourage Union membership • retaliate against b.u.e. • refuse to negotiate in good faith • fail/refuse to cooperate in impasse • enforce any Agency or Dept. rule or regulation in conflict with union contract (if contract provision existed before rule/regulation) • otherwise fail/refuse to comply with statute 23

  25. – 8 Union actions constitute ULPs • mirrors the 8 Agency actions • discriminate against b.u.e. based on Union membership • call/participate in strike, work stoppage, slow down, or picketing (non-info) • deny membership to eligible b.u.e. 24

  26. – Not challengeable as ULP: • action challengeable under statutory procedure (EEO, MSPB, RIFs) – If challengeable as both ULP and grievance, must elect • one or the other, but not both 25

  27. – ULP Procedures • file charges within 6 months • use FLRA form • provide complete description/ documentation at time of filing 26

  28. – FLRA will investigate, has discretion to file complaint • if FLRA does not file, will notify and giveoption to withdraw • if not withdrawn, will provide writtenstatement with reasons • may appeal refusal to file to FLRA GeneralCounsel in DC • if complaint issues against Agency, FLRAG.C. represents Union • Statute spells out remedies, appeal available to FLRA 27

  29. 4. Formal Discussion • – Elements are (i) discussion, (ii) formal, (iii) between Agency rep. and b.u.e. (iv) concerning grievance, general personnel policy or practices, or general employment conditions • – Union entitled to notice/opportunity to attend • – When is meeting “formal”? • depends upon totality of all circumstances 28

  30. 4. Formal Discussion (cont.) • relevant factors are (i) status of person who held discussions, (ii) whether other mgmt. reps attended, (iii) site of discussions, (iv) how meeting was called (spontaneous, unplanned?), (v) how long discussion lasted, (vi) whether formal agenda was prepared and minutes kept, and (vii) manner in which discussions were conducted • among others (such as, was attendance voluntary?) • NAAE rep’s role • attend, participate, speak, comment, not disrupt • state union’s position 29

  31. 5. Weingarten Meeting • – elements are (i) Agency rep (ii) examination of b.u.e. (iii) if b.u.e. reasonably believes discipline may result and (iv) requests Union rep • – no notice to Union required • – grant of immunity • dispels fear of discipline • compels employee to answer – NAAE rep’s role • participate • establish basis for investigation/interview • coach and advise • take minutes • do not let b.u.e. sign statement on spot 30

  32. Formal/Weingarten Meeting Exercise Which of the following are formal or Weingarten meetings and why? • Employer called a meeting to discuss work assignments and progress in meeting due dates. At the meeting, a b.u.e., the local union president, raises questions about access to the Internet to facilitate doing assigned tasks • Employer called a meeting to solicit volunteers for overtime work and to explain both the need for the overtime as well as the procedures to be used in assigning overtime if insufficient volunteers come forward 31

  33. Formal/Weingarten Meeting Exercise (cont.) A supervisor calls a meeting with an employee to discuss the employee’s performance on some recent projects A representative of the Inspector General meets with a b.u.e. to find out what the employee knows about computer thefts at the work site A group of b.u.e.s requests a meeting with a supervisor to discuss office coverage during the holiday season 32

  34. II. COLLECTIVE BARGAINING • A. Duty to Bargain in Good Faith • sincere effort to reach agreement • negotiators authorized to negotiate, commit agency • meet at reasonable times as necessary • provide reasonably necessary information (Agency) • sign agreed provisions, implement • no obligation to agree 33

  35. B. Subjects of Bargaining • 1. Conditions of Employment • personnel policies, practices, matters affecting working conditions 2. Seven exceptions (excluded categories) • political activity • position classification • covered by federal statute • in conflict with federal law or government-wide rule/reg. • in conflict with Agency- (or Dept.) wide rule/reg. for which “compelling need” exists • exclusive Management right • permissive Management right, Agency elects not to negotiate 34

  36. 3. I&I Proposals (exception to exceptions) • Agency must negotiate I&I even when substance is non-negotiable • exceptions • de minimis impact • Union waives bargaining right 4. Appropriate Arrangement (exception to exception) • must negotiate substance • Union proposal must be tailored to accommodate adversely affected b.u.e.s 35

  37. 5. Ground Rules • negotiating procedures to govern collective bargaining • already fully negotiated, but some room left … 6. Post-Negotiations Review • local agreements reviewed for consistency with National Agreement • National and local agreements must go throughagency-head review • Agency has 30 days to approve/disapprove • must renegotiate provisions found inconsistent or contrary to law 36

  38. C. Failure to Negotiate Agreement • 1. Negotiability Disputes • Management declares Union proposal non-negotiable because proposal conflicts with law • negotiability appeal procedures • Union submits written request to Agency for written declaration • Union files negotiability petition with FLRA (15 days) • FLRA decision binding 37

  39. 2. Impasse • failure to reach agreement after good-faith bargaining • invoke FMCS mediation • request FSIP resolution 3. Agency (or Union) failure/refusal to negotiate • file ULP or grievance 38

  40. D. Waiver of Union Negotiating rights • 1. spelled out in Contract • 2. failure of timely response/proposals • 3. “covered by” doctrine • E. Mid-term Bargaining • Agency and Union have right • unless “covered by” Contract • Agency too? 39

  41. F. Right to Information • 1. Only Union may request • 2. Maintained in regular course of business • 3. Reasonably available • 4. Reasonably necessary for full/proper discussion, understanding, and negotiation • provide particularized-need statement 5. Exception for information constituting guidance, advice, training for Management related to collective bargaining 40

  42. G. Official Time • for negotiating collective bargaining, including impasse proceedings • employee in official duty status • not for internal Union business • now “covered by” Art. 11, in Green Book 41

  43. III. HYPOTHETICALS Hypothetical (sort of) A. I. Facts • PPQ employees able to send children to Antilles Consolidated School System (“Antilles”) • since 1978 • free • run, operated by DOD • DOD policy: Antilles “available to families of non-military government personnel who are on a rotation to PR” 42

  44. In 1985, PPQ adopts formal policy: all vacancies in PR will be filled as “rotational assignments” upon request of employee • PPQ children stay enrolled in Antilles • In 2005, PPQ changes policy: terminates all rotational assignments in PR, effective immediately • no notice to Union • 6 employees of PPQ lose entitlement to enroll children in Antilles, must withdraw 43

  45. II. Options • grievance • ULP • request to bargain • two (or more) of the above 44

  46. III. Grievance • terminated practice (rotational assignments) without notice to Union • does it violate CBA? • is it a condition of employment (§ 7103(a)(14))? • does terminating practice involve Management’s right to assign work (§ 7106(a)(2)(B))? • if so, is it still negotiable? • I&I? • as to substance (appropriate arrangement)? 45

  47. III. Grievance (cont.) • Requested remedies: • status quo ante • give notice, bargain • Agency defenses: • non-negotiable (does not affect condition of employment; interferes with Management’s right) • had no choice (there were no rotations, pressure from DOD and school) 46

  48. IV. ULP • failure to give Union notice and opportunity to bargain • what statutory right does it violate? • does Management’s claim, that Agency has no obligation to negotiate when it exercises its right to assign work, defeat ULP? • what remedy is likely? 47

  49. V. Bargaining • when should Union request to bargain? • when should it submit proposals? • what are Union’s best proposals? • as to I&I? • as to substance? • let children go to school, keep rotational assignment designation 48

  50. VI. FLRA Decision (on grievance appeal) • Agency must bargain I&I (§ 7106(b)(2)) and substance if appropriate arrangement (§ 7106(b)(3)), even when Agency change is a Management right. • Agency must bargain over Agency decision effecting employee’s conditions of employment, • as long as change is more than de minimis • look to reasonably foreseeable effect on b.u.e. conditions of employment 49

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