[ v05 p565 ]
05:0565(72)CA
The decision of the Authority follows:
5 FLRA No. 72 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS Respondent and PROFESSIONAL AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS ORGANIZATION Charging Party Case No. 6-CA-378 DECISION AND ORDER THE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE ISSUED HIS DECISION AND ORDER IN THE ABOVE-ENTITLED PROCEEDING CONCLUDING THAT THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE COMPLAINT, RELATING TO THE RESPONDENT'S ALLEGED VIOLATION OF SECTION 7116(A)(1) AND (5) OF THE STATUTE, BE DISMISSED IN ITS ENTIRETY. THEREAFTER, THE GENERAL COUNSEL FILED EXCEPTIONS WITH RESPECT TO THE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE'S DECISION AND ORDER. PURSUANT TO SECTION 2423.29 OF THE AUTHORITY'S RULES AND REGULATIONS (5 CFR 2423.29) AND SECTION 7118 OF THE FEDERAL SERVICE LABOR-MANAGEMENT RELATIONS STATUTE (5 U.S.C. 7101-7135), THE AUTHORITY HAS REVIEWED THE RULINGS OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE MADE AT THE HEARING AND FINDS THAT NO PREJUDICIAL ERROR WAS COMMITTED. THE RULINGS ARE HEREBY AFFIRMED. UPON CONSIDERATION OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE'S DECISION AND ORDER, AND THE ENTIRE RECORD IN THE CASE, INCLUDING THE GENERAL COUNSEL'S EXCEPTIONS, THE AUTHORITY HEREBY ADOPTS THE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE'S FINDINGS, CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS. /1/ ORDER IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT THE COMPLAINT IN CASE NO. 6-CA-378 BE, AND IT HEREBY IS, DISMISSED. ISSUED, WASHINGTON, D.C., APRIL 30, 1981 RONALD W. HAUGHTON, CHAIRMAN HENRY B. FRAZIER III, MEMBER LEON B. APPLEWHAITE, MEMBER FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY -------------------- ALJ$ DECISION FOLLOWS -------------------- JAMES W. DEMIK, ESQUIRE FOR THE GENERAL COUNSEL ROY G. VICK, ESQUIRE FOR THE RESPONDENT BEFORE: WILLIAM B. DEVANEY ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE DECISION AND ORDER STATEMENT OF THE CASE THIS IS A PROCEEDING UNDER THE FEDERAL SERVICE LABOR-MANAGEMENT RELATIONS STATUTE, CHAPTER 71 OF TITLE 5 OF THE U.S. CODE, 5 U.S.C. 7101, ET SEQ /2/ , AND THE FINAL RULES AND REGULATIONS ISSUED THEREUNDER, 5 C.F.R. CHAPTER XIV, FED. REG., VOL. 45, NO. 12, JANUARY 17, 1980. THE ISSUE IN THIS CASE IS WHETHER RESPONDENT VIOLATED SEC. 16(A)(5) AND, DERIVATIVELY OF 16(A)(1), BY UNILATERALLY ALTERING AN AGREED UPON "WATCH" SCHEDULE WITHOUT NOTICE TO THE UNION AND WITHOUT BARGAINING. A CHARGE WAS FILED ON DECEMBER 28, 1979; THE COMPLAINT AND NOTICE OF HEARING ISSUED ON FEBRUARY 29, 1980; AND PURSUANT THERETO A HEARING WAS DULY HELD BEFORE THE UNDERSIGNED ON MAY 13, 1980, IN BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS. ALL PARTIES WERE REPRESENTED BY COUNSEL, WERE AFFORDED FULL OPPORTUNITY TO BE HEARD, TO EXAMINE AND CROSS-EXAMINE WITNESSES, AND TO INTRODUCE EVIDENCE BEARING ON THE ISSUE INVOLVED. AT THE CLOSE OF THE HEARING, JUNE 13, 1980, WAS FIXED AS THE DATE FOR MAILING POST-HEARING BRIEFS AND EACH PARTY TIMELY MAILED A BRIEF, RECEIVED ON OR BEFORE JUNE 19, 1980, WHICH HAVE BEEN CAREFULLY CONSIDERED. UPON THE BASIS OF THE ENTIRE RECORD, INCLUDING MY OBSERVATION OF THE WITNESSES AND THEIR DEMEANOR, I MAKE THE FOLLOWING FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS: FINDINGS 1. THE WATCH SCHEDULES IN QUESTION ARE G.C. EXHIBIT 4 (A-1 COVERS PAYROLL PERIODS 22 AND 23, 1979 (ROUGHLY OCTOBER); A COVERS PAYROLL PERIODS 24 AND 25, 1979 (ROUGHLY NOVEMBER); B COVERS PAYROLL PERIODS 26, 1979 AND 1, 1980 (ROUGHLY DECEMBER); AND C COVERS PAYROLL PERIODS 2 AND 3, 1980 (ROUGHLY JANUARY, 1980)). 2. G.C. EXHIBIT 5 IS NOT AN INDEPENDENT EXHIBIT BUT, RATHER, EXCERPTS CERTAIN MATERIAL FROM GENERAL COUNSEL EXHIBIT 4 AND IN PARTICULAR G.C. EXHS. 4-A, 4-B AND 4-C. BECAUSE THERE ARE ERRORS IN DESIGNATION, ALL REFERENCES HEREIN WILL BE TO THE ORIGINAL WATCH SCHEDULES, G.C. EXH. 4 (A-1 (OCTOBER, 1979); A (NOVEMBER, 1979); B (DECEMBER, 1979) AND C (JANUARY, 1980). 3. IN SEPTEMBER, 1979, MR. LACHANCE, THEN PRESIDENT AND REPRESENTATIVE OF PATCO, AND MS. PRICE, BARGAINING UNIT MEMBER, MET, AT THEIR REQUEST, WITH MR. ANDERSON, FACILITY CHIEF, FOR THE PURPOSE OF PUTTING TRAINEES ON THE SCHEDULE WITH THEIR OJT (ON THE JOB TRAINING) INSTRUCTORS AND TO COVER WEAK SPOTS IN THE SCHEDULE. 4. THERE IS NO DISPUTE THAT: 1) MR. ANDERSON READILY AGREED TO PUT TRAINEES ON THE SCHEDULE WITH THEIR OJT INSTRUCTORS AND THAT THIS WAS DONE; AND B) THE PARTIES DISCUSSED A PROPOSED WATCH SCHEDULE "LINE BY LINE" AND THAT THE OCTOBER SCHEDULE (G.C. EXH 4 A-1) WAS THE PRODUCT OF THEIR DISCUSSION. THERE IS NO DISAGREEMENT THAT THE WATCH SCHEDULE FOR NOVEMBER (G.C. EXH 4-A) WAS, AS MATERIAL, THE SAME AS THE WATCH SCHEDULE FOR OCTOBER EXCEPT, OF COURSE, FOR ROTATION OF CONTROLLERS WHICH IS NOT IN ISSUE. 5. SINCE AUGUST, 1977, THE BROWNSVILLE TOWER HAS BEEN OPERATED 16 HOURS PER DAY (7:00 A.M. TO 11:00 P.M.), SEVEN DAYS PER WEEK. THE NUMBERS ON THE WATCH SCHEDULES ARE STARTING TIMES, NOT HOURS WORKED, E.G. "15" MEANS 1500, OR 3:00 P.M.; 8 MEANS 0800, OR 8:00 A.M., ETC. THE PARTIES AGREED THAT SEVEN LINES, OR POSITIONS, WERE REQUIRED FOR ADEQUATE COVERAGE. EACH LINE, OR POSITION, CONSTITUTED THE WORK SCHEDULE FOR A CONTROLLER, WITH STARTING TIMES DAILY AND SCHEDULED DAYS OFF. EACH WATCH SCHEDULE COVERED TWO PAYROLL PERIODS, ROUGHLY A MONTH; AND EACH CONTROLLER ROTATED FROM THE BOTTOM LINE, OR POSITION, UPWARD, WITH LINE ONE GOING TO THE BOTTOM. WITH THE LOSS OF JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS, PRIOR TO SEPTEMBER, 1979, RESPONDENT HAD ONLY FIVE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS FOR SEVEN LINES, OR POSITIONS, AND HAD SCHEDULED TWO DEVELOPMENTAL TRAINEES, I.E., CONTROLLERS FULLY QUALIFIED IN SOME BUT NOT ALL CONTROL POSITIONS, TO LINES OR POSITIONS. AS NOTED, PATCO OBJECTED TO THIS PROCEDURE AND AT THE SEPTEMBER, 1979, MEETING RESPONDENT AGREED TO PUT TRAINEES ON THE SCHEDULE WITH THEIR OJT INSTRUCTORS. DEVELOPMENTAL TRAINEES WERE PLACED ON THE SAME LINE OR POSITION, AS THEIR OJT INSTRUCTOR, ARE NOT FURTHER CONSIDERED HEREIN. 6. MR. LACHANCE TESTIFIED THAT "WE WORKED OUT THE SCHEDULE (G.C. EXH. 4 A-1) LINE BY LINE . . . THE FIRST LINE . . . WITH DAYS OFF BEING SUNDAY AND MONDAY" (TR. 91); " . . . THE SECOND LINE . . . WITH DAYS OFF BEING MONDAY AND TUESDAY (TR. 91); " . . . LINE 3 . . . WITH DAYS OFF BEING TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY" (TR. 91); "WE AGREED THAT LINE 4 WAS BLANK" (TR. 92); "LINE 5 . . . WITH DAYS OFF BEING THURSDAY AND FRIDAY" (TR. 92); "AND LINE 7 WAS HELD BY MR. ANDERSON BUT IT MORE OR LESS WAS FILLED IN AT HIS DISCRETION TO FILL IN THE HOLES IN THE SCHEDULE. THE HOLES BEING THE WEAK SPOTS IN THE SCHEDULE." (TR. 92). MR. LACHANCE FURTHER TESTIFIED THAT "ABSENCES . . . COULD BE FILLED AS PER THE CONTRACT, 21 DAYS IN ADVANCE. ON A RANDOM AND INFREQUENT BASIS FOR A SPECIFIC PURPOSE AND HAD TO BE BOXED WITH SQUARE BOXES." (TR. 92). 7. MS. PRICE TESTIFIED, IN PART, AS FOLLOWS: "A. WE DISCUSSED THE PROPOSED WATCH SCHEDULE LINE BY LINE, YES. "Q. OKAY. HOW MANY LINES DID YOU PROVIDE FOR? "A. WE NEED SEVEN LINES. "Q. OKAY. "A. TO PROVIDE COVERAGE. AND THERE'S SEVEN LINES AND WE SENT THROUGH IT LINE BY LINE, EACH LINE WITH ITS OWN CHARACTERISTICS. "Q. DID YOU HAVE SEVEN QUALIFIED EMPLOYEES TO PUT ON THE LINES? "A. WE DIDN'T. "Q. YOU'RE SAYING, THEN, THAT FOR THE DURATION OF THIS DISCUSSION THAT IT RESULTED IN A SEVEN-LINE SCHEDULE. IS THAT CORRECT? "A. WE NEEDED A SEVEN-LINE SCHEDULE TO PROVIDE COVERAGE. "Q. OKAY. WHAT HAPPENS IF YOU HAVE ONLY FIVE PEOPLE QUALIFIED TO MAN THOSE PARTICULAR POSITIONS WITHIN THE TOWER? "A. ADJUSTMENTS HAVE TO BE MADE. "Q. OKAY. WHAT WERE THE PROVISIONS MADE FOR THE ADJUSTMENT OF COVERAGE ON THAT? "A. INSTEAD OF EVERYONE WORKING THE SAME SCHEDULE, IN OTHER WORDS, EVERYONE HAVING THE SAME SHIFT AND CONTINUING EVEN ROTATION, DIFFERENT SHIFTS WERE AGREED ON FOR EACH LINE AND A SPECIFIC DAY OF THE WEEK. EVEN ROTATION UPWARDS. (TR. 109-110) "A. . . . LINE 4 IS LEFT BLANK. WE SKIPPED LINE 4 CONSISTENTLY. "Q. SO YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT SIX LINE SCHEDULES WITH ONE OF THE INTERMEDIATE LINES LEFT BLANK? "A. NO, IT WAS STILL A SEVEN LINE SCHEDULE." (TR. 111). * * * * JUDGE DEVANEY: IF I CAN COUNT RIGHT THAT COMES OUT TO BE SIX RATHER THAN SEVEN. THE WITNESS: BUT IT . . . THE WAY I SEE IT IS THAT SIX OUT OF THE SEVEN LINES ARE FILLED. JUDGE DEVANEY: PARDON? THE WITNESS: THE SEVENTH LINE IS BLANK. JUDGE DEVANEY: THAT'S RIGHT. THE WITNESS: AND THE PEOPLE AROUND THAT HAVE TO PICK UP THE SLACK IN THAT LINE. THAT'S WHERE THE ADJUSTMENT COMES IN." (TR. 113) 8. MR. ANDERSON TESTIFIED, IN PART, AS FOLLOWS: "THE WITNESS: WE AGREED, I AGREED WITH THEIR PRESENTATION AS TO THE FIVE-LINE COVERAGE AND THE DEVELOPMENTALS AND WE AGREED THAT THE BASIC WATCH SCHEDULE HOURS WOULD BE 15 (3:00 P.M.) 8:00 AND 7:00 AND THAT WE WOULD KEEP AS CLOSE TO A 15, 15, 8:00, 7:00, 7:00 LINE AS STAFFING WOULD PERMIT, AND THAT THE FIVE LINES, THE FIVE LINES THAT HAVE NAMES ON THEM, WOULD BE USED TO THE SEVEN-LINE SCHEDULE TO GIVE US THE BEST COVERAGE . . . " (TR. 130). " . . . A FULL SCHEDULE TO GIVE ADEQUATE COVERAGE THROUGHOUT FOR TWO SHIFTS PER DAY WOULD GIVE US A SEVEN-LINE SCHEDULE. (TR. 130-131) "THE WITNESS: WITH THE PROPOSAL OF PUTTING THE DEVELOPMENTALS BACK ON THE SCHEDULE FROM THE PREVIOUS SCHEDULE WHERE WE HAD HAD TWO OF THE DEVELOPMENTALS ASSIGNED TO A LINE AND HAD A FULL SEVEN LINE SCHEDULE . . . "JUDGE DEVANEY: ALL RIGHT. "NOW, ON THE ASSUMPTION THAT YOU ENDED UP WITH SIX POSITIONS INCLUDING YOURSELF. "THE WITNESS: RIGHT. "JUDGE DEVANEY: THE SIX POSITIONS ON THE SCHEDULE FOR OCTOBER AND NOVEMBER AND FOR NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER, HOW DID YOU COVER THE SEVENTH DAY, THE SEVENTH POSITION, IN OTHER WORDS? "THE WITNESS: THE SEVENTH DAY WOULD BE BY ADJUSTING THE PATTERN FOR A WEEK OR FIVE DAYS OF COVERAGE WHICH 15, 15, 8:00, 7:00 AND 7:00 WAS THE DESIRABLE WEEKLY COVERAGE FOR A FIVE-DAY SHIFT. "BUT TO COVER ADEQUATELY FOR STAFFING THEN SOME ADJUSTMENTS WOULD HAVE TO BE MADE.: (TR. 131-132). * * * * "Q. NOW, NUMBER 3 HE'S (SUPERVISOR HATCHETT) NOT IN THE SLOT-- IN C HE'S NOT IN SLOT NUMBER 4 AT THAT TIME. "A. HE'S NOT ON NUMBER 4. HE'S MOVED UP TO SLOT NUMBER 3. AND THE LINE CHANGES. "AGAIN, I REFER BACK TO MY UNDERSTANDING OF THE CONSULTATION ON THE SEPTEMBER DATE THAT THERE WOULD BE A REQUIREMENT, AT THAT TIME THERE WOULD BE A REQUIREMENT FOR A LINE CHANGE TO PROVIDE THE MOST COVERAGE. (TR. 150) * * * * "A. THE ROTATION ON THE SCHEDULE CHANGES. WITH HIM (HATCHETT) BEING ON LINE 3 WOULD HAVE NO EFFECT. THEY MERELY ADVANCED UPWARD ONE LINE AS THEIR CURRENT SCHEDULE CALLS FOR. "IN OTHER WORDS, EACH INDIVIDUAL MOVES UP IN THE ROTATION ON THE SCHEDULE. "SO THERE WAS NO ONE THAT WAS CHANGED IN HIS ROTATION FROM THE EFFORT MOVEMENT ON ONE SCHEDULE TO THE NEXT." (TR. 152-153). 9. ARTICLE 33 OF THE PARTIES' AGREEMENT (G.C. EXH. 2, P. 58) PROVIDES, IN PART, AS FOLLOWS: "SECTION 1. . . . ASSIGNMENTS OF INDIVIDUAL EMPLOYEES TO INDIVIDUAL EMPLOYEES TO THE WATCH SCHEDULE ARE NOT CONSIDERED AS CHANGES IN THE BASIC WATCH SCHEDULE. THE BASIC WATCH SCHEDULE WILL NOT BE CHANGED WITHOUT PRIOR CONSULTATION WITH THE UNION . . . " "SECTION 2. ASSIGNMENTS TO THE WATCH SCHEDULE SHALL BE POSTED AT LEAST 21 DAYS IN ADVANCE . . . ." 10. EACH WATCH SCHEDULE (G.C. EXHS. 4 A, 4 B AND 4 C) WAS, AS A MATTER OF COURTESY, DELIVERED BY MR. ANDERSON TO THE PATCO REPRESENTATIVE TO LOOK OVER BEFORE IT WAS POSTED, NOT LESS THAN 21 DAYS IN ADVANCE AS REQUIRED BY ART. 33, SEC. 2; MR. ANDERSON TESTIFIED THAT MR. MCGILLICUDDY, WHO HAD BEEN THE ALTERNATE TO MR. LACHANCE AND WHO SUCCEEDED MR. LACHANCE AS REPRESENTATIVE FOR LOCAL 459 ON OCTOBER 24, 1979 (RES. EXHS. 1 AND 2), WHEN SHOWN G.C. EXH. 4 B, COMMENTED, "THERE'S NOTHING WRONG WITH THIS SCHEDULE, I'VE GOT SATURDAY AND SUNDAY OFF . . . I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR TWO YEARS FOR SATURDAY AND SUNDAY OFF SO I CAN GO PARACHUTING WITH MY BUDDIES" (TR. 142). MR. LACHANCE TESTIFIED THAT HE WAS PRESENT WHEN G.C. EXH. 4 C WAS PUT ON THE CONSOLE BETWEEN MR. MCGILLICUDDY AND MS. PRICE; THAT HE LOOKED AT IT AND NOTICED THAT IT WAS DIFFERENT FROM THE PREVIOUS SCHEDULE BUT MADE NO COMMENT TO MR. ANDERSON. MR. MCGILLICUDDY TESTIFIED THAT HE HAD AN OPPORTUNITY TO LOOK AT G.C. EXH 4 B AND 4 C BEFORE THEY WERE POSTED AND AS TO G.C. EXH. 4 B TOLD MR. ANDERSON THAT HE WOULD NEED TIME TO STUDY IT. 11. CONSULTATIONS, ONE ABOUT MARCH, 1980, AND ANOTHER ABOUT THE FIRST OF MAY, 1980, RESULTED IN "COMPLETELY DIFFERENT" WATCH SCHEDULES (TR. 162-163). CONCLUSIONS THERE IS NO DISPUTE THAT PATCO REPRESENTATIVES, LACHANCE AND PRICE, MET WITH RESPONDENT'S FACILITY CHIEF, MR. ANDERSON, IN SEPTEMBER, 1979, AT PATCO'S REQUEST, TO DISCUSS THE SCHEDULING OF DEVELOPMENTAL TRAINEES; THAT RESPONDENT AGREED TO PATCO'S DEMAND THAT TRAINEES BE PUT ON THE SCHEDULE WITH THEIR OJT INSTRUCTORS; AND THAT A WATCH SCHEDULE WAS AGREED TO FOR OCTOBER, 1979 (G.C. EXH. 4 A-1). THERE IS ALSO NO DISPUTE THAT THE PARTIES AGREED FURTHER ON FUTURE SCHEDULING; HOWEVER, THERE IS A DISPUTE AS TO PRECISELY WHAT WAS AGREED TO AS TO FUTURE SCHEDULING. THE OVERWHELMING WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE AND TESTIMONY SHOWS THAT IN SEPTEMBER, 1979, THE PARTIES AGREED: A) THAT THERE SHOULD BE A SEVEN LINE, OR POSITION, SCHEDULE; B) THAT 15 (1500 OR 3 P.M.), 8 (0800 OR 8:00 A.M.) AND 7 (0700 OR 7:00 A.M.) WOULD BE THE STARTING TIMES FOR EACH SHIFT; AND C) THAT, WITH AVAILABLE STAFFING, THEY WOULD KEEP AS CLOSE TO 15 - 15 - 8 - 7 - 7 AS POSSIBLE. FROM THE RECORD, DESPITE THE AMBIGUITY OF MESSRS. ANDERSON AND LACHANCE AND MS. PRICE IN DESCRIBING IN FULL THE SEVEN LINES, OR POSITIONS, IT IS CLEAR THAT THE SEVEN LINES, OR POSITIONS, PROVIDED FOR SCHEDULED DAYS OFF AS FOLLOWS: LINE (POSITION) 1 SUN-MON LINE (POSITION) 2 MON-TUE LINE (POSITION) 3 TUE-WED LINE (POSITION) 4 WED-THUR LINE (POSITION) 5 THUR-FRI LINE (POSITION) 6 FRI-SAT LINE (POSITION) 7 SAT-SUN THERE HAD BEEN SEVEN LINES, OR POSITIONS, PRIOR TO THE SEPTEMBER MEETING FILLED BY THE FIVE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS AND TWO TRAINEES. WITH THE AGREEMENT THAT TRAINEES BE PUT ON THE SCHEDULE WITH THEIR OJT INSTRUCTORS, THERE WERE ONLY FIVE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS AVAILABLE TO FILL THE SEVEN LINES, OR POSITIONS. ON THE OCTOBER SCHEDULE (G.C. EXH. 4 A-1), THE FIVE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS WERE ASSIGNED TO LINES, OR POSITIONS, 1, 2, 3, 5 AND 6; MR. ANDERSON FILLED LINE, OR POSITION 7; AND LINE, OR POSITION, 4 WAS BLANK. ON THE NOVEMBER SCHEDULE (G.C. EXH. 4 A) THE FIVE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS WERE AGAIN ASSIGNED TO LINES 1, 2, 3, 5 AND 6; MR. HATCHETT (A SUPERVISOR) TO LINE 7; LINE 4 WAS, AGAIN BLANK; BUT THE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS HAD ROTATED (E.G., ROSE HAD ROTATED FROM LINE 1 TO LINE 6, MCGILLICUDDY FROM LINE 2 TO LINE 1; LACHANCE FROM LINE 5 TO LINE 3; CLARK FROM LINE 6 TO LINE 5; AND ROSE FROM LINE 1 TO LINE 6). ON THE DECEMBER SCHEDULE (G.C. EXH 4 B) THE FIVE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS WERE ASSIGNED TO LINES 1, 2, 3, 5, AND 7; LINE 6 WAS BLANK; HATCHETT WAS ASSIGNED TO LINE 4; AND THE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS AGAIN ROTATED (E.G. PRICE HAD ROTATED FROM LINE 2 TO LINE 1; LACHANCE FROM LINE 3 TO LINE 2; CLARK FROM LINE 5 TO LINE 3; ROSE FROM LINE 6 TO LINE 5; AND MCGILLICUDDY FROM LINE 1 TO LINE 7). ON JANUARY SCHEDULE (G.C. EXH. 4 C) THE FIVE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS WERE ASSIGNED TO LINES 1, 2, 4, 6 AND 7; LINE 5 WAS BLANK; HATCHETT WAS ASSIGNED TO LINE 3; AND THE JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS AGAIN ROTATED (E.G. LACHANCE FROM LINE 2 TO LINE 1; CLARK FROM LINE 3 TO LINE 2; ROSE FROM LINE 5 TO LINE 4; MCGILLICUDDY FROM LINE 7 TO LINE 6; AND PRICE FROM LINE 1 TO LINE 7). FROM THE FOREGOING IT IS OBVIOUS THAT RESPONDENT ADHERED STRICTLY TO THE SCHEDULED DAYS OFF FOR EACH LINE, OR POSITION, AND FOLLOWED THE ESTABLISHED, AND CONCEDED, SYSTEM OF ROTATION, WITH RECOGNITION, AS THE PARTIES AGREED AT THE SEPTEMBER CONSULTATION, THAT ONE LINE, OR POSITION, WOULD BE BLANK ON EACH SCHEDULE. THERE IS NO DISPUTE WHATEVER THAT A SUPERVISOR, MR. ANDERSON OR MR. HATCHETT, WOULD BE ASSIGNED TO ONE LINE, OR POSITION. MS. PRICE'S ADAMANT INSISTENT THAT THEY NEEDED, AND PROVIDED FOR, SEVEN LINES, OR POSITIONS, AND HER TESTIMONY THAT, "INSTEAD OF EVERYONE WORKING THE SAME SCHEDULE, IN OTHER WORDS EVERYONE HAVING THE SAME SHIFT AND CONTINUING EVEN ROTATION DIFFERENT SHIFTS WERE AGREED ON FOR EACH LINE AND A SPECIFIC DAY OF THE WEEK. EVEN ROTATION UPWARDS." (TR. 110) SHOWS THAT RESPONDENT'S WATCH SCHEDULES FOR DECEMBER AND JANUARY (G.C. EXH. 4 B AND 4 C) WERE FULLY CONSISTENT WITH THE UNDERSTANDING AGREED TO BY THE PARTIES IN THEIR SEPTEMBER CONSULTATION. NOT ONLY DOES THE PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE SHOW THAT RESPONDENT ADHERED TO THE UNDERSTANDING ARRIVED AT IN THEIR SEPTEMBER, 1979, CONSULTATION IN ITS DECEMBER AND JANUARY WATCH SCHEDULES, BUT THE OVERWHELMING WEIGHT OF THE RECORD SHOWS THAT GROUNDS RELIED UPON BY THE GENERAL COUNSEL TO ESTABLISH THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE ALLEGED IN THE COMPLAINT WERE EITHER WHOLLY UNSUPPORTED OR WERE CONTRARY TO THE OVERWHELMING WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE. THUS, BY WAY OF EXAMPLE: A) THE ASSERTION THAT THE OCTOBER SCHEDULE CONSTITUTED A FIXED SCHEDULE AND/OR THAT THE PARTIES AGREED THAT THERE SHOULD BE A FIVE LINE SCHEDULE WAS SHOWN BY THE TESTIMONY OF MS. PRICE, ONE OF PATCO'S REPRESENTATIVES AT THE SEPTEMBER MEETING, AND OF MR. ANDERSON, NOT TO HAVE BEEN THE AGREEMENT OF THE PARTIES. TO THE CONTRARY, THE RECORD FIRMLY ESTABLISHED THAT THE PARTIES AGREED TO A SEVEN LINE SCHEDULE; THAT DIFFERENT SHIFTS WERE AGREED ON FOR EACH LINE, WITH EVEN ROTATION UPWARDS; B) THE ASSERTION THAT RESPONDENT CHANGED SCHEDULED DAYS OFF WAS SHOWN TO BE WITHOUT BASIS IN FACT. TO THE CONTRARY, THE RECORD AFFIRMATIVELY SHOWS THAT RESPONDENT STRICTLY ADHERED TO THE ASSIGNED DAYS OFF FOR EACH OF THE SEVEN LINES, OR POSITIONS, AND THAT ESTABLISHED ROTATION WAS FOLLOWED, WITH RECOGNITION, AS THE PARTIES AGREED, THAT ONE LINE, OR POSITION, WOULD HAVE TO BE BLANK ON EACH SCHEDULE BECAUSE OF THE LIMITED NUMBER OF JOURNEYMEN CONTROLLERS THEN AVAILABLE; C) THE ASSERTION THAT RESPONDENT CHANGED THE STARTING TIMES OF SHIFTS AND/OR THE "MIX" OF SHIFTS, WHILE TRUE, WAS NOT SHOWN TO HAVE BEEN CONTRARY TO THE AGREEMENT OF THE PARTIES. TO THE CONTRARY, AS MS. PRICE TESTIFIED, "THE SEVENTH LINE IS BLANK . . . AND THE PEOPLE AROUND THAT HAVE TO PICK UP THE SLACK IN THAT LINE. THAT'S WHERE THE ADJUSTMENT COMES IN" (TR. 113) AND MR. ANDERSON TESTIFIED, " . . . WE WOULD KEEP AS CLOSE TO A 15, 15, 8:00, 7:00, 7:00 LINE AS STAFFING WOULD PERMIT . . ." (TR. 130) "AGAIN, I SAY THAT WE AGREED THAT THE SCHEDULE WOULD REFLECT THE STARTING HOUR OF 15, 8:00 AND 7:00 AND THAT THESE HOURS ON THE SCHEDULE WOULD BE ASSIGNED FOR THE SCHEDULE TO STAY AS CLOSELY TO THE DESIRED 15, 15, 8:00, 7:00 AND 7:00 SCHEDULE, BUT THAT THERE WOULD BE VARIATIONS ON EACH LINE, OR ON SOME LINES, TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE COVERAGE FOR THOSE SHIFTS." (TR. 136) (SEE, ALSO RES. EXH 1). G.C. EXHIBITS 4 B AND 4 C DEMONSTRATE GOOD FAITH COMPLIANCE WITH THE AGREED GOAL OF STAYING AS CLOSE TO THE DESIRED 15, 15, 8, 7 AND 7 SCHEDULE AS STAFFING PERMITTED. INDEED, THIS GOAL WAS MORE NEARLY ACHIEVED ON THE DECEMBER AND JANUARY SCHEDULES (G.C. EXHS. 4 B AND 4 C) THAN HAD BEEN ACHIEVED ON THE OCTOBER AND NOVEMBER SCHEDULES (G.C. EXH. 4 A-1 AND 4 A). FOR ALL OF THE FOREGOING REASONS, I FIND THAT THE GENERAL COUNSEL HAS FAILED TO ESTABLISH BY A PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE THAT RESPONDENT BREACHED ANY COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT AND/OR THAT IT ALTERED ANY ESTABLISHED WATCH SCHEDULE IN VIOLATION OF SEC. 16(A)(5) OR (1) OF THE STATUTE. TO THE CONTRARY, THE PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE SHOWS THAT RESPONDENT'S DECEMBER AND JANUARY WATCH SCHEDULES (G.C. EXH. 4 A AND 4 B) WERE FULLY IN ACCORD WITH THE UNDERSTANDING OF THE PARTIES AGREED TO AT THEIR SEPTEMBER, 1979, CONSULTATION. /3/ ORDER HAVING FOUND THAT RESPONDENT DID NOT VIOLATE SEC. 16(A)(5) OR (1) OF THE STATUTE AS CHARGED, I RECOMMEND THAT THE COMPLAINT HEREIN BE DISMISSED. WILLIAM B. DEVANEY ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE DATED: NOVEMBER 13, 1980 WASHINGTON, D.C. --------------- FOOTNOTES$ --------------- /1/ THE AUTHORITY FINDS IT UNNECESSARY TO PASS UPON THE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE'S ALTERNATIVE GROUNDS FOR DISMISSING THE COMPLAINT CONTAINED IN FOOTNOTE 2 OF HIS DECISION AND ORDER. /2/ HEREINAFTER, FOR CONVENIENCE OF REFERENCE, SECTIONS OF THE STATUTE ARE ALSO REFERRED TO WITHOUT INCLUSION OF THE INITIAL "71" PORTION OF THE STATUTE REFERENCE, E.G., SEC. 7116(A)(1) SIMPLY AS "16(A)(1)". /3/ ALTHOUGH NOT NECESSARY IN VIEW OF THE CONCLUSION REACHED CONCERNING THE SEPTEMBER, 1979, AGREEMENT OF THE PARTIES, THE FOLLOWING CONSIDERATIONS CONSTITUTE A SEPARATE AND INDEPENDENT BASIS FOR DISMISSAL OF THE COMPLAINT: A) THE ABSENCE OF ANY OBJECTION BY PATCO TO EITHER THE DECEMBER OR JANUARY WATCH SCHEDULE, ALTHOUGH THE RECORD SHOWS WITHOUT CONTRADICTION THAT THE SCHEDULES WERE PRESENTED TO PATCO'S REPRESENTATIVES "TO LOOK OVER" PRIOR TO POSTING. B) I FULLY CREDIT MR. ANDERSON'S TESTIMONY THAT MR. MCGILLICUDDY, WHEN SHOWN THE DECEMBER SCHEDULE (G.C. EXH. 4 B), COMMENTED "THERE'S NOTHING WRONG WITH THIS SCHEDULE, I'VE GOT SATURDAY AND SUNDAY OFF SO I CAN GO PARACHUTING WITH MY BUDDIES"; BUT EVEN IN THE ABSENCE OF SUCH COMMENT, THE MOST CURSORY EXAMINATION OF THE DECEMBER SCHEDULE WOULD HAVE SHOWN THAT LINE 6 WAS BLANK, WHEREAS LINE 4 HAD BEEN BLANK ON THE OCTOBER AND NOVEMBER SCHEDULES; THAT MR. HATCHETT WAS ASSIGNED TO LINE 4 WHICH HAD BEEN BLANK ON THE OCTOBER AND NOVEMBER SCHEDULE AND THAT HE, MCGILLICUDDY, WAS ASSIGNED TO LINE 7 WHEREAS A SUPERVISOR, MR. ANDERSON OR MR. HATCHETT, HAD BEEN ASSIGNED TO LINE 7 ON THE OCTOBER AND NOVEMBER SCHEDULES. MR. LACHANCE TESTIFIED THAT HE HAD LOOKED AT THE JANUARY SCHEDULE, SAW THAT IT WAS DIFFERENT FROM THE PREVIOUS SCHEDULE, BUT MADE NO COMMENT TO MR. ANDERSON. OF COURSE, THE JANUARY SCHEDULE SHOWED ON ITS FACE THAT LINE 5 WAS BLANK, WHEREAS LINE 6 HAD BEEN BLANK ON THE DECEMBER SCHEDULE AND LINE 4 HAD BEEN BLANK ON THE NOVEMBER SCHEDULE; THAT MR. HATCHETT HAD BEEN ASSIGNED TO LINE 3, WHEREAS HE HAD BEEN ASSIGNED TO LINE 4 ON THE NOVEMBER SCHEDULE AND TO LINE 7 ON THE NOVEMBER SCHEDULE. C) THE FOREGOING NOT ONLY STRONGLY INFERS THAT NEITHER MR. MCGILLICUDDY NOR MR. LACHANCE VIEWED EITHER THE DECEMBER SCHEDULE OR THE JANUARY SCHEDULE AS INCONSISTENT WITH THE SEPTEMBER, 1979, UNDERSTANDING; BUT MORE IMPORTANT, EVEN IF SOME VIOLATION WERE PERCEIVED, NOT EVERY BREACH OF CONTRACT CONSTITUTES AN UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE. GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION, REGION 5, PUBLIC BUILDINGS SERVICE, CHICAGO FIELD OFFICES, A/SLMR NO. 528, 5 A/SLMR 424(1975). A CLEAR, FLAGRANT AND PERSISTENT BREACH OF CONTRACT MAY RISE TO THE SERIOUSNESS OF A UNILATERAL CHANGE IN THE CONTRACT AND, THEREFORE, CONSTITUTE AN UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE, WATERVLIET ARSENAL, U.S. ARMY ARMAMENT COMMAND, WATERVLIET, NEW YORK, A/SLMR NO. 726, 6 A/SLMR 526(1976), BUT IF THERE IS NO FLAGRANT OR PATENT BREACH CONSTITUTING A UNILATERAL CHANGE, DIFFERING AND ARGUABLE INTERPRETATIONS OF AN AGREEMENT ARE NOT UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES, WATERVLIET ARSENAL, SUPRA; DEPARTMENT OF ARMY, WATERVLIET ARSENAL, WATERVLIET, NEW YORK, A/SLMR 624, 6 A/SLMR 127(1976), AND THE REMEDY LIES WITHIN THE GRIEVANCE MACHINERY OF THE NEGOTIATED AGREEMENT, RATHER THAT THROUGH THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE PROCEDURE, AEROSPACE GUIDANCE AND METROLOGY CENTER, NEWARK AIR FORCE STATION, NEWARK, OHIO, A/SLMR NO. 677, 6 A/SLMR 361(1976); OKLAHOMA CITY AIR LOGISTICS CENTER, TINKER AIR FORCE BASE, OKLAHOMA, 3 FLRA NO. 82(1980); DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE, 3480TH AIR BASE GROUP, GOODFELLOW AIR FORCE BASE, TEXAS, CASE NO. 6-CA-139(ALJ) SEPTEMBER 8, 1980). HERE, THERE WAS NO REFUSAL CONSULT. TO THE CONTRARY, THE PARTIES DID CONFER IN SEPTEMBER, 1979, AND AGREED UPON SCHEDULING; THE UNION, ALTHOUGH SHOWN THE DECEMBER AND JANUARY SCHEDULES PRIOR TO THEIR BEING POSTED, DID NOT REQUEST FURTHER CONSULTATION; AND THE PARTIES SUBSEQUENTLY MET AND AGREED ON LATER WATCH SCHEDULES. AT MOST, THERE WERE DIFFERING AND ARGUABLE INTERPRETATIONS OF WHAT HAD BEEN AGREED TO AT THE SEPTEMBER, 1979, CONSULTATION AND CERTAINTY, NO PATENT OR FLAGRANT BREACH WHICH CONSTITUTED A UNILATERAL CHANGE OF AGREEMENT FOR WHICH AN UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE VIOLATION COULD BE FOUND.