[ v08 p212 ]
08:0212(46)NG
The decision of the Authority follows:
8 FLRA No. 46 INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL ENGINEERS, AFL-CIO, NASA HEADQUARTERS PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION (Union) and NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION, HEADQUARTERS, WASHINGTON, D.C. (Agency) Case No. 0-NG-99 DECISION AND ORDER ON NEGOTIABILITY ISSUES THIS CASE COMES BEFORE THE FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY (THE AUTHORITY) PURSUANT TO SECTION 7105(A)(2)(D) AND (E) OF THE FEDERAL SERVICE LABOR-MANAGEMENT RELATIONS STATUTE (THE STATUTE) (5 U.S.C. 7101-7135). UNION PROPOSAL IN ANY REDUCTION-IN-FORCE (RIF) ACTION, MEMBERS OF THE BARGAINING UNIT WHO ARE RELEASED FROM THEIR COMPETITIVE LEVELS WILL BE PERMITTED TO BUMP OTHER EMPLOYEES WHO ARE WITHIN THE SAME SUBGROUP IN OTHER COMPETITIVE LEVELS. QUESTION HERE BEFORE THE AUTHORITY THE QUESTION IS WHETHER THE UNION'S PROPOSAL IS WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THE DUTY TO BARGAIN UNDER SECTION 7117 OF THE STATUTE /1/ OR, AS ALLEGED BY THE AGENCY, IS NOT WITHIN THE DUTY TO BARGAIN BECAUSE IT CONCERNS POSITIONS AND EMPLOYEES OUTSIDE THE BARGAINING UNIT. /2/ OPINION CONCLUSION AND ORDER: THE UNION'S PROPOSAL IS OUTSIDE THE DUTY TO BARGAIN UNDER SECTION 7117 OF THE STATUTE. ACCORDINGLY, PURSUANT TO SECTION 2424.10 OF THE AUTHORITY'S RULES AND REGULATIONS (5 CFR 2424.10(1981), IT IS ORDERED THAT THE PETITION FOR REVIEW OF THIS DISPUTED PROPOSAL BE DISMISSED. REASONS: THE UNION IS THE EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATIVE OF A UNIT INCLUDING SCIENTISTS, ENGINEERS AND LIFE SCIENCE TECHNICIANS EMPLOYED AT THE AGENCY'S HEADQUARTERS IN THE WASHINGTON, D.C. AREA. ACCORDING TO THE UNCONTRADICTED STATEMENTS OF THE AGENCY IN THE RECORD, THIS UNIT INCLUDES APPROXIMATELY 300 OF THE AGENCY'S 1500 HEADQUARTERS EMPLOYEES. IN ADDITION, THE AGENCY EMPLOYS ALMOST 23,000 EMPLOYEES IN ELEVEN MAJOR FIELD INSTALLATIONS AND SEVERAL FIELD OFFICES NATIONWIDE, MOST OF WHOM ARE REPRESENTED EXCLUSIVELY IN A NUMBER OF UNITS BY THE PETITIONING UNION AS WELL AS SEVERAL OTHER UNIONS. THE PROPOSAL IS CONCERNED WITH CERTAIN REASSIGNMENT RIGHTS IN A REDUCTION IN FORCE, AS EXPLAINED IN DETAIL BELOW. THE PHRASE "REDUCTION IN FORCE" (RIF) REFERS TO THE PROCESS A FEDERAL AGENCY CAN INITIATE, UPON THE OCCURRENCE OF VARIOUS ADMINISTRATIVE CONDITIONS, TO ELIMINATE POSITIONS IN THE AGENCY AND TO TAKE APPROPRIATE ACTION WITH RESPECT TO EMPLOYEES WHO HAD OCCUPIED THE ABOLISHED POSITIONS. AS RELEVANT HEREIN, A RIF MUST BE CARRIED OUT IN ACCORDANCE WITH REGULATIONS ISSUED BY THE OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT (OPM) PURSUANT TO STATUTE. /3/ UNDER THESE REGULATIONS, UPON THE OCCURRENCE OF THE PREREQUISITE CONDITIONS, INCLUDING LACK OF WORK, SHORTAGE OF FUNDS OR AGENCY REORGANIZATION (5 CFR 351.201(A)), AN AGENCY MAY DECIDE TO INITIATE A RIF. IT MUST DETERMINE THE NUMBERS AND TYPES OF POSITIONS TO BE ELIMINATED AND IDENTIFY THE EMPLOYEES WHO WILL BE AFFECTED THEREBY. AFFECTED EMPLOYEES MUST BE IDENTIFIED CONSISTENT WITH THE SCOPE OF COMPETITION DELINEATED IN THE REGULATIONS, AS FURTHER EXPLAINED HEREIN, BASED ON TWO CRITERIA: COMPETITIVE AREA AND COMPETITIVE LEVEL. A "COMPETITIVE AREA" IS, IN ESSENCE, THE PART OF AN AGENCY WITHIN WHICH AN EMPLOYEE WHO OCCUPIED AN ABOLISHED POSITION MAY COMPETE WITH OTHER EMPLOYEES TO DETERMINE, ULTIMATELY, WHICH OF THEM WILL BE RETAINED IN THE AGENCY. A COMPETITIVE AREA IS DEFINED IN ORGANIZATIONAL AND GEOGRAPHIC TERMS. IT TYPICALLY WOULD INCLUDE A PART OF AN AGENCY IN WHICH EMPLOYEES ARE ASSIGNED UNDER A SINGLE ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITY (5 CFR 351.402) BUT NEED NOT EXTEND BEYOND A PARTICULAR COMMUTING AREA (FEDERAL PERSONNEL MANUAL, CHAP. 351, SUBCHAP. 2-2.B). WITHIN EACH COMPETITIVE AREA IN AN AGENCY THE REGULATIONS REQUIRE POSITIONS TO BE CATEGORIZED INTO COMPETITIVE LEVELS IN ORDER TO GROUP EMPLOYEES WHO WILL COMPETE AGAINST ONE ANOTHER FOR RETENTION IN THE AGENCY WHEN POSITIONS ARE ABOLISHED. A "COMPETITIVE LEVEL" CONSISTS OF ALL THE POSITIONS IN A COMPETITIVE AREA WHICH ARE AT THE SAME GRADE OR OCCUPATIONAL LEVEL AND WHICH ARE SUFFICIENTLY ALIKE IN VARIOUS SPECIFIC RESPECTS SO THAT THE INCUMBENT OF ANY ONE POSITION MAY BE ASSIGNED TO ANY OF THE OTHER POSITIONS WITHOUT CHANGING THE TERMS OF HIS APPOINTMENT OR UNDULY INTERRUPTING THE WORK PROGRAM (5 CFR 351.403). THE REGULATIONS FURTHER SPECIFY THAT WITHIN EACH COMPETITIVE LEVEL, EMPLOYEES WILL COMPETE FOR RETENTION IN THE AGENCY BASED ON THEIR RELATIVE RETENTION STANDING. THE "RETENTION STANDING" OF AN EMPLOYEE IS HIS OR HER RANK RELATIVE TO THE OTHER EMPLOYEES IN THE COMPETITIVE LEVEL BASED ON TENURE, MILITARY PREFERENCE, LENGTH OF SERVICE, AND PERFORMANCE RATING. MORE PARTICULARLY, EACH COMPETITIVE LEVEL MUST BE DIVIDED INTO TENURE GROUPS I, II AND III (ROUGHLY CONSISTING OF, RESPECTIVELY, CAREER EMPLOYEES, CAREER-CONDITIONAL EMPLOYEES AND EMPLOYEES WITH INDEFINITE APPOINTMENTS). EACH OF THESE GROUPS, ITSELF, THEN MUST BE SUBDIVIDED INTO SUBGROUPS AD, A AND B (ESSENTIALLY CONSISTING OF, RESPECTIVELY, EMPLOYEES WITH VETERAN PREFERENCE PLUS A CERTAIN EXTENT OF DISABILITY, EMPLOYEES WITH VETERAN PREFERENCE NOT INCLUDED IN SUBGROUP AD, AND EMPLOYEES WITHOUT VETERAN PREFERENCE) (5 CFR 351.501). EMPLOYEES ARE RANKED WITHIN EACH SUBGROUP BY THE LENGTH OF THEIR SERVICE (5 0CFR 351.503). ONCE THE RETENTION STANDING OF EMPLOYEES IS DETERMINED THROUGH APPLICATION OF THE ABOVE DESCRIBED MECHANISMS, AN AGENCY MAY "RELEASE" EMPLOYEES FORM THEIR COMPETITIVE LEVEL IN INVERSE ORDER OF THEIR STANDING (5 CFR 351.602), SUBJECT TO CERTAIN REASSIGNMENT RIGHTS THE EMPLOYEES INVOLVED MAY HAVE. THE REGULATIONS PRESCRIBE CERTAIN REASSIGNMENT RIGHTS FOR AFFECTED EMPLOYEES AND, ALSO, PROVIDE THAT AGENCIES MAY GRANT OTHERS. IN THIS CONNECTION, THE REGULATIONS REQUIRE AGENCIES UNDER CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES TO AFFORD EMPLOYEES BEING RELEASED FROM THEIR COMPETITIVE LEVEL IN A RIF THE RIGHT, AMONG OTHERS, TO DISPLACE EMPLOYEES OCCUPYING POSITIONS IN LOWER SUBGROUPS IN OTHER COMPETITIVE LEVELS. FOR EXAMPLE, AN AFFECTED EMPLOYEE IN GROUP I, SUBGROUP A COULD DISPLACE AN EMPLOYEE IN GROUP I, SUBGROUP B, IN ANOTHER COMPETITIVE LEVEL. THIS DISPLACEMENT PROCESS COMMONLY IS REFERRED TO AS "BUMPING." AS RELEVANT TO THE DISPUTE IN THE PRESENT CASE, THE REGULATIONS OF OPM DO NOT REQUIRE, BUT ALLOW, AGENCIES TO PERMIT AFFECTED EMPLOYEES SIMILARLY TO BUMP EMPLOYEES OF LOWER RETENTION STANDING IN THE SAME SUBGROUP IN OTHER COMPETITIVE LEVELS (5 CFR 351.705(A)(2)). IF AN AGENCY DOES PERMIT BUMPING IN THE SAME SUBGROUP, THE REGULATIONS PROVIDE THAT SUCH BUMPING "SHALL BE UNIFORMLY APPLIED IN ANY ONE REDUCTION IN FORCE" (5 CFR 351.705(B)(2)). HENCE, UNDER THE GOVERNING REGULATIONS OF OPM, AN AGENCY HAS DISCRETION WHETHER IT WILL ALLOW BUMPING WITHIN THE SAME SUBGROUP AS WOULD BE REQUIRED BY THE DISPUTED PROPOSAL IN THE PRESENT CASE, PROVIDED THAT, IF THE AGENCY ALLOWS SUCH BUMPING AT ALL, IT MUST BE ALLOWED UNIFORMLY IN ANY ONE RIF. TURNING NOW TO THE PRESENT DISPUTE, UNDER THE RECORD, THE AGENCY IN EFFECT STATES AND THE UNION TACITLY CONCEDES THAT THE COMPETITIVE AREA IN THE AGENCY'S HEADQUARTERS, WHICH ENCOMPASSES THE BARGAINING UNIT HERE INVOLVED, ALSO ENCOMPASSES POSITIONS AND EMPLOYEES WHICH ARE NOT WITHIN THE BARGAINING UNIT. FURTHERMORE, IT IS CLEAR THAT WHATEVER POLICY THE AGENCY ADOPTS, EITHER UNILATERALLY OR THROUGH NEGOTIATIONS, WITH RESPECT TO BUMPING IN THE SAME SUBGROUP WOULD HAVE TO BE APPLIED UNIFORMLY IN ANY ONE RIF, UNDER OPM REGULATIONS. FINALLY, INSOFAR AS APPEARS FROM THE RECORD, THE UNION INTENDED ITS PROPOSAL TO BE APPLIED IN A MANNER CONSISTENT WITH THESE APPLICABLE OPM REGULATIONS. BASED ON THESE CONSIDERATIONS, THE PROPOSAL IS NOT WITHIN THE DUTY TO BARGAIN BECAUSE NEGOTIATIONS ON THE PROPOSAL WOULD AS THE AGENCY ARGUES, "ALLOW THE UNIT TO BARGAIN FOR THE ENTIRE ACTIVITY, INCLUDING EMPLOYEES IT DOES NOT REPRESENT . . . " IT IS WELL SETTLED IN THIS REGARD THAT MATTERS WHICH ARE CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT OF EMPLOYEES IN A BARGAINING UNIT AND ARE WITHIN THE DISCRETION OF THE AGENCY INVOLVED ARE WITHIN THE DUTY TO BARGAIN. THE AGENCY MUST IF REQUESTED EXERCISE ITS DISCRETION THROUGH NEGOTIATIONS WITH THE EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATIVE TO THE EXTENT CONSISTENT WITH APPLICABLE LAW AND REGULATIONS. /4/ IT IS EQUALLY WELL SETTLED, ON THE OTHER HAND, THAT THE DUTY TO BARGAIN DOES NOT EXTEND TO MATTERS CONCERNING POSITIONS AND EMPLOYEES OUTSIDE THE BARGAINING UNIT. /5/ THUS, IF THE UNION PROPOSAL IN THE PRESENT DISPUTE WOULD PRESCRIBE THE RIGHTS OF EMPLOYEES OUTSIDE THE BARGAINING UNIT, THE PROPOSAL GENERALLY WOULD NOT BE WITHIN THE DUTY TO BARGAIN. AS ALREADY INDICATED, IT APPEARS FROM THE RECORD AND THE LANGUAGE OF THE DISPUTED PROPOSAL THAT THE UNION INTENDED ITS PROPOSAL TO BE APPLIED CONSISTENT WITH OPM REGULATIONS. /6/ AS FURTHER INDICATED, APPLICABLE OPM REGULATIONS REQUIRE THE BUMPING RIGHTS WHICH ARE THE SUBJECT OF THE DISPUTED PROPOSAL TO BE APPLIED UNIFORMLY IN ANY ONE RIF. MOREOVER, THE RECORD SUPPORTS A FINDING THAT A RIF POTENTIALLY AFFECTING POSITIONS AND EMPLOYEES IN THE BARGAINING UNIT WOULD ALSO POTENTIALLY AFFECT POSITIONS AND EMPLOYEES NOT IN THE BARGAINING UNIT. HENCE, UNDER THESE CIRCUMSTANCES, NEGOTIATION OF THE UNION'S PROPOSAL WOULD RESULT IN THE PROPOSAL BEING APPLIED UNIFORMLY TO THE NONUNIT AS WELL AS THE UNIT POSITIONS AND EMPLOYEES INVOLVED IN SUCH A RIF. CONSEQUENTLY, THE NECESSARY EFFECT OF THE PROPOSAL IN THESE CIRCUMSTANCES WOULD BE TO REQUIRE THE AGENCY TO BARGAIN OVER MATTERS CONCERNING POSITIONS AND EMPLOYEES OUTSIDE THE BARGAINING UNIT. AS ALREADY STATED, SUCH MATTERS ARE NOT WITHIN THE DUTY TO BARGAIN. FOR THIS REASON, THE PROPOSAL IS NONNEGOTIABLE. ISSUED, WASHINGTON, D.C., MARCH 19, 1982 RONALD W. HAUGHTON, CHAIRMAN HENRY B. FRAZIER III, MEMBER LEON B. APPLEWHAITE, MEMBER FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY --------------- FOOTNOTES: --------------- /1/ SECTION 7117(A)(1) OF THE STATUTE PROVIDES: SECTION 7117. DUTY TO BARGAIN IN GOOD FAITH; COMPELLING NEED; DUTY TO CONSULT (A)(1) SUBJECT TO PARAGRAPH (2) OF THIS SUBSECTION, THE DUTY TO BARGAIN IN GOOD FAITH SHALL, TO THE EXTENT NOT INCONSISTENT WITH ANY FEDERAL LAW OR ANY GOVERNMENT-WIDE RULE OR REGULATION, EXTEND TO MATTERS WHICH ARE THE SUBJECT OF ANY RULE OR REGULATION ONLY IF THE RULE OR REGULATION IS NOT A GOVERNMENT-WIDE RULE OR REGULATION. /2/ THE AGENCY ALSO ALLEGED THAT AGENCY REGULATIONS FOR WHICH A COMPELLING NEED EXISTS BAR NEGOTIATIONS ON THE UNION'S PROPOSAL. THE AUTHORITY FINDS IT UNNECESSARY TO PASS ON THIS QUESTION IN VIEW OF THE DISPOSITION HEREIN. /3/ 5 U.S.C. 3502(1980). /4/ NATIONAL TREASURY EMPLOYEES UNION, CHAPTER 6 AND INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, NEW ORLEANS DISTRICT, 3 FLRA 747(1980). /5/ HAWAII FEDERAL EMPLOYEES METAL TRADES COUNCIL, AFL-CIO AND DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY, NAVY PUBLIC WORKS CENTER, PEARL HARBOR, HAWAII, 4 FLRA NO. 3(1980), INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FIRE FIGHTERS, LOCAL F-61 AND PHILADELPHIA NAVAL SHIPYARD, 3 FLRA 437(1980), AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, NATIONAL COUNCIL OF EEOC LOCALS NO. 216, AFL-CIO AND EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION, WASHINGTON, D.C., 3 FLRA 503(1980), AND NATIONAL COUNCIL OF FIELD LABOR LOCALS, AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO AND U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, WASHINGTON, D.C., 3 FLRA 289(1980). /6/ IF THE UNION HAD NOT INTENDED ITS PROPOSAL TO BE APPLIED IN ACCORDANCE WITH APPLICABLE OPM REGULATIONS, THEN, OF COURSE, THE PROPOSAL WOULD BE INCONSISTENT WITH SUCH GOVERNMENT-WIDE REGULATIONS AND, FOR THAT REASON, NONNEGOTIABLE.