[ v16 p586 ]
16:0586(85)CA
The decision of the Authority follows:
16 FLRA No. 85 DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, WASHINGTON, D.C. AND DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES REGION VII, KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Respondents and NATIONAL TREASURY EMPLOYEES UNION Charging Party Case No. 7-CA-30131 DECISION AND ORDER The Administrative Law Judge issued the attached Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that the Respondents had not engaged in the unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint, and recommending that the complaint be dismissed in its entirety. Thereafter, the General Counsel and the Charging Party filed exceptions to the Judge's Decision, and the Respondents filed an opposition to the exceptions. Pursuant to section 2423.29 of the Authority's Rules and Regulations and section 7118 of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute (the Statute), the Authority has reviewed the rulings of the Judge made at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. Upon consideration of the Judge's Decision and the entire record, the Authority hereby adopts the Judge's findings, conclusions /1/ and Recommended Order. In affirming the Judge's decision that the Respondents did not violate section 7116(a)(1), (5) and (8) of the Statute by terminating the dues assignment of certain employees, the Authority agrees that the employees in question ceased to be part of the certified bargaining unit upon their transfer to the Office of the Inspector General. The record clearly indicates that the employees in the newly created Office of Inspector General, Office of Health Financing Integrity, are now part of the new organization with a separate and distinct mission; that they are under separate overall supervision and authority; and that they share an area of competition for promotions and reductions-in-force separate from that of the employees in the existing bargaining unit. See United States Department of Health and Human Services, Region VI, Dallas, Texas, 15 FLRA No. 161 (1984). As the employees ceased to be part of the bargaining unit, terminations of dues withholdings were proper and in accordance with the Statute. See Department of the Air Force, Griffiss Air Force Base, Rome, New York, 12 FLRA No. 50 (1983), set aside and remanded as to other matters sub nom. American Federation of Government Employees, Local 2612 v. FLRA, 739 F.2d 87 (2d Cir. 1984), Supplemental Decision and Order, 15 FLRA No. 188 (1984). ORDER IT IS ORDERED that the complaint in Case No. 7-CA-30131 be, and it hereby is, dismissed. Issued, Washington, D.C., November 27, 1984 Henry B. Frazier III, Acting Chairman Ronald W. Haughton, Member FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY -------------------- ALJ$ DECISION FOLLOWS -------------------- DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, WASHINGTON, DC AND DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, REGION VII, KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Respondents and NATIONAL TREASURY EMPLOYEES UNION Charging Party Case No.: 7-CA-30131 Bruce R. Granger, Esquire Susan Callahan, Esquire Paul P. Cacioppo, Esquire On Brief For the Respondents Mr. John R. Morefield William Harness, Esquire M. Kathryn Durham, Esquire By Brief For the Charging Party Daniel Minahan, Esquire For the General Counsel Before: WILLIAM B. DEVANEY Administrative Law Judge DECISION Statement of the Case This proceeding, under the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute, Chapter 71 of Title 5 of the United States Code, 5 U.S.C. 7101, et seq., /2/ and the Final Rules and Regulations issued thereunder, 5 C.F.R. 2423.1, et seq., concerns whether ten employees who had been included in the bargaining unit remained in the bargaining unit after their transfer to the Office of the Inspector General. Neither the National Treasury Employees Union (hereinafter, also, referred to as "NTEU" or the "Union"), which seeks to have the affected employees declared included in the bargaining unit, notwithstanding their transfer to the Office of the Inspector General, nor the Respondents, who assert that the affected employees ceased to be part of the bargaining unit upon their transfer from a Principal Operating Component of Region VII (cf. Department of Health and Human Services and National Treasury Employees Union, 13 FLRA No. 7, 13 FLRA 39 (1983), a unit clarification case in which the Authority considered the administrative division of HHS) to the Office of the Inspector General, which is not a component of Region VII, saw fit to utilize the unit clarification procedure; but, to the contrary, Respondents refused to recognize NTEU as the representative of the affected employees after their transfer to the Office of the Inspector General and terminated the dues assignments of the five transferred employees who were dues-paying members of NTEU; and NTEU filed unfair labor practice charges. This is not a representation case and the bargaining unit as certified /3/ may not be altered in an unfair labor practice proceeding, although unit determinations concerning particular employees as being included or excluded from bargaining units as certified may, and in this case must, be resolved in an unfair labor practice proceeding. See, Internal Revenue Service, Seattle District, et al., 12 FLRA No. 74, 12 FLRA 324 (1983); North Carolina Air National Guard, Charlotte, North Carolina, 4 FLRA No. 44, 4 FLRA 348 (1980); The Adjutant General - Georgia, Georgia National Guard, Department of Defense, Atlanta, Georgia, 2 FLRA No. 92, 2 FLRA 712 (1980); U.S. Department of Energy, Western Area Power Administration, Golden, Colorado and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO, Locals 640, 1245, 1759, 1959 and 2159, Case No. 7-CA-1229, OALJ-82-119 (August 4, 1982). Rather, the issue is, more narrowly, whether the affected employees remained in the certified bargaining unit after their transfer to the Office of the Inspector General. This proceeding was initiated by a charge, filed on January 10, 1983 (G.C. Exh. 1(a)); a First Amended Charge, filed on January 31, 1983 (G.C. Exh. 1(b)); and a Second Amended Charge, filed on March 21, 1983 (G.C. Exh. 1(c)). The Complaint and Notice of Hearing issued on March 30, 1983 (G.C. Exh. 1(d)), and a hearing was scheduled for May 18, 1983; by Order dated May 13, 1983 (G.C. Exh. 1(i)y the hearing was indefinitely postponed; by Order dated June 24, 1983 (G.C. Exh. 1(k)), the hearing was rescheduled for August 25, 1983, at a place to be determined; and by Order dated June 30, 1983 (G.C. Exh. 1(1)), the place of hearing was set, pursuant to which a hearing was duly held before the undersigned on August 25, 1983, /4/ in Kansas City, Missouri. All parties were represented at the hearing, were afforded full opportunity to be heard, to examine and cross-examine witnesses, to introduce evidence bearing on the issues involved and were afforded opportunity to present oral argument. At the close of the hearing, September 26, 1983, was fixed as the date for mailing post-hearing briefs, which time was subsequently extended, on timely Motion of NTEU to which the other parties did not object, to October 13, 1983. General Counsel, the Charging Party (NTEU) and Respondents each timely mailed an excellent brief, received on or before October 17, 1983, which have been carefully considered. Upon the basis of the entire record, /5/ including my observation of the witnesses and their demeanor, I make the following findings and conclusions: Findings 1. NTEU is the certified representative for the following unit: "INCLUDING: All GS and WG professional and nonprofessional employees of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Region VII, in the greater Kansas City Metropolitan area. "EXCLUDING: All employees of SSA Office of Central Operations, all employees of the SSA Office of Quality Assurance (Assessment) of the SSA Office of Security and Program Integrity (Assessment), all HEW Audit Agency employees, all employees of SSA Office of Appeals, all employees of SSA Field Offices, and all employees of the Food and Drug Administration, employees engaged in Federal personnel work in other than a purely clerical capacity, temporary employees with an expected employment of 90 days or less, and confidential employees, management officials, and supervisors as defined in the Federal Service Labor Management Relations Statute." (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 1; Certification dated June 15, 1979). 2. The parties entered into a collective bargaining agreement dated October 21, 1981 (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 2), for a three year term. Article 1, "Recognition and Coverage" defines the "employer" as "The Department of Health and Human Services, Region VII", the unit of exclusive representation was as set forth in the certification except: (a) in describing the employees included, the name "Department of Health and Human Services" was substituted for "Department of Health, Education and Welfare" in the certification; and, (b) the exclusions were modified as more fully set forth in n.2, supra. Article 51 governs "Due Withholding" and Section 5E thereof provides for termination of dues allotment, "Termination due to separation, transfer, or reassignment." NTEU's dues are $4.70 per bi-weekly pay period (G.C. Exh. 1(o)). 3. On December 10, 1982, the national office of Health Care Financing Administration (hereinafter, also, referred to as "HCFA") and the Inspector General entered into a memorandum of understanding for the transfer of certain functions, including personnel, which transfer had been approved by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, from HCFA to the Office of the Inspector General (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 5). The transfer was implemented on January 9, 1983. In Kansas City, thirteen of twenty-seven employees of HCFA's Division of Quality Control were transferred to the Inspector General's Office of Health Financing Integrity (G.C. Exh. 1(o)) (hereinafter, the Office of the Inspector General, including the Office of Health Financing Integrity, is also, referred to as "OIG"). The fourteen employees in the Division of Quality Control who were not transferred to OIG were reassigned within HCFA. 4. Prior to transfer of OIG, ten of the thirteen employees transferred had been included in the bargaining unit and five of them had been dues-paying members of NTEU. 5. On January 7, 1983, Respondent notified Mr. Lemuel Hester, President of NTEU Chapter 217, that, "It is management's position that employees of the Office of the Inspector General are excluded from the bargaining unit. This includes those employees identified to transfer from the Health Care Financing Administration to the Office of the Inspector General on January 9, 1983." (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 9). This has been the consistent position of the Department since December 5, 1977, when Secretary Califano determined, " . . . that the Office of the Inspector General (Department and Field) shall be excluded from coverage of the Order (E.O. 11491, as amended) . . . ." (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 7) and by memorandum, issued March 1, 1983, Inspector General Richard P. Kusserow advised all supervisors that, " . . . It is our position that OIG employees are excluded from participation in collective bargaining activities by provisions of the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978." (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 8). 6. Since January 9, 1983, Respondents have excluded the employees transferred from the bargaining unit and have refused to recognize and deal with NTEU as the exclusive representative of the employees transferred to the OIG (G.C. Exh. 1(o)). 7. Since their transfer to the OIG on January 9, 1983, Respondents have revoked and refused to honor written dues assignments from those employees transferred to the OIG (G.C. Exh. 1(o)). 8. The Office of Inspector General was created by an act of Congress enacted October 15, 1976, P.L. 94-505, (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 10). No labor organization has ever been recognized or certified as the exclusive representative of any employees of the Office of Inspector General. (G.C. Exh. 1(o)). 9. The Inspector General is appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate and is subject to removal by the President only for cause communicated "to both Houses of Congress"; "shall report to and be under the general supervision of the Secretary . . . but shall not be under the control of, or subject to supervision by, any other officer of the Department" (42 U.S.C. 3522(a)); reports both to the Secretary and to Congress (42 U.S.C. 3523, 3524); and has independent personnel authority (42 U.S.C. 3525). The Office of Inspector General was made an independent and objective unit in the Department by Congress, inter alia, "to conduct and supervise audits and investigations relating to programs and operations . . . ; to provide leadership and coordination and recommend policies for activities designed (A) to promote economy and efficiency in the administration of, and (B) to prevent and detect fraud and abuse in, such programs and operations . . . ." (42 U.S.C. 3521). 10. Mr. Charles Gaul, Regional Labor Relations Officer for Region VII, described the structure of Region VII which is divided into several Principal Operating Components (POCs), each with its own mission and nationwide in scope (see, also, Department of Health and Human Services, 13 FLRA No. 7, 13 FLRA 39, 40-41 (1983) wherein the Authority succinctly described the administrative organization of HHS). The POCs are: Human Development Services; Health Care Financing Administration; Public Health Service, which includes the Food and Drug Administration; and Social Security Administration (Tr. 38, 39, G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 4). The Regional Director is the representative of the Secretary in the region (Principal Regional Officer) and, although not immediately responsible for administration of the programs of the POCs, exercises a coordinating function over the POCs and has been given authority to enter into labor agreements on behalf of regional employees who work for the various POCs (Tr. 39, G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 2). The Regional Director does not, however, have any authority over employees of OIG (Tr. 39, 223, Res. Exh. 27); nor may OIG employees engage in program operations (Tr. 199). 11. The Office of Audit (referred to as "Audit Agency employees" in the Certification and in the recognition clause of the parties' agreement) has been part of the OIG since the OIG was created; are serviced by the Region VII personnel office pursuant to delegation of authority by the IG; and were specifically excluded by the certification and by the recognition clause of the agreement. The Office of Investigations was part of the OIG from the inception of OIG and its employees are serviced by the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Personnel in Washington, DC; however, the Social Security Field Integrity Staff, excluded from the bargaining unit, were transferred to the OIG on November 28, 1982, and were serviced by the Region VII personnel office. The Health Financing Integrity employees of OIG were serviced by the Region VII personnel office; however, effective October 1, 1983, both the Social Security Field Integrity Staff employees and the Health Financing Integrity employees will be serviced by the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Personnel in Washington, DC (Res. Exh. 15, 16; Tr. 218-219, 260-261) (servicing of Office of Audit employees will also be transferred to Washington but no date has been fixed. Tr. 219). 12. The organization of the OIG is shown on Respondent's Exhibit 1. Under the Inspector General and the Deputy Inspector General are four divisions: Office of Investigations; Office of Program Inspections; Office of Health Financing Integrity; and Office of Audit, each headed by an Assistant Inspector General. Mr. Don Nicholson is Assistant Inspector General for Health Financing Integrity and Mr. James Francis Patton is Deputy Assistant Inspector General for Health Financing Integrity. Mr. Don McLaughlin is Regional Director of the Office of Health Financing Integrity, Region VII and Mr. Jim Wolf is Deputy Regional Director (G.C. Exh. 9). 13. On January 9, 1983, the employees transferred from Health Care Financing Administration ceased to be employees of POCs of Region VII and became employees of OIG. They immediately became subject to the independent personnel authority of the Inspector General (Tr. 257-258); immediately became part of a separate competitive area (Tr. 256); immediately became subject to the OIG career board (Tr. 253-254); and more important, their mission and function changed. As part of the OIG, their function shifted to oversight and evaluation of Health Care Financing Administration's performance (Tr. 133-134, 178-179, 191-193, 220, 319-320, 371); employee investigations became a new major duty; they assumed a new primary duty under the Civil Monetary Penalties Act (Tr. 290-292); as employees of OIG they not only acquired the statutory independence given to the OIG, but also assumed special authority, including the power to issue subpoenas and the authority to place witnesses under oath (Tr. 221); and they immediately came under the supervision and director of OIG. It is true that the immediate supervisors and most of the transferred employees did not change, but this was true only because their prior immediate supervisors, Messrs. McLaughlin and Wolf, became, respectively, Regional Director and Deputy Regional Director of the OIG Office of Health Financing Integrity. 14. Although the transferred employees continue to work in the same area (Tr. 62, 390), on May 2, 1980, OIG placed in motion directions to locate all Office of Investigation and Audit in contiguous OIG office space (Res. Exh. 9) and Inspector General Kusserow testified that such "co-location" will include all OIG employees; that the process has been substantially achieved nationwide; that it is in the process of being completed at Kansas City (Tr. 247); and Mr. McLaughlin testified that GSA was expected to sign a contract about the first of September for occupancy by OIG by December 1, 1983, in City Center Square, Kansas City, which he estimated is six to eight blocks from their present location (Tr. 390). As noted above, while the Region VII personnel office provided administrative support for Audit and Health Financing Integrity employees of the OIG, effective October 1, 1983, these employees will be serviced by Washington, DC. The record shows that such "servicing" was wholly ministerial and that all personnel decisions, e.g., evaluations, promotions, job descriptions, etc., were retained and performed by OIG. Inspector General Kusserow testified that on May 19, 1983, Mr. Don Nicholson, Assistant Inspector General for Health Financing Integrity, advised all of his Regional Directors that position descriptions would be re-written to update them to accurately reflect current duties and functions (Res. Exh. 6, Tr. 238-239) and a new standardized position description has been written for a GS-12 (Res. Exh. 7), implementation of which is pending approval of the Office of Personnel Management (Tr. 239). Conclusions The issue in this case is whether the ten employees remained in the certified bargaining unit after their transfer to the OIG. For reasons set forth hereinafter I conclude that they did not, i.e., that upon their transfer to the OIG they ceased to be part of the certified bargaining unit. The original charge quite candidly recognized that the employees in question were, " . . . transferred to the Office of the Inspector General (OIG), an office outside the bargaining unit" (G.C. Exh. 1(a)) and, although First and Second Amended Charges (G.C. Exhs. 1(b) and (1)(c) and the Complaint (G.C. Exh. 1(d)) omit the concession that they were "transferred to . . . an office outside the bargaining unit", the record firmly, and without contradiction, establishes that they were indeed transferred to an office, the OIG, outside the bargaining unit. First, the OIG is an independent entity within the Department of Health and Human Services, created by Congress specifically, as an independent and objective unit to conduct and supervise audits and investigations relating to programs and operations of the Department; to provide leadership and coordination and recommend policies for activities designed (A) to promote economy and efficiency in the administration of, and (B) to prevent and detect fraud and abuse in, such programs and operations; and to provide a means for keeping the Secretary and the Congress fully and currently informed about problems and deficiencies relating to the administration of such programs and operations and the necessity for and progress of corrective actions. (42 U.S.C. 3521). To insure the independence of the Inspector General, Congress further specifically provided that he shall report to and be under the general supervision of the Secretary, " . . . but shall not be under the control of, or subject to supervision by, any other officer of the Department." (42 U.S.C. 3522); and, inter alia, gave the Inspector General independent personnel authority (42 U.S.C. 3525(a)(6)). Second, the certification included only " . . . employees of . . . Region VII . . . " and upon their transfer, on January 9, 1983, to the OIG the employees in question ceased to be employees of Region VII or of any Principal Operating Component (POC) of Region VII. I am fully aware that each POC of Region VII is part of a POC which is nationwide in scope; nevertheless, within the meaning of the Certification and the parties' Agreement, employees of the POCs are employees of Region VII; and the Regional Director of Region VII has been given authority to enter into labor agreements on behalf of regional employees who work for the various POCs. See, also, Department of Health and Human Services, 13 FLRA No. 7, 13 FLRA 39, 40-41 (1983). The Regional Director has no authority whatever over employees of OIG (see, 42 U.S.C. 3522; Tr. 39, 209, Res. Exh. 27). On January 9, 1983, the employees in question became employees of the OIG, which is wholly independent of Region VII; were immediately subject to a competitive area wholly separate and apart from Region VII; were immediately subject to supervision and control of the OIG, which is wholly separate and independent from all other parts of the Department; were immediately subject to the independent personnel authority of the Inspector General; immediately became subject to the OIG career board; and their mission and function changed. As Mr. Patton stated, in the view of the Health Care Financing Administration, "The role of the Office of the Inspector General is to oversee HCFA. And HCFA's role was to oversee the contractors and carriers." (Tr. 325). That is, as part of the OIG, their function shifted to oversight and evaluation of Health Care Financing Administration's performance; employee investigations became a new major duty; they assumed a new primary duty under the Civil Monetary Penalties Act; they acquired the statutory independence given to the OIG, assumed new investigatory authority; including working with OIG's Office of Investigation, and were given new "tools" to carry out their investigatory duties, including the power to issue subpoenas and to place witnesses under oath. Accordingly, upon transfer to the OIG they ceased to be part of Region VII for any purpose and became, instead, part of the wholly independent OIG. The fact that the Secretary, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 3525(c), provided office space in Region VII or other equipment, supplies, facilities and services, does not affect in any manner their statutory independence as part of the OIG. Moreover, the office space and personnel services provided by Region VII has, or shortly will, terminate and the transferred employees in question will be serviced by the Personnel Office in Washington, DC and they will be located in office space wholly removed from their present location in space of Region VII. Therefore, because the transferred employees in question ceased to be " . . . employees of . . . Region VII. . . . " they no longer were included in the certified bargaining unit. Third, by clear inference and analogy, the transferred employees in question, as employees of OIG, are excluded by virtue of the nature of their work and by the fact that they became upon transfer employees of the Inspector General at the headquarters level. The Certification excluded, inter alia, "all HEW (now HHS) Audit Agency employees". The record shows that at the time of the certification, June 15, 1979, the Audit Agency was, and had been since 1976, part of the OIG. Consequently, although Mr. Hester, President of Chapter 217 testified that "The Office of the Inspector General was not discussed at all" (Tr. 412) in the negotiations of the parties' 1981 Agreement, it is apparent that action was taken to exclude one of the two parts of the OIG present in Region VII, quite probably, in light of Mr. Hester's testimony, by adopting the language of the certification without discussion. As to the other part of the OIG present in Region VII, the Office of Investigation (OI), the Charging Party, NTEU, states in its brief. "OI employees were not excluded by the language of the certification or the contract because they were already excluded from the unit by virtue of their not being employees of HHS, Kansas City. They were employees of the Inspector General at the headquarters level." (NTEU Brief, p. 10). Of course, the record shows that, on January 9, 1983, the employees in question ceased to be employees of HHS, Kansas City, and, like OI employees, became employees of the Inspector General at the headquarters level. In actuality, this is more properly a reflection of their not being part of the employee unit for bargaining purposes; but precisely the same rational applies to all employees of the OIG as all are employees of the Inspector General at the headquarters level. The Certification also excluded, inter alia, "all employees of the SSA Office of Quality Assurance (Assessment) and the SSA Office of Security and Program Integrity (Assessment)" which in the Agreement became "all employees of the SSA Office of Field Assessment". Thus, all personnel, specifically: Audit and Investigations (OIG) and SS Quality Assurance and Program Integrity (in the Agreement SS Field Assessment), engaged in oversight and/or investigation of agency performance either were not included in, or were specifically excluded from, the bargaining unit. By analogy, the employees in question, when their mission and function changed to oversight and investigation of Health Care Financing Administration's performance, including employee investigations, were excluded because the nature of their work is indistinguishable from the nature of the work of the excluded employees. As I find that the employees transferred to the OIG ceased to be part of the bargaining unit on January 9, 1983, when their transfer became effective, it is neither necessary nor appropriate in this unfair labor practice complaint proceeding to decide whether Sec. 12(b)(7) of the Statute precludes collective bargaining as to all employees of the OIG. As noted at the outset, in a complaint proceeding the certification as it exists is controlling and may not be changed, notwithstanding that, as here, unit determinations, i.e., resolution of disputes concerning the inclusion or exclusion of particular employees in the certified unit, can and must be made. What can, or should, constitute an appropriate bargaining unit are matters to be resolved in a unit determination proceeding, not in a complaint proceeding. Nevertheless, if I misconstrue the scope of the complaint proceeding and if, contrary to my determination that the employees in question ceased to be part of the bargaining unit as certified, upon their transfer to the OIG, the transferred employees were not otherwise excluded, I would find that the particular employees could not, pursuant to Sec. 12(b)(7), be included in the bargaining unit. Sec. 12(b)(7) provides: "(b) . . . nor shall a unit be determined to be appropriate if it includes-- . . . . "(7) any employee primarily engaged in investigation or audit functions relating to the work of individuals employed by an agency whose duties directly affect the internal security of the agency, but only if the functions are undertaken to ensure that the duties are discharged honestly and with integrity." (5 U.S.C. 7112(b)(7)). Upon their transfer to the OIG's Office of Health Financing Integrity, the duties of the employees in question became both "investigation" and "audit" within the meaning of Sec. 12(b)(7). Their function shifted to the oversight of the Health Care Financing Administration itself, including oversight of employees to insure that their duties are discharged honestly and with integrity. As a major new component of the OIG, the Office of Health Financing Integrity was created "to be the focal point of activities designed to control fraud, abuse and waste in the Department's health care financing programs. . . . ", Statement of Organization, Functions and Delegations of Authority, 48 Fed.Reg. 4919 (February 3, 1983) (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 14); and they assumed a major new duty, that of employee investigation. The record is clear that upon their transfer to the OIG the employees in question primarily engaged in investigation or audit functions; that such functions relate to the work of individuals whose duties directly affect the internal security of the agency; and that such functions are undertaken to ensure that the duties are discharged honestly and with integrity. Accordingly, pursuant to Sec. 12(b)(7), they may not be included in the certified bargaining unit. U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General, Region I, Boston, Massachusetts, 7 FLRA No. 141, 7 FLRA 834 (1982). Unlike the Department of Labor Inspector General, the OIG does not conduct external audits of contractors or carriers; but, rather, oversees the Health Care Financing Administration, while Health Care Financing Administration oversees the contractors and carriers. It is true that the Authority in the Department of Labor case, supra, referred to review of "employee information as travel vouchers, payroll records, time and attendance records and GSA car vouchers", which, certainly, the record does not show was addressed; but clearly the Authority recognized the broader function, namely, that: " . . . The employees in the Office of Audit are responsible for the conduct of audits of Department of Labor programs and the employees who run these programs, potentially auditing to uncover employee fraud, misuse of funds, or malfeasance." (7 FLRA at 835). Accordingly, the assertion of the General Counsel that, " . . . the oversight of HCFA's program responsibilities which may be carried on by Health Financing Integrity amounts to internal audit functions within the meaning of Section 7112(b)(7)." (G.C. Brief, p. 27) is rejected as both legally and factually untenable. Having found that the employees in question ceased to be part of the certified bargaining unit upon their transfer to the Office of the Inspector General, Respondents did not violate Secs. 16(a)(5), or (1) when, on and after January 9, 1983, they refused to recognize NTEU as the representative of the transferred employees and, because the provisions of the agreement providing for dues withholding ceased to apply, Respondents did not violate Secs. 16(a)(8) or (1) of the Statute by terminating the dues allotments. North Carolina Air National Guard, Charlotte, North Carolina, 4 FLRA No. 44, 4 FLRA 348 (1980). Accordingly, having found that Respondents did not violate the Statute as charged, it is recommended that the Authority adopt the following: ORDER The Complaint in Case No. 7-CA-30131, and the same is hereby, dismissed. WILLIAM B. DEVANEY Administrative Law Judge Dated: November 21, 1983 Washington, DC --------------- FOOTNOTES$ --------------- /1/ The Authority finds it unnecessary to pass upon the Judge's finding that the employees involved herein should be excluded from the bargaining unit because they were involved in "investigation" and "audit" duties within the meaning of section 7112(b)(7) of the Statute. /2/ For convenience of reference, sections of the Statute hereinafter are, also, referred to without inclusion of the initial "71" of the Statute reference, e.g., Section 7116(a)(5) will be referred to, simply, as "Sec. 16(a)(5)." /3/ I am aware that the certification (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 1), and Recognition and Coverage clause of the Parties' collective bargaining agreement (G.C. Exh. 1(o), Jt. Exh. 2, Art. 1, Section 1) are slightly different. Thus, the certification excluded: "All employees of SSA Office of Central Operation, all employees of the SSA Office of Quality Assurance (Assessment) and the SSA Office of Security and Program Integrity (Assessment) . . . ." (Jt. Exh. 1) (The remaining portion being the same in each document.) On the other hand, the Recognition and Coverage clause excluded: "All employees of the SSA Office of Central Operations, all employees of the SSA Office of Field Assessment . . . ." Jt. Exh. 2, Art. 1, Section). No party has relied on somewhat different exclusion of the Agreement in contrast to the exclusion of the certification. /4/ In actuality, by Order dated July 21, 1983 (G.C. Exh. 1(m)) the hearing had been rescheduled from August 25, 1983, to August 26, 1983; but by Order dated August 16, 1983, (G.C. Exh. 1(n)) was further rescheduled from August 26, 1983, back to August 25, 1983. /5/ Motion of General Counsel to Correct Transcript, to which no objection or opposition was filed, which I find meritorious, is hereby granted, except the proposed correction of page 224, line 5, which is denied. The transcript is hereby corrected as set forth in the Appendix hereto.