[ v25 p479 ]
25:0479(33)AR
The decision of the Authority follows:
25 FLRA No. 33 DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION Agency and AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO Union Case No. O-AR-1210 DECISION I. STATEMENT OF THE CASE This matter is before the Authority on exceptions to the award of Arbitrator Justin C. Smith filed by the Agency under section 7122(a) of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute and part 2425 of the Authority's Rules and Regulations. The Union filed an opposition. II. BACKGROUND AND ARBITRATOR'S AWARD This case is one of several in a dispute submitted by the parties to the Arbitrator essentially concerning official time for employees' representational activities. By agreement of the parties, a two-phase arbitration process was established to resolve the basic dispute and the resulting individual grievances. The first phase of the process involved the interpretation of the official time provisions of the Statute and the parties' collective bargaining agreement. In the second phase, the Arbitrator held hearings to resolve, by bench decisions when practicable, specific grievances pending in the various regions of the Agency. The exceptions in this case have been filed to bench decisions of the Arbitrator rendered on July 30, 1986, related to claims arising in the Agency's regional offices. In those decisions the Arbitrator generally ruled that by denying official time and related travel and per diem expenses for Union officials for the representational purposes involved, the Agency violated the parties' agreement which had been negotiated consistent with the Statute. Specifically, the Arbitrator sustained the individual grievances and awarded reimbursement for wrongfully denied official time at appropriate straight-time rates for the time spent by the grievants in performing the representational activities. He also awarded travel and per diem expenses in some instances and decided a number of issues related to the overall dispute. III. FIRST EXCEPTION A. Contentions The Agency contends that the award concerning Mary Ellen Shea, a Claims Representative in the Agency's Boston Region, is deficient on a number of grounds. The Union sought tuition, fees, official time, and travel and per diem expenses for Ms. Shea to attend Harvard University for the academic year 1986-1987, to obtain a master's degree in public administration to enhance her effectiveness as a Union representative. /1/ The Arbitrator awarded the remedy requested. The Agency principally contends that this award of the Arbitrator is contrary to section 7106 of the Statute. B. Analysis and Conclusion We agree with the Agency that the Arbitrator's award concerning Ms. Shea is contrary to section 7106 of the Statute. The Authority has consistently held that an arbitration award may not interpret or enforce a collective bargaining agreement so as to improperly deny an agency the authority to exercise its rights under section 7106. Section 7106(a)(2)(B) reserves to management officials the right to assign work. Furthermore, the assignment of training during the duty time of employees constitutes an exercise of management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B). Encompassed within this right is the discretion to determine which employees will receive particular training during duty hours. For example, U.S. Department of Justice, Immigration and Naturalization Service, Western Regional Office, San Pedro, California and American Federation of Government Employees, Immigration and Naturalization Service Council, Western Region, Local 2805, 18 FLRA No. 20 (1985). Additionally, it is well established under Authority precedent in negotiability cases that proposals which would require management to provide specific formal training or to assign employees to specific training programs during working hours are outside the duty to bargain because they infringe on management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B). For example, American Federation of Government Employees, Local 2094, AFL-CIO and Veterans Administration Medical Center, New York, New York, 22 FLRA No. 81 (1986) (proposal 6). In this case, we find that the Arbitrator's award which interprets and enforces the parties' agreement in such a way as to direct the Agency to provide Ms. Shea with a Harvard education on duty time or, in other words, to assign her the specific training of the Harvard program on duty time constitutes an improper interference with management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B). Accordingly, that portion of the Arbitrator's award which grants Ms. Shea tuition, fees, official time, and travel and per diem expenses to attend Harvard University must be set aside as contrary to section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute. /2/ IV. SECOND EXCEPTION A. Contentions The Agency contends that the portion of the award which requires the Agency to provide the Union use of a particular type of photocopy machine is contrary to section 7106 of the Statute and the Government-wide regulations concerning procurement actions. According to the Arbitrator, the parties' agreement provides that the Agency will continue to provide such office space and furnishings as were provided under component-wide agreements or other arrangements on June 10, 1980. Transcript Volume II, July 30, 1986, at 122. Because the Agency had provided a 15-sort capacity photocopy machine for the Union's use on and before that date, the Arbitrator concluded that the Agency had violated the parties' agreement and ordered that it furnish the Union an equivalent photocopy machine, as well as reimburse the Union for the costs it incurred leasing a photocopy machine during the time the Agency failed to provide one. The Agency argues that this award is contrary to its section 7106(a)(1) right to determine its budget and its section 7106(a)(2)(B) right to make determinations with respect to contracting out because it prescribes the particular equipment that must be provided to the Union. The Agency further argues that the award is contrary to 44 U.S.C. and the Government-wide regulations concerning procurement actions, 41 CFR Sections 101-25. because it orders the Agency to spend money for a purpose for which it was not appropriated and, in effect, determines that the photocopy machine leased by the Union, as well as the one the Agency must now provide, were acquired pursuant to contracts made on behalf of the Government. B. Analysis and Conclusion We find that the Agency has failed to establish that the Arbitrator's award is contrary to its right under section 7106(a)(1) of the Statute to determine its budget. Under the test set forth in American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO and Air Force Logistics Command, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 2 FLRA 604 (1980), enforced as to other matters sub nom. Department of Defense v. Federal Labor Relations Authority, 659 F.2d 1140 (D.C. Cir. 1981), cert. denied sub nom. AFGE v. FLRA, 455 U.S. 995 (1982), the award does not require the Agency to include a particular program or operation in its budget. See also Federal Employees Metal Trades Council, AFL-CIO and Department of the Navy, Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, California, 25 FLRA No. 31 (1987), slip op. at 8-9. Moreover, "(o)nly where an agency makes a substantial demonstration that an increase in costs is significant and unavoidable and is not offset by compensating benefits can an otherwise negotiable matter be found to violate the agency's right to determine its budget under section 7106(a) of the Statute." Wright-Patterson, 2 FLRA at 608. The Agency has failed to make any such showing here. The Agency also fails to establish that the award is contrary to management's right to make contracting out determinations under section 7106(a)(2)(B) or that it is contrary to law and regulations concerning procurement actions. In this regard, the Agency fails to cite any statutory or regulatory provision which would prohibit it from exercising its discretion to provide a photocopy machine for the Union to be used for labor-management relations activities. The award does not require any procurement, installation or service which does not comport with the cited statutory and regulatory requirements and restrictions. Moreover, the Arbitrator merely required the Agency to provide the Union a type of photocopy machine equivalent to the one provided the Union on June 10, 1980, based on his interpretation of the parties' agreement. Thus, the thrust of the Agency's exception constitutes nothing more than disagreement with the Arbitrator's interpretation and application of the pertinent provision of the parties' collective bargaining agreement. It is well established that such disagreement does not provide a basis for finding an award deficient. For example, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Kansas City District and National Federation of Federal Employees, Local 29, 22 FLRA No. 15 (1986), slip op. at 3. Accordingly, this exception must be denied. V. THIRD EXCEPTION A. Contentions The Agency contends that the portion of the award which requires the Agency to pay travel and per diem and to grant official time for a number of employees to attend union-sponsored labor-management relations training on July 11, 1986, is contrary to section 7121(b)(3)(C) of the Statute. In support of its contention, the Agency argues that because management filed a grievance concerning the official time and travel and per diem claims of the employees, the Arbitrator's award in this proceeding interferes with its right under section 7121(b)(3)(C) to file such a grievance. The Agency further argues that it did not deny the requested official time and travel and per diem expenses but, rather, conditionally approved the requests pending the outcome of its grievance to determine the legality of the travel and per diem expenses, the appropriateness of the official time, and the effect of the award of another arbitrator, Arbitrator Cushman, assertedly providing a diffrerent interpretation of the same provisions of the parties' agreement in another case. In its opposition, the Union acknowledges that the Agency approved official time and travel and per diem for the employees for the one-day training program. The Union maintains that management approved the requests pursuant to an earlier award by Arbitrator Smith in this dispute, in which the Arbitrator determined that Union officials were entitled to a reasonable amount of official time for labor-management relations training in grievance processing, arbitration and unfair labor practices. The Agency filed an exception to that earlier award of Arbitrator Smith, essentially alleging that the award was inconsistent with the award of another arbitrator, Arbitrator Cushman. That exception was denied by the Authority on September 16, 1985. American Federation of Government Employees and Social Security Administration, Case No. O-AR-969. The Union argues that the Agency's grievance is an improper attempt to relitigate the same issue. B. Analysis and Conclusion We find that the Agency has failed to establish that the Arbitrator's award is contrary to section 7121(b)(3)(C) of the Statute. As noted above, the dispute submitted to this Arbitrator required the application of the official time provisions of the parties' agreement to the specific grievances pending in the various regions of the Agency, which is precisely what the Arbitrator did in his award of official time and travel and per diem expenses for the employees for labor-management relations training. Thus, the Arbitrator clearly resolved part of the dispute before him. The propriety of the Agency's attempt to raise essentially the same aspect of the dispute in another grievance is not before the Authority and would have to be resolved in another proceeding. In the case before us, the essence of the Agency's exception constitutes nothing more than disagreement with the Arbitrator's interpretation and application of the parties' collective bargaining agreement in resolving the dispute before him and as such does not provide a basis for finding the award deficient. Accordingly, this exception must be denied. VI. FOURTH EXCEPTION A. Contentions The Agency contends that the portions of the award granting employees compensation at straight-time rates as a remedy for wrongfully denied official time are contrary to section 7131(d) of the Statute because there was no evidence that the Agency actually denied the requests for official time. B. Analysis and Conclusion We find based upon our decision in U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Social Security Administration and American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, 22 FLRA No. 16 (1986), request for reconsideration denied (Aug. 15, 1986), the Agency's argument that the Arbitrator violated section 7131(d) of the Statute is without merit. See also American Federation of Government Employees and Social Security Administration, 25 FLRA No. 12 (1987), request for reconsideration denied (Feb. 3, 1987), American Federation of Government Employees and Social Security Administration, 21 FLRA No. 14 (1986); Social Security Administration and American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, 19 FLRA No. 104 (1985). In this case, the Arbitrator with respect to each bench decision essentially found that the denial of official time was in violation of the parties' agreement which had been negotiated consistent with the Statute. Thus, the Arbitrator effectively found that all of the conditions of section 7131(d) had been met including that there had been a wrongful denial of official time. Consequently, the Agency has failed to establish that the bench awards granting the grievants compensation for the amount of time performing representational activities which the Arbitrator ruled should have been performed on official time are contrary to law. Accordingly, this exception must be denied. VII. FIFTH EXCEPTION A. Contentions The Agency contends that the Arbitrator exceeded his authority because he ruled on claims which were not before him and which occurred after the agreed upon claims period. B. Analysis and Conclusion With regard to the Agency's assertion that the Arbitrator exceeded his authority because he ruled on claims which were not part of the grievance before him, it is clear that the grievances resolved were integrally related to the dispute before him. There is no support in the record for the contention that in resolving those aspects of the dispute pending in the various regional offices of the Agency that he ruled on any matters which were not before him as part of the overall grievance proceeding. It is therefore clear that the Agency's assertions constitute nothing more than disagreement with the Arbitrator's resolution of the issues before him and generally with his interpretation and application of the parties' collective bargaining agreement. This disagreement provides no basis for finding an award deficient under the Statute. Social Security Administration, 25 FLRA No. 12, slip op. at 5. With regard to the Agency's assertion that the Arbitrator exceeded his authority by ruling on claims which occurred after the agreed upon claims period, it is clear from the record, and as previously noted by the Authority, that prior to the first phase of the arbitration the parties agreed that the Arbitrator was authorized to resolve specific claims in the overall dispute in the Agency's regional offices and that his awards were to be prospectively as well as retroactively applied. Social Security Administration, 25 FLRA No. 12, slip op. at 4-5. It is therefore clear that the Agency's assertions constitute nothing more than disagreement with the Arbitrator's resolution of the issues before him and generally with his interpretation and application of the parties' collective bargaining agreement. This disagreement provides no basis for finding an award deficient under the Statute. Accordingly, this exception must be denied. VIII. DECISION For the reasons stated above, the award of tuition, fees, official time, and travel and per diem to Mary Ellen Shea in order for her to attend Harvard University is set aside. The Agency's exceptions to the other bench awards of the Arbitrator in this proceeding are denied. Issued, Washington, D.C., February 3, 1987. Jerry L. Calhoun, Chairman Henry B. Frazier III, Member Jean McKee, Member FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY --------------- FOOTNOTES$ --------------- (1) The employee initially requested leave without pay (LWOP) to attend the Harvard program, pursuant to a provision in the parties' collective bargaining agreement assertedly providing that LWOP for such purposes will normally be approved. The Agency denied the request. The Union argued before the Arbitrator that the denial of LWOP was contrary to the parties' agreement and past practice. While the Agency indeed may have been obligated to grant the request under its agreement with the Union, see Local 1917, American Federation of Government Emmployees and United States Immigration and Naturalization Service, Eastern Region, 13 FLRA 77 (1983), it does not appear that the Arbitrator ruled on the employee's entitlement to LWOP in this proceeding. That issue therefore is not before the Authority. (2) In view of our decision, it is not necessary to address the Agency's other contentions concerning this award.