[ v27 p714 ]
27:0714(79)NG
The decision of the Authority follows:
27 FLRA No. 79 ILLINOIS NURSES ASSOCIATION Union and VETERANS ADMINISTRATION MEDICAL CENTER, NORTH CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Agency Case Nos. 0-NG-1209 0-NG-1224 DECISION AND ORDER ON NEGOTIABILITY ISSUES I. Statement of the Case This case is before the Authority because of a negotiability appeal filed under section 7106(a)(2)(D) and (E) of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute (the Statute) and concerns the negotiability of 12 proposals. II. Preliminary Matters The Veterans Administration (VA or Agency) raises two common issues with respect to the negotiability of each proposal in this case, namely that: (1) Title 38 of the United States Code provides the Administrator of the VA with statutory authority to regulate conditions of employment of professional medical employees in the Department of Medicine and Surgery (DM&S) and therefore the Agency has no duty to bargain under the Statute; and (2) that the proposals are barred from negotiations by its "legislative regulations" which have the force and effect of law. For the following reasons we reject the Agency's contentions. In Colorado Nurses Association and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Ft. Lyons, Colorado, 25 FLRA No. 66 (1987), petition for review filed sub nom. Colorado Nurses Association v. FLRA, No. 87-1104 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 25, 1987), we held that the Statute applies to DM&S employees and that as a general matter the Agency has a duty to bargain over their conditions of employment. /1/ In so holding, we rejected the Agency's contentions that certain sections of Title 38 barred negotiations under the Statute of DM&S employees' conditions of employment and that the Agency's personnel regulations constitute "legislative regulations" which have the force and effect of law. To the extent that similar issues are presented here, we reaffirm our holdings for the reasons stated in VAMC, Ft. Lyons. In addition, since the Agency's personnel regulations apply only within the VA itself, they are not Government-wide regulations within the meaning of section 7117(a)(1) of the Statute. See VAMC, Ft. Lyons. An agency's regulation can bar negotiations on a conflicting Union proposal, therefore, only if a compelling need exists for that regulation under section 7117(a)(2) of the Statute and section 2424.11 of our Regulations. In American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 3804 and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Madison Region, 21 FLRA No. 104 (1986), the Authority stated that in order to show a compelling need for an agency regulation, an agency must: (1) identify a specific agency-wide regulation; (2) show that there is a conflict between its regulation and the proposal; and (3) demonstrate that its regulation is supported by a compelling need with reference to the standards in section 2424.11 of our Regulations. The Agency does not make any claim that a compelling need exists for those regulations which are asserted to bar negotiations on Proposals 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, and 12. See the Appendix to this decision for the specific regulations alleged by the Agency to bar negotiations on those proposals. Therefore, the Agency's regulations cannot serve to bar negotiations on the proposals listed above. Accordingly, we find that there is no conflict between Title 38 of the United States Code and the duty to bargain under section 7117 of the Statute. We also find that the proposals are not barred from negotiations under section 7117(a)(2) by agency regulations for which a compelling need exists. To the extent that the Agency raises those same general arguments as to each proposal at issue, we will not restate those contentions and we will not further consider those issues. We now turn to the specific proposals and the other issues involved in this case. III. Proposal 1 Article VIII, Existing Benefits. Section 2. No existing local practices or policies which affect the terms and conditions under which nurses in the unit work shall be eliminated or modified without consultation between the Medical Center and the Association. Any agreements reached shall be consistent with Title 38 and any Government-wide rules and regulations. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency raises no arguments regarding the nonnegotiability of this proposal other than those addressed in Section II of this decision. The Union asserts that the Agency's objection to this proposal merely reasserts its objection to collective bargaining in general. B. Analysis and Conclusions Proposal 1 requires that the Agency consult with the Union before eliminating or modifying nurses' conditions of employment and that any agreements which result from consultation be consistent with Title 38 and any Government-wide regulations. The Agency's sole contention as to the negotiability of this proposal has been rejected for the reasons set forth in Section II of this decision and the record in this case contains no Agency assertion of any law or Government-wide regulation which would bar negotiation on this proposal. It is well established that the parties bear the burden of creating a record upon which the Authority can make a negotiability determination. National Federation of Federal Employees, Local 1167 v. FLRA, 681 F.2d 886 (D.C. Cir. 1982), aff'g National Federation of Federal Employees, Local 1167 and Department of the Air Force, Headquarters, 31st Combat Support Group (TAC), Homestead Air Force Base, Florida, 6 FLRA 574 (1981). A party failing to meet this burden acts at its peril. Consequently, because the Agency has raised no other grounds on which to base a finding that this proposal is outside the duty to bargain and because there is no basis in the record to indicate that Proposal 1 is intended to be applied in a manner inconsistent with any law or Government-wide regulation, we find that this proposal is negotiable. IV. Proposal 2 Article X, Grievance Procedure. Section 1. The Medical Center and the Association desire that all employees in the unit be treated fairly and equitably. It is intended that this grievance procedure will provide a means for resolving complaints and grievances at the lowest level possible and the Medical Center and the Association agree to work toward this end. Section 2. Grievances include any disputes which arise out of a claim that any provision of this Agreement has not been complied with, or out of a claim for dissatisfaction by an employee arising out of a work related situation such as interpersonal work relationships or work conditions. The procedures set forth in this Article are available to all nurses as a way of seeking adjustment of such grievances. The procedures do not apply to: (1) any claimed violation of subchapter III of Chapter 73, Title 5 (relating to prohibited political activities); or (2) retirement, life insurance, or health insurances; or (3) a suspension or removal under Section 7532 of Title 5; or (4) any examination certificate, or appointment; or reduction in grade or pay of any employee; (6) all actions taken by the Chief Medical Director on the basis of Disciplinary Board recommendations; or (7) in the case of Nurse Anesthetists all actions and recommendations resulting from competency reviews by a Professional Standards Board. (There is no item (5) in this Section.) Section 4. Nothing herein shall prevent any nurse from handling her own grievance. However, the President or a Representative from the Association must be given an opportunity to be present at the adjustment. The Association shall not be bound as a precedent by the settlement of any grievance where it does not officially represent the nurse. During any step in the grievance procedure, a nurse may have assistance or representation from the Association. The representative shall be permitted a reasonable amount of official duty time to consult and prepare the grievance and response. Such consultations shall be arranged with notification and approval of the respective supervisors, and shall not interfere with work responsibilities of the nurse involved. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency contends that negotiations on this proposal are precluded by the authority of the VA Administrator under Title 38 and by the Agency's "legislative regulations," issues previously addressed in Section II of this decision. The Agency also claims that Proposal 2 conflicts with VA Manual MP-5, Part II, and DM&S Supplement, Chapter 8, because the proposal does not take into account that aspect of its regulations which provides for patient care needs to be the primary consideration in adjudicating grievances. The Agency asserts that a compelling need exists for these regulations to bar negotiations on Proposal 2. The Union disputes the Agency's contentions. B. Analysis and Conclusions Proposal 2 establishes a negotiated grievance procedure which would exclude "all actions taken by the Chief Medical Director on the basis of Disciplinary Board recommendations." This exclusion relates to disciplinary actions and adverse action procedures for disputes over alleged professional misconduct or incompetence. These matters are covered by the appeals procedures established under 38 U.S.C. Section 4110. This proposal is, therefore, to the same effect as Proposal 1 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons. In that case, we found that the proposal, requiring the establishment of a grievance and arbitration procedure which excluded matters covered under Section 4110 of Title 38, was within the duty to bargain. The Agency claims that Proposal 2 is barred by regulations for which a compelling need exists. The Agency has not shown that without the grievance procedure set forth in its regulations it would be unable to accomplish its patient care mission in a manner consistent with the requirements of an effective and efficient government. We conclude, therefore, that the regulations cited by the Agency are not "essential" within the meaning of section 2424.11 of our Regulations so as to bar negotiations on Proposal 2. Thus, for the reasons set forth in VAMC, Ft. Lyons, we find that Proposal 2 in this case is likewise within the duty to bargain. V. Proposal 3 Article XII, Hours of Duty. Section 2. The duty schedules of full-time nurses shall be regular tours of duty established as a 40 hour basic work week in each administrative work week (calendar week). It will consist of eight consecutive hours per day, exclusive of one-half hour meal time where the schedule provides time for a meal. Those employees who work an eight hour shift without a specified meal period will be immediately available and eat their meals at their worksites. All nurses shall be provided with at least 15 hours of non-duty time between the completion of one scheduled tour of duty and the beginning of the next scheduled tour of duty, except at the nurse's specific request or agreement for less than 15 hours. Section 3. Each nursing unit should have a pattern of time worked out that would provide safe practice with a fair and equitable distribution of time. Nurses will not be scheduled to work for more than six (6) consecutive days except by mutual agreement in writing. Every effort will be made to give nurses every third weekend off. For purposes of this Agreement a weekend is considered to be Saturday and Sunday. Section 4. Individual nurses may request and be assigned to evening or night tours of duty indefinitely. Such nurses may be returned to daytime tours of duty for the purpose of closer supervision, training or development. The remaining nurses assigned to the Nursing Unit will rotate from days to evenings or nights but not more than two tours within a one week period unless requested otherwise in writing by the nurse. Section 5. Requests of nurses for reassignment or transfer to areas of clinical interest or personal preference will be considered in light of the overall needs of the Nursing Service. Preference will be given to qualified nurses presently employed when a vacancy in another area is available. When an employee is accepted for transfer to another position or unit, such transfer will be implemented within ninety (90) days following acceptance. Section 11. Overtime requests may be approved, or other arrangements may be made by the Medical Center if a nurse advises the supervisor that he/she is unable to complete the minimum duties required professionally during a tour of duty. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency contends that Proposal 3 is inconsistent with management's rights to direct employees and assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(A) and (B) of the Statute because the scheduling of nurses for duty would be based on the circumstances of individual nurses rather than the patient care needs of the Agency. Further, the Agency argues that Sections 2 and 4 of this proposal concern matters which are negotiable only at the election of the Agency under section 7106(b)(1) of the Statute because these sections concern the numbers, types and grades of employees or positions assigned to a tour of duty. According to the Agency, these sections would improperly require the Agency to adjust scheduling to fit the concerns of individual nurses. The Agency also claims that Proposal 3 conflicts with VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapters 7 and 11 and the DM&S Supplement, because the proposal does not take into account that aspect of its regulations which provides for patient care needs to be the primary consideration in the scheduling of hours of duty. The Agency asserts that a compelling need exists for these regulations to bar negotiations on this proposal. The Union asserts that Proposal 3 in its entirety consists of current contract language which has been in effect for several years and which has been approved by the Agency in the past. Further, as to sections 2 and 3 of this proposal, the Union contends that the Agency has confused hours of work with the assignment of work. Finally, the Union contends that Section 4 constitutes an appropriate arrangement under section 7106(b)(3). B. Analysis and Conclusions Section 2 Section 2 of this proposal would prevent the Agency from changing nurses' schedules to meet its patient care needs. This portion of the proposal would, among other things, prescribe regular tours of duty and preclude split shifts. Section 2 is to the same effect as Proposal 2 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons, which required the agency to establish regular tours of duty and prevented the agency from establishing split shifts or splitting nurses' days off. In that case we found that the proposal was nonnegotiable because it directly interfered with management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute by preventing the agency from scheduling an employee to perform particular duties on a specific shift in a manner consistent with its patient care requirements. Section 2 likewise would directly interfere with the Agency's right to assign work and therefore is outside the duty to bargain. In view of this disposition, it is not necessary to address the Agency's additional contention that this section concerns matters which are negotiable only at the election of the Agency under section 7106(b)(1) of the Statute. Section 3 The first sentence of Section 3 of this proposal provides that there should be a fair and equitable distribution of time in the scheduling of nurses' tours of duty. This sentence is to the same effect as the first sentence of Proposal 6 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons, which we found to be within the duty to bargain. The proposal in VAMC, Ft. Lyons provided that evening and night duty would be distributed as equitably as possible. We found that the proposal was a procedure to ensure fairness and equity in the assignment of duties and was not concerned with whether employees will or will not be required to perform particular patient care duties. Similarly, a provision to fairly and equitably assign overtime was found to be negotiable in American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 1631 and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Chillicothe, Ohio, 25 FLRA No. 26 (1987). Here, the Agency has not demonstrated that this portion of the proposal would directly interfere with its right to assign work to employees. Therefore, the first sentence of Section 3 is within the duty to bargain. The second sentence of Section 3 establishes a limitation on the Agency's ability to determine the work schedules of its nursing employees. It limits the ability of the Agency to schedule nurses for more than six consecutive days. The effect of this limitation is to prevent management from changing nursing schedules to meet its patient care needs. There is no provision in this sentence that mandates that assignments take into account the nursing skills necessary to meet the hospital's patient care requirements. This sentence is therefore distinguishable from Proposal 6 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons because that proposal recognized and provided for the skills and qualifications of nurses needed for patient care. Rather, the second sentence of Section 3 is to the same effect as Proposal 2 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons, which would have restricted management's right to determine employee work schedules by, for example, prescribing regular tours of duty and precluding split shifts and split days off. We found that Proposal 2 in that case directly interfered with management's right to assign work by preventing it from scheduling an employee to perform particular duties on a specific shift consistent with the agency's patient care requirements. Because the second sentence of Section 3 would interfere with management's right to assign work, it is not a negotiable procedure and is outside the Agency's duty to bargain. The remainder of Section 3 would require the Agency to make "every effort" to give nurses every third weekend off. In Proposal 4 of VAMC, Ft. Lyons, we found that language which required the agency to make "every attempt" to avoid replacing nonprofessional employees with staff nurses constituted a substantive condition which interfered with management's right to assign work. The term "every effort" as used in Section 3 creates the same substantive limitation as that in VAMC, Ft. Lyons; the Agency is constrained from assigning a nurse with specialized skills during the nurse's scheduled free weekend even though the specialized skills may be needed for particular patient care needs. We find, therefore, that the remaining portion of Section 3 imposes a substantive condition on management's right to assign work to employees. Rather than preserving management's right to assign work, the language restricts the exercise of that right. For this reason, we find that the remainder of Section 3 directly interferes with management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute. Section 4 The first portion of Section 4 of the proposal requires that the Agency, if requested, assign individual nurses to evening or night tours of duty "indefinitely" but would allow the Agency to return those nurses to daytime duty for the purposes set forth in the proposal. The effect of this portion of Section 4, therefore, is to require that the Agency assign certain nurses to specific tours of duty. By thus requiring the Agency to grant a nurse's request for assignment to a particular tour of duty, this portion of the proposal would restrict management's ability to assign that nurse to a different tour of duty where it determines that his or her specialized skills are needed to perform particular duties. That is, the determinative factor in assigning nurses to tours of duty under this section of the proposal is the individual nurse's request, not the patient care needs of the Agency. This portion of the proposal is, therefore, to the same effect6 as Proposal 2 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons, which required the VA to establish "regular" tours of duty. Consequently, for the reasons stated in our discussion of that proposal, we find that this portion of Section 4 of the proposal is likewise outside the Agency's duty to bargain. Compare National Federation of Federal Employees, Local 1798 and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Martinsburg, West Virginia, 27 FLRA No. 37 (1987) (Proposal 9) (proposal requiring management to grant employee request for shift assignment held negotiable because it provided for the patient care needs of the agency). The remaining portion of Section 4 places a limitation on the Agency's ability to determine the work schedules of its nursing employees. It requires the Agency to rotate certain nurses from the day shift to the evening or night shifts within the limitation stated in the proposal. The effect of this portion of the proposal is to prevent the Agency from changing its nursing schedules to meet its patient care needs. This portion of Section 4 is distinguishable from Proposal 3 which we found to be negotiable as a "procedure" in VAMC, Ft. Lyons. The parties in that case specifically acknowledged, and thereby protected, the agency's exercise of its discretion with regard to its unique patient care needs. This portion of the proposal, however, is to the same effect as Proposal 2 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons, which restricted management's right to determine employee work schedules by, for example, prescribing regular tours of duty and precluding split shifts and split days off regardless of the agency's work requirements and whether a particular employee's skills were needed on a particular shift. We found that the proposal in that case directly interfered with management's right to assign work. Because this portion of Section 4 would similarly interfere with management's right to assign work, it is not a negotiable procedure and is outside the duty to bargain. The Union claims that Section 4 constitutes an appropriate arrangement within the meaning of section 7106(b)(3) of the Statute for employees adversely affected by management's decision to schedule those employees for more than one tour of duty in a given workweek. The Union states that by limiting management's ability to change an employee's tour of duty the proposal protects employees against the "adverse consequences" of multiple tours of duty. Even assuming, however, that Section 4 constitutes an "arrangement" for employees adversely affected by management's right to assign work, it would not be an "appropriate" arrangement within the meaning of section 7106(b)(3). Limiting management to one change in an employee's tour of duty in a workweek would excessively interfere with management's right to assign work so as to meet the requirements of its patient care needs. For this reason, we cannot find that Section 4 is an appropriate arrangement within the meaning of section 7106(b)(3). Section 5 We find that Section 5, except for the last sentence, is within the duty to bargain. Section 5 provides, among other things, that unit employees may request reassignment to other areas and that they will be given preference for vacancies in those areas. Section 5 is distinguishable from Proposal 5 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons, requiring that preference will be given to nurses currently employed. We found that proposal to be nonnegotiable based upon the union's statement as to the intended effect of the proposal. The union stated that the proposal in that case permitted management to select a candidate from outside the agency only where there were no internal candidates. Because it limited the sources from which management would make selections to fill bargaining unit vacancies, namely, promotion or reassignment from within the agency where there are qualified internal candidates, we found that the proposal directly interfered with management's rights under section 7106(a)(2)(C). The Union in this case, however, states that the purpose of Section 5 is to insure that unit nurses will know what job opportunities are available so that they can apply and be considered and thus be able to realize their goals for different work experiences. Section 5 therefore has the same effect as the first paragraph of Proposal 2 in National Treasury Employees Union and Department of the Treasury, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, 26 FLRA No. 60 (1987). That portion of Proposal 2 provided that unit employees be given priority consideration in filling vacancies and we held that it was negotiable. Based on the intent of Section 5 that unit employees have the opportunity to be considered, but not necessarily be selected, we find that this portion of the proposal does not directly interfere with management's rights under section 7106(a)(2)(C). The last sentence of Section 5 requires the Agency to implement reassignments within 90 days of the acceptance of the employee for transfer. This part of Section 5 is to the same effect as Proposal 7 in American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 1738 and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Salisbury, North Carolina, 27 FLRA No. 13 (1987). In that case, the proposal required management to put an employee who had been selected for a position into that position within 2 weeks. We held that the proposal violated management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute. For the reasons stated in VAMC, Salisbury, we find that the last sentence of Section 5 interferes with management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B). Section 11 Section 11 constitutes a negotiable procedure by which the Agency will exercise its right to assign work. The Agency may use whatever means it desires to meet staffing needs when a nurse notifies a supervisor that he or she is unable to complete the tour of duty. As the Union indicates, overtime is merely one option available to the Agency. The Agency retains the ability to select among all the options available to it, including mandatory overtime. See American Federation of Government Employees, National Joint Council of Food Inspection Locals and Department of Agriculture, Food Safety and Quality Service, Washington, D.C., 9 FLRA 663 (1982). Compelling Need Finally, the Agency claims that Proposal 3 is barred by regulations for which a compelling need exists. Because Section 2, Section 3 (except for the first sentence), Section 4, and Section 5, have been found to be nonnegotiable, we need not reach the issue of compelling need for regulations to bar those portions of Proposal 3. We turn to the Agency's allegation of compelling need as it pertains to the portions of Proposal 3 which we have found are otherwise negotiable. The Agency contends that the proposal conflicts with that aspect of its regulations which requires patient care needs to be the primary consideration in scheduling the work of nurses. However, we found that the first sentence of Section 3 is consistent with the Agency's patient care needs. We also found that under Section 11 the Agency retained every available option concerning the scheduling of overtime. Consequently, we conclude that the first sentence of Section 3 and Section 11 do not conflict with the patient care requirements of the Agency's regulations and, therefore, that those portions of Proposal 3 are not barred from negotiation by an agency regulation for which a compelling need exists. VI. Proposal 4 Article XIII, Salaries. Section 1. The Medical Center will participate in the Chicago Hospital Council's annual survey of salaries paid to nurses in public and private hospitals throughout the area. The Medical Center will make the information available to the Association. The Association may also provide authenticated information and data pertinent to the above survey. Such information and data will be considered by the Medical Center, along with the facts it has obtained, in reaching a decision on recommendations for special pay rates or salary adjustments. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency contends that Proposal 4 violates its right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) because it would have to assign someone to review any data submission made by the Union. The Agency states that the proposal would also require participation in a specific wage survey, while the Agency does not have to participate in such a survey under statutory requirements which remove this matter from conditions of employment under section 7103(a)(14)(C) of the Statute. The Union argues that the Agency has misrepresented the meaning of Proposal 4. Specifically, the Union asserts that the proposal merely provides for Agency consideration of the Union's salary survey. Further, while it acknowledges that wage setting is outside the collective bargaining process, the Union asserts that the proposal provides a procedure by which it can make some contribution to the wage determination. The Union states that the Agency participates in the Chicago Hospital Council's wage survey by its own choice. B. Analysis and Conclusions We find that the proposal requiring the Agency's participation in the Chicago Hospital Council's wage survey is negotiable. Under 38 U.S.C. Section 4107(g) the VA Administrator may increase the rates of basic pay of nurses and other professional medical employees on a nationwide, local, or other geographic basis. The increase in the rate of basic pay may be made to provide pay competitive with that paid to the same category of personnel at non-Federal facilities in the same labor market. Under VA regulations, the Facility Director is responsible for submitting a request for a change in the rate of basic pay. VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 3-5d. A request which is approved by officials within DM&S above the level of the facility is forwarded to the VA Administrator for concurrence. Therefore, the VA Administrator has discretion under 38 U.S.C. Section 4107(g) not only to adjust rates of basic pay but to do so based on information as to salary rates at non-Federal hospitals in a given locality. The proposal simply outlines a series of steps which the Agency is to follow in gathering information on salary rates for nurses in the local area. It establishes a procedure whereby the Agency exercises its discretion under law regarding possible increases in the rates of basic pay for nurses. The Agency's contention as to section 7103(a)(14)(C) is, therefore, inapposite. The proposal here concerns procedures for developing information on salary rates, a matter which is not specifically addressed by 38 U.S.C. Section 4107(g). Thus we find that the portion of the proposal requiring the Agency's participation in the Chicago Hospital Council survey is within the duty to bargain. /2/ We also find that Proposal 4 does not interfere with the Agency's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B). The proposal would allow the Union to submit data regarding wage rates in the area. The proposal is silent concerning who is to accomplish the review of the Union's submission. Thus, the Agency retains total discretion to assign the task of reviewing the data. Moreover, taken literally, the Agency's argument would mean that any proposal which required management to take some action, for example, merely giving notice to the Union of some proposed change in a condition of employment, would interfere with management's right to assign work. Construed in this way, section 7106(a)(2)(B) would completely nullify the duty to bargain because no obligation of any kind could be placed on management by negotiation. Compare American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO and Air Force Logistics Command, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 2 FLRA 604, 607 (1980), enforced sub nom. Department of Defense v. FLRA, 659 F.2d 1140 (D.C. Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 455 U.S. 945 (1982), where the agency argued that a proposal would violate its right to determine its budget because implementation of the proposal would impose a cost on management. The Authority found that such a construction of the Statute could preclude negotiation on virtually all otherwise negotiable proposals, since, to one extent or another, most proposals would have the effect of imposing costs upon the agency which would require the expenditure of appropriated agency funds. See also American Federation of Government Employees v. FLRA, 785 F.2d 333, 338 (D.C. Cir. 1986) ("If an employer was released from its duty to bargain whenever it had suffered economic hardship, the employer's duty to bargain would practically be non-existent in a large proportion of cases."). Consequently, Proposal 4 is within the duty to bargain. VII. Proposal 5 /3/ Article XV, Education. Section 1. Nursing inservice training conducted at the Medical Center will normally be available to all nurses covered by this Agreement whose assignment is pertinent to the training and whose knowledge, skills, and performance are likely to be enhanced by such training. Such training will, insofar as possible, be conducted during the duty hours of the nurses involved. Section 2. Where appropriate, the Medical Center will authorize absences without charge to leave, and will authorize per diem expenses, travel, and fees of nurses to attend educational lectures, seminars, and courses of instruction. Such authorization will be made subject to the staffing needs of the Nursing Service and/or availability of funds for educational purposes. The Medical Center agrees that employees covered by this Agreement shall be given a fair share of funds from those available for educational expenses. Consideration will also be given to the developmental needs of individual nurses in the present or planned assignment. Insofar as possible, such training opportunities will be distributed equitably among the professional nursing staff. This provision will also apply to the attendance at educational lectures, seminars, and courses of instruction conducted by the Association, the District of the Association and the American Nurses Association for the purposes of professional improvement. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency contends that the proposal violates management's right to assign work because it specifies who is to receive training and when they are to receive it. The Union asserts that the proposal merely provides staff training opportunities for nurses on all shifts and that actual approval and discretion remain with the Agency. B. Analysis and Conclusions The Authority has held that proposals requiring an Agency to provide training are outside the duty to bargain because the assignment of training constitutes an assignment of work. American Federation of Government Employees, Local 1760, AFL-CIO and Department of Health and Human Services, Social Security Administration, 23 FLRA No. 21 (1986) (Proposal 8). Inservice training is job-related training conducted during duty hours at the work place. Section 1 of this proposal would require that inservice training would "normally" be available to all nurses to whom the training would be pertinent. This section of the proposal would further provide that the training, "insofar as possible," be conducted during duty time. Section 2 of this proposal would impose an obligation on the Agency "where appropriate" to authorize employees to attend off-premises training during duty hours. It is well established that language such as "normally" and "insofar as possible" which imposes substantive conditions on management's exercise of its reserved rights to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute renders proposals nonnegotiable. See Congressional Research Employees Association and Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, 25 FLRA No. 21 (1987) (Proposals 1 and 2) (finding that the terms "to the extent that it is practicable" and "whenever possible" create substantive limitations on agency's rights); American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 2786 and Defense Mapping Agency, 20 FLRA 193 (1985) (Proposal 1) (rejecting the union's contention that the phrase "shall attempt where possible" did not bind management action). Rather than providing discretion for the Agency, the substantive conditions create an expectation that will be met, except in unspecified situations. For this reason, we find that the proposal directly interferes with management's right to assign work and is outside the duty to bargain. VIII. Proposal 6 Article XV, Leave. Section 3. The Medical Center shall determine the number of employees that can be permitted to be on annual leave from any unit or similar areas of assignment at the same time during any period of the year. The Medical Center will post a schedule in each unit or area of assignment which contains that information at the beginning of each calendar year. Requests for annual leave of one week or more shall be made and acted upon in accordance with the list at that time. Where there is a conflict in choices for vacation period, the conflict will be resolved by the Head Nurse and/or Coordinator. In order to assure a fair and equitable rotation of desirable vacation periods, supervisors will consider all factors in granting annual leave for vacation purposes. Other things being equal, conflicts in selection of vacation dates will be resolved in favor of the employee with the most total Federal service as determined by the service computation dates. Assuming that the time is available in accordance with the schedule posted by the Medical Center, an employee may request leave to begin on any day of the week. After annual vacation periods have been assigned in accordance with the foregoing, any other requests for annual leave in periods of one week or more shall be made four weeks in advance. Preference for choice of time will be given to the nurse first requesting the particular period. Requests will be individually considered to assure adequate coverage over the Christmas and New Year holiday period. Equitable consideration will be givden to all requests in the Nursing unit on a year to year basis. Section 4. After annual leave periods have been requested and approved, changes will not be made by the nurse or by the Medical Center except in cases of extreme emergency. Nurses may request changes which do not affect the approved leave of another employee or they may request an exchange of periods which is acceptable to the other nurse. Every effort will be made by the Medical Center not to interrupt a period of annual leave by calling a nurse back from leave except for emergencies. Except for emergency call back, nurses will return from a period of annual leave on the date and at the time specified on the approved leave request. Section 8. Nurses who are elected to full-time positions with the Association shall be granted leave without pay for up to one (1) year. Upon request and approval by the Medical Center Director such leave may be extended. A nurse on leave without pay as provided in this Section will be returned to his/her former position or a comparable position held by him/her prior to commencing such leave. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency contends that the proposal violates management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute. The Union contends that Section 3 of its proposal is not an assignment of work to the Head Nurse because someone (the Head Nurse or another supervisor) will resolve conflicts in leave requests. The Union also states that Sections 4 and 8 do not create "leave upon demand" conditions and that safeguards for the Agency are present. B. Analysis and Conclusions Section 3 The fourth sentence of Section 3 of this proposal requires the Head Nurse and/or Coordinator to resolve conflicts in choices for vacation period. By requiring that all vacation conflicts be resolved by the Head Nurse and/or Coordinator, this section prescribes a specific duty which is to be performed by the Head Nurse and/or Coordinator under certain circumstances. The Authority has consistently held that management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) encompasses the right to assign specific duties to particular individuals, including management officials, and that proposals which interfere with this right are nonnegotiable. For example, American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 1858 and U.S. Army Missile Command, the U.S. Army Test, Measurement, and Diagnostic Equipment Support Group, the U.S. Army Information Systems Command-Redstone Arsenal Commissary, 27 FLRA No. 14 (1987); National Association of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local R14-87 and Department of the Army and the Air Force, Kansas Army National Guard, 19 FLRA 381 (1985); American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 32 and Office of Personnel Management, 14 FLRA 278 (1984), aff'd mem. sub nom. Local 32, AFGE v. FLRA, No. 84-1251 (D.C. Cir. May 10, 1985). Since this proposal requires the Agency to assign certain tasks to the Head Nurse and/or Coordinator it violates the right to assign work and is nonnegotiable. The same reasoning applies to those portions of Section 3 which provide for supervisors to perform certain tasks. However, these defects of the proposal are easily cured. See U.S. Army Missile Command, 27 FLRA No. 14, slip op. at 13. The fifth and sixth sentences of Section 3 provide for a rotation of desirable vacation periods with conflicts in choices to be determined by service computation dates. Provision 1 in National Association of Government Employees, Local R4-75 and U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Blue Ridge Parkway, 24 FLRA No. 7 (1986) provided for conflicts in scheduling leave to be resolved by service computation dates and rotated thereafter. We found the procedure to be negotiable. Consequently, except for the fourth sentence, Section 3 is within the duty to bargain. Section 4 Section 4 prohibits the Agency from changing employee leave plans, once approved. For example, this portion of the proposal would (1) prevent the Agency from rescinding its approval of leave requests; and (2) prohibit the Agency from calling an employee back to work, except in emergencies. This proposal is not a negotiable procedure since it directly interferes with management's right to assign work. The right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute includes the right to determine when the work which has been assigned will be performed. American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 2263 and Department of the Air Force, Headquarters, 1606th Air Base Wing (MAC), Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico, 15 FLRA 580, 583 (1984). In that case, the Authority held that Proposal 4, requiring the granting of annual leave to an employee where the need for leave is clearly documented, violated management's right to assign work because it deprived the Agency of the employee's services. Because Section 4 of this proposal precludes the Agency from rescinding leave approval or calling an employee back from leave, it violates the Agency's right to assign work. As in Proposal 4 of VAMC, Ft. Lyons, terms which impose a substantive condition, such as "every effort" or "extreme emergency," limit the Agency's right to take action. For these reasons, we find that Section 4 directly interferes with management's right to assign work and is outside the Agency's duty to bargain. Compare Blue Ridge Parkway, 24 FLRA No. 7 (Provision 2) (provision notifying employees that they could be called back from leave in an emergency held not to interfere with management's right to assign work because management would not be limited to any definition of emergency not precluded from calling employees back for other reasons). As to whether Section 4 constitutes an appropriate arrrangement, we again note that this section is to the same effect as Proposal 4 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons. We found that because Proposal 4 in that case would prevent management from reassigning nurses in all situations except "emergencies," it would totally abrogate management's right to assign work. Proposals which totally abrogate a management right do not constitute appropriate arrangements under section 7106(b)(3) of the Statute. See National Association of Government Employees, Local R7-23 and Department of the Air Force, Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, 23 FLRA No. 97 (1986). We conclude, therefore, that Section 4 in this case excessively interferes with management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) and is outside the duty to bargain. See U.S. Army Missile Command, 27 FLRA No. 14 (Provision 9). Section 8 The first two sentences of Section 8 establish an absolute right to leave without pay whenever a bargaining unit employee is elected to a full-time Union office. Proposals which leave management no discretion to deny such requests regardless of the necessity for that employee's services have been held to be nonnegotiable. See American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 2263 and Department of the Air Force, Headquarters, 1606th Air Base Wing (MAC), Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico, 15 FLRA 580 (1984) (Proposal 4). For the reasons stated in Kirtland AFB, we find the first two sentences of Section 8 to be nonnegotiable. The last sentences of this section provides that an employee returning from leave without pay will be placed in his or her former position or a comparable position held by the employee before commencing the leave. This proposal restricts the positions to which the Agency can assign returning employees. That is, it would limit the assignment of returning employees to (1) the employee's former position, or (2) another position formerly held by the employee and comparable to the employee's last position. This would preclude assignment of the employee to a comparable, similar position, but which the employee had not previously held, or to any other available position. This constitutes a violation of management's reserved right under section 7106(a)(2)(A) to assign employees and is outside the duty to bargain. This section is similar to Proposal XIII in American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO and Air Force Logistics Command, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 2 FLRA 604, 626-27 (1980), aff'd sub nom. Department of Defense v. FLRA, 659 F.2d 1140 (D.C. Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 455 U.S. 945 (1982), which was found to violate management's rights to assign employees. See also Fort Knox Teachers Association and Fort Knox Dependents Schools, 26 FLRA No. 108 (1987). Thus, we find that the last sentence of Section 8 is nonnegotiable. IX. Proposal 7 Article (X)VI, Proficiency Ratings. Section 4. The Proficiency Rating Official will counsel the marginal (numerical score 39 to 59) or unsatisfactory (numerical score 38 or below) nurse approximately 90 days prior to the due date of the Proficiency Report. If an unsatisfactory rating is contemplated and it has clearly been established that the employee has not been counseled concerning unsatisfactory service as provided, a recommendation will be made to the approving officials to delay the annual rating for a period not to exceed 90 days. Counseling as provided in this section is not discipline, and shall not be a part of an employee's Official Personnel Folder. Section 6. When a Special Proficiency is deemed necessary, a penciled copy will be prepared and discussed with the nurse. The nurse will be given 72 hours to respond in writing. The supervisor will take into consideration the written responses and discussion in the final copy. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency asserts that the proficiency rating system is an integral part of the personnel system promulgated by the Administrator to advance the VA patient care mission. The Agency argues that the proposal violates its right to assign work and to determine the methods and means of performing work. The Agency asserts that Section 4 violates management's right to assign work because it prescribes rating elements or factors. The Agency also claims that Proposal 7 conflicts with VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapters, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 9 and the DM&S Supplement, because the proposal does not take into account that aspect of its regulations which provides for patient care needs to be the primary consideration in the assessment of nurses through the proficiency rating system. The Agency asserts that a compelling need exists for these regulations to bar negotiations on Proposal 7. The Union argues that nothing in the proposal dictates a standard of performance for, or the critical elements of, a position. The Union asserts that determination of the quality and quantity of work rests entirely with the VA supervisors who then unilaterally convert those determinations into proficiency scores for each employee. According to the Union, this proposal only takes effect after the supervisor makes that proficiency score determination. Thus, according to the Union, the proposal is purely procedural and does not affect management's rights. B. Analysis and Conclusions Section 4 The first sentence of Section 4 establishes the ratings of "marginal" and "unsatisfactory" and further prescribes the range of numerical scores which is to correspond to the marginal and unsatisfactory ratings. This sentence is to the same effect as Section 11.B. in Patent Office Professional Association and Patent and Trademark Office, Department of Commerce, 25 FLRA No. 29 (1987), petition for review filed sub nom. Patent Office Professional Association v. FLRA, No. 87-1135 (D.C. Cir. March 26, 1987), which established four rating categories for evaluating employees' performance and which also prescribed the level of achievement which would warrant a given overall rating. We held that by establishing the level of performance which would be required to achieve a particular summary rating, the proposal violated management's rights under section 7106(a)(2)(A) and (B) of the Statute to direct employees and to assign work. For these reasons, we find that the first sentence of Section 4 is outside the duty to bargain. We also note that the numerical scores set forth in Section 4 are a restatement of a portion of VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 6 and the DM&S Supplement. As we stated at Sections 4.H. and 4.I. in the Patent and Trademark Office decision, if a particular matter is otherwise negotiable, the fact that the matter is a part of an agency's appraisal system will not in and of itself render it nonnegotiable. However, if a particular subject matter contained in an agency's performance appraisal system constitutes an exercise of management's rights under section 7106(a) of the Statute, the parties cannot bargain about including that portion of the system in a collective bargaining agreement because management would be bound by the provision for the life of the contract and would be precluded from discontinuing or modifying it. The remainder of Section 4 provides a procedure for counseling employees with unsatisfactory performance, or employees bordering on unsatisfactory performance. The proposal provides a 90-day counseling period prior to issuance of the annual rating. Similar proposals which have provided a period for an employee to improve performance or a notice period prior to proposed action have been held negotiable. See National Federation of Federal Employees, Local 476 and Department of the Army, U.S. Army Electronics Research and Development Command, Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, 26 FLRA No. 28 (1987) (finding negotiable a provision providing 60-days advance written notice); American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 2910 and Library of Congress, 11 FLRA 632, 635 (1983) (Proposal 5) (finding negotiable an improvement period for employees trying to overcome drug abuse). Compare American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Local 3097 and Department of Justice, 24 FLRA No. 49 (1986) (Proposal 3) (finding nonnegotiable a 120-day abeyance period because it conflicted with a Government-wide regulation (5 C.F.R. Section 432.204(b))). However, the nurses in this case are not subject to Government-wide regulations referenced in the Department of Justice case. Moreover, because this proposal simply sets out the procedural steps management will follow before it makes a final appraisal of an employee's performance, it does not concern the methods and means of performing the Agency's work within the meaning of section 7106(b)(1). See National Federation of Federal Employees, Local 541 and Veterans Administration Hospital, Long Beach, California, 12 FLRA 270, 272-73 (1983). Although professional medical employees of the DM&S are not subject to Chapter 43 of Title 5 of the United States Code, 5 U.S.C. Section 4301(2)(C), we note that Office of Personnel Management (OPM) regulations require that employees covered by that chapter be given a reasonable time to demonstrate acceptance performance before proposing a reduction in grade or removal. 5 C.F.R. Section 432.203(b). OPM has not established a minimum reasonable time period. Attachment to Federal Personnel Manual (FPM) Letter No. 432-1. We note, however, that at least some Federal agencies have provided employees a 90-day period to demonstrate acceptable performance. See, for example, James L. Alexander v. Department of Commerce, Merit Systems Protection Board Docket No. DC04328510399 (March 10, 1986), slip op. at 6. Moreover, for employees covered by Chapter 43, OPM has stated that if an agency has negotiated a minimum or maximum period for employees to demonstrate acceptable performance, it must follow those requirements. Attachment to FPM Letter No. 432-1. Finally, the Agency claims that Proposal 7 is barred by regulations for which a compelling need exists. Because the first sentence of Section 4 is nonnegotiable, we need not reach the issue of compelling need for regulations to bar this portion of Proposal 7. As to the remainder of Section 4, found to be otherwise negotiable, the Agency claims generally that a compelling need exists for its regulation requiring proficiency ratings to be based on the objectives of its patient care system to bar negotiations on Proposal 7 as a whole. The Agency makes no specific showing as to how the portions of Section 4 concerning counseling of employees would conflict with those objectives. In the absence of such a showing, we conclude that the Agency's regulation does not serve as a bar to negotiation under section 7117(a)(2) of the Statute. Therefore, the remainder of this proposal constitutes a negotiable procedure and is within the duty to bargain. Section 6 Section 6 of this proposal concerns a "Special Proficiency" report, which the Union describes as "one which occurs at some time other than during the regular rating period." Union's Response at 12. The Union did not submit any other information regarding this report. The Agency's statement of position is completely silent regarding this section of the proposal. Therefore, we have no way of assessing whether its application as required by the proposal would affect the Agency's exercise of its rights. In short, we cannot determine, on the record before us, whether this proposal is negotiable. The parties will bear the burden of creating the record on which the Authority will make a negotiability determination. American Federation of Government Employees, Local 12 and Department of Labor, 25 FLRA No. 83 (1987) (Proposal 5). Because the Union has not provided any relevant information concerning the report which is the subject of Section 6, it has not met its burden of creating a record which is sufficient for the Authority to make a negotiability determination. In the absence of that information, the Union's petition for review as to this section must be dismissed. X. Proposal 8 Article XVII, Promotions And Advancements. Section 2. The Local Unit and Nursing Service agree it is important to have local unit employees on the Nurses Professional Standards Board. The Association may submit suggestions to the Chief Nurse of nurse employees qualified to serve on the Nurse Professional Standards Board. Nursing Service agrees to include four (4) unit employees in the nominations forwarded to the Director for appointment to the Nurses Professional Standards Board. Section 3. If a full-time permanent nurse is not promoted, the nurse may request a conference with the Chairman of the Professional Standards Board and the Rating Official to discuss the Professional Standards Board's action. If the employee meets the educational and experience standards of the type and scope required, the nurse will be considered for promotion annually until a change in grade occurs. Section 5. Bargaining unit vacancies may be filled by selection from among the best qualified and available nurses whenever possible, and, consistent with this principle, selection may be made among those candidates from the Medical Center. Notice of all professional nurse vacancies shall be posted on the Nursing Service bulletin board, Building 5, for ten calendar days and nurses applying for such vacancies shall be notified of the action taken. A copy of each vacancy notice will be provided to the INA Local Unit. Section 6. The Medical Center will make the fullest possible use of the Special Advancement provisions. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency states that Section 2 of this proposal must be divided into its essential elements in order to understand it. The first element is a statement of policy that the Nursing Service agrees that it is important to have local unit employees on the Professional Standards Board (Board). The second element is that the Union may submit the names of candidates to serve on the Board. The third element requires that four unit employees be included in the nominations forwarded to the Director for appointment to the Board. Therefore, according to the Agency, this section of Proposal 8 would require that four unit employees be appointed to the Board through implementation of the stated policy concerning the importance of unit employee membership on the Board. The Agency further asserts that, because the Professional Standards Board, is a management decision-making body, it must be free from union participation in the decision-making process. The Union contends that the proposal does not conflict with statutory or VA Manual provisions relating to the functions of the Professional Standards Board. The Union contends that Section 2 of the proposal merely recognizes that the local unit can submit suggestions for appointment to the Board and that the discretion of the appointment official is unlimited. The Union further asserts that its proposal is not intended to require unit participation in that decision-making or to determine the Board's organization, duties, functions or actions. The Union also states that Section 3 of this proposal is purely procedural and that it is merely a restatement of current VA practice. With regard to Section 5, the Union asserts that it is aimed at providing nurses with notice of promotion opportunities. The Union contends that this section does not place any obligation on the Agency to promote bargaining unit nurses, but does mean that bargaining unit nurses should be promoted. Finally, the Union asserts that Section 6 of the proposal permits special pay advances for nurses obtaining certifications. The Union states that the language "fullest possible use" in that section means "to the full extent of the process." Petition for Review at 14. B. Analysis and Conclusions Section 2 Section 2 of this proposal would permit the Union to submit suggestions regarding nurses qualified to serve on the Nurse Professional Standards Board. The proposal would require the Agency to include four unit employees, who may but need not be from among those suggested by the Union, among the nominations forwarded for appointment to the Board. The proposal does not require the Agency to select any of the employees suggested by the Union. Likewise, while the first sentence of this section states that the parties recognize the importance of local unit employees serving on the Professional Standards Board, this section does not require the selection of unit employees for appointment to the Board. This proposal is distinguishable from the proposal in National Federation of Federal Employees, Local 1431 and Veterans Administration Medical Center, East Orange, New Jersey, 9 FLRA 998 (1982), which would have required the appointment of a union representative to the Professional Standards Boards. Therefore, we find that this proposal is within the duty to bargain. Section 3 We find that Section 3 of this proposal is negotiable. The first sentence of this section merely provides that a nurse may request a conference to discuss the Professional Standards Board's denial of promotion. Management retains its discretion as to whether it will grant the request. The second sentence of this section requires that an annual re-evaluation be made for nurses who had been passed over for promotion and who meet the requisite educational and experience criteria. This portion of the proposal does not assign work to any non-bargaining unit employee. Rather, the Agency retains the discretion to determine how the re-evaluation is to be conducted. For these reasons, we find that Section 3 constitutes a negotiable procedure under section 7106(b)(2) of the Statute. See, for example, American Federation of Government Employees, Local 1923, AFL-CIO and Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Secretary, Headquarters, Office of the General Counsel, Social Security Division, 21 FLRA No. 28 (1986) (Proposal 4 and Proposal 5), petition for review filed sub nom. American Federation of Government Employees, Local 1923 v. FLRA, No. 86-1297 (D.C. Cir. May 27, 1986). Section 5 We find that Section 5 of this proposal is negotiable. The first sentence of this section would give the Agency discretion to select from among the best qualified candidates and would further provide the Agency discretion to select from among candidates who are within the Medical Center. This portion of the proposal is clearly distinguishable from Proposal 5 in VAMC, Ft. Lyons, requiring that preference will be given to nurses presently employed. We found that proposal to be nonnegotiable because it limited management's right to select from among the best qualified candidates. The use of the permissive term "may" in Section 5 serves to protect the Agency's retained discretion to select whomever it chooses. The remainder of Section 5 constitutes procedures for informing employees of existing vacancies. As such, it is negotiable under section 7106(b)(2) of the Statute. See, for example, National Treasury Employees Union and Internal Revenue Service, 7 FLRA 275, 282 (1981) (Proposals 2-4). Section 6 The Agency's Statement of Position is totally silent regarding Section 6. Likewise, the Union's response is silent regarding this portion of the proposal. As we noted above in our discussion of Proposal 7, Section 6, it is well established that the parties bear the burden of creating a record upon which the Authority can make a negotiability determination. Because there is insufficient information on which we can make a negotiability determination, the Union's petition for review as to Section 6 must be dismissed. XI. Proposal 9 Article XIX, Discipline. Section 2. No nurse will be disciplined by admonishment, reprimand, suspension, demotion, or discharge, except whenever an employee's performance of duty or personal conduct is unsatisfactory because of inaptitude, inefficiency, neglect, or unwillingness to comply with commonly accepted standards of personal conduct. Nurses will receive a copy of all written counselings. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency makes no arguments as to the nonnegotiability of this proposal other than those addressed in Section II of this decision. The Union argues that its proposal does not present a conflict with 38 U.S.C. Section 4110 procedures or any of the Title 38 sections with respect to probationary or part-time employees. The Union asserts that a procedure should be negotiated to address discipline of bargaining unit nurses. The Union also asserts that its proposal parallels the VA requirements. B. Analysis and Conclusions We find that Proposal 9 is negotiable. The first sentence of the proposal describes the bases on which the Agency may discipline nurses. As explained by the Union, the intent of this sentence is simply to parallel the bases for agency discipline which are established under applicable law and VA regulations. Union's Response at 43-44. Noting particularly the absence of any Agency argument to the contrary, we construe this portion of the proposal as providing the Agency with the full range of discipline that it already has under law and regulation. That is, we find that this portion of the proposal does not in any way restrict the Agency's right to discipline. Therefore we conclude that this portion of the proposal is consistent with law and regulation and is within the Agency's duty to bargain. We find that the remainder of Proposal 9, which provides that nurses will receive a copy of all written counselings, is a negotiable procedure under section 7106(b)(2) of the Statute. XII. Proposal 10 /4/ Article XI, Work Environment. New Section 7. Appropriate actions recommended by a nurse as a part of her professional responsibility will be recognized and supported by the Medical Center so long as such actions are consistent with the procedures and policies of the Medical Center. The nurse will be notified of final action taken in such cases. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency makes no arguments concerning the nonnegotiability of this proposal other than those which have already been resolved in Section II of this decision. The Union asserts that its proposal simply sets out a general statement of intent that the Medical Center supervisors will provide appropriate management support to nurses who experience difficulties in dealing with other employees in the course of their work and that the proposal has nothing to do with duties or work assignments. The Union also asserts that the language in Proposal 10 has been part of the parties' agreement and that the intent of the proposal is simply to provide management support for nurses doing their jobs. Further, the Union argues that the proposal is not inconsistent with any management right. B. Analysis and Conclusions In its Petition for Review, the Union states that Proposal 10 is intended to ensure that Agency supervisors will provide appropriate management support to nurses who experience difficulties in dealing with other employees in the course of their work. As an example of the intended application of this proposal, the Union states: (I)f a supervisor directs a night nurse to advise the supervisor of the arrival and departure times of the non-professional employees on the nursing unit, it may also be necessary for the supervisor to alert the night nurse that remedial actions have been taken by the Supervisor with certain employees. Precise support measures and follow-through are not defined. Petition for Review at 15. The Union itself asserts that the Agency's responsibilities under the terms of the proposal are not defined. Further, the record is unclear as to the intended scope of this proposal. Because the Union has not met its burden of creating a record containing information concerning this proposal upon which we can make a negotiability determination, the Union's petition for review as to Proposal 10 must be dismissed. See American Federation of Government Employees, Local No. 12 and U.S. Department of Labor, 25 FLRA No. 83 (1987) (Proposal 5). XIII. Proposal 11 Article XI, Work Environment. Section 6. It is recognized that in urgent needful situations, no absolute restrictions can be placed on nurses' duties in a patient care environment. However, Nursing Services agrees thagt the general duties found within the positions of Nursing Assistant, Housekeeping Aid, Food Service Worker, and clerical support are not ordinarily intended to be a normal part of a nurse's responsibility. A. Positions of the Parties The Agency contends that the effect of Proposal 11 is to preclude management from assigning to nurses the general duties found within the position of nursing assistant, housekeeping aid, food service worker and clerical support with the exception of making such assignment in urgent needful situations. Thus, according to the Agency, the proposal clearly defines which duties should not be assigned to nurses as well as when an exception to the rule can be made. The Union contends that its proposal does not interfere with the Agency's right to assign work. The Union also asserts that its proposal is merely intended as a means to continue discussion on non-nurse duties which may have to be performed by bargaining unit employees. B. Analysis and Conclusions Proposal 11 expressly places restrictions on the Agency's ability to assign certain duties to nurses. The proposal is in all material respects to the same effect as the proposal held to directly interfere with management's right under section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute to "assign work" in New York State Nurses Association and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Bronx, New York, 11 FLRA 578 (1983). See also VAMC, Ft. Lyons (Proposal 4) and National Labor Relations Board Union, Local 19 and National Labor Relations Board, Region 19, 2 FLRA 775 (1980). We therefore conclude that this proposal is outside the duty to bargain. XIV. Proposal 12 Article XVI, Proficiency Ratings. Section 2. Nurses will be rated by their immediate supervisor and the approving official will be the next higher professional administrative supervisor above the rating official. The rating official will not ordinarily discuss the report with other personnel unless the official has been so recently assigned as a supervisor that assistance is needed. In that case, the rating official will review unofficial ratings prepared by previous supervisors during the rating period and will discuss the rating with other professional nurse supervisors who have observed the performance of the nurse being rated. Comments and statements recorded in the narrative part of the proficiency report will be objective and specific. They will describe any especially important aspects of the nurse's assignment or performance. They will explain any unusually low or high element scores of total rating scores. (Only the underlined portion is in dispute.) A. Positions of the Parties The Agency contends that the disputed portion of this proposal conflicts with its right to assign work because it assigns specific duties to particular positions; requires that nurses must be rated by their immediate supervisor and that the approving official must be the next higher administrative supervisor above the rating official. The Agency also argues that the disputed portion of this proposal does not involve a condition of employment because it attempts to impose work assignments on supervisory personnel who are not part of the bargaining unit. The Union states, in response, that the proposal is consistent with Title 38. The Union also contends that the Agency is merely reiterating the same argument that it has made with respect to each proposal, namely, that virtually no aspect of employment of registered nurses is negotiable. The Union contends that its proposal is a procedure regarding discussion of the rating with the employee and is negotiable for that reason under section 7106(b)(2). B. Analysis and Conclusions The first sentence of the disputed portion of this proposal requires nurses to be rated by their immediate supervisor and for that rating to be approved by the next higher professional administrative supervisor above the rating official. The Authority has consistently held that proposals prescribing specific duties to be performed by particular non-bargaining unit personnel in an agency directly interfere with management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute by eliminating the discretion inherent in that right. American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 32 and Office of Personnel Management, 14 FLRA 278 (1984), aff'd mem. sub nom. Local 32, American Federation of Government Employees v. FLRA, 762 F.2d 138 (D.C. Cir. 1985). See also our discussion of Proposal 6, Section 3 above. The proposal in this case would have the same effect as Proposal 4 held nonnegotiable in American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Local 2190 and Library of Congress, 18 FLRA 241 (1985). Therefore, we conclude that the proposal would directly interfere with the exercise of the right to assign work and as a result is not a negotiable matter. However, as we noted in our discussion of Proposal 6, Section 3, these defects are easily cured. See U.S. Army Missile Command. The second sentence of the disputed portion of the proposal limits a rating official's ability to discuss a performance report with other personnel. The Authority has consistently held that the management rights enumerated in section 7106 of the Statute encompass not only the right to act but also the right to discuss and deliberate concerning the relevant factors upon which decisions as to the exercise of those rights will be made. See, for example, American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 3804 and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Madison Region, 21 FLRA No. 104 (1986). This sentence directly interferes with the deliberative process associated with management's right to assign work under section 7106(a)(2)(B) of the Statute and therefore is outside the duty to bargain. While the first two sentences of Proposal 12 reflect portions of VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 6, the reiteration of agency regulations in a proposal does not alter its negotiability. See our discussion at Proposal 7, Section 4. XV. Order The Agency must upon request (or as otherwise agreed to by the parties) bargain concerning the following proposals, or portions thereof: Proposal 1; Proposal 2; the first sentence of Proposal 3, Section 3; Proposal 3, Section 5, except for the last sentence; Proposal 3, Section II; Proposal 4; Proposal 6, Section 3, except for the fourth sentence; the second and third sentences of Proposal 7, Section 4; Proposal 8, Sections 2, 3, and 5; and Proposal 9. /5/ The Union's petition for review is dismissed as to the following proposals, or portions thereof: Proposal 3, Section 2; Proposal 3, Section 3, except for the first sentence; Proposal 3, Section 4; the last sentence of Proposal 3, Section 5; Proposal 5; the fourth sentence of Proposal 6, Section 3; Proposal 6, Section 4; Proposal 6, Section 8; the first sentence of Proposal 7, Section 4; Proposal 7, Section 6; Proposal 8, Section 6; Proposal 10; Proposal 11; and Proposal 12. Issued, Washington, D.C., June 25, 1987. /s/ Jerry L. Calhoun, Chairman /s/ Henry B. Frazier III, Member /s/ Jean McKee, Member FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY --------------- FOOTNOTES$ --------------- (1) On October 27, 1986, we granted the VA's motion for Consideration of Common Issues in Pending Cases, including this case. The common issue as raised by the Agency concerned the applicability of the Statute to VA professional medical employees in the DM&S appointed under Title 38 of the United States Code. (2) The Agency makes no statement in the record regarding whether disclosure of the Chicago Hospital Council's survey data to a union would violate applicable law or regulation. (3) The Agency refers to Proposal 5 in its allegation of nonnegotiability as Article XIV, Sections 1 and 2. It is clear from the record, however, that the Agency is addressing Article XV, Sections 1 and 2. (4) The Agency refers to this proposal in its allegation of nonnegotiability as Article XIX, Section 5. It is clear from the record that the Agency is addressing Article XI, Section 7. (5) In finding that these proposals (or portions thereof) are within the duty to bargain, we make no judgment as to their merit. APPENDIX Proposals 1, 10, and 11 The Agency makes no claim that Proposals 1, 10, and 11 conflict with any VA regulations. Proposal 4 The Agency claims that Proposal 4 conflicts with VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 3, Section D, because the proposal requires the Agency to participate in a particular survey of salaries for nurses which is inconsistent with the VA Administrator's authority to adjust the basic rates of pay. The Agency, however, has neither alleged nor demonstrated that a compelling need exists for this regulation under section 7117(a)(2) of the Statute and section 2424.11 of our Regulations to bar negotiations on Proposal 4. Proposal 5 The Agency claims that Proposal 5 conflicts with VA Manual M-8, Part IV, Chapter 1; and VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 7, Paragraph 7(g) pertaining to education for health care personnel and provisions for leave to attend educational functions, respectively. The Agency, however, has neither alleged nor demonstrated that a compelling need exists for this regulation under section 7117(a)(2) of the Statute and section 2424.11 of our Regulations to bar negotiations on Proposal 5. Proposal 6 The Agency claims that Proposal 6 conflicts with VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 7 and the DM&S Supplement pertaining to leaves of absence. The Agency, however, has neither alleged nor demonstrated that a compelling need exists for these regulations under section 7117(a)(2) of the Statute and section 2424.11 of our Regulations to bar negotiations on Proposal 6. Proposal 8 The Agency claims that Proposal 8 conflicts with VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 2, Paragraph 5A and the DM&S Supplement, Paragraph 2.05A; VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 5, Paragraph 61 and the DM&S Supplement, Paragraph 5.07e(7); VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 11, Paragraph 3(b) and the DM&S Supplement, Paragraph 11B.03; and VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 5, Paragraph 3 pertaining to the promotion and advancement of nurses. The Agency, however, has neither alleged nor demonstrated that a compelling need exists for these regulations under section 7117(a)(2) of the Statute and section 2424.11 of our Regulations to bar negotiations on Proposal 8. Proposal 9 The Agency claims that Proposal 9 conflicts with VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter 8 pertaining to the discipline of health care personnel. The Agency, however, has neither alleged nor demonstrated that a compelling need exists for these regulations under section 7117(a)(2) of the Statute and section 2424.11 of our Regulations to bar negotiations on Proposal 9. Proposal 12 The Agency claims that Proposal 12 conflicts with VA Manual MP-5, Part II, Chapter s (sic), Section 6 pertaining to proficiency ratings. (Chapter 6 deals with the Proficiency Rating System.) The Agency, however, has neither alleged nor demonstrated that a compelling need exists for these regulations under section 7117(a)(2) of the Statute and section 2424.11 of our Regulations to bar negotiations on Proposal 12.