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31:0916(71)NG - AFGE Local 1482 and Marine Corps Logistics Base, Barstow, CA -- 1988 FLRAdec NG



[ v31 p916 ]
31:0916(71)NG
The decision of the Authority follows:


  31 FLRA NO. 71

AKA:              0-NG-1483
                  31 FLRA 916

Date:             23 MAR 1988


AMERICAN FEDERATION OF
GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES
LOCAL 1482

                      Union

       and

MARINE CORPS LOGISTICS
BASE, BARSTOW, CALIFORNIA

                      Agency

Case No. 0-NG-1483

DECISION AND ORDER ON NEGOTIABILITY ISSUE

     I. Statement of the Case

     This case is before the Authority because of a negotiability
appeal filed under section 7105(a)(2)(E) of the Federal Service
Labor - Management Relations Statute (the Statute). It concerns a
proposal which the Union submitted in response to the Agency's
decision to ban the use of all bicycles in the Repair Division
building at the Marine Corps Logistics Base, Barstow.

     The proposal seeks to allow employees to continue to use
their privately owned bicycles in the Repair Division building
during work hours. We find that the proposal is nonnegotiable
because it interferes with the Agency's rights under section 7106
of the Statute to determine its internal security practices and
the means of performing work.

     II. The Proposal

     a. That employees at Repair Division can continue to use
their private bicycles during work hours subject to the following
provisions:

     (1) that all bicycles meet minimum safety standards set by
safety; 

     (2) that the bicycles be marked with the employee name and
shop;

     (3) that the bicycle rider be licensed to ride bicycles;
and

     (4) that Repair Division establish a safe speed limit for
bicycles within Repair Division.

     b. If an employee is found to violate safety pertaining to
the riding of a bicycle, the following procedure will be
followed:

     (1) he/she will be counselled by his/her supervisor; and

     (2) his/her license will be revoked for 30  days for the
first offense; 90 days for the second offense; permanently
removed for the third offense.

     (Only the underscored portion is in dispute.)

     III. Positions of the Parties

     In its petition, the Union argues that this proposal is a
better alternative to the Agency's plan to ban the use of all
bicycles within the Repair Division. The Union further asserts
that its proposal adequately addresses the Agency's safety
concerns.

     The Agency states that it decided to ban bicycle use within
the Repair Division because of a mounting safety problem which
could cause serious injury to persons and property. It asserts
that the decision constitutes an exercise of its right to
determine its internal security practices. The Agency also argues
that employees use bicycles to perform work, such as delivering
parts and documents and performing inspections. In view of this
use, the Agency contends that bicycles are a method and means of
performing work within the definition of section 7106(b)(1) of
the Statute.

     The Agency asserts that because the proposal interferes with
these management rights, it is nonnegotiable. The Union did not
file a response to the Agency's statement of position. 

     IV. Analysis and Conclusions

     1. The Proposal Interferes with Management's Right to
Determine Internal Security Practices

     According to the uncontroverted statements of the Agency,
the building, which is the focus of the bicycle ban, encompasses
10 acres and houses maintenance repair facilities where jeeps,
tanks and other heavy equipment are overhauled. More than 1,000
employees work in the building. Approximately 200 bicycles--most
privately owned--were operated in the building along with various
industrial equipment. The Agency asserts that an increasing
number of "near misses" between the bicycles and the industrial
equipment as well as safety concerns over the increasing
vehicular traffic within the building led it to propose a ban on
bicycles in the building.

     An agency's right to determine its internal security
practices under section 7106(a)(1) includes the right to
determine policies and take actions which are part of its plan to
secure or safeguard its personnel and physical property. See, for
example, Defense Logistics Council of American Federation of
Government Employees Locals and Defense logistics Agency, 20 FLRA
166 (1985), reversed in part as to other matters sub nom. Defense
Logistics Council of American Federation of Government Employees
Locals v. FLRA,  810 F.2d 234 (D.C. Cir. 1987).

     Where a link has been established between an agency's action
and its expressed security concerns, we will not review the
merits of that action. See National Federation of Federal
Employees, Local 15 and Department of the Army, U.S. Army
Armament, Munitions and Chemical Command, Rock Island, Illinois,
30  FLRA  1046, 1056-57 (1988). We find that such linkage is
present in this case. The Agency states that it proposed the
bicycle ban as a method of preventing accidents and safeguarding
Agency personnel and property. The Union does not dispute this
purpose and, in fact, its proposal reflects various safety
concerns. We find, therefore, that the Agency's prohibition of
bicycle riding in its facilities constitutes an exercise of its
right under section 7106(a)(1) to determine internal security
practices.

     The proposal would limit the Agency's ability to ban bicycle
riding by exempting privately owned bicycles from the
prohibition. By doing so, the proposal conflicts with the
Agency's right to determine its internal security practices.


     2. The Proposal Interferes with Management's Right to
Determine the Methods and Means of Performing Work

     The Agency asserts that the proposal addresses the tools and
devices which employees use to perform their work. In support of
this claim, the Agency states that the proposal relates to the
equipment which employees use to perform such tasks as delivering
parts and documents and performing inspections. The Union does
not claim otherwise. Based on the Agency's uncontroverted
statements, we conclude that the proposal seeks to allow
employees to use bicycles in performing their duties. Therefore,
this case is distinguished from those in which the Authority
found that the transportation of employees as proposed by the
Union was not inconsistent with section 7106(b)(1) because it was
not principally related to the agency's work. National Treasury
Employees Union, Chapter 153 and Department of the Treasury, U.S.
Customs Service, 21 FLRA  1116 (1986) (Proposal 6 requiring the
agency to provide a government vehicle for employees to travel
from one work site to another during established tours of duty);
American Federation of Government Employees, AFL - CIO, Local
3525 and United States Department of Justice, Board of
Immigration Appeals, 10 FLRA  61 (1982) (Proposal 1 requiring the
agency to provide shuttle bus service for relocated employees to
facilitate their access to such services as a credit union and
health unit and to research facilities).

     The choice of using bicycles--a particular mode of
transportation--for accomplishing an agency's mission is a
decision under section 7106(b)(1) as to the methods and means to
be used for the accomplishment of its work. That is, it is a
decision concerning the instrumentalities, agents, tools, devices
which will be used to accomplish the agency's work. See, for
example, National Federation of Federal Employees, Local 2052 and
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management Boise
District Office, 30  FLRA  797 (1987) (Proposal 20). This
proposal would interfere with the Agency's discretion to
determine whether bicycles will be included in the methods and
means used to accomplish the work of the Agency. Because of this
effect, the proposal directly interferes with section
7106(b)(1).

     3. Conclusion

     The proposal is outside the duty to bargain because it
interferes with the Agency's right to determine its internal
security practices as well as the methods and means of its
performing work.

     V. Order

     The petition for review is dismissed.

     Issued, Washington, D.C., March 23, 1988.

Jerry L. Calhoun,        Chairman

Jean McKee,                Member

FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY