[ v34 p423 ]
34:0423(76)CU
The decision of the Authority follows:
34 FLRA NO. 76 VETERANS ADMINISTRATION MEDICAL CENTER ALLEN PARK, MICHIGAN (Activity/Agency) and AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES LOCAL 933, AFL-CIO (Labor Organization/Petitioner) 5-CU-90002 ORDER GRANTING APPLICATION FOR REVIEW January 19, 1990 Before Chairman McKee and Members Talkin and Armendariz. I. Statement of the Case This case is before the Authority on an application for review filed by the American Federation of Government Employees, Local 933, AFL - CIO (the Union) under section 2422.17(a) of the Authority's Rules and Regulations. The Union seeks review of the Regional Director's Decision and Order on a petition filed under section 7111(b)(2) of the Federal Service Labor - Management Relations Statute (the Statute) seeking to clarify the bargaining unit status of one position, the second shift Medical Equipment Repairer Foreman. The Regional Director found that the incumbent of the second shift Medical Equipment Repairer Foreman position is a supervisor within the meaning of section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute and should be excluded from the bargaining unit. The Veterans Administration Medical Center, Allen Park, Michigan (the Activity) did not file an opposition to the Union's application for review. Inasmuch as the Authority had two vacancies when this application for review was received, Acting Chairman McKee issued an Interim Order on August 25, 1989, directing that consideration of the application be deferred until further notice. The Interim Order preserved the parties' rights under the Statute to Authority consideration of the Regional Director's decision. The Authority now considers the application for review. For the reasons which follow, we grant the application for review. II. Regional Director's Decision This unit clarification issue arose when the Activity added a second shift Medical Equipment Repairer Foreman position and promoted a Journeyman Repairer to Foreman. Thereafter, the Foreman on the first shift and the newly-promoted Foreman rotated between the first and second shifts every 3 months. The Regional Director found that the Foremen are accountable for the work performed by the employees on their shifts. The Regional Director also concluded that "(o)n the second shift the assignment of work is primarily routine in nature with little guidance given to the (employees)." Regional Director's Decision at 3. The Regional Director further found that each Foreman (1) is responsible for preparing performance appraisals of the employees working under him at the time; (2) has the authority to counsel and admonish employees without prior approval; (3) is the first step in the grievance procedure. The Regional Director also found that the Foremen may recommend employees for awards or promotions, although no recommendations have been made since the second shift Foreman position was created. The Regional Director further found that the Foremen are jointly responsible for recommending the selection of new hires and that "(t)he Foremen recommended the hiring of a clerical employee recently. Their recommendation was accepted." Id. The Regional Director concluded that the above-described duties of the second shift Medical Equipment Repairer Foreman were "not merely routine but require the consistent use of independent judgment in the exercise of supervisory authority." Id. Further, the Regional Director stated that he noted "particularly that the Foreman approves leave and has the authority to discipline. Also, the Foreman is responsible for evaluating employees and has effectively recommended the hiring of a new employee." Id. Based on these findings, the Regional Director concluded that the second shift Medical Equipment Repairer Foreman position is a supervisory position within the meaning of section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute and should be excluded from the bargaining unit under section 7112(b)(1). III. Application for Review The Union contends that the Regional Directors' decision "is clearly erroneous and prejudicially affects the rights of the Petitioner, and/or raise (sic) a substantial question of law due to the departure from Authority precedent." Application for Review at 1. The Union asserts that, contrary to the Regional Director's findings, the second shift Foreman does not consistently exercise independent judgment in the exercise of supervisory authority. According to the Union, the second shift Foreman "does not independently approve pre-scheduled leave, and has not effectively recommended the hiring of a new employee." Id. at 3. The Union argues that the record establishes that annual leave approval is a joint decision between the two Foremen. The Union contends further that because the record establishes that the first and second shift Foremen jointly recommended the hiring of an applicant, the second shift Foreman did not "independently and effectively" recommend the hiring of an applicant. Id. The Union also contends that the Regional Director's finding that "the 'authority' to discipline (employees) and the 'responsibility' for evaluating (employees) constitutes supervisory duties is contrary to Authority precedent." Id. at 4 (emphasis in original). The Union asserts that Authority precedent requires that bargaining unit determinations be based on actual duties performed at the time of the hearing. The Union concludes that because the record does not establish that the second shift Foreman has actually performed these duties, the Regional Director's decision is contrary to Authority precedent. IV. Discussion On consideration of the Union's application for review, it appears to the Authority that pursuant to section 2422.17(c)(1)(i) of our Regulations, compelling reasons exist for granting review due to an absence of Authority precedent. Accordingly, we will grant the Union's application for review. Section 7112(b)(1) of the Statute provides that a bargaining unit is not "appropriate" if it includes a supervisor. Section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute defines "supervisor," in relevant part, as: an individual . . . having authority . . . to hire, direct, assign, promote, reward, transfer, furlough, layoff, recall, suspend, discipline, or remove employees, to adjust their grievances, or to effectively recommend such action, if the exercise of the authority is not merely routine or clerical in nature but requires the consistent exercise of independent judgment(.) The Regional Director relied on a number of findings to support his decision that the second shift Foreman is a supervisor within the meaning of section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute. We conclude that except for one of these findings--a finding for which there is an absence of Authority precedent--the remaining findings do not support a decision that the second shift Foreman is a supervisor within the meaning of section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute. The Regional Director found that each Foreman was accountable for the work performed by the employees on his shift. The Regional Director also found, however, that "(o)n the second shift the assignment of work is primarily routine in nature with little guidance given to the (employees)." Regional Director's Decision at 3. Section 7103(a)(10) provides that exercises of supervisory authority must not be "merely routine" but, rather, must require "the consistent exercise of independent judgment" in order to satisfy the definition of supervisor. The assignment of work by the second shift Foreman does not, therefore, support a finding that the Foreman is a supervisor. The Regional Director also found that the second shift Foreman approves leave. Leave approval is not one of the supervisory indicia listed in section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute, however. Thus, this finding alone, without a showing of the exercise of any specific statutory supervisory authority, does not support the Regional Director's decision that the second shift Foreman is a supervisor. The Regional Director further found that the second shift Foreman has the authority to (1) prepare performance evaluations, (2) counsel and admonish employees, (3) handle grievances, and (4) recommend employees for awards and promotions. However, the Regional Director did not find that the second shift Foreman actually exercised these authorities. Because the Regional Director did not find that any of these authorities had been exercised by the second shift Foreman, the Regional Director's findings do not establish that the second shift Foreman consistently exercises independent judgment in the exercise of those authorities. See Veterans Administration Medical Center, Prescott, Arizona, 29 FLRA 1313, 1315 (1987) (a unit determination is based on testimony as the duties which actually are performed by an employee at the time of the hearing rather than duties which may be assigned in the future); Veterans Administration Medical Center, Bronx, New York, 10 FLRA 301, 302 n.2 (1982) (incumbent's exercise of authority to assign work and direct employees found not to require the consistent exercise of independent judgment because the incumbent had held supervisory position for only 5 months and testified that because supervised employees were more experienced than he, there was little supervision that he could give them). Finally, the Regional Director found that the second shift Foreman, jointly with the first shift Foreman, recommended the hiring of a new employee. Action to effectively recommend the hiring of an employee is one of the indicia of supervisory authority listed in section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute. However, it appears that there is an absence of Authority precedent as to whether the joint exercise of one indicia of supervisory authority is sufficient to establish that an individual is a supervisor within the meaning of section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute. Consequently, we will grant the application for review. The parties may, within 10 days of issuance of this order, submit briefs on the following issue: Whether an individual who jointly exercises one of the indicia of supervisory authority set forth in section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute is a supervisor within the meaning of the Statute. V. Order The application for review is granted. In accordance with section 2422.17(g) of the Authority's Rules and Regulations, the parties may submit briefs within 10 days on the issue noted above. Briefs should be directed to: Ms. Alicia Columna Case Control Office Federal Labor Relations Authority 500 C Street, SW., Room 213 Washington, D.C. 20424