FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY
Office of Administrative Law Judges
WASHINGTON, D.C.
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION BOSTON REGION
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS |
|
and
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO, LOCAL
1164 |
Case No. BN-CA-80498
|
Andrew F. Krall For the Charging Party
Nancy E. Chew, Esq. Richard D. Zaiger, Esq. For the General Counsel, FLRA
Before: SAMUEL A. CHAITOVITZ Chief Administrative Law Judge
Statement of the Case
This proceeding arose under the Federal Service
Labor-Management Relations Statute, 5 U.S.C. §§ 7101-7135, herein
called the Statute, and the Revised Rules and Regulations of the
Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA or the Authority), 5 C.F.R.
§ 2423.1 et seq.
This proceeding was initiated by a charge, as amended, filed
against the Social Security Administration, Boston Region, Boston,
Massachusetts (SSA Boston Region or Respondent) by the American
Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 1164 (AFGE Local
1164 or Union). The Regional Director of the Boston Region of the
FLRA, on behalf of the General Counsel (GC) of the FLRA, issued a
Complaint and Notice of Hearing in this case. The Complaint alleges
that SSA Boston Region violated section 7116(a)(1), (5), and (8) of
the Statute by failing and refusing to furnish AFGE Local 1164
requested sanitized information regarding the allocation,
methodology, and usage of overtour(1) hours within the SSA Boston Region. SSA
Boston Region filed an Answer denying the substantive allegations
of the Complaint.(2)
A hearing was held in Boston, Massachusetts, at which time
all parties were afforded a full opportunity to be represented, to
be heard, to examine and cross-examine witnesses, and to introduce
evidence. SSA Boston Region and the GC of the FLRA filed timely
post-hearing briefs which have been fully considered.
Based upon the entire record, including my observation of
the witnesses and their demeanor, I make the following findings of
fact, conclusions, and recommendations.
Findings of Fact
A. Background
American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO (AFGE)
is the certified exclusive representative of a nationwide
consolidated unit of Social Security Administration (SSA) employees
appropriate for collective bargaining, including, inter
alia, part-time employees in SSA Boston Region.
There are 74 field offices and six hearing offices within
the SSA Boston Region, which encompasses the six New England
states. AFGE Local 1164 represents, as an agent for AFGE,
approximately 1400 employees throughout SSA Boston Region. Of these
1400 employees, roughly 100-200 are part-time employees.
Manuel Vaz has been at all times material the Regional
Commissioner for SSA Boston Region. As Regional Commissioner Vaz is
the top management official in the SSA Boston Region and oversees
the operation of the Boston Region. Andrew Krall has been President
of AFGE Local 1164 since 1994. His regular duties as the President
involve a full range of labor-management issues.
B. Overtour Complaints
In mid-1998, Krall received an unusually high volume of
complaints from the part-time employees represented by AFGE Local
1164 concerning overtour. Overtour is the ability of a part-time
employee to work beyond his or her normal tour of duty. Overtour is
similar to overtime for full-time employees; however, the major
difference is that full-time employees are paid time-and-a-half for
overtime, whereas part-time employees are paid straight time for
overtour.
The complaints Krall received in mid-1998 all concerned the availability of overtour. Employees alerted Krall that managers in some offices were telling their part-time employees that overtour was not available, while in other offices part-time employees were able to work as much overtour as they wished.
C. The Requests for Information and the Responses
In light of the complaints about the availability of
overtour, Krall filed an information request with Regional
Commissioner Vaz on June 12, 1998. Krall's June 12, 1998, letter
requested the following information for the period October 1, 1997,
through September 30, 1998:
(1) any and all records showing allocation of overtour from
Central Office to the Boston Region,
(2) any and all records showing intra-regional overtour
allocation or availability with breakouts, if appropriate,
for each area, district or individual office,
(3) any records evidencing the method used to allocate or
distribute overtour within the region . . .[examples
provided],
(4) with respect to (3), provide any data justifying the
actual allocation or distribution of overtour . . .
[examples provided],
(5) for the period 10/1/97 to present, please provide a
breakdown of the amount overtour usage for each part time
employee in the Boston Region. You may sanitize the data
with respect to name, but provide the office, grade
and position for each employee.
This June 12, 1998 letter stated that Article 3 of the
National Agreement (NA) requires that management treat all
employees fairly and equitably in all aspects of personnel
administration(3)and that the
Union's "particularized" need for this information was to determine
whether this resource is being allocated in a fair and equitable
manner. As an example, the letter inquired whether the funds were
made available on a per capita or unlimited bases and stated that
some office managers were refusing to authorize overtour. The
letter stated that AFGE Local 1164 also wanted to determine if
overtour is allocated based on workload considerations and further
noted that employees in offices with comparable workloads did not
have equal access to the resource. The letter stated that a
grievance may be filed on behalf of impacted employees once the
extent of any discrepancy is revealed.
Ms. Susan Sullivan, a Labor Relations Specialist for the SSA
Boston Region, responded for Vaz. By letters dated June 25, 1998,
and July 14, 1998, Sullivan responded to Krall that additional time
was necessary before an answer could be provided. No substantive
discussions regarding the information request occurred between the
parties during this time.
By letter dated August 4, 1998, Sullivan responded a third
time. SSA Boston Region denied the information request for three
reasons: failure to articulate particularized need; lack of a
correlation between the information request and the section of the
collective bargaining agreement cited by Krall in his June 12,
1998, request; and management of overtour allocations is a
management right. However, Sullivan invited Krall to resubmit his
request with what, in Respondent's view, would constitute
particularized need.
No oral discussions between the parties occurred during this
time frame regarding the information request; all exchanges were in
writing. The Union did not at any time request to negotiate over
overtour.
By letter dated September 14, 1998, Krall resubmitted his
information request, citing a recent arbitrator's award which
involved administrative leave which interpreted Article 3 of the NA
in a manner which would permit a grievance of the type Krall
proposed to file with respect to overtour. This letter reiterated
how an overtour distribution discrepancy might lead to a grievance
in accordance with Article 3, dependent upon what the information
reveals.(4)
Sullivan responded a fourth and final time on September 29, 1998. Again the information request was denied by SSA Boston Region, setting forth similar grounds as in the denial of August 4, 1998, but also stating, as an additional defense, that some of the information requested is not maintained and available.
At least some of the requested information existed which
would at least partially have satisfied each of the items requested
in Krall's June 12, 1998, request.(5) No discussions between the parties occurred
during this time frame regarding the information request; all
exchanges were in writing.
To date, AFGE Local 1164 has not received any of the
requested information.
Discussion and Conclusions of Law
A. The Statute
Section 7114(b)(4) of the Statute provides that the duty to
bargain in good faith includes, among other things, the obligation
--
(4) in the case of an agency, to furnish to the exclusive
representative involved or its authorized representative,
upon request and, to the extent not prohibited by law, data
--
(A) which is normally maintained by the agency in
the regular course of business;
(B) which is reasonably available and necessary for
full and proper discussion, understanding, and
negotiation of subjects within the scope of
collective bargaining; and
(C) which does not constitute guidance, advice,
counsel, or training provided for management
officials or supervisors, relating to collective
bargaining . . . .
Section 7116(a)(1),(5) and (8) of the Statute provides:
(a) For the purpose of this chapter, it shall be an unfair
labor practice for an agency --
(1) to interfere with, restrain, or coerce any
employee in the exercise by the employee of any
right under this chapter;
****
(5) to refuse to consult or negotiate in good faith
with a labor organization as required by this
chapter;
****
(8) to otherwise fail or refuse to comply with any
provision of this chapter.
****
The General Counsel contends that the SSA Boston Region's
refusal to provide the requested information was inconsistent with
its obligations under Section 7114(b)(4) of the Statute and
therefore violated Section 7116(a)(1), (5), and (8) of the
Statute.
SSA Boston Region, at the hearing, amended its answer to
admit that the information requested by AFGE Local 1164, does not
constitute guidance, advise, counsel, training for management
officials and supervisors relating to collective bargaining; that
disclosure of the requested information is not prohibited by law;
that the requested information is normally maintained; and that the
requested information is reasonably available.
The only defense raised by SSA Boston Region is whether the
requested information is necessary for a full and proper
discussion, understanding and negotiation of subjects within the
scope of collective bargaining.
B. The Particularized Need For the Information
The facts in this case are not in dispute. On two occasions
the AFGE Local 1164 requested information regarding the allocation,
methodology, and usage of overtour hours for the Respondent's
Boston Region. As the Union explained to the SSA Boston Region, the
information was needed to determine if overtour hours were
distributed and made available to part-time employees in a fair and
equitable manner, as required by Article 3 of the NA.
AFGE Local 1164 further explained to SSA Boston Region that
the Union had received numerous complaints from part-time employees
regarding the availability of overtour, and the data provided
pursuant to the information request would determine whether a Union
or individual grievance is appropriate. Finally, the AFGE Local
1164 provided SSA Boston Region with a citation to the recent
arbitrator's award which specifically interpreted Article 3
consistently with the Union's interpretation.
The facts of this case establish that the AFGE Local 1164
met the particularized need standard as required under Internal
Revenue Service, Washington, D.C. and Internal Revenue Service,
Kansas City Service Center, Kansas City,Missouri, 50
FLRA 661 (1995) (IRS, Kansas City). The Union articulated,
with specificity, why it needed the information, including the uses
to which the information would be put and the connection between
those uses and the Union's representational responsibilities under
the Statute. Id. at 669.
Specifically, the AFGE Local 1164 requested information
regarding the allocation, methodology, and usage of overtour hours
throughout the Boston Region. Written communications establish that
SSA Boston Region understood why the AFGE Local 1164 wanted the
overtour information. SSA Boston Region understood that SSA Local
1164 wanted to verify that distribution and availability of
overtour hours was being handled fairly and equitably, as provided
for under Article 3 of the NA. AFGE Local 1164 stated: "Several
people have raised questions about this matter. In some parts of
the region, part timers seem to have unlimited access to this
resource. Others have none." AFGE Local 1164 stated its intention
of possibly filing grievances on behalf of impacted employees
regarding a violation of Article 3 of the NA, should the
information, once provided, reveal such violations of Article 3
with respect to the availability and allocation of overtour. In
this regard AFGE Local 1164 provided the case citation to the
recent arbitrator's decision which interpreted Article 3 of the NA
after the SSA Boston Region attempted to deny the information based
on the merits of any underlying grievance, even though AFGE Local
1164 was, arguably, under no obligation to provide such
citation.
Article 3 of the NA contains broad provisions concerning
fairness and equitable treatment of all employees regarding all
aspects of personnel management. Overtour, inasmuch as it is
analogous to overtime or administrative leave, is an aspect of
personnel management. The Authority has long held that an Agency
has an obligation to provide information normally maintained by it
which concerns overtime and compensatory time, for use by the union
in the investigation of employee concerns regarding pay matters.
Army and Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES), Lowry
Air Force Base Exchange, Ft. Carson, Colorado, 13 FLRA 392, 399
(1983) (AAFES). Overtour seems to fall within this
holding.
Insofar as overtour is not specifically addressed elsewhere
in the contract, it reasonably could be concluded that it falls
within the purview Article 3. An arguable violation of Article 3 is
grievable under the terms of the contract itself; therefore, AFGE
Local 1164 met the particularized need standard because it "has a
grievable complaint covering the information."Department of the
Air Force, Scott Air Force Base, Illinois v. FLRA, 104 F.3d
1396, 1400 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (quoting NLRB v. FLRA, 952 F.2d
523, 532-33 (D.C. Cir. 1992)).
To establish particularized need, a union must respond to an agency's request for clarification and provide additional explanation as to why it needed the requested information. Department of the Air Force, Washington, D.C., 52 FLRA 1000, 1007-08 (1997). The August 4, 1998, response by Sullivan requested clarification, which Krall provided in his September 14, 1998, follow-up request.
The data requested was necessary for AFGE Local 1164 to
determine if it should continue to pursue the matter, and if so, to
what extent a grievance should be filed: on an individual basis, on
an office/area basis, or on a regional basis. The requested
information was critical to the Union's efforts to represent the
affected part-time employees. The failure of SSA Boston Region to
provide the requested information compromised the ability of AFGE
Local 1164 to represent the part-time bargaining unit employees in
a grievance and/or arbitration proceeding.
C. SSA Boston Region's Defenses
Once a union has met its burden of establishing a
particularized need, the agency is responsible for asserting and
establishing any countervailing interests. IRS, Kansas City,
50 FLRA at 670.
Management of overtour is not at issue here, but rather
whether it is being distributed fairly and equitably, as required
by the NA. Furthermore, the AFGE Local 1164 at no time requested to
negotiate overtour. Thus AFGE Local 1164 was not interfering with a
management right.(6)
The written responses of SSA Boston Region of August 4,
1998, and September 29, 1998, outlined four defenses: failure to
articulate particularized need, that a management right was
implicated, the merits of any underlying grievance did not warrant
disclosure of the information, and the information was not
maintained and available.
As discussed above I have concluded that AFGE Local 1164
demonstrated the requisite particularized need to justify receiving
the requested information and was not interfering with any
managements rights.
In U.S. Department of Justice, Immigration and Naturalization Service, Border Patrol, El Paso, Texas, 37 FLRA 1310, 1321 (1990) (INS El Paso), the Authority held:
Like questions of arbitrability, questions of whether
the requested information was relevant in the grievance,
or admissible as evidence in arbitration, are matters to
be resolved in the grievance procedure. The information
was requested in connection with the Union's
investigation of a potential grievance concerning
performance appraisal and the information was necessary
for the Union to determine whether to proceed with the
grievance.
Furthermore, the Authority has consistently held that unions
have a right to data "that is necessary to enable it to fulfill its
representational functions, including data which assists in
resolving potential grievances." U. S. Department of the Air
Force, 375th Mission Support Squadron, Scott Air
Force Base, Illinois, 51 FLRA 599, 613 (1995).
The argument by SSA Boston Region on the merits of any
underlying potential grievance is not a valid basis for denying
information properly requested under the Statute. Id. In its
brief SSA Boston Region cites Article 33 of the NA, which deals
with part-time employees. It does not mention overtours. SSA Boston
Region argues that since part-time employees are mentioned in
Article 33 of the NA, that requirements set forth in Article 3 of
the NA would not apply to part-time employees. However I reject
this argument because the interpretation and application to
part-time employees of Article 3 by the Union is reasonable. It is
up to the grievance procedure and arbitrator, if necessary, to
resolve the possible differences in contract interpretation. See
INS El Paso, 37 FLRA at 1321. The merits of the possible
grievance, from an agency's point of view, are not a defense to
union's right to the information.
Although unclear, it appears that SSA Boston Region raised
at trial the defense that the information is not necessary because
the request was too broad in scope. It did not make this argument
in its brief.
The scope of the June 12, 1998, request was never raised by
the SSA Boston Region to AFGE Local 1164 prior to the trial in this
matter. However, at trial it appeared SSA Boston Region was arguing
the scope of the request was inappropriate, both geographically and
temporally. The written responses to the Union did not state, or
even suggest, that the request was too broad in scope, relative
either to the time frame for which the information was requested or
to the fact it was requested on a Region-wide basis. The evidence
further establishes that at no time relevant to the facts in this
case were there oral communications between the Union and the
Respondent relative to the substance of the information request.
This entire defense was raised for the first time the day of the
hearing.
The Authority has held that "an agency denying a request for
information under section 7114(b)(4) must assert and establish any
countervailing anti-disclosure interests." IRS, Kansas City,
50 FLRA at 670. The Authority's rationale for requiring a union and
an agency to articulate and exchange their respective interests is
to facilitate communication and early resolution of a dispute, and
effectuate the purposes and policies of the Statute. Id. at
670-71. Had the SSA Boston Region raised this issue in a timely
manner, as required under IRS, Kansas City, AFGE Local 1164
would have had the opportunity to either present its reasoning for
the scope of the request, or to reach a suitable compromise.
Because SSA Boston Region did not articulate its concerns over the scope of the request prior to hearing, it is precluded from being raised as a defense to furnishing the information. See id.
In any event, the scope of the request is appropriate on its
face. In U.S. Department of Justice, Immigration and
Naturalization Service, Northern Region, Twin Cities,Minnesota,
52 FLRA 1323 (1997) (Twin Cities III); U.S. Department of
Justice, Immigration and Naturalization Service,Northern Region,
Twin Cities, Minnesota, 51 FLRA 1467, 1474-76 (1996) (Twin
Cities II), the agency requested general clarification of the
union's need for some requested information. The Union was
responsive to the request, but the agency never specifically raised
concerns regarding the temporal and geographic scope of the union's
request. TwinCities III, 52 FLRA at 1330. Although
particularized need includes the scope of the request, when it is
not properly and specifically raised for clarification by an agency
prior to the hearing, and the union has demonstrated its
responsiveness to other requests for clarification by the
Respondent, the testimony offered at trial regarding the scope of a
request can be considered in determining its appropriateness.
Id.
In the subject case AFGE Local 1164 represents a Region-wide
unit, with the part-time employees it represents distributed in
offices throughout SSA Boston Region. To receive information on
less than a regional basis would be meaningless to a grievance
whose intent is to determine the fairness and equity of the
distribution of overtour hours among part-time employees of the SSA
Boston Region. I also find that a request for information regarding
one fiscal year is not excessive or unreasonable on its face.
(8)
In light of all of the foregoing, I conclude that AFGE Local
1164 properly requested the information, showing a particularized
need, and was entitled to it and that SSA Boston Region did not
meet its obligations set forth in section 7114(b)(4) of the Statute
when it refused to furnish the requested information. Accordingly,
I conclude SSA Boston Region violated section 7116(a)(1), (5) and
(8) of the Statute.
D. Remedy
Having concluded that SSA Boston Region violated section
7116(a)(1), (5) and (8) of the Statute, I recommend the Authority
adopt the following Order:
ORDER
Pursuant to section 2423.41 of the Authority's Rules and
Regulations and section 7118 of the Federal Service
Labor-Management Relations Statute, the Social Security
Administration, Boston Region, Boston, Massachusetts, shall:
1. Cease and desist from:
(a) Failing and refusing, upon request, to supply
AFGE Local 1164 information, as required by law, including
information regarding the allocation, distribution, and usage of
overtour hours for the Boston Region.
(b) In any like or related manner interfering with,
restraining or coercing its employees in the exercise of rights
assured by the Statute.
2. Take the following affirmative action to effectuate the
purposes and policies of the Statute:
(a) Provide AFGE Local 1164 the information
requested in its June 12, 1998, information request concerning
distribution of overtour.
(b) Post at its facilities throughout the Boston
Region copies of the attached Notice on forms to be furnished by
the Federal Labor Relations Authority. Upon receipt of such forms,
they shall be signed by the Regional Commissioner, Social Security
Administration, Boston Region, Boston, Massachusetts, and shall be
posted and maintained for 60 consecutive days thereafter, in
conspicuous places, including all bulletin boards and other places
where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps
shall be taken to ensure that such Notices are not altered,
defaced, or covered by any other material.
(c) Pursuant to section 2423.41(e) of the
Authority's Rules and Regulations, within 30 days from the date of
this Order, notify the Regional Director of the Boston Region,
Federal Labor Relations Authority, 99 Summer Street, Suite 1500,
Boston, Massachusetts 02110, in writing, as to what steps have been
taken to comply.
Issued, Washington, D.C., March 5, 1999
SAMUEL A. CHAITOVITZ
Chief Administrative Law Judge
NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES
POSTED BY ORDER of THE
FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY
The Federal Labor Relations Authority has found that the Social
Security Administration, Boston Region, Boston, Massachusetts
violated the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute and
has ordered us to post and abide by this Notice.
We hereby notify our employees that:
WE WILL provide the American Federation of Government
Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 1164, with the information requested in
its June 12, 1998 information request concerning overtour
distribution.
WE WILL NOT fail and refuse to supply information, as
required by law, requested by American Federation of Government
Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 1164, including information regarding the
allocation, distribution, and usage of overtour hours for the
Boston Region.
WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner interfere with,
restrain or coerce employees in the rights assured by the
Statute.
______________________
(Agency)
Date: _______________________ By: ____________________________
(Signature) (Title)
This Notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the
date of posting and must not be altered, defaced or covered by any
other material.
If employees have any questions concerning this Notice or
compliance with any of its provisions, they may communicate
directly with the Regional Director, Boston Region, Federal Labor
Relations Authority, 99 Summer Street, Suite 1500, Boston,
Massachusetts 02110, and whose telephone number is: (617)
424-5730.
1. Overtour hours refer to hours worked by part-time workers in excess of their regular part time schedule, similar to overtime hours worked by full-time employees.
2. SSA Boston Region amended its Answer at the hearing so that its denial was limited to a denial that the requested information is necessary for a full and proper discussion, understanding and negotiation of subjects within the scope of bargaining.
3. The current NA between AFGE and
SSA was effective March 5, 1996. The contract states at Article
3-Employee Rights, Section 2-Personal Rights, Paragraph A:
All employees shall be treated fairly and equitably in all aspects of personnel management, without regard to political affiliation, race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, age or disabling condition, and with proper regard and protection of their privacy and constitutional rights.
4. Even though the merit of an underlying grievance is not a valid reason to deny information, Krall felt that providing the case citation to the arbitrator's award might convince the SSA Boston Region to provide the requested information.
5. SSA Boston Region does not deny the existence of the requested information.
6. Although both written responses by the SSA Boston Region indicate that disclosure of the information involves a management right, the SSA Boston Region did not argue this at hearing or in its brief.(7)
7. The Respondent also failed to raise this as a defense at the Prehearing Conference, as well.
8. In its brief SSA Boston Region attacks the bona fide nature of the request for data. It offers no evidence to support this allegation. I thus reject it.