OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGES
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20424-0001
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY
NAVY EXCHANGE SERVICE CENTER EUROPE, NAPLES, ITALY |
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and
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, LOCAL 3712, AFL-CIO
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Case No. CH-CA-50557
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Robert A. Hochberger, President For Charging Party
John F. Gallagher, Esquire For the General Counsel
Before: JESSE ETELSON Administrative Law Judge
Statement of the Case
Respondent changed the work assignment of an employee. The
complaint in this case alleges that Respondent implemented that
change without affording the Charging Party (the Union) an
opportunity to negotiate over its impact and implementation. By
doing so, the complaint alleges, Respondent repudiated a memorandum
of agreement (MOA) between it and the Union, and apart from that,
refused to negotiate in good faith with the Union, thereby
committing unfair labor practices in violation of sections
7116(a)(1) and (5) of the Federal Service Labor-Management
Relations Statute (the Statute).(1)
Respondent's answer admits most of the factual allegations of the
complaint but denies that it implemented the change without
affording the Union an opportunity to negotiate, that it repudiated
the MOA, and that it committed the alleged unfair labor
practices.
A hearing was held in Naples, Italy. Counsel for the General Counsel and Respondent's representative filed post- hearing briefs. The following findings are based on the record, the briefs, my observation of the witnesses, and my evaluation of the evidence.(2)
Findings of Fact
The Union is a labor organization and is the certified
exclusive representative of a unit of employees of Respondent. One
of the employees in the unit is Paolo Del Piano(3), who, at the time the events giving rise to
this case began, was classified as a "Janitor Leader." Respondent
occupies part of the Pelli Building in Naples. Mr. Del Piano was
assigned to perform janitorial duties in the part of the Pelli
Building occupied by Respondent. In June 1994 Respondent made Del
Piano responsible for cleaning additional space in Respondent's
part of the building. The Union filed an unfair labor practice
charge over Respondent's action. That charge was settled by an MOA
between Respondent and the Union providing that the additional
space responsibility would be rescinded and that Del Piano's work
duties would remain as they were before the June change, until
Respondent gave the Union notice and opportunity to bargain
concerning the impact and implementation of any future
determination to change Del Piano's "working conditions."
An attachment to the MOA detailed areas within the building
for which Del Piano had been responsible before the June 1994
change and to which his duties would return. The attachment lists
six categories of assigned areas, specifies the square footage of
each, and indicates the total square footage of 8,099. The
attachment also lists the areas included in the additional space
that had been assigned to Del Piano in June, totaling 5,203 square
feet.
On March 6, 1995, Del Piano's supervisor, Lieutenant George
E. Christensen, sent the president of the Union, Robert Hochberger,
a copy of a new "Janitorial Schedule" for cleaning in the Pelli
Building, with a memorandum informing Hochberger that Christensen
would be meeting with Del Piano on March 10 "to discuss this
assignment of work and to answer any questions that he may have."
The memorandum concludes by informing Hochberger that the work
schedule "will go into effect on Monday, 13 March 1995[,]" and that
Hochberger should feel free to contact Christensen if he had any
questions.
Under the new "Janitorial Schedule," Del Piano again became
responsible for substantially, if not identically, all of the Pelli
Building areas to which he had been assigned when his
responsibilities were increased in June 1994. Thus, the space he
was required to clean increased from approximately 8,000 square
feet to approximately 13,000 square feet.(4) The additional space had been assigned,
during the period following rescission of the June 1994 change, to
a part-time employee who worked 15 hours a week. However, the March
1995 "Janitorial Schedule" adjusted the cleaning specifications so
that some of the operations were not required as often as they had
been. For example, substantial areas that had been required to be
vacuumed daily were now to be vacuumed only weekly.
Hochberger responded to this notification with a letter,
also dated March 6, to Captain B.R. Bennett, the official to whom
Lt. Christensen reports. Capt. Bennett had represented Respondent
in signing the MOA. Hochberger referred Bennett to the MOA and
informed him that he believed that the announced change in Del
Piano's duties was "illegal." Hochberger's final paragraph
stated:
Of course, you are changing his duties without allowing the Union to bargain. We are, hereby,
invoking negotiations. The Union is giving you a 30-day notice pursuant to Article 27 of the
Negotiated Agreement that we intend to file a ULP.
Respondent did not respond to Hochberger's letter.
Hochberger attended the May 10 meeting with Christensen and
Del Piano for the purpose of representing the Union at a "formal
discussion" as described in section 7114(a)(2)(A) of the
Statute.(5) As may have been
inevitable, however, Del Piano believed that Hochberger was there
to represent him.
In any event, Hochberger did not go to the meeting prepared
to negotiate over the impact and implementation of the new
schedule, but reminded Christensen, at the meeting, that the Union
had requested such negotiations. He also requested maintenance of
the status quo during the negotiation process. Christensen
did not respond verbally to Hochberger concerning negotiations.
Instead he responded with what Hochberger characterized as "kind of
[a] shrug [of his] shoulders."(6)
Hochberger left the meeting understanding that the new schedule
would be implemented, as indicated previously, on March 13. And so
it was.
As a result of the new schedule, Del Piano perceived his
work load to be heavier. The total space for which he was
responsible increased by approximately 60-65 percent. Because the
required frequency of certain cleaning operations within that
increased space was reduced, the total square footage Del Piano had
to cover over the course of a week, in performing all of the
required repetitions of all of the cleaning operations, increased
by only about 26 percent. (GC Exh. 5.) In addition, because he
believed that the scheduled cleanings would leave certain areas
"filthy," and in response to complaints from users of the
facilities, Del Piano voluntarily cleaned some areas more often
than required by the schedule. Del Piano told Lt. Christensen that
people were complaining. Christensen told him to do the best he
could.
Del Piano's pay and hours remained the same. He continued to
perform the same kinds of cleaning operations. The only change,
from his perspective, was the "extra location" he had to cover.
However, as he put it, "You have to work like a maniac to get the
work done." This comment, while hyperbolic, is a credible
expression of his perception of the change.
In November 1995 (after the unfair labor practice charge was
filed in this case) Respondent reclassified Del Piano's position
from "Janitor Leader" to "Janitor." His new job description
eliminated the "working leader" functions included in the former
job description, but there is no evidence that he had been
performing them before the assignment change.
Discussion and Conclusions
The record and the briefs present essentially three issues
with respect to the establishment of the alleged violations. The
first is whether the change in Del Piano's work assignment
generated an obligation to negotiate over its impact and
implementation under section 7106(b)(2) and (3) of the Statute. The
second is whether, assuming there was such an obligation,
Respondent fulfilled it. Third is the issue, resolution of which is
in this case closely related but not identical to the first and
second, of whether Respondent repudiated the MOA.
A. Obligation to Bargain Over Impact and Implementation
l. Applicable Principles
Section 7106 of the Statute, subtitled "Management
rights," provides, in pertinent part, that:
(a) Subject to subsection (b) of this section, nothing in this chapter shall affect the authority
of any management official of any agency--
* * * * *
(2) in accordance with applicable laws--
* * * * *
(B) to assign work, to make deter-minations with respect to contracting
out, and to determine the personnel by which agency operations shall be
conducted;
* * * * *
(b) Nothing in this section shall preclude any agency and any labor organization from
negotiating--
* * * * *
(2) procedures which management officials of the agency will observe in exercising
any authority under this section; or
(3) appropriate arrangements for employees adversely affected by the exercise of
any authority under this section by such management
officials.
Negotiations over "procedures" as defined in subsection
(b)(2) have come to be known as "implementation" bargaining (or
negotiations) and those over "appropriate arrangements" as defined
in subsection (b)(2) as "impact" bargaining. See Department of
the Air Force, Air Force Systems Command, Electronic Systems
Division, 14 FLRA 390, 402 (1984). However, they are
collectively referred to in reverse order--"impact and
implementation." This usage dates from pre-Statute interpretations
of Executive Order 11491. See Internal Revenue Service and IRS
Richmond District Office, 2 FLRA 333, 334 n.1, 341 (1979).
A duty to engage in "impact and implementation" bargaining arises when an agency has decided to exercise its management rights under section 7106(a) in a manner that effects a change in established conditions of employment, provided that the change is more than de minimis. Department of Health and Human Services, Social Security Administration, 24 FLRA 403, 405-08 (1986) (SSA). The Authority used SSA as an opportunity to reassess and modify its previous standard for determining whether a change in conditions of employment was more than de minimis and thus required bargaining.(7)
The standard announced in SSA places "principal
emphasis on such general areas of consideration as the nature and
extent of the effect or reasonably foreseeable effect of the change
on conditions of employment of bargaining unit
employees.(8) Equitable
considerations will also be taken into account in balancing the
various interests involved." Id. at 408. The Authority also
announced in SSA that the number of employees involved will
not be a controlling consideration but "will be applied primarily
to expand rather than limit the number of situations where
bargaining will be required." Id.(9)
The direct "effect or reasonably foreseeable effect" of the
change involved in the instant case pertains to Mr. Del Piano's
workload. Increases or realignments in workload are changes in a
condition of employment that may give rise to obligations to
bargain over their impact and implementation. See, for example,
United States Department of Veterans Affairs Regional Office, San
Diego, California, 44 FLRA 312, 320, 337 (1992) (VA San Diego);
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Social Security
Administration, Baltimore, Maryland and Social Security
Administration, Hartford District Office, Hartford,
Connecticut, 41 FLRA 1309, 1318 (1991); United States
Department of Justice, United States Immigration and Naturalization
Service, El Paso District Office, 34 FLRA 1035, 1046, 1072-73
(1990) (INS I), modified in other respects, 39 FLRA 1431
(1991). In fact, the Authority exhibited what is perhaps the
clearest illustration of this proposition in one of its earliest
applications of the SSA revised standard. Thus, in Internal
Revenue Service, 24 FLRA 999, 1001-02 (1986), the Authority,
finding an impact on bargaining employees sufficient to require
bargaining, assigned primary importance to the conclusion that the
agency's new program, which removed certain employees from their
normal duties for a period of months, "could have a foreseeable
impact on the workload of remaining employees as well as on the
selected employees' ability to perform their duties upon return to
their bargaining unit duties."See also Department of Justice,
U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, U.S. Border Patrol, El
Paso, Texas, 39 FLRA 1325, 1331-32 (1991); Overseas Education
Association and Department of Defense Dependents Schools, 39 FLRA
153, 159-160 (1991).
In determining whether the impact ("effect or reasonably
foreseeable effect") of a change in workload is more than de
minimis, the Authority looks not only to the direct effect on the
difficulty of performing the job, but also to the potentiality for
an indirect effect on employees' appraisals or other variables that
could, in turn, affect their job security or opportunity for
promotion. See VA San Diego; INS I; U.S. Department of the
Treasury, Customs Service, Washington, D.C. and Customs Service,
Northeast Region, Boston, Massachusetts, 38 FLRA 770, 783, 820
(1990).
On the other hand, the addition of some duties does
not, by itself, require bargaining. The impact of the addition must
still be examined to determine whether it reaches the level of
significance that makes it more than de minimis. See U.S.
Department of Labor, Washington, D.C. and U.S. Department of Labor,
Employment Standards Administration, Chicago, Illinois, 30 FLRA
572, 579-80 (1987); Department of Transportation, Federal
Aviation Administration, Washington, D.C., 20 FLRA 481, 484
(1985) (FAA) (a pre-SSA decision that may still have some vitality
at least with respect to some factors in assessing the "impact" of
an addition of duties).
2. Application to this Case
The 26 percent increase in the cumulative space to be
covered by the combination of Del Piano's cleaning operations did
not, by itself, necessarily increase his workload in a way that
made his job more difficult or onerous. See FAA (no evidence
"that the duties assigned would change to any measurable degree the
amount of time required by the employees to complete all their
assigned duties"). Each cleaning operation within a given area is
not equivalent in difficulty or in the time it reasonably consumes.
Vacuuming an area, for example, is not the same as disposing of its
trash. Neverthe-less, Del Piano's credible impression of the impact
supports the inference that, for him, at least, the change was one
that made his job more difficult to perform successfully within his
working hours. His testimony is supported by the empirical
observation, reinforced by common sense, that there may be more
involved in adequately cleaning (for example, vacuuming) an area
that has accumulated a week's worth of dirt than performing the
same operation in an area that was cleaned yesterday.
If this were not sufficient to establish an impact that is
more than de minimis, I believe there is legally cognizable
significance in the fact that Del Piano found it necessary to take
it upon himself to exceed the scheduled cleaning operations. He did
so, it would appear, not out of an obsessive regard for
cleanliness, but because he and at least some users of the
facilities found that acceptable standards of cleanliness could not
be maintained by strict adherence to the schedule. Del Piano was
therefore faced with the choice of adhering to the schedule and
leaving the place in what he regarded as a substandard condition,
or working harder to achieve a more acceptable result.
Whether or not management would have found the results of
adherence to the schedule acceptable, I credit that there was a
palpable difference in the results obtainable. While not all
employees may take pride in their work product, especially when the
product is as ephemeral as a clean facility, I am satisfied that
Del Piano did. Nor was his feeling of the inadequacy of the
schedule solely self-imposed. His receipt of complaints from
facility users was both a confirmation of his reaction and, in
itself, a further adverse effect of the change.
I believe that the conditions that affect an employee's
ability to satisfy himself that he is performing his job
adequately, and that affect the nature of the feedback he receives
from his "customers," are as much "conditions of employment" as are
the physical aspects of the work environ-ment. Thus, these
intangible effects of the new cleaning schedule changed Del Piano's
conditions of employment and did so, I find, to an extent that was
more than de minimis.
All of the above are what I have found to be the actual
effects of the new schedule. They provide an independent basis for
meeting the SSA test. Some of these actual effects may also
have been reasonably foreseeable, and thus have also satisfied the
other part of that disjunctive test. I conclude that the reasonably
foreseeable effects of the change, by themselves, also establish an
impact that is more than de minimis. Among the effects that
I have found actually to have occurred, I conclude that it was
reasonably foreseeable at least that the new schedule would require
a significantly increased intensity of effort on Del Piano's part.
Management is not chargeable with anticipating precisely the
increase in intensity of effort necessary. However, management had
or should have had sufficient knowledge of the situation at the
time of the change (Portsmouth at 575), to make it
reasonably foreseeable that the change would have a significant
impact on the way Del Piano would have to go about his
duties.(10) Also reasonably
foreseeable, although not necessarily of over-whelming probability,
was that the increase in Del Piano's duties would affect his
ability to sustain the same performance level for appraisal
purposes. Cf. U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission,
40 FLRA 1147, 1155 (1991) (reasonably foreseeable that "increased
workload will have ramifications in employees' performance
appraisals").
Based on all of these considerations, I conclude that the
effects and the reasonably foreseeable effects of the change
in conditions of employment represented by the new cleaning
schedule were, independently, more than de minimis. Thus the
change engendered an obligation to bargain over its impact and
implementation.
B. Failure to Fulfill the Bargaining Obligation
There is no sensible reason for impact and implementation
bargaining not to have occurred between Hochberger and Christensen
when they met, with Del Piano, just before the new cleaning
schedule was implemented. In fact, Del Piano appeared to have been
under the impression that something like that was occurring (Tr.
60). However, it did not. Why not?
Hochberger had requested the opportunity to negotiate and
had even "invoke[d] negotiations." Having received no response, nor
any indication that Christensen was authorized to negotiate,
Hochberger presented no proposals at the meeting. It was reasonable
for him to assume, in the circumstances, that any attempt to
negotiate at that meeting would have been futile. Nor does
Respondent argue otherwise. Rather, Respondent faults the Union for
not demonstrating to it at or around that time how the new work
assignment impacted on Del Piano's conditions of employment.
I reject the suggestion that the Union was obligated to
accompany its bargaining request with a demonstration of why there
was a duty to bargain. Hochberger's letter stated that Respondent
was changing Del Piano's duties without allowing the Union to
bargain. Implicitly, this was an assertion that there was a duty to
bargain. Hochberger had no reason at that point to assume that
Respondent needed any further information about the Union's reason
to believe there was a bargaining obligation. Respondent was
required at least to respond to the request. See Army and Air
Force Exchange Service, McClellan Base Exchange, McClellan Air
Force Base, California, 35 FLRA 764, 769 (1990). Not having
done so, it is not in a position to insist retroactively on the
Union's having demonstrated the impact.
There was a duty to bargain. Respondent failed and refused
to give the Union the opportunity to do so. It therefore violated
sections 7116(1) and (5) of the Statute.
C. Repudiation of the MOA
As the parties' MOA obligated Respondent to provide the
Union with an opportunity to bargain concerning the impact and
implementation of any change in Del Piano's working conditions, it
follows from my findings with respect to Respondent's statutory
bargaining obligation that Respondent breached the MOA. In some
circumstances, the failure or refusal to honor an agreement arrived
at through collective bargaining violates sections 7116(a)(1) of
the Statute. Such agreements include those reached for the purpose
of settling an unfair labor practice charge. See Great Lakes
Program Service Center, Social Security Administration, Department
of Health and Human Services, Chicago, Illinois, 9 FLRA 499
(1982). A statutory violation occurs when the breach amounts to a
repudiation of an obligation imposed by the agreement's terms.
Department of Defense, Warner Robins Air Logistics Center,
Robins Air Force Base, Georgia, 40 FLRA 1211, 1218-19 (1991)
(Warner Robins).
The Authority has identified two elements to be examined in
analyzing an allegation of repudiation: (1) the nature and scope of
the alleged breach (i.e., was the breach clear and patent?) and (2)
the nature of the agreement provision allegedly breached (i.e., did
the provision go to the heart of the parties' agreement?).
Department of the Air Force, 375th Mission Support Squadron,
Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, 51 FLRA 858, 862 (1996).
In examining the first of these elements, the Authority has
focused on whether, in explaining its actions, the respondent has
relied on a reasonable interpretation, although not necessarily the
only reasonable interpretation, of the provision in question.
Id. at 863. However, the "clear and patent" issue is not
presented in that form in the instant case. Respondent here does
not present any interpretation of the provision concerning its
obligation to furnish the Union with an opportunity to bargain that
is at variance with the interpretation I have given it above. That
is, the provision substantially approximates Respondent's statutory
bargaining obligation. Whether there was a "clear and patent"
breach here depends not on conflicting interpretations of the
agreement, but on whether there was a change in Del Piano's working
conditions. Having found that there was, and therefore that there
was a breach, I conclude that the "clear and patent" standard
cannot stand in the way of an ultimate conclusion that Respondent
repudiated the agreement.
With regard to the second element, it cannot be disputed
that the provision Respondent breached went to the heart of the
parties' agreement. The opportunity to bargain was the essence of
the agreement. In fact, that is the only subject it addressed in
substance, as it formed the basis for the settlement of an unfair
labor practice charge relating to Respondent's bargaining
obligation. I therefore conclude that there was a repudiation here,
within the meaning the Authority gives to that term, and that
Respondent committed this additional unfair labor practice in
violation of sections 7116(a)(1) and (5) of the Statute.
The Remedy
In connection with the usual bargaining order to remedy
violations of section 7116(a)(5), Counsel for the General Counsel
requests that the order include a requirement for restoration of
the status quo ante. Such a requirement would rescind the
change in Del Piano's schedule, pending negotiations. Respondent
contends that a status quo ante remedy is inappropriate
here, and that any bargaining order granted should be limited to
prospective bargaining over the impact and implementation of the
change. No request has been made for any kind of make-whole remedy,
nor was there evidence of the necessity or appropriateness of such
a remedy.
A status quo ante remedy is normally deemed
appropriate where management changes a condition of employment
without fulfilling its obligation to bargain on that change and the
change is one that is "substantively" negotiable. In such cases,
the Authority will grant such a remedy absent special
circumstances. Veterans Administration, West Los Angeles Medical
Center, Los Angeles, California, 23 FLRA 278, 281 (1986) (VA
Los Angeles). Where the refusal to bargain was over a change
that was subject to impact and implementation but not "substance"
bargaining, a status quo ante remedy will be found
appropriate only after a weighing of factors designed to balance
"the nature and circumstances of the particular violations against
the degree of disruption in government operations that would be
caused by such a remedy." Federal Correctional Institution,
8 FLRA 604 (1982) (FCI). When a status quo ante remedy is not
deemed appropriate in such a case, the usual bargaining order is
prospective only.(11)
The rationale for making a status quo ante remedy
presumptively appropriate in the case of a refusal to bargain over
a substantively negotiable change is that such remedy is necessary
"in order not to render meaningless the mutual obligation under the
Statute to negotiate concerning changes in conditions of
employment." VA Los Angeles; U.S. Customs Service, Region V, New
Orleans, Louisiana, 9 FLRA 116, 119 (1982). Such imperative,
apparently not deemed to be applicable to cases where the
bargaining involved will be limited to impact and implementation,
makes it unnecessary in substantive bargaining cases to apply the
FCI criteria. Long Beach Naval Shipyard, Long Beach,
California, 17 FLRA 511, 514 and n.6 (1985).(12)
In contrast to the distinction made between these types of
refusal-to-bargain cases, the Authority has not had occasion to
articulate a remedial standard for cases of unlawful repudiation.
Examination of a number of repudiation cases reveals, nevertheless,
a pattern of ordering restoration of conditions that were changed
by virtue of the repudiation, without a separate analysis of
whether the repudiated provision concerned matters subject to
substance bargaining or impact and implementation bargaining.
See, for example, Department of Defense Dependents Schools,
50 FLRA 424 (1995), Panama Canal Commission, Balboa, Republic of
Panama, 43 FLRA 1483 (1992), reconsideration denied, 45
FLRA 1075 (1992); Warner Robins; Rolla Research Center, U.S.
Bureau of Mines, Rolla, Missouri, 29 FLRA 107 (1987). See
also U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation,
Washington, D.C. and Bureau of Reclamation, Mid-Pacific Regional
Office, Sacramento, California, 46 FLRA 9, 28-30 (1992)
(status quo ante ordered to remedy violations that included
repudiation). But cf. Department of the Navy, Naval Underwater
Systems Center, Newport, Rhode Island, 30 FLRA 697, 701 (1987)
(status quo ante remedy warranted where management, by
repudiating an agreement, unilaterally changed a negotiable term
and condition of employment); Department of Treasury, Internal
Revenue Service, Memphis Service Center, 15 FLRA 1984)
(status quo ante remedy denied, based on FCI factors,
although revocation of agreement based on assertion of its
nonnegotiability was found to be an unlawful repudiation in
addition to the unfair labor practice of refusing to negotiate
concerning a proposal previously determined to be negotiable).
More generally, the Authority has provided the following
guidance:
We believe that remedies for unfair labor practices under the Statute should, like those under the
NLRA, be "designed to recreate the conditions and relationships that would have been had there
been no unfair labor practice." Local 60, United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners v. NLRB,
365 U.S. 651, 657 (1961) (Harlan, J., concurring). Remedies should be designed to "restore, so
far as possible, the status quo that would have obtained but for the wrongful act." NLRB v. J.H.
Rutter-Rex Manufacturing Co., 396 U.S. 258, 265 (1969) citing Phelps Dodge Corp. v. NLRB,
313 U.S. 177, 194 (1941). Although not in itself a sufficiently justifying effect, deterrence is also
certainly a desirable effect of a remedy. Carpenters v. NLRB, 365 U.S. at 659. However,
remedies should not be punitive. Id.
at 659.
United States Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons,
Safford, Arizona, 35 FLRA 431, 444-45 (1990). The Authority's
approach to status quo ante remedies for unilateral changes in
substantively negotiable conditions of employment, although
predating the Authority's articulation of this broader policy,
appears to reflect its spirit. On the other hand, the FCI
approach applied to unilateral changes in conditions subject only
to impact and implementation bargaining appears to stand as more in
the nature of a pre-existing exception to that policy.
I believe that repudiations of the kind represented by the
instant case fall more properly under the broader policy approach,
and therefore, that a status quo ante remedy is
presumptively appropriate. That is, it is warranted, absent special
circumstances, where a party has repudiated an agreement by
reneging on a promise to withhold action until certain conditions
are met. A status quo ante remedy in those circumstances
does nothing more than to direct a party to live up to its
agreement.
I find no special circumstances in this case that would
justify withholding such a remedy. Respondent merely asserts that
such a remedy would be "unduly disruptive."
Beyond the putative merits of any general approach for
remedies in repudiation cases, a status quo ante order seems
particularly appropriate in the instant case. The parties settled
an unfair labor practice charge in a manner that appears on the
agreement's face to fix Respondent's obligation to bargain before
changing Del Piano's working conditions. To remedy Respondent's
subsequent unfair labor practices, including its repudiation of
that agreement, without giving the Union the opportunity to bargain
before any changes are made, would truly "render
meaningless" the negotiations leading to the settlement agreement.
Such a result would remove much if not all incentive for a party in
the Union's situation to settle an unfair labor practice charge on
similar terms. That, in turn, would encourage otherwise avoidable
litigation.
For all of the above reasons, I recommend that the Authority
issue the following order.
ORDER
Pursuant to section 2423.29 of the Authority's Rules and
Regulations and section 7118 of the Statute, the U.S. Department of
the Navy, Navy Exchange Service Center Europe, Naples, Italy,
shall:
1. Cease and desist from:
(a) Unilaterally changing working conditions of unit
employees by implementing a new work schedule without fulfilling
its obligation to bargain with the American Federation of
Government Employees, Local 3712, AFL-CIO (Local 3712), the
exclusive representative of certain of its employees, concerning
the impact and implementation of such change.
(b) Repudiating the memorandum of agreement
negotiated with Local 3712 for the resolution of an unfair labor
practice charge filed in Case No. CH-CA-40847.
(c) 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 in order to
effectuate the purposes and policies of the Statute:
(a) Rescind the new work schedule for employee Paolo
Del Piano that was implemented on or about March 13, 1995.
(b) Upon request, negotiate with Local 3712 over the
impact and implementation of the new work schedule for Paolo Del
Piano.
(c) Post at all its facilities where bargaining unit
employees represented by Local 3712 are located 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 Commanding Officer 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 insure that such notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by
any other material.
(d) Pursuant to section 2423.30 of the Authority's Rules
and Regulations, notify the Regional Director of the Chicago
Region, in writing, within 30 days from the date of this Order, as
to what steps have been taken to comply.
Issued, Washington, DC, June 18, 1996
__________________________
JESSE ETELSON
Administrative Law Judge
POSTED BY ORDER OF THE
FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY
The Federal Labor Relations authority has found that Social
Security Administration, Dallas Region, Dallas, Texas, 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 NOT unilaterally change working conditions of unit
employees by implementing a new work schedule without fulfilling
our obligation to bargain with the American Federation of
Government Employees, Local 3712, AFL-CIO (Local 3712), the
exclusive representative of certain of our employees, concerning
the impact and implementation of such change.
WE WILL NOT repudiate the memorandum of agreement we negotiated
with Local 3712 for the resolution of an unfair labor practice
charge filed in Case No. CH-CA-40847.
WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner interfere with,
restrain, or coerce our employees in the exercise of the rights
assured them by the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations
Statute.
WE WILL rescind the new work schedule for employee Paolo Del
Piano that was implemented on or about March 13, 1995.
WE WILL, upon request, negotiate with Local 3712 over the impact
and implementation of the new work schedule for Paolo Del
Piano.
(Activity)
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 of the Federal Labor Relations
Authority, Chicago Region, 55 West Monroe, Suite 1150, Chicago,
Illinois 60603-9729, and whose telephone number is: (312)
353-6306.
1. § 7116. Unfair Labor Practices
(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[.]
2. Agency Exhibits A and B, included in the bound volumes entitled "Transcript of Proceedings," were not admitted into evidence and have not been considered.
3. The record contains several variations of this employee's surname, including "del Piano" and "DelPiano." Having neglected to establish through the employee himself the correct form and the appropriate capitalization, I have resorted to what appears to be the most common usage in the United States.
4. While there was arguably a hearsay aspect to the source of the square footage figures presented in a Union-generated survey received as GC Exh. 5, the figures are corroborated, except for a deviation of 10 square feet (in additional bathroom space), by matching square footage figures in the attachment to the MOA. I deem Respondent's execution of the MOA to be an admission of accuracy of the figures.
5. "(2) An exclusive representative of an appropriate
unit in an agency shall be given the opportunity to
be represented at--
(A) any formal discussion between one or more representatives of the agency and one or more employees in the unit or their representatives concerning any grievance or any personnel policy or practices or other general condition of employment[.]"
6. Only Hochberger testified about this aspect of the meeting, and I credit his testimony. Christensen did not testify.
7. The examples provided in Respondent's brief of instances in which the Authority found that a change was de minimis all preceded SSA. Therefore those Authority findings provide uncertain guidance for the proper application of the "reassessed and modified" de minimis standard.
8. My analysis of Authority cases applying this standard previously led me to believe that the "reasonably foreseeable effect" part of the test controlled over the actual "effect" part, so that an agency was not at risk in lacking 20-20 hindsight as to unanticipated but actual effects. The Authority appears to have disavowed that analysis and to have reaffirmed that the actual effect may serve independently as a sufficient basis for meeting the SSA test, that is, that the two parts are to be read disjunctively. See Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, 45 FLRA 574, 575 n.1, 582-583 (1992) (Portsmouth). But in Veterans Administration Medical Center, Prescott, Arizona, 46 FLRA 471, 476 (1992), the Authority stated that "[t]he inquiry does not focus primarily on the actual effects of a change in employees' conditions of employment." However, in more recent decisions, the Authority has again reaffirmed the actual "effects" part of the test. See, for example, United States Immigration and Naturalization Service, United States Border Patrol, Del Rio, Texas, 47 FLRA 225, 230, 232 (1993).
9. In each of the pre-SSA cases cited by Respondent in the instant case, the Authority had relied at least in part on the number of employees involved in finding that the changes were no more than de minimis.
10. In using the phrase, "significant impact," I intend to be descriptive, not prescriptive. I do not mean to propose "significant" as a synonym for "more than de minimis". Cf. Portsmouth at 575 n.2 ("more than de minimis" is not the same as "substantial").
11. This is not the same as a determination as to whether the Authority should order that any agreement reached as a result of the mandated negotiations be made retroactive, a remedy that has not been sought here. See generally Environmental Protection Agency and Environmental Protection Agency, Region II, 25 FLRA 787, 790-91 (1987).
12. I presume that the basis for this distinction goes generally along the following lines. When the obligation to bargain is limited to the impact and implementation of a change management has a right to make under section 7106 of the Statute, it is virtually a foregone conclusion that, once the bargaining obligation has been satisfied, the change will either be made or, if already made, remain in place. The FCI formulation thus treats restoration of the status quo ante pending negotiations not as a prerequisite to meaningful bargaining, but as a remedy the advantages of which must be balanced, without any presumption of appropriateness, against factors that might render it inappropriate.