An
administrate law judge (ALJ) with the Federal Relations Authority has found the
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) committed an unfair labor practice by not
bargaining with its own union related to the agency’s office relocation to
another part of the District of Columbia.
The
National Labor Relations Board Union (NLRBU) represents certain employees who
work for the NLRB, including approximately 62 employees at the agency
headquarters in Washington, D.C. In 2010, the agency started to consider
what it would do when its office lease expired in June 2013. Ultimately,
the agency agreed to lease space in another part of town. The union requested
to bargain over the move and made information requests for floorplans and other
information.
Both
sides eventually signed a so-called “ground rules” document that purported to
limit the bargaining to two days, but contained some language that provided
that bargaining could go longer if issues remained unresolved. The parties
met, but substantive bargaining did not begin until the second day when the
parties attempted to discuss the 41 separate proposals submitted by the
union. There were discussions about size of workspaces, their proximity to
windows, whether internal windows would be frosted, the number of restroom
stalls, details about furniture and even whether workspaces would have coat
hooks.
The
parties could not come to resolution on all 41 proposals within the two-day
period and the NLRB eventually broke off talks. The agency took the
position that it had fulfilled its obligation to bargain over the relocation
both per the statute and the ground rules agreement. The union sought
mediation assistance from the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service
(FMCS), but the NLRB refused to participate in mediation and wrote in an email
to the union:
“Bargaining
has concluded [and] [m]ediation would be pointless since we have moved
forward… We don’t intend to waste our time, and that of a mediator, to
engage in a useless undertaking.”
In
May 2014, the NLRBU filed an unfair labor practice charge against the NLRB
alleging that the agency arbitrarily ceased bargaining with the union over
issues related to the office relocation and the case was eventually heard by an
ALJ, who found that the NLRB violated its duty to bargain in good faith
with the union. The ALJ held that the “ground rules” document did not justify
the agency’s position and that the “evidenced thus shows overwhelmingly that
the parties had not reached impasse.”
The
ALJ’s remedy imposed is interesting as well. He ordered the NLRB to return to
the bargaining table and resume negotiations at the point where they left
off. While the ALJ recognized the agency could not move back to its old
location and start over, he did indicate that if the parties reached agreement
on issues, the agreement could be applied retroactively in some instances.
Finally,
the ALJ ordered the NLRB to post a prominent notice, signed by the chairman of
the NLRB and its general counsel, at all of its locations nationwide and
online. In the notice, the NLRB promises, among other things, that it will
not unilaterally change working conditions of its employees without negotiating
with the union.
A
copy of the decision and notice posting can be found here.
Source:
Lexology
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