| |
|
 |
Article 43
Bargaining History
Back
to article
The parties
fashioned an entirely new approach and philosophy to the handling
of grievances. The new grievance procedure reflects the manner
in which the Department and Local 12 wish to relate to each
other institutionally and their desire to expand this to the
work site. This new approach is intended to foster labor-management
cooperation at the work site and focus upon mutual respect
and problem resolution between employees and their supervisors.
While
this Article provides a formal grievance machinery, it is
the parties' intent that it be utilized only as a last resort.
That is, to the maximum extent possible, supervisors and employees
and stewards should feel free and are encouraged to discuss
matters of mutual concern in a non-adversarial manner, deal
with issues and not personalities, and attempt to resolve
such issues informally. While this is the intent, the parties
also recognize that good faith disagreement on issues can
exist in a cooperative relationship and that an "agreement
to disagree" is always possible.
If the
filing of a grievance becomes necessary, it is the parties'
desire that the grievance be resolved at the earliest time
and at the lowest level possible. It is recognized that in
any grievance process, if a grievance escalates to higher
levels or as more time passes, the grievance becomes more
difficult to resolve. The new Step 1 procedure contemplates
that the parties to the grievance focus on the problem or
concern rather than legal or technical issues. Thus, the grievance
form at Step 1 need contain only the basic facts or concerns
of the grievant and may omit any specific references to contractual
provisions, regulations, or requested remedy. The intent is
to provide for a grievance meeting where the respective participants
can discuss the matter which gave rise to the grievance in
a more informal fashion, focus on the facts and concerns of
the grievant, and explore possible resolution without being
primarily burdened with technical or regulatory matters, or
preparing a case for arbitration. No written decision is required
at Step 1 if the supervisor can respond orally at the meeting.
If done so, the supervisor may confirm the oral decision in
writing (for the record). The Agreement calls for the Step
1 meeting to be arranged with the Union steward to avoid the
appearance of improper discussion between the supervisor and
the grievant (without the presence of the Union steward).
It is
normally expected that a Step 1 grievance will be filed with
an employee's immediate supervisor. However, on occasion it
may make sense for a grievance to be filed elsewhere. If such
a question arises on the part of either the grievant/Union
or Management, the question should immediately be discussed
between the Union's Agency Chief Steward and the servicing
Labor Relations Officer. They may agree that the grievance
should be filed elsewhere and the grievance is then filed
and processed accordingly. If they cannot agree, then the
grievance is filed and processed with the immediate supervisor.
It is understood that at the Step 1 meeting, the supervisor
may request the Agency Labor Relations Officer to be present.
The parties also acknowledge that technical experts may be
present but that the meeting remains between the immediate
supervisor, the grievant, and the Union.
Step 2
of the grievance procedure was totally revised. Step 2 is
intended to be a fine tuning of Step 1, requiring more specificity
from the grievant and Union, but the focus remaining on problem
resolution. The parties acknowledged that the "factfinding"
process under the prior Agreement had not worked as intended
to resolve matters at Step 2. Thus, instead, a meeting will
now occur between the grievant, the Union representative,
and a higher level Management official. In balancing the desire
to maintain a 2-step procedure for expediency and still focus
on the issue(s) being resolved at the lowest level possible,
the parties decided to elevate grievances at Step 2 to the
highest "career program manager." The parties will
agree upon a list of the Agency positions in the various organizational
units in the Department where Step 2 appeals are to be filed,
and the list will be made known to employees, managers, and
supervisors.
Again, the meeting should be arranged with the Union representative.
At Steps
1 and 2, Union representation will normally come from among
the Agency's designated stewards. Exceptions may be made by
the Local 12 President in accordance with Article 41. At Step
1, such exceptions should not be made routinely. However,
it is understood that these exceptions may be more frequent
at Step 2. For the purpose of representation at Step 2, Agencies
(other than the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Administration
and Management) serviced by the National Capital Service Center
shall be considered one area of jurisdiction. These Agencies
include all components of the Office of the Secretary, Bureau
of International Labor Affairs, Office of Labor-Management
Standards, Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration, Veterans'
Employment and Training Service, and the President's Committee
on Employment of People with Disabilities.
While
the joint factfinding process has been replaced, it is understood
that the Union representative at Step 2 is still entitled
to reasonable official time to prepare for the Step 2 meeting.
Such time includes reviewing relevant documents or information
and speaking to individuals with relevant information concerning
the grievance. Understanding that no one can be compelled
to speak to the Union representative, the parties desire that
all relevant facts be made known so that neither party proceed
in ignorance of important facts. Additionally, while it is
desirable for the grievant/Union to submit any information
or documents in support of the grievance when the grievance
is initially filed at Step 2, the grievant/Union may submit
additional information or documents at the Step 2 meeting
for consideration by the Management official.
The parties
agreed to maintain the language in this Article with respect
to reasonable official time, but clarified its meaning. In
specifying that "reasonable" means that amount of
time needed to perform the representation, the parties agreed
this was not left to the subjective determination of the representative.
Rather, a "rule of reason" would apply -- i.e.,
given the particular fact situation, what a reasonable person
under normal circumstances could be expected to use and balancing
this against the needs of the Agency to get its work completed.
In laying
out the grievance procedure in this Article, the parties understand
that a supervisor or manager is not precluded from holding
other informal discussions with the Union steward and employee
in an attempt to informally resolve the grievance. However,
a supervisor may not discuss the grievance with the employee
without also giving the Union the opportunity to be present
at the discussion.
The changes
in both Step 1 and Step 2 necessitated a change in dealing
with the issue of grievability/arbitrability. With the informal
nature of Step 1 and the focus on problem resolution remaining
at Step 2, the parties did not desire either Management or
the grievant/Union to get overly hung up on the issue of grievability
to the extent that it would detract from a good faith effort
to resolve the grievance. Thus, Management still has the obligation
to advise the grievant and Union of any concerns over the
grievability of a matter at the earliest time practicable.
It is understood that when such a concern arises, it merely
becomes another issue in the grievance and Management must
continue to process the grievance. To the extent it is not
raised in the grievance procedure, it may be raised at arbitration
-- but only if done so in a timely manner. The intent here
is to provide the Union adequate time to deal with the issue
in keeping with the mutual interest that there should be no
surprises at arbitration.
Given
that employees in the excepted service may now grieve adverse
actions or performance-based actions, it was necessary to
clarify that the "stay" provisions of Section 13.a.
and b. do not apply to employees in the excepted service.
Additionally, it was clarified that a grievance concerning
the merit staffing of a position in the excepted service or
a non-bargaining unit threshold position does not trigger
the stay provision of Section 13.c. The parties also clarified
that with respect to stays of merit staffing actions, if a
grievance is filed after the interviewing process has begun,
the interviewing process may be completed.
In keeping
with the goal of streamlining the process as much as possible,
the parties agreed that certain actions, which, if grieved,
become subject to the stay provision, would bypass either
Step 1 or both Steps 1 and 2 of the grievance procedure and
go immediately to arbitration. Concerning the latter, this
will depend upon whether Local 12 represented the employee
during the "notice" period, in accordance with higher
regulation.
With respect
to the concept or definition of the term "threshold,"
the parties chose not to define the term in the Agreement.
Instead, the parties agreed that the term would best be defined
during the administration of the Agreement and any dispute
could be resolved, if necessary, by resorting to the grievance
procedure.
Finally,
the parties agreed that they share joint responsibility for
administration of this Article to ensure that it will work
in a consistent fashion across Agency lines. Both parties
will actively monitor the operation of the grievance procedure
and work together to correct any problems that may arise so
that grievances can be effectively resolved or moved expeditiously
along to the next phase.
|