[ v34 p368 ]
34:0368(69)CA
The decision of the Authority follows:
34 FLRA NO. 69
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
WASHINGTON, D.C.
(Respondent)
and
WESTERN AREA POWER ADMINISTRATION
GOLDEN, COLORADO
(Respondent)
and
INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF ELECTRICAL WORKERS
GOVERNMENT COORDINATING COUNCIL #1
LOCALS 640, 1245, 1759, 1959 AND 2159
(Charging Party)
7-CA-90123
DECISION AND ORDER
January 18, 1990
Before Chairman McKee and Members Talkin and Armendariz.
I. Statement of the Case
This unfair labor practice case is before the Authority under section
2429.1(a) of the Authority's Rules and Regulations based on a stipulation
of facts by the parties. The General Counsel filed a brief. The Respondents
did not file a statement
of position.
The issues in this case are whether: (1) Respondent Western Area Power
Administration (WAPA) violated section 7116(a)(1) and (5) of the Federal
Service Labor - Management Relations Statute (the Statute) by failing and
refusing to pay employees in Supervisory Craftsman positions the
supplementary wage increase which was paid to all bargaining unit employees
pursuant to the parties' Supplementary Labor Agreement #3; and (2)
Respondent U.S. Department of Energy, Washington, D.C. (DOE) violated
section 7116(a)(1) and (5) of the Statute by interfering with the
bargaining relationship of the parties at the level of exclusive
recognition when it refused to allow employees in Supervisory Craftsman
positions to be paid the negotiated wage adjustment.
For the reasons set forth below, we find that Respondent WAPA did not
violate the Statute by refusing to pay Supervisory Craftsmen the
supplementary wage increase which was paid to all bargaining unit employees
under the parties' Supplementary Labor Agreement #3. We also find that
Respondent DOE did not violate the Statute by interfering with the
bargaining relationship at the level of exclusive recognition. The
complaints as to Respondent WAPA and Respondent DOE, therefore, will be
dismissed.
II. Background
This case is another part of the continuing dispute between the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Government Coordinating
Council #1, Locals 640, 1245, 1759, 1959, and 2159 (the Union) and WAPA
over the unit status of prevailing rate employees in Supervisory Craftsman
positions. The history of the dispute is set forth in the Authority's
decisions in Department of Energy, Western Area Power Administration, 3
FLRA 77 (1980) (WAPA 1); Department of Energy, Western Area Power
Administration, Golden, Colorado, Case No. 7-CU-24 (Feb. 17, 1981) (WAPA
2); U.S. Department of Energy, Western Area Power Administration, Golden,
Colorado, 22 FLRA 758 (1986) (WAPA 3), rev'd sub nom. United States
Department of Energy, Western Area Power Administration, Golden, Colorado
v. FLRA, 880 F.2d 1163 (10th Cir. 1989) (WAPA v. FLRA); and U.S. Department
of Energy, Western Area Power Administration, Golden, Colorado, 27 FLRA 268
(1987) (WAPA 4), reversed sub nom. U.S. Department of Energy, Western Area
Power Administration, Golden, Colorado v. FLRA, No. 87-2062 (10th Cir. Nov.
15, 1989).
As outlined in the decisions cited above, WAPA negotiates the wage rates of
its prevailing rate employees in units of exclusive recognition represented
by the Union. WAPA consistently has maintained that prevailing rate
employees in Supervisory Craftsman positions--positions previously
denominated Foreman II and III--are "supervisors" within the
meaning of section 7103(a)(10) of the Statute and are excluded from the
units of exclusive recognition with which it has an obligation to bargain.
WAPA, therefore, has refused to bargain with the Union over wage rates for
Supervisory Craftsman employees.
The Authority determined, however, in WAPA 1 and WAPA 3, that employees in
Supervisory Craftsman positions were included in units of exclusive
recognition. Consequently, the Authority found, in WAPA 3 and WAPA 4, that
WAPA's refusal to bargain over wage rates for Supervisory Craftsman
positions constituted an unfair labor practice under section 7116(a)(1) and
(5) of the Statute.
III. Facts
The parties stipulated that in August 1988 they conducted a Joint Wage
Survey pursuant to Article 17 of their collective bargaining agreement.
Based on that survey, the parties negotiated a new wage schedule for unit
employees, which was published as Supplementary Labor Agreement #3--1988
Wage Schedule. Stipulation at 2-3; Exhibit 3 to Stipulation.
By a memorandum dated September 19, 1988, Respondent DOE notified
Respondent WAPA that Section 613 of the Treasury, Postal Service, and Other
Governmental Agencies Appropriation Bill of 1989 provided a pay cap for
prevailing rate employees and a 90-day delay in the implementation of that
pay cap. Respondent DOE also stated that, based on advice received from the
Office of Personnel Management (OPM), the pay cap would not apply to
prevailing rate employees, including prevailing rate supervisors, covered
by section 9(b) of the Prevailing Rate Systems Act of 1972 and section 704
of the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978. Stipulation at 3; Exhibit 4 to
Stipulation.
Beginning on October 9, 1988, the supplemental wage increase required by
Supplementary Labor Agreement #3 was paid to employees in the bargaining
unit. Based upon the advice of Respondent DOE in the memorandum of
September 19, 1988, Respondent WAPA did not pay, and has not paid, the
supplemental wage increase to employees in Supervisory Craftsman positions.
Stipulation at 3.
IV. The Position of the General Counsel
The General Counsel notes, citing the Authority's decisions in WAPA 1
through WAPA 4, that the Authority consistently has held that employees in
Supervisory Craftsman positions are included in the bargaining unit. The
General Counsel also notes that Respondent WAPA consistently has refused to
negotiate over wage rates for Supervisory Craftsmen or, based on advice
received from Respondent DOE, to pay Supervisory Craftsmen wage rates
required for unit employees by the parties' collective bargaining
agreements. General Counsel's Brief at 2-4.
The General Counsel argues that Respondent DOE violated the Statute by
"advising" Respondent WAPA that it would be improper to pay the
negotiated supplemental wage increase to Supervisory Craftsmen. Id. at 4.
The General Counsel concludes that by so advising Respondent WAPA,
Respondent DOE "improperly insinuated itself" into the collective
bargaining relationship at the level of exclusive representation. Id. at 8.
The General Counsel contends that Respondent WAPA violated the Statute by
refusing to pay the negotiated supplemental wage increase to employees in
Supervisory Craftsman positions. The General Counsel argues that Respondent
WAPA's refusal to comply with the supplemental wage agreement as to
Supervisory Craftsmen constitutes "a repudiation of the economic
provisions of that
agreement(.)" Id. at 6.
V. Discussion
A. Whether WAPA Violated Section 7116(a)(1) and (5) of the
Statute
During the pendency of this case before the Authority, the United States
Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit issued its decision in WAPA v. FLRA,
reversing the Authority's decision in WAPA 3. The Court concluded that, by
including employees in Supervisory Craftsman positions in bargaining units
represented by the Union, the Authority "improperly certified a mixed
unit of supervisory and non-supervisory employees(.)" WAPA v. FLRA,
880 F.2d at 1172.
The parties in this case are the same as the parties in the case before the
Tenth Circuit in WAPA 3. The resolution of this case depends on the
determination of the unit status of employees in Supervisory Craftsman
positions, which is the same issue that was before the Court in WAPA 3.
Consistent with the Court's decision in WAPA v. FLRA, we conclude that the
unit of prevailing rate employees represented by the Union in this case
does not include employees in Supervisory Craftsman positions.
Consequently, we find that Respondent WAPA had no duty under the Statute to
bargain with the Union over the conditions of employment of employees in
those positions and no obligation to pay Supervisory Craftsmen the
negotiated supplemental wage increase which was paid to unit employees
under the parties' Supplementary Labor Agreement #3. Accordingly, we
conclude that Respondent WAPA, by failing to pay Supervisory Craftsmen the
supplemental wage increase due unit employees under the Supplementary Labor
Agreement, did not repudiate that agreement in violation of section
7116(a)(1) and (5) of the Statute. We will, therefore, dismiss the
complaint as to Respondent WAPA. B. Whether DOE Violated Section 7116(a)(1)
and (5) of the
Statute
When management at a higher level in an agency directs or requires
management at a subordinate level of exclusive recognition to act in a
manner that is inconsistent with the subordinate level's bargaining
obligations under the Statute, the higher-level management entity violates
section 7116(a)(1) and (5) of the Statute. See United States Department of
Agriculture, Washington, D.C. and United States Department of Agriculture,
Farmers Home Administration, Little Rock, Arkansas, 24 FLRA 682, 686-87
(1986); Headquarters, Department of the Army, Washington, D.C. and U.S.
Army Training Center Engineer and Fort Leonard Wood, Fort Leonard Wood,
Missouri, 22 FLRA 647 (1986).
We have found, however, that Respondent WAPA did not have an obligation to
bargain with the Union over the conditions of employment of employees in
Supervisory Craftsman positions. Consequently, there was no bargaining
relationship as to Supervisory Craftsmen at WAPA with which Respondent
DOE's issuance of the September 19, 1988 memorandum could have interfered.
Accordingly, we conclude that Respondent DOE did not violate section
7116(a)(1) and (5) of the Statute and we will dismiss the complaint as to
Respondent DOE.
VI. Order
The complaint is dismissed.
FOOTNOTES:
(If blank, the decision does not
have footnotes.)