822 A.2d 1085 | D.C. | 2003
Petitioners seek review of a decision of the District of Columbia Department of Employment Services (“DOES”) awarding unemployment compensation to members of a local union who, in the course of a labor dispute, initiated a strike, and were later locked out by the employer until an agreement was reached. Although an examiner denied any compensation to the claimants, the Office of Appeals and Review (“OAR”) reversed the decision, and awarded benefits to the claimants for the days during the labor dispute when they were precluded from returning to work.
Petitioners assert a series of challenges; we address only the question of eligibility of the claimants for benefits because that issue is dispositive of the case. We conclude that the final order of the DOES, applying D.C.Code § 51 — 110(f) and awarding compensation benefits, was error. We reverse.
I.
Respondents, members of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians (the “union”), Local 31, were employed by one or more of petitioners (collectively “ABC”) in the District of Columbia. The collective bargaining agreement under which the union and ABC had operated expired on March 31, 1997, and until the time at which the events giving rise to the instant action took place, the parties had been unsuccessful in their periodic endeavors to reach a new agreement. At approximately 5:00 a.m. E.S.T. on November 2, 1998, members of Local 16, the New York City Local, began picketing the facilities there, thus precipitating a nationwide strike. The strike was intended to be for twenty-four hours;
On November 11, 1998, 158 union members (“union members”) filed claims for unemployment benefits with the DOES.
The union members filed a timely appeal from the Appeals Examiner’s decision to the OAR. The OAR reviewed the claims and issued a proposed decision, which considered the relevant provision of the statute, D.C.Code § 51 — 110(f) (2001),
The present appeal followed.
II.
A.
The outcome of this case is determined by our interpretation of the pertinent section of the statute, D.C.Code § 51 — 110(f). For that reason, we begin with a statement of that provision:
An individual shall not be eligible for benefits with respect to any week if it has been found by the Director that such individual is unemployed in such week as a direct result of a labor dispute, other than a lockout, still in active progress in the establishment where he is or was last employed.
D.C.Code § 51 — 110(f) (emphasis added).
ABC contends that a reading of the statute, in light of our strong precedent to
In NBC, supra, this court faced a situation remarkably similar to the instant case. NBC and the same union’s collective bargaining agreement expired on March 31, 1976, whereupon the union effected a strike. Five days later, the union notified NBC that its members were willing and able to return to work on April 7, 1976 under the status quo until a new agreement could be reached. NBC, much like ABC in the instant case, responded by requiring the union to agree to certain conditions, which the union rejected.
Several months before the NBC decision, on September 7,1977, a draft bill that included the present reference to “other than a lockout” was presented to the Council of the District of Columbia for consideration. Subsequently, the Council adopted readings of Bill 2-209, “District of Columbia Unemployment Compensation Act amendments for 1978,” which retained the reference to “a lockout.” The bill was a sweeping overhaul of the District of Columbia Unemployment Compensation Act, and the amendment altering D.C.Code § 51 — 110(f) by adding the phrase “other than a lockout” constituted only a small part of it. On August 30 of the same year, the mayor signed the legislation, which was assigned Act No. 2-267 and published at 25 D.C.Reg. 2451 on September 22, 1978. The Council then transmitted the legislation to Congress on January 18, 1979, and upon the expiration of the thirty-day Congressional review period required under § 602(c)(1) of the District of Columbia Self-Government and Reorganization Act, Pub.L. 93-198 (1973), Act No. 2-267 became effective as D.C. Law 2-129 on March 3,1979.
B.
In reviewing a case of this nature, we generally give some deference to decisions rendered by administrative agencies. Springer v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs., 743 A.2d 1213, 1218 (D.C.1999); Long v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs., 717 A.2d 329, 331 (D.C.1998) (citations omitted). Such deference merely reflects the statutory authority entrusted to an agency to regulate a particular area of public activity. It is contemplated that the agency’s experience and expertise will
C.
Turning now to this case, we observe that considerable time has passed since our decision in NBC (1977). The question now posed is whether, under the provision as amended in 1979, a voluntary work stoppage by employees can be converted to a lockout, when the employer, in the absence of an agreement, refuses to permit the employees to return to work. As was so in NBC, there is no dispute as to the facts in this instance. Accordingly, our review focuses on the agency’s application of the amended statute.
Most would agree, as the DOES points out, that the relationship between employer and employee is undergoing substantial change. We are mindful that legislation in this important area of the work place strives to balance legitimate concerns of the employer, as well as the hardship of unemployment. See Wright v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs., 560 A.2d 509, 511 (D.C.1989). It is unclear whether the Council amended the statute, with respect to eligibility for benefits, intending to legislate a different result from that reached in NBC. The DOES does not argue that this was the Council’s intent. It does urge that the language, “other than a lockout,” could equitably be read to permit benefits for the claimants here. It advances this view, relying, in part, on Pennsylvania precedent, i.e., AVCO Corp. v. Pennsylvania Unemployment Compensation Bd., 105 Pa.Cmwlth. 316, 524 A.2d 531 (1987) which, applying Pennsylvania’s applicable statutes, allows a strike to be converted to a lockout if, under all the circumstances, the strikers’ willingness to return to work satisfies a requirement of reasonableness. Id.
We conclude that the amended reference to a “lockout” does not change what has been the continuing construction of the statute. Specifically, we have consistently determined eligibility for compensation benefits on the basis of the initial cause of the interruption of the employment. The reference to “lockout” does no more than make explicit what was earlier an arguable point. See NBC, supra, 380 A.2d at 999-1000. Thus, employees who, in the course of a labor dispute not yet resulting in a strike, are refused entry to the work place will not be disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits. But it is the initial cause of the unemployment, not subsequent events (such as the conversion of a strike to a lockout), that determines eligibility for such benefits. In this instance, looking at the language of the existing statute, our earlier decisions, and NBC in particular, we conclude that the DOES erred in its application of the statute in the circumstances presented. Accordingly, the order is
Reversed.
. This was the second unannounced strike after the collective bargaining agreement ex
. The first exchange was a letter from the union to ABC, wherein the former notified the latter of the strike’s finite duration. ABC responded by indicating that, unless the union agreed to provide seventy-two hours’ notice for any future strikes for regular programming, and fourteen days’ notice for remote broadcasts, ABC would not accept a return to work. The union countered with an offer to return with the promise not to strike over ABC’s unwillingness to provide information the union sought regarding a benefits package. In response, ABC rejected this offer, asserting that it did nothing to address ABC's concerns regarding unannounced strikes. The union made another offer, which, in addition to the conditions of the first union offer, would have bound the parties for a period of thirty days, not to cause work to stop. This, too, was unsatisfactory to ABC, and the lockout ensued.
. We treat the union members as a class. Ms. Constance Sims is the named claimant.
. Formerly D.C.Code § 46-310 (1973), then recodified as D.C.Code § 46-110(f) (1981).
. The condition in NBC required the union to agree to prevent alleged sabotage of NBC facilities and to extend the expired contract.
. At the time, § 51-110 did not contain the language "other than a lockout,” emphasized above.
. We rejected a similar contention premised on Pennsylvania decisions in Wright, supra, 560 A.2d at 509-11.