The respondent, the New Hampshire Department of Corrections (DOC), appeals an order of the New Hampshire Public Employee Labor Relations Board (PELRB) finding that the DOC had a valid and binding past practice of compensating employees for their time spent completing a mandatory fitness test, and that by changing this past practice unilaterally, the DOC committed an unfair labor practice. We reverse and remand.
The PELRB found, or the record supports, the following facts. The dispute in this case relates to physical fitness testing requirements that apply to certain DOC employees. In December 2010, the petitioner, the New England Police Benevolent Association, Local 250 (Union), filed an •unfair labor practice complaint against the DOC asserting that the DOC’s directive that such testing must be accomplished on the employee’s own time without work release or compensatory time was a unilateral change of a binding past practice. The Union alleged that since 2001, the DOC had either allowed employees to complete the physical fitness test during their work shift or had awarded such employees compensatory time if the test was completed during the employee’s non-work time. The Union averred that the change in the past practice constituted a change in a term and condition of employment. Accordingly, the Union asserted that by changing the practice unilaterally, the DOC breached its duty of bargaining in good faith. The PELRB found in the Union’s favor, and this appeal followed.
To succeed on appeal, the DOC must show that the PELRB’s decision is unlawful or clearly unreasonable. Appeal of City of Laconia,
The DOC first argues that the record does not support the PELRB’s finding of a past practice. We agree.
“An employer’s practices, even if not required by a collective-bargaining agreement, which are regular and long-standing, rather than random or intermittent, become terms and conditions of [union] employees’ employment, which cannot be altered without offering their collective-bargaining representative notice and an opportunity to bargain over the proposed change.” Sunoco, Inc.,
As the party alleging an established past practice, the Union had the burden of proof on this issue. Eugene Iovine, Inc.,
“The record here falls short of such a showing.” Caterpillar, Inc.,
Having concluded that the PELRB erred when it found that a past practice existed, we need not address the DOC’s alternative contention that the alleged past practice did not involve a mandatory subject of bargaining.
Reversed and remanded.
