410 A.2d 140 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1979
This is an appeal by the city of New Haven and the New Haven board of education (both hereinafter referred to as the municipal employer) from a decision and orders of the Connecticut state board of labor relations (the labor board). Four labor unions (unions) which represent some of the employees of the municipal employer had filed complaints1
with the labor board, alleging that the municipal employer had unilaterally and without good faith bargaining enacted an amended residency ordinance requiring its prospective employees and those employees transferred in the future to positions outside their bargaining units to become residents of the city of New Haven. The labor board held that the municipal employer, by adopting the ordinance without first bargaining in good faith with the unions, violated §
The labor board found the following facts which are not disputed. Since February 24, 1966, the municipal employer has by ordinance required its employees to live within the greater New Haven area, which is defined as New Haven and those six towns and cities which are contiguous to New Haven. On March 15, 1976, a petition was filed to amend the residency ordinance to require employees to reside within the city. A public hearing was held on the proposed amendment at which time the unions argued against it, claiming that its adoption would be in violation of state labor laws. The issue *20 of whether the residency requirement was a mandatory subject for good faith bargaining was clearly raised at the public hearing.2
The union heard nothing further on the proposed amendment until April 21, 1977, when a revised draft was again submitted. On November 15, 1977, the legislation committee submitted the majority and minority reports on the issue to the board of aldermen. On November 29, 1977, an informal hearing was held on the revised proposal and the unions again protested its adoption. On December 5, 1977, the board of aldermen enacted, and on December 19, 1977 the mayor approved, the amendment to the residency ordinance which became effective January 1, 1978. The pertinent parts of the amendment to the residency ordinance provided that "as a condition for employment" all persons employed after January 1, 1978 must become residents within six months of employment, and that those who were employed before January 1, 1978 and who are appointed, transferred or promoted outside their bargaining units must comply with the ordinance in the same manner as those who were hired after January 1, 1978.3 *21
At no time while the amendment to the residency ordinance was in the legislative process, including that period of time during which the parties negotiated new collective bargaining agreements,4 did the unions or the municipal employer ever request to bargain as to the change in residency requirements. In the current collective bargaining agreements, there is no residency requirement.
The labor board concluded the following: that requiring those employed after January 1, 1978 and those employed before January 1, 1978 who are permanently appointed, transferred or promoted into a bargaining unit to establish residence in the city within six months thereafter is a condition of employment and therefore a mandatory subject of collective bargaining; that the unilateral change of such a condition of employment without collective bargaining is a practice prohibited by §
To effectuate these principles of collective bargaining, the MERA makes it mandatory for local governmental employers and their employees "to meet at reasonable times . . . and confer in good faith with respect to wages, hours and other conditions of employment . . . ." General Statutes §
The language of the MERA regarding the duty to confer in good faith with respect to wages, hours and conditions of employment is similar to that contained in the National Labor Relations Act. This federal act provides that it shall be an unfair labor practice for an employer to refuse to bargain collectively with the representatives of its employees "in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, or other conditions of employment."
The legislature has assigned to the labor board the primary task of construing the provisions of the MERA. General Statutes §
A requirement of residency at the time of or during employment has passed constitutional muster.9 It has been held that an ordinance requiring police officers to maintain a particular residence during the period they are employed is not irrational and therefore does not violate the equal protection clause of the
It has been held that when a failure by an employee to meet or comply with a requirement maydirectly result in the termination of employment, it is a condition of his employment.11 "The broad statutory term `conditions of employment' may be construed to include the question whether a person *28
shall continue in employment . . . ." Board ofPolice Commissioners v. White,
It is further clear that the residency ordinance as it applies to future employees is a subject for mandatory bargaining with the collective bargaining *29
agent of the present employees. "The duty to bargain is a continuing one, and a union may legitimately bargain over wages and conditions of employment which will affect employees who are to be hired in the future." N.L.R.B. v. Laney DukeStorage Warehouse Co.,
Not everything which may be of general interest to the employee is a subject matter of compulsory bargaining under the MERA. It is clear there is no "duty to bargain collectively regarding such managerial decisions, which lie at the core of entrepreneurial control." Fibreboard Corporation v.Labor Board,
The Michigan Supreme Court had no difficulty in finding that such a residency requirement was a condition of employment. Detroit Police OfficersAssn. v. City of Detroit,
The municipal employer in this case argues that the residency requirement is a continuing precondition *30
for employment and therefore is not subject to mandatory bargaining. The Supreme Court of Michigan adequately answered this argument when it held: "We are not persuaded that the residency requirement, regulating as it does the conduct of police officers throughout their years on the force, may be correctly labeled a `continuing recruiting requirement.' In addition, we expressly reject the City's argument that any term or condition of employment may be so labeled. A recruiting requirement, whether it is age, mental competency, physical characteristics or residency, focuses on that point in time at which a candidate for employment is hired. At that moment the new recruit must meet established standards. Once an applicant has met these standards and has been hired as an employee, the `recruiting requirements' as such do not continue to regulate his or her right to hold the job. Employment standards are, of course, lawful, but they must be treated as a term and condition of employment." Detroit Police Officers Assn.
v. City of Detroit,
The municipal employer argues that the unions were under an obligation to demand that it bargain before the adoption of the ordinance. It is correct that the MERA does not require the employer to seek out its employees and request them to participate in negotiations over mandatory subjects of collective bargaining. "To put the employer in default . . . the employees must at least have signified to . . . [the employer] their desire to negotiate."N.L.R.B. v. Columbian Co.,
It makes sense not to require a union to request bargaining on every proposal made in a legislative body of a municipality that may affect wages, hours *32 and conditions of employment when the subject of that proposal could not be enforced unless adopted into law. If bargaining were required on every proposal affecting wages, hours and conditions of employment, it would place an onerous burden upon both the municipal employer and the employee. In recognition of this, the labor board has ruled that a complaint alleging a unilateral change of condition of employment on the basis of a proposal pending before a legislative body or charter revision commission is premature. City of Bristol, Conn. Labor Board, Decision No. 1578 (1977); City ofHartford, Conn. Labor Board, Decision No. 1353 (1975).
The cases relied upon by the municipal employer in claiming that the unions were under a duty to demand bargaining are readily distinguishable. InNorwich v. Norwich Fire Fighters,
The remaining cases relied upon by the municipal employer come from the private sector. In N.L.R.B.
v. Spun-Jee Corporation,
In sum, the requirement of residency for employees of a municipality is clearly a condition of employment within the meaning of the municipal employee relations act. It therefore follows that the municipal employer was under an obligation to bargain in good faith on the issue. By unilaterally requiring its employees to maintain their residence in New Haven, without good faith bargaining, the municipal employer violated §
Accordingly, the appeal of the city of New Haven and the New Haven board of education is hereby dismissed.