This case involves a teachers’ union collective bargaining proposal resisted as nonnegotiable by the Department of the Army. Specifically, the union proposed that teachers in schools for dependents of Army personnel not be required to sign personal service contracts as a condition of employment. The Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA or Authority), holding for the Army, declared the union’s proposal inconsistent with the Army’s right to hire, a right insulated against bargaining by the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute, 5 U.S.C. § 7106(a)(2)(A) (1982).
We conclude that the union’s proposal entails no substantive interference with the Army’s hiring prerogatives and therefore is negotiable. We also find persuasive the holding of our sister circuit that the Army’s use of personal service contracts in the hiring of teachers violates a Federal Acquisition Regulation.
See West Point Elementary School Teachers Ass’n v. FLRA,
I.
The Department of the Army operates six elementary and two middle schools at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, for the education of approximately four thousand dependents of Army personnel. 1 Congress authorized the operation of such schools in section 6 of the Act of September 30, 1950, 20 U.S.C. § 241 (1982), to provide education for military dependents who lacked access to local public schools. Employees of these “section 6” schools may be hired, and the terms and conditions of their employment set, without regard to the Civil Service Act *700 and several other laws applicable to civil servants. Id. § 241(a). 2
The Fort Bragg Association of Educators (the union) represents approximately three hundred and fifty teachers and other professional employees of the eight Fort Bragg schools. See Joint Appendix (J.A.) at 1, 75. In 1981, the union negotiated a collective bargaining agreement with the Army. Modified in 1982 and renewed for two years in 1984, the agreement granted teachers “career status,” or tenure, after a three-year probationary period. See Agreement Between the Fort Bragg Schools and the Fort Bragg Unit of the North Carolina Ass’n of Educators/NEA art. 15, § 4 (Addendum to Brief for Petitioner). Tenured teachers, the agreement provided, could not be dismissed except for “just cause,” id., and were given preference over probationary employees during reductions in force, id. art. 14, § 5(d).
Despite this agreement, the Army has constantly required its section 6 employees to sign personal service contracts (PSCs) annually as a condition of employment. See 32 C.F.R. § 594.5602 (1988). The PSCs establish the terms and conditions of employment for each employee, including pay, leave, termination, and grievance resolution. See J.A. at 54-62 (sample PSC). The contracts are renewed each year with a salary modification, see id. at 63-64 (sample PSC modification), and a basic contract is issued every three years.
In 1985, the Army notified the union that it believed the PSCs superseded the collective bargaining agreement; the superintendent of the Fort Bragg schools accordingly declared the tenure and reduction in force provisions of the agreement null and void.
See
J.A. at 73.
3
During negotiations for a new agreement in 1987, the union made the following proposal: “Unit employees will not be requested or required to enter into personal service contracts as a condition of their employment.”
See Fort Bragg Ass’n of Educators, NEA and Department of the Army, Fort Bragg Schools,
The FLRA declared the union’s proposal outside the Army’s duty to bargain, holding that it interfered with the Army’s right to hire, a “management right” safeguarded by the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute (FSLMRS), 5 U.S.C. § 7106(a)(2)(A).
Fort Bragg,
We view the use of personal services contracts by the Agency to be inseparable from the decision to hire. [The union’s proposal] prohibits the use of personal services contracts to hire employees, thereby requiring management to use some other appointment process. By prohibiting the Agency from using personal services contracts, [the proposal] constitutes a substantive rather than a procedural limitation on the Agency’s *701 right to hire and thus directly interferes with that right.
Id.
at 1534.
4
The FLRA emphasized, however, that “the content of personal services contracts cannot supersede collective bargaining agreement provisions lawfully negotiated pursuant to the Statute.”
Id.
at 1533;
see also Fort Bragg,
The union petitioned this court for review of the FLRA’s
Fort Bragg
decision.
5
In the interim, the Second Circuit reversed the Authority’s decision regarding PSCs in
West Point. See West Point Elementary School Teachers Ass’n v. FLRA,
II.
The FSLMRS imposes on both agencies and unions the duty to bargain in good faith over “conditions of employment,” 5 U.S.C. § 7114(b)(2), which are defined as “personnel policies, practices, and matters ... affecting working conditions.” Id. § 7103(a)(14). Among matters exempted from the duty to bargain are proposals that interfere with the agency’s right to hire “in accordance with applicable laws.” Id. § 7106(a)(2)(A). The procedures by which an agency exercises its hiring authority, however, are negotiable. Id. § 7106(b)(2).
We hold that the union’s proposal fits the latter category. It does not address the substance of the Army’s right to hire; instead, it concerns the manner in which the Army records and confirms the terms and conditions of employment. We recognize that this classification issue falls within the domain of the FLRA’s expertise. The scope of our review is therefore narrow; the Authority’s decision survives our scrutiny unless it is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706 (1982) (applied specifically to FLRA decisions by
id.
§ 7123(c));
see Overseas Educ. Ass’n v. FLRA,
The FLRA has held nonnegotiable proposals that would interfere with an agency’s discretion to determine whether to create a new position,
see National Ass’n of Gov’t Employees, Local R1-109, AFL-CIO and Veterans Admin. Medical Center,
*702
Newington, Conn.,
The union’s proposal simply provides that, regardless of the nature of the jobs the Army creates, whom it hires, and under what substantive conditions of employment, the Army may not record the terms of employment in PSCs. In its brief, the FLRA itself refers to PSCs as “[t]he vehicle ... used by an agency to embody the terms of appointment” and “the memorializing of the act of hiring.” Brief for the FLRA at 21;
see also American Fed’n of Gov’t Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 1770 and the Department of the Army, Fort Bragg Dependents Schools,
We find these descriptions telling. As they indicate, by prohibiting PSCs, the union’s proposal would affect only the
procedure
by which the Army records the terms of appointment and employment; eliminating PSCs would not add to, subtract from, or modify the
substance
of those terms. The Army is not required to use PSCs,
see AFGE, Local 1770,
As we have held previously and reaffirm here, the Agency may not use personal services contracts to attempt to establish unilaterally conditions of employment in derogation of the statutory collective bargaining rights of those employees. Where employees subject to 20 U.S.C. § 241 are in a unit of exclusive recognition, the content of personal services contracts cannot supersede collective bargaining agreement provisions lawfully negotiated pursuant to the [FSLMRS].
*703
We also find persuasive the Second Circuit’s decision in
West Point
that the Army’s use of PSCs for section 6 employees is unlawful,
The Second Circuit’s decision rests on a Federal Acquisition Regulation which provides:
(a) ... [A] personal services contract is characterized by the employer-employee relationship it creates between the Government and the contractor’s personnel. The Government is normally required to obtain its employees by direct hire under competitive appointment or other procedures required by the civil service laws. Obtaining personal services by contract, rather than by direct hire, circumvents those laws unless Congress has specifically authorized acquisition of the services by contract.
(b) Agencies shall not award personal services contracts unless specifically authorized by statute (e.g., 5 U.S.C. § 3109) to do so.
48 C.F.R. § 37.104 (1987). The FLRA argues that this regulation applies only to employees protected by the civil service laws because section (a) suggests that the regulation’s purpose is to prevent the circumvention of those laws. 6 Because section 6 teachers are exempt from many of the civil service laws under 20 U.S.C. § 241(a), the FLRA reasons, use of PSCs for those teachers does not violate the purpose of the regulation. 7 Brief for the FLRA at 17-18.
As the Second Circuit held, however, the language of section (b) of the regulation “is not limited to employees covered by the civil service regulations.”
West Point,
Recognizing the lack of specific authorization for PSCs in the text of 20 U.S.C. § 241(a), the FLRA draws on the legislative history of the 1965 amendments to that section, which made various civil service rules inapplicable to section 6 employees. Brief for the FLRA at 18-19. The Authority maintains that the amendments responded to the Army’s request to allow section 6 schools to follow the personnel practices of local schools, which included the use of PSCs. Id. The Senate Report reprinted a letter from the Army:
Employment practices and contract clauses have been established, therefore, to reflect the practices which exist in the *704 public schools.... [I]t is highly desirable that the personnel practices for instructional personnel be patterned after those usually encountered in the teaching profession rather than those which have been developed for the Federal service as a whole. The attached draft legislation would provide clear legislative authority considered necessary to permit continuation of present practices.
S.Rep. No. 311, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 4-5 (1965), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1965, pp. 1910, 1913.
This letter cannot bear the weight the FLRA would place on it. A letter incorporated in the Senate Report is, without more, hardly a reliable indicator of legislative intent.
See Bancorp Leasing & Financial Corp. v. Agusta Aviation Corp.,
In sum, we align ourselves with the Second Circuit’s analysis in West Point: because 20 U.S.C. § 241(a) does not specifically authorize the Army’s use of PSCs, that use violates the Federal Acquisition Regulation; the union’s proposal therefore does not interfere with management’s right to hire “in accordance with applicable laws.”
CONCLUSION
The union’s proposal to prohibit the Army’s - use of personal service contracts does not interfere substantively with the Army’s right to hire because those contracts are merely a means of recording the terms of employment. Furthermore, the Army’s use of PSCs appears to us, as it did to the Second Circuit, to violate a Federal Acquisition Regulation; the Army therefore is not exercising its hiring authority “in accordance with applicable laws.” For the reasons stated, we grant the union’s petition for review and reverse the decision of the FLRA. We further direct the Authority to enter an appropriate bargaining order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Army operates “dependents schools" at eight other bases in the United States. The Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps run similar schools on several of their U.S. bases. See Brief for Petitioner at 2.
. Section 6 provides:
[Dependents school] personnel may be employed and the compensation, tenure, leave, hours of work, and other incidents of the employment relationship may be fixed without regard to the Civil Service Act and rules and the following: (1) chapter 51 and sub-chapter III of chapter 53 of Title 5; (2) sub-chapter I of chapter 63 of Title 5; (3) sections 5504, 5541 to 5549, and 6101 of Title 5; (4) sections 1302(b), (c), 2108, 3305(b), 3306(a)(2), 3308 to 3318, 3319(b), 3320, 3351, 3363, 3364, 3501 to 3504, 7511, 7512, and 7701 of Title 5; and (5) chapter 43 of Title 5.
20 U.S.C. § 241(a).
. The Army relied on a legal opinion of the Army Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Personnel, given after consultation with the Army Judge Advocate General; the opinion maintained that section 6 employees, because they are employed under PSCs, are subject to government contract law, which requires, inter alia, that all government contracts provide for dispute resolution procedures and termination clauses. Joint Appendix (J.A.) at 70-71.
. In both
West Point
and
Fort Bragg,
the FLRA rejected the Army’s assertions that the union’s proposal interfered with the Army’s rights to "determine the ... organization ... of the agency,” "to make determinations with respect to contracting out, and to determine the personnel by which agency operations shall be conducted.” 5 U.S.C. § 7106(a)(1) & (2)(B);
see West Point,
. The FLRA had also found several union proposals concerning pay and leave negotiable. The Army petitioned for review of that part of the FLRA’s decision in No. 88-1132, which was originally consolidated with the union’s petition in No. 87-1823. We terminated the consolidation, however, and stayed further consideration of No. 88-1132 pending the decision of this court, sitting en banc, in Department of Defense Dependents Schools v. FLRA, No. 87-1733, et al. See Feb. 8, 1989 Order in Nos. 87-1823 & 88-1132.
. The union asserted the illegality of the PSCs under 48 C.F.R. § 37.104 (1987) in its petition to the FLRA.
See, e.g.,
J.A. at 4. The FLRA, however, failed to provide any reason for rejecting the union’s argument in its
Fort Bragg
decision.
See
. Significantly, the FLRA’s interpretation of the Federal Acquisition Regulation is not entitled to deference because the regulation was not promulgated by the FLRA and is not within the Authority’s area of expertise.
See Office of Personnel Management v. FLRA,
'. In contrast, the statute cited by the regulation as an example of specific authorization provides:
When authorized by an appropriation or other statute, the head of any agency may procure by contract the temporary (not in excess of 1 year) or intermittent services of experts or consultants or an organization thereof, including stenographic reporting services.
5 U.S.C. § 3109(b) (1982).
