delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) discharged Douglas Hayes, the grievant, as a child protective investigator. His discharge was submitted to arbitration in accordance with thе applicable collective bargaining agreement. The arbitrator found him guilty of several of the charges but modified the discharge to a 30-day unpaid suspension. Hayes’ union, thе American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Council 31, AFL-CIO (AFSCME), appealed to the circuit court, which vacated the arbitrator’s award. We reverse thе trial court and reinstate the arbitrator’s award.
Hayes worked as a child protective investigator for DCFS from 1982 until he was discharged in May 1998 due to his failure to make timely contact with аlleged victims or other subjects in a number of abuse and neglect cases. His discharge was submitted to arbitration pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement between DCFS and the Illinois Department of Central Management Services (together, the Department) and AFSCME. The arbitrator found Hayes guilty of most of the allegations against him and reduced the penalty from discharge to a 30-day unpaid suspension under the principles of progressive and corrective discipline. In addition, the Department could require Hayes to undergo retraining before he undertook an active caseload again.
The trial court vacated the arbitration award and reinstated the Department’s discharge of Hayes. AFSCME аppeals.
I
The trial court adopted the Department’s argument that the arbitrator exceeded his authority by reducing Hayes’ penalty from discharge to a 30-day unpaid suspеnsion. On appeal, AFSCME argues that the arbitrator did not exceed his authority and properly relied on principles of progressive discipline and just cause.
Judicial review оf an arbitration award is extremely limited. American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees v. Department of Central Management Services,
Since there arе no allegations of fraud, corruption, partiality, or misconduct in this case, we need only consider whether the face of the award contains gross errors of law or fact. See Tim Huey Corp.,
In DuBose,
“[I]f discharge is the appropriate pеnalty, it must be because something in the grievant’s work history justifies it, or because the specific charges against the grievant make this case more serious than other cases of tardy investigations.”
The arbitrator found that Hayes had a clean disciplinary record but had been repeatedly counseled regarding his failure to conduct timely investigations. Since Hаyes had never been subject to progressive corrective discipline, the arbitrator concluded that summary discharge was inappropriate. As support for this conclusion, he noted that DCFS initially did not believe that discharge was necessary. Because we can find no gross error of law or fact apparent on the face of the arbitration award, we may not vacate it on that basis. See Tim Huey Corp.,
II
The trial court also found that enforcement of the arbitration award violated established public policy against DCFS employing persons whose neglect and dishonesty could seriously reduce the safety, welfare, and protection of minors. See DuBose,
An arbitrator’s findings relating to an employee’s rehabilitative potеntial and the risk imposed on third parties by his reinstatement will be upheld if they are rational. DuBose,
Here, the arbitrator carefully considered Hayes’ rehabilitation potential and his amenability to discipline. He first considered the specific charges against Hayes and found that some were unwarranted. He then acknowledged the seriousness of the remaining incidents and squarely placed responsibility for them on Hayes. He also considered evidence of Hayes’ competence and amenability to retraining as shown by his disciplinary record and work history to determine whether discharge was apprоpriate. He found that there was little proof that Hayes, a long-time employee, was incompetent. He noted that Hayes’ disciplinary record was clean, contаining only a “stale” oral reprimand from 1995. Hayes’ work history showed that although he had been repeatedly counseled concerning his tardy investigations, he had never been subjectеd to progressive and corrective discipline.
Our review of the record indicates that DCFS did not act with sufficient clarity to correct the problem. Although DCFS repeatedly told Hаyes of his misfeasance, it failed to put any teeth behind its reprimands pursuant to its policy of progressive and corrective discipline until it finally sought to discharge him. As the arbitration award stated, “[t]he failure of supervision in this case is a failure to give the grievant the necessary corrective warnings, in the form of progressive discipline.”
The arbitrator conсluded that there was no evidence that Hayes would not be amenable to progressive and corrective discipline if it were properly applied. He noted that even Hayes’ manager had intended to retrain rather than discharge him until Hayes made an intemperate remark in his grievance answer. The arbitrator did not believe that, taken in cоntext, this incident was sufficient to summarily discharge Hayes in light of his 16 years of service. We cannot say that these findings and conclusions were irrational (see DuBose,
Finally, in determining whether an arbitration award violated public policy, the courts in DuBose and Blasingame also looked at: (1) the nexus between the grievant’s misconduct and harm to others; (2) the suitability of the punishment; and (3) whether the award sanctioned a violation of the law. DuBose,
Fortunately, in this case Hayes’ misconduct did not result in harm to any minors. However, the arbitrator found that Hayes’ repeated failure to conduct timely investigations constituted a serious breach of his duties. While the arbitrator did not find that this misconduct necessitated immediate discharge, he did find that it warranted the next most severe sanction, an unpaid 30-day suspension.
This punishment is sufficiently severe that it cannоt be said to sanction a violation of law.
After reviewing the award in this case, we cannot say that the arbitrator’s findings and conclusions were irrational or failed to take into account the appropriate public policy considerations. DuBose,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the circuit court of Peoria County is reversed, and the arbitrator’s award is reinstated.
Reversed.
BRESLIN and McDADE, JJ., concur.
