OPINION OF THE COURT
During the parties’ negotiations regarding their July 1, 1995 through June 30, 1998 collective bargaining agreement, petitioner proposed the inclusion of a provision implementing the statutory benefits provided injured police officers under General Municipal Law § 207-c (hereinafter referred to as a 207-c agreement). Petitioner apparently provided respondent with several examples of 207-c agreements along with the agreement between it and its firefighters that was predicated upon General Municipal Law § 207-a. This later agreement, in conformance with General Municipal Law § 207-a (2), provided that petitioner would pay permanently disabled firefighters the difference between their disability retirement benefit and the wages that they would have earned had they continued working. Although General Municipal Law § 207-c does not confer this benefit upon permanently disabled police officers, the parties nonetheless included it in the 207-c agreement that they incorporated in the collective bargaining agreement. Although petitioner claims to have discovered the allegedly mistaken inclusion of this benefit in the summer of 1996, matters remained essentially dormant until February 4, 1997, when a disabled police officer applied for the supplemental payments provided under the parties’ 207-c agreement. Petitioner’s denial of his request led respondent to demand arbitration. Petitioner responded by moving for a stay of arbitration and the reformation of the 207-c agreement on the ground of mutual mistake.
In considering an application for a stay of arbitration of a public sector labor dispute, a court must make two inquiries: (1) are the arbitration claims with respect to the particular subject matter of the dispute authorized under the Taylor Law (Civil Service Law art 14), and (2) whether the terms of the particular arbitration clause include the subject matter of the dispute sought to be arbitrated (see, Matter of Blackburne [Governor's Off. of Empl. Relations],
Petitioner maintains that the answer to the first inquiry is no because the subject 207-c agreement runs afoul of statutes prohibiting public employers and employees from negotiating with respect to any benefit provided by a public retirement system (see, Retirement and Social Security Law § 470; Civil Service Law § 201 [4]). These statutes, however, do not prevent the creation of benefits for public sector retirees that exist separately from the benefits provided by a retirement system (see, Ballentine v Koch,
We further find that the dispute as to whether the employee is entitled to the benefits provided by the 207-c agreement is arbitrable given the collective bargaining agreement’s definition of a grievance as “a complaint by [respondent] * * * that there has been a violation, misunderstanding or inequitable application of any of the provisions of this Agreement” (see, Board of Educ. v Barni,
For these reasons, we affirm the order of Supreme Court.
Cardona, P. J., Mercure, Yesawich Jr. and Peters, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is affirmed, with costs.
