Opinion
I. INTRODUCTION
At issue in this appeal is whether the County of Santa Clara (County) complied with its statutory and contractual obligations regarding meeting and conferring in good faith before reducing the work schedules for an unspecified number of correctional peace officers who are members of the Santa Clara County Correctional Peace Officers’ Association, Inc. (Association). The officers work for the County’s Department of Correction (DOC) in staffing the County’s jails, though they remain sheriff’s deputies.
The County and the Association entered into a written memorandum of understanding (sometimes MOU) effective on June 2, 2008, that created three different work schedules, working either five eight-hour days a week (the 5/8 Plan) or four 10-hour days a week (the 4/10 Plan) for a total of 80 hours biweekly, or working 12.25 hours a day four days one week and three days the next (the 12 Plan) for a total of 85.75 hours biweekly. In order to reduce the County’s total budget for fiscal year 2012 (July 1, 2011, through June 30, 2012) while avoiding layoffs, the DOC proposed, among other things, a reduction of the 12 Plan to working mostly 12-hour shifts totaling 80 hours biweekly, not 85.75 hours. The County and the Association met twice in early June 2011 before the County’s board of supervisors adopted a proposed budget on June 15, 2011, which included a modified 12 Plan. After the budget was adopted, the parties met again and the Association’s members voted on the County’s proposals.
The parties renew their contentions on appeal. The County contends that the Association has failed to exhaust its contractual remedies. The Association disputes this and contends that the County set an arbitrary deadline and failed to complete its obligation to meet and confer in good faith, including participating in impasse resolution, before implementing the work schedule change. The County contends that because it reserved rights in the MOU to convert 12 Plan assignments to other plans, it fulfilled all of its statutory and contractual obligations. For the reasons stated below, we will affirm the judgment after concluding that the County complied with its obligations to meet and confer about this reduction in working hours.
A. The Memorandum of Understanding
The County and the Association entered into a memorandum of understanding effective on June 2, 2008. The term of the MOU was through “May 29, 2011, and from year to year thereafter.” (MOU, § 27.) The MOU specified the monthly pay scales for correctional officers in different classifications, their hours of work, and lengths of shifts, among other things.
Three alternative shifts are recognized as a normal workday: the eight-hour shift of the 5/8 Plan, the 10-hour shift of the 4/10 Plan, and the 12.25-hour shift of the 12 Plan described above. (MOU, § 7.1.) The MOU provided that a full workweek is 40 hours except as otherwise provided in the MOU or by law. (Ibid.) The 12 Plan, by calling for working 85.75 hours biweekly, was thus an exception to a 40-hour workweek. According to the Association’s mandate petition, the 12 Plan has been in place for 30 years.
The MOU defined overtime in section 7.5 as any time worked on a single day in excess of the defined shift length, or any time worked in a biweekly pay period over 80 hours. Section 7.5 further provided that “[f]or the employees in the Twelve (12) Plan all hours worked from 80 to 85.75 hours per pay period shall be considered for PERS purposes as overtime paid at the straight time rate.” (MOU, § 7.5 subd. (a).) In another section, the MOU
Section 7.1, subdivision (a) also provided: “Employees assigned by the Chief of Correction to the Twelve Plan will continue to work on the Twelve (12) Plan during the term of this Memorandum.”
Section 7.1, subdivision (b) (sometimes section 7.1(b)) provided: “The Appointing Authority reserves the right to convert assignments on the Twelve Plan to either a 5/8 or a 4/10 Plan, upon the giving of forty-five (45) calendar days’ advance notice of such change to the Association, which shall be afforded the opportunity to meet and confer on such a proposed change prior to its implementation.”
It is up to the “Appointing Authority,” the County, to “set up a standard shift and days off assignment policy within each department,” based first “on the administrative needs of the department, so as to have a certain minimum number of experienced and/or qualified or skilled personnel on a shift.” (MOU, § 7.2.)
The MOU also included a grievance procedure that we discuss below.
B. The Meetings and the Association Vote
John Hirokawa was involved in meetings with the Association in 2011 as the undersheriff and also acting chief of the DOC. He filed a declaration stating the following. 2 Facing a projected County budget deficit of $230 million, the DOC was asked to make budget cuts of $15 million while avoiding staff layoffs, if possible. Among the proposals was to alter the 12 Plan by ehminating the built-in 5.75 hours of biweekly overtime with a projected annual savings of $5,860,683. This modification entailed related changes of officers reporting directly to their posts instead of the briefing room, supervisors checking staff in and out, and officers sharing information during the shift change and by information technology.
On May 19, 2011, the acting chief notified the Association by certified letter of its “intent to change the 12-plan work schedule to a 5/8, 4/10 or modified 12-plan” (80-hour work schedule) to become effective on July 4, 2011. “These proposed changes in the above described assignments will not
The acting chief later attended three meetings with representatives of the Association, counsel for both sides, and other interested parties, including the County’s labor relations representative Ramsin Nasseri. At the first meeting on June 2, 2011, the acting chief provided the Association with several proposed work schedules, including versions of how the 12 Plan could be modified to result in working 80 hours biweekly. The Association responded by questioning the existence of a budget deficit and the chief’s authority to modify the 12 Plan and complaining about the unfair impact on Association members. The Association rejected the explanation that the reduction in hours was a business necessity in order to meet the DOC’s $15 million target.
At the second meeting on June 13, 2011, the Association questioned how the schedule changes would affect the members. Custody Administrative Captain David Sepulveda explained the operational details as best he could. Some questions could not be answered because the County was awaiting the Association’s feedback. The Association complained about a 7 percent salary reduction and contended that the goal could be accomplished by retirements and layoffs. The acting chief said that retirements and layoffs would not yield enough savings. He encouraged the Association to attend the County’s upcoming budget hearings. The Association did not offer an alternative plan to save $6.1 million.
A third meeting was scheduled for June 20, 2011. Meanwhile, on June 15, the County Board of Supervisors considered the DOC’s recommendations and, after hearing from several Association representatives, unanimously voted to accept the County Executive’s proposed budget, which included the modified 12 Plan.
According to the acting chief, at the meeting on June 20, 2011, the Association still disputed the existence of a budget deficit and failed to propose another method for saving $15 million. The chief advised the Association that every day of delay in implementing the plan was costing the County about $17,000. The County agreed to the Association’s request to delay implementation until its members could vote on the County’s proposals.
A report on the members’ vote on the County’s proposals was originally promised on July 2, 2011, and was delivered by e-mail at the end of the workday on July 6, 2011. The vote was reported as a 200 to 15 rejection of the County’s MOU proposal. As to the different 12 Plan schedules presented,
C. The Trial Court’s Findings
After a court trial based on the documents submitted, the trial court made the following findings in denying the petition for writ of mandate. “1. Pursuant to the Memorandum of Understanding between the County of Santa Clara and the Correctional Peace Officers’ Association (‘MOU’), the Appointing Authority reserved the right to convert assignments on the Twelve Plan to either a 5/8 or a 4/10 Plan upon the giving of 45 calendar days advance notice.
“2. Although the County did not adopt the 5/8 or the 4/10 schedule the fact that the County adopted a modified 12 Plan that Petitioner’s membership preferred established that the County met and conferred in good faith.
“3. Additionally, because Petitioner’s members chose the modified 12 Plan over the other proposed schedules, the Court finds there was mutual agreement and, therefore the parties did not need to declare impasse and mediation was not required.
“The Court therefore concludes the County satisfied its obligations to meet and confer pursuant to section 7.1 (b) of the MOU.”
II. THE STANDARDS OF REVIEW
This appeal presents several issues that require application of different standards of review. How to interpret a statute such as the MMBA presents questions of law that we review independently on appeal.
(DiQuisto v. County of Santa Clara
(2010)
The interpretation of an MOU also presents questions of law that we review independently on appeal when, as here, there was no conflicting extrinsic evidence presented as to its meaning. (Compare
Service Employees Internat. Union
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1996)
However, whether a party actually engaged in meetings in good faith is generally a factual question, and the fact finder’s express or implicit determination will be upheld on appeal if supported by substantial evidence.
(Lipow v. Regents of University of California
(1975)
“ ‘[T]he applicable standards of appellate review of a judgment based on affidavits or declarations are the same as for a judgment following oral testimony: We must accept the trial court’s resolution of disputed facts when supported by substantial evidence; we must presume the court found every fact and drew every permissible inference necessary to support its judgment, and defer to its determination of credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the evidence. [Citation.]’ ”
(Engineers & Architects Assn.
v.
Community Development Dept.
(1994)
III. DISCUSSION
A. The Association Did Not Fail to Exhaust a Contractual Remedy
In the trial court, the County asserted that this action is barred because the Association failed to exhaust its contractual remedies and that a “party to a labor agreement that provides for binding grievance arbitration must exhaust contractual remedies in the absence of facts excusing exhaustion.” The County renews this argument on appeal.
Section 23 of the MOU did establish a grievance procedure for resolving both “employee grievances” and “organizational grievances” through binding arbitration. However, excluded from the grievance procedure, as the Association points out, are “[i]tems within the scope of representation and subject to the
In light of this conclusion, we need not consider the Association’s alternate contentions that the grievance procedure has expired along with the MOU and that invoking the procedure would have been futile in light of the County’s adoption of the modified 12 Plan.
B. The Meyers-Milias-Brown Act
“With the enactment of the George Brown Act (Stats. 1961, ch. 1964) in 1961, California became one of the first states to recognize the right of government employees to organize collectively and to confer with management as to the terms and conditions of their employment. Proceeding beyond that act the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (Stats. 1968, ch. 1390) authorized labor and management representatives not only to confer but to enter into written agreements for presentation to the governing body of a municipal government or other local agency.”
(Glendale City Employees’ Assn., Inc.
v.
City of Glendale
(1975)
“The MMBA has two stated purposes: (1) to promote full communication between public employers and employees, and (2) to improve personnel management and employer-employee relations. (§ 3500.) To effect these goals the act gives local government employees the right to organize collectively and to be represented by employee organizations (§ 3502), and obligates employers to bargain with employee representatives about matters that fall within the ‘scope of representation’ (§§ 3504.5, 3505). [][] Specifically, section 3504.5 provides that public agencies must give employee organizations ‘reasonable written notice’ of any proposed ‘ordinance, rule, resolution, or regulation directly relating to matters within the scope of representation’ ; [3] section 3505 provides that representatives of public agencies and employee organizations ‘shall have the mutual obligation personally to meet and confer
“The recurrent phrase, ‘scope of representation,’ is defined in section 3504 to include ‘all matters relating to employment conditions and employer-employee relations, including, but not limited to,
wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment,
except, however, that the scope of representation shall not include consideration of the
merits, necessity, or organization of any service
or activity provided by law or executive order.’ (Italics added.)”
(Farrell, supra,
“[T]he phrase ‘wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment’ was taken directly from the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) (29 U.S.C. § 158(d))” and state courts have accordingly looked for guidance to federal decisions in interpreting this phrase
{Farrell, supra,
The phrase
“merits, necessity or organization of any service
or activity” has no counterpart in the NLRA.
(Farrell, supra,
Deciding whether a topic is bargainable under the MMBA and subject to a meet and confer requirement involves “a three-part inquiry. First, we ask whether the management action has ‘a significant and adverse effect on the wages, hours, or working conditions of the bargaining-unit employees.’
([Farrell], supra,
C. A Reduction in Working Hours Is Generally A Bargainable Topic
These general principles aid in determining to what extent the County was required to meet and confer about its proposal to modify the 12 Plan. On appeal there is no real dispute that the County was obliged to meet and confer prior to reducing the working hours for certain represented employees from 85.75 hours to 80 hours biweekly. Case law has determined that at least some aspects of a reduction of working hours or a change in the scheduling of the hours are topics subject to collective bargaining. The MOU also recognized this obligation.
In
Fire Fighters Union v. City of Vallejo
(1974)
That appeal considered several proposals by the union, including two particularly relevant to our case. The union had proposed two work schedules for firefighters, “a maximum of 40 hours per week for fire fighters on 8-hour shifts and 56 hours per week for fire fighters on 24-hour shifts.”
(Vallejo, supra,
In
Huntington Beach Police Officers’ Assn. v. City of Huntington Beach
(1976)
The city in that appeal did not point to any part of the memorandum of understanding that made this change nonnegotiable. The appellate court nevertheless reviewed the agreement and concluded, “[a]lthough the agreement inferentially recognizes the ultimate authority of the chief to decide to what extent the Ten-Plan shall be operative in his department, it does not, either expressly or by implication, provide that changes in policy affecting the application of the plan shall not be subject to the meet and confer process.”
(Huntington Beach, supra,
In
Independent Union of Pub. Service Employees
v.
County of Sacramento
(1983)
D. The Business Necessity Defense Has Not Been Established
In the trial court, the County asserted in its opposition to the mandate petition that “a compelling business necessity may also justify unilateral action.” County repeats this assertion on appeal, although the trial court made no express finding about it.
In the area of private employment, “[t]he NLRB has recognized the existence of a compelling business justification to excuse or justify the unilateral implementation of a change in wages or working conditions. (See
Winn-Dixie Stores Inc.
(1979) 243 NLRB [No.] 972, 101 LRRM 1534.) However, economic considerations alone are not sufficient to justify a unilateral change.
(Airport Limousine Service, Inc.
(1977) 231 NLRB [No.] 932, 96 LRRM 1177, 1179-1180.) Moreover, neither exigent circumstances nor a business necessity completely absolves an employer of its duty to notify and bargain with the union. Bargaining is required to the extent that the situation permits, although an impasse is not necessary. Whether the business necessity defense exists is an issue determined on a case-by-case basis.
(Joe Maggio, Inc. et al.
(1982) 8 ALRB No. 72.)”
(Cardinal Distributing Co. v. Agricultural Labor Relations Bd.
(1984)
California appellate courts have not yet explicitly applied or adapted this business necessity defense to the context of public employment. The PERB has, however, applied this doctrine to public employment by the County. “At times, a compelling operational necessity can justify an employer acting unilaterally before completing its bargaining obligation. [Citation.] However, the employer must demonstrate ‘an actual financial emergency which leaves no real alternative to the action taken and allows no time for meaningful negotiations before taking action.’ ” (County of Santa Clara (2010) PERB Dec. No. 2114-M p. 16 [2010 Cal. PERB Lexis 29]; see County of Santa Clara (2010) PERB Dec. No. 2120-M p. 16 [2010 Cal. PERB Lexis 35].)
E. Impasse Resolution
1. The MMBA does not impose an impasse resolution procedure
The Association alternatively argues that “the County failed to meet and confer with” the Association and that the County “failed to complete the meet and confer process regarding the decision to adopt the Modified 12 Plan because it failed to allocate sufficient time to complete the process, did not reach an agreement with the [Association] to adopt the Modified 12 Plan and failed to exhaust required impasse procedures.” Since the parties indisputably met, we will assume that the Association’s real point is that the County did not complete the process.
The County responds in part that the MMBA did not require the parties to resolve all disagreements through impasse procedures. The County is correct.
Several California statutes applicable to different kinds of public employees contain mandatory procedures for identifying and resolving a bargaining impasse, usually requiring mediation. (E.g., §§ 3548 [public school employees], 3590 [higher education employees; statutory language virtually identical to § 3548]; Pub. Util. Code, § 99568 [public transit employees]; Bus. & Prof. Code, § 19455, subd. (d)(8)(B) [racetrack backstretch workers].)
In contrast with those statutes, the applicable version of the MMBA did not mandate an impasse resolution procedure. This is what it says on the
Consistent with this permissive approach, section 3505.2 does not require mediation. Instead it allows the parties to agree on mediation and a mediator.
(Placentia, supra,
Former section 3505.4 (Stats. 2000, ch. 316, § 1, p. 2638) provided: “If after meeting and conferring in good faith, an impasse has been reached between the public agency and the recognized employee organization, and
impasse procedures, where applicable, have been
exhausted, a public agency that is not required to proceed to interest arbitration
[4]
may implement its last, best, and final offer, but shall not implement a memorandum of understanding. The unilateral implementation of a public agency’s last, best, and final offer shall not deprive a recognized employee organization of the right each year to meet and confer on matters within the scope of representation, whether or not those matters are included in the unilateral implementation, prior to the adoption by the public agency of its annual budget, or as otherwise required by law.” (Italics added.) Though this statute was repealed
We recognize that the California Supreme Court has stated more than once that public agencies are required “to refrain from making unilateral changes in employees’ wages and working conditions until the employer and employee association have bargained to impasse.”
(Santa Clara County Counsel Attys. Assn., v. Woodside
(1994)
The applicable version of the MMBA did not require public agencies to reach agreement. “Even if the parties meet and confer, they are not required to reach an agreement because the employer has ‘the ultimate power to refuse to agree on any particular issue. [Citation.]’
([Farrell), supra,
As the Association contends, the Santa Clara County Code provides for impasse resolution in the Employee Relations Ordinance. Division A25 of the code pertains to the personnel department. Chapter IV, article 6 of that division is entitled “Impasse Procedures.”
Section A25-414 of that Article states: “(a) If the appropriate level of management and the recognized employee organization fail to reach agreement prior to June 1 of a fiscal year on a matter within the scope of representation affecting the budget and subject to approval by the Board of Supervisors and the parties together are unable to agree on a method of resolving the dispute, the dispute shall be submitted to mediation.
“(b) If the parties are unable to agree on the mediator, either party may request the service of the State Conciliation Service to provide a mediator. Costs of mediation shall be divided one-half to the County and one-half to the recognized employee organization or recognized employee organizations.” (Italics added.)
The County asserts that this ordinance is permissive only.
“Under ‘well-settled principle[s] of statutory construction,’ we ‘ordinarily’ construe the word ‘may’ as permissive and the word ‘shall’ as mandatory, ‘particularly’ when a single statute uses both terms. [Citation.] In other words, ‘[w]hen the Legislature has, as here, used both “shall” and “may” in close proximity in a particular context, we may fairly infer the Legislature intended mandatory and discretionary meanings, respectively.’ ”
(Tarrant Bell Property, LLC v. Superior Court
(2011)
The County also argues that this impasse procedure was never triggered, because it reserved the right in section 7.1(b) of the MOU “to unilaterally adjust the work assignments over the union’s objection provided adequate notice and an opportunity to meet and confer are given.” We will next address the significance of this subdivision.
F. The County’s Reserved Right
In section 7.1(b) of the MOU, the County, as appointing authority, specifically reserved “the right to convert assignments on the Twelve Plan to either
1. The Association did not waive its right to bargain regarding reduced working hours
The County urges that this subdivision of the MOU amounts to “a management reservation of rights clause that reserves for management the right to implement certain unilateral changes.” This clause, the County argues, “is evidence that [the Association] waived its right to bargain the change in work schedules.”
Farrell, supra,
The County relies on
Sacramento, supra,
The
Sacramento
decision applied both tests and found no waiver. Looking at the totality of the circumstances, a history of unilateral reassignments
Farrell, supra,
As section 7.1(b) of the MOU specifically recognized the Association’s right to meet and confer before implementation of a plan to convert 12 Plan assignments to 5/8 or 4/10 Plan assignments, we do not regard the subdivision as a waiver of the same right. (Cf.
N.L.R.B. v. U.S. Postal Service
(D.C. Cir. 1993) 303 U.S. App.D.C. 428 [
2. The MOU specified the applicable time period to meet and confer
The Association complains that the “County failed to provide adequate time to complete the process because it set an arbitrary deadline for completing the meet and confer process.”
We reiterate that section 3505 provides in part: “ ‘Meet and confer in good faith’ means that a public agency, or such representatives as it may designate, and representatives of recognized employee organizations, shall have the mutual obligation personally to meet and confer promptly upon request by either party and continue for a reasonable period of time in order to exchange freely information, opinions, and proposals, and to endeavor to reach agreement on matters within the scope of representation prior to the adoption by the public agency of its final budget for the ensuing year. The process should include adequate time for the resolution of impasses where specific procedures for such resolution are contained in local rule, regulation, or ordinance, or when such procedures are utilized by mutual consent.” (Italics added.)
The MMBA does not attempt to specify how long or how frequently parties must meet in order to establish prima facie good faith or when impasse may be declared. The parties to an MOU, however, are free to agree
The specified time period of 45 days from notice to implementation also contains an unavoidable implication about the applicability of the impasse procedure contained in the County code. The County code provides for resolution of impasse by mediation if the parties are unable to agree on another method of resolving their dispute. Here, 45 days was sufficient time to conduct three meetings to discuss the County’s proposal and to conduct a vote by Association members. But 45 days is an unrealistically short time to conduct several meetings at which the parties “exchange freely information, opinions, and proposals, and to endeavor to reach agreement” (§ 3505), and also to reach and declare an impasse, agree on a mediator, and participate in mediation. The MOU arguably did not allow an “adequate time for the resolution of impasses where specific procedures for such resolution are contained in local rule, regulation, or ordinance.” (§ 3505.) It therefore appears that the parties did not intend the impasse resolution procedure to apply to this particular proposal by the County to convert 12 Plan assignments. Instead they specified the entire applicable process in the MOU, 45 days’ notice of a County proposal to convert 12 Plan assignments, the opportunity to meet and confer within those 45 days, and implementation of the County’s proposal 45 days after providing notice, regardless of whether the parties reach agreement or impasse on implementation in the interim. Though we have concluded that the Association did not waive the right to bargain about the implementation of converting the 12 Plan to other plans, we conclude that the Association did waive any right to postpone implementation beyond 45 days by declaring impasse and compelling mediation.
3. The reserved right to reassign all 12 Plan employees included the right to reduce the 12 Plan shifts
We recognize that the County sought to achieve budget savings through reduced work schedules rather than employee layoffs. Nonetheless, we find guidance regarding the County’s obligation to meet and confer from cases involving layoffs.
The California Supreme Court has clarified its earlier ruling in
Vallejo
regarding the extent to which contemplated layoffs of public employees are
Adapting these private employment cases to public employment, the court explained that “the rule adopted in
Vallejo
is that under the MMBA a local public entity may unilaterally decide that financial necessity requires some employee layoffs, although the entity must bargain over the implementation of that decision and its effects on the remaining employees.”
(Local 188, supra,
Local 188
defines the scope of the exclusion in section 3504 from bargaining of the “merits,
necessity,
or organization of any service or
In a different context, it has been established that the “integrated process of determining the budget of a county and adjusting the number of employees in each county office to conform to the overall spending plan is a legislative function which ‘may not be controlled by the courts.’ ”
(County of Butte v. Superior Court
(1985)
Applying the reasoning of Local 188 to our case, how much the County can afford to spend on staffing its jails, in other words, the budget for the DOC, is inherently within fundamental managerial policy and prerogative, even without an explicit reservation of managerial rights. Deciding how to accomplish a budget target, namely, by layoffs, is also within management prerogative. If a county decides to preserve jobs and find ways other than layoffs to trim the budget of a department, that would also be within managerial prerogative.
We conclude that the County was not required by the MMBA or the MOU to meet and confer about the need to reduce the budget of the DOC or about the policy decision to avoid layoffs in making reductions. Retaining all existing employees while paying them less necessarily requires either reducing their hours or their compensation, both bargainable under the MMBA. Although under section 7.1(b) of the MOU the County was required to meet and confer before exercising its right to convert 12 Plan employees to other plans, the scope of those negotiations was limited to details of implementing such a change.
The Association contends it never agreed to the County’s decision to adopt the modified 12 Plan. This contention challenges the trial court’s finding that “because [the Association’s] members chose the modified 12 Plan over the other proposed schedules, . . . there was mutual agreement and, therefore the parties did not need to declare impasse and mediation was not required.” The Association argues that its e-mail report of the members’ vote reflected a
The County had reserved the right in the MOU to convert all 12 Plan employees to other listed plans upon 45 days’ notice and the opportunity to meet and confer before implementation. In other words, the Association had already consented to a conversion on these terms. The Association had the right to meet and confer about how the conversion would be implemented, such as the timing of the conversion, but not about whether it would be implemented. The Association did not have the right to delay implementation beyond 45 days by declaring impasse and requesting mediation.
It is evident that the County contemplated in section 7.1(b) of the MOU that at some future time it might lose the financial ability to maintain a number of employees working 85.75 hours biweekly instead of 80 hours biweekly. The reservation of rights did not eliminate the County’s obligation to meet and confer about reassigning all 12 Plan employees to shorter workweeks, but it was apparently adopted in contemplation of circumstances possibly requiring elimination of the 12 Plan.
The trial court noted that the County did not actually exercise its right to convert all 12 Plan employees to other listed plans. The Association likewise emphasizes that “[s]ection 7.1(b) only permits a 5/8 or 4/10 Plan, not the Modified 12 Plan” and that “section 7.1(b) does not authorize 12-hour shifts.” We agree that section 7.1(b) did not explicitly authorize the County to offer alternatives to converting 12 Plan employees to either the 4/10 or 5/8 Plans. However, it is a maxim of jurisprudence that “[t]he greater contains the less.” (Civ. Code, § 3536.) As the County was able to assign all 12 Plan employees to 40-hour workweeks and 80 hours biweekly on one of two other plans, it is implicit that the County could offer 12 Plan employees other formulas for working 80 hours biweekly.
The appellate court in
Uforma/Shelby Business Forms, Inc. v. N.L.R.B.
(6th Cir. 1997)
“Although the language does not state that petitioner may ‘eliminate a shift,’ it reserves to petitioner the exclusive ability to schedule and assign work, determine the number of employees required for a job, and layoff or relieve employees from duties. These broad powers necessarily encompass the ability to reschedule and lay off the members of a given shift, regardless of whether petitioner is affecting one or one hundred employees. The reasoning of the ALJ exalts form over substance by suggesting that collective bargaining agreements must catalog every conceivable permutation of a decision to lay off, such as delineating with precision each position or work force percentage which an employer may reschedule or lay off.”
(Uforma/Shelby Business Forms, Inc., supra,
While the reserved management rights in our case were not as broad as those in Uforma/Shelby Business Forms, Inc., they did contemplate the County converting 12 Plan employees to working 80 hours biweekly after allowing the Association to meet and confer about the implementation of this conversion. We conclude that the power to eliminate all 12 Plan assignments and the power to lay off employees for budgetary reasons must include the ability to modify 12 Plan assignments to conform to other work schedules recognized in the MOU. The County was acting within its reserved rights by preserving most of the 12 Plan schedule, rather than reassigning all or most 12 Plan employees to other plans. The County recognized an obligation to meet and confer before exercising this reserved right, and the record reflects that it complied with that obligation.
4. Bargaining in good faith
The County repeatedly asserts that the Association engaged in bad faith bargaining, apparently in response to its perception that the Association has accused the County of bad faith bargaining. The Association’s briefs do not expressly accuse the County of bargaining in bad faith, but they complain that the County failed to complete its obligation to bargain in good faith and imposed an arbitrary deadline. We have already rejected those contentions, which we understand to be the Association’s only implicit claims of bad faith by the County.
We do not agree with the trial court’s finding that the Association’s membership vote preferring one form of a modified 12 Plan over another established the County’s good faith in bargaining. As we have explained, however, modifying the 12 Plan was within the County’s reserved rights so
“In general, good faith is a subjective attitude and requires a genuine desire to reach agreement [citations]. The parties must make a serious attempt to resolve differences and reach a common ground [citation]. The effort required is inconsistent with a ‘predetermined resolve not to budge from an initial position.’ [Citations.]”
(Placentia, supra,
To the extent the Association implies the County acted in bad faith, the implication is based on the premise that the County was required to engage in further meetings and then participate in mediation if an impasse was reached. As we have concluded that the County acted within the authority reserved in section 7.1(b) of the MOU, we reject the implication that the County’s action was taken in bad faith.
IV. DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Rushing, P. J., and Elia, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 9, 2014, S218061.
Notes
Unspecified section references are to the Government Code.
The Association has filed no counterdeclaration regarding what transpired at the meetings. Instead, on appeal it relies on parts of Hirokawa’s declaration as well as its verified petition.
3 Section 3504.5 excuses public agencies from providing reasonable notice “in cases of emergency as provided in this section.” (Id., subd. (a).) Subdivision (b) provides: “In cases of emergency when the governing body or the designated boards and commissions determine that an ordinance, rule, resolution, or regulation must be adopted immediately without prior notice or meeting with a recognized employee organization, the governing body or the boards and commissions shall provide notice and opportunity to meet at the earliest practicable time following the adoption of the ordinance, rule, resolution, or regulation.”
4 The MMBA does not itself define “interest arbitration.” This court has stated: “ ‘Resolution of disputed contract issues through a binding process is commonly referred to as “interest arbitration” in labor law.’ [Citation.] ‘ “Interest arbitration, unlike grievance arbitration, focuses on what the terms of a new agreement should be, rather than the meaning of the terms of the old agreement.” ’ ”
(City of San Jose v. International Assn, of Firefighters, Local 230
(2009)
Former section 3505.4 was repealed and replaced amidst a number of amendments to the MMBA effective on January 1, 2012. Assembly Bill No. 646 (2011-2012 Reg. Sess.) repealed and replaced section 3505.4 and added sections 3505.5 and 3505.7. The nonexistence of mandatory impasse procedures in the MMBA is what prompted the author of Assembly Bill No. 646 to propose this new legislation. (Assem. Com. on Public Employees, Retirement and Social Security, Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 646 (2011-2012 Reg. Sess.) as amended Mar. 23, 2011, at <http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/ll-12/bill/asm/ab_0601-0650/ab_646_cfa_20110503_ 104246_asm_comm.html> [as of Mar. 17, 2014].)
