21 Mass. App. Ct. 166 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1985
In January, 1983, the board of selectmen of the town of Lee, the appointing authority, refused to permit a full-time, permanent police officer, Jeffrey Gamelli, to change his residence from Lee to the nearby town of Becket, on pain, if he did so, of forfeiting his job. Claiming that this represented a new or changed policy on the part of the town with respect to residency, the Lee Police Association (union), the relevant exclusive bargaining representative,
Since 1954, Lee has had on its books a by-law (Appendix C, § 1) which states in part: “A citizen of the town qualified under the General Laws applicable to Police Departments in towns under civil service shall be eligible for membership in the Police Department.” Even if one assumes that the by-law, properly interpreted, speaks to the facts of Gamelli’s case (a question to which we shall return), it would not obviate the claim of prohibited practice. For in the present context residency is among the “terms and conditions of employment” of G. L. c. 150E, § 6, inserted by St. 1973, c. 1078, § 2, and is thus a mandatory subject of bargaining.
So all that is left for consideration on this appeal is whether there was substantial evidence supporting the commission’s finding that the treatment of Officer Gamelli’s residency was a fresh departure for the town of Lee. Vain is the town’s effort
Turning, then, to the record before the commission, we note, first, that if members of the police force adverted to the by-law,
As to the actual practice in Lee, there could be no massive evidence, since the total force in any given year would not exceed eight, turnover was not substantial (only four persons had been hired since 1978), and test cases would be rare because officers, by and large, would naturally choose to live in the town they served. Three cases, however, could be cited.
On the whole we cannot say there was a lack of “substantial evidence” (as defined in G. L. c. 30A, § 1[6], inserted by St. 1954, c. 681, § l)
The town does not argue that the commission’s order is defective if its decision is correct on the merits.
Order affirmed.
It represented all full-time civil service appointed police officers in Lee.
Also implicated in such a case is § 10(a)(1), interference with any employee in the exercise of rights under the statute.
See Boston Sch. Comm., 3 M.L.C. 1603 (1977); City of Springfield, 4 M.L.C. 1517 (1978); City of Worcester, 5 M.L.C. 1414 (1979). We deal here with residence as a condition of continued employment, not merely as a condition of hire. Compare Boston Sch. Comm. at 1608; City of Worcester, at 1415.
As indicated in the Burlington case (at 188 n.5), the by-law is not permanently nullified; it may be merely suspended until the labor dispute subsides.
Appendix C consists of “Police Department Rules and Regulations.” It contains some ninety sections. The section referring to “[a] citizen of the town” and so forth appears in the section of Appendix C entitled “Duties of Chief of Police.”
See City of Everett, 8 M.L.C. 1393 (1981), referring to a “consistent, if sporadic, practice.”
“ ‘Substantial evidence’ means such evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.”