15 Mass. App. Ct. 611 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1983
The town of Saugus and Local 1003, International Association of Firefighters (the Union) entered into a collective bargaining agreement (the Agreement) effective for two years ending June 30, 1982. The 1980 town meeting of Saugus appropriated, at the request of the town manager, sufficient funds to provide for full compliance with the Agreement by the fire department for the fiscal year (F.Y.) 1981. See G. L. c. 150E, § 7(b).
Article V, § 1, of the Agreement (the job security clause) required the town to maintain in the fire department not
Because of the inadequate appropriation, layoff notices were sent to five firefighters on June 22,1981. These layoffs never became effective. Three firefighters retired as of July 1, 1981, and were not replaced. The retirement of the chief in office on July 1 and of another firefighter may have been in prospect. See note 3, infra.
Despite the receipt of State reimbursement funds and a further appropriation to the fire department by a special town meeting, the total amount appropriated for F.Y. 1982 was sufficient to maintain only forty-three employees and a chief, but no firefighters have been discharged as a consequence of the reduced appropriations. In July, 1981, the town had a free cash account of $550,000 and an additional reserve account. From these funds, a sufficient amount probably could have been obtained to support the minimum number of firefighters required by the Agreement.
The Union, following the layoff notices of June, 1981, filed grievance notices which, upon a complaint in the Superior Court
After the arbitrator’s decision, the town filed in the Superior Court an application to vacate the arbitrator’s award, apparently as a new proceeding. The application was denied on February 1, 1982, and the arbitrator’s award then was confirmed. The town has appealed.
The town relies principally upon Boston Teachers Local 66 v. School Comm. of Boston, 386 Mass. 197 (1982) (hereafter the 1982 case), decided May 12, 1982, over three months after the order now under review. In part 2 of the 1982 case, at 211-214, the Supreme Judicial Court considered a job security provision of a collective bargaining agreement similar in various respects to the job security provision discussed in the present case, viz., that “during the first two years of the agreement ‘any teacher . . . with tenure . . . shall continue to be employed.’” See the 1982 case at 200-201. The court (at 213) held “that a job security clause is enforceable for periods not spanning more than one fiscal year.” It also held (at 212) “that a provision in a collective bargaining agreement that attempts to restrict the ability of a school committee to determine on an annual basis the size of its teaching staff intrudes into an area of exclusive managerial prerogative” (emphasis supplied) because “[ejssential to the management of the public schools is the ability to determine the appropriate size of the teaching staff in light of available funds.” See the discus
The 1982 case was in some respects a continuation of discussion in an earlier case between the same parties. School Comm. of Boston v. Boston Teachers Local 66, 378 Mass. 65, 70-72 (1979, hereinafter the 1979 case). As in the 1979 case, the 1982 case recognized (at 211) that certain prior decisions had been “[i]n the context of public education”; (at 211-212) that collective bargaining agreements “relating to class size and teaching load ‘may be enforced where there has been no change in educational policy and funds are available’”; and (at 213), see Boston Teachers Local 66 v. School Comm. of Boston, 370 Mass. 455, 464 (1976), that procedures for determining the timing and method of staff reduction (see the 1979 case at 72), the number and identity of affected employees, and the impact of the lay-off decision, may be the subject of negotiation and arbitration. See the 1983 Newton case, 388 Mass. at 564 & n.5. Some reliance was placed in the 1982 case (at 214) upon the provisions of general and special statutes relating to education. There was general recognition that variations between the statutes relating to Boston and similar statutes effective elsewhere in the Commonwealth must be considered (see, e.g., at 207, 209 and 214).
Despite the considerations just mentioned, we conclude that for Saugus the requirement in the Agreement of a minimum of forty-eight fire department employees is essentially a job security provision governed by the 1982 case. The Saugus Agreement provision, perhaps, is even more clearly destructive of the town’s power to determine annually the employee size of its departmental units than that considered in the 1982 case. In any event, if the 1982 case is followed,
The arbitrator’s report did not purport to be an interpretation of any ambiguous provisions of the Agreement. The town readily conceded that it had “not complied with the minimum compl[e]ment provisions” of the Agreement. The matter was not arbitrable and the award based upon a violation of the job security clause was beyond his authority. The orders confirming the arbitrator’s award, and refusing to vacate that award, are reversed. The case is remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
A Union complaint, dated June 25,1981, sought relief against the then proposed layoffs. Injunctive relief was denied on July 10, 1981. Expedited arbitration was ordered in September, 1981.
One fire captain had been promoted to the position of acting chief while continuing to perform his duties as captain. The arbitrator concluded that this did not necessitate extra work by the remaining department employees. He also decided that any premium or overtime pay directly attributable to the reduced complement of firefighters, and in fact earned by the firefighters, should reduce the damages from the town’s violation of the job security clause.
Because the reduction in staff size was accomplished through retirements in the normal course, no question is here raised about the necessity to bargain over the method of accomplishing the reduction or the impact of any layoffs. Contrast the 1983 Newton case, 388 Mass. at 565.
We perceive nothing in Labor Relations Commn. v. Natick, 369 Mass. 431, 435-442 (1976), contrary to the conclusion thus reached by us. The Natick case dealt principally (a) with whether collective bargaining agreements could control certain promulgated regulations by the fire chief and (b) with the question of determining the appropriate town representatives for collective bargaining (see especially at 438 n.5). Our conclusion also is not affected by cases dealing with statutory provisions as to compensation once accepted by a town meeting, which at least as to the compensation of individual town employees, may not be changed by action of a later town meeting. See Labor Relations Commn. v. Selectmen of Dracut, 374 Mass. 619, 627-629 (1978). See also as to pay increase provisions funded for one year of a two- or three-year collective bargaining agreement, the 1982 case, part 1, at 203-211. Compare Quincy Educ. Assn. v. Quincy, ante 66 (1982).
Other decisions affecting the scope of permissible arbitration include Boston v. Boston Police Patrolmen's Assn., 8 Mass. App. Ct. 220-223 (1979); Boston v. Boston Police Superior Officers Fedn., 9 Mass. App. Ct. 898 (1980); Taunton v. Taunton Branch of Mass. Police Assn., 10 Mass. App. Ct. 237, 242-243 (1980).