The Connecticut state board of labor relations (hereinafter the board) has appealed from the trial court's denial of a petition to enforce its order of August 3, 1981, directing the town of South Windsor to bargain with Council No. 4 of The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (hereinafter AFSCME). The facts are not in dispute. On October 4, 1979, AFSCME filed a petition with the board pursuant to General Statutes
By letter dated September 10, 1980, eighteen of the nineteen employees who had previously signed authorization cards communicated to the board and to AFSCME their desires to withdraw the previous authorizations. Thereafter, on October 1, one of those employees, Edward C. Moniz, filed with the board a petition for decertification of the union. On October 3, the AFSCME representative, Peter Thor, wrote the town manager requesting contract negotiation.7 The latter declined however, based upon the pending decertification petition. As a result of that refusal, AFSCME filed a complaint with the board pursuant to General Statutes (Rev. to 1981)
The board consolidated the original decertification petition and the union's complaint and conducted a hearing thereon on February 25, 1981, which was continued to April 21. On August 3, it issued a decision wherein it dismissed the petition for decertification as premature and ordered the town to negotiate with the union. No action was taken with respect to the February 20 decertification petition. The town filed a motion that the board reconsider its decision, but that was denied. Finally, on December 2, 1981, Moniz filed a third petition for decertification on behalf of the *Page 343 employees. Throughout the course of the proceedings, the town manager had refused to bargain with the union.
On May 5, 1982, the board filed a petition in the Superior Court pursuant to General Statutes
The issue for our determination, which is one of first impression, concerns the amount of time that must elapse before a petition for decertification may be filed when the union has been designated as unit representative by recognition agreement rather than by election.
General Statutes (Rev. to 1981)
There is no Connecticut case on this particular point. It is well established, however, that since the Connecticut Municipal Employee Relations Act, like the Connecticut Labor Relations Act, is patterned after the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, "`[T]he judicial interpretation frequently accorded the federal act is of great assistance and persuasive force in the interpretation of our own acts.'" Winchester v. Connecticut State Board of Labor Relations,
The board, in its conclusion, held that "[a] reasonable time for a recognized representative to make substantial headway towards obtaining a contract is one year from the date of recognition and we interpret the Act as prescribing such a duration for the recognition and its exclusive quality. Cf. sec.
In order to pass judicial review, the ultimate findings of the board must be supported, as the statute requires, by substantial evidence. General Statutes
We further hold, however, that the trial court erred in ordering "the Board to reopen the hearing on the decertification petition and direct an election by secret ballot or use any other suitable method to determine whether and by which employee organization the employees desire to be represented and certify the results thereof." The applicable provisions of General Statutes
Because it does not appear as a matter of law that there is only one single conclusion that the Board could reasonably reach, a direct order to the board is legally unwarranted. Feinson v. Conservation Commission, supra.
There is error in part, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion DALY and CIOFFI, Js., concurred.
