IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
No. 13–1158
Filed May 9, 2014
AFSCME IOWA COUNCIL 61,
Appellant,
and
STATE OF IOWA, DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES,
Appellee,
vs.
IOWA PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS BOARD,
Appellee.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Michael D.
Huppert, Judge.
Public employee organization appeals district court decision on
judicial review that reversed ruling of Public Employment Relations
Board on scope-of-bargaining issue. DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT
AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART; REMANDED WITH
INSTRUCTIONS.
Mark T. Hedberg of Hedberg & Boulton, P.C., Des Moines, for
appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Matthew T. Oetker,
Assistant Attorney General, for appellee State of Iowa, Department of
Administrative Services.
2
Ann M. Smisek, Des Moines, for appellee Iowa Public Employment
Relations Board.
3
WATERMAN, Justice.
The fighting issue in this appeal is whether a collective bargaining
proposal addressing outsourcing of work performed by public employees
is a “procedure[] for staff reduction” and therefore a mandatory subject of
bargaining pursuant to Iowa Code section 20.9 of the Public Employment
Relations Act (PERA), Iowa Code chapter 20. See Iowa Code § 20.9
(2013). The Iowa Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) determined
that the State of Iowa’s Proposal 8(B) is subject to mandatory bargaining.
The State and AFSCME Iowa Council 61 (AFSCME) filed cross-petitions
for judicial review. The district court reversed PERB’s ruling on this
issue, and AFSCME appealed. We retained the appeal.
In Waterloo Education Association v. Iowa Public Employment
Relations Board (Waterloo II), our court thoroughly reviewed the history of
public employee collective bargaining and the methods courts and
agencies use to resolve scope-of-bargaining issues. 740 N.W.2d 418,
420–28 (Iowa 2007), abrogated in part by statute, 2010 Iowa Acts ch.
1165, § 6 (codified at Iowa Code § 20.6(1) (2011)). We reaffirmed a two-
pronged test for ascertaining whether a proposal is a mandatory or
permissive subject of bargaining. Id. at 429. PERB used the Waterloo II
test. The parties disagree over the meaning and effect of Proposal 8(B)
and disagree over its predominant purpose under the Waterloo II test.
This case presents our first opportunity to review PERB’s application of
that test since the legislature amended PERA to expressly grant PERB
the authority to interpret and apply the chapter. See 2010 Iowa Acts ch.
1165, § 6 (codified at Iowa Code § 20.6(1) (2011)). Our review “do[es] not
pass in any way on the merits” of the proposal. Waterloo II, 740 N.W.2d
at 431.
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For the reasons explained below, we hold that Proposal 8(B), as
interpreted by the State to require staff retention, is a permissive subject
of bargaining. However, Proposal 8(B) is a mandatory subject under
AFSCME’s interpretation, which permits the employer to “bump” other
public employees after transfers resulting from outsourcing. The record
is inadequate to determine which interpretation is correct. Accordingly,
we affirm the district court’s judgment in part, reverse in part as to
Proposal 8(B), and remand for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
AFSCME 1 is an employee organization certified by PERB to
represent certain State employees in collective bargaining. In November
2012, AFSCME began negotiating its 2013–2015 collective bargaining
agreement with the State. On November 30, the State provided its initial
bargaining position for the terms of the new contract. The State
proposed deleting certain contract provisions from the existing contract.
The State asserted the proposed deletions “concern[] permissive subjects
which the State need not negotiate in accordance with Iowa Code section
20.9.”
Proposal 8(B) of the State’s bargaining position deleted a provision
of the then-current collective bargaining agreement, which stated:
If, as a result of outsourcing or privatization following
an Employer initiated competitive activities process,
positions are eliminated, the Employer shall offer affected
employees other employment within Iowa State government.
Other employment shall first be sought within the affected
employee’s department and county of employment. Affected
employees accepting other employment shall not be subject
1AFSCME is an acronym for the American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees.
5
to loss of pay nor layoff pending placement in other
employment under this Section. Neither shall such
employees be subject to a decrease in pay in their new
position. However, affected employees will not be eligible for
any pay increase until such time as their pay is within their
new pay grade range. In the alternative, employees may
elect to be laid off.
Employees placed in other employment under this
Section, as well as those electing to be laid off, will be eligible
for recall to the classification held at the time of outsourcing
or privatization, in accordance with Article VI of this
Agreement.
AFSCME disputed the State’s classification of this provision as a
permissive bargaining subject, arguing that the provision was instead a
“procedure[] for staff reduction,” which is a mandatory bargaining
subject under Iowa Code section 20.9 (2013).
Because the parties could not agree whether this provision, and
others, were mandatory bargaining subjects, the State filed a “Petition for
Expedited Resolution of Negotiability Dispute” with PERB. PERB ruled
on the State’s petition on February 8, 2013. It rejected the State’s
argument that the predominant purpose of Proposal 8(B) is to retain
staff. PERB found the predominate purpose of Proposal 8(B) “is to
designate a process for implementing a staff reduction that occurs due to
outsourcing.” PERB was not persuaded by the State’s argument that
Proposal 8(B) “makes outsourcing economically infeasible because [the
State] must maintain employment for displaced employees under the
proposal.” It ruled “[t]his argument relates to the merit of the proposal
rather than the test of negotiability.” PERB further found Proposal 8(B)
did not infringe on the State’s authority to decide to reduce staff, but
instead “focuses on what happens once a decision to reduce staff has
been made.” It therefore concluded “[b]ecause the predominant purpose
of [Proposal 8(B)] is to set out a process for implementing procedures for
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a staff reduction, it is mandatory.” PERB concluded the State’s other
proposals were permissive.
Both the State and AFSCME filed petitions for judicial review. On
July 12, the district court affirmed PERB’s decision on all proposals
except for Proposal 8(B). The district court determined Proposal 8(B) did
not fit within the meaning of “procedures for staff reduction,” explaining:
[T]he statutory phrase “procedures for staff reduction”
relates to the manner in which the contemplated reduction
will take place, not how to manage the consequences
associated with a reduction that has already taken place. In
the court’s mind, this hinges upon the word “for,” which is
defined in this context as a function word used to indicate
purpose or an intended goal. Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate
Dictionary 454 (10th ed. 2001); see also Wiseman v.
Armstrong, 269 Conn. 802, 811, 850 A.2d 114, 119 (2004).
In other words, for the procedures in question to be
considered mandatory under § 20.9, they must have as their
purpose, goal or object a reduction in staff. As measured by
this standard, proposal 8(B) falls short; its predominant
purpose relates to the aftermath of a reduction that has
already resulted from outsourcing or privatization.
The district court thus reversed PERB’s ruling that Proposal 8(B) was a
mandatory bargaining subject, without reaching the State’s argument
that the predominant purpose of Proposal 8(B) is staff retention.
AFSCME appealed the district court’s ruling regarding Proposal
8(B). PERB and AFSCME argue we should uphold PERB’s ruling, while
the State urges us to affirm the district court’s ruling.
II. Scope of Review.
Judicial review of an agency ruling is governed by Iowa Code
chapter 17A. See Iowa Med. Soc’y v. Iowa Bd. of Nursing, 831 N.W.2d
826, 838 (Iowa 2013). The district court reviews the agency’s decision in
an appellate capacity. Id. In turn, “ ‘[w]e review the district court’s
decision to determine whether it correctly applied the law.’ ” Id. (quoting
City of Sioux City v. GME, Ltd., 584 N.W.2d 322, 324 (Iowa 1998)). “We
7
must apply the standards set forth in section 17A.19(10) and determine
whether our application of those standards produce[s] the same result as
reached by the district court.” Auen v. Alcoholic Beverages Div., 679
N.W.2d 586, 589 (Iowa 2004).
In Waterloo II, decided in 2007, we recognized that “[w]hether a
proposal is a mandatory subject of collective bargaining, as defined by
Iowa Code § 20.9, has not been explicitly vested in PERB’s discretion.”
740 N.W.2d at 420. In 2010, the legislature responded by amending
Iowa Code section 20.6 to expressly grant PERB authority to “[i]nterpret,
apply, and administer” the provisions of Iowa Code chapter 20. 2010
Iowa Acts ch. 1165, § 6 (codified at Iowa Code § 20.6(1) (2011)) (replacing
language that authorized PERB only to “[a]dminister” the provisions of
chapter 20). The same year, in Renda v. Iowa Civil Rights Commission,
we noted, “The question of whether interpretive discretion has clearly
been vested in an agency is easily resolved when the agency’s enabling
statute explicitly addresses the issue.” 784 N.W.2d 8, 11 (Iowa 2010).
Because the legislature has now expressly vested PERB with discretion to
interpret and apply chapter 20, we will review PERB’s interpretation and
application of section 20.9 to determine if it is “irrational, illogical, or
wholly unjustifiable.” Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(l), (m) (2013).
A decision is “irrational” when it is “not governed by or
according to reason.” Webster’s Third New International
Dictionary 1195. A decision is “illogical” when it is “contrary
to or devoid of logic.” Id. at 1127. A decision is
“unjustifiable” when it has no foundation in fact or reason.
See id. at 2502 (defining “unjustifiable” as “lacking in . . .
justice”); id. at 1228 (defining “justice” as “the quality or
characteristic of being just, impartial or fair”); id. (defining
“just” as “conforming to fact and reason”).
Sherwin-Williams Co. v. Iowa Dep’t of Revenue, 789 N.W.2d 417, 432
(Iowa 2010).
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“The burden of demonstrating . . . the invalidity of agency action is
on the party asserting invalidity.” Iowa Code § 17A.19(8)(a). We may
affirm the district court on an alternative ground that is supported by the
record and urged by the prevailing party. Hawkeye Foodservice Distrib.,
Inc. v. Iowa Educators Corp., 812 N.W.2d 600, 609 (Iowa 2012).
III. Analysis.
PERA governs collective bargaining between public employers and
public employee organizations. Waterloo II, 740 N.W.2d at 421. “Iowa’s
PERA contains both a provision establishing mandatory collective
bargaining on specified matters and a contrapuntal management rights
clause preserving exclusive, public management powers in traditional
areas.” Id. The public management powers are found in Iowa Code
section 20.7. That section expressly retains for public employers “the
exclusive power, duty, and the right to,” among other things, “[h]ire,
promote, demote, transfer, assign and retain public employees in
positions within the public agency”; “[r]elieve public employees from
duties because of lack of work or for other legitimate reasons”; and
“[d]etermine and implement methods, means, assignments and
personnel by which the public employer’s operations are to be
conducted.” Iowa Code § 20.7(2), (5), (6). Iowa Code section 20.9 then
enumerates seventeen topics that are subject to mandatory collective
bargaining procedures:
The public employer and the employee organization
shall meet at reasonable times . . . to negotiate in good faith
with respect to wages, hours, vacations, insurance, holidays,
leaves of absence, shift differentials, overtime compensation,
supplemental pay, seniority, transfer procedures, job
classifications, health and safety matters, evaluation
procedures, procedures for staff reduction, in-service training
and other matters mutually agreed upon.
9
Iowa Code § 20.9 (emphasis added). This list is exclusive. Waterloo II,
740 N.W.2d at 425.
The classification of a bargaining proposal as either mandatory or
permissive “is a critical issue.” Id. at 421.
If a subject is within the scope of mandatory bargaining, the
parties are required to bargain over the issue, and if
agreement is not reached, the statutory impasse procedures,
which ultimately lead to binding arbitration, are available.
If, on the other hand, the proposal is a permissive subject of
bargaining under section 20.9, the public employer may
reserve the right to decide the issue unilaterally by declining
to participate in bargaining. When the employer declines to
bargain over a permissive subject, the impasse procedures in
PERA are not available and decisions related to the subject
remain within the exclusive power of the public employer.
Id. at 421–22 (citation omitted).
When PERB resolves a negotiability dispute, it decides only
whether a subject is a mandatory topic of bargaining—not whether a
specific proposal is substantively meritorious. See Iowa Admin. Code r.
621—6.3(1) (defining “negotiability dispute” as “a dispute arising in good
faith during the course of collective bargaining as to whether . . . a
proposal which is subject to collective bargaining under Iowa Code
section 20.9 is a mandatory topic of bargaining”). In the same way, on
appeal, “we do not pass in any way on the merits” of a negotiability
dispute. Waterloo II, 740 N.W.2d at 431. We review only “the question of
whether [the disputed topic] . . . must be determined, if possible, by the
parties themselves through good faith negotiations and in the event of
impasse, through binding arbitration as provided in PERA.” Id.
Under our deferential standard of review, our task today is to
decide if PERB’s interpretation of “procedures for staff reduction” in Iowa
Code section 20.9 and its application of that statute to Proposal 8(B) are
“irrational, illogical, or wholly unjustifiable.” See Iowa Code
10
§ 17A.19(10)(l), (m). The topics listed in Iowa Code section 20.9 cannot
be defined “in a fashion so expansive that the other specifically identified
subjects of mandatory bargaining become redundant,” nor are the topics
“subject to the narrowest possible interpretation.” Waterloo II, 740
N.W.2d at 429–30. Consistent with legislative intent, PERB must give
each topic in section 20.9 “its common and ordinary meaning within the
structural parameters imposed by section 20.9.” Id. at 430.
In determining whether Proposal 8(B) presents a mandatory
bargaining topic, PERB employed the analytical framework our court
cemented in Waterloo II. See id. at 428–29. In Waterloo II, we recounted
how our court adopted a straightforward definitional “topics” test in
Charles City Community School District v. Public Employment Relations
Board, 275 N.W.2d 766, 772–73 (Iowa 1979), but also struggled with the
relationship between the exclusive rights of management in section 20.7
and the mandatory bargaining provisions in section 20.9. Waterloo II,
740 N.W.2d at 426. Over the years, our court vacillated between a strict
topics test and a balancing test that sought to harmonize the mandatory
bargaining provisions with management rights. Id. at 426–28. In
Waterloo Community School District v. Public Employment Relations Board
(Waterloo I), 650 N.W.2d 627 (Iowa 2002), the PERB case that
immediately preceded Waterloo II, the court cited the topics test “but did
not directly apply it.” Waterloo II, 740 N.W.2d at 428.
In Waterloo II, we sought to identify, once and for all, “the proper
test for determining whether a proposal is subject to mandatory
bargaining under section 20.9.” Id. at 428. We first considered caselaw
from other state courts and federal courts regarding how they resolve
scope-of-bargaining issues. Id. at 422–25. We then thoroughly reviewed
the evolution of our court’s approach to resolving scope-of-bargaining
11
disputes. Id. at 425–28. Waterloo II ultimately clarified the proper test,
see id. at 428–29, and it is this test PERB uses to adjudicate such
disputes. 2
Under the Waterloo II framework, PERB attempts to identify the
proposal’s “predominant purpose.” Id. at 427, 429. This inquiry serves
to guard against “the possibility that artful negotiators may attempt to
craft proposals that incidentally involve [mandatory bargaining topics],
but which are really designed to influence . . . policy or limit
management discretion.” Id. at 431. Proposals that only “incidentally
involve” a mandatory bargaining topic cannot be said to have that topic
as the proposal’s predominant subject. Id. “When framing the scope of a
disputed proposal topic, we are concerned with determining what the
employer would be bound to do if a proposal were taken to arbitration
and incorporated into a collective bargaining agreement.” State v. Pub.
Emp’t Relations Bd., 508 N.W.2d 668, 675 (Iowa 1993). A proposal’s
predominant purpose should not be decided “merely [by] looking for the
topical word as listed in section 20.9” because this “virtually . . .
mechanical exercise” is not the same as identifying the predominant
characteristic of a proposal. See id.
In a typical case in which PERB is able to identify the predominant
subject of a proposal, it next asks if that subject is “definitionally within
the scope” of a topic listed in Iowa Code section 20.9. Waterloo II, 740
N.W.2d at 425. If the answer to that question is “yes,” the proposal is a
mandatory subject of collective bargaining—subject only to the limitation
that proposals are not subject to collective bargaining if they are
2Both the State’s and AFSCME’s briefs accept the use of this analytical
structure.
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“preempted or inconsistent with any provision of law.” Id. at 429
(describing the question of whether a proposal is illegal as the second
prong of the analysis). The list of seventeen mandatory bargaining topics
thus presents a “legal shooting range” and an employee organization
“must hit one of the targets, or come close enough to one, in order to
avoid characterization of the proposal as permissive.” Id. at 425.
In holding that the first, and typically determinative, inquiry is
whether a proposal presents a mandatory bargaining topic, Waterloo II
necessarily “reject[ed] the notion that the issue of negotiability should
ordinarily be resolved at the outset by balancing the employer’s interest
in management rights against the interest of employees in mandatory
bargaining.” Id. at 429. We held: “By creating the section 20.9 laundry
list of exceptions to management prerogatives, the legislature has already
done the balancing. There is no occasion for this court to judicially
rebalance what the legislature has already balanced.” Id. Yet, we
recognized the need for a “balancing-type analysis” “in unusual cases
where the predominant topic of a proposal cannot be determined”
because “mandatory and permissive elements are inextricably
intertwined in a proposal.” Id. at 429, 431. In these rare cases in which
a balancing analysis is appropriate, the employer’s interest in
management rights is weighed against the interest of employees in
mandatory bargaining. See id. at 429.
A. What Is the Definition of “Procedures for Staff Reduction”?
PERB, the district court, and the parties all agree that an employer’s
decision to reduce staff does not fall within “procedures for staff
reduction”; the State is free to decide to eliminate staff positions as a
result of outsourcing or privatization and need not negotiate such
decisions. PERB defines “procedures for staff reduction” to mean
13
“matters involving the order and manner of how a staff reduction will be
carried out.” The district court found PERB’s definition of “procedures
for staff reduction” too broad, concluding the word “for” in “procedures
for staff reduction” is “a function word used to indicate purpose or an
intended goal.” The district court, therefore, defined “procedures for staff
reduction” more narrowly, as procedures that “have as their purpose,
goal or object a reduction in staff.”
Because PERB has been granted interpretive authority under
chapter 20, it is within its discretion to choose one appropriate definition
of the word “for” over another. The Merriam–Webster Collegiate
Dictionary defines “for” not only as “a function word to indicate purpose”
or “an intended goal,” but also as “with respect to.” Merriam–Webster’s
Collegiate Dictionary 488 (11th ed. 2009). If a procedure is “with respect
to” staff reduction, it is a procedure “for” staff reduction. PERB defined
“procedures for staff reduction” as procedures that describe the “order
and manner of how a staff reduction will be carried out.” The phrase
“order and manner of how” is simply another way of saying “with respect
to” or “for.” PERB’s definition of the phrase “procedures for staff
reduction” thus is consistent with a common meaning of the word “for.”
PERB’s definition does not otherwise contradict the plain meaning
of “procedure,” “staff,” or “reduction.” Black’s Law Dictionary defines
“procedure” as a “specific method or course of action.” Black’s Law
Dictionary 1323 (9th ed. 2009). We have previously given the term
“procedures” in Iowa Code section 20.9 a broad application, holding it is
not limited to “a particular way of accomplishing something” or “a series
of steps,” but may also include substantive matters. See Saydel Educ.
Ass’n v. Pub. Emp’t Relations Bd., 333 N.W.2d 486, 488–89 (Iowa 1983)
(internal quotation marks omitted); accord Pub. Emp’t Relations Bd., 508
14
N.W.2d at 677 (“We have defined the term ‘procedure’ broadly in our
prior cases interpreting section 20.9.”). Based on these definitions, we
conclude PERB’s interpretation of “procedures for staff reduction” is
consistent with the plain and ordinary meaning of the phrase and is
therefore not irrational, illogical, or wholly unjustifiable. If a proposal
“involv[es] the order and manner of how a staff reduction will be carried
out,” that proposal is a “method” “with respect to” staff reduction.
Accordingly, we disagree with the district court’s reason for
reversal. However, the State in the PERB proceedings and in district
court urged an alternative ground for holding Proposal 8(B) is
permissive—that its predominant purpose is staff retention. The district
court did not rely on that ground. We may affirm the district court on
this alternative ground urged by the State below and supported by the
record. See Hawkeye, 812 N.W.2d at 609. We therefore turn to that
issue.
B. What Is the Predominant Purpose of Proposal 8(B)? PERB
found that Proposal 8(B)’s predominant purpose “is to designate a
process for implementing a staff reduction that occurs due to
outsourcing.” The State argues that Proposal 8(B) is instead a procedure
for staff retention.
The State argues that, because Proposal 8(B) requires the State to
offer affected employees another position within the government, the
State’s workforce and payroll is not reduced. The State points to the
language in Proposal 8(B) that requires the State to retain affected
employees at their current pay grade:
[T]he Employer shall offer affected employees other
employment within Iowa State government. Other
employment shall first be sought within the affected
employee’s department and county of employment. Affected
15
employees accepting other employment shall not be subject
to loss of pay nor layoff pending placement in other
employment under this Section. Neither shall such
employees be subject to a decrease in pay in their new
position.
(Emphasis added.) The State asserts:
It is entirely unclear how Proposal 8(B) could have been
construed to constitute a procedure for staff reduction when,
by the very terms of the provision, no staff can be reduced
and . . . the State is precluded from implementing a lay-off of
affected employees.
AFSCME defends PERB’s identification of Proposal 8(B)’s
predominant purpose. AFSCME asserts Proposal 8(B) “deals with
measures to be taken as a result of staff reduction due to outsourcing or
privatization of jobs.” PERB on appeal argues, “[w]hile the proposal may
require the employer to retain bargaining unit employees by offering
them employment elsewhere, overall the proposal describes a procedure
that occurs when positions are eliminated” and categorizes the State’s
argument as “akin to the expression of a glass being half-empty or half-
full.” PERB points out that the proposal does not require employers to
retain staff generally or to refrain from reducing employees not in the
bargaining unit.
We conclude a staff reduction occurs only when an employee
leaves the State payroll, not merely when a particular job position is
eliminated. As the Kentucky Supreme Court recently observed, “no one
could reasonably argue that a job classification must last forever.” Webb
v. Meyer, 406 S.W.3d 444, 447 (Ky. 2013). The Kentucky Supreme Court
further recognized “[t]here is a significant distinction between being
transferred within one’s employment and not having employment at all.”
Id. (holding “[i]f there has been no termination of employment, there has
been no layoff or reduction in force”). We agree and hold a “staff
16
reduction” under section 20.9 requires “that there has, in fact, been a
reduction in the total work force and not simply the substitution of one
position for another.” Valdez v. Cantor, 994 P.2d 483, 486 (Colo. App.
1999) (“We have failed to discover a single instance in which the term
has been held to apply when the total number of employees has
remained the same.”). Accordingly, if the predominant purpose of
Proposal 8(B) is staff retention, the proposal is a permissive bargaining
topic. It would be illogical for PERB to conclude otherwise.
Yet, the record is inadequate for us to discern what, exactly,
Proposal 8(B) will bind the State to do. It is unclear if Proposal 8(B) will
result primarily in a position reduction rather than a staff reduction. At
oral argument, counsel for AFSCME and the State discussed the actions
the State could take—pursuant to Proposal 8(B) and other provisions of
the collective bargaining agreement—in response to outsourcing that
eliminates job positions. No clear consensus emerged as to what would
occur. The parties debated whether the State must create new positions
to accommodate displaced employees, whether the State could move
affected employees only into open positions, or whether the State could
“bump” other employees in order to create position vacancies.
AFSCME’s counsel described what would happen as “a game of
musical chairs,” with some employees being terminated to accommodate
those that had been displaced due to outsourcing. AFSCME’s counsel
asserted that, at the end of the day, some employees would be left
without jobs. Under this scenario, there would be a reduction in staff.
AFSCME’s counsel expressed concern that a displaced employee could be
moved into a new position and then terminated a short time later.
AFSCME’s counsel also expressed concern that a displaced employee
could be reassigned to an impractical position—for example, a position in
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in a faraway location—and such a reassignment would amount to a
constructive discharge.
The State’s counsel acknowledged “[t]he proposal is silent” as to
whether the State could bump employees and stated, “I don’t read in
here that the employees have the right to bump someone else.” The
State’s counsel asserted that displaced employees could only be moved to
open positions, and no other employees could be bumped. The State’s
counsel suggested that other contract provisions provide procedures to
govern when bumping can occur. The State’s counsel stated, “I believe
. . . this proposal . . . does not affect the rights of a separate agency,
separate department. Those employees have their separate rights under
[the bargaining agreement].” The existing collective bargaining
agreement, however, is not included in the record. We are unable to
determine from the record whether the State may bump or terminate
other public employees holding positions to be filled by transferred
employees who lost positions due to outsourcing.
All parties agree the decision to outsource is a permissive
bargaining subject—it is a fundamental management power to decide to
outsource. When asked at oral argument if “the ultimate decision
whether to subcontract or outsource or privatize a particular set of jobs
in state government is a permissive subject,” AFSCME’s counsel
acknowledged:
The ultimate decision whether or not we are going to
privatize, whether or not we are going to close an institution,
whether or not we are going to do something else that results
in a reduction of force is, in fact, [the] prerogative of the
employer.
Yet, the prohibition on reducing staff found in Proposal 8(B) is at odds
with the State’s authority to outsource.
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Proposal 8(B) by its terms prohibits the State from involuntarily laying off
any affected employee or reducing the pay of any affected employee. The
employee can choose to resign, but can also choose not to resign. The
State must find another position in state government for any employee
who declines to resign. This effectively gives the employee veto power
over the employer’s ability to reduce staff. Under the State’s
interpretation, Proposal 8(B) is a procedure for staff retention, not
reduction. Under this meaning of Proposal 8(B), it is illogical for PERB to
find it to be a mandatory subject of bargaining.
The bumping issue, however, was not briefed by the parties or
addressed by the rulings of PERB or the district court. On this record,
we are unable to determine if the State would have the ability to lay off
other state employees whenever required by Proposal 8(B) to offer
positions to bargaining unit employees whose jobs are outsourced, as
AFSCME contends. The factual record is inadequate to determine the
realities of what Proposal 8(B) requires the State to do and how the other
provisions of the collective bargaining agreement are implicated.
Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s ruling as to Proposal 8(B) and
remand for further proceedings on that issue.
IV. Disposition.
For the foregoing reasons, we hold, to the extent the primary
purpose of Proposal 8(B) is to preclude the State from reducing staff in
response to outsourcing, it is a permissive rather than mandatory
subject of bargaining. Nevertheless, if PERB determines on remand that
the State is permitted to reduce employment by bumping employees after
transfers resulting from outsourcing, then Proposal 8(B) can be found to
be a mandatory subject of bargaining. We affirm the district court
judgment on the issues not raised in the appeal. We reverse the district
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court’s ruling as to Proposal 8(B) and remand this case to the district
court to remand to PERB for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
Costs are assessed equally to AFSCME and the State.
DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART AND
REVERSED IN PART; REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
All justices concur except Appel, J., who takes no part.