Detroit Police Officers Ass'n v. City of Detroit

*81Boyle, J.

Appellee Detroit Police Officers Association filed an unfair labor practice charge against appellant City of Detroit with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission, alleging that the city violated § 10(l)(e) of the public employment relations act, MCL 423.210(l)(e); MSA 17.455(10)(l)(e), by refusing to bargain over the removal of jobs from the dpoa’s bargaining unit. The merc’s order in favor of the dpoa was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. 137 Mich App 87; 357 NW2d 816 (1984). We would likewise affirm.

i

FACTS

The material facts, as stipulated to by the parties, are set forth in the opinion of the Court of Appeals:

Prior to September 1, 1981, court security for the traffic and ordinance division, as well as for the misdemeanor and examination functions of the felony division, of the Recorder’s Court of Detroit was provided by 44 police officers represented by the dpoa. Pursuant to the court reorganization mandated by 1980 PA 438, effective September 1, 1981, the 36th District Court was created, to which was transferred the traffic and ordinance and the misdemeanor and examination functions previously performed by the Recorder’s Court.[1] Regarding court security at the newly reorganized Recorder’s Court, MCL 600.1417; MSA 27A.1417 provides in pertinent part as follows:
"[T]he county of Wayne and the city of Detroit shall enter into a contract . . . which shall pro*82vide that the city of Detroit provide courtroom security in the recorder’s court in the city of Detroit only until September 30, 1983, or until all of the officers now assigned to the recorder’s court felony division have been transferred to other court duty, have elected to transfer to other duty, or have terminated their police service, whichever occurs first.”
In accordance with the above, the city temporarily reassigned 18 of the 44 police officers to court security jobs at the Recorder’s Court. The city’s temporary assignment of these 18 police officers is not at issue in this case and, contrary to the city’s assertion on appeal, was not addressed in merc’s decision and order.
Regarding court security at the newly created 36th District Court, 1980 PA 438 added the following statutory provision:
"In the thirty-sixth district, the district control unit shall be responsible for maintaining court security. Persons providing security services shall be assigned subject to the approval of the chief judge of the thirty-sixth district and, when performing services in the courtroom, shall be subject to the control of the judge holding court.” MCL 600.8283; MSA 27A.8283.
The City of Detroit is the "district control unit” for the 36th District Court. MCL 600.8103(3); MSA 27Á.8103(3); MCL 600.8104(l)(b); MSA 27A.8104(l)(b). Pursuant to the foregoing, the city unilaterally decided to contract with a private guard agency for the provision of court security services at the 36th District Court. Consequently, the remaining 26 police officers who formerly provided court security for the Recorder’s Court functions transferred to the 36th District Court were assigned to other non-court security bargaining unit jobs. While the city indicated its willingness to bargain over the impact of its decision to contract out the court security work at the 36th District Court, it refused to bargain over the decision itself, giving rise to the dpoa’s filing of an unfair labor practice charge. [137 Mich App 89-91.]

*83The hearing referee found that there was no unlawful refusal to bargain because the court security work previously performed by the dpoa at the Recorder’s Court was eliminated by the Legislature by virtue of 1980 PA 438, not by decision of the City of Detroit. The hearing referee found that the Legislature intended to eliminate courtroom security work at the newly created 36th District Court from the dpoa bargaining unit. Therefore, the hearing referee found no duty to bargain over the decision to utilize contract labor to supply courtroom security at the 36th District Court.

A two-member majority of the merc reversed the decision of the referee, disagreeing with the factual findings and statutory interpretation:

We find that the record in this case does not support the [referee’s] conclusion that the work of providing security for the traffic and ordinance and misdemeanor and examination functions of 36th District Court is not bargaining unit [work] because these functions are no longer performed as part of Detroit Recorder’s Court. Insofar as the record discloses, it appears that these functions were transferred more or less intact from the former Detroit Recorder’s Court to the new 36th District Court. It also appears that positions which are substantially identical to those once filled by bargaining unit members continue to exist and are now being filled by employees of the private contractor, albeit under different employment terms. We find in these circumstances that the transfer of the Detroit Recorder’s Court misdemeanor and examination and traffic and ordinance functions to the new court was akin to an administrative reorganization which did not destroy the identity of the work of providing security for these functions. . . .
We also cannot agree with the [referee’s] interpretation of the Court Reorganization Act on this matter. We note that Section 1417 of that statute, *84which explicitly protects security personnel from the Felony Division of the old Recorder’s Court from involuntary transfer to noncourt assignments prior to 1983, makes reference to transfers to "other court duty.” This suggests that the legislature anticipated that Respondent would be continuing to provide some courtroom security with its own employees. This aside, however, the Court Reorganization Act is silent on the specific question presented by this case. We think it improper to infer from the legislature’s silence that they intended to permit Respondent to free itself of its obligation to bargain over work long recognized as part of Charging Party’s bargaining unit. Had they intended this result, of course, they could have so provided.

The merc then held:

[T]he work of providing courtroom security for the traffic and ordinance and misdemeanor and examination functions of 36th District Court is bargaining unit work, as the identity of this work was not destroyed when it was transferred from the abolished Detroit Recorder’s Court to the new district court. Secondly, we hold that Respondent had an obligation to bargain with Charging Party before subcontracting this work to a private contractor, as this action reduced the number of jobs in the unit and resulted in a loss of work opportunity for member[s] of Charging Party’s bargaining unit.

The merc then ordered the city to bargain with the dpoa over the decision to subcontract and to return the bargaining unit work to the unit.2

*85On appeal, the Court of Appeals found that the merc decision that the courtroom security work was bargaining unit work was supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence on the record as a whole. MCL 423.216(e); MSA 17.455(16)(e). The Court of Appeals also agreed with the merc’s conclusion that the court reorganization legislation, 1980 PA 438, did not show a legislative intent to prohibit the City of Detroit from using police officers to provide security at the new 36th District Court. Therefore, the merc’s decision that the city violated § 10(l)(e) of the pera by refusing to bargain over the decision to subcontract this bargaining unit work was upheld. On April 22, 1986, this Court granted leave to appeal on a motion for reconsideration of its October 9, 1985, denial of leave.

ii

THE 1980 COURT REORGANIZATION ACT

In 1980 PA 438, the state Legislature undertook the task of reorganizing the Wayne County and Detroit court structures, utilizing state funding for *86many of the reorganized court operations.3 The portion of 1980 PA 438 which is the background for the instant litigation is the transfer of the Detroit Recorder’s Court traffic and ordinance division and the misdemeanor and examination departments of the felony division to the newly created 36th District Court. 1980 PA 438 also eliminated the Detroit Common Pleas Court, transferring jurisdiction over its civil cases and landlord-tenant disputes to the new 36th District Court. Before the reorganization, the dpoa provided security at the functions previously located in the Recorder’s Court; the Wayne County sheriff provided security for the functions previously located in the Common Pleas Court. 1980 PA 438 included two sections relating to courtroom security: MCL 600.1417; MSA 27A.1417 discusses security at the felony functions remaining at the Recorder’s Court, while MCL 600.8283; MSA 27A.8283 discusses security for the new 36th District Court. The City of Detroit argues that 1980 PA 438 expressly abolished the bargaining unit work about which the dpoa asserts a right to bargain.

MCL 600.8283; MSA 27A.8283 provides:

In the thirty-sixth district, the district control unit shall be responsible for maintaining court security. Persons providing security services shall be assigned subject to the approval of the chief judge of the thirty-sixth district and, when performing services in the courtroom, shall be subject to the control of the judge holding court.

MCL 600.1417; MSA 27A.1417, on the other hand, states:_

*87To implement section 37(3) of Act No. 369 of the Public Acts of 1919, being section 725.37 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, the county of Wayne and city of Detroit shall enter into a contract under Act No. 35 of the Public Acts of 1951, as amended, being sections 124.1 to 124.4 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, which shall provide that the city of Detroit provide courtroom security in the recorder’s court in the city of Detroit only until September 30, 1983, or until all of the officers now assigned to the recorder’s court felony division have been transferred to other court duty, have elected to transfer to other duty, or have terminated their police service, whichever occurs first. Any Detroit police officer who so transfers or terminates shall be replaced by a security officer chosen by the county of Wayne and the chief judge of the recorder’s court of the city of Detroit. The contract shall provide that only persons who are employees of the city of Detroit and who have complied with the minimum employment standards prepared and published under Act No. 203 of the Public Acts of 1965, as amended, being sections 28.601 to 28.616 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, shall provide the courtroom security. The contract shall also provide that the county shall annually budget and appropriate sufficient sums for the required courtroom security, and shall pay the city for the courtroom security services on a quarterly basis. The chief judge of the recorder’s court shall monitor the payments for courtroom security services made pursuant to this section and shall certify to the director of the department of management and budget any delinquency in the payments to be made by the county. Upon receiving from the chief judge of the recorder’s court a certification of delinquent payments, the director of the department of management and budget shall direct that the amount owed to the city be subtracted from funds otherwise payable to the county and shall pay that amount to the city.

The legislative history of § 1417 indicates a clear legislative intent to protect the presence of the *88dpoa at the Detroit Recorder’s Court following-1980 PA 438, for a time at least. The initial wording of § 1417, as proposed by the House, would have continued the dpoa presence at the Recorder’s Court with no time limit whatsoever:

The County of Wayne and the City of Detroit shall enter into a contract under Act No. 35 of the Public Acts of 1951, as amended, being sections 124.1 to 124.4 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, which shall provide that the City of Detroit provide courtroom security in the Recorder’s Court in the City of Detroit. The contract shall provide that only persons who are employees of the City of Detroit and who have complied with the minimum employment standards prepared and published under Act No. 203 of the Public Acts of 1965, as amended, being sections 28.601 to 28.616 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, shall provide the courtroom security. The contract shall also provide that the county shall annually budget and appropriate sufficient sums for the required courtroom security and shall pay the city for the courtroom security services on a monthly basis. [1980 Journal of the House 2593.]

The first conference report changed this to a phase-out of the dpoa by September 30, 1982, with replacement by "security officers” chosen by Wayne County and the Chief Judge of the Recorder’s Court. 1980 Journal of the Senate 2418-2419. The second conference report extended the phaseout period to September 30, 1983, and was ultimately adopted. The March 6, 1981, Analysis of Senate Bill 1106 by the House Legislative Analysis Section, p 13, discussed the purpose of § 1417:

While the status and pay of practically all employee groups affected by the Detroit-Wayne County court reorganization would be protected under the bills, Detroit police officers now provid*89ing security in the Detroit Recorder’s Court could be left without jobs unless they were protected as provided in Senate Bill 1106.

In contrast to the clear legislative intent to afford limited protection to dpoa members, which is evident in the history of § 1417, little is available concerning the evolution of § 8283.4 The most that can be said of § 8283 is what it does not say: It does not by its terms either require or bar dpoa members from being the means used by the city to fulfill its requirement of "maintaining court security.” While no intent to protect the dpoa is evident, neither is any contrary intent to release the city from any duties imposed under the pera. We can only conclude, as did the mero and the Court of Appeals, that MCL 600.8283; MSA 27A.8283 leaves the method of providing courtroom security in the 36th District Court within the discretion of the district control unit as limited by other applicable law and obligations.

hi

THE PERA DUTY TO BARGAIN

In 1965, the Legislature enacted the public employment relations act, 1965 PA 379. Const 1963, *90art 4, § 48 gives the Legislature the authority to "enact laws providing for the resolution of disputes concerning public employees, except those in the state classified civil service.” The pera continues the previously existing prohibition of strikes by public employees, MCL 423.202; MSA 17.455(2), but creates the right of public employees to organize, MCL 423.209; MSA 17.455(9). The pera furthermore imposes on public employers a duty to bargain collectively with the representatives of its employees. MCL 423.210-423.215; MSA 17.455(10)-17.455(15). Section 15 of the pera imposes on public employees the duty to bargain collectively "with respect to wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment . . . .”5

The right to collective bargaining in the public employment arena is a relatively recent development. See, generally, Edwards, Labor Relations Law in the Public Sector (2d ed), ch 1, pp 1-140; Developments in the law of public employment, 97 Harv L R 1611, 1676-1737 (1984). A key question has been and, as the instant litigation shows, continues to be the appropriate subjects of bargaining. Id., pp 1682-1700. While some urge that more subjects of bargaining should be considered *91mandatory6 in the public arena because public employees are generally prohibited from striking, Developments, supra, p 1686, in reality the scope of bargaining in public employment relations is generally more limited. These limitations arise because of judicial concerns about the effect of unionization upon the political process, Befort, Public sector bargaining: Fiscal crisis and unilateral change, 69 Minn L R 1221, 1256 (1985); restrictions in the statutory language of public employee relations statutes, Edwards, The emerging duty to bargain in the public sector, 71 Mich L R 885, 913-914 (1973); and concern for the "management rights” of the public employer in making policy decisions, Befort, supra, pp 1257-1258; Developments, supra, p 1688,7 A minority of courts, *92ours included, have followed the precedents set in federal private labor decisions under the nlra and construe public employee collective bargaining rights as broadly as those under the nlra because of the similarity of state statutes to the nlra. Edwards, supra, p 895.

Federal courts have interpreted § 8(d) of the nlra as establishing as mandatory subjects of bargaining "wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment,” 29 USC 158(d). See NLRB v Borg Warner Corp, 356 US 342; 78 S Ct 718; 2 L Ed 2d 823 (1958). Since § 15 of the pera uses identical language, federal private sector precedents, while not controlling, have been viewed as helpful in construing § 15. Local 1277, AFSCME v Center Line, 414 Mich 642, 652; 327 NW2d 822 (1982); DPOA v Detroit, 391 Mich 44, 53; 214 NW2d 803 (1974). This Court has held that those issues falling within the statutory language "wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment” constitute mandatory subjects of bargaining under the pera. 391 Mich 54-57; 414 Mich 652-653.

Federal labor law has long recognized that "terms and conditions of employment” for purposes of the nlra, § 8(d), includes an employer’s decision to terminate its employees and to hire a subcontractor to do the same work. In Fibreboard Paper Products Corp v NLRB, 379 US 203; 85 S Ct 398; 13 L Ed 2d 233 (1964), the United States Supreme Court held that an employer’s unilateral decision to terminate its own maintenance staff and to hire a subcontractor to do the same work within the plant without good-faith bargaining violated the nlra. A long line of merc opinions holds that an employer’s unilateral decision to transfer bargaining unit work outside the unit is an unfair labor practice under the pera. Ishpem*93ing v Local 1282, AFSCME, 1985 MERC Lab Op 687; Lansing Fire Fighters, Local 421 v Lansing, 133 Mich App 56; 349 NW2d 253 (1984), aff'g 1983 MERC Lab Op 97; Clinton Co Int School Dist v Ed Ass’n, 1984 MERC Lab Op 529, 531-536; Roseville v Fire Fighters Ass’n, 1982 MERC Lab Op 1377; Huron School Dist v MESPA, 1980 MERC Lab Op 773.

The Court of Appeals and the merc held that courtroom security work at the 36th District Court is bargaining unit work. The city argues that the courtroom security work for the traffic-ordinance and misdemeanor-examination functions of the Recorder’s Court ceased to exist upon transfer of those functions to the 36th District Court. Since the 36th District Court was a new entity, the city argues that the courtroom security functions at the 36th District Court are also new. The merc found that security work for the traffic and ordinance and misdemeanor and examination functions of the 36th District Court was "transferred more or less intact from the former Detroit Recorder’s Court . . . .” Furthermore, the merc found that the positions at the 36th District Court were "substantially identical” to the positions at the Recorder’s Court, and that the transfer from the Recorder’s Court to the 36th District Court "was akin to an administrative reorganization which did not destroy the identity of the work of providing security for these functions.”

There is ample evidence in the record to support the merc’s factual finding concerning the similarity of the positions in the Recorder’s Court to the misdemeanor-examination and traffic-ordinance functions in the 36th District Court. The exhibits in the record indicate that the city planned to use fifty-four employees of jowa, the private security agency, at the 36th District Court to perform the *94work previously done by fifty-six dpoa members at the Recorder’s Court. The similarity extends beyond pure numbers to the nature of the work. As the Court of Appeals correctly noted,

It is undisputed that the traffic and ordinance and the misdemeanor and examination functions of Recorder’s Court for which the bargaining unit previously provided security were simply transferred intact to the 36th District Court. The work of providing security for those court functions continues to exist, with only the judicial administrative unit at which that work is performed having been changed. [137 Mich App 94.]

Since the merc’s findings are supported by "competent, material, and substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole,” we would affirm the merc’s conclusion that the courtroom security work at the 36th District Court constitutes bargaining unit work. MCL 423.216(e); MSA 17.455(16)(e).

We would also affirm the merc’s decision that there was a duty to bargain over the city’s decision to subcontract bargaining unit work. The unilateral removal of bargaining unit work from the dpoa eliminated some forty-four bargaining unit positions; the work continues to be performed at the 36th District Court, albeit by jowa employees rather than dpoa members. In Fibreboard, supra, p 215, the United States Supreme Court construed "conditions of employment” under § 8(d) of the nlra to include an employer’s decision to replace "employees in the existing bargaining unit with those of an independent contractor to do the same work under similar conditions of employment.” The Court reasoned that preventing termination of employment as a result of the subcontract constituted a condition of employment, that the peaceful *95resolution of disputes concerning subcontracting would promote the policies of the nlra, and that subcontracting decisions are particularly amenable to the collective bargaining process. Id., pp 210-211. The Court further observed that the duty to bargain would not "significantly abridge” the employer’s managerial freedom because the subcontract did not alter the basic business operation, the same maintenance work still had to be performed, and the change in workers did not involve capital investment — -just an exchange of personnel. Id., p 213. The Court also noted that the prospect of cost savings through unilateral decisions to subcontract bargaining unit work was not a sufficient basis for overcoming the duty to bargain, and the national labor policy, contained in the nlra. Id., p 214.

The facts and reasoning in Fibreboard are most pertinent to the instant case and our construction of § 15 of the pera. The resolution of labor-management strife in the public sector through collective bargaining is a basic goal of the pera, which joins the strike proscription, MCL 423.202; MSA 17.455(2), with the employer’s duty to bargain collectively, MCL 423.215; MSA 17.455(15). We are not persuaded in this case that there is any basis for distinguishing decisions concerning subcontracting in Michigan public sector labor law from those concepts defining subcontracting in the private sector as set forth in the Fibreboard case. While the duty to bargain over subcontracting does limit to some extent the city’s freedom to act, that restriction flows from the pera and does not prevent the removal of the misdemeanor-examination and traffic-ordinance functions from the Recorder’s Court to the 36th District Court. The court reorganization plan under 1980 PA 438 did not depend upon substituting jowa personnel for dpoa personnel in the 36th District Court. The *96subcontract did not change the courtroom security work performed at the misdemeanor-examination and traffic-ordinance functions — indeed, the merc found that the work to be performed at the 36th District Court was "substantially identical” to that performed at the Recorder’s Court. Finally, the subcontract itself (as opposed to the reorganization as a whole) involved a mere exchange of personnel.8 Therefore, we conclude that this transferral of bargaining unit work to nonunit personnel was a mandatory subject of bargaining under § 15 of the pera, and the city’s refusal to bargain constitutes a violation of § 10(l)(e) of the pera. As the merc cogently observed in Ishpeming, supra, p 692,

[W]e view a unilateral transfer of bargaining unit work as an action striking at the heart of the bargaining relationship. Such actions taken unilaterally, even where motivated by reasons of efficiency or economics, communicate to employees most clearly the futility of collective action. There is no case in which this is more true than where an employer unilaterally decides to layoff [sic] a bargaining unit employee and to retain nonunit employees to perform the unit work.

The city violated its duty under the pera by refusing to bargain on this subject.

The city argues that the creation of the 36th District Court should be viewed as a partial close *97of business. Under federal labor law, an employer does not have a duty to bargain over the decision to terminate a part of its operation where the decision is based upon a fundamental change in the nature and direction of the business rather than on a mere reduction in labor costs. First Nat'l Maintenance Corp v NLRB, 452 US 666; 101 S Ct 2573; 69 L Ed 2d 318 (1981).

In First Nat'l, the United States Supreme Court engaged in a balancing test to determine whether the decision to terminate part of a business operation was a mandatory subject of bargaining. The Court considered three types of management decisions: those with only an indirect effect on the employment relationship, those dealing almost exclusively with the employment relationship, and those focused on a "change in the scope and direction of the enterprise,” id., p 677, but with the collateral result of a profound effect on the employment relationship. In the third type of decision, the Court recognized the employer’s need for relatively unfettered business judgment as well as the policies of the nlra, holding that

bargaining over management decisions that have a substantial impact on the continued availability of employment should be required only if the benefit, for labor-management relations and the collective-bargaining process, outweighs the burden placed on the conduct of the business. [Id., p 679.]

The Court construed the Fibreboard decision as, in effect, utilizing this test, underlining the Fibreboard Court’s conclusion that reduction of labor costs is a matter "peculiarly suitable for resolution within the collective bargaining framework.” Id., p 680, quoting Fibreboard, supra, p 214. Applying the balancing test to the facts of First Natl, the Court concluded that the decision to partially *98terminate the business was not a mandatory subject of bargaining because the need for independent managerial discretion outweighed the slight benefit to be gained by union participation in the decision. First Nat’l, supra, p 686. The Court pointed out that the employer was not replacing its employees or moving the business elsewhere, there was no antiunion animus alleged, and the purpose was to reduce economic loss caused by a dispute over the management fee paid by a third party to the employer for the services terminated. Id., p 688. In addition, there was no abrogation of an existing bargaining agreement. Id.

In the instant case, the merc refused to characterize the reorganization as a partial close of business. Unlike the facts in First Nat’l, in this case, the operation was merely relocated, and similar positions were filled by different personnel. The security work continued, albeit in different locations. Thus, to the extent First Nat’l is based upon a partial close of business, it is inapplicable in the instant case.9

*99IV

REMEDY

Finally, the city contends that the merc order to bargain over the decision to subcontract the security work and to return the work to the bargaining unit pending satisfaction of this bargaining obligation would create administrative and legal problems to the city. We would find in these circumstances and in the absence of any record basis for these assertions that the alleged problems that are caused by the passage of time must remain the burden of the city. The merc decision was issued on March 30, 1983, and the decision of the Court of Appeals was issued on September 4, 1984. We also note that, according to Joint Exhibit 4, art 11, the contract between the city and jowa allows termination in whole or in part after thirty days notice.

v

CONCLUSION

We would hold that the city violated its duty under the pera to bargain in good faith concerning its decision to subcontract court security work in the trafile and ordinance division and the misdemeanor and examination division of the 36th District Court transferred from the Detroit Recorder’s Court. The work constituted bargaining unit work, and 1980 PA 438 did not eliminate the city’s pera duty to bargain over the subcontracting of bar*100gaining unit work. The decision of the Court of Appeals should be affirmed.

Brickley and Cavanagh, JJ., concurred with Boyle, J. Archer, J.

I cannot agree with the conclusion that "1980 PA 4381 did not eliminate the city’s pera duty to bargain over the subcontracting of bargaining unit work.” Ante, pp 99-100.

While the opinion for affirmance acknowledges a clear legislative intent to afford limited protection to Detroit Police Officers Association members who worked at the Detroit Recorder’s Court felony division, as evidenced in the history of MCL 600.1417; MSA 27A.1417,2 ante, pp 87-89, it further acknowledges that MCL 600.8283; MSA 27A.82833 *101evidences "no [legislative] intent to protect the dpoa” members assigned to provide security at the traffic and ordinance division of the Recorder’s Court. Ante, p 89. Further, in § 8283, the Legislature failed to affirmatively hold the city responsible for phasing out the Detroit police officers assigned to the traffic and ordinance division of the Recorder’s Court, as it did when phasing out courtroom security in the felony division pursuant to § 1417.

I therefore agree with the following analysis and decision of the hearing referee:

[I]t is clear that an employer must bargain prior to making a change that will result in the removal of bargaining unit work. City of Westland v Michigan Police Officers Ass’n, 1981 MERC Lab Op 642; Center Line Public School v MEA-NEA, 1982 MERC Lab Op [756]; River Rouge School Dist v Ed Ass’n, 1982 MERC Lab Op [1011]. The instant case, however, involves a legislatively imposed change which rearranged former Recorder’s Court functions and resulted in the creation of a new court. These statutorily mandated changes were obviously beyond the power of the City to control, cf. City of Westland v Fire Fighters, 1979 MERC Lab Op 166.
The legislature, in enacting Public Act 438 of 1980, in effect abolished Recorder’s Court as a separate independent entity; some of its functions were merged with Circuit court, others were transferred to the new 36th District Court. The new court also absorbed the former Common Pleas Court, where security had been the responsibility of Wayne County. The undersigned is in agreement with the Respondent that the City had no obligation to continue the arrangement for security personnel which it had with the old Recorder’s Court, with an entirely new and different entity. *102Through no action of the City, the former bargaining unit work no longer existed.[4]
It is true that the City of Detroit, as district control unit, is responsible for courtroom security under Section 8283 of the statute. However this language simply conforms with the District Court Act, 1968 PA 154, which makes the district control unit responsible for maintaining, financing, and operating the district court. I am unable to conclude that this section was intended by the legislature to continue the former arrangement whereby Detroit police officers provided courtroom security, particularly when the statute makes specific provision for phasing out the responsibility of Detroit police officers in providing courtroom security in the felony division of Recorder’s Court. That language is an example of the type of detailed, complex provisions the legislature enacted in order to accomplish the transition to the new court organization. Had the legislature intended the former security practices in Recorder’s Court to continue in the 36th District Court it could have so specified. Instead the only provisions relative to the 36th District Court security are that the district control unit shall be responsible for maintaining court security, and that persons providing security services shall be assigned subject to the approval of the chief judge of the 36th District Court.

I would reverse the decisions of the Court of Appeals and the merc for the reasons stated by the hearing referee.

Levin, J., concurred with Archer, J.

The new 36th District Court also encompasses the functions of the Court of Common Pleas. This included landlord-tenant cases and civil actions. Before the reorganization, the Wayne County Sheriff supplied seven deputies to provide courtroom security at the Court of Common Pleas.

The merc order, in its entirety, provides:

Respondent City of Detroit, its officers, representatives and agents are hereby ordered to:
1. Cease-and-desist from refusing to bargain with the Detroit Police Officers Association regarding the decision to subcontract *85the work of providing courtroom security for the traffic and ordinance and misdemeanor and examination functions of the 36th District Court.
2. Take the following affirmative action to effectuate the purposes of the Act:
a. Upon request, bargain in good faith with the Detroit Police Officers Association regarding the decision to subcontract the work as described in (1) above to a private contractor.
b. Return the bargaining unit work as described in (1) above to the unit by reassigning bargaining unit personnel to this work pending satisfaction of the bargaining obligation.
c. Post the attached notice in conspicuous places on the Respondent’s premises, including all places where notices to employees are normally posted.

1980 PA 438 was the initial step in achieving the goal of full state funding of trial court operations. Statewide funding of trial courts is an important element in achieving the "one court of justice” mandated in Const 1963, art 6, § 1.

The deposition of Judge Frederick E. Byrd, the first Chief Judge of the 36th District Court, indicates that before enactment of MCL 600.8283; MSA 27A.8283, consideration had been given to making the Chief Judge, rather than the city, the final authority for purposes of obtaining security personnel for 36th District Court:

A. Yes, that was going to go to a private agency, although the statute had been changed originally. Originally I was to pick them.
Q. You were to pick what?
A. The private agency, but the City had it amended and the City picked the security service and gave the Chief Judge veto power.

MCL 423.215; MSA 17.455(15), in its entirety, provides:

A public employer shall bargain collectively with the representatives of its employees as defined in section 11 and is authorized to make and enter into collective bargaining agreements with such representatives. For the purposes of this section, to bargain collectively is the performance of the mutual obligation of the employer and the representative of the employees to meet at reasonable times and confer in good faith with respect to wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment, or the negotiation of an agreement, or any question arising thereunder, and the execution of a written contract, ordinance or resolution incorporating any agreement reached if requested by either party, but such obligation does not compel either party to agree to a proposal or require the making of a concession.

Federal law recognizes three types of "subjects” of bargaining under the nlra: mandatory, permissive, and illegal. See, generally, Befort, Public sector bargaining: Fiscal crisis and unilateral change, 69 Minn L R 1221, 1224-1225 (1985). Mandatory subjects are those on which the parties, on demand, must bargain in good faith. Permissive subjects are those which are not mandatory, but about which the parties may bargain. NLRB v Borg-Warner Corp, 356 US 342, 349; 78 S Ct 718; 2 L Ed 2d 823 (1958). The third class of subjects are "illegal” subjects — those on which legislation prohibits the parties from bargaining. See, e.g., nlra, § 8(a)(3), 29 USC 158(a)(3) (parties are limited in extent to which union membership can be a condition of employment).

The pera, unlike many state statutes, does not have a specific provision excluding from bargaining items dealing with policy matters or within the "management rights” of the public employer. See Edwards, supra, pp 914-915; Developments, supra, p 1684, ns 9-10. While infringement on managerial prerogatives has not been argued in this case as a basis for limiting the pera duty to bargain, we note that this Court has held in previous cases that claims that the pera duty to bargain impinges upon the public employer’s managerial power are properly left for legislative, rather than judicial, redefinition of the pera. CMU Faculty v CMU, 404 Mich 268; 273 NW2d 21 (1978) (quoting from Pontiac Police Officers Ass’n v Pontiac (After Remand), 397 Mich 674, 684; 246 NW2d 831 [1976] [opinion of Levin, J.]). The legislative forum is particularly appropriate for striking a balance between, on the one hand, the governmental employer’s legitimate desire to exercise discretion in the management of public funds and in the response to public concerns, and, on the other hand, the statutory duty to bargain over the conditions of employment of public employees.

The only reason for the subcontracting decision available in the record is gleaned from Judge James Ryan’s deposition. Judge Ryan was the supervising justice of the Michigan Supreme Court during implementation of the reorganization. Justice Ryan’s deposition indicates that the city decided to subcontract the security services because "as a general proposition, it is less expensive to the City to obtain outside or independent contractor services in many areas of Government, and that if other things are equal, that would be a desirable way to go for courtroom security.” Justice Ryan also commented that, in his view, dpoa members were "substantially overqualified to perform” the security services.

The city cites a variety of recent nlrb decisions for the proposition that, following First Nat’l Maintenance Corp, there is no duty to bargain about a decision to subcontract which results from a fundamental change in the nature or direction of an employer’s business: Hawthorn Mellody, Inc v Teamsters, 275 NLRB 55 (1985); Garwood-Detroit Truck Equipment, Inc v Int’l Union, 274 NLRB 23 (1985); Kroger Co v United Food Union, 273 NLRB 70 (1984); Columbia City Freight Lines, Inc v Teamsters, 271 NLRB 12 (1984); Otis Elevator Co v Local 989, Int’l Union, 269 NLRB 891 (1984).

None of the facts of the nlrb cases cited by the city actually involves a subcontracting decision such as that in the instant case. Furthermore, even the current nlrb cases acknowledge that Fibreboard and First Nat’l Maintenance require a mandatory duty to bargain where the decision turns upon a reduction of labor costs. Otis Elevator, supra, p 893; Garwood-Detroit Truck Equipment, Inc, supra. Therefore, we deem it unnecessary to comment further on the post-First Nat’l Maintenance holdings of the nlrb. But see, generally, Gorman, The negligible impact of the National Labor Relations Act on managerial decisions to close or relocate, 58 Tul L R 1354 (1984); Lane, comment, Unfair labor practice and contract aspects of an employer’s desire to close, partially close, or relocate bargaining *99unit work, 24 Duquesne L R 285 (1985). Were it necessary to further discuss the rationale of Otis Elevator and its applicability to the instant case, we would observe that both the Recorder’s Court and the 36th District Court are courts performing the function of administering state felony and misdemeanor law in the City of Detroit. Thus, it is questionable whether there was a fundamental change in the nature or direction of the city’s business as to these functions.

The Wayne County court reorganization act, 1980 PA 438, effective September 1, 1981, created the new 36th District Court. Pursuant to the act, the administrative functions of the Wayne Circuit Court and the Detroit Recorder’s Court were merged, the Recorder’s Court traffic and ordinance division was abolished, its three traffic and ordinance division judges transferred to the Recorder’s Court bench and the positions then occupied by the traffic court referees were eliminated. The act also abolished the Common Pleas Court. The new 36th District Court has a jurisdictional grant of authority different from the jurisdiction of both the traffic and ordinance division and Common Pleas Court.

MCL 600.1417; MSA 27A.1417 provides, in pertinent part:

[T]he county of Wayne and the city of Detroit shall enter into a contract . . . which shall provide that the city of Detroit provide courtroom security in the recorder’s court in the city of Detroit only until September 30, 1983, or until all of the officers now assigned to the recorder’s court felony division have been transferred to other court duty, have elected to transfer to other duty, or have terminated their police service, whichever occurs first. [Emphasis added.]

MCL 600.8283; MSA 27A.8283 provides:

In the thirty-sixth district, the district control unit [the city] shall be responsible for maintaining court security. Persons providing security services shall be assigned subject to the approval of the chief judge of the thirty-sixth district and, when performing services in the courtroom, shall be subject to the control of the judge holding court. [Emphasis added.]

It should be noted that the instant case does not involve changes in the employing entity, which could create a bargaining obligation. See, for example, Southgate Comm School Dist v Federation of Teachers, 1970 MERC Lab Op 850 (merger of two school districts); North Dearborn Heights School Dist v AFL-CIO, 1981 MERC Lab Op 398 (partial takeover); Davison Bd of Ed v AFL-CIO, 1973 MERC Lab Op 824 (opening new facilities).