City of Pgh. v. Plrb

556 A.2d 928, 124 Pa. Commw. 502
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 30, 1989
Docket2061 C.D. 1988
StatusPublished

This text of 556 A.2d 928 (City of Pgh. v. Plrb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Pgh. v. Plrb, 556 A.2d 928, 124 Pa. Commw. 502 (Pa. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

124 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 502 (1989)
556 A.2d 928

City of Pittsburgh, Petitioner
v.
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board, Respondent.

No. 2061 C.D. 1988.

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued February 10, 1989.
March 30, 1989.

Argued February 10, 1989, before Judges CRAIG and DOYLE, and Senior Judge KALISH, sitting as a panel of three.

Joseph F. Quinn, Assistant City Solicitor, with him, D.R. Pellegrini, City Solicitor, for petitioner.

John B. Neurohr, with him, James L. Crawford, for respondent.

Stanford A. Segal, Gatz, Cohen, Segal & Koerner, for intervenor, Firefighters, Local No. 1.

OPINION BY JUDGE CRAIG, March 30, 1989:

This case presents the question of whether the 159 captains, 24 battalion chiefs and 4 deputy chiefs in the *503 Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire should be excluded from the collective bargaining unit, the union representative of which is the Pittsburgh Firefighters, Local No. 1, International Association of Firefighters, AFL-CIO.

To request the exclusion of those positions, the city filed its petition for unit clarification with the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board (PLRB) on November 12, 1985. After hearings, a hearing examiner issued a proposed order of unit clarification, finding that the positions were nonmanagerial and should remain within the bargaining unit. After the PLRB dismissed the city's exceptions and made the proposed order final, the city appealed.

Facts

The hearing examiner's findings of fact, describing the functions and relationships of the various fire bureau positions, are largely undisputed. To summarize the relationships and some of the functions stated in Findings of Fact Nos. 4-39, we here set forth a generalized table of organization, as follows:

                        PUBLIC SAFETY DIRECTOR
                                   |
                           DEPUTY DIRECTOR
                                   |
                              FIRE CHIEF
                                   |
                                   | ---- ADMINISTRATIVE AIDE
                                   |
    ASST. DIR. FIRE SUPPRESSION          ASST. DIR. FIRE PREVENTION
                                   |
             DEPUTY CHIEFS (4 — Each supervises a platoon [shift].)
                                   |
         BATTALION CHIEFS (24 — Each supervises one of 6 districts.)
                                   |
CAPTAINS (159)                        LIEUTENANTS (121)
(Each captain supervises              (Each lieutenant supervises
an engine company — one               a truck company,
vehicle, 3 or 4 firefighters.)        2 to 4 firefighters.)
                                   |
                           FIREFIGHTERS (715)

Note: In a firehouse having both an engine and truck company, the captain is the senior supervisor of the house. Some firefighters are assigned to squad units.

*504 The city contends that, with captains, battalion chiefs and deputy chiefs included in the bargaining unit, the fire bureau has only one position of managerial status — that of the fire chief of the bureau. However, the Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire is no longer a separate department reporting directly to the mayor. As the foregoing table discloses, a recent reorganization of the city's executive branch resulted in the restoration of the position of public safety director as head of the Department of Safety, including the Bureau of Fire, along with Bureaus of Police, Emergency Medical Services and Administration.

In the public safety director resides the personnel management powers as to hiring and promotion, and also significant policy-making, planning and budgeting responsibilities. Along with the public safety director, the deputy director of the department and the fire chief, with the assistance of an administrative aide, also exercise managerial control over the bureau outside of the bargaining unit.

Also in the organization, as presented to the PLRB, are two additional positions outside of the bargaining unit, those of the assistant director for fire suppression and assistant director for fire prevention. As the titles indicate, and the hearing examiner found, these positions stand in the line of command between the fire chief and the deputies, with the assistant director for fire suppression concerned with the firefighting operation and the assistant director for fire prevention concerned with fire prevention activities headed by a captain of fire prevention. In Firefighters Local Union, No. 1 v. Civil Service Commission of City of Pittsburgh, 118 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 498, 545 A.2d 487 (1988), this court recently held that the applicable statutes do not permit the city to place these positions outside of the competitive civil service; our decision did not prohibit the creation of such *505 positions but simply held that the laws permitted only the fire chief to be exempted from civil service and thus required these positions, like those of the deputy chiefs and lower positions in the fire department, to be under civil service protection.

The position of deputy director is to contain an office of professional responsibilities, with a chief inspector and a safety administrator; the chief inspector will be responsible for, among other things, making sure that the regulations, policies and the procedures of the fire bureau are in place and are in operation. The fire bureau will be subject to ongoing inspection to insure implementation of orders of the fire chief.

The Service and Administration Bureau, under the director of the public safety, will be responsible for education and training, for communications and also for research and development throughout the entire department, including the fire bureau.

Each of the four deputy chiefs in the fire bureau heads a platoon, which essentially consists of the complete manning of the fire department during a given shift. Deputy chiefs respond to downtown fires and to multiple alarms in other districts of the city. The operational responsibilities of a deputy chief include taking charge of a single alarm fire, controlling deployment during times of two or more multiple alarm fires, and calling in additional resources and related agencies, such as emergency medical services, police and utility companies. The deputy chiefs confer with the fire chief and are responsible for disseminating updates, changes and new regulations.

Battalion chiefs report to the deputy chiefs daily. Each battalion chief is in charge of one of the districts, composed of a number of firehouses or fire companies. Battalion chiefs supervise payroll records and prepare forms for requesting personnel changes. Battalion chiefs *506 also answer alarms and supervise at fires, with the authority to redeploy men and equipment in their districts. A battalion chief also has the authority to call in other city departments and related agencies as needed.

Captains and lieutenants supervise fire companies. A given fire company consists of one apparatus, which may be an engine (pumper) or a truck. The captains supervise engine companies, consisting of three or so firefighters. The lieutenants supervise truck companies. Ten firehouses contain only engine companies.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fire Fighters, Local Union, No. 1 v. Civil Service Commission
545 A.2d 487 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1988)
Geriot v. Council of Borough of Darby
417 A.2d 1144 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1980)
Township of Chartiers v. Commonwealth
510 A.2d 884 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1986)
Fraternal Order of Police, Star Lodge No. 20 v. Commonwealth
511 A.2d 923 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1986)
City of Pittsburgh v. Commonwealth
556 A.2d 928 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
556 A.2d 928, 124 Pa. Commw. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pgh-v-plrb-pacommwct-1989.