City of Worcester v. Labor Relations Commission

756 N.E.2d 1220, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 106
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 29, 2001
DocketNo. 99-P-1443
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 756 N.E.2d 1220 (City of Worcester v. Labor Relations Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Worcester v. Labor Relations Commission, 756 N.E.2d 1220, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 106 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

McHugh, J.

Apparently concerned about youngsters absenting themselves from school, the Worcester city manager designated all officers of the Worcester police department as “supervisors of [school] attendance.” Shortly thereafter, the Worcester police [107]*107chief promulgated a special order setting out certain procedures the officers were to follow in carrying out their supervisory responsibilities.

After the chief promulgated his implementing order, the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, Local 378 (union), which represents the officers below the rank of sergeant, filed with the Labor Relations Commission (commission) an unfair labor practice charge against the city of Worcester (city). In its charge, the union claimed that the city had made the designation and had issued the order without notice even though both were mandatory subjects of bargaining under G. L. c. 150E, § 6. By doing so, the union claimed, the city had violated G. L. c. 150E, § 10(a)(5), inserted by St. 1973, c. 1078, § 2, which makes it a prohibited practice to “[rjefuse to bargain collectively in good faith,” and, derivatively, G. L. c. 150E, § 10(a)(1), which makes it an unfair labor practice to “[(Interfere, restrain, or coerce any employee in the exercise of any right guaranteed” by c. 150E as a whole. The city responded by claiming that it had no obligation to bargain over the designation, the implementing order or the impact that either would have on the officers who were part of the bargaining unit.

After hearing, the commission concluded that the city was not required to bargain over the designation or terms of the implementing order, but was required to bargain over the impact both would have on the officers. The union and the city then appealed to this court from the portions of the commission’s order adverse to them. We conclude that the city was required to bargain over the designation, the implementing order, and their impacts, and we therefore reverse.

The essential facts are not in serious dispute. Indeed, the union and the city presented their respective positions to the commission on an agreed statement of facts coupled with the brief testimony of Officer James Collins, the union’s president. That agreed statement and supplemental testimony revealed that the chief issued the order now at issue on September 16, 1996, in the midst of negotiations between the union and the city for what became a collective bargaining agreement covering the period July 1, 1996, through June 30, 1997.

The chief’s order was entitled “Truancy Intervention” and [108]*108stated that, on August 26, 1996, the city manager had designated all Worcester police officers as “supervisors of attendance with the authority to exercise the duties specified in [G. L. c. 76, §§ 19 and 20,] which include the power to apprehend and take to school without a warrant any truant or absentee found wandering in the streets or public places.”

Following that recitation, the order stated, in essence, that officers who, during the school hours, “encounter[ed]” youngsters who appeared to be under sixteen were required to determine whether they were enrolled in schools and, if so, whether they were absent without authority. If the youngster was enrolled and was absent without authority, then the officer was to “offer [him or her] transportation” to the appropriate “[s]tudent [attendance [c]enter”2 in downtown Worcester. If the youngster declined the offer, the officer was to discontinue his or her contact with the student. If the youngster accepted the offer, the officer was to transport the student to the attendance center. The commission concluded that each encounter of the type just described was likely to take between forty-five and ninety minutes from inception to completion. Moreover, if the youngster accepted the transportation offer, the officer would be required to leave his or her patrol sector to deliver the student to the attendance center and other police officers would be required to cover the abandoned sector, as well as their own, during the transporting officer’s absence.

Before the city manager’s designation and the chief’s order, Worcester police officers possessed, and exercised, discretionary power to determine whether youngsters they encountered in the course of responding to calls for suspected criminal behavior or public disturbances were absent from school without permission. If so, the officers had, and had exercised, the power to transport the youngsters to the schools they should have been attending. The officers had exercised that power, however, only as an adjunct to their traditional role of investigating, suppressing and quelling crimes and public disturbances. They were not required [109]*109to, and did not, make pure “truancy” inquiries, i.e., inquiries of youngsters whom the officers encountered in non-criminal contexts simply to determine whether the youngsters belonged in school.

General Laws c. 76, §§ 19 and 20, the statutory provisions cited in the chiefs order, are part of a chapter of the General Laws dealing with school attendance and related matters. General Laws c. 76, § 1, in essence and with a series of exceptions here irrelevant, requires school attendance by all children under sixteen years of age. To enforce that requirement, §§ 19 and 20 deal with the position of “supervisor of attendance.” Descended from a statute first enacted in 1873 (see St. 1873 c. 262, § 2), section 19 provides that “[e]very school committee shall appoint, make regulations governing and fix the compensation of one or more supervisors of attendance.”3 G. L. c. 76, § 19, inserted by St. 1973, c. 1073, § 1. Section 20 imposes on “supervisors of attendance” a series of duties and powers, one of which is that they “may apprehend and take to school without a warrant any truant or absentee found wandering in the streets or public places.”4 G. L. c. 76, § 20, inserted by St. 1973, c. 1073, § 1.

Well before this controversy arose, the Worcester school committee, acting pursuant to § 19, had appointed “supervisors [110]*110of attendance.” At the time of the chief’s order, those supervisors were covered by a collective bargaining agreement between the Worcester school committee and the Educational Association of Worcester.5

Against that factual and statutory backdrop, the commission reached two related conclusions. First, the commission concluded that “ [decisions concerning where to deploy public services are managerial prerogatives that are not subject to bargaining. . . . [Designating officers as supervisors of attendance with truancy intervention responsibilities [is a decision] that fall[s] within the penumbra of managerial rights and [is] not subject to mandatory bargaining.” Nevertheless, the commission, relying on the decision in School Comm, of Newton v. Labor Relations Commn., 388 Mass. 557 (1983), concluded that the city’s decision had an impact on the affected police officers’ workloads and that the city consequently had an obligation to bargain with the union over the impact of the city manager’s designation and the police chief’s order. Pending completion of that “impact” bargaining, the commission ordered the city to cease its enforcement of the chief’s September 16 order and to restore the status that had existed before the order was promulgated.6

In reviewing the commission’s decision, we “give due weight [111]

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

Related

City of Worcester v. Labor Relations Commission
438 Mass. 177 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
756 N.E.2d 1220, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-worcester-v-labor-relations-commission-massappct-2001.