East County Bargaining Council v. Centennial School District No. 28JT

685 P.2d 452, 69 Or. App. 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 30, 1984
DocketC-185-82; CA A27416
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 685 P.2d 452 (East County Bargaining Council v. Centennial School District No. 28JT) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East County Bargaining Council v. Centennial School District No. 28JT, 685 P.2d 452, 69 Or. App. 47 (Or. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

*49 RICHARDSON, P. J.

East County Bargaining Council (council) is the exclusive representative under the Public Employe Collective Bargaining Act (PECBA), ORS 243.650 et seq., of teachers employed by Centennial School District No. 28JT. The council appeals and the district cross-appeals from an Employment Relations Board (ERB) order sustaining some and rejecting other allegations that the district’s refusal to bargain about teacher evaluation procedures and certain other matters is an unfair labor practice under ORS 243.672(1)(e).

The issue raised by the council’s appeal is whether its proposals pertaining to teacher evaluations involve “employment relations” and are therefore mandatory subjects of bargaining under ORS 243.650(7), which provides:

“ ‘Employment relations’ includes, but is not limited to, matters concerning direct or indirect monetary benefits, hours, vacations, sick leave, grievance procedures and other conditions of employment.”

School district and teacher representatives have contested variations of that issue before ERB and the appellate courts repeatedly. In Springfield Education Assn. v. School Dist., 290 Or 217, 621 P2d 547 (1980), the Supreme Court concluded that ERB’s balancing approach, by which it weighs the comparative effect of a proposed bargaining subject on educational policy and on teacher employment conditions, is not an erroneous interpretation of or method of determining the mandatory bargainability of a subject under ORS 243.650(7). The court also approved ERB’s three-part standard for applying its balancing approach to teacher evaluation proposals. It explained:

“ERB concluded that the bases for and use of evaluation related predominantly to educational policy, although they affect teachers’ working conditions somewhat, because the bases represent the determination of programs and program standards and the use of evaluation is to determine whether these program standards are being met. The determination and measurement of program standards are management functions.
“ERB also concluded that the mechanics of evaluation also affect working conditions, but relate primarily to educational policy because the mechanics and bases of evaluation
*50 are ‘inextricably intertwined.’ The form, content, number and sequence of evaluations, and the resources allocated therefor, ERB reasoned, must be designed to correlate to the program standards and to serve as the basis for subsequent managerial action. Accordingly, both the bases for and uses of evaluation and the mechanics of evaluation were deemed not to be conditions of employment and, hence, subject to permissive rather than mandatory bargaining.
“ERB next concluded that those parts of the proposals dealing with procedural fairness (e.g., notice and opportunity to be heard) had no effect on the formulation and achievement of program and little effect on the allocation of resources, but greatly affected teachers’ employment. Hence, procedural fairness procedures were deemed to be subject to mandatory bargaining.” 290 Or at 235-37. (Emphasis in original; footnotes omitted.)

During the six-year period that the unfair labor practice complaints decided by Springfield were pending before ERB and the courts, ORS 342.850, the statute governing teacher evaluations, was amended. Or Laws 1979, ch 598, § 1; Or Laws 1979, ch 668, § 2a. 1 However, the court noted in *51 Springfield that the amended statute was “not applicable to [that] contract year or [this] proceeding.” 290 Or at 219, n 1. The principal question in this case is whether the amendment of ORS 342.850 affects the application of the test approved in Springfield for determining what evaluation-related matters are mandatory subjects of bargaining.

The most important change effected through the 1979 amendment of ORS 342.850 was the addition of the present subsection (2). The parties appear to agree that the general effect of that and the other 1979 changes was to increase the statutorily required content of and procedures for teacher evaluations and, therefore, to reduce the discretionary authority of school district boards in connection with evaluations. The parties also appear to agree that what the council presented here were “parrot proposals,” i.e., they were designed to incorporate the language or substance of ORS 342.850 into the collective bargaining agreement.

The council argues that, because the amendment made the statutory requirements for evaluations more specific, increased the evaluation-related rights of teachers and reduced the flexibility and discretion of school districts in *52 connection with evaluations, the effect was to shift the balance from the educational policy to the employment conditions end of the spectrum and to make virtually all matters pertaining to teacher evaluations mandatory bargaining subjects. The council implicitly makes the related point that, because the district must comply with the statute, it has no educational policy interests which militate against bargaining about proposals that simply duplicate the statutory requirements.

ERB disagreed with that argument and adhered to the standards that it had established before the 1979 amendment of ORS 342.850. Its order explains:

«* * * goth parties relied on the fact that the Council’s proposals repeat or parallel statutory provisions in arguing their respective positions. This Board finds the statutory argument to be largely irrelevant in determining the bargainability of proposals, except where it is contended that a proposal is a prohibited subject, because we are required to apply the ‘balancing test’ even where a subject is addressed by statute. Sutherlin Education Association v. Sutherlin School District, 25 Or. App. 85 [, 548 P2d 204] (1976).
“* * *

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Related

Board of Education v. Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board
556 N.E.2d 857 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
685 P.2d 452, 69 Or. App. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-county-bargaining-council-v-centennial-school-district-no-28jt-orctapp-1984.