L. Anderson & D. Jackiewicz v. Pleasant Valley Ed. Support Professionals' Assoc.

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 24, 2022
Docket1081 C.D. 2020
StatusUnpublished

This text of L. Anderson & D. Jackiewicz v. Pleasant Valley Ed. Support Professionals' Assoc. (L. Anderson & D. Jackiewicz v. Pleasant Valley Ed. Support Professionals' Assoc.) 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
L. Anderson & D. Jackiewicz v. Pleasant Valley Ed. Support Professionals' Assoc., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Lorrie Anderson and : Danuta Jackiewicz, : Appellants : : No. 1081 C.D. 2020 v. : : Submitted: December 13, 2021 Pleasant Valley Educational : Support Professionals’ : Association and Pleasant Valley : School District and Lorraine : McCutchan :

BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE McCULLOUGH FILED: January 24, 2022

Lorrie Anderson (Anderson) and Danuta Jackiewicz (Jackiewicz) (collectively, Appellants) appeal from the September 11, 2020 order of the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County (trial court), which granted the motions for summary judgment filed by Pleasant Valley Educational Support Professionals’ Association (PVESPA),1 Pleasant Valley School District (School District), and Lorraine McCutchan (McCutchan) (collectively, Appellees) and dismissed Appellants’ complaint. We affirm.

1 PVESPA is an employee organization that represents a specific group of employees employed by the School District. Appellants are employed by the School District as support staff/secretaries. Appellee McCutchan is also employed with the School District as a support staff/secretary. Appellants and McCutchan are members of PVESPA. The School District and PVESPA negotiated several collective bargaining agreements (CBA),2 which include procedures by which PVESPA members can file grievances, including on their own without the representation of PVESPA. The grievance procedures in the CBAs govern how an employee’s grievance is heard and decided. Level One requires that an informal conference be held within five days with an immediate supervisor. (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 29a.) After the informal conference, if there is no resolution, Level Two requires the School District’s superintendent to file a written decision within 10 work days after receipt of the grievance. Id. Level Three states that if the grievant is not satisfied with the written decision of the Superintendent, the matter shall be referred to the School Board, which shall make a determination within 10 days after receipt of the grievance. Id. If the grievance has not been satisfactorily resolved in the foregoing steps, Level Four requires the grievance to be referred to arbitration if it arises out of the interpretation of the CBA. The CBAs also included schedules that set out the salaries of employees. Id. at 68a. In 2008, McCutchan obtained a step-level pay increase.3 McCutchan’s 2008 step-level pay increase resulted from her complaint/grievance, alleging the School District’s failures to withdraw union dues from her paycheck, to move her step-

2 The CBAs negotiated between the School District and PVESPA include: the CBA for 2008- 09 through 2011-12; the CBA for 2012-13 through 2014-15; and the CBA for 2015 through 2018. The portions of the CBAs that Appellants claim were violated are the pay schedules regarding secretaries.

3 The term step-level refers to increments by which an employee’s salary increases over time. Those increments are set out in steps that appear in schedules in the CBAs.

2 level up when other less-senior secretaries were given increases, and to put her into an additional position for which she was trained. The School District agreed to move McCutchan up a step-level in pay on account of the issues she presented. Because the School District agreed to move McCutchan up a step-level in pay on account of the issues she presented, McCutchan did not file a grievance or inform PVESPA or her coworkers of her complaint. In 2015, Anderson learned of McCutchan’s 2008 step-level pay increase. This occurred during negotiations as to the CBA for 2015 through 2018 when Anderson, who was involved in the negotiations, was provided salary spreadsheets. According to Anderson, the spreadsheets revealed that McCutchan was a pay level above Anderson. One spreadsheet appears to show McCutchan with a salary several thousand dollars higher than Anderson’s salary. Anderson was concerned about the apparent salary difference because she believed she had more seniority than McCutchan. A seniority list stated Anderson’s “Seniority Date” was 8/4/1997, and McCutchan’s was 7/27/98. Id. at 1517a. Anderson’s Grievance In 2015, Anderson expressed to Bernadette McHugh, a Uniserv4 representative with the Pennsylvania State Education Association (PSEA), her desire to file a grievance regarding the issue of McCutchan’s 2008 pay dispute resolution. McHugh assisted Anderson in the drafting of the grievance. On July 30, 2015, Anderson filed a grievance regarding the pay difference between herself and McCutchan, asserting that the School District “gave step movement to a single administrative secretary unilaterally in violation of the collective bargaining agreement.” Id. at 1521a. Anderson asserted that the following CBA articles were

4 Uniserv assists PVESPA in collective bargaining and grievance administration.

3 violated: Article I-Recognition, Article W-Wages and Hours, and Section 5- Secretaries, Appendix A. Id. As relief, Anderson requested “[a]ny and all members of the bargaining unit impacted by the step movement violation . . . be provided step movement and any other terms that an arbitrator deems appropriate.” Id. Anderson filed her grievance with John Gress, her supervisor in the office where she worked. Because her grievance concerned payroll, Gress advised Anderson to meet with Dr. John Burrus, the School District’s Director of Human Resources. However, Anderson never met with Dr. Burrus and Gress prepared a disposition statement on September 3, 2015. Pursuant to the CBA, Anderson’s grievance expired 15 days after the letter of disposition prepared by Gress. Separately, in August of 2015, PVESPA’s Executive Board met to discuss Anderson’s grievance. Anderson and McCutchan were also in attendance. At the meeting, the PVESPA Executive Board expressed concerns to Anderson regarding her grievance, making it clear that it was skeptical there was a valid basis for the grievance. One concern was that the grievance could have a harmful impact on other PVESPA members. According to the PVESPA Executive Board, the harmful impact could come from the School District re-examining all secretaries’ salaries since the grievance sought relief for all secretaries. That could lead to determinations not only to reduce McCutchan’s salary but also other secretaries’ salaries if the School District determined it did not comply with the salary schedules in the CBAs. It was pointed out to Anderson that such potential reductions posed a risk for her salary as it may not have been set in compliance with the CBA. PVESPA’s Executive Board also expressed its concern that Anderson’s grievance pitted one PVESPA member against another. Id. at 964a-65a, 1054a-56a. The PVESPA Executive Board members viewed this as “unique” and “extremely unusual,” and expressed discomfort with a grievance that involved

4 “accusations” by one union member against another. Id. Noting that Anderson had admitted that she had always been paid at the amounts set in the CBAs, the PVESPA Executive Board voiced concerns that the Anderson grievance was not seeking to correct any “harm” to Anderson, but simply challenging the step movement given to McCutchan. Id. at 957a-59a, 965a. PVESPA’s Executive Board concluded that Anderson’s grievance did not have any “validity,” and as a result, PVESPA did not represent her in the grievance. Id. at 978a. Following this meeting, Anderson had an in-person conversation with PVESPA President, James Serfass, during which Anderson told Serfass she no longer wanted to pursue the grievance and that she had withdrawn it.

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L. Anderson & D. Jackiewicz v. Pleasant Valley Ed. Support Professionals' Assoc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-anderson-d-jackiewicz-v-pleasant-valley-ed-support-professionals-pacommwct-2022.