Paxton-Buckley-Loda Education Ass'n v. Educational Labor Relations Board

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 29, 1999
Docket4-97-0899
StatusPublished

This text of Paxton-Buckley-Loda Education Ass'n v. Educational Labor Relations Board (Paxton-Buckley-Loda Education Ass'n v. Educational Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paxton-Buckley-Loda Education Ass'n v. Educational Labor Relations Board, (Ill. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

April 29, 1999

NO. 4-97-0899

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

PAXTON-BUCKLEY-LODA EDUCATION ) Administrative

ASSOCIATION, IEA-NEA, ) Review of  

Petitioner, ) Illinois v.

) Educational

THE ILLINOIS EDUCATIONAL LABOR ) Labor

RELATIONS BOARD, BETH NUSS, and   ) Relations Board

KIMBERLY KINLEY, ) No. 94-CB-0009-

S

Respondents. )

________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE COOK delivered the opinion of the court:

On August 28, 1997, the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board (IELRB) issued an opinion and order finding that petitioner Paxton-Buckley-Loda Education Association, IEA-NEA (Association), violated section 14(b)(1) of the Illinois Educa­

tional Labor Relations Act (Act) (115 ILCS 5/14(b)(1) (West 1996).   Paxton-Buckley-Loda Education Ass'n , 13 Pub. Employee Rep. (Ill.) par. 1114, No. 94-CB-0009-S (Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board, August 28, 1997) (hereafter 13 Pub. Employee Rep. (Ill.) par. 1114).  The Association appeals the IELRB's finding that it violated section 14(b)(1) of the Act as well as the IELRB's remedial order.  We affirm.

Beth Nuss and Kimberly Kinley are employed by the Paxton-Buckley-Loda Community Unit School District No. 10 (Dis­

trict) as band directors.  The Association is the exclusive bar­

gaining representative for the District's certified employ­ees, including Nuss and Kinley.  

In early 1993, the Association and the District negotiated a new collective-bargaining agreement for 1993-96.

Nuss and Kinley had previously received per diem pay for summer band work (not mentioned in previous contracts), but Associa­tion presi­dent John Overstreet and other members of the Association's negotiat­ing team concluded such pay was too high in comparison to other "extra-duty" posi­tions, such as coaching and sponsoring student clubs.  The negotiating team, which had no information regarding the time Nuss and Kinley spent on summer band work, submitted a proposed agreement that added summer band as an extra-duty assignment at a pay rate approxi­mately $1,000 less annually per teacher than the per diem rate.  

Tentative agreement was reached on the proposed agree­

ment on July 1, 1993.  On July 6, 1993, Overstreet told Kinley for the first time that they had "to make a small pay cut" for Nuss and Kinley by reclassifying summer band as an extra-duty assignment; the cuts were "approximately a few hundred dollars" and "just something that needed to be done."  Overstreet told Kinley that the reclassification had arisen at the end of negotiations and was a necessary concession for contract settlement.  Overstreet alleg­edly stated that he put in more time in football than Nuss and Kinley put in for the entire year.  Overstreet denied making that statement but he admitted he knew the pay cut would be approxi­mately $1,000, and he did not relay that information to Nuss and Kinley.  

Nuss and Kinley determined they would each lose up to $1,000 per year and, on July 10, 1993, met with Mike Short, president of the school board, and with the district's superin­

tendent.  Short stated the pay cut had been represented to him as "small," around "a few hundred dollars."  Short told Nuss and Kinley he could not negotiate with them as individual employees, that they had to resolve the matter through the Association, that the Association had recommended the reclassification in its first proposal, and that the District planned to ratify the agreement.   Nuss and Kinley then met with Gene Vanderport, UniServe Director for the Illinois Education Association, an hour before the Association's vote on ratification.  Vanderport told them that he was not aware of the size of the pay cut and that it was wrong of the Associa­tion not to inform them of the reclas­sifica­

tion.  However, he asked them not to raise the issue at the ratification meeting and told them he would arrange a meeting with the negotiating team about reopening the summer band compen­

sation issue.  In August, sometime after Nuss and Kinley met with the negotiating team, Vanderport sent a letter on behalf of the Association to the District asking that negotiations be reopened.  The District declined to do so.  

On August 15, 1993, Nuss and Kinley received their first checks for summer band work, reflecting amounts calculated at the per diem rate.  Nuss and Kinley contacted Marlene Stalter, bookkeeper for the District, expressing concern that they had been overpaid.  Stalter told Nuss and Kinley that the new salary did not start until September, that new payroll practices always started on September 1, and no one had told her to pay Nuss and Kinley any differently.  

In September, the District again refused to reopen negoti­a­tions, but in December there was a meeting between Thomas Miller (the District's attorney), Vanderport, and counsel for Nuss and Kinley.  As a result of the meeting an amendment was proposed under which summer band would remain on the extra-duty list, but the percentage of base salary paid for that work would be in­creased to approximate the per diem rate.  According to Short, the District believed it had an agreement, subject only to the Association and the District signing it.  

Overstreet reported to Nuss and Kinley that an agree­

ment had been reached, subject to negotiation team review and ratification by the Association.  He suggested they would proba­

bly want ratification as soon as possible, so they could get their back pay for summer 1993.  When Nuss and Kinley replied they had received per diem pay for summer 1993, that the pay cuts were not to start until September, Overstreet immediately ended the conversation and called Stalter regarding how she paid Nuss and Kinley for summer band 1993.  Overstreet told Vanderport that he considered the payments "illegal" and believed Nuss and Kinley had "deceived" them.  In late December 1993 or early January 1994, the Association decided not to pursue the amendment to the agreement that Vanderport had worked out with Miller.  The Association presented the District with a counterproposal agreeing to abide by the original agreement, but providing that Nuss and Kinley would not be required to return the "illegal payment" they had re­ceived.  The District, in a January 12, 1994, letter, refused to sign the counterproposal and stated it would do nothing further since the dispute was between the Association and two of its members.  That letter was the first indication to Nuss and Kinley that the Associa­tion had changed its position.  

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