Plpso v. papillion/lavista School

555 N.W.2d 563, 5 Neb. Ct. App. 102
CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1996
DocketA-95-621
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 555 N.W.2d 563 (Plpso v. papillion/lavista School) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plpso v. papillion/lavista School, 555 N.W.2d 563, 5 Neb. Ct. App. 102 (Neb. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

555 N.W.2d 563 (1996)
5 Neb. App. 102

PAPILLION/LAVISTA SCHOOLS PRINCIPALS AND SUPERVISORS ORGANIZATION (PLPSO), Appellee,
v.
PAPILLION/LAVISTA SCHOOL DISTRICT, SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 27, Appellant.

No. A-95-621.

Court of Appeals of Nebraska.

November 12, 1996.

*564 Kelley Baker and Jerry L. Pigsley, of Harding & Ogborn, Lincoln, for appellant.

Robert E. O'Connor, Jr., Omaha, for appellee.

Before MILLER-LERMAN, C.J., and HANNON and MUES, JJ.

MILLER-LERMAN, Chief Judge.

Papillion/LaVista School District, School District No. 27 (District), appeals the April 18, 1995, "Findings and Order" of the Nebraska Commission of Industrial Relations (CIR), which determined that the bargaining unit generally described as the Papillion/LaVista Schools Principals and Supervisors Organization (PLPSO) was the appropriate bargaining unit for representation election purposes for certain employees of the District. For the reasons recited below, we affirm.

BACKGROUND AND FACTS

The PLPSO filed a petition with the CIR on September 28, 1994, requesting, inter alia, that the PLPSO be certified as the appropriate bargaining unit for employees in the unit. The PLPSO produced 23 out of a potential 26 or 27 authorization cards of members of the proposed bargaining unit authorizing the PLPSO to represent them.

Following the filing of an answer denying the allegations in the petition, a hearing was conducted on January 25, 1995, at which five witnesses testified and 23 exhibits were received in evidence. The witnesses in favor of the PLPSO as the appropriate bargaining unit were an elementary school principal, a high school assistant principal, and a junior high school principal. The witnesses called by the District were the assistant superintendent for personnel of the District *565 and the superintendent of the District. The exhibits included the "Constitution and By Laws" of the PLPSO, an administrator salary schedule, an organizational chart, a list of central office administrators, numerous job descriptions, administrator evaluation and evaluation indicator forms, an administrator performance appraisal, a list of administrators, and a letter dated March 2, 1994, from the president of the board of education to the president of the PLPSO regarding proceeding with 1994-95 salary discussions.

On April 18, 1995, findings were made by the CIR. As to some of these findings, the District either disputes their accuracy or challenges their legal significance. The following findings were made by the CIR: The PLPSO is composed of principals, assistant principals, and directors of programs in the District. The PLPSO has been organized since at least 1982. There was a predecessor organization to the PLPSO. The predecessor organization adopted by laws in the early 1970's. The PLPSO or its predecessor "has existed for over twenty years." The PLPSO "worked through the central office administration, and on occasion even met directly with the Board, to negotiate informally wages, salary schedules, length of contracts, and other working conditions."

The CIR decision listed the job titles of the members of the proposed bargaining unit, the majority of whom were principals or assistant principals. The CIR order noted that the PLPSO and the District "stipulated that all of these employees have supervisory duties to varying degrees. All of these supervisory employees are state certified administrators and have at least a Master's Degree."

The CIR found that the individuals in the group use a "`team approach'" to administrative duties and that the power in the group is diffused in a "collegial educational environment." The CIR defined the central office administration as generally composed of the superintendent and assistant superintendents of varying descriptions.

The CIR found as follows:

All school principals and the Library/Media Coordinator report to the Superintendent of Schools through the Assistant Superintendent of Personnel. The assistant principals report to their respective school principals. The Director of Special Services and the Challenge Coordinator report to the Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction. The Special Services Coordinator and the English as a Second Language Project Director report to the Director of Special Services. The Director of Business Operations reports to the Assistant Superintendent for Business Services.
Performance evaluations are generally conducted on the supervisory employees by the person to whom they report. Principals are required to conduct performance evaluations on their respective assistant school principals. These evaluations may contain recommendations with respect to continued employment. These evaluations will also be used in the future as one of three equally weighted components for the distribution of merit pay.
None of the supervisory employees for at least the past six years has been recommended for termination of employment. Decisions on employment continuation or termination are ultimately made by the Board. Although principals have general supervisory authority over assistant principals, the collaborative team approach is used. The principals do not generally supervise the day-to-day work of their assistant principals. Instead, the assistant principals generally confer with, and report to, the principals with respect to specific problems that arise. The principals do not "micro manage" their assistant principals, and to that extent, the assistant principals are autonomous. Depending on the issue, the assistant principals sometimes interact directly with the assistant superintendents.

The CIR evaluated the legal significance of the foregoing findings vis-a-vis the following factors: mutuality of interest in wages, hours, and working conditions among PLPSO members; duties and skills of employees within the PLPSO; extent of union organization and desires of employees in the PLPSO; established policies of the employer; and *566 the policy against undue fragmentation of units in public employment.

The CIR concluded that the appropriate supervisory employee bargaining unit should be as follows:

All school principals, and assistant school principals, the Director of Special Services, the Special Services Coordinator, the English as a Second Language Project Director, the Challenge Coordinator, the Library/Media Coordinator, and the Director of Business Operations, all employed by the Papillion/LaVista School District, School District No. 27.

In designating the foregoing as the appropriate bargaining unit, the CIR noted that the Legislature has provided that supervisors may organize with other supervisors for purposes of collective bargaining pursuant to Neb.Rev.Stat. § 48-816(3)(a) (Reissue 1993). In this regard, the CIR stated that the

Nebraska Legislature has even provided statutory presumptions that certain firefighter and police officer supervisors shall have a community of interest with other firefighter and police officer employees, and that school administrators employed in a Class V school district shall have a community of interest with teachers and other certificated employees for purposes of joining a single bargaining unit. Neb.Rev. Stat.

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