Portland Fire Fighters Ass'n v. City of Portland

751 P.2d 770, 305 Or. 275, 1988 Ore. LEXIS 11
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1988
DocketERB UP-143-85; CA A39106; SC S34427
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 751 P.2d 770 (Portland Fire Fighters Ass'n v. City of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Portland Fire Fighters Ass'n v. City of Portland, 751 P.2d 770, 305 Or. 275, 1988 Ore. LEXIS 11 (Or. 1988).

Opinion

*278 LENT, J.

Neither a public employer nor its employees’ exclusive representative may refuse the other’s request to bargain collectively “with respect to employment relations.” ORS 243.650(4), 243.672(l)(e), 243.672(2)(b). 1 The issue presented is whether a public employer’s limit on the number of fire fighters who may be on vacation at the same time is an “employment relation” and therefore a matter over which the employer may not refuse to bargain. The Employment Relations Board (ERB) concluded that the limit was not an “employment relation” and, on judicial review, the Court of Appeals affirmed. Portland Firefighters Assoc. v. City of Portland, 86 Or App 662, 740 P2d 228 (1987). We allowed review to consider whether the ERB has erroneously interpreted the definition of “employment relations” in ORS 243.650(7). Because we hold that it has, we reverse and remand to the ERB for further proceedings.

I.

Petitioner Portland Fire Fighters Association (PFFA) is the collective bargaining representative for fire *279 fighters in the Portland Fire Bureau. In 1985, during negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement between the PFFA and respondent City of Portland, the City announced that it would limit to 24 the number of fire fighters who were permitted to be on vacation at any given time. The limit under the then existing collective bargaining agreement, one-sixth of the members of each engine house company, permitted substantially more fire fighters to be on vacation at the same time. The purpose of the new limit was to reduce costs associated with labor force fluctuations caused by the seasonal use of vacation leave.

In order to protect its members’ ability to take vacations at times they most preferred, the PFFA proposed retaining the existing collective bargaining agreement’s limit in the new agreement, but the City refused to bargain over the proposal. The City maintained that the proposal did not concern “employment relations” and was therefore a “permissive” rather than a “mandatory” matter for bargaining. The PFFA then filed with the ERB an unfair labor practice complaint based on the City’s refusal to bargain.

The ERB agreed with the City’s position and dismissed the PFFA’s complaint. In a written opinion accompanying its dismissal, the ERB acknowledged that the “subject of ‘vacations’ is mandatory for bargaining” under the definition of “employment relations” in ORS 243.650(7). ORS 243.650(7) 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.” (Emphasis added.)

The ERB observed, however, that “a union may put forth a proposal in negotiations that ostensibly concerns a mandatory subject but that in reality is an attempt to force bargaining over a permissive matter.” In order to decide whether a particular proposal concerns a “mandatory” or “permissive” matter, the ERB has employed the following “balancing test”:

“[W]e must weigh the effect the actual proposal would have on some condition of employment against the effect it would have on some management right. If the effect on the condition of employment is greater than the effect on the management right, the subject matter of the proposal is the condition of *280 employment. If the effect on the management right is greater, then the subject matter of the proposal is the management right. In the first instance, then, the proposal would be mandatory because it concerns a condition of employment; in the second it would be permissive because it concerns a management right.”

The weight assigned to a proposal’s effects on “conditions of employment” and “management rights” has depended upon the industry in which the proposal was made. Thus a proposal held to concern a “mandatory” matter in one industry might be held to concern a “permissive” matter if made in another.

With respect to the PFFA’s proposal, the ERB justified its conclusion that the proposal concerned a “permissive” matter for bargaining by emphasizing that fire departments must operate continuously with full crews.

“The City has an extensive interest in protecting the public safety by utilizing fire suppression personnel in the most efficient manner. So long as the system of scheduling vacations established by the City does not unreasonably impinge on the employes’ ability to use accrued leave (a situation we do not find to be the case here), [2] a bargaining proposal seeking to establish the scheduling system—that is, one which seeks to mandate the number of employes who may be on vacation at one time—affects management’s right to staff and assign to a greater extent than it does employment conditions and therefore is permissive.”

On judicial review, the Court of Appeals affirmed:

“Our function on review is to uphold the reasoned application of correctly interpreted law to particular factual circumstances. Springfield Education Assn. v. School Dist., 290 Or 217, 235, 621 P2d 547 (1980). ERB has adequately explained the reasoning behind its determination, and that reasoning ‘rationally relates the decision to the interpretive criteria which, in turn, express the meaning of the statute.’ 290 Or at 239.”

86 Or App at 667.

Although the Court of Appeals discussed the ERB’s *281 application of its “balancing test,” the Court of Appeals did not explain why it thought that the “interpretive criteria” implicit in that “balancing test” “expressed] the meaning of’ ORS 243.650(7). We now turn to that issue, which, phrased somewhat more simply, is whether the ERB’s decision is consistent with the statutory definition of “employment relations.” 3

II.

In reviewing agency orders in contested cases, a court may set aside or modify the order or remand the case to the agency if the court, among other things, “finds that the agency has erroneously interpreted a provision of law.” ORS 183.482(8)(a). This court has previously discussed the interpretation of ORS 243.650(7) in Springfield Education Assn. v. School Dist., 290 Or 217, 621 P2d 547 (1980).

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751 P.2d 770, 305 Or. 275, 1988 Ore. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/portland-fire-fighters-assn-v-city-of-portland-or-1988.