Richland School District v. Commonwealth, Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board

454 A.2d 649, 71 Pa. Commw. 45, 118 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2308, 1983 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1192
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 6, 1983
DocketAppeal, No. 1124 C.D. 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 454 A.2d 649 (Richland School District v. Commonwealth, Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board) 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
Richland School District v. Commonwealth, Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board, 454 A.2d 649, 71 Pa. Commw. 45, 118 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2308, 1983 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1192 (Pa. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Rogers,

Richland School District seeks review of an order of the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board (PLRB) requiring it to bargain collectively with the Richland School Service Personnel Association (new union), [47]*47the exclusive representative of a unit of the district’s ■nonprofessional employees. The question presented Is that of whether a public employer may lawfully •refuse to bargain with a newly certified union after the employer and a predecessor union have entered into a- collective bargaining agreement covering the .period of time concerning which new negotiations are requested.

The facts, contained in a stipulation of the parties, are as follows. In 1970 the Richland Service Employees Association (old union) was certified by the PLRB as the representative of a unit of the school district’s workers including maintenance employees, custodians, matrons, cooks and secretaries. A series of collective bargaining agreements were thereafter negotiated by the old union and the district with the penultimate agreement expiring on June 30, 1979. On January 10, 1979 the old union and the district began negotiations which culminated in March in a two-year agreement - intended to govern the terms and conditions of employment of members of the bargaining unit for the period between July 1, 1979, and June 30, 1981. This agreement was ratified first by the old union on March 14, 1979, and was then ratified by the district and executed by both parties on April 18, 1979. Meanwhile, on April 12, 1979, the new union filed a Representation Petition with the PLRB and, following notice sent to the district on April 19, 1979, and the execution by the district and the new union of a pre-election Memorandum of Agreement, a representation election was conducted on June 11, 1979, at which time sixty-three of the seventy members of the bargaining unit cast ballots and forty of the ballots cast indicated a preference to be. represented for purposes of collective bargaining by the new union. Certification by the PLRB followed.

[48]*48By letter dated June 27,1979, Mr. Robert F. Ward, regional field director for the new union’s statewide affiliate, notified the district that the membership of the new union had, on June 21, 1979, “overwhelmingly rejected the tentative agreement reached between the [old union] and the district prior to the election. . . .” Mr. Ward then requested, on behalf of the new union, the setting of “a date in early July to commence negotiations of a successor contract to that which expires on June 30,1979.”

The school district’s response, by its counsel, to the request for negotiations is, in its entirety, as follows :

June 29,1979
Re: Richland School Service Personnel Association
Dear Mr. Ward:
This will advise you that there is no tentative agreement between the Richland School Employees Association and the School District. Rather, on April 18, 1979 the officers of the Service Employes Association and the Rich-land School Board executed and signed and formerly ratified a two-year contract from July 1,1979 to June 30,1981.
This contract was the result of good faith negotiations which began on January 10, 1979 and were formally concluded on April 18, 1979.
There is absolutely nothing tentative about the ratified and signed contract. There is nothing to discuss relative to contract terms. The formal contract specifies the terms and conditions of employment for the period covered.
The Richland School District stands ready and intends to implement all the terms and [49]*49conditions contained in said contract beginning July 1, 1979. No further negotiations are anticipated until January of 1981. The Rich-land School District expects the service employees to abide by and to work under the terms of the contract signed on April 18, 1979.
The document to which you refer was the result of the collective bargaining process begun in January of 1979 and in no way is a unilateral application or implementation of an agreement. That a new bargaining agent was selected 53 days after the signing of a contract does not make that signed contract a nullity. Your members will be expected to work under and abide by the contract they negotiated and ratified. (Emphasis added.)

The union charged, and the PLRB, affirmed by the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria County determined, that this response to the new union’s request to negotiate constituted an unlawful refusal to bargain in good faith within the meaning of Section 1201(a) (5) of the Public Employee Relations Act, Act of July 23, 1970, P.L. 563, as amended, 43 P.S. §1101.1201 (a) (5). The school district here challenges that determination.

We must first note that the school district has presented its challenge narrowly. No exceptions were filed to the PLRB’s June 27, 1979, Nisi Order certifying the new union and, therefore, we may not now inquire into the propriety of that certification. On this point, however, PERA Section 605(7) (ii), 43 P.S. §1101.605(7) (ii) creates a thirty day “window period” beginning ninety days prior to the date of the expiration of a collective bargaining agreement during which the otherwise operative “contract bar” is not effective and rival unions may file representa[50]*50tion petitions with the PLRB. The new union’s representation petition was apparently properly filed during the window period which began ninety days prior to the June 30, 1979 expiration date of the penultimate agreement between the school district and the old union.

Additionally, at oral argument before this Court counsel for the parties expressed conflicting views as to the proper resolution of the issue of whether, under PERA Sections 801-804, 43 P.S. §§1101.801-1101.804, a public employer must respond affirmatively to a union’s request for negotiations first made less than one hundred and fifty days prior to the employer’s budget submission date but we believe this issue has not been preserved. PERA’s negotiating timetable provisions played no express part in the school district’s response to the new union’s request to negotiate. As the letter of its counsel shows, the school district refused to bargain because it had previously concluded successful negotiations with the old union and not because the new union’s request was untimely with reference to PERA Sections 801-804 and the district’s budget submission date. Moreover, the district’s budget submission date is not specified in the party’s stipulation or elsewhere in the record and, indeed, the district’s refusal to bargain covered a two-year period until January of 1981 and, therefore, could not be justified with reference solely to the timing of the request in the 1979 fiscal year. Finally, the single question the appellant presents on the occasion of this appeal refers only to the extent of an employer’s duty to negotiate “with a successor union during the existence of a ratified collective bargaining agreement....”

We therefore decline to express our views on the application of PERA Sections 801-804 to these facts [51]

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454 A.2d 649, 71 Pa. Commw. 45, 118 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2308, 1983 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richland-school-district-v-commonwealth-pennsylvania-labor-relations-pacommwct-1983.