Stevens v. Oregon Public Employees Union

728 P.2d 70, 82 Or. App. 264
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 12, 1986
DocketERB DA-67-85, DA-72-85, DA-74-85; CA A37531
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 728 P.2d 70 (Stevens v. Oregon Public Employees Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. Oregon Public Employees Union, 728 P.2d 70, 82 Or. App. 264 (Or. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

*266 WARREN, J.

Petitioner Oregon Public Employees Union (OPEU) seeks review of the Employment Relations Board’s (ERB) dismissal of a fair share 1 deauthorization petition pursuant to ORS 183.480. In response to a fair share provision in the most recent public employes’ contract, three individuals from three state agencies filed petitions with ERB for deauthorization of the fair share agreement pursuant to ORS 243.650(10). ERB dismissed the petitions, because it concluded that there was no valid fair share agreement and that, therefore, the statutory deauthorization provision does not apply. We affirm.

OPEU is the exclusive collective bargaining representative for many employes of the State of Oregon. State employes are not required to be members of the union, although all state employes in bargaining units represented by OPEU receive the benefits of contracts negotiated by the union. To alleviate the problem of “free-riders” who benefit from union negotiations and activities but are not dues paying members, the union is authorized by statute to negotiate with the employer for a fair share agreement, whereby nonunion members of the bargaining unit make payments to the union in lieu of dues to help cover the cost of services provided by the exclusive representative. If, within 90 days after the collective bargaining contract is executed, 30 percent or more of a bargaining unit’s members petition ERB declaring their desire to rescind the fair share agreement, ERB takes a secret vote by the unit’s employes and, unless a majority of those voting approve the agreement, ERB certifies deauthorization. ORS 243.650; ORS 243.672.

OPEU and the state negotiated a fair share provision in the 1985-87 agreement. In June and July, 1985, respondents Stevens, McCandlish and Classen filed petitions with ERB for *267 deauthorization of the fair share agreement in their respective agencies. OPEU opposed the petitions on the ground that the requisite 30 percent of the bargaining unit had not signed the petitions. ERB dismissed the petitions on its own motion on the ground that there was no valid fair share agreement between OPEU and the state and, therefore, the deauthorization provision in the statute did not apply.

OPEU asserts that ERB erred in considering, on its own motion, the validity of the fair share agreement. The union argues that ERB may only dismiss for the reasons specified by its rules, which provide that a petition may be dismissed if it is not “timely or properly filed.” OAR 115-30-000(3)(b). Therefore, they contend ERB has no authority to consider the threshold question of validity of the fair share agreement if it is not raised by one of the parties. We disagree. ERB has the authority, as the agency charged with oversight of public employe collective bargaining, to decide issues preliminary to proper determination of matters before it. See, e.g., ORS 240.086(3); ORS 240.115. Because there would be no reason to decide whether the petitions were timely and properly filed if the fair share agreement they sought to deauthorize was invalid, ERB did not err when it raised on its own motion the validity of the underlying fair share agreement.

On the merits, ERB concluded that the agreement here is not a “fair share” agreement, because the contract provision exempts twelve state agencies of the statewide bargaining unit from application of the provision, 2 whereas, *268 by definition, a fair share agreement requires contribution by all nonunion members of the bargaining unit. ORS 243.650(16); Stines v. OSEA, 287 Or 643, 601 P2d 799 (1979). Petitioner does not challenge that conclusion.

It contends, however, that, even though the provision is not a valid fair share agreement, it constitutes a valid union security arrangement, because it is not more restrictive than the fair share agreement allowed by law. It argues, first, that the contract provision is actually less restrictive than a fair share agreement and is, therefore, a permissible arrangement under NLRB v. General Motors Corp., 373 US 734, 83 S Ct 1453, 10 L Ed 2d 670 (1963), and Stines v. OSEA, supra. It also contends that, even if the agreement is similarly restrictive, the statutorily permitted fair share agreement merely puts an upper limit on union security agreements and so any agreement not more onerous is allowable.

We agree with ERB that the contract provision here provides for the same amount of adherence to the union as a fair share agreement authorized by ORS 243.672(l)(c); 3 indeed, it is a fair share agreement in all respects except that it does not meet the statutory requirement that it apply to all nonunion members of the bargaining unit. For those nonunion members to whom it does apply, however, the effect is the same as fair share: They are not required to join the union but are required to pay money to the union whether they become members of it or not. Thus, the provision is not less restrictive than the arrangement allowed by law, but is identically restrictive.

The union would have us decide whether union security agreements that contain union adherence provisions identical to statutory fair share agreements are permissible. In our view, that analysis misses the point. Here, the union is *269 attempting to include in its contract a fair share provision while failing to comply with the statutory requirements to obtain such an agreement. If the union had chosen a type of union security agreement different from fair share that was less restrictive than fair share, such as maintenance of membership, the provision possibly could be upheld. Stines v. OSEA, supra. However, when the agreement the union seeks to enforce is, effectively, fair share, it must meet the requirements of the statute to be valid. Here the agreement does not comply and, therefore, is invalid.

Affirmed.

1

A “fair-share agreement” is defined as

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Bluebook (online)
728 P.2d 70, 82 Or. App. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-oregon-public-employees-union-orctapp-1986.