The County of Cook v. Illinois Labor Relations Board

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 15, 2006
Docket1-06-0770 & 1-06-0894 Cons. Rel
StatusPublished

This text of The County of Cook v. Illinois Labor Relations Board (The County of Cook v. Illinois 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
The County of Cook v. Illinois Labor Relations Board, (Ill. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION November 15, 2006

Nos. 1-06-0770, 1-06-0894 (Consolidated)

THE COUNTY OF COOK (PROVIDENT HOSPITAL), ) Appeal from the ) Illinois Labor Relations Petitioner-Appellant, ) Board, Local Panel ) v. ) Nos. LRC05010 ) LUC5003 ILLINOIS LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, LOCAL ) PANEL; LOCAL 200, RWDSU, AFL-CIO, CLC; ) and AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY ) AND MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES, COUNCIL 31, ) ) Respondents-Appellees. ) ____________________________________________________________________________

THE COUNTY OF COOK (PROVIDENT HOSPITAL), ) Appeal from the and AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY ) Illinois Labor Relations AND MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES (AFSCME), ) Board, Local Panel COUNCIL 31, AFL-CIO, ) ) Petitioners-Appellants, ) ) v. ) Nos. LRC05010 ) LUC5003 ILLINOIS LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, LOCAL ) PANEL; and LOCAL 200, RWDSU, AFL-CIO, ) CLC, ) ) Respondents-Appellees. )

JUSTICE GREIMAN delivered the opinion of the court:

This case concerns the certification of a collective bargaining unit made up of all part-

and full-time employees holding the positions Administrative Assistant III and Administrative

Assistant IV (the AAIIIs and IVs) at Provident Hospital (Provident), one of four hospitals in the 1-06-0770, 1-06-0894 (Consolidated)

Cook County Bureau of Health (the Bureau). The Retail, Wholesale & Department Store Union,

Local 200 (RWDSU), petitioned the Illinois Labor Relations Board, Local Panel (the Board), to

organize all employees holding those positions for collective bargaining purposes while the

American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees, Counsel 31 (AFSCME), filed a

petition to intervene in the matter and a petition seeking to accrete Provident AAIIIs and IVs to

its existing bargaining unit of Provident employees holding the positions of Administrative

Assistant I and Administrative Assistant II (the AAIs and IIs). An administrative law judge

(ALJ) found that neither RWDSU’s petition for certification nor AFSCME’s petition to accrete

the Provident AAIIIs and IVs was appropriate and recommended their dismissal but that the

employees constituting the petitioned-for unit were not confidential employees. RWDSU and

Cook County filed exceptions. The Board disagreed with the ALJ, finding that the petitioned-for

unit was appropriate and that none of the employees were confidential and ordered an election of

representation. The Provident AAIIIs and IVs elected RWDSU to represent them.

We consolidated Cook County’s and AFSCME’s appeals. Cook County contends that

the Board erred in finding the AAIIIs and IVs at Provident to be an appropriate bargaining unit

when such a decision will cause fragmentation of the larger group of all Bureau AAIIIs and IVs,

the decision will cause a proliferation of petitions for formation of similar bargaining groups at

other Cook County hospitals and the decision is contrary to the Board’s precedent. Cook County

further contends that the Board erred in finding that the AAIIIs and IVs at Provident were not

confidential employees. AFSCME contends that the Board erred in finding the AAIIIs and IVs at

Provident to be an appropriate bargaining unit when it mischaracterized the ALJ’s factual

2 1-06-0770, 1-06-0894 (Consolidated)

findings, its decision was contrary to precedent and any cases seemingly supportive of the

Board’s decision are distinguishable when viewed in context.

RWDSU’s representation/certification petition to organize all Provident AAIIIs and IVs

was filed on October 18, 2004. On November 30, 2004, AFSCME filed its petition for unit

clarification to accrete those employees to its existing bargaining unit. On December 13, 2004,

the cases were consolidated. On March 31, 2005, AFSCME filed a petition to intervene in

RWDSU’s representation proceeding. Hearings on the matter were held on November 23, 2004,

February 18, 2005, and April 5, 2005.

Provident opened as a Cook County hospital facility in 1993 and is one of several Bureau

hospitals. Provident has its own chief operating officer, budget, labor relations office, personnel

office, payroll department, evaluation procedures, attendance policy and personal leave policy.

Provident is certified and accredited separately from the other Bureau hospitals. The other

hospitals in the Bureau are at least seven miles from Provident and the hospitals are not

connected by a centralized shuttle.

Job classifications, titles, codes and pay grades are county-wide. All Bureau facilities

employ AAIIIs and IVs who all have the same benefits. Nonetheless, Provident institutes its own

personnel policies that conform with the general Bureau policies. If there is a vacancy in an

AAIII or AAIV position at Provident, it is posted at all facilities and a Provident employee

applying for the position will not get preference because he or she is already employed at

Provident. Employees at Provident may apply for positions at other hospitals and vice versa.

Applications for open AAIII and IV positions are reviewed by the Provident human resources

3 1-06-0770, 1-06-0894 (Consolidated)

department and hiring decisions are made by the department that has the vacancy. While

Provident AAIIIs and IVs do not rotate to other facilities within the Bureau, they can be

temporarily reassigned to another facility. However, the evidence suggests that this occurs very

infrequently.

At the time of the hearings, there were 14 Provident AAIIIs and 17 Provident AAIVs.

They reported to the chairs of the medical departments and administrative department heads

within Provident. AAIIIs and IVs were generally responsible for providing administrative and

secretarial support, attending meetings and taking minutes, coordinating projects and circulating

memoranda. There were nine bargaining units at Provident but the AAIIIs and IVs had never

been included in one. Cook County stipulated that 11 of the Provident AAIIIs and IVs were not

confidential employees.

Two committees, the executive staff committee and the medical executive committee,

developed Provident policies. The executive staff committee was responsible for setting labor

relations bargaining strategies and policies and developing proposals to present to the Cook

County bargaining committee. The medical executive committee was responsible for instituting

departmental rules, such as rules regarding employee attendance and performance and regulations

and bylaws ensuring compliance with the hospital’s patient care standard.

Several AAIIIs and IVs and the people to whom they reported testified regarding the

AAIIIs and IVs responsibilities. AAIV Derrick Dowell reported to Dr. Aaron Hamb, the

Provident chief medical officer and a member of both the executive staff committee and the

medical executive committee. Dowell’s responsibilities included researching and reviewing

4 1-06-0770, 1-06-0894 (Consolidated)

physician applications and taking minutes of both committees’ meetings.

AAIV Rosetta Porter, who reported to Dr. Clifford Crawford, the chairman of the

department of surgery and a member of the medical executive committee, had never heard

discussion of collective bargaining issues at meetings at which she took minutes nor has she

typed memoranda or correspondences about collective bargaining.

AAIII Edna Miggins, who reported to Dr. Clifton Clarke, the chairman of the department

of internal medicine and a member of the medical executive committee, worked with the

infection control committee.

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