Appeal of State Employees' Association of New Hampshire, Inc., SEIU, Local 1984 ( 2018 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Public Employee Labor Relations Board
    No. 2017-0514
    APPEAL OF STATE EMPLOYEES’ ASSOCIATION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, INC.,
    SEIU, LOCAL 1984
    (New Hampshire Public Employee Labor Relations Board)
    Argued: May 9, 2018
    Opinion Issued: October 12, 2018
    Glenn R. Milner, general counsel, State Employees’ Association of New
    Hampshire, Inc., SEIU, Local 1984, of Concord, on the brief, and Milner and
    Krupski, PLLC, of Concord (John S. Krupski orally), for the petitioner.
    Gordon J. MacDonald, attorney general (Nancy J. Smith, senior assistant
    attorney general, on the brief and orally), for the State.
    LYNN, C.J. The petitioner, the State Employees’ Association of New
    Hampshire, Inc., SEIU, Local 1984 (Union), appeals an order of the New
    Hampshire Public Employee Labor Relations Board (PELRB) finding that the
    respondent, the State of New Hampshire, did not commit an unfair labor
    practice by prospectively eliminating salary enhancements for newly hired
    Sununu Youth Services Center (SYSC) employees under the parties’ collective
    bargaining agreement (CBA). We affirm.
    The parties stipulated to, or the PELRB found, the following facts. The
    State operates the SYSC. The Union is the certified and exclusive bargaining
    representative for certain SYSC employees, including teachers. As part of a
    consent decree resolving a federal lawsuit filed in the late 1980s, the State was
    required to pay certain SYSC employees salary enhancements in addition to
    their base wages. The State continued paying the salary enhancements after
    the consent decree expired in July 2002.
    Since 2014, the Union has filed a series of unfair labor practice
    complaints concerning the State’s attempts to eliminate those enhancements.
    In 2014, the Union alleged that the State unilaterally eliminated the salary
    enhancements for current employees while the 2013-2015 CBA was still in
    effect. The Union argued that this conduct was improper because the
    enhancements had become a binding past practice and, thus, subject to
    mandatory bargaining under RSA chapter 273-A. The State took the position
    that its obligation to pay the enhancements expired in 2002, when the consent
    decree expired, and that its practice of paying the enhancements had never
    been memorialized in the CBA. In addition, the State argued that, even if the
    salary enhancements had become a binding past practice, it had “cancelled”
    this practice by rejecting the Union’s proposal to include the enhancements in
    the 2013-2015 CBA.
    In a July 2014 order, the PELRB found that paying the salary
    enhancements was a binding past practice and, thus, subject to mandatory
    bargaining. The PELRB was not persuaded by the State’s contention that it
    had “effectively cancelled the practice at the end of the term of the contract
    which preceded the 2013-[20]15 CBA” by rejecting the Union’s attempt to
    include the enhancements in the 2013-2015 CBA. The PERLB found that the
    Union’s proposal was “nothing more than an attempt by the [Union] to have an
    existing past practice reduced to writing and expressly described in the
    contract.” That the State’s rejection of the proposal did not reflect its
    understanding that salary enhancements would not be part of the 2013-2015
    CBA was demonstrated by the fact that, despite the absence of contract
    language specifically incorporating the salary enhancements, the State
    continued to pay such enhancements after the 2013-2015 CBA took effect.
    The PELRB also rejected the State’s assertion that “it could unilaterally
    discontinue a past practice covering a mandatory subject of bargaining like
    wages at the end of the preceding contract’s terms” in part because: (1) the
    State “announced its plans to terminate” the enhancements in February 2014,
    which fell within the term of the 2013-2015 CBA; and (2) “[u]nder the State’s
    plan, the past practice would continue during a portion of the 2013-[20]15 CBA
    term.” The State was ordered to restore the salary enhancements and to
    negotiate any future changes to the practice with the Union. The State neither
    requested a rehearing nor appealed the PELRB’s decision.
    In November 2014, the Union proposed to include the salary
    enhancements in the 2015-2017 CBA. The State rejected the Union’s proposal
    2
    without any substantive discussion. Thereafter, when the State and the Union
    were unable to come to terms on a new CBA, the parties declared an impasse
    and, in January 2015, entered into the mediation phase of bargaining. During
    that phase, the Union withdrew its salary enhancement proposal upon
    reaching a tentative agreement with the State.
    On February 26, 2015, the State notified the Union that “the current
    practice of salary enhancements at the SYSC, which is not part of our collective
    bargaining agreement, shall come to an end on July 1, 2015, or, in the case of
    an evergreen situation, when a new contract is effective, whichever is later,
    unless memorialized in the collective bargaining agreement.” However, the
    State indicated that the salary enhancements would remain in place for
    teachers who were subject to the PELRB’s 2014 decision. On March 5, 2015,
    the Union ratified the tentative agreement. During the CBA’s “evergreen”
    period,1 the State continued to pay salary enhancements to newly-hired SYSC
    teachers. The 2015-2017 CBA took effect in October 2015 and did not include
    salary enhancements for newly-hired SYSC employees. On or about July 8,
    2016, the State hired a new part-time Library Media Specialist for whom it did
    not pay a salary enhancement. Thereafter, the Union filed the unfair labor
    practice complaint that is the subject of the instant appeal.
    Based upon the parties’ briefs, exhibits, and stipulated facts, the PELRB
    first determined that the instant action is not covered by the 2014 order.
    Proceeding to the merits, the PELRB found that the State had not committed
    an unfair labor practice and, thus, dismissed the Union’s complaint. The
    PELRB explained that it was “satisfied that the State ha[d] taken the steps
    necessary to terminate the new hire salary enhancement past practice upon
    the effective date of the 2015-[20]17 CBA.” According to the PELRB, the State’s
    February 26, 2015 letter sufficiently notified the Union as to the State’s desire
    to eliminate salary enhancements for prospective SYSC employees, and “there
    was an opportunity between February 26, 2015 and March 5, 2015” for the
    Union to bargain. The PELRB reasoned that the Union “had the right to
    suspend the ratification process,” which was still “underway, . . . and demand
    that the State reopen negotiations to bargain based upon the State’s February
    26, 2015 notice letter.” “Instead, the [Union] took no action in response to the
    State’s February 26, 2015 notice letter and completed ratification of the
    tentative agreement on March 5, 2015.” In the PELRB’s view, the Union waived
    its bargaining rights, thus entitling the State to “implement the termination of
    salary enhancements for new hires consistent with its February 26, 2015
    notice letter.” The Union’s motion for rehearing was subsequently denied. This
    appeal followed.
    1An evergreen clause “purports to continue the terms of the contract indefinitely until the parties
    negotiate, and the legislative body ratifies, a successor contract.” Appeal of Alton School Dist.,
    
    140 N.H. 303
    , 307 (1995).
    3
    “RSA chapter 541 governs our review of PELRB decisions.” Appeal of
    Hillsborough County Nursing Home, 
    166 N.H. 731
    , 733 (2014); see RSA 273-
    A:14 (2010). “Pursuant to RSA 541:13 (2007), we will not set aside the
    PELRB’s order except for errors of law, unless we are satisfied, by a clear
    preponderance of the evidence, that it is unjust or unreasonable.” Appeal of
    Prof’l Fire Fighters of Hudson, 
    167 N.H. 46
    , 51 (2014). “The PELRB’s findings
    of fact are presumed prima facie lawful and reasonable.” Id.; see RSA 541:13.
    “In reviewing the PELRB’s findings, our task is not to determine whether we
    would have found differently or to reweigh the evidence, but, rather, to
    determine whether the findings are supported by competent evidence in the
    record.” Fire Fighters of 
    Hudson, 167 N.H. at 51
    . “We review the PELRB’s
    rulings on issues of law de novo.” 
    Id. On appeal,
    the Union advances three arguments. First, the Union
    asserts that the PELRB erred by ignoring its past decisions without discussion.
    Second, it argues that the PELRB erroneously applied the federal “Notice and
    Bargain” rule, which, it contends, conflicts with New Hampshire law. Third, it
    posits that even if the federal rule comports with New Hampshire law, the
    PELRB erred in applying that rule to the facts of this case. We need not
    address these arguments because we hold that, on the record before us, the
    elimination of the salary enhancements was the product of normal bargained-
    for exchanges that produced the 2015-2017 CBA. See Appeal of N.H. Dep’t of
    Safety, 
    155 N.H. 201
    , 203 (2007) (sustaining board’s decision on valid
    alternative grounds).
    “It is the obligation of the public employer and the employee organization
    certified by the board as the exclusive representative of the bargaining unit to
    negotiate in good faith.” RSA 273-A:3, I (2010). “Good faith negotiation
    involves meeting at reasonable times and places in an effort to reach agreement
    on the terms of employment, and to cooperate in mediation and fact-finding
    required by this chapter . . . .” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    The statute explains,
    however, that “the obligation to negotiate in good faith shall not compel either
    party to agree to a proposal or to make a concession.” 
    Id. Refusal by
    a public
    employer to negotiate in good faith constitutes an unfair labor practice. RSA
    273-A:5, I(e) (2010).
    According to the Union, as a mandatory subject of bargaining, the salary
    enhancements “can only be altered by mutual agreement of the parties,” and
    there was no “opportunity, let alone a meaningful one, for [the Union] to
    bargain” over the salary enhancements prior to signing the 2015-2017 CBA.
    The Union is correct that an employer cannot unilaterally change a term or
    condition of employment. See Appeal of Hillsboro-Deering School Dist., 
    144 N.H. 27
    , 30 (1999). However, that is not what occurred here. The Union
    proposed to include the salary enhancements in the 2015-2017 CBA. After the
    State rejected the proposal, the Union had the opportunity to advocate for its
    inclusion in the CBA up to and including the time when the parties declared
    4
    impasse and entered into the mediation phase of bargaining. Instead, during
    mediation, the Union “withdrew the proposal . . . upon reaching a tentative
    agreement” with the State.
    The Union’s actions are significant, here, because in the context of
    collective bargaining, “an offer will remain on the table unless the offeror
    explicitly withdraws it or unless circumstances arise that would lead the
    parties to reasonably believe that the offeror has withdrawn the offer.” N.L.R.B.
    v. Auciello Iron Works, Inc., 
    980 F.2d 804
    , 808 (1st Cir. 1992) (quotation
    omitted). The Union withdrew its proposal, which it knew the State had
    rejected, and agreed to a contract that did not include the salary
    enhancements. Indeed, “[i]n the face of a timely repudiation of” the salary
    enhancement practice, the Union chose to withdraw its proposal, rather than
    “have the practice written into the agreement.” Richard Mittenthal, Past
    Practice and the Administration of Collective Bargaining Agreements, 
    59 Mich. L
    . Rev. 1017, 1041 (1961). In light of the State’s rejection and the Union’s
    subsequent withdrawal of the proposal, it cannot “be inferred from the signing
    of the [2015-2017 CBA] that the parties intended the practice to remain in
    force.” 
    Id. at 1040-41.
    The State’s February 2015 letter simply confirmed its
    understanding that the salary enhancements would not continue because they
    were not included in the 2015-2017 CBA. By contrast, in the 2014 action,
    while the State rejected the Union’s proposal to incorporate the salary
    enhancements into the 2013-2015 CBA, it continued to pay the salary
    enhancements even after that CBA took effect. Thus, the PELRB’s 2014
    decision reflects the fact that it was the parties’ “common understanding” that
    the salary enhancement practice would “be continued until changed by mutual
    consent” of the parties during future negotiations. 
    Id. at 1036
    (quotation
    omitted). Such a change is exactly what occurred during the bargaining for the
    2015-2017 CBA.
    Based on the record before us, we conclude that, as a matter of law, the
    Union’s withdrawal of the proposal during the mediation phase that led to the
    adoption of the 2015-2017 CBA establishes that elimination of the salary
    enhancements was a bargained-for result of the new CBA. See 51A C.J.S.
    Labor Relations § 888, at 631 (2010) (“If the facts before the board were such
    that all reasonable minds must honestly draw one conclusion therefrom the
    question is one of law for the court rather than one of fact for determination by
    the board.”). In light of our conclusion, we need not decide whether the
    February 2015 letter, by itself, would have been sufficient to end the past
    practice between the parties based upon the Union’s ratification of the CBA.
    Affirmed.
    HICKS, BASSETT, HANTZ MARCONI, and DONOVAN, JJ., concurred.
    5
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2017-0514

Judges: Lynn

Filed Date: 10/12/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024