Transcript Document

Collective Bargaining in
California Public Schools
The bargaining process
Types of bargaining
• When collective bargaining began in
California schools, the traditional form of
bargaining was what is sometimes
called positional bargaining.
• Each party came to the table with
positions and often with language that
they wanted to convince the other party
to accept.
Traditional bargaining
• The California Teachers Association had a full
team of trainers with templates for language
to be introduced at the table.
• Employers who had previously held almost
total control over the way school districts
worked tried to either put current practice
down in writing or to limit the number of items
that would become codified in the contract.
Traditional bargaining
• Under traditional bargaining, teams usually
have a spokesperson who does most of the
talking and break into caucuses when they
want to privately react to offers or develop
their own offers.
• This form of bargaining is also known as
positional bargaining and can become quite
confrontational.
Interest-based bargaining
• Due to the positional and often
confrontational nature of traditional
bargaining, another form of bargaining known
as interest-based bargaining was developed.
• In contrast to traditional bargaining where
each group trains its own members, interestbased bargaining usually requires three days
of joint training before bargaining begins.
Interest-based bargaining
• Most training is under the auspices of either
the Center for Collaborative Studies
[email protected], which encompasses
what was once known as the California
Foundation for Improvement of EmployerEmployee Relations (CFIER) or
• The California Teachers Association which
also developed a training program used in
many districts.
Interest-based bargaining
• Under interest-based bargaining, the two
teams meet together, identify common
interests and then work to develop mutually
agreeable solutions that meet those interests.
• Trust is critical during negotiations and
between the teams and those they represent.
• Teams that become adept at interest-based
bargaining apply the same principles to noncontract problem solving.
Interest-based bargaining
• Interest-based bargaining is most
effective at developing common
solutions to issues within the contract.
• It is not especially useful in resolving
salary settlements and teams often
resort to more typical positional
bargaining on salary.
Alternative forms of bargaining
• Other hybrid forms of bargaining that take
pieces from positional and interest-based
bargaining are sometimes used.
• Districts with high levels of trust and
collaboration have extended bargaining into
areas not typically included in contracts, such
as merit pay, assessment of student
achievement, and alternative forms of
evaluation.
Bargaining in good faith
• Both the employer and the employee
organization are expected to bargain in “good
faith” in an effort to reach an agreement.
• That means making an honest attempt to
reach an agreement, meeting face to face at
reasonable times, considering all proposals,
reaching an agreement and generating a
written version of that agreement.
Indicators that one party is not
negotiating in good faith
There are factors that PERB might see as
indicators that one party isn’t negotiating in
good faith:
• Failure to respond or delaying tactics
• Withdrawal of previously offered concessions
• Regressive bargaining
• Injecting significantly new proposals at
advanced stages of bargaining
• Lacking the authority to negotiate
Indicators of bad faith
bargaining
There are other factors that are more likely to be seen
as indicators of bad faith bargaining:
• An absolute refusal to bargain
• Making unilateral changes in conditions of
employment
• Willfully providing inaccurate information or refusing
to provide information
• Conditioning proposals on waiver of rights
• Bypassing the negotiators
• Refusal to generate a written agreement
Unfair labor practices
for employers
Unfair labor practices for employers include:
• Refusal to meet and negotiate in good faith
with union representatives
• Interference, domination or discrimination
among unions
• Interference with rights of employees or
unions
• Refusal to participate in impasses procedures
Unfair labor practices
for employee organizations
Unfair labor practices for employee
organizations include:
• Refusal to meet and negotiate in good faith
with employer representatives
• Causing or attempting to cause the employer
to commit an unfair labor practice
• Coercing, discriminating against, threatening
reprisals or interfering with employees in
exercise of their rights.
• Refusal to participate in impasses procedures
Establishing a negotiation
schedule
• Both sides need to clearly develop their
priorities and have collected as much
information as possible before beginning
negotiations
• That doesn’t mean that you have to wait until
the Governor signs the state budget, but it
may mean that the focus in early negotiations
is on contract language without a large
financial impact.
Negotiating non-financial
issues
• There are many sections of the contract,
including grievance procedures, leaves,
transfers, reassignments and evaluation that
don’t hinge heavily on finances and could be
settled before compensation issues are
addressed.
• Be cautious about items that do have
financial impact beyond salary, such as
changing class size, adding preparation time
or increasing stipends.
Preparing for and responding
to common union strategies
There are a number of common tactics
that can undercut negotiations. Make
sure that your management team and
Board are aware of these before they
occur so they can be addressed
effectively.
Practices that can
undercut negotiations
• Direct interaction between union negotiators
and the Board or individual Board members
• Appeals sent out to parents through students,
which is something that can be considered an
unfair labor practice
• Establishment of unrealistic expectations that
cannot be met in the current financial
situation
• Attempts to call interim or final budgets fiction
and guesswork. Be prepared to defend and
explain the budget.
Union tactics during
difficult negotiations
If the contract negotiations drag on, expect
these tactics:
• The union encouraging teachers to “work-to-rule” by
only working their required hours and failing to attend
meetings, performances, athletic events or other
activities in afternoons and evenings. This can
sometimes work against teachers if student
performances get cancelled.
• Employee sickouts in which large numbers of
teachers call in sick on a particular day, draining the
sub pool and causing administrators to combine
classes and or teach classes themselves.
Union tactics during
difficult negotiations
• “Informational” picketing in which the union
tries to get a message to parents or Board
members by carrying picket signs near a
school, at a local shopping area or near the
homes of Board members or the
superintendent. At schools this usually
means teachers from another school with a
different dismissal time come to picket at a
given school.
Communication before and
during negotiations
• Effective communication during
negotiations is dependent on setting up
an effective communication plan well
before the negotiations get rocky.
• There must be communication plans to
assure that each of the stakeholder
groups receives appropriate
communication.
Communication when
“Sunshining” your proposal
• An often missed opportunity to share
the district’s stand on key issues is
when the positions are shared and
“sunshined” at a Board meeting.
Districts often let this opportunity slide
by just listing briefly the topics to be
covered. Take the time to show how
your core values and principles are the
source of your positions.
Communication with
employees
• Since they are the people represented by the
organization across the table, communication
with the district employees needs to be firmly
in place.
• Frontload employees with the facts through
written communication and your website early
and often so that when the union issues their
version of the facts, there will at least be two
versions for employees to consider rather
than to simply accept the union information.
Communication with
employees
• The employees need to know that steps and
columns have already used some of the new
money or that special education is taking
more of the funding or that declining
enrollment is impacting the available money.
• Be sure that you are communicating clearly
about your full educational program and
everything else going on in the district so you
don’t give the impression that negotiations
are the only thing you’re dealing with.
Communicating with parents
and the community
• Parents are a little tougher to reach but
establishing an informative and dynamic
website is a good place to start.
• Regular communication through email
or notes should also be something that
is done from the outset and not just
done when things get rough.
Establishing a good working
relationship with local media
• An excellent way to communicate with
the community is through a regular
column in the local newspaper, usually
something featuring monthly updates
from the superintendent. If you don’t
have such a column, work with your
local paper to establish one.
Establishing a good working
relationship with local media
• Education reporters are usually fairly low on
the pecking order and may not have much
expertise on education when they take over.
• Do all you can to inform and educate
reporters, much as you inform and educate
new Board members. A study session with
the local editor and the education reporter
can pay dividends later when stories
demonstrate an understanding of your
program and positions.
Communication with your
management team
• Don’t forget to keep your management team
in the loop.
• They don’t need every detail, but should
know the basic positions being discussed and
the rationale for district positions.
• They need to feel like their input is valued,
even if they’re not sitting at the table.
Communication with your
management team
• Ideally, the management team can be the
eyes and ears of the district, keeping you
informed about what is being said by the
average employee.
• They should know enough to squelch rumors
and misinformation, but should defer to the
designated public spokesperson for the
district if there are serious negotiation
questions.
Communication with the
Board of Trustees
• The Board of Trustees needs to be fully
informed and involved in the core values and
principles that are established at the outset of
negotiations and need to understand the
basic positions being taken by the negotiation
team.
• The Board shouldn’t hear every detail of what
was said at the table, but they should know
positions that are being championed by either
team and understand the underlying issues.
Communication with the
Board of Trustees
• Study sessions early in the process can be
done at open meetings that might bring
employees or the public in to again hear your
explanations and standards for negotiations.
• During negotiations, you can talk about
negotiations in closed session or even call
special closed session meetings with
negotiations as the only topic.
Confidentiality and
unfair labor practices
• Honor the confidentiality of negotiations by
not sharing out the more outrageous things
people say or propose during negotiations.
• However, you are not breaking confidentiality,
or performing an unfair labor practice, by
sharing the positions you are taking at the
table and your rationale for those positions.
Don’t be afraid to communicate.
The Board inserting
itself into negotiations
• The Board should give you direction
and parameters to work within, but
should not get directly involved in
negotiations.
• Discourage separate conversations
between representatives of the union
and individual or pairs of Board
members.
The Board inserting
itself into negotiations
• Board members need to know from the start
that they should redirect the union back to the
table for negotiations and that at most they
should only listen to input.
• Individual board members have no authority
to do anything and board members in general
need to be sure that they never grant
promises or assurances of a certain outcome
at the table.
Don’t take it personally
• One of the most difficult things to remember
is to not take what goes on during
negotiations personally.
• Keep the focus on the issues and don’t let the
emotions move you away from core values
and principles.
• Reasonable people will say and do very
unreasonable things during difficult
negotiations and then go right back to being
those valued employees you once knew.
What’s your BATNA?
• The Best Alternative To a Negotiated
Agreement (BATNA) is a term that came from
interest-based bargaining to describe the best
thing you can do if you don’t settle the
contract.
• This is something you need to fully develop
so you have something to weigh offers
against. Sometimes you are better off to stick
with your BATNA instead of accepting an
unreasonable attempt to resolve a contract.
Impasse and mediation
• First of all, remember that impasse,
mediation and factfinding are attempts
to end negotiations, and aren’t the end
of the world.
• Accept them and prepare for them as
simply part of the negotiation process.
Impasse
• Impasse is reached when the parties have
reached a point in negotiations where
negotiations have been so prolonged or
differences are so substantial that agreement
doesn’t seem possible.
• Either party can request that PERB appoint a
mediator to come in to help resolve the
differences.
Impasse
• PERB will review the number and length of
bargaining sessions, the extent to which the
parties have presented and discussed
counter proposals and reached tentative
agreements and the extent to which issues
are still unresolved and appoint a mediator if
they agree it is necessary.
• There are only a few available mediators, so
this process can take some time to even
begin.
• Negotiations can continue during impasse.
Impasse
• The mediator will generally begin with the two
teams in one room so he or she can hear the
unresolved differences and get a feel for how
the teams are working, or not working,
together.
• After the initial joint meeting, the majority of
mediation time occurs with the two teams in
separate rooms and the mediator traveling
back and forth between the two groups,
carrying offers and encouraging concessions.
Impasse
• The impasse process is advisory only so the
mediator can only try to encourage settlement
and work with the two teams to come up with
creative solutions that haven’t already been
tried.
• The mediator can choose to come back for
further sessions or can reach a point where
he or she doesn’t believe resolution is
possible and can certify the process on to
factfinding.
Factfinding
• Factfinding is the last step in the collective
bargaining process.
• Under factfinding, each party chooses one
panel member and PERB appoints a neutral
chairperson to run the factfinding panel.
• Each team is asked to present a case and
share specific information with the panel.
Information for factfinding panel
In preparation for the presentation to the panel, each
team needs to prepare input on:
• Applicable state and federal laws
• The current agreement and any MOU’s
• The “interests and welfare of the public and the
financial ability of the public school employer.”
• A comparison of wages, hours and conditions of
employment with comparable communities
• The consumer price index for goods and services
• The overall compensation of employees
• Any other important facts like parcel taxes,
foundation support and other local funding
Panel findings
• Just as in impasse, negotiations can continue
during factfinding
• At the end of its review, the chairperson will
issue his or her findings and allow the other
members to share their agreement or
disagreement with the findings
• The findings must be made public within ten
days, but they are not binding on either party
Still no resolution
• If there is still no resolution after
factfinding, the district can unilaterally
implement its “last, best and final offer.”
• After factfinding, the union can consider
taking a strike vote.
Teacher strikes
• A teacher strike is a rare, but
exceptionally disruptive event.
• Plans need to be made well in advance
to hire enough substitutes and to keep
the educational program running as
smoothly as possible during the strike.
• More details will be contained in a strike
manual that will be updated by ACSA.