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United States
Office of Personnel Management

New Developments in Employee
and Labor Relations

December 1999


TABLE OF CONTENTS


HIGHLIGHTS

OPM Sets Date for SOELR 2000 Conference

The Office of Personnel Management’s 2000 Symposium on Employee and Labor Relations (SOELR 2000) will be held in Denver, Colorado on March 7-10, 2000. The brochures for the conference were mailed out in November and the brochure (including its enclosed registration form) and other SOELR update information is also available on the Office’s home page at www.opm.gov/er. (See Employee/Labor Relations Training).

Reaffirmation of Labor-Management Partnerships

On October 28, 1999, President Clinton issued a memorandum for heads of executive departments and agencies . This memo reaffirmed his belief that cooperation between Federal agencies and their unions could help create a Government that works better, costs less, and makes a positive difference in the lives of the American people. This belief was first laid out in Executive Order 12871, issued in October 1993. (See Topical Overview).

‘Limited Personal Use’ of Government Office Equipment

The Federal Chief Information Officers (CIO) Council has approved a "Recommended Executive Branch Model Policy/Guidance on ‘Limited Personal Use’ of Government Office Equipment - including information technology. The guidance sets out a general policy on limited use of government office equipment for personal needs and also discusses inappropriate personal use of the equipment. The recommended guidance provides that such limited personal use must not lead to loss of employee productivity, interfere with official duties and should result in only minimal additional expense to the Government. (See ‘Limited Personal Use’ of Government Office Equipment).

John N. Sturdivant National Partnership Award

The National Partnership Council presented its 1999 John N. Sturdivant National Partnership Award to ten Federal agency labor-management partnerships at an awards ceremony that was held in OPM’s auditorium on September 15, 1999. The award ceremony was followed by a reception in honor of the partnerships being recognized. (See Partnership).

Sexual Harassment Penalty

In a long-standing case, the Merit Systems Protection Board applied the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Lachance v. Devall, No. 98-3213, May 20, 1999, and determined, contrary to the Board’s earlier decision, that removal was the appropriate penalty for sexual harassment by appellant Devall. (See Charges and Penalties).


ATTORNEY FEES

  • The Board majority agreed with the Office of Personnel Management's (OPM's) reconsideration request and found that a substantive jurisdictional finding is required in order to award attorney fees since there is no unequivocal expression by Congress that attorney fees may be awarded against the United States in the absence of Board jurisdiction. The Board also agreed with OPM that the reason set forth in Joyce of preserving the Board's analytical resources may not be used to circumvent a statutorily-required jurisdictional finding. The Board will therefore, no longer apply the holding in Joyce. Instead, the Board determined that the holding in Shaw, that a substantive jurisdictional finding is required in order for the Board to award attorney fees, is good law and no longer overruled.

However, the Board disagreed with OPM's contention that an appellant cannot be a prevailing party unless he or she has obtained relief through an enforceable judgement, consent decree, or settlement. While this is the definition of prevailing party supplied by the Supreme Court in Farrar v. Hobby, 506 U.S. 103 (1992), the Board found support in various circuit courts for its broader definition. That definition holds that where the Board has jurisdiction over the appeal, the agency has unilaterally rescinded its action, i.e., returned the appellant to the status quo ante, and the appellant has incurred attorney fees, there is a rebuttable presumption that fees are warranted in the interest of justice under the "knew or should have known" Allen category. The Board remanded this case for a jurisdictional hearing. Joyce v. Air Force and Office of Personnel Management, PH0752950085-B-1, October 5, 1999.

See also Joyce v. Department of the Air Force and Office of Personnel Management under Current Interventions.

Contact: Ken Bates, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

BACK PAY

  • Where an agency fails, six months after the issuance of a compliance order, to present evidence that it had paid the employee appropriate interest on a back-pay award, the Board not only finds the agency in noncompliance, but orders the agency to identify the individual at the agency responsible for ensuring the compliance. This decision illustrates the Board's authority under 5 USC § 1204 (e)(2)(A) to direct that the salary of the individual responsible for noncompliance be stopped. Morton v. Postal Service, AT0752950209-C-1, July 30, 1999.

Contact: Linda Moody, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

BACK PAY FOR IMPROPERLY DENIED OVERTIME

  • The Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA) turned down the agency's (Customs Service) exceptions to an award in which the arbitrator found the agency violated the regional and national agreements when it permitted National Guard personnel to independently perform certain inspectional activities. (The arbitrator found that both agreements, dealing with using National Guard personnel in a support capacity at ports of entry, require that National Guard personnel be under the direction and control of Customs personnel.) As a remedy, the arbitrator ordered "back overtime pay, with interest . . . to all adversely affected [Customs Service] employees . . . ."

The Federal Labor Relations Authority, in finding that the award wasn't inconsistent with the agency's right to determine its budget, noted that the award didn't prescribe a program, operation or dollar amount to be included in an agency's budget with respect to overtime. Moreover, the agency didn't provide any financial data that would enable the Federal Labor Relations Authority to determine whether the order requires significant and unavoidable cost increases without compensating benefits.

Although the award "affected" the right to assign work, it did not "abrogate" that right. "[T]he agreements only preclude the Agency from assigning National Guardsmen to the [two exits at issue] if a Customs employee is not concurrently assigned. . . . [Thus] the Agency has retained its right to determine when and if National Guard personnel, and/or its own personnel, should be utilized."

The Federal Labor Relations Authority held that the award was consistent with the Back Pay Act. A finding of a contract violation satisfies the "unjustified or unwarranted personnel action" requirement. The missed overtime constitutes a withdrawal or reduction of an employee's pay, allowances, or differentials. Moreover, "there is no requirement in the [Back Pay] Act or its implementing regulations for the arbitrator to identify the specific employees entitled to backpay as a result of the unwarranted action."

Nor did the award result in an illegal windfall. The Federal Labor Relations Authority noted that 19 CFR 24.16(h) provides that back pay overtime awards don't apply to any pay cap calculations. The agency, moreover, didn't provide a copy of Article 22 of the CBA that it claimed was violated by the award.

Finally, the agency's essence argument was rejected because the arbitrator's interpretation wasn't implausible, irrational, or unconnected to the agreements' wording. U.S. Customs Service, El Paso, Texas and National Treasury Employers Union, Chapter 143, 0-AR-3074, June 30, 1999, 55 FLRA No. 97.

Contact: Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

CHANGE IN LAW RENDERING CONTRACT PROVISION UNENFORCEABLE ... OFFICIAL TIME FOR LOBBYING ... UNTIMELY ARGUMENTS

  • The D.C. Circuit turned down the union's petition for review of 54 FLRA No. 70, in which the Authority held that the agency did not commit an unfair labor practice (ULP) when it refused to grant official time for lobbying purposes.

In 54 FLRA No. 70, the General Counsel accused the agency of "repudiating" a contract provision providing official time for lobbying purposes when it refused a union request for official time for eleven union representatives to meet with Members of Congress to discuss "matters of interest to the Union and the employees it represents." Although, under then-existing case law, official time for lobbying purposes was a negotiable condition of employment, the Authority found persuasive the agency's argument that the contract provision was unenforceable because inconsistent with section 8015 of the 1996 DOD Appropriations Act, which banned the use of official time for lobbying purposes. The unfair labor practice was dismissed because the provision was unenforceable and consequently couldn't be "repudiated."

The union appealed, arguing that: (1) the Appropriations Act could not repeal the provisions of the FSLMRS by implication, (2) the Authority "overlooked its obligation to reconcile the statutes," (3) FLRA's interpretation raises a First Amendment question, and (4) the FSLMRS is more specific than the Appropriations Act.

The court noted that "none of these objections, none of these arguments, was ever urged until the case arrived in this court." Although the Appropriations Act argument had been unanticipated by the union, the court noted that it didn't seek to file a reply brief under 5 CFR 2429.26(a) or ask the Authority to reconsider its decision.

It is true that we have considered and ruled on objections first raised on judicial review when the FLRA rested its decision on a ground neither party had argued, so long as a request for reconsideration appeared clearly doomed. . . . The situation here is not comparable. In the first place, the FLRA did not   raise the Appropriations Act; the Defense Department argued the point to the agency. Second, it is not so plain that a request for reconsideration would have been futile.

The court, noting that 5 U.S.C. § 7123(c) bars the court from considering objections that have not been urged before FLRA unless the failure to urge the objection(s) is excused because of extraordinary circumstances, held that "[t]he particular 'failure or neglect' encountered here cannot be excused. There are no extraordinary circumstances. And so the petition for judicial review must be denied." Georgia State Chapter Association of Civilian Technicians v. Federal Labor Relations Authority, No. 98-1452 (D.C. Cir, August 3, 1999).

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

CHARGES AND PENALTIES

  • In setting the penalty of removal in this case, the agency relied on two past disciplinary actions for similar misconduct--a 3-day suspension and a 10-day suspension. A Merit Systems Protection Board Administrative Judge determined that the agency could not rely on this past record because it did not satisfy the criteria established by the Board in Bolling v. Air Force, 9 M.S.P.R. 335 (1981). Bolling discussed the level of review the Board would give if an appellant challenged the validity of his or her past record. In this case, however, the appellant did not challenge the record. While noting that Bolling did not directly address such a circumstance, it "apparently" approved the rule set up by the Office of Personnel Management's former Federal Personnel Manual that when an appellant does not challenge the past record, "only the occurrence of that action need be verified." The Board adopted this rule and determined that evidence confirmed the occurrence of the past discipline and was thus properly used in determining the penalty in this case. The Board also overruled its judge and determined that removal was the appropriate penalty. Holland v. DOD, PH0752990010-I-1, August 17, 1999.
  • In a long-standing case, the Merit Systems Protection Board applies the decision of the Court of Appeals in the Federal Circuit in Lachance v. Devall, No. 98-3213, May 20, 1999, to appellant Devall and determined, contrary to its earlier decision, that removal was the appropriate penalty in this case. The appellant had been removed for: (1) sexual harassment, (2) unauthorized use of another's property, and (3) inattention to duty. The Board originally mitigated the penalty to a 90-day suspension after sustaining only the first two charges and despite testimony by the agency's deciding official that he considered the sexual harassment charge the primary basis for the removal penalty. The U.S. Office of Personnel Management sought reconsideration of this outcome by the Board and ultimately prevailed in the matter at the Federal Circuit. Devall v. Navy, DA0752950794-M-1, September 1, 1999.
  • In this case, the appellant was removed based on three charges. A Merit Systems Protection Board Administrative judge sustained two of the charges and mitigated the penalty to a 30-day suspension. The Board noted that after the judge's decision, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled in Lachance v. Devall, No. 98-3213, May 20, 1999, that the Board may not independently determine penalties but may mitigate to the maximum reasonable penalty. The Board applied Devall and found that the agency would have removed the appellant for the two sustained charges and that removal remains a reasonable penalty. Hernandez v. Agriculture, DE1221980404-W-1, September 10, 1999.
  • The appellant was removed for (1) failure to follow leave procedures, (2) absence without leave or AWOL, and (3) unauthorized use of government property. The Merit Systems Protection Board determined that the first two charges did not involve different misconduct or elements of proof and must be "merged" into one charge--AWOL. (The AWOL only occurred because the appellant failed to follow leave procedures.) The Board sustained the charges but mitigated the removal to a 30-day suspension because of the agency's improper reliance on earlier charges of AWOL that had not been subject to disciplinary action. The "old" AWOL was not noted in the appellant's proposal or decision letters on the removal action and came up for the first time through testimony by the agency's proposing and deciding officials at the Board hearing in the case. They each stated they relied on the "old" AWOL in setting the penalty. Westmoreland v. Veterans Affairs, CH0752970692-B-1, September 30, 1999.
  • The agency removed the appellant from her supervisory position for borrowing money from subordinates. The appellant also borrowed money from other supervisors and tried unsuccessfully to borrow from other subordinates. The agency did not charge the appellant with the latter misconduct but instead clearly put the appellant on notice that those incidents were used only in determining the severity of the penalty. The Merit Systems Protection Board approved of the agency's actions. In response to the appellant's argument that her penalty was disparate from that imposed on others, the Board noted that, "unless the agency knowingly treated similarly situated employees differently or began levying a more severe penalty for a certain offense without giving notice of the change in policy," there was no basis for reversal or mitigation of the penalty. The Board also noted that its Administrative Judge erred in stating that an appellant's allegation of disparate penalties is an "affirmative defense." The removal was upheld. Vargas v. Postal Service, SF0752980496-I-1, October 5, 1999.
  • The agency removed the appellant based on two charges: (1) failing to follow written regulations, rules, procedures, and directives and (2) failure to follow verbal directives and lying to his supervisor. The Merit Systems Protection Board upheld the first charge but determined that the second charge was really two charges. Here, the Board said the second charge describes two separate acts of misconduct that are not dependent upon each other and do not comprise a single, inseparable event. Thus, the Board "split" the second charge into two and considered them individually. The first part, failure to follow verbal orders was upheld, and the second part, lying to the supervisor, was not upheld. Even though all the charges were not upheld, the Board found no basis to mitigate the penalty. Bryant v. Army, DC0752980736-I-1, October 22, 1999.

Contact: Gary Wahlert, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

DETERMINING THE UNIT STATUS OF VACANT POSITIONS ... EXCEPTIONS TO THE RULE ... GRIEVANCE/ARBITRATION

  • FLRA normally doesn't determine the unit status of a vacant position. (See Bureau of the Mint, 6 FLRA 52 (1981). However, under certain circumstances a FLRA Regional Director (RD) can determine the unit status of a vacant position. In FLRA's words:

This case raises the issue of whether an RD must resolve a representation issue concerning a vacant position where the unit determination is a collateral issue necessary to the resolution of a grievance at arbitration. We conclude that the RD shall determine the unit status of a vacant position when [1] both parties agree or [2] the arbitrator decides that the unit determination is necessary to the resolution of a grievance at arbitration. In such event, the grievance must be placed in abeyance pending a decision on a petition for clarification of the unit.

The above decision is an extension of FLRA's decision in Headquarters, XVIII Airborne Corps and Fort Bragg, 34 FLRA No. 6, where it held that FLRA would determine the unit status of a vacant position in order to determine the arbitrability of a grievance. FLRA there said that the "absence of a decision concerning the grievant's bargaining unit status would frustrate the Statute's policy favoring the resolution of employee grievances through arbitration." That reference to "arbitrability" is now extended to encompass any "collateral issue necessary to the resolution of a grievance at arbitration." U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and National Association of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, SEIU, BN-BP-80051, August 31, 1999, 55 FLRA No. 132

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

EMPLOYEE/LABOR RELATIONS TRAINING

  • The Office of Personnel Management's 2000 Symposium on Employee and Labor Relations (SOELR) will be held in Denver, Colorado on March 7-10, 2000. The brochures for the conference were mailed out in November and the brochure (including its enclosed registration form) and other SOELR update information is also available on the Office's home page at www.opm.gov/er. This comprehensive conference is devoted to recent developments and emerging issues in employee relations, labor relations, dispute resolution, performance management, and partnership. SOELR 2000 will offer 10 all-day preconference workshops and more than 40 separate breakout topics during the conference.

    Contact: soelr@opm.gov or (202) 606-4446.

  • The annual Federal Dispute Resolution Conference (FDR) will be held in Anaheim, California on August 20-24, 2000. Brochures for the conference are usually mailed out in early spring. The brochure, along with the conference registration form, will be on an Internet website at http://www.fdr-conference.org/. This conference is oriented toward equal employment opportunity specialists, personnelists, and attorneys.

    Contact: pforner@aol.com or (202) 463-8400, ext. 348.

FAMILY-FRIENDLY WORKPLACE ADVOCACY OFFICE

  • OPM issued The Elder Care Connection - A Guide for the Federal Workplace in July 1999. The Elder Care Resources (ECC) is a resource guide of elder care to help Federal employees and caregivers with elder care dependent care needs services and providers located in the Washington, DC, Maryland and Northern Virginia areas. This publication promotes the awareness and importance of elder care and aging services and programs by providing referral information on topics as: caregiving management, community resources, Federal and national organizations, financial assistance and mortgage services, health and wellness services, home assistance and modification, insurance, legal matters, living options and publications.
  • OPM issued Part-time Employment and Job Sharing Guide in August 1999. This Guide outlines and provides information on how to successfully manage and/or participate in part-time employment and job sharing arrangements. Some topics covered include: defining part-time employment and job sharing; benefits for permanent part-time employees such as leave, retirement, health and life insurance; and how a reduced schedule affects personnel issues such as pay, adverse actions/grievances, service credit and reduction in force. The Guide also provides new information on using USAJOBS to easily locate a consolidated list of jobs that are being or may be filled on a part-time basis.
  • OPM's Family-Friendly Workplace Advocacy Office sponsored its first meeting of the Interagency Family- Friendly Workplace Working Group on October 5, 1999, at OPM. The establishment of this group was mandated in President Clinton's May 24th memorandum, "New Tools to Help Parents Balance Work and Family", which, among other things, directed the head of each executive department and agency to appoint a family-friendly work/life coordinator to serve as a member of the Working Group. Work/life coordinators are charged with making sure that Federal employees are aware of the full range of family-friendly options available to help them meet their personal and family responsibilities. They will also provide information about resources and programs that are currently available in their communities. The Working Group will promote, evaluate, and exchange information on Federal family-friendly workplace initiatives, with technical assistance and facilitation provided by the Family-Friendly Workplace Advocacy Office.

    Contact: workandfamily@opm.gov or (202) 606-5520.

INSPECTOR GENERAL AGENTS ... REPRESENTATIVES OF THE AGENCY FOR WEINGARTEN PURPOSES

  • In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court, relying on (1) the plain text of the FSLMRS, (2) court deference to FLRA's reasonable interpretations of the FSLMRS, and (3) Congress' countervailing labor-management policy concerns (as opposed to the policy concerns of the Inspector General Act), held that Office of Inspector General (OIG) agents are representatives of the agency for the Weingarten purposes of § 7114(a)(2)(B).

The court stressed that it was not passing on various FLRA rulings on the scope of section 7114(a)(2)(B). It noted, in this connection, that the 4th Circuit had held that various proposals placing limitations on the manner in which IG agents could conduct investigatory interviews were inconsistent with the Inspector General Act. But the Supreme Court emphasized that "[t]he process by which the scope of § 7114(a)(2)(B) may properly be determined . . . [is a question] not now before us."National Aeronautics and Space Administration et al. v. Federal Labor Relations Authority, et al., Supreme Court, No. 98-369, June 17, 1999.

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

JURISDICTION AND PROCEDURE

  • The appellant had obtained mitigation of the removal action against him through his appeal to the Board. He later filed an enforcement petition, alleging that his directed reassignment to another city violated his entitlement to be placed as nearly as possible in the status quo ante, within the terms of the Board's order directing his demotion. The Board found the agency had compelling, overriding reasons for not reinstating the appellant at his former facility, since he had been barred from entry there by the base commander on the basis of two incidents where he had inappropriately displayed weapons on the base. These were matters unrelated to the original removal action, and constituted a sufficient basis for the agency's directed reassignment action. The agency was therefore in compliance. Galliart v. Treasury, SF-0752-96-0729-C-1, September 15, 1999.

Contact: Linda Moody, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

'LIMITED PERSONAL USE' OF GOVERNMENT OFFICE EQUIPMENT

  • The Federal Chief Information Officers (CIO) Council has approved a "Recommended Executive Branch Model Policy/Guidance on 'Limited Personal Use' of Government Office Equipment - including information technology. The guidance sets out a general policy on limited use of government office equipment for personal needs and also discusses inappropriate personal usage of the equipment. The recommended guidance provides that such limited personal use must not lead to loss of employee productivity, interfere with official duties and should result in only minimal additional expense to the Government. Among the listed examples of inappropriate personal uses are: use that could cause disruption of government services or operations; the creation, viewing, or storage of sexually oriented materials; and the use of such equipment for any fundraising activity. The guidance states that it is only a model and each agency should "assess their needs and responsibility as they relate to mission, security, budget, workload, public contract, etc. in determining the extent to which this policy is established and implemented." The guidance also notes that agencies will need to, early on, talk with their unions and review collective bargaining agreements on how to apply the union's use of the equipment under those conditions. The model policy can be accessed at: http://cio.gov/CIOdoc.htm.

Contact: Ken Bates, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

NUMBER OF OVERALL PERFORMANCE RATING LEVELS IS NOT A (B)(1) MATTER

  • A proposal prescribing 4 overall rating levels "impermissibly affects" (i.e., "directly interferes with") management's section 7106(a)(2)(A) and (B) rights to direct employees and assign work. FLRA said the following in rejecting the union's claim that the proposal dealt with methods and means.

Proposals concerning the number and designation of rating levels do not concern how an agency performs its work or what an agency uses to accomplish its work. Rather, such proposals concern how an agency evaluates the manner in which its employees perform the work to which they have been assigned. The Authority has consistently held that an agency's determinations as to performance standards and rating levels concern the work objectives for employees. . . . An agency's determination of the methods and means of performing work, on the other hand, concerns how employees will do their work, and what they will use, to accomplish those objectives.

American Federation of Government Employees, Council of GSA Locals, Council 236 and General Services Administration, 0-NG-2387-01, April 30, 1999, 55 FLRA No. 73.

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

NO DUTY TO BARGAIN ON THE TERMINATION OF AN UNAUTHORIZED PRACTICE

  • The national agreement requires all bargaining unit employees to sign in and out of work sequentially every day on the same form. This was followed by the local president until February 1994, during a reorganization, when he began to spend 100% of his time on union work and, with the permission of his supervisor, left a phone number where he could be reached in lieu of signing in and out.

In January 1995, a new supervisor instructed the local president to sign in and out sequentially. When the union requested bargaining, the supervisor refused, noting that the nationwide agreement did not allow for arrangements in conflict with the agreement. The matter got elevated to the headquarters level where the Acting Deputy Director for Human Resources said she would not tolerate any arrangements that contradicted the agreement.

FLRA dismissed the ULP complaint, finding "that AFGE and HUD in Article 34 prohibited local parties from agreeing to modify the terms of the nationwide agreement, and that HUD Denver officials engaged in a practice contrary to the terms of Article 17 of that agreement. Accordingly, there is no basis for finding that HUD Denver committed a ULP when it insisted on returning without bargaining to the practice mandated by Article 17." (Emphasis added.) Department of Housing and Urban Development, Rocky Mountain Area and American Federation of Government Employees, Local 3972, DE-CA-50202, June 10, 1999, 55 FLRA No. 99.

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

PARTNERSHIP

  • The National Partnership Council presented its 1999 John N. Sturdivant National Partnership Award to ten Federal agency labor-management partnerships at an awards ceremony that was held in OPM's auditorium on September 15, 1999. The award ceremony was followed by a reception in honor of the partnerships being recognized. There were six award winners and four honorable mention citations (a list of the winners is below). Director Lachance hosted the event.

1999 John N. Sturdivant National Partnership Award Winners

National Partnership Award (in alphabetical order)

1. Defense Contract Management Command (DCMC) Raytheon Tucson and the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Local 3973.

2. Food and Nutrition Service (FNS), Western Region, USDA and the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) Chapter 227.

3. IRS North Central District and the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) Chapters 2, 8 and 29.

4. Overton Brooks VA Medical Center, Shreveport, Louisiana and the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Local 2525.

5. United States Mint and the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Locals 51, 608, 695, 1023, 3653, 3740.

6. Veterans Affairs (VA) Regional Office, Waco, Texas and the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Local 2571.

Honorable Mention Citation (in alphabetical order)

1. Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina and the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Local 2065.

2. U.S. Army Training Center and Fort Jackson (USATC & Fort Jackson) and the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Local 1909 and National Federation of Federal Employees (NFFE) Local 1214.

3. USDA-Forest Service and the National Federation of Federal Employees (NFFE) Forest Service Council.

4. Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Kansas City, Missouri and the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Local 2663.

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

PERFORMANCE AWARDS ... 10-YEAR PAST PRACTICE ... UNILATERAL CHANGE

  • The Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA) turned down agency exceptions to an award in which the arbitrator found that the agency violated the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) when, without giving notice to the union at the regional level, it based performance awards on a lower percentage of annual salary than previously (from 2% to 1% for outstanding ratings and from 1% to .5% for highly successful ratings) and ordered backpay for the adversely affected employees.

The arbitrator had found that the CBA as a whole required negotiations over a decision to change a past practice. FLRA rejected the agency's "essence" and Back Pay Act exceptions. Regarding the latter, it noted that the violation of a CBA is an unjustified or unwarranted personnel action and, based on the arbitrator's factual findings to which FLRA deferred, there was a causal connection between the unjustified action and the loss of pay. General Services Administration and American Federation of Government Employees, Local 2431, 0-AR-3093, May 28, 1999, 55 FLRA No. 84.

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

PROCEDURAL ARBITRABILITY

  • FLRA turned down the union's exceptions to an award in which the arbitrator held that he could not consider a claim that the agency violated the Rehabilitation Act by not providing reasonable accommodation (for an employee with an obsessive-compulsive disorder) because the union failed to sufficiently raise this issue at the outset of the grievance. FLRA said the following:

When an arbitrator finds that a grievance does not meet the specificity requirements of the parties' agreement and, consequently, declines to address the merits of that legal claim, the award is a procedural arbitrability determination. . . . An arbitrator's determination of procedural arbitrability of an issue is subject to challenge only on grounds other than those that directly challenge the procedural arbitrability determination itself. [FLRA cited 51 FLRA No. 40 where it said that such grounds include bias on the part of the arbitrator or a showing that the arbitrator exceeded his authority.]

American Federation of Government Employees, Local 703 and Army Armament and Chemical Acquisition and Logistics Agency, 0-AR-3060, May 2, 1999, 55 FLRA No. 87.

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION/MEDICAL ISSUES

  • The agency removed the appellant from Federal service based on unacceptable performance. On appeal, the administrative judge found that the agency met its burden in proving unacceptable performance but reversed the action based on disability discrimination. The administrative judge found that the appellant suffered from the disability of depression but failed to state what major life activity was substantially limited by the disease. The full Board found that the appellant's general statements regarding stress and frustration did not constitute a significant limitation on his ability to work. Further, his statement that he was able to work after being detailed to a different supervisor during the time between the conclusion of the performance improvement period and his removal failed to demonstrate that he was generally foreclosed from his line of work. Vyas v. Army, PH0432970168-I-2, September 2, 1999.
  • The Board sustained an agency's removal of an employee and reversed the administrative judge's finding that the agency had discriminated against the employee based on her medical conditions of bipolar disorder and depression. The appellant was a telephone operator in a Medical Center. The agency proved its charges of appearing sleepy while on duty, misdirecting an emergency "code blue" team; and acting in an inappropriate manner toward a volunteer. However, the administrative judge found that the appellant demonstrated that she suffered from bipolar disorder and depression and that the agency had discriminated against her by failing to reasonably accommodate those conditions. The full Board rejected this analysis and cited numerous court and Equal Employment Opportunity Commission cases that stand for the principle that an employee is not immunized from discipline simply on the basis of having a disability. Because the agency was able to demonstrate that similar disciplinary action would have been taken against any employee who acted inappropriately and endangered patient safety, the Board sustained the removal action. Laniewicz v. Veterans Affairs, PH0752970016-I-1, September 14, 1999.

Contact: Sharon Snellings, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

REDUCTION IN FORCE

  • The Merit Systems Protection Board reopened this appeal on its own motion in order to make clear its position on an individual's appeal rights once a reduction in force notice has been issued. The Board held that an employee who receives a valid reduction in force notice and chooses to accept another position rather than being placed or removed via reduction in force does not have appeal rights to the Board. The Board noted that the Federal Circuit had ruled differently in Harants v. U.S. Postal Service, 130 F.3d 1466 (Fed. Cir. 1997). However, the Board found that the court had relied only on past Board precedent in issuing its ruling. Therefore, the Board used this case to clarify that its previous holdings were not intended to provide a right of appeal to employees who received a reduction in force notice but voluntarily accepted another position before the any reduction in force action was effected. The Board also noted that the Harants case involved the Postal Service reorganization where employees were not given any reduction in force procedures. Therefore, the Board determined that the proper reference in case law is to Owen v. Army, 74 MSPR 88 (1997) in which the Board found that by voluntarily accepting another position prior to the effective date of the reduction in force notice, the appellant lost his right to appeal the potential reduction in force action. Vice Chair Slavet issued a dissenting opinion. Johnson v. Army, DC0351980045-I-1, July 28, 1999.

This case reached the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit after the Merit Systems Protection Board upheld the appellant's removal under reduction in force. The appellant argued that the agency erroneously used a 1995 fully successful performance rating when calculating the amount of service years based on performance. The appellant stated that the 1995 rating was not valid because the rating official had only been her supervisor for 84 days and the agency policy required that he be in place for 90 days. The court denied the argument, finding that the requirement was for the employee, not the supervisor, to be operating under the performance plan for at least ninety days. The appellant had been under the plan for approximately six months when the rating was issued and the court sustained the agency's use of the rating in deriving its retention register. Veneziano v. Energy, Appeal No. 98-3070, (Fed. Cir., September 1, 1999).

Contact: Sharon Snellings, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

RETIREMENT

  • A pro se appellant's appeal is timely based on the fact that he was not informed that he had to refile or amend his pending EEO discrimination complaint based on the same RIF action in order to incorporate the subsequent appealable action, a demotion. After receiving the original RIF notice of separation, the appellant filed a formal EEO discrimination complaint. The agency subsequently issued a second and superseding RIF notice which again advised him of the abolishment of his position and offered him a position at a lower grade. The discrimination complaint was dismissed because it was determined to be a "mixed case" appealable to the Board, so the appellant filed an appeal with the Board based on the RIF abolishment of his position and his resultant demotion. In his initial decision, the administrative judge stated he considered the demotion to be the only action appealable to the Board, and noted that the appellant did not amend his discrimination complaint to address the demotion after receiving the second RIF notice; the AJ therefore dismissed the appeal as untimely. The Board, however, agreed with the EEOC administrative judge and agency, who both viewed the complaint as covering the subsequent action. Also, since pro se appellants are not required to plead the issues with the precision of an attorney (Walters v. United States Postal Service, 65 M.S.P.R., 115, 119 (1994)), and because the appellant was not informed of the requirement to refile his complaint based on the subsequent action, the Board reversed the initial decision and remanded the case. Darrell R. Lott v. Department of the Army, DC0351980654-I-1, July 2, 1999.
  • Upon reconsideration, the Board again addresses the issue of whether an employee who retires based on disability is entitled to have his disability retirement annuity calculated under the enhanced annuity provisions of 5 USC § 8339 (d)(1) as a law enforcement officer (LEO). The employee was entitled to LEO status, had more than 20 years of service, but had not yet reached the age of 50. In this decision the Board reversed itself, upholding OPM's decision that the applicable statutes provides for an enhanced annuity for LEO's only if the employee meets the criteria for immediate LEO retirement. Accordingly it denied the appellant's request to have his disability retirement recalculated. Rogers v. Office of Personnel Management, DA0831970094-R-1, August 3, 1999.
  • The employee claimed that his retirement from DODDS was involuntary and constituted an adverse action appealable to the Board. Concluding that the appellant made sufficient non-frivolous claims of coercion and misinformation to warrant an evidentiary hearing, the Federal Circuit overturned the Board decision which found no jurisdiction and remanded the case back to the Board for a hearing. In this case, the employee, who was employed as an Assistant Principal at an Air Force Base in Turkey, alleged that he was given a final adverse action decision notice that required him to make all arrangements for his family to leave the country within 11 days. Faced with this deadline, as well as serious health concerns, the employee agreed to retire and thereby obtain six additional weeks to arrange his move back to the U.S. Middleton v. Department of Defense, Appeal No. 98-3409, (Fed. Cir. August 10, 1999).

    Contact: Ken Bates, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

  • Disability Retirement. The Merit Systems Protection Board agreed with the position argued by the Office of Personnel Management that an employee who has been reassigned to light duty is not eligible for retirement benefits as long as the employee retains the grade and pay previously held. The Board noted that even if the agency does not assign an employee to an established position, the assignment of light duty work, as long as the work will continue, will be sufficient to prevent the employee from qualifying for disability retirement. Appellants whose medical conditions prevent them from performing in their positions of record would have to demonstrate that a light duty assignment would not continue in order to be eligible for disability retirement. Vice Chair Slavet issued a dissenting opinion. Bracy & Wilson v. Office of Personnel Management, DC831E970643-I-1 & AT844E970645-I-1, August 30, 1999.

Contact: Sharon Snellings, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

SUITABILITY

  • The agency tentatively selected the appellant for a Police Officer position from a civil service register but later told him that he was unsuitable for the position because the agency's background investigation uncovered negative credit history information. The employee filed an appeal with the Merit Systems Protection Board claiming that the agency's action constituted a negative suitability determination. The Board determined, however, that, while the agency "apparently determined that the appellant was unsuitable," it had no delegated authority from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management to make official suitability determinations with regard to applicants on a civil service register. Thus, the Board concluded that the agency's action was not a matter appealable to the Board. Metzenbaum v. GSA, CH3443980814-I-1, August 11, 1999.

    Contact: Gary Wahlert, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

TIMELINESS

  • The appeal filed by the appellant was timely based on the date he received the agency's decision by "hand-delivery." Following receipt of the agency's proposal to remove the appellant, the appellant's representative provided the agency with a FAX number for the specific purpose of receiving "any and all material relied on to support" the proposed removal of the appellant. When notifying the appellant of its final decision, the agency served the notice to the appellant by personal delivery (on July 6) and to the appellant's representative by certified mail and by FAX (on July 2) to the number he provided for receiving the agency's supporting evidence. The agency argued that since the appellant's representative received the notice by FAX on July 2, the appeal filed on August 5 was untimely. The Board, however, found the arguments of the appellant's representative to be persuasive: (1) the appellant's representative only intended to authorize the agency to use the FAX number provided for the purpose of allowing the appellant expeditious review of material in order to respond to the removal proposal; (2) the FAX number provided belonged to Kinko's and he was only using that number until his firm obtained its own exclusive business FAX number; and (3) the FAX number provided in his letter to the agency was not intended to be used for service of the removal decision. Given these circumstances, the Board found that the appellant received the decision letter on July 6 making his August 5 appeal timely. Randall R. Koelling v. Department of the Navy, SF0752980665-I-1, July 21, 1999.

Contact: Ken Bates, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

UNIFORM SERVICES EMPLOYMENT AND REEMPLOYMENT RIGHTS ACT (USERRA)

  • The Board defined its jurisdictional authority under the Veterans Programs Enhancement Act of 1998, a statute that amended the 1994 Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act. The amendment allowed the Merit Systems Protection Board to adjudicate complaints even if the complaint occurred prior to the effective date of the 1994 statute (October 13, 1994). The Board considered two interpretations of the 1998 amendment. The first would allow the Board to review complaints that occurred before October 13, 1994, under the predecessor to the current statute (Veterans' Reemployment Rights Act). This previous statute had only covered an appellant's status as a member of a Reserve component of the Armed Forces. The second interpretation would allow the Board to retroactively apply the substantive rights found in the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act. The Board adopted the first interpretation after examining the legislative history of the 1998 amendment and relying on the commonly accepted theory of jurisprudence that a law should not be applied retroactively unless Congress explicitly makes it so. Williams v. Army, DE3443980266-I-1, July 26, 1999.
  • In this case, the appellant claimed the agency violated his rights under the Veterans Employment Opportunities Act of 1998 and the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 when it failed to properly credit his 5-point veterans' preference and selected another veteran for a vacant position. The Board found that it did not have jurisdiction to review his claim under the Veterans Employment Opportunities Act because the appellant had failed to file a complaint with the Department of Labor, a prerequisite to gaining appeal rights at the Board under the 1998 law. The case was remanded for a hearing on the allegation that the appellant's rights had been violated under the 1994 statute. Tindall v. Army, DC3443990270-I-1, October 27, 1999.

Contact: Sharon Snellings, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

UNILATERAL CHANGE ... BYPASS ... LAST CHANCE AGREEMENTS

  • In a split decision, the Authority concluded that management committed unilateral change and bypass ULPs when it negotiated a last chance agreement (LCA) directly with an employee (who had failed to pay a government-issued credit card bill) without notifying and bargaining with the union. It distinguished its holdings here from its holdings in 38 FLRA No. 34, proposals 3 and 4, by noting that the meeting did not take place as part of a grievance proceeding or a statutory appeal and thus did not involve the §7121(b)(1)(C)(ii) employee right to represent him or herself in the negotiated grievance procedure or the §7114(a)(5)(A) employee right to designate his/her representative in an appeal action. As a remedy, FLRA orders, if requested by the union, that the LCA be voided and that the employer purge all copies of the LCA from the employer's files. Social Security Administration and American Federation of Government Employees, Local 1923, WA-CA-60297, September 30, 1999, 55 FLRA No. 160.

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930

WHISTLEBLOWER PROTECTION ACT

  • The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit held that the short time between the whistleblowing in this case and the whistleblower being subjected to a reduction in force (RIF) resulted from the timing of the RIF itself rather than the implementation of it against the whistleblower. Thus, the whistleblower's claim of causation based on temporal proximity (between the whistleblowing and the RIF) failed. Veneziano v. Energy, Appeal No. 98-3070, (Fed. Cir., September 1, 1999).
  • The Merit Systems Protection Board finds that, contrary to the appellant's allegations, the agency's delays in removing one of its Administrative Law Judges for disruptive behavior toward coworkers including the appellant did not constitute "abuse of authority" under whistleblower law. The Board said earlier inactions by management on the disciplinary action were "merely debatable" or, at most, "simply negligent." The Board dismissed the appellant's reprisal claim. Pullcini v. Social Security Administration, DC1221980447-W-1, October 5, 1999.
  • In this case, the appellant complained to a supervisor and a co-worker about what he considered to be dishonest and illegal agency accounting practices and then alleged to the Merit Systems Protection Board that this constituted whistleblowing and that the agency reprised against him for it. An administrative judge determined that the complaints were not whistleblowing because they were merely disagreements with his supervisor and, in the case of the co-worker, one who had no authority to resolve the matter. The full Board, however, determined that the challenged accounting process was an "embedded" one for which the supervisor also had no responsibility and that the appellant, by balking at using the accounting practices and disclosing his beliefs about them, was "not merely carrying out his job responsibilities." The Board concluded that the appellant made a nonfrivilous showing that he made a protected disclosure and remanded the case back to one of its regional offices for processing. Price v. NASA, DC1221980578-W-1, October 5, 1999.
  • In this case a Merit Systems Protection Board administrative judge found that the agency's removal of the appellant from his Physician position was in reprisal for his whistleblowing. The full Board, however, found that the agency treated the appellant in the same way as it would any other agency employee violating its zero tolerance workplace violence policy and thus did not reprise against the appellant. The appellant was removed, among other things, for being "disrespectful, arrogant, excessive, abusive, and physically intimidating" to a coworker, assaulting a coworker when he "pointed [his] fingers inches away from [the coworker] while yelling and displaying other aggressive behaviors", and jeopardizing the agency's commitment to providing a safe work environment. Yunus v. Veterans Affairs, AT1221990160-W-1, October 7, 1999.

Contact: Gary Wahlert, er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

CURRENT INTERVENTIONS

Listed below are decisions currently pending before a third-party and in which the Office of Personnel Management has intervened, sought reconsideration or judicial review, or filed an amicus curiae brief. Decisions received, as well as other developments since the last report are highlighted in bold. Additional information on each case can be obtained from the Office of Workforce Relations, Employee Relations Branch at er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

1. Special Counsel v. Merrick Malone and Margie Utley, CB1216940015-T-1 & CB1216940016-T-1, February 9, 1998.

This case involves two employees of the District of Columbia who were found to have violated 5 USC 7324 (the Hatch Act). Prior to a decision by the Merit Systems Protection Board, both employees resigned, and the Office of Special Counsel requested that they be debarred from future employment with the District of Columbia Government. At issue here is whether the applicable statute prevents the Merit Systems Protection Board from debarring employees who violate the Hatch Act and therefore limits the penalty to either removal or suspension. In a February 9, 1998, decision, the Merit Systems Protection Board rejected the recommended decision of its Chief Administrative Law Judge who had ordered that the two employees be debarred for 10 and 5 years respectively. The Board held, contrary to the meaning given this provision for nearly 50 years, that it lacked authority to order the now former employees debarred from future employment. Since the employees had resigned and the Board believed there was no other penalty that could be imposed, it determined that the case was moot and must be dismissed. The Office of Personnel Management has sought reconsideration of this decision, arguing that the Board erred in its analysis of the applicable legislative history and prior case law. Decisions of both the Comptroller General and the former Civil Service Commission held that debarment was authorized. Without the potential penalty of debarment, individuals who violate the Hatch Act could avoid serious punishment by simply resigning and then seeking immediate reemployment.

On November 1, 1999, the Board declined to accept OPM's arguments. Instead it found that the statute is ambigious and the legislative history does not require a finding that debarment is authorized. It held (1) that Section 7324 does not authorize the debarment of Federal employees and, reversing its earlier holding, (2) the employees' resignations do not render moot the Special Counsel's complaint. Contact: er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

2. Joyce v. Department of the Air Force, PH0752950085-B-1, April 9, 1998.

On June 26, 1998, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) intervened in a case involving an award of attorney fees to an appellant who refused to come to work after being ordered to do so, arguing that a lack of accommodation made it unsafe. On appeal, he argued that he was either constructively suspended or removed from his position. Prior to an MSPB hearing, the agency provided reasonable accommodation and gave the appellant back pay for the period of time he had refused to work. The administrative judge (AJ) thereafter dismissed the appeal. The AJ then dismissed the appellant's request for attorney fees, finding that the Board lacked jurisdiction over the matter since the appellant had voluntarily absented himself from work. The full Board reversed the initial decision and held that: (1) it need not make a determination of jurisdiction in order to award fees but need only determine whether an appellant has set forth a prima facie case of jurisdiction, and (2) it need not analyze the case to determine whether an award of fees is warranted "in the interest of justice," but instead established a rebuttable presumption that fees are warranted in cases where the appellant has established a prima facie case of jurisdiction and the agency unilaterally rescinds its action.

OPM sought intervention of this case, arguing that the Board exceeded its authority and ignored the requirement in 5 U.S.C. 1204 (a), which provides that the Board issue decisions only in those cases in which it has jurisdiction. In Joyce, the Board held that no jurisdictional determination was necessary. The Board further ignored the requirement in 5 U.S.C. 7701 that it can award fees only after a finding that the employee was a prevailing party and that such an award would be in the interest of justice. Instead, it shifted the burden to the agency to demonstrate that fees were not warranted in the interest of justice.

On October 5, 1999, the Board majority agreed with OPM's reconsideration request and found that a substantive jurisdictional finding is required in order to award attorney fees since there is no unequivocal expression by Congress that attorney fees may be awarded against the United States in the absence of Board jurisdiction. The Board also agreed with OPM that the reason set forth in Joyce of preserving the Board's analytical resources may not be used to circumvent a statutorily-required jurisdictional finding. The Board will therefore, no longer apply the holding in Joyce. Instead, the Board determined that the holding in Shaw, that a substantive jurisdictional finding is required in order for the Board to award attorney fees, is good law and no longer overruled.

However, the Board disagreed with OPM's contention that an appellant cannot be a prevailing party unless he or she has obtained relief through an enforceable judgement, consent decree, or settlement. While this is the definition of prevailing party supplied by the Supreme Court in Farrar v. Hobby, 506 U.S. 103 (1992), the Board found support in various circuit courts for its broader definition. That definition holds that where the Board has jurisdiction over the appeal, the agency has unilaterally rescinded its action, i.e., returned the appellant to the status quo ante, and the appellant has incurred attorney fees, there is a rebuttable presumption that fees are warranted in the interest of justice under the "knew or should have known" Allen category. The Board remanded this case for a jurisdictional hearing. Contact: er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

3. Office of Special Counsel v. Department of Veterans Affairs, CB1214940005-C-1, April 26, 1999.

The Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) found that the Department of Veterans Affairs reprised against the employee in this case for making a disclosure protected by the Whistleblower Protection Act. The nature of the reprisal was a proposed reassignment to Los Angeles from his job in the state of Washington, an actual reassignment to New York, a failure to reassign him to Houston as he requested, and his proposed removal for disability (this proposal was stayed pending consideration of the employee's claim of reprisal). The employee asked for and received approval to be carried in a sick leave status after being reassigned to New York. After about a year, he went from a sick leave status to workers compensation status and finally to an early voluntary retirement. The Office of Special Counsel (OSC) argued before the Board that as corrective action for the prohibited personnel practice (reprisal for whistleblowing), the employee should be provided back pay for the period of time he was on workers compensation and that sick leave used after his reassignment should be reinstated to him. The latter action would require recomputation of his annuity, using the credited sick leave. The Board agreed with OSC's arguments and ordered the corrective action requested. On June 1, 1999, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) sought reconsideration of the Board's decision on the basis that OPM believes that the remedy violates the Back Pay Act and is inconsistent with earlier decisions by the Board. With regard to the Back Pay Act, OPM's longstanding governmentwide regulations at 5 C.F.R. Part 550 interpreting the Act, which are entitled to administrative and judicial deference, provide that an employee must be ready, willing, and able to work in order to receive the remedy of pay and benefits under the Act. Specifically, the regulations state that when computing back pay, an agency may not include "[any period during which an employee was not ready, willing, and able to perform his or her duties because of an incapacitating illness or injury." Clearly, the appellant was not able to work during the period he received workers compensation and during the sick leave period. OPM has withdrawn its request for reconsideration in this case. Contact: er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

4. Von Zemensky v. Department of Veterans Affairs, PH0351980078-I-1, April 28, 1999.

On July 19, 1999, OPM intervened in a case involving the rights of Veterans' Affairs health care professionals hired under title 38 who are separated due to reductions in staff levels and/or resources. The initial decision which prompted OPM's intervention held that the agency's termination of the appellant's services due to a reduction in resources was invalid because the agency failed to provide the employee with reduction in force procedures established under 5 USC §§3501-04 and 5 CFR part 351. This decision was issued following a remand from the full Board in February 1999 in which the Board held, in response to an interlocutory appeal, that title 38 employees were entitled to reduction in force procedures and rights laid out under title 5. OPM finds no reference within the reduction in force statute or the implementing regulations that would provide coverage for title 38 employees. Congress excluded those employees from the coverage of most of the personnel provisions that cover other employees, including RIF procedures and protections, and the current decision creates an erroneous interpretation of statute and OPM regulations. Contact: er@opm.gov or (202) 606-2920.

TOPICAL OVERVIEW

REAFFIRMATION OF LABOR-MANAGEMENT PARTNERSHIPS

  • On October 28, 1999, President Clinton issued a memorandum for heads of executive departments and agencies. This memo reaffirmed his belief that cooperation between Federal agencies and their unions could help create a Government that works better, costs less, and makes a positive difference in the lives of the American people. The President's strong commitment to labor-management partnership was first expressed in Executive Order 12871, issued in October 1993.

In the six years since Executive Order 12871 was issued, agencies and unions have made great strides in working together to improve agency performance. Partnerships between labor and management have cut costs, enhanced productivity, and improved the delivery of service to the American people at agencies like the IRS, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Social Security Administration, the Customs Service, and the Army. Many of these successful partnerships are recognized each year by the National Partnership Council with the John N. Sturdivant National Partnership Award. One recent winner was the U.S. Mint, whose partnership with the American Federation of Government Employees brought dramatic gains in customer service and over $25 million dollars in annual cost savings.

The President set out three specific directives with his new memo --

First, agencies are directed to develop a plan with their unions for implementing partnership. Every effort should be made to develop a plan that helps the agency and its employees deliver the highest quality service to the American people. Whenever possible, workplace issues should be resolved through consensus using interest-based problem-solving techniques. Agencies should aggressively seek training, facilitation, and meditation assistance that can help foster an environment where partnerships can succeed and thrive.

Second, agencies are directed to report to the President through the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), on the progress being made toward achieving the goals of the memo and the directives set forth in the Executive Order. Reports are to be submitted by April 14, 2000. These reports must be prepared with union involvement and input.

And third, the President has directed the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to analyze the information in these reports and, in coordination with OMB, advise the President on further steps that might be needed to ensure successful implementation of labor-management partnerships.

To assist agencies and unions, OPM will provide guidance on how agencies and unions can measure their progress in partnership, and what kind of information they should be providing in their reports to the President. OPM will also continue to direct agencies and unions to the kind of training, mediation, and facilitation resources that can help them develop more effective labor-management relationships.

Contact: lmrd@opm.gov or (202) 606-2930.

INDEX OF CASES


Agencies having general questions concerning this publication, including suggestions for improvement, are encouraged to call Callie Chandler or Ken Bates on (202) 606-2920.

Other questions or comments may be mailed to the Employee Relations Branch, U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Room 7425, Theodore Roosevelt Building, 1900 E Street, NW., Washington, DC 20415-2000. You may call us at (202) 606-2920; fax (202) 606-0967; or email er@opm.gov.

Created 21 April 2000