Assn. of Pub. School Emp. v. S.E.R.B.
Assn. of Pub. School Emp. v. S.E.R.B.
Opinion of the Court
OPINION
Appellants, State Employment Relations Board ("SERB") and Springfield Local School District Board of Education ("Board"), appeal a decision of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas reversing a decision of SERB issuing a cease and desist order against appellee, Ohio Association of Public School Employees, Local 530 ("Local 530"). Appellants have separately appealed the decision of the common pleas court. SERB presents the following two assignments of error:FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERRORTHE LOWER COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION IN REVERSING SERB'S ORDER ON THE BASIS THAT THE CONDUCT OF THE UNION WAS PROTECTED SPEECH UNDER THE
FIRST AMENDMENT OF THE U.S. CONSTITUTION SINCE SERB'S ORDER FINDING THAT THE UNION HAD ENGAGED IN NEGOTIATION ACTIVITIES DIRECTLY DESIGNATED REPRESENTATIVE OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, IN VIOLATION OF R.C.4117.11 (B)(3), WAS SUPPORTED BY SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE ON THE RECORD AS A WHOLE AND WAS IN ACCORDANCE WITH LAW.
THE LOWER COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION BY NOT AFFIRMING SERB'S ORDER FINDING THAT OAPSE VIOLATED R.C.
4117.11 (B)(3) BY UNILATERALLY ISSUING A PRESS RELEASE IN CONTRAVENTION OF THE GROUND RULES FOR NEGOTIATIONS ESTABLISHED BY THE UNION AND THE BOARD OF EDUCATION SINCE SERB'S ORDER WAS SUPPORTED BY SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE ON THE RECORD AS A WHOLE AND WAS IN ACCORDANCE WITH LAW.
The Board presents the following two assignments of error:
FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR *Page 835
SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERRORA. THE COMMON PLEAS [COURT] ERRED TO THE PREJUDICE OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION IN REVERSING SERB'S LAWFUL ORDER ON THE BASIS THAT THE CONDUCT OF THE UNION WAS PROTECTED SPEECH UNDER THE
FIRST AMENDMENT UNDER THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION.
B. THE COMMON PLEAS COURT ERRED IN THE PREJUDICE OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION BY REVERSING SERB'S DECISION THAT THE UNION VIOLATED O.R.C. §
4117.11 (B)(3) BY UNILATERALLY ISSUING A PRESS RELEASE IN VIOLATION OF THE PARTIES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT RELATING TO GROUND RULES FOR NEGOTIATIONS.
The Board and Local 530 were parties to a collective bargaining agreement in effect from September 1, 1990 through August 31, 1993. In May 1993, the parties began negotiating a successor collective bargaining agreement. The major point of contention between the parties was the Board's proposal to contract out transportation services to a private company. On July 13, 1993, after several unsuccessful negotiation sessions, the Board declared an impasse and sought mediation; the first mediation session was scheduled for August 28, 1993. On July 19, 1993, Dolores Halman, the president of Local 530 and a member of Local 530's negotiating team, spoke at a board of education meeting about the negotiations between Local 530 and the Board. The main points of Halman's statement were that Local 530's negotiating team was not being treated fairly and that the Board's representative was not bargaining in good faith. Halman also stated that subcontracting of transportation services would not be good for the school, the district, the bus drivers, or anyone involved.
At a second board of education meeting held on August 9, 1993, Halman returned, as did Marc Beallor, the OAPSE field representative and chief spokesperson for Local 530 in the pending negotiations. Beallor stated that the subcontracting issue was not simply a matter of negotiations but, also, a matter of policy. Beallor criticized the private company the Board proposed contracting with and stated that the main concern of the bus drivers and mechanics was the safety of the children in the school district. He added that the main reason Local 530 opposed subcontracting was its belief that the safety of the students would be compromised. Beallor added:
*Page 836* * * Hopefully, this matter can be voted on again, and hopefully we can resolve this issue before it reaches a point where we're in a situation where we may possibly have a strike in the district. * * * Our members feel very strongly on this issue, they do not want subcontracting, they do not want to work for a subcontractor. Our local met earlier this evening and because your negotiating team, your attorney declared an impasse at the last negotiating session because we won't agree to subcontracting our members authorized the negotiating committee to call a strike if necessary, and we don't want that to happen. * * *
Beallor also issued a press release prepared by the union which was reported in the August 11, 1993 edition of the Akron-Beacon Journal.
Based upon Halman's and Beallor's statements at the school board meetings and the press release, the Board filed two unfair labor practice charges against Local 530. The first unfair labor practice charge asserted that Halman "invited the Employer [Board] to engage in public bargaining" and concluded that such action was a failure and refusal to bargain in good faith with the Board's representatives. The second unfair labor practice charge addressed Beallor's comments at the school board meeting and disclosure of information to the press and characterized his actions as direct dealing and a failure to bargain in good faith with the Board's representatives.
SERB conducted an investigation and found probable cause to believe that Local 530 had violated R.C.
In June 1996, SERB issued an order and opinion adopting the findings of fact and conclusions of law as amended in the hearing officer's proposed order. SERB stated that bypassing the Board's authorized representative "undermines the statutory scheme, interferes with the planned process of negotiations, creates chaos in an otherwise orderly, if difficult, process and, hence, constitutes an act in contravention of the obligation to bargain in good faith." Thus, SERB found that Local 530 violated R.C.
SERB ordered Local 530 to cease and desist from:
Refusing to bargain collectively with a public employer and engaging in bad faith bargaining by speaking at public meetings of the Springfield Local School District Board of Education regarding their contract negotiations, and unilaterally issuing a press release to the media regarding negotiations in violation of Article 2.4 of the parties' collective bargaining agreement, and from otherwise violating Ohio Revised Code Section
4117.11 (B)(3). (Emphasis added.)
Local 530 appealed SERB's order and opinion to the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas pursuant to R.C.
Relying on City of Madison, Joint School Dist. No. 8 v.Wisconsin Emp. Relations Comm. (1976),
When considering an appeal from a SERB decision on an unfair labor practice charge, the standard of review to be applied by the court of common pleas is whether there is substantial evidence to support that decision. Lorain City Bd. of Edn. v.State Emp. Relations Bd. (1988),
R.C.
* * * Refuse to bargain collectively with a public employer if the employee organization is recognized as the exclusive representative * * *[.]
SERB has construed R.C.
In the present case, SERB found that Local 530's representatives had circumvented the Board's representative and negotiated directly with the Board and that this behavior violated Local 530's duty to bargain in good faith with the Board.
In their first assignment of error, both appellants assert that the trial court abused its discretion when it found that the disputed conduct of Local 530's representatives was protected speech under the
Local 530 argues that the actions of its union representatives at the school board meeting did not rise to negotiating and did not compromise the negotiations process. Alternatively, Local 530 argues that R.C.
Thus, the key issue is whether the court of common pleas abused its discretion when it found that Halman's and Beallor's comments at the board meetings did not constitute negotiations, and SERB's decision to the contrary was not supported by substantial evidence.
Black's Law Dictionary (Fifth Ed.Rev. 1979) page 934, defines "negotiation" in pertinent part, as the "process of submission and consideration of offers until acceptable offer is made and accepted. * * * [T]he act of settling or arranging the terms and conditions of a bargain, sale, or other business transaction." Consistent with this definition, Broadstock found negotiation when a union representative requested a raise; this constituted a submission of an offer as to a term of an employment agreement. In contrast, the "mere expression of an opinion about a matter subject to collective bargaining, whether or not the speaker is a member of the bargaining unit," does not constitute an attempt to reach an agreement or bargain and poses not genuine threat to a policy of exclusive representation. Madison, at 180, Stewart, concurring.
In support of its finding that Local 530 attempted to negotiate with the Board, SERB relies heavily on Beallor's statement "[h]opefully, this matter can be voted on again, and hopefully we can resolve this issue before it reaches a point *Page 839 where we're in a situation where we may possibly have a strike in the district." SERB contends that this statement is a direct attempt to negotiate with the Board and persuade it to reverse the position its bargaining representative had taken during negotiations. According to SERB, by making this statement, Beallor raised the specter of a strike unless the Board conceded to his demand that it reverse the position of its bargaining representative. Neither appellant asserts that Halman's nor Beallor's comments actually disrupted the negotiations.
Local 530 argues that neither Beallor's statements nor Halman's statements amount to negotiations. Local 530 notes that neither Halman nor Beallor made proposals to the Board, nor did they directly address or discuss specific bargaining proposals of the Board, or discuss any specific contract term.
Based upon the absence of evidence in the record that Local 530's representatives submitted any offer to the Board or that the statements of Halman and Beallor had any negative or disruptive affect on negotiations, the common pleas court did not abuse its discretion when it found that the comments did not constitute negotiations. Accordingly, the common pleas court properly reversed SERB's decision finding that Local 530 had committed an unfair labor practice based upon the statements made at the board of education meetings.
For the above reasons, appellants' first assignments of error are overruled.
In their second assignments of error, both appellants assert that the common pleas court erred when it did not affirm SERB's order finding that Local 530 violated R.C.
Article 2.4 of the parties' 1990-1993 Master Agreement addresses the negotiations procedure and progress reports; it provides:
2.4 Progress Reports The parties agree that during the period of negotiations and prior to reaching an agreement to be submitted to the Board and the Union, the proceedings of the negotiations shall not be released to the media without the approval of both parties. (Emphasis added.)
SERB found that the following newspaper report in the August 11, 1993 edition of the Akron-Beacon Journal resulted directly from a press release prepared by Local 530 and issued by Beallor. The article reads, in part, as follows:
"This is not a vote to go on strike. This authorizes a strike and sends a message to the school board that we are prepared to do what is legally necessary to urge the board to negotiate in good faith," said Dolores Halman, president of the Ohio Association of Public School Employees Local 530.*Page 840She said the main issue in negotiations is the board's plan to contract out bus drivers' and mechanics' jobs to a private firm.
School board President Bob Collins said because of the impasse, a meeting has been set for today with federal mediator David Thorley.SERB found that the information the union released to the Akron-Beacon Journal violated Section 2.4 of the collective bargaining agreement and constituted bad-faith bargaining in violation of R.C.
4117.11 (B)(3). SERB's order and opinion provide no analysis in support of its conclusion that the information in the news release was information concerning "the proceedings of the negotiations."
Local 530 appealed this finding to the common pleas court on two alternate bases: (1) Local 530 argued that SERB lacked authority to find a violation of R.C.
The common pleas court did not err when it failed to affirm SERB's finding that Local 530 released information regarding the proceedings of the negotiations to the media in violation of Article 2.4 of the parties' collective bargaining agreement. The article contains no details about what transpired in the negotiation sessions. Neither stating that union members authorized a strike nor identifying the main issue of the negotiations reveals information about the proceedings of negotiations. Furthermore, that the Board's proposal to subcontract transportation services to a private company was the major issue in the bargaining sessions would have been no surprise to anyone who followed the affairs of the school district.
For the above reasons, both appellants' second assignments of error are overruled.
Appellants' assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.
________________________ McCORMAC, J.
TYACK and KLINE, JJ., concur.
KLINE, J., of the Fourth Appellate District, sitting by assignment in the Tenth Appellate District. *Page 841
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.