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Negotiation%20of%20the%20Collective%20Bargaining%20Agreement

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Negotiation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement Class 1 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Negotiation%20of%20the%20Collective%20Bargaining%20Agreement


1
Negotiation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement
  • Class 1

2
Review
  • Concept of Improper Practices
  • Particularly watch out for duty to bargain
  • Careful of anti-union behavior
  • Choice of union representation by majority vote
  • Duty of Fair Representation
  • Union must represent everyone in the unit
  • Employer must not try to deal with them
    individually
  • Bargaining Units
  • District may have input about new units
  • Issues for the District to consider

3
Today Planning for Negotiation
  1. Determining Goals and Priorities
  2. Who will be on the negotiation team?
  3. Gathering information
  4. Calculating costs
  5. Watch out for unintended consequences, e.g.
    behavioral changes

4
I. Determining Goals and Priorities
  • Examine the existing collective bargaining
    agreement
  • Where do goals come from?
  • Remember limits of what can be accomplished
  • Note differences in perspective

5
II. Who is on the Negotiating Team?
  • Who is the chief spokesperson?
  • Will Superintendent be at the table?
  • Will there be Board of Education members at the
    table?
  • Will the Business Officer be at the table?
  • Role for Principals?

6
III. Gathering Information
  • What kinds of information do we need?
  • Comparative Information
  • Cost Information (see below)
  • Legal Information
  • Where can we find it?
  • Internal sources
  • External sources

7
IV. Calculating Costs
  • What kinds of costs (and savings) do we need to
    calculate?
  • Pay
  • Health insurance

8
IV. Calculating Costs
  • Programs designed to produce behavioral changes
  • Health insurance buyouts
  • Early retirement incentives
  • Sick day conversions

9
V. Unintended Consequences
  • Will holding the line on pay or a concession on
    health insurance make it harder to recruit and
    hold employees?
  • Will a saving have a serious deleterious effect
    on morale?

10
Administrative
  • Hand out Murphy reading

11
Case D Bargaining Dispute at the MacIntosh
School District
  • Additional Questions for you as District
    Representatives
  • How can you present your issues as to make the
    Association understand and appreciate them?
  • How can you alter your positions so as to be more
    persuasive?
  • How can you try to understand and appreciate the
    Associations issues better?
  • How can misunderstandings like the one from the
    previous round of negotiation be avoided in the
    future?

12
Next Time
  • Continue Topic of Negotiation
  • Finish Readings on that Topic (not in text)
  • Hebdon and Stern
  • Partridge

13
Negotiation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement
  • Class 2

14
Review Preparing for Negotiations
  • Setting goals and priorities
  • Deciding who speaks for your side
  • Gathering information
  • Calculating costs
  • Watching out for unintended consequences,
    especially behavioral changes

15
Today
  1. Teachers on Strike
  2. Interest-based Negotiations
  3. Educational Collective Bargaining and Work Rules

16
I. Teachers on Strike
  • Teacher strikes in New York State have become
    quite rare
  • Quite common in 1970s and 1980s
  • What was it like for teachers to be on strike
    Professor Cathy Leogrande

17
I. Teachers on Strike
  • Arguments against the right to strike for
    teachers
  • Arguments in favor of the right to strike for
    teachers
  • Hebdon and Stern what kinds of legislation
    gives rise to more strikes?
  • Partridge what kinds of legislation gives rise
    to more strikes?

18
II. Interest-based Negotiations
  • Based on Fisher and Ury Getting to Yes
  • Try to focus on interests, not positions
  • Try not to personalize the dispute
  • Try to create options for mutual gain
  • Try to agree on standards to judge the options

19
III. Educational Collective Bargaining and Work
Rules
  • Hill - Local school boards have given unions
    control over teacher placements, performance
    evaluations, working conditions and work
    assignments and tied principals hands
  • Hill - Disadvantaged students and schools lose
    the most from teacher collective bargaining
  • Hill - Teacher pay may increase by much more than
    announced rate of increase due to steps

20
III. Educational Collective Bargaining and Work
Rules
  • Hess and Kelly - Contracts usually not as
    restrictive as critics suggest but administrators
    often dont use the flexibility they have
  • Hess and Kelly - Some administrators and Boards
    use contract language as an excuse for inaction

21
Administrative
  • Organize the negotiation Exercise
  • The case materials you need to do the negotiation
    are already available on the course web site
  • Fact Finding case but youll be negotiating
  • Everyone should look at both the Association and
    the District materials

22
Case Today
  • The Chatswood CSD and Chatswood Teachers
    Negotiations
  • If you were the District, how would you try to
    persuade the Association here?
  • If you were the Association, how would you try to
    persuade the District here?

23
Next Time
  • Next Class Mediation and Fact Finding
  • Reading on reserve
  • McKelvey
  • Karper
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