Title: Negotiation%20of%20the%20Collective%20Bargaining%20Agreement
1Negotiation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement
2Review
- 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
3Today Planning for Negotiation
- Determining Goals and Priorities
- Who will be on the negotiation team?
- Gathering information
- Calculating costs
- Watch out for unintended consequences, e.g.
behavioral changes
4I. 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
5II. 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?
6III. 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
7IV. Calculating Costs
- What kinds of costs (and savings) do we need to
calculate? - Pay
- Health insurance
8IV. Calculating Costs
- Programs designed to produce behavioral changes
- Health insurance buyouts
- Early retirement incentives
- Sick day conversions
9V. 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?
10Administrative
11Case 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?
12Next Time
- Continue Topic of Negotiation
- Finish Readings on that Topic (not in text)
- Hebdon and Stern
- Partridge
13Negotiation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement
14Review 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
15Today
- Teachers on Strike
- Interest-based Negotiations
- Educational Collective Bargaining and Work Rules
16I. 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
17I. 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?
18II. 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
19III. 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
20III. 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
21Administrative
- 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
22Case 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?
23Next Time
- Next Class Mediation and Fact Finding
- Reading on reserve
- McKelvey
- Karper