Minutes 12-10-04 (2)
MINUTES OF THE BLUE COLLAR AND WHITE COLLAR COMBINED
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING SESSION
BETWEEN THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF FIREMEN & OILERS AND
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH HELD ON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2004
AT 11:00 A.M. IN CONFERENCE ROOM B, CITY HALL,
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
Present
For NCF&O:
Sharon Munley, Trustee, Local 1227
Bob Kruper, Union Steward
Mike Osborn, Union Steward
Jeff Mark, Union Steward
Don Roberts, Union Steward
Rick Smith, Union Steward
Pam We1ch, Union Steward
John Pagliarulo, Union Steward
Jim MacIntyre, Union Steward
For the City:
Wilfred Hawkins, Assistant City Manager
Jeff Livergood, Public Works Director
John Jordan, Assistant Director of Human Resources
I. Call to Order
The meeting was called to order at 11 :24 a.m.
II. Minutes
Mr. Hawkins wanted everyone to understand that the reason the minutes were not
available was that the City Clerk's office was short-handed. Everyone understood.
Safety Shoes
The stewards related the fact that supervisors were saying that safety shoes were not in
the budget and making comments like, "You don't go out in the field often enough." Mr.
Hawkins stated that he would address this with the supervisors.
Certification Pay
John Pagliarulo stated that if an individual was a structural plan reviewer, he could also
obtain certification to do electrical plan review, mechanical plan review, and plumbing
plan review. However, when hired, this kind of worker was told that if they got additional
certifications, they would get a minimum of 2% for that certification.
Meeting Minutes
NCF&O Blue and White Collar Bargaining
Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
The way it had worked out in practice was that persons hired to do structural plan review
that later obtained certification for electrical plan review were not being credited with 2%
for that certification.
Mr. Livergood thought that the salary study scheduled for January should produce
adequate job descriptions so that this type of certification could be built into the base
salary and paid from the beginning. When a person is hired, the certifications that the
City wants for that position should be clear from the beginning.
Ms. Munley stated that a person who had been at the City for 8 years and was in the
middle of that scale was not going to realize any additional money for that certificate. He
would only get more room at the "top." There is no incentive to go and get that
certification. For example, Mike Osborn gets 5% for a water license. No matter where a
person is in the pay scale, if he goes from a B to an A, they get 5%. That is the kind of
parity they wanted to see.
Overtime Assignments
Ms. Munley believed that what was done for the Blue Collar unit would work for the
White Collar unit. Basically, what was said for the Blue was that if you were the person
doing the work during the day, you would be the person to be doing it on an overtime
basis. It stays within the bargaining unit.
Disaster Procedure
Ms. Munley stated that the A team people should be allowed to go home to secure their
own homes before doing their work for the City at large. Mr. Hawkins thought that the
City already allowed and encouraged this. Mr. Osborn remarked that during the first
hurricane emergency this year, he was allowed to go home, but not during the second
one. Luckily he was able to do his work on his own home in the dark.
Overtime - White Collar
Mr. Pagliarulo requested that consideration be given to making sure that workers doing
inspections for clients that have paid for overtime in advance actually get that overtime
pay. There are times when the City does not pay overtime, i.e. when you did not work 40
hours. Perhaps you had jury duty, for example and came back to work and did the work
for the pre-paid overtime client for two hours. Ms. Munley stated that if an employee
were absent for funeral leave, jury duty, annual military leave, it would not count as
overtime if an employee had not worked 40 hours. Everything else such as vacation,
holidays, personal leave, and sick leave count as time worked. Mr. Pagliarulo stated that
it had not happened yet but might - the instance where a client had paid for overtime in
advance and the employee might not get it because he was out on a kind of absence that
did not count towards time worked. He wanted language put in the contract "just in case."
Mr. Livergood thought that if this happened and the employee was paid for straight time
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NCF&O Blue and White Collar Bargaining
Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10,2004
because of the exclusions regarding time worked, the client who had paid for overtime
work in advance would get a refund.
White Collar Participation in Bargaining Sessions
Mr. MacIntyre felt that the White Collar workers had been excluded from the bargaining
table. Mr. Hawkins responded that the White Collar workers had definitely not been
excluded, and that he had written to Ms. Munley stating that he wanted to negotiate on
different dates for each unit. Mr. MacIntyre believed that the White Collar unit would be
expected to accept whatever was negotiated for the Blue Collar. Mr. Hawkins stated that
this was definitely not the case.
A break was called at 11 :49 a.m. The meeting resumed at 12:03 p.m.
Combining the Blue and White Collar Articles
The parties went through the White and Blue Collar agreements and decided on certain
sections that were identical for both contracts. Ms. Munley suggested that the White
Collar and Blue Collar units meet jointly on the articles so identified and separately on
the articles that were unique to each unit.
The articles that were identified as being the same were:
Preamble
Recognition
Rights of Employees
Management Rights
Strikes
Non-Discrimination
Union Representation (w/exception of number of hours and stewards)
Collective Bargaining
Union Time Pool
Bulletin Boards
Comp Time
Wages
Promotion & Reclassification
Standby & Callback
Emergency Pay
Pay for Training
Working in Higher Class
Sick Leave
Workers Compensation
Light Duty
Vacation
Bonus Days
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Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
Holidays
Funeral Leave
Military Leave
Leave of Absence
Unauthorized Absence
Jury Duty
Seniority & Layoff
Job Posting and Bidding
Insurance
Personnel Files
Dues Deduction
Pension
Longevity
Savings Clause
Maintenance of Conditions
Posting of Agreement
Collateral Documents
Substance Abuse (different but should be same per Mr. Hawkins)
Grievance (except White Collar has a step before grievance)
Bonus Increases (same but in different places in each contract)
Work Breaks
Different Language in White Collar and Blue Collar Contracts
Basic Workweek and Overtime
Task (Blue Collar only)
Certification Pay
Safety and Health
Labor Management
Tool Replacement
Uniforms
General Provisions
Progressive Discipline (White Collar only)
Time Records (Blue Collar only)
It was understood by the parties that the same meant "same language," and that
negotiations were still ongoing on all articles. Ms. Munley believed that the two units
could meet jointly on approximately 43 of the 53 articles and separately on the rest. The
City agreed to this plan.
A lunch break was taken at 12:13 p.m. The meeting resumed at 1:49 p.m.
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Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
I Preamble - SO
The parties agreed to affix SQ (Status Quo) on the articles to which there were no
changes. The first so marked was the Preamble.
I Reco2nition - SO
Rights of Employees
Section 5 of this article does not appear in the White Collar contract. The Union wanted
to move it to Posting of the Agreement, Article 52, which is in both contracts.
The City wanted to delete sections 2 and 3, but the Union wanted to preserve them. They
determined after discussion that this article was actually different for Blue Collar and
White Collar and would have to be addressed separately.
I Mana2ement Ri2hts - SO
Ms. Munley noted that this article had been moved from the back of the contract to the
front and this was all right with the Union as long as it was verbatim. Mr. Hawkins
agreed that it was verbatim.
I Strikes - SO
Mr. Livergood asked why section 5.2 was included since State Statute did not allow
strikes. Ms. Munley wanted it left in because anything could happen, even an illegal
strike.
I Non-Discrimination - SO
According to Ms. Munley, this article was the same between Blue and White Collar,
except in the White Collar it was not subject to grievance. The City proposal was to
eliminate the Title VII information. Mr. Hawkins agreed to leave it in for both units. Mr.
Livergood asked why both units could not have language to the effect that, "This article
is not subject to grievance or arbitration." Ms. Munley explained that the Blue Collar unit
did not want this language in its contract.
I City Representation - SO
Union Representation
Ms. Munley believed that this would reqUIre a lot of discussion due to the City's
proposal.
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Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
I Bulletin Boards - SO
Grievance & Arbitration - Blue Collar; Progressive Discipline in White Collar
Will require a lot of discussion.
Compensatory Time
The City wanted to strike any booking of time and either use or get paid for the
compensatory time in the pay period following its accrual. If the comp time were not
taken in this time period, the employee would be paid for it. The Union wanted to have
90 days in which to use the comp time. The City was concerned about the record keeping
aspects of booking comp time. Ms. Welch explained the complicated process she had to
follow about comp time when she acted as the payroll clerk. Mr. Hawkins commented
that there had been a lot of disagreements over comp time. The City believed it was more
efficient to pay the employees for comp time. He commented that when departments
were short handed, the employees who had earned comp time did not have an opportunity
to use it.
Ms. Welch suggested that comp time be tracked on the paycheck stubs so each person
would know exactly how much comp time they had accumulated. Mr. Hawkins will look
into it with Payroll.
Ms. Munley asked if anyone had asked Payroll what would make comp time more
streamlined for them. Mr. Jordan stated that paying it in the next pay period was helping
Payroll.
Working in Higher Class
Needs work.
Wages
Ms. Munley reiterated the Union's proposal on Wages. The committee to create a new
performance measurement instrument should have equal numbers of representation from
the Blue Collar, White Collar units and management. This group would analyze job
descriptions and come up with quantitative measurements against them so that a person's
performance could be measured against definite goals. A person could have a good idea
of what they would have to do to get the best possible performance rating. A process had
to be determined to talk about the proposed Pay Classification Study also.
Promotions & Reclassifications
The City proposed PPM language. Ms. Munley thought the language had been changed.
Mr. Hawkins stated that the City had inserted PPM language in the Blue Collar contract,
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Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
but the White Collar contract already had PPM language. Mr. Jordan stated that it was
not quite verbatim. Ms. Munley stated that on the last contracts, the language was the
same on this article in the Blue Collar and White Collar contracts. Mr. Hawkins felt that
a close reading of the PPM would show that it captured most of what had been in the
contracts.
Standby & Callback
The language was the same in the Blue and White Collar contracts. The City proposal
changed this.
The Union proposed language saying that if the beeper had to be passed around (if
somebody had to go to football game), then the person receiving the beeper gets that pay,
not the person handing the beeper off. This was in the Union proposal of 11-18-04. The
City wanted to revert to the former practice, but the Union was very much against it. Ms.
Munley stated that it had not ever been their intention to pass the beeper around in order
to "work the system." Mr. Hawkins stated that there were some managerial procedural
matters that he had to address in Utilities about this.
Training Pay
The White Collar agreed with the language in this article. Ms. Munley verified that the
"incidental training" language was gone. Agreement was reached that working in a
higher class begins from the moment the employer starts the higher class job.
Emergency Pay
Ms. Munley asked to see the Ordinance referenced in the City's proposal, "City-Wide
Declaration of Local Emergency and Emergency Pay Ordinance Pending." She
continued, saying that this had been the subject of a grievance settlement worked out with
City Attorney Jim Cherof.
Certification Pay
Ms. Munley said that no pre-determined list of job-related certifications for the White
Collar was completed in the previous round of negotiations. She thought this should be
done this time.
Sick Leave
Needs work.
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NCF&O Blue and White Collar Bargaining
Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
Vacation
Needs work.
Bonus Days
Ms. Munley commented that the language should say a "day" rather than an 8 or lO-hour
day. Mr. Hawkins said that in the 12/3 meeting it was decided to say, "according to shift
hours." The day would be equal to a person's shift hours. Blue and White Collar
representatives agreed on this article.
Holidays
The City wanted to take out the first paragraph pertaining to an employee's birthday.
Both bargaining units agreed to move the paragraph to the Vacation article. Mr.
Livergood asked how this affected the "without prior notice." Ms. Munley said this
could come out since everyone is aware that they have to let management know if they
are not coming in. The City agreed.
Compassionate Leave
Ms. Munley asked what had been lost. Mr. Hawkins stated that nothing was lost, and the
PPM language had been inserted. The Union will have to look at this in caucus, but it
seemed all right.
Military Leave
Page 61 of City's proposal on Military Leave was not in Ms. Munley's Blue Collar
package. This was page 31 in the White Collar proposal. The Union could probably agree
to it.
Leave of Absence
Will have to be discussed.
I Unauthorized Absence - SO
Seniority
Ms. Munley said it seemed all right with the exception of the reference to outsourcing.
She asked why it was put in there. Mr. Jordan said that the City had inserted the PPM
language in this article. Ms. Munley did not have page 66 either. The Union requested
removal of the word "outsourcing" from 6.3.A. Mr. Livergood wanted to check with the
City Manager first. Since everyone agreed that the City had a right to do outsourcing, Mr.
Hawkins agreed that this word could come out.
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Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
Jury Duty
Needs to be discussed.
Job Posting/Bidding
Needs work.
Safety and Health
Ms. Munley thought the White Collar language would probably be totally different.
Recruitment and Selection
Mr. Livergood inquired if the Union was o.k. with this and Ms. Munley responded that it
was not and that this needed a great deal of discussion.
Uniforms
Ms. Munley felt that there was a lot of similarity between White and Blue on this article
and an article could be created for the White Collar unit. The pieces that the White Collar
was entitled to could be put into it.
Insurance
The Union wanted to leave the language from the last contract. Comprehensive medical
included hospitalization so the City struck that word, but the Union wanted it left in,
along with Vision Care. The remainder would be Status Quo.
Personnel Files
The City's proposal struck these words, "Prior disciplinary actions, beyond a two-year
time frame, recorded on the employee personnel file that are not pertinent to the
particular action being considered, shall not be referred to in any current disciplinary
action. " The Union wanted this sentence put back in.
General Provisions
This was different for both bargaining units.
I Dues-SO
Tuition
PPM language was inserted.
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NCF&O Blue and White Collar Bargaining
Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10,2004
I Pension - SO
Mr. MacIntyre raised the issue of whether DROP employees were entitled to bonuses.
Mr. Hawkins said that this was a pension issue and could not be regulated via the
contract.
Ms. Munley paraphrased this concept, saying that in the DROP, you were retired in terms
of your pension but a DROP participant was still an employee of the City and subject to
the labor agreement. The DROP participants should get their bonuses and so forth.
Mr. Hawkins said the City was on its way to fixing this.
Mr. Jordan said that in the DROP plan an employee was no longer entitled to bonuses or
salary increases. Ms. Munley strongly disagreed, saying that the labor agreement could
not be contradicted and that when a person entered the DROP program, it only affected
their pension - contributions were no longer being made towards it by either party. It did
not mean that they were no longer covered under the labor agreement. This was the case
wherever she had DROP plans.
Mr. Hawkins did not disagree with that, but did not feel it should be covered in the
contract.
Mr. Jordan said that the language needed to be clarified. Ms. Munley offered to come to
the next Pension Board meeting. She reiterated that the Pension agreement could not
circumvent the labor agreement.
Mr. Hawkins said this would be the subject of an internal discussion. The City had to
come to consensus on definitions.
Ms. Munley asked if a statement could be placed in this article to the effect that,
"Employees in the DROP plan continue to receive all benefits of the labor agreement."
Mr. Hawkins stated that he would present it internally.
Mr. Pagliarulo asked if a DROP employee was subject to the terms of Workers
Compensation and the response was that they were subject to this.
I Probationary Period - SO
I Loneevitv - SO
I Bonus Increases - SO
The City did not change this article. The language was the same in the White Collar
agreement, but it was in a different place.
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NCF&O Blue and White Collar Bargaining
Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
I Labor Manae:ement - SO - White Collar
This only appears in the White Collar contract and it was Status Quo. Mr. Hawkins noted
that the Blue Collar contract also addressed this, but it was pointed out that it did not have
its own article.
I Savine:s Clause - SO
Maintenance of Conditions
The City wanted to make changes to this article.
The Agreement
Not addressed.
I Collateral Documents - SO
For the record, Ms. Munley wanted the language to be noted, "... these documents govern
us when they have been presented to us and we have agreed to them."
Vacations
After a lengthy discussion, it was agreed that there could be 24 hours of emergency
vacation. This leave did not require the supervisor's pre-approval but the supervisor must
acknowledge the request prior to the start of the work shift or half-hour into the shift. The
City will roll this in to 28.8. It was decided that emergency leave could be taken on an
hourly basis if necessary. The Union wanted one hour for regular vacations also. The City
wanted half a day for regular vacations also for things like doctor appointments. Some
people would rather use vacation time for this as opposed to sick time. The City agreed
with the one hour for regular vacations.
In reference to cashing out vacation, the previous contract changed the amount to 90
hours. Mr. Hawkins asked if the reference was to cashing out when leaving the City or
for emergencies. Mr. Jordan said it was going back to the way it was previously.
Originally, a person would use vacation hours and if they did not have enough vacation
hours to cover the 90 hours, they would use sick hours. But in the last contract it changed
and did not say it was one and then the other - it just said you could use 90 hours. Mr.
Osborn said it was originally just sick time and it was one for one (one hour of sick for
one time of emergency). Vacation time was added in case someone did not have enough
sick time. The City's proposal states that the sick leave hours cash-in would be calculated
at 50% of the employee's hourly rate. Mr. Hawkins nodded assent.
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Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
Ms. Munley will suggest a fix covering the "less than three shifts/more than three shifts"
and bring language to the table.
Ms. Munley felt that in the City's proposal, section 28.8 was an attempt to do emergency
leave and could be taken out. Mr. Jordan said it had been changed to 24 hours and it did
not have to come out. Ms. Munley thought it had been said a different way. The City will
look at that and tweak the language.
Ms. Munley asked if the Committee referenced in the City's proposal, section 28.7.3, had
always been comprised of the same people and the response was affirmative. Mr.
Hawkins said that requests had very seldom been denied. The approval is progressive - it
is not done with all the individuals sitting in one room.
Ms. Munley thought that this article would be acceptable to both bargaining units with
the suggested revisions.
In regard to regular vacation, the goal of both sides was to add flexibility on both sides of
the equation - for the employee to notify the supervisor and for the supervisor to approve
it. Ms. Munley would look at the language on this but she felt that "the little piece was
asking for the vacation by the end of the day and the bigger piece was that the employee
had to ask the supervisor 48 hours in advance of taking it." Forty-eight hours was four
days to Ms. Munley on each side - request and approval. She would look at the language
further.
Ms. Munley asked the stewards if they agreed to the language on Emergency Vacation
and Sick Leave. The response was not conclusive.
Work Breaks
Ms. Munley inquired whether this was a problem in the White Collar unit. Mr.
MacIntyre responded that there were a lot of different classifications and it was hard to
capture them all. People in Communications had a pretty liberal policy, for example and
that had to go on as usual. The City did not think that this was a problem on the White
Collar side. The stewards agreed that it was not a problem in the White Collar unit.
Mr. Hawkins noted that it seemed that it was time for the City to produce some revised
language. He was having difficulty following the track of the conversations without
having the minutes. He felt that several articles could be T.A.'d after a little language
clean-up.
Sick Leave
Mr. Livergood said this had been changed to one half hour notification to supervisor
instead of one hour before. The current contract caused problems with the one-hour rule.
An appropriate amount of time had to be agreed to. Ms. Munley did not have the old
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Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
contract in front of her but it used to say "before or after start of shift." It is supposed to
be after start of the shift and somehow, in the White Collar it said, "... one hour after start
of shift.." and the Blue Collar said".. .one hour before..". The Union wanted it to be
after, not before.
Mr. Hawkins thought that the parties had agreed to do 30 minutes before the start of shift
or up to 30 minutes after the start of the shift.
Ms. Munley suggested language stating, "If an employee fails to call in within the 30
minutes before or 30 minutes after the start of his or her shift, he or she would be docked
for the time that elapsed outside this timeframe before he or she calls in." A person not
calling in during this timeframe would be in an unpaid status for the amount of time
outside these parameters. Mr. Livergood stated that "If an employee does not call in
during the specified ti, meframe the employee shall be in an unpaid status from the
beginning of the work shift until the time notice of absence is provided to supervisor." If
they are gone for the entire day, they will be docked for the entire day. If they call in any
time before that shift is over, they are only docked for the time that passed from the
specified timeframe.
Ms. Munley suggested language saying, "An employee shall notify his immediate
supervisor or designee in a manner provided by management of his or her illness no less
than one half hour before or no later than one half hour after his normal work day
begins." Both parties liked this language.
Ms. Munley asked why the City had stricken "Weekend requests shall be covered by the
provisions of the Family Medical Leave Act." Mr. Jordan said it was law. Ms. Munley
understood that but said that not everyone out in the workforce understood it. The City
had no problem with putting it back in.
Regarding sharing of sick leave, Mr. Livergood confirmed that the City had taken out the
requirement that the employee had to confirm the number of hours available with the
Finance Department. The employees should be able to ascertain this information from
their paycheck stubs.
Ms. Munley felt if the suggested re-writes were done, this article could probably be
T.A.'d.
Workers Compensation
Ms. Munley asked about why the City struck the part about extending the salary
supplement for three months. Mr. Hawkins said that the City had struck the extension
because FMLA would kick in. Ms. Munley stated FMLA was unpaid. Mr. Hawkins said
that the City did not have to do any kind of supplementation and most cities did not. Ms.
Munley asked if people went beyond the three-month period and Mr. Jordan responded,
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NCF&O Blue and White Collar Bargaining
Boynton Beach, Florida
December 10, 2004
"almost all of them." Supplementing for three months is still over and above what most
cities pay.
I Compassionate Leave - T .A.
The article was reviewed. The Union wished to add to the last sentence of the City's
language that "The City Manager may grant additional paid leave under this section
when he/she deems it appropriate. Both bargaining units agreed to the City's proposal
with this last addition by the Union. It was also agreed that it would be three consecutive
days for a local funeral and five days for an out-of-state funeral and that the out-of-state
days could be broken up if necessary.
The parties reached T.A. on this article with the above change.
Payroll Recording of Hours
A long discussion ensued on this topic between Mr. Hawkins and Ms. Welch.
Adjournment
The negotiation session ended at 3:45 p.m.
Next Meeting
The next meeting will be on Wednesday, December 29,2004 at 1:00 p.m. in Conference
Room B.
Respectfully submitted,
Susan Collins
Recording Secretary
(121504)
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