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L 7,
Municipal Collective
Bargaining

3

'

'

Dayton & Montgomery Co.
Public Library

iND.
U. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Bureau of Labor Statistics

1972




DEC 2 61972
DOCUMENT COLLECTION




Municipal Collective
Bargaining
Agreements in
Large Cities
Bulletin 1759
U. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Jam es D. Hodgson, Secretary
B U R E A U O F L A B O R STATISTICS
Geoffrey H. M oore, Com m ission er
1972

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Preface
This bulletin is one of a series of studies by the Bureau of Labor Statistics dealing
with collective bargaining and labor-management relations in the public sector, and
was carried out with funds made available by the Labor-Management Services
Administration of the Department of Labor.
The Bureau made this study to provide management and union negotiators with
information on the characteristics of public employee agreements, in this case, in
major cities. Studies in progress cover agreements for policemen and firemen and for
Federal employees.
This bulletin was prepared in the Division of Industrial Relations by Richard R.
Nelson, with the assistance of Haney R. Pearson and Donald L. Breneman, under the
direction of Leon E. Lunden, Project Director. Ronald W. Glass and John L. Gurney
participated in the planning and data collection phases of this project.




in

Contents
Page

Chapter 1. Introduction
....................................................................................................................................................
Scope and method of study .....................................................................................................................................

1
1

Chapter 2. General characteristics .....................................................................................................................................
Regional distribution .................................................................................................................................................
City size and employee organization .......................................................................................................................
Size of bargaining unit ..............................................................................................................................................
Occupational groups .......................................................
City activities .........................................................................................................................................................
Agreement term ......................................................................................................................................................

3
3
3
3

Chapter 3. Agreement provisions .....................................................................................................................................
Administrative provisions ........................................................................................................................................
R eco g n itio n .......................................................................................................................................................
Union security .................................................................................................................................................
Dues checkoff ................................................................................................................................................
Management rights ..........................................................................................................................................
Antidiscrimination ..........................................................................................................................................
Activities of employee organizations.............................................................................................................
Labor-management activities .........................................................................................................................
Personnel actions ......................................................................................................................................................
P ro m o tio n .........................................................................................................................................................
Demotion .........................................................................................................................................................
Layoff procedures ..........................................................................................................................................
Job s e c u r ity ......................................................................................................................................................
Hours, overtime, and premium pay .........................................................................................................................
Scheduled hours; daily and weekly overtime ..............................................................................................
Regulation of overtime ..............................................................................................................................
Weekend work .............................................................................................................................................
Holidays worked .............................................................................................................................................
Wage provisions and allowances ..............................................................................................................................
Wage adjustments ..........................................................................................................................................
Job classification and reclassification .......................................................................................................
Shift d ifferen tials.............................................................................................................................................
Mileage allowances ..........................................................................................................................................
Travel p a y .........................................................................................................................................................
Clothing allowances .......................................................................................................................................
Selected payments for time not worked ................................................................................................................
Sick leave .........................................................................................................................................................
Funeral leave ................................................................................................................................................
Jury duty ......................................................................................................................................................
Paid military leave ............................................................................................................
Call back pay ...................................................................................................................................................




iv
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21
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21
22
23
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23
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23
23
24
24
26
26

Contents—Continued

Page

Reporting pay .............................................................................................................................................
Paid rest periods ..........................................................................................................................................
Paid meal p e r io d s ..........................................................................................................................................
Washup, cleanup ..........................................................................................................................................
Vacations .....................................................................................................................................................
H o lid a y s ........................................................................................................................................................
Unpaid leave pro visions..........................................................................................................................................
Military leave ...............................................................................................................................................
Union business ............................................................................................................................................
Personal l e a v e ................................................................................................................................................
Maternity leave .............................................................................................................................................
Education .....................................................................................................................................................
Miscellaneous leave provisions ..................................................................................................................
Grievance and arbitration p ro c e d u re s..................................................................................................................
Scope of the grievance procedure ............................................................................................................
Exclusions from the grievance procedure .................................................................................................
Union participation ....................................................................................................................................
Procedural steps and time limits ...............................................................................................................
Arbitration ...................................................................................................................................................
Disciplinary p ro c ed u re s..........................................................................................................................................
No-strike p ro v isio n s................................................................................................................................................
Official time for grievances and n eg o tiatio n s......................................................................................................
Negotiation impasse procedures and relatedmatters .........................................................................................
Savings c la u s e s ........................................................................................................................................................

26
27
27
28
29
29
29
29
30
31
31
32
33
33
33
34
34
35
35
37
38
38
39
41

Chapter 4. Teacher provisions in municipal collective bargaining agreements ........................................................
Academic freedom ...............................................................................................................................................
Professional behavior .............................................................................................................................................
Professional development ....................................................................................................................................
Teacher evaluation ................................................................................................................................................
Consultation ...........................................................................................................................................................
Working conditions ................................................................................................................................................
Classroom en v ironm ent..........................................................................................................................................
Professional integrity .............................................................................................................................................

54
54
54
54
56
56
57
59
60

Tables:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

Municipal agreements and worker coverage in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by region
and State, 1970 .......................................................................................................................................
Municipal agreements and worker coverage in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by city
size group and city, 1970
Union affiliation in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by city
size, region, and size of bargainingunit, 1970 ......................................................................................
Bargaining units of 10,000 workers or more in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by city,
agency and organization, 1970
Union affiliation and type of organization in municipal agreements in cities with populations of
250,000 and over, by occupational group and government activity, 1970 ...................................
Municipal agreements and worker coverage in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by
contract duration, union affiliation, and type of organization, 1970 ...............................................
Union security, dues checkoff, and management rights provisions in municipal agreements in cities
with populations of 250,000 and over, by region, 1970 ...................................................................




v

2
5
6
6
7
8
41

Contents— Continued
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.

Union security, dues checkoff, and management rights provisions in municipal agreements in cities
with populations of 250,000 and over, by occupational group and government activity, 1970 . .
Types of union security provisions in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000
and over, by city size, 1970 ...................................................................................................................
Antidiscrimination provisions in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and
over by region, 1970 ..............................................................................................................................
Selected provisions governing activities of employee organizations in municipal agreements in cities
with populations of 250,000 and over, by city size, 1970 .................................................................
Labor-management committees in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and
over, by city size, 1970
Promotion and demotion procedures in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000
and over, 1970
Selected reduction-in-force procedures in municipal agreements in cities with populations of
250.000 and over, by city size, 1970 ....................................................................................................
Miscellaneous job security provisions in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000
and over, 1970
Hours and overtime provisions in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and
over, by city size, 1970
Premium pay for weekend and holiday work in municipal agreements in cities with populations of
250.000 and over, by city size, 1970 ....................................................................................................
Wage adjustment provisions in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and over,
by contract duration, 1970 ..................................................................................................................
Wage adjustment and contract reopener provisions in municipal agreements in cities with
populations of 250,000 and over, by city size, 1970 .........................................................................
Role of employee organization in job classification in municipal agreements in cities with
populations of 250,000 and over by occupation, 1970 ....................................................................
Travel time pay, mileage allowance, and special clothing allowance or maintenance in municipal
agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by occupation, 1970 ........................
Selected payments for time not worked in municipal agreements in cities with populations of
250.000 and over, by occupational group, 1970 ...............................................................................
Maximum paid vacation in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by
city size, 1970 ..........................................................................................................................................
Number of paid holidays in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by
region, 1970 .............................................................................................................................................
Leave of absence provisions in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and over,
1970 ........................................................................................................................................................
Negotiated and agency grievance procedures in municipal agreements in cities with populations of
250.000 and over, by city size, 1970 ....................................................................................................
Negotiated grievance procedures in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and
over, by city size, 1970 ........................................................................................................................
Selected arbitration procedures in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and
over, by city size, 1970
Selected disciplinary procedures in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and
over, by city size, 1970
Official time allowances for employee organization business in municipal agreements in cities with
populations of 250,000 and over, by city size, 1970 .........................................................................
Negotiation impasse procedures in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and
over, by city size, 1970 ........................................................................................................................

Appendix. Identification of clauses




..............................................................................................................................
VI

Page
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62

Chapter 1. Introduction
Over the last few years, public employee labor
relations and collective bargaining have grown in impor­
tance in Federal installations and in State and local
government units. The Bureau has examined aspects of
this growth in a number of recent publications.1 In late
1971, the Bureau reported that 1970 membership in
unions and employee associations in the public sector
had increased to a new high of 2.7 million, and thus had
continued the growth trend evident over the last few
years.2 Most of the increase occurred among employees
of State and local governments. At about the same time,
the Bureau also published work stoppage data for 1970
which revealed a continued high level of stoppages
among State and local government employees.3 Taken
together, these two reports focused attention on one of
the basic needs that union and management negotiators
in State and local jurisdictions have, namely, for
information upon which rational, and hopefully,
peaceful agreements can be based. Clearly, knowledge of
current collective bargaining contracts of public em­
ployees would be beneficial.
This study is the first the Bureau has made of public
employee labor contracts below the Federal level and
provides data on a wide variety of collective bargaining
provisions. In addition to aiding negotiators now, the
statistics derived from the study will serve as a bench­
mark against which the Bureau will measure changes in
later studies.
Scope and m ethod o f study

For this study, the Bureau examined 286 collective
bargaining agreements and related documents covering
613,490 municipal employees in cities having popula­
tions of 250,000 or more. (See table 1.) These were
negotiated in 39 cities, or more than 70 percent of the
55 cities which, according to the 1970 census, had
populations of 250,000 or more.4 These cities were
located in 24 States and included the District of
Columbia. Of the remaining 16 cities in the population
size group,5 two—Norfolk, Virginia and San Antonio,
Texas-had neither active employee organizations, nor
collective bargaining agreements at the time that this
study was made. Another two—Nashville, Tennessee and



Tulsa, Oklahoma—had active employee organizations
and written agreements, but the Bureau had not received
contracts from them by the time study tabulations were
completed. Finally, 12 cities had active unions and
associations, but as yet had negotiated no written
contracts. In some of these 12, lack of written agree­
ments did not necessarily denote lack of labor relations
activity. Some cities—for example, Minneapolis, Min­
nesota and Wichita, Kansas—confer informally with
employee organizations; and Honolulu, subsequent to
1
Directory of National and International Labor Unions in the
United States, 1967 (BLS Bulletin 1596, 1968); Independent
State and Local Public Employee Associations in California,
1968 (joint project of BLS and California Department of
Industrial Relations, Division of Labor Statistics and Research);
Municipal Public Employee Associations (BLS Bulletin 1702,
1971); Philadelphia Municipal Employees: Compensation
Chronology 1953-1971 (BLS Mideast Region Report No. 3);
Municipal Labor-Management Relations: Chronology of
Compensation Developments in Milwaukee, 1960-70 (BLS
Bulletin 1720, 1971). Also, see Municipal Government Wage
Surveys for selected cities.

2“Labor Union and Employee Association Membership,
1970,” Press Release, USDL, Sept. 13, 1971. For earlier data,
see “Union Membership Among Government Employees,”
Monthly Labor Review, July 1970.
3In 1970, there were 412 State and local government
stoppages involving 333,500 workers. These resulted in 2 million
man-days idle, or 0.06 percent of estimated working time. Work
Stoppages in 1970, Summary Report, U.S. Department of
Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1971. Also, see Work
Stoppages in Government, 1958-68 (BLS Report 348, 1970). A
summary release issued November, 1971, updates the informa­
tion for 1969 and 1970.
4The 39 cities are Akron, Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston,
Buffalo, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Denver,
Detroit, Forth Worth, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Jersey City,
Kansas City, Los Angeles, Louisville, Memphis, Milwaukee,
Newark, New Orleans, New York, Oakland, Oklahoma City,
Omaha, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Portland, Rochester,
Sacramento, San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle, Tampa, Toledo,
Tucson, Washington, D.C. The 16 cities for which no contracts
were available to the Bureau of Labor Statistics are Birmingham,
Dallas, El Paso, Honolulu, Houston. Long Beach, Miami,
Minneapolis, Nashville, Norfolk, St. Louis, St. Paul, San
Antonio, San Diego, Tulsa, and Wichita.
5
The information which follows was derived from a
questionnaire survey now in progress on municipal labor
relations policies.

1

the study, came under a new State collective bargaining
law that promised more formalized labor relations in the
future.
Included in the study are collective bargaining agree­
ments similar to those in private industry as well as other
documents, such as memoranda of understanding,
ordinances, or other unilateral promulgations, which
clearly indicate that they were the result of bilateral
negotiations. This approach understates the effect of
unions and associations on municipal labor relations
policies. In many cases, seemingly unilateral city
ordinances and executive orders actually are the conse­
quence of discussions involving employee organizations.
However, since no record of this involvement has been
set forth in the documents, they have not been
considered within the scope of the study. For con­
venience of exposition, documents used in this study
will be referred to as agreements or contracts.
Data in the following chapters indicates the relatively
low prevalence of some provisions compared with
agreements in the private sector. In part, the low
prevalences result from the recent origin of most
municipal bargaining. As these relationships mature,
changes are likely to occur. In addition, much of what is

Table 1.

normal in private sector agreements has been governed
for years in municipalities by civil service rules and
regulations, administrative actions, and legislative acts,
all in the absence of collective bargaining. Although
many of these traditional bargaining items will find their
way into municipal contracts, one cannot expect that
private industry patterns will be repeated in all details.
City bargainers will work out their own solutions to
labor relations problems suitable to their particular
municipal situations.
In addition to the discussion of city agreements,
generally, the final section of this report illustrates
clauses found in teacher contracts. An appendix
identifies the clauses used as illustrations in the study.
The reader should keep in mind that the data reflect the
Bureau’s understanding of the written provisions and not
necessarily that of the parties. Agreement language is
elusive and complicated, and often requires interpreta­
tion through the arbitration process. What is carried out
in practice, furthermore, may differ from contract
language. Under these circumstances, the Bureau can
only analyze the specific language appearing in con­
tracts, and hope that it closely reflects the rules under
which the parties operate.

M unicipal agreements and w orker coverage in cities w ith populations o f 250,000 and over, b y region

and State, 19701
Region and State
T o t a l.........................................

Agreements

Workers

286

613,490

Region and State
South A tla n tic .................................

24
24

22,630
22,630

Middle A t la n t ic ...............................
New York .................................
New Jersey ...............................
Pennsylvania .............................

71
51
10
10

342,800
301,316
8,384
33,100

East North C e n tral..........................
Ohio ...........................................
Indiana ......................................
Illin o is ........................................
Michigan ....................................
Wisconsin....................................

82
26
4
8
18
26

137,849
44,309
5,800
38,950
31,342
17,448

West North Central ........................
M issouri......................................
N eb ra s k a ....................................

7
2

6,750

5

5,250

48,612

District of Columbia ..............
Georgia ......................................
F lo rid a .........................................
East South C e n tral..........................
Kentucky ....................................
Tennessee .................................

20
12
8

8,690
1,705
6,985

West South Central ........................
Louisiana....................................
Oklahoma ..................................
T e x a s ...........................................

3
1
1
1

3,960
700
60
3,200

M o u n ta in ...........................................
C o lo ra d o ....................................
A r iz o n a ......................................

13
8
5

10.478
6,178
4,300

P a c ific ................................................
Washington ...............................
O regon.........................................
C alifornia....................................

42
15

31.721
12,620
4,600
14,501

N O T E : Only the States listed (including the District of
Columbia) were represented in the study. Twenty-one States do




qnn
O H ,O
UU

12,120
350
1,842

1,500

1Tables cover all cities of 250,000 inhabitants or more which
had written agreements and which made these agreements avail­
able.

2

Workers

24
11u
n
9
1
4

M o ru la n rl

New E n g lan d ....................................
* Massachusetts ..........................

Agreements

3

24

not have a city with a population of 250,000 or more. Minne­
sota, Kansas, Virginia, Alabama, and Hawaii had cities meeting
the minimum population requirement, but agreements were not
available or no agreements had been negotiated.

Chapter 2. General Characteristics
Regional distribution

Fifty-three percent of the 286 agreements were from
cities in the Middle Atlantic and East North Central
States, areas traditionally strong in private sector
unionism. A smaller concentration of agreements was
found in the Pacific region. Unionization in general does
not have a strong foothold in the West South Central
and West North Central States.1 Consequently, col­
lective bargaining among government employees is not
likely to be widespread at this stage.
More than half of the worker coverage reported came
from the Middle Atlantic region, largely because of the
effect of organization in New York City, which alone
accounted for 11 percent of all agreements and more
than 46 percent of the represented employees. (See table
2.) Because of the effect of New York City agreements
on worker coverage, text references to the frequency of
particular provisions will be in the number and propor­
tion of contracts. Tables, however, carry worker
coverage.2

unions and one association bargained for at least 20 of
the agreements in the study:
Unions and associations
All unions and associations
State, County and Municipal
(AFSCME) (A FL-C IO ) .................
National Education Association
(NEA) (Ind.)
.................................
Firefighters (IA F F ) ( A F L - C IO ) ____
Teachers (A FT ) (AFL-C IO ) . ______

Agreements

Workers

286

613,490

56

216,288

23
23
22

48,835
30,510
163,950

These four employee organizations accounted for
more than 43 percent of all agreements, covering nearly
75 percent of the employees.
Size o f bargaining unit

C ity size and em ployee organization

Most bargaining units in the study were moderate in
size; almost 40 percent of the contracts covered fewer
than 250 workers each. (See table 3.) However, 48
percent were concentrated in nine bargaining units, each
representing more than 10,000 workers.3 (See table 4.)

New York City agreements and worker coverage also
influenced the concentration of workers in cities of 1
million and over (63 percent of those in the study)
compared with the number of agreements covering them
(24 percent of those in the study). In smaller city
population size groups, most of the agreements were
widely dispersed as were the remaining minority of
workers. (See table 3.) Agreements involving AFL-CIO
affiliates were concentrated largely in the smaller city
population size groups, but worker coverage again
centered in cities of 1 million and over. By comparison,
agreements involving employee associations and their
worker coverage clustered in cities below 1 million. In
total, employee associations negotiated 29 percent of
the agreements covering 16 percent of the workers.
The American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees (AFSCME) (AFL-CIO) had the
most agreements of any employee organization studied
and was the only union which had membership in all
occupational groups and regions of the country. Four

1Municipal Public Employee Associations (BLS Bulletin
1702, 1971), table 10, p. 15, and Directory o f National and
International Labor Unions in the United States, 1969, (BLS
Bulletin 1665, 1970), tables 10 and 11, pp. 76-7.
2 Among the 32 New York City agreements, two had a very
significant effect on worker coverage data: The Mayoral Agency
agreement with the American Federation o f State, County and
Municipal Employees (AFL-CIO) involving 120,000 city
workers; and the Board o f Education contract with the
American Federation of Teachers (AFL-CIO), covering 60,000
teachers.
3Included in this group is the New York City Agreement
with the AFSCME covering 120,000 workers and referred to in
footnote 7. In New York City, a large number of separated units
were linked together under District Council 37 of the AFSCME,
once the union had achieved a citywide majority, to make one
unit for the purpose of negotiating working conditions or other
noneconomic matters. For each constituent bargaining unit, the
New York City Office of Labor Relations issues a separate
Implementing Personnel Order, which sets forth the economic
settlement for that specific bargaining situation.




3

Occupational groups

Eighty-five percent of the agreements studied covered
a single occupational group; the largest number applied
to blue-collar workers. (See table 5.) However, more
white-collar than blue-collar employees were repre­
sented, especially professional and technical employees.
The preponderence of the professional and technical
group stemmed from the inclusion of large teacher
agreements and again, of the New York City white-collar
contract. Blue-collar employees of transit systems and
authorities represented the second largest group of
workers.

Most agreements involved employees in one specific
activity or agency. Among these, three activities were
particularly noticeable: education, which exceeded all
others in both number of agreements and worker
coverage; transit systems; and the protective services,
police and fire. AFL-CIO affiliates were preponderant,
not only in citywide agreements, but in education,
transit, and protective services as well. Most employee
association agreements were clustered in education,
largely with the National Education Association, and in
police protection, involving a variety of policemen’s
organizations.
Agreem ent term

City activities

In municipal activities, agreements separated into two
major groups: those which are city wide, covering nearly
11 percent of the contracts and 30 percent of the
employees studied and those which focus on single
departments of city governments. (See table 5.)
The Bureau divided citywide contracts into two
groups: the first and most prevalent covering all city
activities, except police and fire. The second involving a
miscellany of agreements and including (a) those con­
tracts which excluded activities other than protection
services and (b) those which applied citywide to an
occupational category, such as all clerical workers. Had
the study included smaller city population size groups,
the proportion of citywide agreements conceivably
would have been larger, because the smaller city sizes
lend themselves to citywide units.

4



The duration of agreements was shorter in municipal
service than in the private sector, where most are in
effect for 3 years or longer. (See table 6.) Only 20
percent of the municipal agreements were in effect for 3
years or longer. About 65 percent expired after 2 years
or less. This shorter agreement term perhaps may reflect
the newness of the bargaining relationship. As table 6
shows, a number of agreements were negotiated for odd
numbers of months—for example, more than 1 year, but
less than 2; or more than 2 years but less than 3. To
some degree, these come about from bargaining talks
extending over many months which result in retroactive
settlements, as well as prospective ones. This lengthy
procedure conceivably develops not only from the
newness of some relationships, but also from the
complexity of bargaining and the relationship of the
economic settlement to city budgetary procedures.

Table 2.

Municipal agreements and worker coverage in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by city size

group and city, 19701
Agreements

Workers

T o ta l..................................

286

613,490

1,000,000 and o v e r ....................
Chicago, Illin o is ....................
Detroit, M ichigan..................
Los Angeles, C a lifo r n ia ........
New Yo rk City, New Y o rk ..
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania . ..

69

386,277

18
3
32
8

31,342
2,950
284,235
28,800

500,000-999,999 ........................
Atlanta, Georgia ..................
Baltimore, Maryland ............
Boston, Massachusetts..........
Cleveland, O h io ....................
Columbus, O h io ....................
Denver, C o lora d o..................
Indianapolis, In d ia n a ............
Jacksonville, Florida ............
Kansas City, M issou ri............
Memphis, Tennessee ............
Milwaukee, Wisconsin ..........
New Orleans, L o u is ia n a ........
Phoenix, A riz o n a ..................

129
1
10
24
8
3
8

156.552
350
34,300
22,630
14,229
11,000
6,178
5,800
1,242
1,500
6,985
17,448
700
1,850

City

4
3
2
8
26
1
3

38,95 cH

*See table 1, footnote 1.
NOTE: This table does not show all agreements nor full
collective bargaining coverage for the cities listed, but reports
only agreements forwarded to the Bureau and the number of




City

Agreements

Workers

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania . . . .
San Francisco, California . . . .
Seattle, W ashington..............
Washington, D. C ...................

2
2
15
9

4,300
3,300
12,620
12,120

250,000-499,999 ........................
Akron, Ohio ........................
Buffalo, New Y o rk ..............
Cincinnati, Ohio ..................
Forth Worth, T e x a s ..............
Jersey City, New Je rs e y ........
Louisville, K e n tu c k y ............
Newark, New Jersey ............
Oakland, C a lifo rn ia ..............
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma ..
Omaha, Nebraska..................
Portland, O re g o n ..................
Rochester, New Y o rk ..........
Sacramento, California ........
San Jose, C a lifo rn ia ..............
Tampa, Florida ....................
Toledo, O h io ........................
Tucson, Arizona ..................

88
5
15
5
1
9
12
1
5
1

70.661
4,560
11,081
10,320
3,200
4,384
1,705
4,000
2,685
60
5,250
4,600

5
3
4
7
7
1
5
2

6,000

2,566
3,000
600
4,200
2,450

workers covered by them. City size is based on the 1970 Census
of Population, U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the
Census.

5

Table 3.
Union affiliation in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by city size,
region, and size o f bargaining unit, 1970
Union
City size, region, and size
of bargaining unit

A ll agreements
Agree­
ments
Workers

A FL-C IO
Agree­
Workers
ments

Independent
Agree­
Workers
ments

Combination of
A F L-C IO
and independent
Agree­
ments
Workers

Associations
Agree­
Workers
ments

C IT Y S IZ E 1
Total ......................

286

613,490

184

490,448

17

, 20,959

2

2,900

83

99,183

1,000,000 and o v e r ..........
500*000-999,999 ..........
250,000-499,999 ..........

69
129
88

386,277
156*552
70,661

51
87
46

351,650
106,290
32,508

6
3
8

18,465
625
1,869

1
1

2,050
850

12
38
33

16,162
47,587
35,434

Total ......................

286

613,490

184

490,448

17

20,959

2

2,900

83

99,183

New England....................
Middle A tla n tic ................
East North Central ..........

24
71
82
7
24
20
3
13
42

22,630
342,800
137,849
6,750
48,612
8,690
3,960
10,478
31,721

14
47
54
5
20
13
2
5
24

18,270
301,296
102,700
3,550
40,362
7,721
760
2,428
13,361

1
3
6

200
16,815
3,600

6

319

1

25

2

2,900

9
21
22
2
4
1
1
8
15

4,160
24,689
31,549
3,200
8,250
650
3,200
8,050
15,435

Total ......................

286

613,490

184

490,448

17

20,969

2

2,900

83

99,183

Under 2 5 0 ........................
250-499 ..........................
500-999 ..........................
1,000-1,999 ....................
2,000-2,999 ....................
3,000-3,999 ....................
4,000-4,999 ....................
5,000-7,499 ....................
7,500-9,999 ....................
10,000 and o v e r ..............

107
35
44
38
20
12
7
7
7
9

9,765
12,925
28,200
52,550
46,800
40,800
30,050
39,750
58,400
294,250

65
22
30
26
14
6
4
3
6
8

5,638
8,110
19,300
36,850
32,700
19,900
16,850
17,450
50,900
282,750

10
3

794
1,065

2

2,600

32
10
13
10
5
6
3
3
1

3,333
3,750
8,050
13,100
12,050
20,900
13,200
17,300
7,500

REG IO N

West North C e n tra l............

South Atlantic ................
East South Central ..........
West South C e n tra l............
M o u n ta in .............................

P a c ific ..............................
SIZE O F B A R G A IN IN G
U N IT

1 City size is based on the 1970 Census of Population, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Tables cover

Table 4.

.1

5,000

T

11,500

1

850

1

2,050

all cities of 250,000 .inhabitants or more which had written
agreements and which made these agreements available.

Bargaining units o f 10,000 workers o r m ore in cities w ith populations o f 2 50,000 and over, b y city,

agency and organization, 1 97 0 1

City

Agency

Employee organization

Workers

New Y o rk ..........................
New Y o r k ..........................
New Y o r k ..........................
Chicago ............................
P h ila d e lp h ia ......................
New Y o r k ..........................
D e tr o it..............................
New Y o r k ..........................
B a ltim o re ..........................

Mayoral agency
Board of Education-Teachers
Transit Authority
Board of Education
Board of Education
Sanitation
Board of Education
Board of Education-School Lunch
Public Works

State, County and Municipal Employees (AFL-CIO)
T eachers (A F L?C IQ)
Transportation workers (AFL-CIO)
Teachers,(AFL-CIO)
Teachers ^AFL-CIO)
Teamsters, (fnd.4
Teachers (AFL-CIO)
State, County and Municipal Employees (AFL-CIO)
State, County and Municipal Employees (AFL-CIO)

120,000
60,000
30,000
25,800
13,500
11,500
11,250
11,200
11,000

See footnote 1, table 1.




Table 5.
U n io n a ffiliation and type o f organization in m unicipal agreements in cities with populations o f 250,000
and over, by occupational group and governm ent activity, 19701

Unions
Occupational group and
government activity

A ll unions and
associations
Agree­
ments
Workers

AFL-C IO
Agree­
ments
Workers

Independent
Agree­
ments
Workers

Combination of
A FL-C IO
and Independent
Agree­
ments
Workers

Associations
Agree­
ments
Workers

O C C U P A T IO N A L G R O U P

Total ......................
Blue-collar or manual crafts
Professional or technical . .
Clerical ............................
Police and f ir e ..................
Blue-collar and clerical2 . .
Professional and clerical . .
Blue-collar and professional
Blue-collar, clerical,
professional, or technical
Occupation not given . . . .

286
119
68
11
46
8
5
3

613,490
133,668
210,889
10,850
57,424
5*016
14,200
2,200

184
96
21
7
26
6
4
2

490,448
105,665
157,800
8,600
31,624
1,966
7,700
1,850

17
14

20,959
19,209

1

1,200

1

350

15
11

20,170
159,073

13
9

18,870
156,373

1

200

286
22
25
79
1

613,490
26,674
30,824
246,700
350

184
2
25
44
1

490,448
874
30,824
189,830
350

17
1

20,959
1,200

3

28
14
13

7,884
18,080
7,092

19
10
11

5,574
6,421
1,892

22
3

65,441
629

20
3

61,841
629

100

1

100

11
2

2,266
650

10
1

19
9

7,946
5,136

7
30

8,131
185,587

2
1

2,900
850

83
8
47
4
19
1
1

99,183
7,944
53,089
2,250
24,600
1,000
6,500

1

2,050

1
2

1,100
2,700

83
19

99,183
24,600

490

32

56,380

5
4
2

1,960
11,659
5,200

4

350

1

100

1

3,500

2,222
550

1
1

44
100

5
7

5,510
4,884

14
2

2,436
252

1
24

10
178,937

6
3

8,121
3,400

G O V ER N M EN T A C T IV ITY

Total ......................
Police2 ............................
F ir e ..................................
E d u ca tio n ........................
Puhlic w e lfa re ..................
Public works - maintenance
of buildings and roads . .
S a n ita tio n ........................
Housing a u th o rity ............
Transit systems and
a u th o ritie s ....................
Port autho rities................
Turnpike and tollbridge
a u th o ritie s....................
Public utilities: water,
electric & g a s ................
Recreation facilities ........
Public health: hospitals
and clinics ....................
L ib ra rie s ..........................
Legislative, judicial &
administrative functions .
Citywide a ctivities............
*See table 1, footnote 1.




1

!

1

350

2

2

2,900

2,900

2 Includes one police agreement covering civilian, blue-collar,
and clerical employees.

7

Table 6.
Municipal agreements and worker coverage in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by contract
duration, union affiliation, and type of organization, 19701
Unions
Contract duration

Total ......................
Less than 12 m o n th s........
12 m on th s........................
13 through 23 months . ..
24 m onths........................
25 through 35 months . ..
36 m on th s........................
More than 36 months . . . .
Duration undetermined ..
*See table 1, footnote 1.

8



A ll unions
and associations
Agree­
ments
Workers
286
20
64
25
78
29
53
5
12

613,490
23,514
106,112
25,212
139,329
55,740
239,448
5,450
18,685

A FL-C IO
Agree­
ments
Workers
184
10
37
12
52
18
45
3
7

490,448
12,270
70,821
14,457
101,254
39,490
237,771
2,900
11,485

Independent
Agree­
Workers
ments
17

20,959

Combination of
A F L-C IO and
Independent
Agree­
ments
Workers
2

2,900

*>

6

319

2
5
3
1

5,400
14,475
615
150

•••#
1
....

1

850

2,050

Associations
Agree­
ments
Workers
83

99,183

10
21
13
23
6
5
1
4

11,244
34,972
10,755
31,825
1,775
1,062
2,400
5,150

Chapter 3. Agreement Provisions
Adm inistrative provisions

Recognition. Government agreements, like their non­
government counterparts, invariably contain language in
which the municipal employer sets the status of the
employee organization by recognizing it as a bargaining
representative.1 These provisions vary in the scope of
the bargaining unit which they define; that is, the kinds
of employees, occupation, or functions covered. For
example, a citywide agreement simplifies the bargaining
relationship for city management but concentrates
bargaining power in one organization. On the other
hand, single agency agreements may disperse employee
organization power to the extent that different unions
and associations are recognized, but this process
complicates bargaining and can lead to several nego­
tiating crises at different times during the year. Cities
have followed both courses, and considerable literature
on the “paper bargaining unit” has come into being. In
the first illustration, a citywide unit excluding certain
part-time and temporary employees was recognized and
in the second, one city department (fire protection) was
certified:
(1)

(2)

The city hereby recognizes the respective unions as
the exclusive collective bargaining representatives for the
purposes stated in Chapter 108, Extra Session, Laws of
1967 of the State of Washington of all employees
employed within the bargaining units defined in ap­
pendixes A through R to this agreement. This shall
include all full-time employees and all regular part-time
employees while they are employed in such unit, but shall
exclude temporary and other part-time employees.
WITNESSETH:
That for and in consideration of the sum of $1 and
other good and valuable consideration each to the other
in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged,
it is agreed:

The city in the manner provided in Florida Laws here­
by recognized the Union as the representative o f all Fire­
fighter members o f the Fire Department o f the City with
the exception of the Chief, for the purposes of bargaining
with respect to wages, hours of work and working con­
ditions.

Union security. At this point in the development of city
collective bargaining, union security arrangements are
not common. In large measure this lack of arrangements




may be due to the widely held view that “compulsory
unionism” is incompatible with the image that public
service at all times must be open to all qualified citizens.
Many jurisdictions have held the union shop and similar
arrangements to be illegal.
Fewer than one-third of all municipal agreements
studied contained union security provisions. (See table
7.) The ratio of such provisions to total agreements
reached 50 percent only in New England and the East
South Central States. The East North Central region
accounted for the largest number but only 39 percent of
the contracts for these States.
Most union security arrangements in the study
covered blue-collar workers. These accounted for more
than half of the provisions. (See table 8.) To some
degree, this concentration resulted from the large
number of blue-collar agreements in the study, but the
proportion of blue-collar contracts with union security
provisions exceeded the average found for the whole
study. Transit contracts, citywide agreements and public
health contracts, in that order, had the highest propor­
tions of union security arrangements. Education had the
fewest proportionately, followed by police, fire and
public utilities agreements. Union security provisions
were found most frequently in cities with populations of
1 million or more, including Philadelphia, which
pioneered in such arrangements. (See table 9.)
In selecting forms of union security, city bargainers
tended to compromise between no union security and its
strongest legal form, the union shop, by agreeing to
agency shop arrangements. A popular provision in
Canadian collective bargaining, the agency shop has not
gained adherents in the United States in nongovernment
agreements.2 In the present study, however, over
two-fifths of the union security provisions (39) involved
'So common are these provisions that the Bureau has not
tabulated them.
2A 1971 BLS study of 620 agreements covering 2,000
workers or more each found only 23 agency shop provisions, or
about 3.7 percent of all agreements studied and 4.4 percent of
agreements with union security provisions. See Characteristics of
Agreements Covering 2,000 Workers or More (BLS Bulletin
1729. 1972).

9

the agency shop. (See table 9.) Under such arrangements
all employees in the bargaining unit who do not join the
union or association pay a fixed amount monthly,
usually the equivalent of dues, as a condition of
employment, to help defray employee organization
expenses in acting as bargaining agent:
(3)

The parties recognize that this is an agency shop
agreement, and in accordance with such, it is understood
that each employee who is a member of the bargaining
unit hereinabove defined, but is not a member of Local
1071, shall be liable to contribute to the said Local as
representative costs, an amount equivalent to such dues as
are from time to time authorized, levied and collected
from the general membership of said Local. The City
agrees to deduct an amount equal to the normal monthly
dues paid by members of the association from the
earnings of each of said employees so covered by this
agreement.

after 30 days of employment and as a condition of
employment, pay to the union each month as a service
charge, a contribution toward the administration of this
agreement in an amount equal to the regular monthly
dues of the Portland Firefighters Association. Employees
who fail to comply with this requirement shall be
discharged by the employer within 30 days after receipt
of written notice to the employer from the Union.

About one-fifth of the union security provisions
called for maintenance of membership. Under this
arrangement, only employees who are members of an
employee organization at the time the agreement is
negotiated, or who voluntarily join subsequently, are
required to remain members for the duration of the
agreement:
(7)

One agency shop arrangement required employees to
pay the costs incurred in contract bargaining and
administration only, rather than the full amount of
union dues:
(4)

. . . to assure that employees covered by this
Agreement shall be adequately represented by the union
in bargaining collectively on questions of wages, hours
and other conditions of employment, the CollectorTreasurer of the City shall deduct from each payment of
salary made to each such employee during the life of this
collective bargaining agreement and pay over to the
Union, the exclusive bargaining agent of such employee,
as an agency service fee, the sum of 99 cents per week,
which amount is proportionately commensurate with the
cost of collective bargaining and contract administra­
tion. . . .

The following agreement was exceptional in that the
payment to the union was voluntary:
(5)

(6)

The stronger forms of union security in total had less
effect on employee coverage than did the agency shop
and maintenance of membership. Indeed, union shop
provisions were found in only one-fourth of the
municipal agreements having union security arrange­
ments. Such provisions as were found required all
employees to become members of the union within a
specific time period (usually 1 month):
(8)

AGENCY SHOP. In the event that the City
enters into an agreement with any labor organization with
which it engages in collective bargaining and such agree­
ment provides that as a condition of employment that
those employees shall work under either a union shop or
an agency shop the following language shall become
effective: Each employee covered by this agreement shall,

10




UNION SECURITY
It shall be a condition of employment that all
employees of the “ Employer” covered by this agreement
who are members of the “Union” in good standing on the
effective date of this agreement shall remain members in
good standing, and those who are not members on the
effective date of this agreement shall, on the 31st day
following the effective date of this agreement, become
and remain members in good standing of the union. It
shall also be a condition of employment that all em­
ployees covered by this agreement and hired on or after
its effective date shall, on the 31st day following the
beginning of such employment, become and remain
members in good standing in the union.

In keeping with the principle that employees who
benefit by the agreement should share in the cost of
administering the contract, the parties agree that any
present or future employee who is not a union member,
or who does not make application for membership, may
pay to the union each month a service charge as a
contribution toward the administration of this agreement
in an amount equal to the regular monthly dues.

In another agreement, adoption of an agency shop
during the life of the contract was conditioned upon the
city signing a union security arrangement with any other
organization:

All permanent employee(s) who are members of
the union at the time of the execution of this agreement
will remain as members of the union for the duration of
the agreement as a condition of continued employment.
All permanent employee(s) who are hired, in the
classifications of employment covered by this agreement,
subsequent to the execution of this agreement who elect
after completion of their probationary period to become
members of the union will as a condition of continued
employment remain as members of the Union for the
duration of the agreement.

Modified union shop provisions which permit certain
employees to remain outside the union were the least
frequent. Under this provision, the modified union shop
becomes a union shop by attrition of nonunion
employees:
(9)

All employes coming within the scope of this
agreement who were members in good standing of [the

Union] as of November 30, 1962, or who became or
become members in good standing after that date, as well
as employes in any new classification that may be added
to the scope of this agreement who are members of [the
Union] at the time of the inclusion of such classification,
shall maintain their membership in good standing in [the
Union] during the life of this agreement as a condition of
employment with the Authority in the work covered by
this agreement. All new employes hired by the Authority
coming within the scope of this agreement shall become
members of [the Union] within 30 days from the date of
hiring and shall maintain membership in good standing in
[the Union] as a condition of continued employment
with the Authority in the work covered by this agree­
ment.

Dues checkoff. In contrast to the low prevalence of
union security provisions, dues checkoff clauses were
widespread. Over three-fourths of the city agreements
studied permitted the deduction of dues and other fees
and assessments from employee wages. (See table 7.)
The only area of the country with a proportionately low
incidence of dues checkoff clauses was the Pacific
region. Agreements covering white-collar occupations
(i.e., professional, technical, and clerical) had a slightly
higher frequency of dues checkoff provisions than
blue-collar agreements. (See table 8.) Most government
activities registered high frequencies, including education
which had a low prevalence of union security arrange­
ments. (See table 8.) The proportion of police agree­
ments having dues checkoff (68 percent) was less than
for fire agreements (72 percent). Both had low propor­
tions of agreements with union security provisions.
Checkoff provisions have several common features.
First, the employee must present a written authoriza­
tion, duly signed to save the employer from subsequent
charges of unlawful deduction. Second, if the employer
is charged with wrongful or illegal deductions, then the
clause usually provides that the union will safeguard the
employer. Third, the authorization is usually effective
for 1 year and renewable automatically. And fourth,
checkoff authorizations may be revoked, generally at the
end of the authorization’s effective date. In the follow­
ing illustrations these features appear. In the first, the
scope of deductions also extends to initiation fees as
well as dues, and the city is limited specifically to
making deductions only for the certified bargaining
agent. Challenging employee organizations, in effect,
must fend for themselves:
(8)

Asa convenience and service to its employees, the
employer will honor the written requests of individual
employees to have their union dues checked off monthly
from their regular pay, subject to the following condi­
tions:




Such checkoff authorization shall be made by the
individual employee. Subject to the conditions herein
contained, it shall be the policy of the Employer to honor
no dues checkoff authorization for any other collective
bargaining group purporting to represent any of the
employees in a unit, division, department or craft, during
the period that the accredited collective bargaining agent
is so recognized.
The Employer will deduct from one pay of each month
the union initiation fees and dues for that month for such
members of the union in the bargaining unit who have
signed authorization cards directing and authorizing the
employer so to do, and which cards conform to the Labor
Management Relations Act, 1947. The amount so
deducted shall be paid over to the union by the employer
comptroller within 10 working days after the deduction is
made. Any authorization card to be effective must be
delivered to the employer comptroller 10 working days
before the pay day on which it is to be effective. If an
employee or employees should at any time contend that
the employer acted wrongfully or illegally in making a
checkoff of initiation fees or dues, the union or employee
organization will defend and protect the employer against
expense, repayments or losses on account of such
contention.
(10)
The Board will deduct from the pay of each
teacher from who it receives an authorization to do so,
the Federation’s annual membership fee in uniform dollar
amounts. Such deduction will be made monthly in 10
equal payments. This authorization will remain in force
from year to year unless revoked at the completion of any
annual payment. Such revocation to be effective shall be
submitted to both the Board and the Federation by
certified letter at least 30 days prior to the final monthly
payment of the annual Federation fee. The fees and a list
of the teachers from whom they have been deducted and
the amount deducted from each shall be forwarded to the
Federation office no later than 30 days after such
deductions were made. The Federation agrees to defend,
indemnify and hold harmless the Board in connection
with any cost or litigation arising out of the deductions
made pursuant to this paragraph.

Provisions which stipulate that the city will be
reimbursed for costs related to checkoff appeared in less
than 9 percent of the agreements permitting checkoff.
(See table 7.) In the first illustration, the union agreed to
pay a service fee to cover the cost as determined by the
employer. In the second, deductions permitting full cost
to be reimbursed are made “at the union’s expense”:
(11)
The library shall deduct from the wages of an
employee who is a member of the union, and who
submits to the library a written, personally signed
authorization therefor, the monthly union dues as
certified to the library by the Secretary of the Local anu
shall remit the same to the union not later than the 15th
day of each month following such deduction.
* * * * *

11

i
or each such deduction made as authorized there
may be charged by the library a sum determined by the
Library as appropriate to the cost of it which will not
exceed $.05.
(12)
The present plan of voluntary union dues deduc­
tion, at the union’s expense, will continue in effect,
except that the union shall provide its own payroll
authorization cards, and that such authorized deductions
shall remain in effect unless termination of dues notice is
given in writing as prescribed on authorization card,
maintained by the Payroll Division, and signed by the
employee.

Management rights. A management rights clause sets
forth those prerogatives which are reserved to the
employer in whole or part for the length of the contract.
Fundamentally, it is a summary of an understanding
between the parties of those issues which remain solely
under employer control and those issues which are
subject to bargaining between the parties. The clause
cannot stand alone as an indicator of what management
can or cannot do, but must be read with the agreement
in its entirety to determine which rights previously
exercised by management unilaterally have been
abridged. However, the clause helps an arbitrator reach
decisions on issues on which the contract is otherwise
silent.
Management rights provisions are more prevalent in
city agreements (59.1 percent) than in private industry
(48.5 percent)3 but less prevalent than in Federal agree­
ments.4 (See table 7.) Contracts in the East North
Central region contained the highest proportion of such
clauses and accounted for over two-fifths of all manage­
ment rights provisions. Agreements in public health,
transit, public works, and citywide contracts, were the
most likely to have management rights clauses. (See
table 8.) The largest cluster of provisions was found in
education, but these represented only 2 out of every 5
agreements, a rate of frequency well below the average
for all agreements.
As in private sector agreements, clauses varied from
brief general statements to detailed listings of specific
rights. Both clauses cited specify that these rights are
subject to definite provisions in the contract, and the
second further stipulates that management will exercise
its prerogatives in a nondiscriminatory manner towards
union members*
(13)
Subject to this agreement and applicable law, the
city (and its Mayor and Police Commissioner) reserves and
retains the regular and customary rights and prerogatives
of municipal management.
(14)
Except as otherwise provided in this memo­
randum, the Department in the exercise of its functions
of management, shall have the right to decide the policies,

12




methods, safety rules, direction of employees, assignment
of work, type of work, equipment to be used in the
operation of the Department, and the right to hire,
discharge, suspend, discipline, promote, demote, and
transfer employees and to release such employees because
of lack of work or for other proper and legitimate
reasons. The exercise of these rights by management shall
not be used for the purpose of discrimination or injustice
against members of the union.

Management rights, in some municipalities, were
governed by noncontractual regulations and were not
specifically enumerated in the agreement. However, the
incorporation into the contracts by reference gave them
the status of negotiated prerogatives:
(15)
The Employer shall have all of the rights set forth
in Article I, Section 114, of the Baltimore City Code
(1966 edition, as amended), Article 77, Section 142-144
the Annotated Code of Maryland, (1969 Replacement
Vol.) and Article VII, Section 58-60 of the Baltimore City
Charter, 1966 Revision, which provisions are incorporated
herein by reference.

Antidiscrimination. As a rule, antidiscrimination clauses
protected employees against bias because of race, creed,
color, national origin, sex, age, marital status, or union
membership. Many of the clauses were general policy
statements barring discrimination by the union as well as
the employer, as in the following provision:
(16)
In accord with Board policy, no person or
persons, departments or divisions responsible to the Board
shall discriminate against any employee on the basis of
race, creed, color, national origin, sex, marital status or
membership in or association with the activities of the
Rochester Teachers Association or any other teacher
organization.
In accord with its Constitution, the Rochester
Teachers Association shall admit persons to membership
without discrimination on the basis of race, creed, color,
national origin, sex or marital status.

The policy statement is modified in the following
illustration in that it prohibits discrimination only
“whenever practicable”;
(17)
The employer agrees that there shall be no
discrimination or favoritism for reasons of sex, age,
nationality, race, religion, marital status, political af­
filiation, union membership or union activities whenever
practicable.

3See Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Management
Rights and Union Management Cooperation, (BLS Bulletin
1425-5, 1966.)
4Executive
Order
10988,
“ Employee-Management
Cooperation in the Federal Service,” set forth in Section 7 (2)
that each basic or initial agreement negotiated shall expressly
state rights reserved to management as expressed in the order.

Some clauses stipulated that all persons were to be
treated equally. In the clause which follows the union is
made coequal with the municipality in assuring that the
contract is applied on a nondiscriminatory basis:
(18)
The provisions of this agreement shall be applied
equally to all employees in the bargaining unit without
discrimination as to age, sex, marital status, race, color,
creed, national origin, political affiliation or for any
reason whatsoever. The union shall share equally with the
city the responsibility for applying this provision of the
agreement. . .

Among the 183 antidiscrimination provisions, fifteen
applied the ban only to membership in the employee
organization.

Activities o f employee organizations. Provisions specify­
ing the rights o f employee organizations and the duties
of their elected representatives existed in a number of
agreements. These provisions are in some respects the
counterpart to management rights clauses. In general,
they discuss rights accruing to the union or association
and its representatives, and in addition, some duties are
specified.
The most common o f these clauses, found in over
half of the agreements, provided the employee organiza­
tion with its own bulletin board for posting notices, or
provided the union or association with space on existing
boards (See table 11.):
(19)
The District will furnish bulletin boards at the
various Divisions for the use of the [union]. At any
location where there are two (2) Divisions, and they are
under the jurisdiction of different locals of the union, the
District will provide separate bulletin boards for each
local. The union may furnish their own locks when
desired.. . .
The Union will not post on bulletin boards any
material derogatory to the District.
(3)

It is agreed that the association may use city
bulletin boards for the purpose of posting association
notices to association members, provided that such
notices shall be clearly identified as association notices.

Both o f these provisions limited the use o f the
bulletin board. The first barred derogatory statements
about the agency, and the second limited postings to
notices o f the employee organization. Many clauses
similarly limited its use in greater detail. Cleveland, for
example, barred political and critical statements and
required postings to have official signatures and to be
removed instantly for violation, subject to the grievance
procedure. In the second illustration, prohibited notices
would cancel bulletin board use:
(20)
The city shall provide the union with a bulletin
board at mutually selected locations. Provided th a t-




a. no notice or other writing may contain any­
thing political or critical of the city or any city
official or any other institution or any
employee or other person;
b. all notices or other materials posted on the
bulletin board must be signed by the President
or Chief Steward of the Union or any official
representative of District Council 78;
c. upon req u e st from th e appropriate
Commissioner or his designee, the union will
immediately remove any notice or other writing
that the city believes violates this paragraph,
but the union shall have the right to grieve such
action through the Grievance Procedure.
(21)
...P o ste d notices shall not contain anything
political or anything reflecting adversely upon the city or
any of its employees. Any union-authorized violation of
this article shall entitle the city to cancel immediately the
provisions of this article and prohibit the union further
use of the bulletin boards...

In the following contract, postings were limited
implicitly by statements regulating precisely those
materials that may be displayed:
(22)
The authority shall provide space on its bulletin
boards for the posting of union bulletins, but use of such
bulletin boards shall be restricted to the following
purposes:
a. Notice of recreational and social activities.
b. Notice of elections and results.
c. Notice of appointments of union representa­
tives.
d. Notice of meetings.

In addition to the use o f bulletin boards, a few
agreements allowed the employee organization use of
interdepartmental mail service. This privilege also was
regulated closely, as in the next clause, which allowed
the union to use these facilities only for official
publications:
(23)
T h e u n io n shall b e fr e e t o use th e b u lle tin b o a r d s
in the buildings at which the members of the union
report, using a reasonable part thereof to post items of
interest and importance to members of the union,
including union notices, etc., provided, however, such
material shall not be political in nature, commercially
advertise a private business, or reflect unfavorably on the
members of the Board of School Directors or the
administration. Materials must be submitted to the
department head or principal before posting. The union
shall also be permitted to use the Board mail delivery to
send out notices of meetings, notices of social events and
notices of elections. Such documents shall not contain
political or religious statements or statements which
would constitute an attack upon the administration or
members of the Board.

Thirty-seven percent o f the agreements spelled out
the rules under which officers or accredited representa­
tives of the organization could meet on the property of

13

the employer during working hours with members o f the
organization or management. The following provision
allowed visits only for one specific purpose, required
advance notice to management, and stipulated that the
visit would not interfere with the performance of duties.
In other cases, activities of the visiting representative and
the steward were enumerated:
(2 4 )

An

o ffice r

or

a c c r e d it e d

a s s o cia tio n sh all, u p o n
c ia t io n ,

rep resen ta tiv e

re a so n a b le r e q u e s t b y

b e a d m it t e d t o

th e p r o p e r t y

d u rin g w o r k in g h o u r s fo r

of

the

th e asso­

o f th e e m p lo y e r

th e p u r p o s e o f d iscu ssin g o r

assistin g in the a d ju s tm e n t o f g riev a n ces . . . p r o v id e d that
th e y d o n o t in te r fe r e w ith

the p e r fo r m a n c e o f d u ties.

E a ch a s s o cia tio n r ep resen ta tiv e w ish in g t o b e a d m itte d t o
the p r o p e r ty o f the e m p lo y e r f o r this p u r p o s e sh all n o t i fy
the

a p p r o p r ia te

m anagem ent

rep re se n ta tiv e

in

a d v a n c e .. . .
(2 5 )

T h e c i t y agrees th a t d u rin g w o r k in g h o u r s , o n its

p re m ises, a n d w it h o u t lo ss o f p a y , U n io n S tew a rd s o r
p r o p e r ly d e sig n a te d u n io n re p resen ta tiv es shall b e a llo w e d
to:
In v estig a te an d p r o c e s s griev a n ces.
P ost u n io n n o t ic e s .
S o lic it u n io n m e m b e r s h ip d u rin g o t h e r e m p lo y e e ’ s
n o n w o r k in g tim e.
A t t e n d n e g o tia tin g m e e tin g s .
T ra n sm it c o m m u n ic a t io n s , a u th o r iz e d b y th e lo c a l
u n io n o r its o ff i c e r s , to th e c it y o r its re p re se n ta ­
tives.
C o n s u lt
u n io n

w it h

the

o ff ic e r s ,

or

c it y ,

its rep resen ta tiv es, lo c a l

oth er

u n io n

re p resen ta tiv es

c o n c e r n in g th e e n f o r c e m e n t o f a n y p r o v is io n s o f
this a g reem en t.

Employee organizations were permitted to hold
meetings on company time or premises in 20 percent of
the contracts; the right to use the company premises was
the more common o f the two. The union often was
required to pay the cost o f custodial service and
interference with work was to be avoided:

(2 7 )

l.

N o u n io n m e m b e r o r o f f i c e r shall c o n d u c t
a n y u n io n b u sin e ss o n c ity tim e e x c e p t as
s p e c ifie d in this a g re e m e n t o r as a u th o riz e d
b y the p r o p e r d e p a rtm e n t h e a d , C ity L a b o r
N e g o tia to r , C it y P e rs o n n e l D ir e c t o r , o r the
L abor

P o licy

C o m m it t e e

of

th e C o m m o n

C o u n c il
2.

N o u n io n m e e tin g shall b e h e ld o n c ity tim e .

Labor-management activities. A number of agreements
established joint committees to deal with issues common
to the union and city employer. These fell into two
distinct groups: those which generally discussed any
problems of common interest outside the grievance
procedure; and those which involved one or two specific
issues away from the pressures of the bargaining table.
The first, general joint labor-management com­
mittees, were found in 19 percent of the agreements.
(See table 12.) To enhance communication, these
provided for joint consultation on matters o f mutual
interest, not otherwise defined. Clauses establishing
committees typically stipulated that meetings would
occur regularly, sometimes with an agenda o f subjects
for discussion, which would be circulated in advance. In
addition, these clauses often established the size o f the
committee, provided for special meetings when neces­
sary, and required written minutes. The following two
illustrations were drawn from separate bargaining units
within the same agency of the District o f Columbia
government, and show the variations that may be agreed
on. The first set committee size at “a reasonable
number,” and the second specified the exact number of
committee members. The first excluded individual
grievances from discussion; the second had no such
provisions and both provided for special meetings. The
first stated in explicit terms that meetings would be held
on official time, the second did not have any provision,
but could be interpreted as tacitly providing for official
time. Both required published minutes:
(2 8 )

T h e e m p l o y e r a n d th e u n io n agree t o m o n t h ly

m e e tin g s

of

th e U n io n -M a n a g e m e n t C o o p e r a t io n C o m ­

m itte e as a m e a n s o f b e t t e r c o m m u n ic a t io n s a n d u n d e r­
sta n d in g w it h b o t h p e rs o n n e l a n d s u p e rv is o ry m a n a ge ­

(2 6 )

T h e F e d e r a t io n sh all h a ve th e righ t t o use s c h o o l

m e n t . In a d d it io n , th e p a rties agree t o sp e cia l m e e tin gs

b u ild in g s , fa cilitie s a n d e q u ip m e n t , p u rsu a n t t o e x is tin g

(o t h e r

p ra ctic e s a n d p o lic ie s , p r o v id e d th a t s u ch use sh all n o t

a d v a n ta g e o u s.

in te r fe r e w it h th e regular s c h o o l p ro g r a m an d p r o v id e d

n u m b e r o f r e p re se n ta tiv e s o f th e u n io n a n d th e e m p lo y e r .

th a n

m o n t h ly

m e e tin g s )

w h en

m u tu a lly

T h is c o m m it t e e co n s is ts o f a re a so n a b le

that w h e n an y m e e tin g is h e ld in th e ev en in g a n d sp ecia l

S u b c o m m it t e e s f o r U n io n -M a n a g e m e n t C o o p e r a t io n m a y

c u s t o d ia l

b e e s ta b lis h e d a t lo w e r o rg a n iz a tio n a l le v e ls w h e re the

serv ice

is re q u ir e d ,

th e

B oard

m ay

m ake

a

re a s o n a b le ch a rg e th e r e fo r . N o ch a rg e sh all b e m a d e f o r

n e e d f o r s u ch a c h a n n e l o f c o m m u n ic a t io n is a g reed t o .

u se o f s c h o o l r o o m s b e f o r e th e c o m m e n c e m e n t o f the

S u b je c t m a tte r o f c o n fe r e n c e s w ill b e p r o b le m s o f g eneral,

s c h o o l d a y , n o r u n til 4 : 3 0 p .m .

Some contracts specifically forbade the use of
company time for employee organization meetings or
other business:

14



c o n c e r n t o e m p lo y e e s . In d iv id u a l g rie v a n ce s w ill n o t b e a
s u b je c t

fo r

d is cu s s io n

at

th e se

U n io n -M a n a g e m e n t

c o n fe r e n c e s . H o w e v e r , a p o l i c y th a t has re s u lte d o r c o u ld
re su lt in g e n e ra l in cre a s e o f g rie v a n ce w ill b e c o n s id e r e d as
a t o p i c f o r d is cu s s io n .

Such meetings will be held at a mutually agreeable time.
At least 3 working days prior to the meeting, either party
shall provide, in writing, specific discussion items which
require research of the other party. No official notice is
required for between-meeting consultations and they will
be arranged at the convenience of both parties as soon as
possible after the need is indicated. These meetihgs will be
conducted during regular working hours on official time.
At the conclusion of these meetings, either party may
request that a joint statement be issued on the unresolved
subjects under discussion, the general position of the
parties on these subjects, and the agreements reached
during the session. Management will duplicate and furnish
to the union at least one copy of the statement for each
Union Steward and Bulletin Board.
(29)
The employer agrees that representatives of the
union in the unit and management will meet monthly on
a regular basis for the purpose of reviewing and discussing
the common interests in establishing and maintaining
labor-management cooperation.
Other meetings will be held at the request of
either party as the need arises, at times mutually agreed
to, to confer on personnel policies and other matters
affecting working conditions of employees in the unit.
A brief summary of the matters discussed and any
understandings reached at all meetings as well, as the
position taken by the parties in a disagreement will be
prepared and initiated by both sides.
The employer agrees that the union may have
present at meetings described in sections a. and b. of this
article a maximum of three officers and/or stewards. In
addition, the union may have present other officials of the
union who are not employees of the D.C. Government.

The remaining provisions established a variety of
committees to deal with specific issues. For instance, 12
percent of the agreements provided for joint safety
committees. These provisions established committee
composition and described the extent of the com­
mittee’s authority. The language in these clauses ranged
from detailed provisions, as in the first illustration, to
shorter, more general clauses as in the last two illustra­
tions. In all three, the committees’ authority was limited
and advisory or promotional in nature:
(30)
The city and union agree to establish jointly a
Safety and Health Committee consisting of an equal
number of city and union representatives, the number of
members to be agreed upon. This committee will advise
management of all safety and health activities and will
be expected to:
a. Make immediate and detailed investigation of
each accident to determine fundamental causes.
b. Develop data to indicate accident sources and
injury rates.
c. Make inspection to detect hazardous physical
conditions or unsafe work methods and recom­




mend changes or additions to protective equipment
or devices for the elimination of hazards.
d. Promote safety and first-aid training for com­
mittee members and workers and participate in
advertising safety and in making the safety pro­
gram known to all workers.
e. Conduct regularly scheduled meetings at least
once a month during working hours without loss of
pay for the sole purpose of discussing accident
prevention and developing suitable corrective
measures.
(31)
A Police Safety Committee, consisting in part of
at least one member from each of the three Police
organizations (designated by those organizations). This
committee shall make recommendations to the Director
of Public Safety and City Manager for consideration.
(32)
. . . The municipal employer and the union shall
establish a joint safety committee consisting of represen­
tatives of each party in each department for the purpose
of promoting sound safety practices and rules.

Apprenticeship training committees were found in 11
agreements:
(33)
The city of Seattle, Washington Standards of
Apprenticeship developed by the city of Seattle Joint
Advisory Apprenticeship Committee are hereby
recognized. This conforms with the provisions of the city
Charter.
Application of the standards and detailed proce­
dures for the operation of the program, shall be worked
out by the Joint Electrical Craft Advisory Committee,
and be recognized as a part of this agreement.
(34)
The parties hereto agree to establish a joint
apprenticeship committee. The union and the authority
shall each have two members, to be appointed im­
mediately after the execution of this agreement. The joint
apprenticeship committee will develop an indentured
apprentice training program for first class mechanic,
which will be registered with the California State Division
of Apprenticeship Standards. The intent of the parties is
to have said program developed and operational at or
before the time the authority moves to its new service and
maintenance facility. At the time of inauguration of said
program, the incumbent second class mechanics will be
reclassified to apprentice first class mechanic, with no
reduction in wages.

An additional 15 agreements established one or more
committees to deal with particularly vexing problems
that had eluded resolution at the bargaining table. In the
following provision, for example, a tripartite committee
was established to resolve job evaluation problems on a
case-by-case basis:
(35)
Inequities-The inequity problem will be resolved
by the creation of a Job Evaluation Review Board which
will be structured as follows: Two members from the
administration-two members from the union and one

15

public member who shall be jointly agreed to. Member­
ship on the Board may vary in order to provide adequate
knowledge to deal with the specific evaluation being
requested. The Job Evaluation Review Board will consider
properly processed re-evaluation requests arising within
the bargaining unit. It is the intent of the parties that the
Job Evaluation Review Board shall continue during the
life of this contract to meet problems not now foreseen as
well as those presently recognized.

Most of the 15, however, were study committees
designed to resolve problems outside the atmosphere of
negotiations in areas such as wage relationships, health
insurance, job evaluation, seniority, and the like. Com­
mittees could work without any deadline or could be
required to report by a given date. Their findings were
advisory in nature; final decisions were left either to the
parties or to city management. Some committees
examined a single problem and others, several issues. In
the first illustration, four specific issues were to be
studied, and in the second, one complex problem:

missioner, no later than 6 months from the date this
agreement becomes effective. Present seniority provisions
of this agreement shall remain in effect until such time as
an accord is reached on further modifications.
*

*

*

*

*

The union and the department each shall appoint
three members and two alternate members to a study
committee to review the service rating system to deter­
mine whether a more desirable system can be developed.
The study committee shall submit a report of its findings
to the commissioner within 6 months from the date this
agreement becomes effective.

Another 17 agreements created committees to deal
with professional issues pertaining to teachers about
school operations, implementation o f integrated educa­
tion, building plans for new schools, vocational edu­
cation, the extended work year, teacher recruitment,
educational policy, and the like.5
Personnel actions

(36)
Arrangements will be made to establish a joint
union-management committee, consisting of three
representatives appointed by the authority and three
representatives appointed by Division 241 to study and
submit recommendations regarding grievances, discipline
methods, work rules and job posting procedures.
(37)
The employer will establish an insurance com­
mittee and will include on that committee representatives
of the organizations representing its employees in col­
lective bargaining. It shall be the function of that
committee to make a study of the health and welfare
insurance benefits presently being provided to City
employees to aid in a determination of which benefits and
plans are of the greatest value to the greatest number of
the city’s employees. In the event that the employer, after
reviewing the findings of the committee, determines to
change the type of plans or benefits available to its
employees, it shall continue to pay the cost thereof
provided that the benefit level is the same or substantially
equivalent to the existing benefit level.

Under the following provision, Detroit and its police
officers organization established two committees to
study several issues: seniority, rotation o f precinct
assignments, and the service rating system:
(38)
The union and the department each shall appoint
three members and two alternate members to a study
committee to review the seniority provisions of this
agreement and proposals of each party for the modifica­
tions of such provisions. The committee shall consider
also a rotation plan for personnel assigned to certain
precincts, the intent being to afford all policemen the
opportunity of serving in areas of the city presenting
varying degrees of challenge to law enforcement and to
prevent inequities resulting from prolonged assignment of
some members to work presenting relatively greater
exposure to danger. The study committee shall submit a
report on a proposed seniority system to the com­

16



Decisions to promote, demote, or reduce the size of
the work force traditionally have been part of city rules
and regulations. Employee organizations have been able
to achieve, in most instances, a voice in the proceedings
or a right to appeal management decisions. In some
situations, employee organizations have reduced existing
procedures to contract language. Actions under these
rules then are subject to agreement appeal rights.

Promotion. Promotion procedures, specified in more
than half o f the agreements, varied greatly from simple
statements o f factors in promotion to detailed clauses of
specific steps. (See table 13.) In two illustrations, the
role of seniority differed substantially:
(39)
Promotion shall be by merit based on considera­
tion of professional background and attainments, with
length of service as only one of the factors to be reviewed.
(40)
(a) The term promotion as used in this provi­
sion means the advancement of an employee to a higher
position or the reassignment of an employee to a higher
paying position.
(b)
Whenever an opportunity for promotion
occurs or a job opening occurs in other than a temporary
situation as defined below, in any existing job classifica­
tions or as the result of the development of establishment
of a new job classification, a notice of such openings shall
be posted on all bulletin boards stating the job classifica­
tion, rate of pay and the nature of the job requirements in
order to qualify. Such posting shall be for a period of not
less than 5 work days.
5
Illustrations appear in the general discussion of teacher
provisions in the last section of this study.

(c )
a p p ly

D u rin g this p e r io d e m p lo y e e s w h o w ish t o

fo r

th e

open

p o s it io n , in c lu d in g

e m p lo y e e s

on

l a y o f f , m a y d o s o . T h e a p p lic a t io n shall b e in w r itin g , an d
it

shall

be

su b m itte d

to

th e

e m p l o y e e ’ s im m e d ia te

su p e rv isor.
(d )

T h e e m p lo y e r shall fill su ch j o b o p e n in g s o r

v a ca n cies fr o m a m o n g th o s e e m p lo y e e s w h o h a ve a p p lie d
o n th e fo llo w in g b a sis:
1.

S e n io r ity is th e m a jo r fa c t o r .

2.

T h e e m p lo y e e has th e a b ility t o d o th e
jo b .

3.

T h e e m p lo y e e ca n learn t o d o th e j o b

Nearly one-third of the agreements established the
rate o f pay that an employee would receive for
temporary transfer to higher paying jobs (See table 13.)
Most of these clauses required the employer to pay the
standard rate o f the temporary job ; this payment was to
begin immediately or within a few hours after the
employee assumed the higher position. The following
clause stipulated that the higher rate would apply after
the employee has been on the job 6 hours. A transfer of
more than 24 hours would be given to the top man on
the promotion list:

w ith a re a so n a b le a m o u n t o f tra in in g o f
(4 3 )

up t o 3 0 w o r k in g d a y s.

E m p lo y e e s

ra tin g
(e )

A n o t ic e listin g th o s e e m p lo y e e s w h o have

a p p lie d fo r the p o s it io n and th e e m p lo y e e o r e m p lo y e e s
s e le cte d fo r th e p o s it io n shall b e p o s te d b y th e e m p lo y e r
o n all b u lle tin b o a r d s w ith in 2 w o r k d a y s o f th e s e le c tio n
b y th e e m p lo y e r an d b e p o s te d fo r a p e r io d o f at least 10
w o r k d a y s.

high er

r e q u ire d

th an

to

w ork

his regular

t e m p o r a r ily

p o s it io n

shall b e

at

a

com ­

p e n s a te d at th e rate o f th e high er p o s it io n i f he sh o u ld
w o r k f o r 6 h o u rs o r m o re at th e h igh er rating. I f this be
f o r m o re th an

2 4 h o u r s , th e m an f r o m th e t o p o f the

e sta b lish e d p r o m o t io n a l list o n the sam e p la t o o n f o r this
p o s it io n shall b e ta k e n , a n d s h o u ld h e b e p r o m o t e d , this
tim e shall b e c o u n t e d t o w a r d h is salary ste p p ro g re s s io n .

Other clauses referred only to agency or other
regulations on promotion, and by reference included
them in the collective bargaining statement:

Some contracts, however, required the employee to
work in the temporary position for a longer period of
time before the new rate became effective:

(4 1 )

(4 4 )

W h en a v a c a n cy o c c u r s , o r a n e w j o b is c re a te d ,

A n e m p lo y e e s e le c te d f r o m an a p p ro p r ia te list t o

e m p lo y e e s shall b e p r o m o t e d o r tra n sferred in a c c o r d a n c e

fill a t e m p o r a r y v a c a n cy in a h ig h er c la s s ific a tio n shall

w ith

re ce iv e a 5 p e rc e n t in cre a se o r t h e first ste p p a y o f the

th e ru les a n d re g u la tio n s o f C iv il S ervice an d th e

c it y .

high er cla s s ific a tio n w h ic h e v e r is g re a te r, a fte r w o r k in g 30

Forty-one percent of the agreements provided for the
posting of opportunities for job promotions. Although a
few only mentioned that jobs would be posted, most
contained details o f the posting and selection processes.
For instance, the first illustration merely indicates that
jobs will be posted and specifies how long the notice will
remain. The second requires that the notice contain
specific items of information, including duties, location,
pay grade, and qualifications:
(8)

If a vacancy,
jo b

is

cre a te d

o t h e r th a n su p erv isors, o c c u r s , o r a

w h ic h

re q u ire s a n e m p lo y e e u n d e r th e

r e c o g n it io n cla u se o f this a g re e m e n t, n o t ic e f o r b id shall
b e p o s te d w ith in 2 4 h o u r s . S u c h n o t ic e shall b e k e p t
p osted

f o r 7 2 h o u r s , e x c lu d in g S u n d a y s a n d h o lid a y s .

D u rin g the p e rio d o f p o s tin g th e e m p lo y e r shall ha ve th e
rig h t,

w it h o u t

regard

to

s e n io r it y ,

to

fill

th e

p la ce

t e m p o r a r ily .
(4 2 )
in g

and

resu ltin g

p r o m o t io n a l

o p p o r t u n it ie s

an d

lateral tra n sfer o p p o r t u n it ie s w ill b e g iv en t o s t a ff and t o
th e

a s s o c ia tio n

tw e lv e p re c e d in g ca le n d a r m o n t h s , a n d shall re ce iv e said
h ig h er p a y w h ile a c tin g in said h ig h e r cla s s ific a tio n a fte r
said 3 0 d a y s.

Demotion. Only 13 percent o f the agreements provided
rules governing demotion. (See table 13.) Since
demotion policies often are covered by outside rules
such as civil service regulations, they remain an un­
abridged management right and therefore, are not
referred to in the agreement. Demotion provisions were
typically brief and contained few details. Some, how­
ever, established the right to grieve, defined the seniority
status of demoted employees, or incorporated existing
nonnegotiated rules:
(4 5 )

p ie s id e n t , a n d

s u ffic ie n t

tim e w ill b e

a llo w e d f o r e m p lo y e e s t o a d v a n ce th eir c a n d id a c y . N o t ic e

In the case o f a d e m o t io n o f a R e g iste re d N urse to

a lo w e r c la s s ific a t io n , th e c ity shall s h o w ju s t cause fo r
th e

S u ita b le n o t ic e o f all v a ca n cies w ith in th e b a rg a in ­
u n it

d a y s cu m u la tiv e ly in th e h ig h e r cla s s ific a tio n w ith in the

d e m o tio n .

The

d e m o t io n

m ay

be

s u b je c t

to

th e

g rie v a n ce p r o c e d u r e .
(4 6 )
(a )

D e m o t io n s :
W h en e m p lo y e e s are d e m o t e d f r o m o t h e r d iv is io n s
o f the d e p a r t m e n t, n o t u n d er th e re p re s e n ta tio n o f

w ill b e e ff e c t e d b y p o s tin g fo r 5 c o n s e c u t iv e w o r k d a y s o n

u n io n ,

su ita b le b u lle tin b o a r d s t h r o u g h o u t th e m a in a n d b r a n ch

p ro p r ia te

lib ra ries. S u c h n o t ic e w ill in c lu d e a d e s c r ip tio n o f th e

fille d w ith m e m b e r s p re s e n tly u n d e r th e re p re se n ta ­

d u tie s and lo c a t io n o f th e p o s it io n in w h ic h th e v a c a n cy

tio n

e x is ts , to g e th e r w ith

c o m e u n d e r th e a c c e p t e d tra n sfer p r o c e d u r e w i t h

its ra n k , title , p a y g ra d e , a n d th e

re q u is ite q u a lific a t io n s .




of

th e y

shall n o t

s e n io rity
the

be

a b le

to

use

u n til all o p e n in g s

th e n
have

ap­
been

u n io n . T h e y shall th e n im m e d ia te ly

th e fu ll b e n e fit o f th eir a p p ro p r ia te se n io rity .

17

(b)

If an employee is transferred to a position under
the department not included in the bargaining unit
and is thereafter transferred again to a position
within the unit, he shall have accumulated seniority
while working in the position to which he was
transferred.

(c)

However, employees returning to the bargaining
unit under the provisions of this section will be
assigned a vacant position and will be allowed to
exercise their full seniority in picking job assign­
ments at the next regular job opening. Employees
transferred or demoted under the above circum­
stances, shall retain all rights accrued for the
purposes of any benefits provided for in the
agreement.

(47)
. . . reduction in pay or position shall be governed
by the rules of the Board of Fire Commissioners and the
Civil Service Commission . . .

Eight percent of the clauses allowed employees
voluntarily to elect demotion during periods of
reduction-in-force. This stipulation generally meant
transfer to an existing vacancy rather than replacement
of workers with less seniority:
(5)

The term demotion, as used in this provision,
means reassignment - not requested by the employeefrom a position in one job classification to a lower paying
position in the same job classification or in another job
classification.
Demotions shall be made only
off employees. In any case involving
employee involved shall have the right
alternative he will take - the demotion or

to avoid laying
demotion, the
to elect which
the layoff.

No demotion shall be made for disciplinary
rea son s.

Some o f these provisions spelled out the seniority rights
accruing to the demoted worker:

the advent o f collective bargaining. As a consequence,
references to layoffs are relatively infrequent.6
Provisions granting employee organizations an active
role during reduction-in-force situations were negligible.
The following example is typical in that it only required
discussion o f anticipated action with the union (See
table 14):
(49)
In the case of layoffs, seniority of employees in
the City Service shall be recognized as a factor to be given
substantial weight, together with other factors, in deter­
mining the order of layoff. When a layoff is con­
templated, an opportunity for discussion shall be afforded
to the appropriate union representatives prior to the
issuance of the notices of layoff.

Almost 12 percent of the agreements stipulated that
the union or association be given 1 week or more
advance notice of any layoff except in emergencies. This
action afforded the union the opportunity to confer
with city management on ways of easing the effect on
employees. At times, notice to both the union and
employee was required.
(50)
Except in emergency situations, employees to be
laid off for an indefinite period of time will have at least 7
calendar days notice of layoff. The union shall receive a
list of the employees to be laid off on the same date the
notices are issued to the employees.

Occasionally, as part o f the reduction-in-force
process, workers were given displacement (bumping)
rights. Bumping can occur either serially with many
workers being affected, as in the first example, or
bumping can be limited to the least senior employee and
thereby minimize disruptions, as in the second illustra­
tion:

Layoff procedures. The growing financial plight of cities

(51)
An employee whose job is affected by a layoff or
a job abolishment may bump into any job within the
progression up to his position, whether or not he ever
held the lower-rated job and/or any job all of whose
duties are included in the job involved in the layoff or
abolishment; provided the employee whose job is affected
by a layoff or abolishment has more service with the city
than the employee he is bumping. The procedure may
then be followed by the employee so bumped until the
last bumping procedure is completed. Representatives of
the bargaining agent and the employer will jointly create a
chart setting forth the jobs into which each classification
may bump in the event of a layoff or abolishment.

sometimes has resulted in drastic restrictions of
municipal activities at the same time that desperate
appeals for fiscal relief have been issued from mayors’
offices to State and Federal Governments. In some
situations, layoff has moved from threat to actuality.
Civil service regulations in most cities provided for
orderly reduction-in-force (RIF) procedures long before

6
For a discussion of provisions in private sector agreements,
see Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Layoff, Recall, and
Worksharing Procedures, (BLS Bulletin, 1425-13,1972).

(48)
At the time of any layoff, a regular employee or a
promotional probationer shall be given an opportunity to
accept reduction to the next lower class in a series of
classes in his department, or he may be transferred as
provided by Rule 10:01 c (3), transfer in lieu of layoff.
An employee so reduced shall be entitled to credit for any
previous regular service in the lower class and to other
service credit in accordance with the Service Credit Rule
9.

18




(52)
An employee to be laid off under . . . this section
may exercise seniority to displace the employee with the
least amount of seniority within his classification and
term of employment subject to the provisions o f . . . this
article. If he chooses not to exercise his seniority or
cannot do so . . . he will be laid off; otherwise the
displaced employee will be laid off.

The provision found most often but still appearing in
only 28 percent o f the agreements, granted employees
who are displaced through no fault o f their own the
right to be rehired in the inverse order in which they
were laid off. (See table 14.) In the following clause,
ability to perform the available work along with
seniority was a factor in recall:
(53)
When due to lack of work, it becomes necessary
to layoff employees, the employee with the least seniority
standing shall be the first to be laid off, provided such
employees retained are capable of doing the work
remaining. When employees are to be recalled, the first to
be recalled shall be those last laid off provided, that
such employees recalled are capable of doing the work
then available.

Job security. Several miscellaneous job security provi­
sions helped either to protect the employees from layoff
or ease the hardships that resulted from reductionsin-force. Few agreements contained these provisions,
again perhaps, because they are covered by city rules and
procedures antedating collective bargaining. Some, like
attrition clauses, are as rare in private as in public
agreements, and as a practical matter, a policy o f not
filling vacancies may be adopted.
The most frequent o f these provided for the training
of employees. (See table 15.) The skills acquired through
training could increase an employee’s value to the
employer:
(54)
The authority shall establish an in-service training
program for the purpose of improving employee under­
standing and performance with respect to the employee’s
present position, the objectives of the authority’s pro­
grams, and to prepare the employee for promotional
opportunity. Successful completion of promotional train­
ing shall qualify all employees for promotion to the
position for which trained, in accordance with this
Article . ..
(55)
All heavy equipment mechanics of the Fire
Department shall be given the opportunity to attend a
recognized fire equipment repair school or factory for
special training. All members attending such a school shall
receive their full salary while attending, and the city of
Kansas City shall stand the cost of the school and
out-of-town living expenses while in attendance as well as
the cost of transportation from Kansas City and return.
With the adoption of the next pay plan there shall be
established a new classification of fire equipment




mechanic, and persons who successfully complete the
specialized schooling shall be reclassified.

A few agreements provided for tuition aid. In the
following provision, payment of full tuition, books, and
fees was contingent on 2 years of service following
completion o f course work:
(56)
The city will pay for the full cost of all tuition,
books and fees of all police officers attending and
successfully completing police science courses leading to
the degree of associate of Police Science; payment being
made on the following schedule:
(a) One-half of all expenses above mentioned upon
presentation of evidence of successful completion of
individual courses.
(b) All such expenses previously unreimbursed to
be paid in a lump sum upon completion of 2 years’
continuous service from date of receipt of the Associate’s
degree.

Clauses that either prohibit the subcontracting of
work or limit the circumstances where it could be used
helped to protect the jobs o f employees. These clauses,
however, were not significant in municipal agreements
and appeared in only eight agreements:
(57)
During the term of this agreement, the Board of
Education shall not contract out or subcontract any
public work performed by employees covered by this
agreement that would mean the loss of time of any
employee covered by this agreement, save in cases of
emergency as determined by the Department Head.

Advance notice of technological changes and attrition
arrangements were minimal in city agreements. The
attrition arrangement in the second illustration protects
employees in specific classifications only:
(58)
The municipal employer agrees to supply
journeymen and apprentices full opportunity to become
proficient on all new equipment, machinery or processes
which are a substitute for, evolution of, or which replace
present equipment, machinery or processes and the union
agrees to supply partially trained journeymen and ap­
prentices for that purpose. The municipal employer will
give the union sufficient advance notice of its intention to
install any new equipment, machinery or processes to
enable the contracting parties to implement the provisions
of this section.
(59)
The city shall have the exclusive right to eliminate
through attrition the classifications of uniform fire
dispatcher, fire lieutenant, fire prevention inspectors, drill
master, and assistant fire marshal.
Hours, overtim e, and prem ium pay

Scheduled hours; daily and weekly overtime. The
number of hours constituting the normal daily or weekly

19

work schedule was set forth in almost two-thirds o f the
agreements, and often served as the basis for defining
overtime. (See table 16.)

refuse overtime except in an emergency without fear of
discrimination. However, a record of hours refused was
kept and posted:

(32)
The regular workweek for full-time employees
shall be 40 hours with respect to every person holding a
position in schedule B of the City compensation Plan
effective March 6, 1963, with an asterisk prefixed to the
title of the position, 35 hours with respect to all other
such persons. The regular workday for employees whose
regular workweek is 40 hours shall be 8 hours, and the
regular workday for employees whose regular workweek
is 35 hours shall be 7 hours. The workweek shall consist
of 5 days, Monday through Friday, inclusive, except for
employees in continuous operations or on rotating shifts,
and except for employees in departmental schedules
which differ from the standard Monday through Friday
type schedule such as, by way of example and not by way
of limitation, in the Public Works Department and the
Department of Health and Hospitals.. ..

(24)
Overtime work shall be voluntary except in the
event of an emergency. There shall be no discrimination
against any employee who declines to work overtime,
except in the event of an emergency, but a record shall be
kept for each employee and posted, showing the number
of hours of overtime he refused to work.

Overtime payment usually was specified after a certain
number of daily or weekly hours had been worked (both
found in approximately 38 percent o f all agreements):
(17)
Time and one-half the employee’s regular hourly
rate of pay shall be paid for work under any of the
following conditions:
All work performed in excess of 8 hours in one da y . ..
(60)
Except as otherwise provided herein, the regular
workweek for regular full-time employees will be 40
hours, and all hours worked in excess of 40 in 1
workweek will be paid for at the rate of time and one-half
(lVfc). Provided, however, that, consistent with the provi­
sions of the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act, the
hospital may schedule employees who work in special
care departments (e.g., operating room) for 80 straight
time hours of work over 2 workweeks so long as such
employees receive time and one-half i\Vi) for all hours
worked in excess of 80 in 2 workweeks, time and one-half
(IV2) for all hours worked in excess of 8 in 1 workday,
and 4 days off during the 2 workweeks.

Regulation o f overtime. Twenty-seven percent o f the
agreements which govern the scheduling o f overtime
provided for its equal distribution. (See table 16.) In
some, however, the requirement was made that the
employee be able to perform the job:
(61)
Insofar as is practical, overtime will be divided
equally among employees within a classification in which
overtime is needed. If the employee within the c’assification next entitled to overtime is not qualified to perform
the work for which overtime is needed, then the qualified
person within the classification next entitled to overtime
will be granted the overtime work.

Approximately 16 percent o f the agreements
specifically granted employees the right to refuse over­
time. In the following example, an employee could
20




Compensatory time, that is, the granting of time off
rather than overtime premium pay, was banned
specifically in 18 percent of the agreements. (See table
16.)
(62)
Employees working overtime Sundays and holi­
days shall be compensated two times hourly rate. Em­
ployees who work in excess of the normal 35 hour
workweek shall be compensated on the basis of 1 1/2
times the hourly rate. No compensatory time, will be
given for overtime work.

A few agreements, however, permitted compensatory
time off or overtime pay at the option of the employer:
(37) Overtime at the rate of 1-1/2 times an employee’s
established hourly rate as set forth in schedule A,
exclusive of shift premium, shall be paid for all work
performed outside of or in excess of an employee’s
established shift hours and on the employee’s 6th and 7th
day of work in any week and on holidays other than
those falling on Saturday, provided, however, that the
employer may compensate for such overtime by time off
at a time mutually agreed upon at the rate of 1-1/2 hours
off for each hour of overtime (to a maximum of 40 hours
in 1 year) worked.

Weekend work. Premium pay for work on Saturday or
Sunday, normally nonwork days for many civil servants,
was specified in less than one-fifth of the contracts. (See
table 17.) In both examples, employees are guaranteed a
minimum number of hours at the premium pay rate:
(35)
For regularly scheduled employees (MondayFriday), Saturdays shall be compensated at the rate of
time and one-half provided such employees have been
credited with 40 hours straight-time pay in the scheduled
work week. A minimum of 4 hours at the time and
one-half rate shall be guaranteed to such employees.
(63)
Employees who are required to work on Sunday
shall be paid double time for such work and shall receive
not less than 4 hours’ work.

Only 11 percent of the agreements provided for
premium pay for work on the sixth or seventh consecu­
tive day o f work. Such provisions applied to employees
on continuous operations:
(64)
Time and one-half the employee’s regular hourly
rate of pay shall be paid for work under any of the
following conditions: . . .

If an employee (continuous operation employee) works
more than 6 consecutive days he/she shall receive double
time for the 7th consecutive day worked every day
worked thereafter.

Holidays worked. Premium pay for work on holidays
was provided in nearly 45 percent o f the agreements
studied. This frequency was surprisingly large for such
matters usually were established by municipal legislation
or administrative promulgations.7 In the following
illustration the employee working on the holiday
received time and one-half plus holiday pay, or double
time and one-half:
(65)
All work on a holiday for employees who are
otherwise eligible for pay on a holiday shall be paid at a
time and one-half pay rate in addition to the holiday pay.
Wage provisions and allowances

Wage adjustments. Although many agreements are
shorter in duration in municipalities than in private
industry, many contracts were still sufficiently lengthy
to require adjustment of wages during the contract term.
(See table 18.) Agreements o f 2 years or more were
more likely to have wage adjustment provisions than
agreements o f shorter duration. Deferred wage increases,
provided automatically usually at the contract’s an­
niversary date, were included in 52 percent o f the
agreements. Agreements with deferred increases
paralleled city size. Thus, cities o f 1 million inhabitants
and over were most likely to include deferred wage
increases in their contracts; cities o f 250,000 to 499,999
population were least likely. (See table 19.) In some
cases percentage increases were given as in the first
illustration; in other cases, fixed amounts as in the
second illustration:
(54)
The authority shall, effective January 14, 1969
(or the beginning of the first payroll period next
following this date), increase the compensation of all
employees covered by this agreement, in addition to any
other provisions, in the amount of 7.5 percent of salary
rates then in effect.
Effective January 1,1970 and January 1,1971 (or the
beginning of the first payroll period next following these
respective dates), the authority shall increase the
compensation rates of all employees covered by this
agreement in additional amounts of 7.5 percent.
(66)
Newly hired and promoted employees start at
base rate of the classification and progress to classification
rate after 6 months. All classification and base rates shall
7

S ee

p. 2 9

fo r a d is cu s s io n o f h o lid a y p ro v is io n s in c it y

a g re e m e n ts.




be increased 24 cents and 27 cents per hour in years
beginning July 1, 1971, and July 1, 1972, respectively.

Cost-of-living adjustments, provided for in escalator
clauses which relate wage levels to living costs as
measured by a price index, typically the Bureau of
Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index, were found in
only 17 percent of the agreements. (See table 19.) The
objective o f such a provision is to maintain the
purchasing power of money wages during the term of
the agreement. One agreement gave the union the option
of accepting the cost-of-living increase or an agreed on
deferred increase:
(67)
In the event the cost-of-living increases more than
7 percent in the period beginning on March 1,1969 (base
124.6) and ending on February 28, 1971 the wage rates
shall be increased on the basis of 1 cent per hour for each
.5 point or major fraction thereof, rise in the cost-of-living
over 131.6 as reflected in the Consumers Price Index for
Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, Bureau of
Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor monthly
report using U.S. Survey. If the Bureau of Labor Statistics
Consumer Price Index in its present form and method as
calculated shall be revised or discontinued, the parties
shall request the Bureau of Labor Statistics to provide an
appropriate conversion of the allowance which shall be
applicable as of the appropriate allowance date and
thereafter.
(68)
During the period from the first day of July,
1969, to the 30th day of June, 1970, the city agrees to
increase each salary grade by a percentage equal to the
percentage of increase in the national Cost-of-Living
Index as shown by the average of the 12 monthly reports
of the United States Bureau of Labor immediately
preceding July 1, 1969; or, at the option of the union,
instead of the cost-of-living increase, the employees
represented by the union shall be paid an additional 2
percent of their salary during the second year of this
agreement.

Clauses that allowed the contract to be reopened for
renegotiation o f wages or specific issues were found in
about one-fourth o f the agreements. (See table 19.) The
advantage of wage reopeners over deferred increases lay
in the ability of the parties to negotiate wages tailored to
conditions existing at the time o f the reopener. Most of
these reopeners were limited to wages:
(69)
Either party to this memorandum of intent
reserves the right to reopen Article XVI (Wages) for the
purpose of renegotiating wages for the period October 1,
1971 through September 30,1972, by notifying the other
party in writing at least 10 days prior to June 1, 1971.

Certain nonwage matters were the subject of
reopeners in 11 agreements. Some contracts permitted
negotiations on any noneconomic subject. Others
allowed reopenings on specific items, such as pensions:

21

R e o p e n in g o f c o n t r a c t
(7 0 )

It is a greed b y an d b e t w e e n the p a rties h e r e t o that •

this a g ie e m e n t m a y b e r e o p e n e d o n o r a fte r J u ly 1 , 1 9 6 9
f o r the p u rp o s e s o f c o n s id e r in g a n y n o n e c o n o m ic m a tters
a n d issues w h ic h m a y ha ve arisen b y th a t d a te .
(7 1 )

The

a u th o r it y

shall

a p p o in t

a

c o m m it t e e

to

inv estig a te th e p o s s ib ilit y o f an in itia tio n o f a re tire m e n t
p e n s io n p lan fo r e m p lo y e e s c o v e r e d b y th e term s o f this
a g re e m e n t. T h is a g re e m e n t m a y b e r e o p e n e d at a n y tim e

dealing with blue-collar workers. (See table 20.) Threefourths of these agreements left classification matters to
unilateral management determination, but more than
half of these granted the employee organization the right
of appeal. At times, such appeals could be arbitrated but
often they were resolved only by a higher management
authority:
(7 4 )

I f su b sta n tia l ch a n g e s in th e m e t h o d o f o p e r a t io n ,

d u rin g th e te rm , fo r th e s o le a n d e x c lu s iv e p u r p o s e o f

t o o ls , o r e q u ip m e n t o f a j o b o c c u r , o r i f a n e w j o b is

n e g o t ia t io n

e sta b lish e d w h ic h has n o t b e e n p re v io u s ly cla s s ifie d , th e

of

a

p e n s io n

p la n , at th e re q u e s t o f said

c o m m it t e e .

w a g e ra te fo r su ch j o b shall b e d e te r m in e d b y th e O f f i c e
of

Thirteen agreements stipulated that area wage surveys
would be conducted either to adjust current wages or
serve as a basis to set future wage rates. (See table 19.)
Eight of these provided for union participation in the
area wage survey. In the first example, the union was
limited to submitting comments and recommendations.
In the second, union and city shared equally in approval:

P e rs o n n e l

A d m in is tr a t io n .

B e fo r e p u t tin g su ch rate

in t o e f f e c t , th e O f f i c e o f P e rs o n n e l A d m in is tr a t io n w ill
p r o m p t ly n o t i f y

th e u n io n in w r itin g , b u t o n c e this is

d o n e , th e c it y m a y p u t th e ra te in t o e f f e c t w it h o u t a n y
fu rth e r d e la y . T h e r e a fte r , th e u n io n ca n file a g rie v a n ce
o n th e sin gle issu e o f w h e th e r th e rate e sta b lish e d b y th e
O ffic e

of

P e rs o n n e l

u n r e a s o n a b le ,

and,

A d m in is tr a t io n
if

th e

g rie v a n ce

is

re a s o n a b le

or

is

s u b m it t e d

to

a r b itr a tio n , th e a r b itr a to r sh all h a ve th e a u th o r it y t o set a
n e w rate i f h e d e te r m in e s th a t the rate se t b y th e O f f i c e

(7 2 )

T h e u n io n a n d a u th o r it y a gree th a t th e a u th o r it y

o f P e rs o n n e l A d m in is tr a t io n is u n re a so n a b le .

has th e r e s p o n s ib ilit y t o esta b lish p a y rates b a s e d u p o n
the

p rev a ilin g

m u tu a lly

rates

in

th e

area. F u r th e r , th e

p arties

r e c o g n iz e th e u n io n ’ s c o n c e r n reg a rd in g d a ta

(2 9 )

A jo b

c la s s ific a tio n c o m p la in t is an e m p l o y e e ’ s

re q u e s t f o r re v ie w o f th e t itle , c o d e o r g ra d e o f his j o b at

re la tin g t o cla s s ific a tio n s c o v e r e d b y this a g re e m e n t. T h e

th e

a u th o r it y w ill p r o v id e th e u n io n w it h all n o n c o n fid e n t ia l

c la s s ific a t io n c o m p la in t th r o u g h h is re p re se n ta tiv e s. S u ch

a c t iv it y

le v e l.

salary data u p o n r e q u e s t. T h e u n io n m a y m e e t a n d c o n fe r

request

o r s u b m it c o m m e n t s , su g g estion s o r r e c o m m e n d a t io n s fo r

su p e rv iso r w h o w ill m e e t p r o m p t ly w ith th e e m p lo y e e

c o n s id e r a tio n b y the a u th o r it y p r io r t o th e a d o p t io n o f

a n d the u n io n r e p re se n ta tiv e t o d iscu ss th e m a tte r an d

w ill

be

Any

e m p lo y e e

s u b m it t e d

o r a lly

m ay
to

in itia te

th e

a jo b

a p p ro p r ia te

e x p la in th e b a sis u p o n w h ic h th e j o b has b e e n e v a lu a te d .

n e w salary s ch e d u le s.

I f th e m a tte r is n o t s a tis fa cto r ily se ttle d at this le v e l, th e
(7 3 )

In o r d e r t o im p le m e n t th e c i t y ’ s p o l i c y to w a r d

p a y in g p reva ilin g rates, th e c it y

agrees t o d e te r m in e a

p rev a ilin g rate b y a su rv ey o f rates p a id fo r lic e n s e d first
class

o p e ra tin g

en g in eers w h o

u n io n m a y , at th e e m p l o y e e ’ s r e q u e s t, file a c o m p la in t in
w ritin g

w it h

th e

D iv is io n

C h ie f .

I f th e m a tte r is n o t

r e s o lv e d , th e c o m p la in t ca n b e file d w it h th e A s s o c ia t e

are assign ed as s h ift o r

D ir e c t o r , a n d th e n t o th e D ir e c t o r o f S a n ita ry E n g in e e r­

w a t c h en g in eers a n d first class r e fr ig e r a tio n e q u ip m e n t

in g . I f th e m a tte r is still n o t r e s o lv e d , th e n th e w r itte n

operators, and computing a weighted average based on the

complaint is referred to the District of Columbia Central

num ber

P e rs o n n e l O f f i c e . T h e P o s itio n C la s s ifica tio n S p e cia lis t in

of

e m p lo y e e s

s u rv e y e d

in

th e

re sp e ctiv e

classes. . . .
W h en th e rates f o r th e a b o v e classes are d e te r m in e d ea ch
y e a r , th e y sh all b e a p p r o v e d b y th e c ity a n d th e u n io n .

th e P e rs o n n e l O f f i c e w ill m e e t p r o m p t ly w ith th e p arties
in v o lv e d t o d iscu ss th e m a tte r . I n f o r m a t io n u sed t o arrive
a t a d e c is io n w ill b e m a d e availa ble t o th e e m p lo y e e an d
th e u n io n re p re se n ta tiv e .

A n y c la im e d e rro r in th e c o m p u t a t io n o f th e rates m u st
b e m a d e w ith in 3 0 d a y s o f t h e d a te o f a p p ro v a l b y th e
c it y a n d th e u n io n t o e ffe c t u a t e a c o r r e c t io n .

An

appeal

m ay

be

m ade b y

th e

e m p lo y e e ( s )

re g a rd in g th e c o rr e c tn e s s o f h is p re se n t t itle , series c o d e ,
a n d g ra d e t o th e C e n tra l W age B o a rd C o m m it t e e a n d /o r

Job classification and reclassification. As opposed to

adjustments in wages for groups of employees or all
employees in a city agency, job classification and
reclassification procedures permit changes in individual
job rates when the job or jobs have been modified
substantially or newly established. Thus, new rates can
be established for difficulty of work, skills required,
responsibility, and so forth. These new jobs and their
rates then can be slotted into the existing wage
structure. Provisions for the classification and re­
classification of jobs were found in 22 percent of the
agreements, and were negotiated in agreements primarily
22




th e C iv il S e rv ice C o m m is s io n . S u c h an a p p e a l m u st b e
in itia te d w it h in 15 d a y s o f th e d a te o f th e d e c is io n o f th e
c o m p la in t .

One-fourth of the agreements stipulated that the
employee organization would participate to some degree
in making necessary job classification decisions. (See
table 20.) The first illustration allowed only consulta­
tion, and the second provided the employee organization
a greater degree of involvement and permitted recourse
to third party advisory arbitration:
(7 5 )

The

a s s o c ia tio n

c it y

agrees

re g a rd in g

th a t

it w ill c o n s u lt

oth er jo b

w it h

th e

cla s s ific a tio n s w h ic h it

m a y later esta b lish o r ch a n g e as t o salary g rad es an d rates

rate o f 10 ce n ts p e r m ile . H o w e v e r , this a llo w a n c e w ill n o t

o f c o m p e n s a tio n t h e r e o f.

tak e e ff e c t u n til the e x is tin g o r d in a n c e relatin g t o su ch
r e im b u rs e m e n ts

(7 6 )

Job

reeva lu a tion

-

W ith in

6 0 d a y s o f c o n tra ct

has

been

am ended

an d

a

sy s te m

of

c o n t r o ls has b e e n in t r o d u c e d .

a p p ro v a l, a c o m m itt e e w ill b e esta b lish ed t o rev iew j o b
in e q u itie s. I f the parties c a n n o t rea ch a m u tu a l a g r e e m e n t,
the issues m a y b e s u b m itte d t o a d v is o r y a r b itr a tio n . T h e
d e c is io n o f th e a rb itra to r w o u ld th e n b e r e c o m m e n d e d t o
th e

C ivil

S ervice

C o m m is s io n

a n d /o r

the

B oa rd

of

E d u c a t io n fo r th eir c o n s id e r a tio n .

(8 0 )

S h ift differentials. Approximately 30 percent of the

agreements studied provided for a differential for
evening and night work:
All agreem ents.......................................
Establishing shift d iffe re n tia ls ...........
No shift d iffe re n tia ls ............................

Agreements Employees
286
613,490
87
292,891
199
320,699

These were scattered among those activities which are in
operation around the clock, such as transit systems, fire
protection, and hospital services. Differentials were paid
either as an hourly add-on, a salary increase, or a percent
increase above day rates:
(4 6 )

Travel pay. Only about 6 percent of agreements
provided for payment for time spent traveling to or from
work:

A p re m iu m o f 15 ce n ts p e r h o u r shall b e p a id fo r

all h ou rs a c tu a lly w o r k e d in a n y reg u la rly assign ed d a ily
a f t e r n o o n sh ift w h ic h c o m m e n c e s at the h o u r o f 11 a .m .
o r b e t w e e n the h o u r o f 11 a .m . a n d 1 p . m .
A p re m iu m o f 2 0 ce n ts p e r h o u r sh all b e p a id fo r ail h o u rs
a ctu a lly w o r k e d in a n y reg u la rly assign ed d a ily n igh t sh ift
w h ic h c o m m e n c e s at the h o u r o f 7 p .m . o r b e t w e e n the
h o u rs o f 7 p .m . and 4 a .m . in clu s iv e.

O p e ra to r s r e q u ire d t o r e p o r t t o th e L egal D iv is io n ,

a tte n d c o u r t f o r th e d e p a r t m e n t, o r the C ity o f D e t r o it ,
o r t o b e d e ta in e d at the te rm in a l, shall b e p a id th e regular
w a g e rate p lu s travel tim e , an d less w itn e ss fe e s. T im e so
c o n s u m e d shall n o t resu lt in fin a n cia l losses t o o p e ra to r s .
(8 1 )

T h e n a tu re o f th e p r o fe s s io n a l r e s p o n s ib ilitie s o f

s p e c ia liz e d serv ices p e rs o n n e l re q u ire s travelin g b e t w e e n
b u ild in g s o r c o m m u n it y a g e n cie s. It is u n d e r s t o o d th a t
th e y are o n d u t y at all tim e s w h ile travelin g o n s c h o o l
d istrict b u sin e ss.

allowances. Special clothing, uniforms, or
protective devices usually were paid for or maintained
by the city when they were considered necessary to safe
or efficient performance of the employees’ duties. These
clauses, providing for clothing allowance or their main­
tenance, were found in 39 percent of the agreements and
applied largely to police, fire, and blue-collar workers.
(See table 21.):

Clothing

(8 2 )

T h e B ra n ch agrees t o fu rn ish a p p ro p r ia te p r o t e c ­

tive c lo th in g and e q u ip m e n t n e ce ssa ry f o r th e p e r f o r m ­
a n ce o f assign ed w o r k . T h e u n io n m a y , at its d is c r e t io n ,

fin a n cia l d i f ­

r e c o m m e n d n e w p r o t e c tiv e c lo th in g an d e q u ip m e n t an d

fe r e n c e in sh ift p a y an d all p a y m e n ts shall b e m a d e in

m o d ific a t io n s t o e x istin g e q u ip m e n t f o r c o n s id e r a tio n b y

a c c o r d a n c e w ith the f o llo w in g s c h e d u le :

the B ra n ch .

(7 7 )

The

p a rties

h erein

r e c o g n iz e

th e

Registered nurse Practical nurse
$1,200
$ 900

3 p .m .-11
4 p.m. -1 2
1 1 p .m . - 7
12 m - 8 a.

p.m...............
m ..............
a.m...............
m ...................

(7 8 )

E ffe c t iv e Ja n u a ry 1, 1 9 6 9 , a d iffe r e n t ia l o f 5

(2 1 )

E a c h e m p lo y e e shall re ce iv e an a llo t m e n t o f $ 1 0

p e r m o n t h fo r the p u rch a se a n d m a in te n a n c e o f p e rs o n a l
ite m s o f c lo th in g a n d e q u ip m e n t as p re s cr ib e d b y the c it y ,

1,500

1,125

p r o v id e d that the c it y shall fu rn ish an d m a in ta in all o th e r
ite m s o f c lo t h in g an d e q u ip m e n t . T h is p r o v is io n shall b e
e ff e c t iv e c o m m e n c in g Ja nua ry 1, 1 9 7 1 .

p e rc e n t p er c e n tu m shall b e p a id t o all fire o ff ic e r s fo r
w o r k a ctu a lly p e r fo r m e d b e t w e e n th e h o u r s o f 4 p .m . a n d

Selected payments fo r tim e no t w orked

8 a .m . o n a regular n ig h t sh ift a n d t o th o s e fire o ff ic e r s
assign ed

to

ro ta tin g

to u r s

of

d u ty

fo r

w ork

a ctu a lly

p e r fo r m e d b e t w e e n th e h o u rs o f 4 p .m . a n d 8 a .m . It shall
not

be

a p p lic a b le

to

F ire

O ffic e r s

who

are

regu larly

assign ed t o d a y tim e t o u r s o f d u t y e x c e p t w h e n s u ch fire
o f f i c e r is o r d e r e d t o w o r k a n igh t s h ift.

Mileage allowances. In one-fourth of the agreements,

city employees whose work required them to travel to
various locations were authorized to receive a mileage
allowance. (See table 21.) As the following illustration
indicates, authorization of such payments could become
enmeshed in the legislative process:
(7 9 )

E m p lo y e e s w h o are re q u ire d t o use th eir p erson a l

a u to m o b ile s o n

c it y b u sin ess w ill b e re im b u rse d at th e




City contracts paralleled private sector counterparts
in that they contained a variety of payments for time
not worked, particularly for sickness, vacations, holi­
days, funerals, and jury duty. (See tables 22, 23, 24.)
However, many of these frequently were granted uni­
laterally to city employees before the advent of col­
lective bargaining, and thus, such arrangements were not
included always in the agreements studied.
Sick leave. Seventy-seven percent of the agreements

referred to sick leave. (See table 22.) Typically, sick
leave provisions set forth the number of days that would
be earned during a given working period. Often, they

23

stipulated the maximum days that might be accrued and
carried over from year to year:

w ife ,

(8 3 )

d a y s are u se d w ith in th e ca le n d a r w e e k (a n y 7 c o n s e c u t iv e

T h e c i t y ’ s cu rre n t sick leave p o l i c y p r o v id e s :

hu sba nd,

p a re n t, p a re n t-in -la w , ste p p a r e n t, c h ild ,

b r o t h e r , sister o r s te p c h ild shall b e p e r m itt e d w it h o u t lo ss
o f p a y f o r n o t t o e x c e e d 3 fu ll w o r k d a y s , p r o v id e d the
d a y s ) startin g w it h th e d a y o f th e d e a th .

A ll e m p lo y e e s shall a cc ru e s ic k lea v e at th e rate o f 13
I n case th e d e a th o f a re la tiv e , as liste d in S e c t io n 2 , (a ),

w o r k in g d a y s p er y e a r.

a b o v e o c c u r s w h e n su ch rela tiv e is in th e a r m e d se rv ice s o f
E m p lo y e e s

m a y a c c ru e sick leave t o a m a x im u m o f 9 0

th e U n ite d S ta te s, th e se p ro v is io n s m a y a p p ly t o leave fo r
th e p u r p o s e o f a tte n d in g m e m o r ia l o r r e lig io u s serv ices

days.

h e ld b e c a u s e o f s u ch d e a t h , w it h o u t regard t o th e p la ce

Most of the provisions dealt with aspects of sick leave
policy designed to prevent abuses, such as reporting
requirements and medical certification:

w h e re d e a th o c c u r r e d o r t o th e p la c e w h e r e se rv ice s are
h e ld .
A b s e n c e o f 1 d a y w it h o u t lo ss o f p a y w it h in t h e ca le n d a r
w e e k (a n y 7 c o n s e c u t iv e d a y s ) startin g w it h th e d a y o f

(8 4 )

S ic k leave p a y m e n ts w ill n o t b e m a d e unless th e

e m p lo y e e

c o m p lie s

w it h

d e p a rtm e n ta l

rules req u irin g

p r o m p t n o t ic e t o su p erv isors o f a n y illness o n th e j o b , a n y
a b s e n c e , p rog ress r e p o r ts d u rin g a b s e n c e s , an d e x p e c t e d

th e d e a th shall b e p e r m itt e d in case o f th e d e a th o f a
g ra n d p a re n t, g r a n d c h ild , b r o t h e r -in -la w , siste r-in -la w , s o n in -la w , d a u g h te r-in -la w , u n c le , a u n t, n e p h e w , n e ic e , o r
first c o u s in .

d a te o f retu rn t o w o r k .
R e g u la r ly a p p o in t e d a c c o u n ta n ts m a y b e e x c u s e d b y th e
(8 5 )

W h en r e q u e s te d b y th e a u t h o r it y , a n y e m p lo y e e

re tu rn in g fr o m a sick leave in e x c e s s o f 3 d a y s sh all, at th e
tim e

of

su ch

r e tu rn , p res en t w r itt e n e v id e n c e fr o m

th e fu n e ra l o f a fe l l o w e m p lo y e e .

a

p h y s ic ia n o f h is p h y s ic a l fitn e ss .

Funeral leave . About 60 percent of the agreements

permitted paid leave in the event of death in the
employee’s immediate family, or less often, for other
relatives or fellow employees. Funeral leave provisions
generally included a definition of the family, a statement
of which employees were eligible for leave, and a
stipulation of the maximum days of leave that could be
used. Within these general provisions, variety existed.
For example, the definition of family could extend to
step parents and children, foster parents, or a legal
guardian. The maximum leave in the first clause was 3
days, and in the second, 5 days:
(8 6 )

S u p e r in te n d e n t f o r Vi d a y w it h o u t lo s s o f p a y t o a tte n d

T im e o f f w it h p a y , sh all b y g ra n te d t o regular

e m p lo y e e s , n o t t o e x c e e d 3 w o r k d a y s in case o f d e a th in

The preceding clause applied to “ regularly appointed”
accountants. Most clauses similarly emphasized that the
leave extended only to the regular work force, and
occasionally established a minimum length of service for
eligibility. In the following provision, an employee was
required to have 6 months’ service. The clause also
stipulated that the days of leave referred to were
regularly scheduled work days, and that the leave would
not impair accumulated sick or vacation leave:
(5 8 )

In

th e e v e n t o f t h e d e a th o f a s p o u s e , fa th e r ,

fa th e r-in -la w ,
c h ild ,

or

m o th e r,

g ra n d c h ild

m o th e r-in -la w ,
in

th e

b roth er,

im m e d ia t e

fa m ily

sister,
o f an

e m p lo y e e w it h 6 o r m o r e m o n t h s o f c o n t in u o u s a ctiv e
se rv ice , a n d w h o is in a c tiv e se rv ice at th e tim e o f s u ch
d e a th , su ch e m p lo y e e sh all b e e n t it le d t o re ce iv e u p t o 3
d ays’

lea v e

w it h o u t

lo s s

of

pay

fo r

th e

p urpose

of

a tte n d in g fu n e r a l se rv ice s o r a rrangin g f o r b u ria l. It is

th e im m e d ia te fa m ily . I m m e d ia te fa m ily shall b e d e fin e d

u n d e r s t o o d th a t th e se d a y s m u st b e d a y s u p o n w h ic h th e

fo r this p u r p o s e as s p o u s e , n a tu ra l, fo s t e r , ste p p a re n t,

e m p lo y e e is re g u la rly s c h e d u le d t o w o r k . L e a v e w it h o u t

m o th e r-in -la w , fa th e r-in -la w , c h ild , b r o t h e r o r sister; o r

lo s s o f p a y u n d e r th is p a ra g ra p h shall n o t b e d e d u c t e d

a n y rela tive resid in g in th e h o u s e h o ld .

f r o m s ic k lea v e o r v a c a t io n lea v e.

fa m ily , 5 d a y s leave o f a b s e n c e w it h p a y sh all b e g ra n te d .

Occasionally, employees could accumulate funeral leave
within given limits:

T h e im m e d ia te fa m ily shall b e d e fin e d as fo l l o w s : m o t h e r ,

(3 0 )

(8 7 )

fa th e r,

In case o f a d e a th in th e e m p lo y e e s im m e d ia te

spouse,

fa th e r-in -la w ,

c h ild r e n , sister, b r o t h e r , m o th e r-in -la w ,
g ra n d m oth er,

g r a n d fa th e r

and

legal

g u a rd ia n .

r e ce iv e

. . . D u rin g th e first 2 years e a ch e m p lo y e e shall
5 d a y s b e r e a v e m e n t le a v e f o r e a c h fis c a l y e a r ,

w h ic h m a y b e a c c u m u la t e d t o a t o t a l o f 1 0 d a y s . A ft e r
t h e 10 d a y s lea v e ha ve b e e n a c c u m u la t e d , th e re sh all b e
n o fu rth e r gran t o f d a y s . I f m o r e than 5 d a y s o f f in a n y 1

Often relatives and fellow employees also could be
encompassed within the clause. The clause also could
authorize leave for a memorial service, usually in the
event of the death of a member of the armed forces:

y e a r are n e e d e d d u e t o a d e a th in th e fa m ily , an e m p lo y e e
m a y b o r r o w fr o m h is a c c u m u la t e d 10 reserve d a y s b u t h e
m u st re p la ce th o s e d a y s fr o m h is s u c c e e d in g y e a rs’ 5 d a y
p e rs o n a l le a v e g ra n t.

I f e x p lic it ly r e p o r t e d o n th e tim e s h e e t, a b s e n c e

Jury du ty. Jury duty or court witness leave with pay

o f a r e g u la r ly -a p p o in te d a c c o u n t a n t d u e t o th e d e a th o f a

was found in slightly fewer agreements than funeral

(8 8 )

24



leave. (See table 22.) As a rule, provisions stipulated that
employees would continue to receive regular pay, and
also set forth the conditions they, in turn, had to meet
to qualify, such as remission of jury pay to the city:

c i t y , c o u n t y , t o w n , state o r th e F e d e ra l G o v e r n m e n t o i
s u b d iv is io n o r a g e n c y . . . . t o a tte n d o r a p p e a r b e f o r e . . . .
a n y o f th e fo r e g o in g , o r w h o a tte n d s as a w itn e ss or in
o t h e r c a p a c ity in th e p e r f o r m a n c e o f his d u t y . . . in a
crim in a l ca se o r o t h e r ca se p e n d in g in a F e d e ra l d istrict
c o u r t , o r b e f o r e a g ra n d ju r y p r o c e e d in g , o r a U n ite d

(8 9 )

A b s e n c e w it h p a y n o t ch a rg e d t o v a c a t io n w ill b e

g ra n ted

e m p lo y e e s . . . . o n

ju r y

d u ty

or

an sw erin g

a

s u b p o e n a (p a y r e ce iv e d fo r su ch d u t y m u st b e tu r n e d o v e r
t o the A c c o u n t in g D iv is io n ).

S ta tes C o m m is s io n , o r in c o n fe r e n c e w it h a U n ite d S ta tes
a t t o r n e y . . . . o r at a n y p re-tria l c o n f e r e n c e o r a n y o th e r
re la te d h ea rin g o r p r o c e e d in g , shall b e e n t it le d t o o v e r ­
tim e

c o m p e n s a t io n

f o r e v e ry h o u r o r fr a c t io n t h e r e o f

W here an e m p lo y e e is s u m m o n e d f o r ju r y d u t y b y

d u rin g w h ic h h e w as in su ch a t te n d a n c e o r a p p e a ra n ce ,

a c o u r t o f c o m p e t e n t ju r is d ic t io n , an d a ctu a lly serves o n

b u t in n o e v e n t less th a n 3 h o u r s s u ch p a y o n an o v e rtim e

su ch ju r y , he m a y q u a lify t o re ce iv e his regular p a y as an

b a sis; p r o v id e d , h o w e v e r , th a t i f h e so a tte n d s. . . d u rin g

e m p lo y e e d u rin g su ch serv ice b y tu rn in g his ju r y p a y o v e r

any d ay , o n

t o th e c ity F in a n ce O ffic e r .

e n title d t o su ch a d d itio n a l p a y fr o m th e tim e o f first su ch

(9 0 )

m o r e th an o n e su ch o c c a s io n , he shall b e

a t t e n d a n c e .. . t o th e tim e o f last s u ch a t te n d a n c e o n su ch

One agreement set forth jury-related activities for which
absences away from work were fully paid:

d a y ; p r o v id e d , fu rth e r , that i f a n y s u ch o c c a s io n o c c u r s
o n a h o lid a y w h ic h fa lls o n th e e m p l o y e e ’ s d a y o f f o r
d u rin g

(9 1 )

E m p lo y e e s w h o are r e q u ire d t o serve o n a ju r y , o r

are re q u ire d t o r e p o r t t o c o u r t in p e rs o n in re sp o n se t o a

his

v a c a t io n ,

th e

e m p lo y e e

shall

re ce iv e

the

a d d itio n a l p a y d u e h im u n d e r th e h o lid a y an d v a c a tio n
p ro v is io n s . . .

ju r y d u t y s u m m o n s , o r are re q u ir e d t o r e p o r t f o r ju r y
e x a m in a t io n , o r t o q u a lify

f o r ju r y d u t y , shall receiv e

th eir regular salary d u rin g s u ch a b s e n c e s p r o v id e d th a t
th e y

rem it

to

th e

B o a rd

an

am ount

equal

to

th e

c o n p e n s a tio n r e ce iv e d b y t h e m , i f a n y , f o r ju r y d u t y .

Another agreement gave the city the option of providing
compensatory time or overtime pay for shift workers on
jury duty on what would otherwise be a scheduled day
off. In addition, the city required proof of jury duty:
(3 5 )

A ll e m p lo y e e s o f th e c ity o f T o l e d o w h ile serving

u p o n a ju r y in a n y c o u r t o f r e c o r d w it h in L u ca s C o u n t y ,
O h io , shall b e p a id his regular salary f o r s u ch p e r io d o f
tim e .

The agreement involving employees of the Los Angeles
Housing Authority contained many of the features of
jury duty provisions already discussed-pay, notification
and certification of duty, remission of fees—but it also
included two variations, namely, permission for em­
ployees to keep mileage allowances and permission to go
on jury duty only if the authority’s operations were not
harmed:

He

shall

rem it

to

the

c it y

T rea su rer w h a te v e r

a m o u n t su ch e m p lo y e e sh all r e ce iv e as c o m p e n s a t io n fo r

(9 3 )

E m p lo y e e s re ce iv in g le tte rs o r s u m m o n s f o r ju r y

d u ty

s h o u ld

absen ce

n o tify

th e ir

su p e rv iso r

im m e d ia t e ly .

is re q u ir e d b y an o f f i c i a l o r d e r fr o m

If

a n o th e r

g o v e rn m e n ta l ju r is d ic t io n f o r ju r y d u t y o r o t h e r p u b lic
p u r p o s e , leave w it h p a y shall b e g ra n te d fo r th e p e rio d o f

his services as ju r o r .

a b s e n c e p r o v id e d t h a t :
S h ift

w ork ers

who
o ff

serve
sh all

on

ju r y

be

(a t

d u ty
the

on

o p tio n

regu larly

s c h e d u le d

days

e m p lo y e r )

g ra n te d c o m p e n s a t o r y tim e o f f o r o v e r tim e

of

th e

pay.

1. T h e

2 . A n y ju r y o r w itn e ss fe e s re ce iv e d b y th e e m p lo y e e
shall b e

A ll ju r y d u t y c o m p e n s a te d f o r b y th e e m p lo y e r shall b e
c e r t ifie d t o

th e e m p lo y e r b y

tio n s o f th e a u th o r it y .

In the course of duty, police officers could be called to
testify before a court. The following highly detailed
clause assured premium pay if attendance was required
on days off:
A n e m p lo y e e o n d u t y at n ig h t o r o n v a c a t io n ,

fu r lo u g h , o r o n a d a y o f f , w h o a tte n d s as a w itn e s s o r in

I f an

e m p lo y e e , o th e r

th a n

a litiga n t

in

th e ca se , is

re q u ir e d t o b e a b se n t t o a p p e a r b e f o r e a gra n d ju r y o r in a
crim in a l ca se b e f o r e a c o u r t w it h in th e S ta te o f C a lifo r n ia ,
o r in a civ il case b e in g trie d w it h in L o s A n g e le s C o u n t y , in
r e s p o n s e t o a s u b p o e n a d u ly se rv e d , his regular salary shall
b e c o n t in u e d d u rin g th e p e r io d o f a b s e n c e , p r o v id e d th a t:
1. E a c h

o t h e r c a p a c ity in th e p e r fo r m a n c e o f h is d u t y fo r o r in
[M a ss a ch u s etts]

t o th e F isca l O f f ic e r . M ileage

3. T h e a b s e n c e w ill n o t s e rio u s ly im p e d e th e o p e r a ­

n o t so c e r t ifie d .

b e h a lf o f

r e m itte d

a llo w a n c e s m a y b e re ta in e d b y th e e m p lo y e e .

th e C le rk o f C o u r ts , a n d

u n d e r n o c irc u m s ta n ce s m a y ju r y d u t y a p p ly t o a n y d a y

(9 2 )

o r d e r has n o t b e e n b r o u g h t a b o u t th r o u g h

m is c o n d u c t o r c o n n iv a n c e .

d a te

of

n e ce ssa ry

a tte n d a n c e

in

co u r t o r

b e f o r e a g ra n d ju r y , o t h e r th an th e d a te s p e c ifie d

o r the c it y in a crim in a l o r

in th e s u b p o e n a , shall b e c e rt ifie d to b y the cle rk

o t h e r case p e n d in g in a n y d is trict c o u r t . . . . , a n y ju v e n ile

o r o t h e r a u th o riz e d o f f i c e r o f su ch c o u r t o r g ra n d

c o u r t , o r a n y s u p e r io r c o u r t , o r b e f o r e a n y g ra n d ju r y

ju r y .

p ro c e e d in g s , o r in c o n fe r e n c e w it h a d is trict a t t o r n e y . . . . ,
o r at an y p re-trial c o n fe r e n c e o r a n y o t h e r rela ted h ea rin g
o r p r o c e e d in g , o r w h o is re q u ir e d o r r e q u e s te d b y a n y




2.

In an y
m ilea g e

case in w h ic h a w itn e ss fe e e x clu s iv e o f
a llo w a n c e

is p a y a b le , su ch

fe e shall b e

25

c o lle c t e d

by

th e e m p lo y e e a n d re m itte d t o th e

(9 5 )

R e g u la r fu ll-tim e e m p lo y e e s , w h o are m e m b e r s o f

a n y m ilita ry reserve c o m p o n e n t , are e n t it le d t o leave o f

F is c a l O ffic e r .

a b s e n c e f o r s u ch tim e as th e y are in the m ilita ry se rv ice

In municipal schools, employees could be excused from
jury duty, presumably on the grounds that such em­
ployees serve the city more meaningfully while remain­
ing on regular duty:
(6 5 )

S ch ool

e m p lo y e e s

m ay

be

excu sed

fr o m

ju r y

o n fie ld tra in in g o r a ctiv e d u t y f o r p e rio d s n o t t o e x c e e d
3 0 d a y s p e r ca le n d a r y e a r. S u c h a leave m u st b e g ra n te d
b y th e d e p a rtm e n t h e a d a fte r seein g o rd e rs f r o m p r o p e r
m ilita ry a u th o ritie s . I f th e e m p l o y e e ’ s m ilita ry p a y is less
th a n his regular p a y , h e m a y file a c e r t ific a t e t o th a t
e f f e c t u p o n h is re tu rn , w it h c o p ie s o f m ilita ry o r d e r s a n d

d u t y . I m m e d ia t e ly a fte r re ce iv in g a s u m m o n s , th e e m ­

p a y v o u c h e r , a n d fo r w a r d it t o th e P a y r o ll O f f i c e t h r o u g h

p l o y e e sh o u ld req u es t in s tr u c t io n s fr o m th e o f f i c e o f th e

th e P e rs o n n e l D e p a r tm e n t , w h e r e u p o n h e w ill b e g iv e n a

C le r k T rea su rer in o r d e r t o

seek e x e m p t io n fr o m ju r y

c h e c k fo r th e d iffe r e n c e . M ilita ry tra in in g leave d o e s n o t
a p p ly t o s h o rt r e p e titiv e p e r io d s o f m ilita ry se rv ice .

d u ty.

Paid m ilitary leave. Employees who are members of the

Call back pay. Two-fifths of the agreements guaranteed

armed services reserve and who are called to active duty
for emergencies or summer training were provided leave
with pay in 40 percent of the agreements.8 The clauses
differed in the amount and duration of pay and the
certification required for pay eligibility. The following
two provisions, granted full pay during temporary
military service. The clauses, however, contained no
stipulations on whether payments made by the military
had to be turned over to the city:

that an employee called back after the completion of his
shift either would work or receive compensation for a
stipulated number of hours. Most frequently, 3 or 4
hours were guaranteed, usually at overtime premium
rates:

(9 4 )

A n y e m p lo y e e w h o is a m e m b e r o f th e R eserv e

F o r c e s o f th e U n ite d S ta tes o r o f th e S ta te o f N e w Y o r k
an d

who

is o r d e r e d b y t h e a p p ro p r ia te a u th o ritie s t o

a tte n d a tra in in g p ro g r a m , o r p e r fo r m o t h e r d u tie s u n d er

(3 7 )

A n y e m p lo y e e c a lle d t o retu rn t o w o r k im m e d ia t e ­

ly , o r b e f o r e t h e e m p lo y e e ’ s n e x t w o r k sh ift an d s u ch call
is a fte r th e e m p lo y e e has le ft th e e m p lo y e r ’ s p re m ise s at
th e e n d o f h is last s h ift sh a ll b e p a id f o r a m in im u m o f 4
h o u rs at th e rate o f o n e a n d o n e - h a lf tim e s h is regular
rate, p r o v id e d

h o w e v e r , th a t

i f th e sam e e m p lo y e e is

c a lle d b a c k m o r e th a n o n c e d u rin g th e sa m e b e t w e e n sh ift
p e r io d h is t o t a l m in im u m gu a ra n te e f o r all su ch ca ll-b a ck s
sh all n o t e x c e e d f o u r ( 4 ) h o u r s at tim e a n d o n e -h a lf.

th e su p e rv isio n o f th e U n ite d S ta tes o r o f th e S ta te o f
N e w Y o r k , shall b e g ra n ted a leave o f a b s e n ce w it h p a y
f o r a p e r io d n o t t o e x c e e d 3 0 d a y s d u rin g su ch serv ice.
(5 4 )

L ea v e o f a b s e n c e w it h p a y shall b e g ra n ted t o an

e m p lo y e e w h o is a m e m b e r o f th e N a tio n a l G u a rd o r
O rg a n iz e d

R eserv e

to

fu lfill his a n nu al t o u r

o f d u ty

In the following provision, actual hours worked were
paid for at time and one-half, but the guarantee
extended only to 4 hours at straight time:
(9 6 )

I f an e m p lo y e e is c a lle d b a c k t o w o r k a fte r having

c o m p le t e d a fu ll d a y ’ s w o r k , h e sh all b e p a id at tim e an d

re q u ir e m e n t. T h is leave p e r io d is n o r m a lly 2 w e e k s an d

o n e - h a lf th e straight tim e h o u r ly

shall n o t e x c e e d 17 d a y s .

w o r k e d w ith th e m in im u m g u a ra n te e o f 4 h o u r s at th e

Other provisions stated that the city would pay the
difference between military and regular pay. By and
large, provisions were limited to full-time employees as
in the following examples, and required the employee
to submit pay vouchers on his return so that the
differential could be computed. The first explicitly
guaranteed continued accumulation of vacation and sick
leave credits:

stra ig h t-tim e h o u r ly rate.

The guarantee rate was only 3 hours at straight time for
New York subway supervisors, but those recalled also
received a paid meal allowance:
(9 7 )

A regular (n o n p r o b a t io n a r y ) e m p l o y e e o f th e c ity

w h o is t e m p o r a r ily c a lle d t o
tra in in g )

sh all b e

g ra n ted

d u r a tio n

of

a ctiv e

su ch

a ctiv e d u t y (e .g . su m m e r

a lea v e
d u ty

and

of

a b s e n ce

shall b e

I f an

e m p lo y e e

is re q u ire d t o r e p o r t b a c k f o r

e m e r g e n c y w o r k a fte r b e in g relea sed u p o n th e c o m p le t io n
o f h is regu la r t o u r o f d u t y , h e w ill b e p a id as f o l l o w s : I f
h e shall h a ve b e e n o r d e r e d t o a n d d o e s r e p o r t in p e rs o n t o
th e

(7 4 )

rate o f p a y f o r tim e

p la ce

a llo w e d

w h e re

he

is d ir e c t e d

to

r e p o r t , h e w ill b e

3 h o u r s ’ tim e at his regular rate o f p a y f o r so

r e p o r tin g .

f o r the
p a id

th e

An

e m p lo y e e

e n g a ge d

in

e m e r g e n c y w o r k o u t s id e his

d iffe r e n c e b e t w e e n h is regular p a y an d his serv ice p a y

re g u la rly s c h e d u le d w o r k in g tim e w ill b e g iv e n a $ 3 m eal

( u p o n r e c e ip t o f a service p a y v o u c h e r ) f o r a p e r io d n o t t o

a l l o w a n c e .. . .

e x c e e d 31 d a y s in a n y ca le n d a r y e a r a n d , fu r t h e r , shall
a c c u m u la te v a c a t io n an d sick leave w it h p a y c re d it d u rin g
th e p e r io d o f su ch leave.

“ L e a v es o f a b s e n c e f o r m ilita ry serv ice are d iscu sse d o n
p. 2 9 .

26



R eportin g pay. Seventeen percent of the agreements

provided for payments to city employees, who reported
for work as scheduled only to find no work was
available. Such provisions were designed to penalize city

employers for improperly scheduling work and to
compensate employees for the inconvenience of travel­
ing to work unnecessarily. In contrast to provisions in
nongovernment contracts, city agreements generally
made no provisions for waiver of the report pay
requirement:
(9 8 )

A ll e m p lo y e e s , e x c e p t p a rt-tim e p e r s o n n e l, w h o

r e p o r t fo r w o r k at a regular assign ed tim e an d w h o are
o f f i c i a l l y e x c u s e d a n d sen t h o m e d u e t o la ck o f w o r k o r
in c le m e n t w e a th e r b e f o r e

Only 5 percent of the agreements
provided for meal periods on the city’s time. These
clauses usually referred to special situations or circum­
stances, such as continuous operation or overtime, and
applied to blue-collar workers, policemen, and firemen.
For example, an employee working a minimum number
of hours of overtime would be provided a paid meal
period and another break if he continued to work for an
additional period:

Paid meal periods.

c o m p le tin g 2 h o u r s o f w o r k ,

shall b e c re d ite d w it h 2 h o u r s p a y at th e ir stra ight tim e

(3 7 )

A n e m p lo y e e w h o is r e q u ire d t o w o r k m o re than

2 h o u rs b e f o r e o r b e y o n d his regular sh ift shall b e a llo w e d

rate.

a 3 0 m in u te lu n ch p e r io d o n th e e m p lo y e r ’ s t im e , t o b e

The employee could be required to remain available for
work and to perform any work assigned to qualify for
the guarantee:

ta k e n

not

later

th an

th e

e x p ir a t io n

of

su ch

2

hour

o v e r tim e p e r io d . In th e e v e n t th e e m p lo y e e w o r k s fo r
m o re than 4 h o u r s b e y o n d s u ch 2 h o u r o v e r tim e p e r io d ,
he shall re ce iv e an a d d itio n a l 3 0 m in u te lu n ch p e r io d o n

(9 9 )

A n y regular o p e r a t o r w h o r e p o r ts fo r his regu larly

assign ed run o r trick a n d w h o , th r o u g h n o fa u lt o f his
o w n , is n o t

u sed , sh all re ce iv e

his regular d a y ’ s p a y ,

p ro v id e d h e h o ld s h im s e lf ava ila b le fo r a n d p e r fo r m s a n y
o t h e r w o r k w h ic h h e m a y b e o r d e r e d t o p e r fo r m .
(1 0 0 )

the e m p lo y e r ’ s tim e f o r e a ch a d d itio n a l 4 h o u r o v e r tim e
in c r e m e n t.

In th e ev en t a s u b s titu te te a ch e r re p o r ts t o a

b u ild in g in a c c o r d a n c e w ith an a ssign m en t b y th e D iv isio n
o f P e rs o n n e l, a n d th e services o f th e su b s titu te te a ch e r are
u n n e ce ssa ry , a n d in the e v e n t th e s u b stitu te is w illin g t o
m o v e t o an assign m en t in a n o th e r b u ild in g b u t n o s u ch
assign m en t is a v a ila b le, th e su b s titu te te a ch e r shall b e p a id
the su m e q u a l t o o n e -fo u r t h o f his d a ily rate.

Where the nature of the operation required continuous
attendance at the work place, then the worker received a
paid lunch period, but he had to be prepared to respond
to any need for his services:
(1 0 4 )

E m p lo y e e s w h o m u st c o n t in u o u s ly m o n it o r th e ir

d u t y sta tio n shall have a 1 /2 h o u r lu n ch p e r io d b u ilt in t o
th eir 8 h o u r s h ift, a n d this lu n ch p e rio d shall b e sc h e d u le d
as c lo s e t o the m id d le o f th e w o r k sh ift as p o s s ib le . It is
u n d e r s t o o d th at su ch e m p lo y e e s are o n d u t y w h ile e a tin g
a n d m a y ha ve t o r e s p o n d t o d u t y r e q u ir e m e n ts . W h e re th e

Paid rest periods . Rest periods appeared in 19 percent

n u m b e r o f e m p lo y e e s p e rm its , e f f o r t s w ill b e m a d e to

of the agreements, but the practice formally or informal­
ly probably was more widespread than the data indicate.
(See table 22.) Allowances in agreements usually involve
blue-collar employees. Typically, clauses provide for rest
periods of equal length, one before and one after lunch,
midway through the shift:

a llo w u n in te rr u p te d m ea l b re a k s.

Length of paid lunch periods may vary according to
working conditions:
(4 0 )

T h e r e shall b e a 2 0 m in u te p a id lu n ch p e r io d fo r

all p e rs o n n e l w h o are re q u ire d t o rem a in at th e ir w o r k
sta tio n o r w o r k s ite d u rin g th e c o u r s e o f th e w o r k d a y .

(1 0 1 )

A ll

e m p lo y e e s

shall h a ve a 15 m in u te c o f f e e

S u c h p e rs o n n e l shall in c lu d e , b u t n o t lim ite d t o , o p e ra tin g

b re a k in th e m o rn in g a n d a 15 m in u te c o f f e e b rea k in th e

p e rs o n n e l in th e D iv isio n o f R e fu s e D is p o s a l, d isp a tch e rs

afternoon.

who

S u ch

coffee

b rea k s shall b e p a id fo r b y th e

e m p lo y e r .

Clauses also may be added to prevent the abuse of
breaks, for example, to extend lunch hours or for
personal business:
(1 0 2 )

A ll e m p lo y e e s ’ w o r k s ch e d u le s shall p r o v id e f o r a

15 m in u te rest p e r io d d u rin g e a c h o n e -h a lf s h ift. T h e rest
p e rio d shall b e s c h e d u le d at th e m id d le o f e a c h o n e -h a lf
sh ift w h e n e v e r th is is fe a s ib le . T h e rest p e r io d is in t e n d e d
t o b e a recess t o b e p r e c e d e d a n d f o l l o w e d b y a w o r k
p e rio d . C o n s e q u e n t ly , it m a y n o t b e u sed t o a llo w late
arrival o r early d e p a rtu re o r t o e x te n d the lu n ch p e r io d .
(1 0 3 )

A ll e m p lo y e e s shall b e e n title d t o o n e 15 m in u te

rest p e rio d d u rin g e v e ry 4 h o u rs w o r k ; th e rest p e r io d w ill
b e ta k en o r d in a r ily d u rin g the s e c o n d o r th ird h o u r o f

can n ot

lea v e

th e ir

w ork

sta tio n s ,

2 4 -h o u r

sh ift

o p e r a tio n s , e t c . N o paid lu n ch p e rio d shall b e lo n g e r than
2 0 m in u te s e x c e p t that in th e D iv is io n o f C o n s t r u c t io n ,
M a in te n a n ce a n d R e p a ir o f S treets a n d in th e D iv isio n o f
S e w a g e T r e a tm e n t , b e ca u s e o f sp e cia l w o r k in g c o n d it io n s ,
th e p a id lu n ch p e r io d shall b e 3 0 m in u te s.

Washup, cleanup. Washup, cleanup provisions were
found in only 9 percent of the agreements studied, again
predominantly among blue-collar workers, as might be
expected, since basically this provision is job-related. For
this study, clauses were defined to include matters such
as putting away tools or equipment as well as prepara­
tory time at the beginning of the day:
(1 9 )

A ll o p e r a to r s w ill b e a llo w e d 10 m in u te s p re p a ra ­

e a ch 4 h o u r p e r io d . E m p lo y e e s shall n o t c o n d u c t p erson a l

t o r y tim e f o r th e p u r p o s e o f g e ttin g e q u ip m e n t re a d y fo r

b u sin ess d u rin g the w o r k d a y w it h o u t p e rm is s io n .

p u llin g




o u t.

O p e ra to r s

w ill b e

a llo w e d

5 m in u te s f o r

27

sto rin g e q u ip m e n t a fter c o m p le t io n o f th eir assign m en ts

(1 0 5 )

o r w o r k runs at D iv isio n p o in ts o r o u t s id e lo c a t io n s .

on

E very e m p lo y e e c o v e r e d b y th is a g re e m e n t w h o
Ju ne

l

e m p lo y e r
P re p a ra tory tim e and s i g n o f f tim e shall b e c o n s id e r e d as

v a c a tio n

w o rk tim e an d m a d e a part o f t h e w o r k ru n .

An

e m p lo y e e

of

th e

Shops

and

E q u ip m e n t

D e p a r tm e n t, G arage D iv isio n o r S h o p D iv is io n , shall b e
a llo w e d

10

m in u te s w it h

pay

to

w a sh a n d d ress im ­

m e d ia te ly p rio r t o th e c o m p le t io n o f th e d a y ’ s w o r k .
(6 6 )

P lu m b ers an d p a in ters a n d o t h e r e m p lo y e e s w h e n

n e cessa ry shall b e given 15 m in u te s in th e a f t e r n o o n t o
cle a n u p b e f o r e leaving at the e n d o f th e w o r k d a y .

Several agreements required the city to provide neces­
sary facilities:
(5 7 )

a ctu a lly

30

w eeks

e lig ib ility

w orked
in

th e

fo r

th e

m u n ic ip a l

aggrega te d u rin g

y e a r shall b e

g ra n te d

2

th e

w eeks

of

v a c a t io n leave. . . .
...

More typically, provisions dealt with washing up and
clothes changing, some of which provided for such time
only at the end of the day. Time allowed usually varied
from 10 to 15 minutes:
(3 6 )

has

fo r

E m p lo y e e s shall b e g ra n te d a 15 m in u te p e rs o n a l

cle a n u p p e r io d p rio r t o th e e n d o f ea ch w o r k s h ift.

F or

serv ice

th e

p u r p o s e o f d e te r m in in g v a c a t io n l e a v e . . .

w ith

th e C o m m o n w e a lt h o f M a ssa ch u se tts, th e

c ity o f B o s t o n , o r th e c o u n t y o f S u f f o l k shall b e in c lu d e d
in c o m p u t in g le n g th o f se rv ice .

As for scheduling vacations, clauses stipulated that time
off would be distributed without impairing operational
efficiency. Within this limit, vacations could be selected
by employees, usually on a seniority basis. However, the
kind of seniority may differ for different groups of
employees, and may be modified by location of work,
shifts, and desirability for vacations during warm
weather months:
(7 )

V a c a t io n p e r io d s shall e x t e n d o v e r th e e n tire y e a r
and

shall b e

s c h e d u le d

in su ch a m a n n e r th a t in th e

ju d g m e n t o f (t h e e m p lo y e r ) s u ch v a c a tio n p e rio d s w ill n o t
in te r fe r e w ith th e d e m a n d s f o r s e r v i c e .. . .

W o rk sc h e d u le s shall b e a rra n g ed s o e m p lo y e e s m a y tak e
a d van tage

of

this

p r o v is io n , th e

e m p lo y e r

sh all m a k e

availa ble th e r e q u ire d fa cilitie s a n d su p p lies.

T h e s e le c tio n f o r v a c a tio n p e r io d s f o r o p e r a to r s [tra n s­
p o r t a t io n ]

sh all b e in a c c o r d a n c e w it h s e n io rit y . [T h e

e m p lo y e r ]

w ill p o s t a list b y O c t o b e r 1 5 th s h o w in g th e

In some cases, the amount of time was not given, but
employees were granted a “reasonable” time. The
following provision also permitted washup at the end of
both halves of the shift:

n a m e s o f o p e r a to r s a c c o r d in g t o th e ir s e n io r it y sta n d in g

(2 9 )

d a y s , w ith o n e s h o p stew a rd en g a gin g in th e p ic k .

T h e e m p lo y e r w ill p r o v id e a rea son a b le a m o u n t o f

tim e , c o n s is te n t w ith th e n a tu re o f th e w o r k p e r fo r m e d ,
f o r e m p lo y e e s t o clea n u p p r io r t o lu n ch an d at th e e n d o f
the w o r k d a y s .

a n d s p e c if ic tim e f o r e a c h o p e r a t o r t o m a k e his s e le c tio n .
S uch

s e le c tio n

N ovem ber

sh all

p rio r

to

b e g in
th e

on

th e

ca le n d a r

first

year

in

M onday
w h ic h

in
the

v a c a t io n is t o b e ta k e n , an d shall b e c o m p le t e d w ith in 6

W ith r e s p e ct t o n o n o p e r a t in g e m p lo y e e s , the s e le c tio n o f
v a c a tio n

p e r io d s

s e n io rit y

by

shall b e

lo c a t io n s b y

in

a c c o r d a n c e w it h D iv isio n

sh ifts .

[T h e e m p lo y e r ]

shall

d e te r m in e th e n u m b e r o f e m p lo y e e s an d c la s s ific a tio n s

Vacations. A surprising 70 percent of the agreements

^

referred to paid vacations, another fringe benefit normally covered in personnel regulations. (See table 23.) Plans
typically were graduated and increased annually as
length of service increased. Of the agreements specifying
maximum lengths of vacation, 81 percent were for 4
weeks or longer; 5 weeks was the most common.
Vacation provisions are usually lengthy and involve a
number of issues such as length of service, annual work
requirements, scheduling, and the effect of termination,
retirement, and military service on vacations. The length
of service determines the number of weeks’ vacation for
a given year. Although length of continuous service
usually is defined as work with one employer, the
following plan permitted service with different govern­
mental units. The same plan required city employees to
work 30 weeks in the year to obtain the minimum 2
weeks’ vacation. Other plans may set the vacation
eligibility in hours or days worked in the year:
28




fo r

any

v a c a tio n

p e r io d

a lth o u g h

v a ca tio n s

w ill

be

s c h e d u le d o v e r th e e n tire ca le n d a r y e a r , th e y w ill b e set up
f o r p ick so th a t a n y o n e in the n o n o p e r a t in g d e p a rtm e n t
c o u ld

p ic k

a v a c a tio n

in

M a y , J u n e , J u ly , A u g u st o r

S e p te m b e r as h e s o d esire s. . . .
(1 0 6 )

A rra n g e m e n ts f o r v a ca tio n s m ust b e m a d e w ith

regard t o th e n e ce s s ity o f c o n t in u o u s w o r k in g c o n d it io n s
in

order

th a t,

in

the

ju d g m e n t

of

th e

a u th o r it y ,

a

s u ffic ie n t n u m b e r o f e m p lo y e e s w ill b e availa ble at all
tim e s t o c o v e r th e va riou s classes o f w o r k . V a c a t io n s shall
b e p ic k e d a c c o r d in g t o an e m p l o y e e ’ s se n io rity w ith in th e
s e c tio n h e is e m p lo y e d .

Vacations also were granted to part-time workers,
usually pro-rated according to the number of hours,
days, or weeks a year that they worked. City employees
who left employment usually received the vacation
which they had earned until the time of their departure.
The estate of a deceased worker typically received the
employee’s earned vacation pay. Workers discharged for
cause generally lost earned vacation:

(1 0 7 )

V a c a t io n s f o r p a r t-tim e b u ild in g serv ice h elp ers

‘ 'In ju r e d o n

D u ty ”

status o n

th e d a te o f th e o b se rv e d

h o lid a y shall n o t re ce iv e h o lid a y p a y .

are g ra n ted o n the b a sis o f t o ta l h o u rs w o r k e d , in c lu d in g
p a id s ick t im e , d u rin g th e 12 m o n t h p e r io d e n d in g w ith
pay

p e r io d

num ber

10

of

ea ch

y e a r. A n

a d d itio n a l

a llo w a n c e is g ra n ted a fte r 1 0 and 2 0 years o f s e r v i c e .. . .
A n y e m p lo y e e , w h o leaves th e service d u e t o r e sig n a tio n ,
re tir e m e n t, l a y o f f o r d e a th o r w h o ta k es m ilita ry lea v e,
w ill

be

p a id

fo r

ea rn ed

v a c a t io n

tim e

th a t

has

If the holiday was worked, the employee was paid a
premium, and if the holiday fell on a day off or during
vacation, an extra day’s pay was provided:

ac­

c u m u la te d . D isch a rg ed e m p lo y e e s are n o t e n t it le d t o p a y

(7 1 )

I f a h o lid a y as e sta b lish e d in th is c o n t r a c t falls

d u rin g an e m p l o y e e ’ s v a c a tio n t im e , th e e m p lo y e e w ill be

f o r a c c u m u la t e d v a c a tio n tim e .

p a id d o u b le tim e fo r th e h o lid a y .

Holidays. Provisions specifying the number of paid

holidays appeared in as many agreements as vacation.
(See table 24.) The number of paid holidays in city
contracts varied greatly, but more than half of the
agreements provided for 10 paid holidays or more.
Regional variations were apparent. Although most agree­
ments in the Pacific and East North Central States
provided for 8 holidays or more, those in the East Coast
were more liberal. Contracts in the Middle Atlantic
States provided for 11 holidays or more, and in New
England, where local holidays such as Bunker Hill Day
and Evacuation Day are also celebrated, 12 or more.
Some agreements also provided for days off on an
employee’s birthday and on his employment anniversary
date.
In addition, holiday provisions usually established the
number and designation of holidays, eligibility for pay,
and premiums for work. Qualifications for holiday pay
were determined by length of service, usually minimal,
and days worked before and after the holiday. All of the
qualifications had to be met for holiday allowances to be
received. However, work qualifications which often
could be waived under mitigating circumstances were
adhered to rigidly when absence from work was the
employee’s fault:
(1 0 8 )

To

q u a lify

fo r

h o lid a y

pay,

c it y

f o r a p e r io d o f 3 0 ca le n d a r d a y s , an d ha ve w o r k e d th eir
n o r m a l w o r k d a y b e f o r e a n d th eir n o r m a l w o r k d a y f o l l o w ­
in g t h e h o lid a y , un less s u ch fa ilu re t o w o r k is cau sed b y
o n e o f th e fo llo w in g re a so n s:
P ers on a l

illn ess

or

illness

in

th e

im m e d ia te

fa m ily
b.

J u ry d u t y

c.

S ervin g m ilita ry r e q u ire m e n ts

8 h o u rs straight tim e .
S h o u ld an e m p lo y e e b e re q u ir e d t o w o r k o n a h o lid a y as
e sta b lish e d in th is c o n t r a c t , said e m p lo y e e shall b e p aid
d o u b le

tim e

fo r

all

h o u rs

w ork ed

w ith

a m in im u m

g u a ra n tee o f 8 h o u rs.

As an alternative, the city could provide another day off,
often within given time limits. Occasionally, a contract
stipulated that injured employees would receive pay for
the day even though compensated by insured benefits:
(9 )

I f an e m p lo y e e , w h o is e lig ib le fo r p aid h o lid a y as
set fo r t h a b o v e , is a b se n t f r o m w o r k b e c a u s e o f illness o r
in ju ry

an d is c u r r e n tly re ce iv in g a c c id e n t and sick n e ss

in s u ra n ce

b e n e fit s ------- o r w o r k m e n s c o m p e n s a t i o n .. . .

th e e m p lo y e e is e n t it le d t o h o lid a y p a y f o r a p p lic a b le
h o lid a y s , w it h o u t d im in u t io n o f h is a c c id e n t an d sick n ess
o r w o r k m e n ’ s c o m p e n s a t io n b e n e fits .

Unpaid leave provisions

Leave of absence provisions, which allow an em­
ployee to be absent and still retain his job rights, were
found in three-fourths of the agreements and were
divided about equally among the various kinds of leave
specified. (See table 25.)

e m p lo y e e s

c o v e r e d b y th is a g re e m e n t m u st have b e e n o n th e p a y r o ll

a.

I f a h o lid a y as e sta b lish e d in this c o n t r a c t fa lls d u rin g an
e m p l o y e e ’ s regular d a y o f f , th e e m p lo y e e w ill b e p a id fo r

d . D e a th in t h e im m e d ia t e fa m ily
e.

L a id o f f w it h in 1 w e e k p r io r t o th e h o lid a y

f.

L ea v e w it h p a y , in c lu d in g v a c a tio n leave

M ilitary leave. Leave for regular military service was

included in more than two-fifths of the agreements.
Typically, these clauses provided for a leave of absence,
in effect a guarantee of reemployment and a guarantee
of various employee rights. Clauses could widen the
definition of military leave to include nonmilitary
services of conscientious objectors, as in the following
clause, protecting seniority and automatic progression
up the salary schedule:
(1 0 9 )

M ilita ry leaves o f a b s e n ce w it h o u t p a y w ill b e

g ra n te d t o a p e rm a n e n t te a c h e r in d u c t e d in t o th e A r m e d
(9 0 )

E m p lo y e e s w h o are a b sen t w it h o u t leave o n the

w o r k d a y im m e d ia te ly p r e c e d in g o r fo llo w in g th e o b s e r v e d
h o lid a y , shall n o t b e e n t it le d

t o h o lid a y p a y o r o th e r

F o r c e s f o r the r e q u ir e d le n g th o f se rv ice , a c c o r d in g t o the
te rm s o f th e S e le c tiv e S e rv ice an d T ra in in g A c t o f 1 9 4 0
a n d su b s e q u e n t a m e n d m e n ts b y C o n g re ss.

p ro v is io n s o f this a rticle . A n y su sp e n sio n m a d e u n d e r th e
p ro v is io n s o f this a g re e m e n t sh all b e tre a te d as a b se n ce

A te a ch e r w ill b e e lig ib le f o r m ilita ry leave o f a b se n ce i f

w it h o u t leave u n d er th is s e c t io n . A n y e m p lo y e e w h o is o n

o r d e r e d t o r e p o r t f o r civilia n w o r k in th e N a tio n a l in terest




29

u n d e r th e cu rren t p ro v is io n o f th e S e le c tiv e S ervice and
T ra in in g A c t a p p ly in g t o c o n s c ie n t io u s o b je c t o r s .
U p o n retu rn t o the s c h o o l s y s t e m , s u ch in d u c t e d tea ch er
w ill b e p la c e d o n a ste p o f th e sala ry sca le as i f h e had
n e v e r le ft.
The

tea ch er

retu rn in g

fr o m

m ilita ry

service

w ill

be

re in sta ted a n d w ill reta in s e n io r it y as i f h e h a d n ev er le ft .

The right to reemployment to an old job or an
equivalent one could be limited by the employee’s
physical condition. The contract also could restrict
reemployment to those honorably discharged:
(1 1 0 )

Any

p e rm a n e n t

fu ll-tim e

e m p lo y e e

w h o shall

the status of the employee when he returned to work.
Although the following clauses were silent on the
subject, it could be the practice that when maximum
leave was reached, the leave might be renewed for an
additional period, once both parties reviewed the sit­
uation. The first provided for seniority to be ac­
cumulated during the leave period; and the second
assured no loss in salary progression:
(1 1 3 )

M e m b e rs

of

th e u n io n e le c te d

to

lo c a l

u n io n

p o s itio n s o r s e le c te d b y th e u n io n t o d o w o r k w h ic h takes
t h e m f r o m th eir e m p lo y m e n t sh all, at th e w r itt e n requ est
o f the u n io n , re ce iv e leaves o f a b se n ce f o r p e rio d s n o t to
e x c e e d 2 y e a rs o r th e te rm o f o f f i c e , w h ic h e v e r m a y b e

e n te r the a rm ed fo r c e s o f th e c o u n t r y w h ile a state o f w ar

s h o rte r , a n d u p o n

o r th e r e q u ire m e n t o f c o m p u ls o r y m ilita ry service e x ists

w o r k w it h a c c u m u la te d s e n io r it y . E m p lo y e e s w ill o b ta in

w ill

fo r m e r p o s it io n o r o n e o f an

leave re n e w a l f r o m

p re s e n ta tio n

c it y .

be

r e s to r e d

e q u iv a le n t

status

d isch a rg e. . . .

to

his

upon

w it h in

90

days

fr o m

of
th e

a n h o n o r a b le
d a te

of

th e

d isch a rg e.

to

The

r e e m p lo y e d

at

th e c ity o n fo r m s p r o v id e d b y th e

B o a rd

agrees

th a t

up

to

th re e

te a ch e rs

d e s ig n a te d b y th e a s s o cia tio n w ill u p o n re q u e st b e g ra n te d

R e in s ta te m e n t
s u b je c t

(1 1 4 )

th e ir retu rn shall b e

th e

fr o m

m ilita ry lea v e o f a b s e n c e shall b e

a b ility

to

pass

the

r e q u ire d

p h y s ic a l

a leave o f a b s e n c e f o r u p t o 2 y e a rs, w it h o u t p a y , f o r th e
p u r p o s e o f en g a gin g in a s s o cia tio n ( l o c a l , sta te , n a tio n a l)
a ctiv itie s . U p o n re tu rn f r o m su ch le a v e , a te a c h e r w ill b e

e x a m in a t io n .

c o n s id e r e d as i f h e w e r e a c t iv e ly e m p lo y e d b y th e B o a rd

By reference, the law on military reemployment could
be incorporated into the contract; the city also could
guarantee retirement credits:
(1 1 1 )

A n e m p lo y e e shall b e g ra n ted an e x t e n d e d leave

o f a b s e n c e w it h o u t p a y f o r m ilita ry d u t y in a c c o r d a n c e

d u rin g th e leave a n d w ill b e p la c e d o n th e salary sc h e d u le
at th e le v e l h e w o u ld have a ch ie v e d i f h e h a d n o t b e e n
a b se n t.

Even short-term leaves for union business included
safeguards of employee status:

w it h la w an d a fte r d isch a rg e shall b e re sto r e d t o e m p l o y ­
m e n t w ith th e c it y , u p o n r e q u e s t, in a c c o r d a n c e w ith

(1 1 5 )

A t th e re q u e s t o f th e u n io n , a leave o f a b s e n c e

w it h o u t p a y shall b e g ra n te d t o a n y cla ssifie d e m p lo y e e

la w .. . .

w h o is a m e m b e r o f th e u n io n t o a tte n d a c o n v e n t io n o r
E m p lo y e e s

on

m ilita ry leave w h o th e r e a fte r retu rn t o

e m p lo y m e n t w it h th e c it y shall re ce iv e re tire m e n t cred it
f o r all tim e sp e n t in a ctiv e m ilita ry s e rv ice .

Similarly, length of service could include time spent on
military leave. The following clause also provided pay
for the first 30 days of military service:
(1 1 2 )

o t h e r sim ilar f u n c t io n s o f sh o rt d u r a tio n (s u b je c t t o the
a p p ro v a l

of

th e

a p p o in t in g

a u th o r it y

an d

th e

C om ­

m is s io n ). S u c h leave o f a b s e n c e w ill n o t a f f e c t h is sick
lea v e

a n d v a c a t io n lea v e a cc ru a ls , an n iversary d a te fo r

in cre a se s; s e n io rity d a te s ; n o r w ill it c o n s t itu te a b re a k in
se rv ice

fo r

c o m p u t in g

service

c re d its f o r C iv il S ervice

e x a m in a tio n s .

B ilin gu a l tea ch ers o n regular a p p o in t m e n t w h o

e n te r th e m ilita ry serv ice shall b e o n leave o f a b s e n c e w it h
p a y d u rin g th e first 30 d a y s o f s u ch serv ice un less th e
B o a r d is o th e r w is e re q u ire d t o m a k e p a y m e n t o f salary
d u rin g su ch m ilita ry serv ice.
In d e te r m in in g le n g th o f serv ice f o r a n y p u r p o s e o f this

Agreements providing for refusal of requests for leaves
of absence were rare. In the following provision, written
justification of any disapproval had to be given to the
union. Conceivably, the decision could be processed
under the grievance procedure:

a g r e e m e n t, c o n t in u it y o f serv ice shall n o t b e d e e m e d t o
b e in te r ru p te d b y a b s e n ce d e te r m in e d t o b e d u e t o illn ess,
a c c id e n t o r in ju r y s u ffe r e d in th e lin e o f d u t y o r b y tim e
sp e n t in m ilita ry se rv ice , th e P ea ce C o r p s o r V I S T A .

(1 1 6 )

The

e m p lo y e r

r e co g n iz e s

that th e u n io n

m ay

d e sig n a te e m p lo y e e m e m b e r s , e le c te d o r a p p o in t e d , t o a
u n io n o f f i c e o r t o b e d e le g a te t o a u n io n fu n c t io n an d
agrees th a t, u p o n r e q u e s t, th e e m p lo y e e w ill b e g ra n ted
an nu al leave o r leave w it h o u t p a y fo r th e p e r io d o f tim e

Union business . About the same number of contracts

referred to leave for union business as for military leave.
Clauses typically defined the length of the leave period
(long-term for employees assuming a union office and
short-term employees going to a union convention or
training institute), the number of employees eligible, and

30




re q u ire d

to

be

aw ay

fr o m

his j o b

t o a ct as a u n io n

re p re se n ta tiv e , o r t o a tte n d u n io n c o n v e n t io n s o r ca u cu se s
or

to

a tte n d

sp on sored

a

tra in in g

u n io n -s p o n s o r e d
cou rse.

Su ch

and

fo r

e m p lo y e r

re q u e s ts w ill b e s u b ­

m itte d as far in a d v a n ce as p o s s ib le , b u t in n o case less
than 5 w o r k in g d a y s p rio r t o th e d a y leave is t o b e g in . I f
leave is r e fu s e d , it shall b e b y th e p e rs o n a l d e c is io n o f th e

b ra n ch

c h ie f, th e u n io n w ill b e n o t ifie d o f su ch leave

d isa p p rov a l in w ritin g t o g e th e r w ith n o t ific a t io n th e r e fo r .

T e a c h e r s shall b e e n title d t o t w o p e rso n a l bu sin ess d a y s
p er y e a r w it h o u t lo ss o f p a y .*
* T h e p e rs o n a l bu sin ess d a y s shall n o t b e c u m u la tiv e .

Personal leave. Leaves o f absence for personal reasons
were found in 38 percent o f the agreements. (See table
25.) These open ended provisions were defined vaguely,
which provided leeway to the city in granting leave and
to the employees in seeking leave. Such provisions
ranged from simple declarations, as in the first illustra­
tion, which had no reference to the length o f leave to
lengthier statements o f short-term leave, setting forth

* U n u se d

O n e w h o re q u e sts a p e rs o n a l b u sin e ss d a y shall su b m it his
re q u e s t, o n th e f o r m p r e s c r ib e d , t o th e p rin cip a l in tim e
t o a llo w

th e re q u e s t t o re a ch th e O f f i c e o f th e S u p e r­

in te n d e n t o f S c h o o ls 3 d a y s p rio r t o th e d a y o f lea v e.
N o r m a lly , re a so n s w h ic h w ill ju s t if y th e w r itte n re q u e st
w ill b e s u ch as:

reasons for which it would be granted:
(1 1 7 )

p e rs o n a l b u sin e ss d a y s shall b e tra n sferred to

s ic k leave b a n k .

A . M arriage

of

th e

B . G r a d u a t io n o f a s o n o r d a u g h te r.

leave o f a b se n ce fo r g o o d ca u s e . . . .

C . P a r tic ip a tio n
(4 0 )

A ft e r

th e re a fte r

1 y ea r o f c o n t in u o u s se r v ice , a n d y e a r ly

fr o m

th e

d a te

of

te a ch e r o r o f an im m e d ia te

rela tive o f th e te a c h e r .

A ll e m p lo y e s shall b e e n t it le d t o a re a so n a b le

e m p lo y m e n t ,

in

a g r a d u a tio n

or

a c c e p t in g a

degree.

fu ll-tim e

D . S e rio u s illness at h o m e .

e m p lo y e e s m a y b e g ra n ted p e rs o n a l le a v e , n o t t o e x c e e d a

E . A tt e n d a n c e at a p r o fe s s io n a l m e e tin g .

to ta l o f 3 d a y s in an y o n e y e a r , f o r a n y o f th e fo llo w in g

F . P r o p e r t y c lo s in g s , sales, e t c .

reason s:
In th e case o f a p e rs o n a l e m e r g e n c y , su ch as a tte n d a n c e at
R e lig io u s o b s e r v a n ce . . .
P ers on a l,

legal,

m atters

of

an

b u sin e ss ,

a fu n e ra l n o t c o v e r e d b y th e ru les, th e re q u ir e m e n t o f a
h o u s e h o ld

em erg en cy

n a tu re ,

or
not

fa m ily
covered

p r io r

w r itt e n

re q u e s t

w ill

be

w a iv e d

by

th e

S u p e r­

in te n d e n t o f S c h o o ls .

e ls e w h e re in th e s e re g u la tio n s , p r o v id e d t h e e m ­
p lo y e e states th e s p e c if ic rea son f o r th e req u est
an d s u ch is a p p r o v e d b y th e B u reau H ea d a n d th e
D ir e c t o r o f P e rs o n n e l.

M aternity leave. O f the contracts studied, 37 percent
referred

to

maternity

leave;

such agreements were

numerous especially in educational institutions. Clauses
typically stipulated the duration o f leave, which varied

Teacher agreements granting personal leaves o f absence
tended to be more detailed, cover conditions under

greatly, particularly in terms o f the em ployee’s physical

which leave might be granted, apply time limits, bases
for refusal o f leave, and rules to be observed by

em ployee’ s status on

employees on leave:

absence on seniority or salary, provisions com m only

(1 1 8 )

A n y te a ch e r w h o

so req u es ts m a y b e g ra n ted

p e rs on a l a b s e n ce o f a re a so n a b le n a tu re b y th e S u p e r­
in te n d e n t w it h o u t p a y , p ro v id in g th a t a d e q u a te p ro v is io n s
have b e e n m a d e t o assure th e c o n t in u it y o f th e in s tr u c ­
tio n a l

p ro g ra m .

R e q u e s t f o r p e rs o n a l a b s e n ce shall b e

condition. As a rule, clauses did not refer to the
return, such as the effect o f

connected with other leaves. Usually, negotiated
maternity leave clauses contained administrative details:
advance notice o f leaving and returning and require­
ments for medical certificates or examinations before
and after:

m a d e in w ritin g at least 14 ca len d a r d a y s in a d v a n ce o f
th e

e ffe c t iv e

s itu a tio n s .

d a te

If

th e

of

th e

lea v e, e x c e p t

S u p e r in te n d e n t

is

in e m e r g e n c y

c o n s id e r in g

(1 2 0 )

A

m arried

fe m a le

e m p lo y e e

who

becom es

not

p re g n a n t an d w h o w ish e s t o retu rn t o w o r k a fte r d e liv e r y

a p p ro v in g th e a b s e n c e , h e shall c o n s id e r , p rio r t o ta k in g

shall d iscu ss h e r s itu a tio n w ith h er su p e rv iso r n o later

a p p ro p r ia te a c t io n , th e fo llo w in g :

th a n th e e n d o f th e 4 t h m o n t h o f p re g n a n c y an d shall

1. T h e in d iv id u a l r e q u e s t o f th e te a ch e r.

fu rn ish a m e d ic a l c e r t ific a t e s h o w in g e x p e c t e d d a te o f

2.

T h e p rio r r e c o r d o f th e te a ch e r.

c o n fin e m e n t . W h e th e r o r n o t t o gra n t a leave o f a b s e n ce

3.

U n u su a l circ u m s ta n ce s .

f o r p re g n a n c y is at th e d is c r e t io n o f th e d e p a rtm e n t h e a d .

4.

T h e fa c t that sim ilar a b s e n c e req u ests m a y o r

I f g r a n te d , it m u st b e w it h o u t p a y . I f a leave is g ra n te d

m a y n o t b e a p p r o v e d in th e fu tu re .

th e a g e n cy h e a d m a y req u est that th e v a c a n c y b e fille d o n

5.

P rior d is a p p r o v a l o f th e re q u e s t.

a t e m p o r a r y b a sis an d th a t te m p o r a r y p r o m o t io n b e m a d e
d u rin g

(1 1 9 )

L eave o f a b s e n c e f o r p e rs o n a l b u sin e ss m a y b e

g ra n ted b y th e B o a rd o f E d u c a t io n f o r s u ch p e r io d s as th e
B o a rd

m ay

d e c id e , said p e r io d n o t t o e x c e e d

th e p e r io d o f le a v e . W h e th e r o r n o t a leave is

g r a n te d , th e p re g n a n t e m p lo y e e m u st leave th e serv ice at
2 m o n t h s b e f o r e th e e x p e c t e d d a te o f c o n fin e m e n t .

1 y ea r.

s u ch leave m a y req u est e x t e n s io n o f su ch

R e tu r n t o d u t y c a n n o t b e w ith in 6 w e e k s o f d e liv e ry and

leave f o r g o o d a n d v alid ca u se. T h o s e t o w h o m su ch leave

m u st b e a c c o m p a n ie d b y a sta te m e n t o f h er a tte n d in g

T e a ch e rs o n

is g ra n ted shall s u ffe r lo s s o f fu ll p a y a n d m u st sta te, in

p h y s ic ia n a n d c o n c u r r e n c e o f a c it y p h y s ic ia n . T h e a g e n cy

w ritin g , th a t

h e a d m a y re q u ire a d v a n ce n o t ic e o f h e r re tu rn , n o t t o

t h e y w ill n o t a c c e p t a n o th e r p o s it io n as

a d m in istra to r, su p erv isor o r t e a c h e r d u rin g that p e r io d .




e x ceed 30 days.

31

(1 2 1 )

A

fu ll-tim e ,

p erm a n en t

e m p lo y e e

w it h

e x t e n s io n o f s u ch leave m a y b e g ra n te d f o r a p e r io d n o t

a

m in im u m o f 1 y ea r o f c o n t in u o u s serv ice m a y b e g ra n te d

to exceed

u p o n a p p lic a t io n t o th e a p p o in t in g a u th o r it y , a m a te r n ity

in te n d e n t is a u th o r iz e d t o a d ju st th e d a te o f retu rn fr o m

1 y e a r. In th e case o f a te a c h e r , t h e S u p e r ­

leave o f a b se n ce w it h o u t p a y an d w it h o u t loss o f se n io rity

su ch lea v e t o

fo r a p e r io d u p t o 6 m o n t h s b e g in n in g n o earlier than th e

te rm . In all cases w h e re a lea v e t o care f o r an a d o p t e d
has

c o in c id e w it h th e b e g in n in g o f a s c h o o l

e n d o f the 5 th m o n th an d n o later than th e e n d o f th e 7 t h

ch ild

m o n t h o f p re g n a n cy a n d e n d in g n o later th an 4 m o n th s

S u p e r in te n d e n t

been

g ra n te d ,

e m p lo y e e s

a fte r b ir th . In n o e v e n t sh all m a te r n ity leave e x c e e d 6

t e r m in a tio n o f s u ch le a v e , o f th e ir in t e n t io n t o re tu rn ,

m o n th s .

resign o r t o a p p ly f o r an e x t e n s io n o f lea v e.

in w r itin g , at least

shall

n o tify

1 m on th

th e

p r io r t o

S u ch a p p lic a t io n m u st b e m a d e at least 3 0 d a y s p r io r t o

E ducation. O f all the types analyzed, leave for educa­

th e d a te su ch leave is t o b e c o m e e ff e c t iv e . T h e c o m p a n y

tion was the least prevalent. (See table 25.) As a rule, the

m ust b e n o t ifie d at least 3 0 d a y s p r io r t o th e d a te o f th e

proposed program had to be jo b related, beneficial to

e m p l o y e e ’ s in t e n d e d r e s u m p tio n o f a c tiv e e m p lo y m e n t .

the city, and approved by relatively high levels o f the

Maternity leave could extend to adopted children, could

agency or city hierarchy. The maximum length o f

be renewed, or could be lengthened or shortened to
coincide with the school year:

absence was at times left vague:

(1 2 2 )

A

m a te r n ity

leave

shall

be

g ra n te d

upon

(6 7 )

P e rm a n e n t fu ll-tim e e m p lo y e e s sh all b e e lig ib le t o

re ce iv e a lea v e o f a b s e n ce w h ic h d o e s n o t e x c e e d 1 fu ll

a

p h y s ic ia n ’ s c e r t ific a t io n o f p r e g n a n c y . F o r e a c h case o f

year

m a te r n ity , an e m p lo y e e shall b e re q u ir e d t o tak e a lea v e

e d u c a t io n a l lea v es

o f a b s e n ce w it h o u t p a y , c o m m e n c in g n o t la ter th a n t h e

m e n d a t io n o f t h e D e p a r tm e n t H e a d an d w it h th e a p p ro v a l

e n d o f th e 6th m o n t h o f p r e g n a n c y . S u c h lea v e shall n o t

o f th e D iv is io n D ir e c t o r .

e x c e e d 18 m o n t h s f o r a n y o n e case o f m a te r n ity .

fo r

(3 )

A

th e

p urpose

of

s h o u ld

fu rth e rin g
be

e d u c a t io n .

Su ch

d e te r m in e d u p o n r e c o m ­

lea v e o f a b s e n c e w it h o r w it h o u t p a y m a y b e

A w o m a n e m p lo y e e w h o a d o p ts a c h ild m a y b e g ra n ted a

o b t a in e d as an e d u c a t io n a l lea v e s u b je c t t o th e a p p ro v a l

leave w it h o u t p a y fo r u p t o 18 m o n th s .

o f t h e F ire C o m m is s io n e r an d w r itt e n a p p ro v a l o f th e
C ity

(2 6 )

A s s o o n as a n y e m p l o y e e w h o is a m a rried w o m a n

shall b e c o m e a w a re o f h er p r e g n a n c y , she shall n o t i f y th e
su p e r in te n d e n t

im m e d ia t e ly

an d

sh all

a p p ly

fo r

re ce iv e a leave o f a b s e n c e w it h o u t p a y t o b e e ffe c t iv e
p re g n a n c y a n d e x te n d in g f o r a p e r io d o f 1 y e a r fr o m th e
o f b ir th .

U pon

a p p lic a t io n

of

th e e m p lo y e e , an

e x te n s io n o f su ch leave m a y b e g ra n te d f o r a p e r io d n o t
e x c e e d 2 y ea rs. A n e m p lo y e e o n m a te r n ity leave w h o m a y
d esire t o retu rn t o serv ice p r io r t o n o r m a l e x p ir a t io n o f

Some contracts stipulated that seniority would not
accrue during absence, or that salary progress would
continue as though the employee had remained on the
payroll:
(1 2 3 )

A leave o f a b s e n c e w it h o u t p a y o f u p t o 2 years

d u r a t io n m a y b e g ra n te d t o a n y te a c h e r u p o n a p p lic a t io n
fo r

c o n s id e r a tio n o f th e S u p e r in te n d e n t, req u es tin g s u ch an

a c c r e d it e d

earlier

d a te .

Su ch

a r e q u e s t is t o

is f o r th e p u r p o s e o f a cq u irin g

u se fu ln e ss o f t h e e m p lo y e e t o th e F ire D e p a r tm e n t.

her m a te rn ity leave m a y s u b m it a w r itt e n r e q u e s t f o r th e
t e rm in a tio n

su ch

an d

b e g in n in g n o t la ter th a n th e e n d o f th e 5 t h m o n t h o f
d a te

M an a ger i f

e d u c a t io n a l tra in in g w h ic h w ill in cre a se th e e f f i c i e n c y an d

th e

p urpose

o f en g a gin g

in

fu ll-tim e

s tu d y at an

c o lle g e o r u n iv e rsity w h ic h is re la te d t o his

b e ac­

p r o fe s s io n a l re s p o n s ib ilitie s . U p o n retu rn f r o m su ch le a v e ,

c o m p a n ie d b y a s u p p o r tin g s ta te m e n t fr o m h er p h y s icia n

a t e a c h e r w h o sh all h a v e s u cc e s s fu lly c o m p le t e d th e w o r k

in d ic a tin g that th e in d iv id u a l is p h y s ic a lly a b le t o resu m e

f o r w h ic h th e lea v e is g iv e n shall b e p la c e d at th e sam e

her regular d u tie s. In a n y ca se, w h e r e a m a te r n ity leave

p o s it io n o n t h e salary s c h e d u le as h e w o u ld h a v e b e e n h a d

has b e e n g r a n te d , th e e m p l o y e e sh all n o t i f y th e S u p e r­

h e ta u g h t in t h e s y s te m d u rin g su ch a p e r io d .

in te n d e n t in w ritin g at least 1 m o n t h p r io r t o te rm in a tio n
o f s u ch lea v e, o f h e r in t e n t io n t o r e tu rn , resign o r t o
a p p ly fo r an e x te n s io n o f th e lea v e. In th e case o f a
te a c h e r , th e S u p e r in te n d e n t is a u th o r iz e d t o a d ju st th e
d a te o f retu rn fr o m

s u ch a leave t o c o in c id e w it h th e

b e g in n in g o f a s c h o o l t e r m , o r w it h the b e s t in terest o f

(1 2 4 )

L e a v e s o f a b s e n c e w it h o u t p a y m a y b e g ra n te d

f o r r e a s o n a b le p e r io d s f o r th e p u rp o s e s listed b e l o w . . . .
T ra in in g re la te d t o
ap p roved

an e m p l o y e e ’ s regular d u tie s in an

e d u c a t io n a l

in s tit u t io n

(s e n io r it y

shall

not

a c c ru e d u rin g p e r io d o f le a v e ).

the p u p ils at th e tim e . In a n y ca se, w h e re a s u b s e q u e n t
p re g n a n c y

occu rs b e fo re

th e

e x p ir a t io n

o f e ith e r th e

o rigin a l lea v e o r th e o p t io n a l e x t e n s io n o f su ch lea v e, th e
e m p lo y e e is t o a p p ly f o r a n e w m a te r n ity leave w it h o u t
p a y as p r o v id e d in th ese r e g u la tio n s. S u c h p riv ileg es sh all

Contracts also might set reasons for refusal, protect the
em ployee’ s retirement program, and permit part-time
employment during absence:

b e lim ite d t o o n e a d d itio n a l a p p lic a t io n .
(1 2 5 )
A leave o f a b s e n ce w it h o u t p a y m a y b e g ra n ted t o

L eaves o f a b s e n ce w it h o u t p a y shall b e g ra n te d

u p o n a p p lic a t io n f o r the f o llo w in g p u rp o s e s :

care f o r an a d o p t e d c h ild as f o l l o w s : i f th e ch ild a d o p te d
is less th a n 1 y ea r o l d at th e tim e o f a d o p t i o n , said leave

a.

S tu d y re la te d t o th e s c h o o l s e cre ta ry ’ s lice n se fie ld ;

sh all n o t e x c e e d 2 y e a r s ; o t h e r w is e s u ch leave sh all n o t

b.

S tu d y t o

exceed

1 y e a r. U p o n a p p lic a t io n o f t h e e m p lo y e e , an

32




m e e t e lig ib ility re q u ir e m e n ts f o r a lice n se

o t h e r th a n th a t h e ld b y th e s c h o o l se cre ta ry . . .

T h e B oa rd w ill r e c o m m e n d t o th e T e a c h e r s ’ R e tir e m e n t

have b e e n c re d it e d t o th e m had th e y re m a in e d in active

B o a rd the gran tin g o f re tir e m e n t c re d it f o r th e d u r a tio n

se rv ice w it h th e D is trict.

o f the a fo re sa id leaves.
T im e sp e n t o n P e a ce C o r p s leave m a y n o t b e c o u n te d as
“ U rgen t

needs”

of

the

sch ool

to

w h ic h

se creta ry is assign ed m a y b e asserted b y

th e

sch ool

th e B o a rd as

a ctiv e

y ea rs

r e tire m e n t

of

e m p lo y m e n t

e lig ib ility ,

but

in

it w ill

th e

d e te r m in a tio n

coun t

of

as a c c re d ite d

ju s t ify in g a te m p o r a r y d e n ia l o f a n y a p p lic a t io n fo r leave

se rv ice in th e d e te r m in a tio n o f th e re tire m e n t a llo w a n c e

w it h o u t p a y .

p r o v id e d

c o n t r ib u t io n s b a s e d o n h is salary rate at the

b e g in n in g o f h is P e a ce C o r p s leave are p a id t o th e P e n sio n
S ch ool

secretaries

on

m a te r n ity

leave

and

sch ool

F u n d b y th e e m p lo y e e .

secretaries o n leave o f a b s e n ce w it h o u t p a y fo r s tu d y an d
rela ted

p ro fe s s io n a l

e x p e r ie n c e

shall

be

p e r m itt e d

to

Short-term absences could be paid for, but approval
might shift to a higher level o f authority as the duration
o f the leave increased:
(1 2 6 )

T h e S u p e r in te n d e n t, o r his d e s ig n e e , m a y grant

p e rm ission

to

tea ch ers

t o a tte n d e d u c a t io n a l m eetin gs

w it h o u t loss o f p a y , b u t p e rm issio n t o b e a b sen t fr o m a n y
a ssign m en t

fo r

m o re

than

10

days

(n o t

n ecessa rily

c o n s e c u t iv e ) in a n y 1 y ea r is g ra n te d o n ly b y the B o a rd o f
E d u c a tio n

upon

S u p e r in te n d e n t,

or

the
his

r e c o m m e n d a t io n
d e s ig n e e .

A

of

record

of

th e
th e

c o n d it io n s o f su ch p e rm issio n is k e p t o n file in th e O ff i c e
o f the E x e cu tiv e D ir e c t o r fo r P e rs o n n e l S ervices.

M iscellaneous

leave

provisions. City

E m p lo y e e s are c re d it e d w ith regular sick leave a llo w a n c e
d u rin g th e ir p e r io d o f P e a ce C o r p s se rv ice .

p e r fo r m per d ie m s c h o o l secretarial serv ice.

agreements

contained a number o f provisions which were not
tabulated separately, for example, leaves o f less than 1

Grievance and arbitration procedures
Negotiated grievance procedures in the city agree­
ments studied were com m on, but not nearly as
widespread as in private industry, where 99 percent o f
the agreements referred to the handling o f employee
complaints.9 O f the city contracts studied, 87 percent
referred to a negotiated grievance procedure or to a
negotiated system in conjunction with an agency
procedure. (See table 26.)
S cope o f the grievance proced ure. Although a grievance
may be defined as any employee complaint relating to
his jo b ,

not all agreements were as unrestricted in

day for voting or donating blood:

establishing what grievances could be taken through the
system. In fact, only 87 percent o f the agreements

(1 2 7 )

containing a procedure attempted to define admissable

G e n e ra lly , an e m p lo y e e w ill b e a llo w e d s u ffic ie n t

o ff i c i a l tim e o f f t o a llo w 3 h o u rs e ith e r a fte r p o lls o p e n o r
b e f o r e t h e y c lo s e fo r registerin g o r v o tin g . U n d er u n usu al

complaints. (See table 27.) These were about evenly

b e g ra n ted t o e m p lo y e e s c o v e r e d b y th is a g reem en t fo r

divided between those which permitted any and all
matters to be grieved and those which limited use o f the
negotiated procedure to complaints involving the
interpretation and application o f the contract. Each

th e p u r p o s e o f d o n a t in g b l o o d at th e R e d C ross B lo o d

category excluded certain issues from the grievance

B an k.

procedure.

circ u m s ta n ce s , an e m p lo y e e ca n b e e x c u s e d u p t o a fu ll
day.
(1 2 8 )

A d m in is tra tiv e lea v e, n o t t o e x c e e d 4 h o u r s , w ill

Leaves also were granted for military funerals:
(1 2 9 )

P erm a n en t fu ll-tim e e m p lo y e s shall b e a llo w e d t o

a tte n d m ilita ry fu n era ls o f vetera n s w it h o u t lo s s o f p a y
w h e n a re q u e s t f o r th e leave is m a d e b y a p r o p e r v etera n s’

Provisions with no restrictions on the scope o f the
procedure typically consisted o f brief definitional
statements, opening the procedure, for example, to “ any
grievance” or to “ all differences and grievances” :
(1 3 1 )

“ E v e ry civilia n e m p lo y e e o f th e P o lic e D e p a r t­

o r g a n iz a tio n th a t th e service o f su ch o f f i c e r o r e m p lo y e e

m e n t shall ha ve th e right t o p re se n t f o r c o n s id e r a tio n any

is d e s ire d f o r th e p r o p e r c o n d u c t o f a m ilita ry fu n era l.

g rie v a n ce w h ic h h e m a y ha ve as t o a n y m a tte r a ffe c tin g
his re la tio n s h ip t o th e D e p a r tm e n t. . . . ”

Finally, extended leave could be granted for Peace Corps
duty:
(1 3 0 )

(1 3 2 )

F or

th e

p u rpose

of

fa cilita tin g

the

p e a c e fu l

a d ju s tm e n t o f d iffe r e n c e s that m a y arise fr o m tim e to
E m p lo y e e s m a y b e g ra n ted leave w it h o u t p a y fo r

P e a ce C o r p s serv ice. S u c h leave is fo r 1 y ea r and m a y b e
e x t e n d e d n o t t o e x c e e d 2 y ea rs.

tim e a n d p r o m o t e h a r m o n y an d e f f ic ie n c y t o the e n d that
th e a u th o r it y , its e m p lo y e e s a n d th e gen eral p u b lic m a y
m u tu a lly b e n e fit , th e a u th o r it y a n d the u n io n agree to

A p r o b a t io n a r y e m p lo y e e retu rn in g fr o m th e P ea ce C o r p s
retains the p e rio d o f p r o b a t io n a r y serv ice a ch ie v e d p rio r
t o his e n try in t o th e s e rv ice . E m p lo y e e s o n P ea ce C o r p s
leave are g iv en the b e n e fit o f a n y in c r e m e n ts w h ic h w o u ld




9 S ee M a jo r

C o lle c tiv e

B argain in g A g r e e m e n t s :

G rieva n ce

P r o c e d u r e s (B L S B ull. 1 4 2 5 - 1 , 1 9 6 4 ) , ta b le l , p . 2.

33

m eet

an d

d ea l

a c c r e d it e d
g rie v a n ces,

w ith

e a ch

oth er

rep resen ta tiv es
in c lu d in g

the

on

th r o u g h
all

th eir

d u ly

d iffe r e n c e s

an d

in te r p r e ta tio n

of

Complaints over activities which were the respon­
sibility o f civil service commissions or other legally
established boards were excluded most frequently.
Agency regulations or city ordinances would have to be

th is agree­

m e n t. . .

The amount o f detailed language, on the other hand,

changed to make these matters subject to collective

varied widely from clauses which limited the negotiated
procedure to complaints over the interpretation and

bargaining or the negotiated grievance system:

application

of

the

contract.

Such

provisions,

for

example, could be concise statements:
(6 )

o f this a g re e m e n t shall re fe r th e m a tter t o h is su p erv isor
w ith in 5 w o r k in g d a y s o f th e d a te u p o n w h ic h th e a lleg ed
v io la t io n o c c u r r e d . T h e e m p lo y e e m a y b e a c c o m p a n ie d
b y a u n io n rep resen ta tiv e in a n y d is cu s s io n fo llo w in g su ch
r e fe r e n c e to th e su p erv isor.
O n ly m a tters in v o lv in g th e q u e s tio n w h e th e r th e

m u n ic ip a l

e m p lo y e r

is

c o m p ly in g

A n y m a tte r w h ic h is s u b je c t t o th e ju r is d ic t io n o f

th e C iv il S e rv ice C o m m is s io n o r a n y R e tir e m e n t B o a rd
e sta b lish e d b y la w shall n o t b e a su b je c t o f g rie v a n ce o r

A n y e m p lo y e e cla im in g a b r e a c h o f a n y p r o v is io n

(6 3 )

(9 2 )

w it h

th e

e x p re ss

a rb itr a tio n h e re u n d e r.

Provisions also could exclude from grievance appeals any
actions taken under State law, matters subject to special
review under agency or State rules, and issues over which
the agency had no jurisdiction:
(1 0 7 )
th e

A g rie v a n ce is d e fin e d t o b e an issue c o n c e r n in g
in t e r p r e t a tio n

or

a p p lic a t io n

o f p ro v is io n s o f this

p ro v is io n s o f this a g re e m e n t shall c o n s t itu te g riev a n ces

a g re e m e n t o r c o m p lia n c e th e r e w ith , p r o v id e d , h o w e v e r ,

u n d e r this a rticle .

th a t it shall n o t b e d e e m e d t o a p p ly t o a n y o r d e r , a c t io n ,
o r d ire c tiv e o f th e S u p e r in te n d e n t o r o f a n y o n e a ctin g o n

On the other hand, they could evolve into lengthy
declarations which have legalistic language, and which
include complaints over rules and regulations o f the city
and agency, but exclude disputes over specific issues and
certain other rules and regulations which had the force
o f law, i.e., policy rather than personnel matters:

h is b e h a lf, o r t o a n y a c t io n o f th e B o a rd w h ic h relates o r
p erta in s t o th e ir r e s p e ctiv e d u tie s o r o b lig a t io n s u n d e r th e
p ro v is io n s o f th e S ta te S ta tu te s.
(1 3 3 )

...e x c e p t

th a t

th e

te rm

g rie v a n ce

shall n o t

a p p ly t o a n y m a tte r as t o w h ic h ( 1 ) a m e th o d o f re v ie w is
p re s cr ib e d b y la w , o r b y a n y ru le o r re g u la tio n o f th e
S ta te C o m m is s io n e r o f E d u c a t io n h a vin g th e f o r c e and

(5 6 )

T h e term g rie v a n ce shall m ea n a real o r c la im e d

v io la t io n , m is in te rp r e ta tio n o r in e q u ita b le a p p lic a t io n o f

e f f e c t o f la w , o r b y a n y b y -la w o f the B o a rd o f E d u c a t io n
o r ( 2 ) th e B o a rd o f E d u c a t io n is w it h o u t a u th o r it y t o a c t.

th e ru les, p r o c e d u r e s , re g u la tio n s, a d m in istra tiv e o rd e r s o r
w o r k rules o f th e c it y , th e D e p a r tm e n t o f P u b lic S a fe ty o r
m a teria ls

or

Union participation. Although most agreements allow
an employee to process his own grievance, the employee

su p e rv isio n

of

organization

th e P o lice B u rea u , w h ic h relate t o o r in v o lv e e m p lo y e e
h e a lth

or

s a fe ty ,

e q u ip m e n t

fu rn ish e d

p h y s ic a l
to

fa cilitie s ,

e m p lo y e e s

or

e m p lo y e e s ; p r o v id e d , h o w e v e r , th a t su ch term s shall n o t
in c lu d e

any

m a tter

in v o lv in g

rates

of

c o m p e n s a t io n ,

re tire m e n t b e n e fit s , ch a n g es in th e p u b lis h e d rules a n d
re g u la tio n s

or

esta b lish ed

p roced u res

of

th e

c it y , th e

D e p a r tm e n t o f P u b lic S a fe ty o r th e P o lic e B u rea u , o r a n y
m a tter w h ic h is o t h e r w is e re v ie w a b le p u rsu a n t t o law o r

ordinarily

serves

as

his

spokesman.

Thirty-five percent o f the agreements required notice to
the employee organization o f any grievance submitted to
the city. (See table 27.) Com m only, this action occurred
following the informal first step, after which the formal
procedure started:

a n y rule o r re g u la tio n h a vin g th e fo r c e a n d e f f e c t o f la w .

An agreement could provide a more liberal scope for
union than for employee grievances:
(7 3 )

A

e m p lo y e r

u n io n
an d

g riev a n ce
the

u n io n

I f an

in fo r m a l d is cu s s io n

w it h

his im m e d ia te

su p e rv iso r c a n n o t se ttle a g r ie v a n c e , the a ggrieved p a rty
shall p re se n t w r itte n n o t ific a t io n o f th e g rie v a n ce w ith a

is a d iffe r e n c e b e t w e e n th e
c o n c e r n in g

(1 3 4 )

(1 )

w o r k in g

re q u e s t f o r a fo r m a l c o n fe r e n c e . A c o p y o f th e le tte r shall
b e sent t o th e g rie v a n ce c o m m it t e e [ o f th e a s s o c i a t i o n ] .

c o n d it io n s o r (2 ) the in te r p r e ta tio n o r a p p lic a t io n o f an y
p r o v is io n o f th is a g reem en t an d m a y b e p ro c e s s e d d ir e c t ly

Ordinarily, the employee organization would step in at

t o S te p 2 o f th e g riev a n ce p r o c e d u r e .

this point to represent the aggrieved employee, if it had

e m p lo y e r an d a n y e m p lo y e e c o n c e r n in g th e in te r p r e ta tio n

not already been called in for the informal discussion.
When entering the dispute, the employee organization

o r a p p lic a t io n o f a n y p ro v is io n s o f this a g re e m e n t.

typically would investigate the complaint, and in its

A n y e m p lo y e e g rie v a n ce is a d iffe r e n c e b e t w e e n th e

discretion would determine whether to carry it further
E xclusions from the grievance procedure. Seventy-two
agreements specifically excluded certain matters from
the negotiated grievance procedure. These exclusions

in the formal grievance procedure:
(1 3 5 )

T o in itia te th is g rie v a n ce p r o c e d u r e , an aggrieved

o f f i c e r shall o r a lly c o n s u lt w it h his im m e d ia t e su p e rv iso r

were as likely to be located in sections dealing with the

in

subject matter as in the grievance clause itself.

g rie v a n ce has n o t b e e n r e s o lv e d , th e o f f i c e r sh all, w ith in 2

34




order

to

a t te m p t

to

se ttle

the

g rie v a n ce .

If

th e

d a y s , r e d u ce his g riev a n ce t o w ritin g an d shall receive a
w ritte n a n sw er fr o m
d a y s th e re a fte r.

his im m e d ia te su p erv isor w ith in 2

<

I f th e aggrieved o f f i c e r is n o t sa tisfied w it h th e w r itte n

In others, steps could be bypassed, time limits extended,
or personnel processing the grievance expanded to
provide a flexible procedure tailored to particular
complaints:

d e te r m in a tio n o f the g rie v a n ce , h e shall th e n c o n s u lt w it h
(7 0 )

the F O P w h o shall in v estig a te th e g rie v a n ce .

M a tters releva n t t o g rie v a n ce p r o c e d u r e s . . .

( b ) T h e tim e lim its in th e p r o c e d u r e m a y b e e x t e n d e d b y
I f a fte r in v e stig a tio n th e F O P co n s id e r s th e g riev a n ce t o

m u tu a l a g r e e m e n t, in w r itin g .

b e a ju s t o n e , th e F O P shall s u b m it th e g riev a n ce t o th e
( c ) A n y ste p o f th e g rie v a n ce p r o c e d u r e m a y b e b y p a s s e d

a ggrieved o f f i c e r ’ s D iv isio n C o m m a n d e r w ith in 3 d a y s o f
r e ce ip t o f th e su p erv isor’ s w r itte n r e p o r t .

b y m u tu a l a g r e e m e n t, in w ritin g . . .
( e ) In th e case o f a g r o u p , p o l i c y o r o r g a n iz a tio n t y p e

Procedural steps and tim e limits. Beyond the informal

g r ie v a n c e , th e g rie v a n ce m a y b e s u b m it t e d d ir e c t ly t o

first step, the grievance typically is carried through
successively higher levels o f appeal which coincide
with

levels

of

supervision.

The

number

o f steps

obviously depends on the com plexity o f the organiza­

*

th e d e p a rtm e n t h e a d b y th e u n io n .
(1 )

Any

tim e

lim its

stip u la te d

in

th e

g rie v a n ce

p r o c e d u r e m a y b e e x t e n d e d f o r sta ted p e r io d s o f tim e b y
th e a p p ro p r ia te p arties b y m u tu a l a g re e m e n t in w ritin g .

tion. These steps each involve a review o f the written
statement o f the complaint, a meeting o f supervisors,

A g rie v a n ce h ea rin g o n th e in te re st o f a m a jo r it y o f
th e e m p lo y e e s in th e b a rg a in in g u n it shall b e r e d u c e d t o

employee and union, and finally, a written disposition o f
the grievance, by the appropriate supervisor for the step.
In this manner, a written record supplements oral
presentations. Continued dissatisfaction with the disposi­
tions results in the movement o f appeal to the next
higher step.
T o expedite grievances, time limits often are placed
on various appeals and responses o f aggrieved employees,
their representatives, and city management. The
employee, for example, must initiate the grievance

When all appeals have been exhausted and the employee
still i s . dissatisfied with management’s response, the
employee organization may reassess the issue to
determine further action. If the complaint is to be

within a given time following the occurrence o f which the
employee wishes to complain. Supervision must respond

continued, the
management:

within specific time limits, and then the employee

(8 0 )

organization must appeal, i f dissatisfied with the
response, to the next higher level under still another

w ritin g b y th e u n io n an d m a y b e in t r o d u c e d at S te p 3 o f
t h e g rie v a n ce p r o c e d u r e . . .
A s a m ean s o f fa cilita tin g s e ttle m e n t o f th e g rie v a n ce ,
e ith e r p a rty m a y in c lu d e an a d d itio n a l m e m b e r o n its
c o m m it t e e . . .

(5 ) T he

th e

p roced u re

is

not

a p p e a le d

w ith in

th e

p re s cr ib e d t im e , said g riev a n ce w ill b e c o n s id e r e d se ttle d
o n th e basis o f th e last a n sw er p r o v id e d , a n d t h e je shall b e
no

g rie v a n ce

b etw een

of

negotiate

with

city

In p re s e n tin g a g r ie v a n ce , th e fo llo w in g su cce ssiv e

th e

w ill b e s u b je c t t o n e g o t ia t io n
u n io n

b u sin e ss

agent

and

the

B o a r d o f S tre e t R a ilw a y C o m m is s io n e r ’ s.

I f the fin d in g o r r e s o lu t io n o f a g riev a n ce at a n y

step

could

ste p s m u st b e ta k e n u n til its s e t t l e m e n t . . .

time limit:
(1 3 6 )

union

This step may be intermediate or final and may lead to
arbitration.

fu rth e r a p p ea l o r r e v ie w . S h o u ld th e e m p lo y e r n o t

These limits may vary; management may have fewer
days to respond than the employee organization has to
appeal, especially in the lower steps o f the procedure.

A rbitration. As the final step in the process, 72 percent
o f agreements in cities compared with 90 percent in
private industry provided for arbitration. (See table
2 8 .)10 In the move from grievance to arbitration, the
scope o f the procedure often is narrowed to issues

Provisions may require prompter action in the lower,

involving interpretation and application o f the contract:

respon d

w ith in th e p re s cr ib e d

tim e , th e g rie v a n ce w ill

p r o c e e d t o th e n e x t ste p .

than in the upper steps o f the procedure.

(1 3 8 )

In some cases, steps could be by-passed to facilitate

o n ly

F in a l an d b in d in g a rb itr a tio n m a y b e r e s o r te d t o
w h e n issues arise b e t w e e n th e p arties h e r e t o w ith

r e fe r e n c e t o

settlement:

th e in t e r p r e t a tio n , a p p lic a t io n o r e n f o r c e ­

m e n t o f p ro v is io n s o f this a g re e m e n t.
(1 3 7 )
be

T h e step s in th e p r o c e d u r e set fo r t h h e re in shall
fo llo w e d

unless

it

is

m u tu a lly

a g reed

by

the

a p p ro p r ia te su p erv isor a n d th e griev a n t th a t th e griev a n ce
s h o u ld b e sta rted at S te p 3 o r S te p 4 . . .




1 0 S e e “ M a jo r C o lle c t iv e B argainin g A g re e m e n ts : A r b itr a t io n
P ro c e d u r e s ” (B L S B u lle tin 1 4 2 5 - 6 , 1 9 6 6 ) , p . 7 .

35

Provisions may specify a single arbitrator or an
arbitration board, consisting usually o f equal numbers o f
representatives o f each party who, in turn, select the
impartial members o f the panel. If the panel or parties
cannot agree on the arbitrator, they may turn to a
government agency for a list o f qualified persons from
whom a final selection is made. Often alternate names
are struct
HI only one person is left:
(139^ .
If they cannot agree on a fifth member
j,
;>e first 3 working days after their first meeting,
the:, the [employer] and the union shall jointly apply to
the [Federal] Mediation and Conciliation Service for a list
o f at least seven arbitrators. The parties shall alternately
strike names from such list, the union to strike first, and
the last remaining name shall be the sole arbitrator. . .

To expedite the decision, time limits likewise are placed
on the grievance system at various stages o f the
arbitration process: The initial meeting o f the board,
hearings, and the arbitrator’ s decision.
Most o f the agreements authorizing arbitration
specified the status o f the arbitrator’s decision. Binding
arbitration prevailed. O f the 188 contracts containing a
clear stipulation o f status, 147 established binding
arbitration:
(26)
The decision o f the arbitrator, if made in
accord: nc with his jurisdiction and authority, as defined
here?
'■ Ne accepted as final by the parties to the
dispute and both will abide by it.

As in private sector agreements, the jurisdiction and
authority o f the arbitrator often was spelled out in some
detail

to

protect

the agreement from

any revision

resulting from his decision:
(140)
The decision o f the arbitrator shall be final and
binding upon the parties, except that the arbitrator shall
make no decision which alters, amends, adds to or
detracts from this agreement, or which recommends any
right or relief prior to the effective date o f this agreement,
or which modifies or abridges the rights and prerogatives
o f municipal management under Article IV o f this
agreement.
(108)
. . . The arbitrator will follow and be bound by
the rules o f procedure adopted by the American
Arbitration Association. The arbitrator shall fix a time,
and a place for a hearing upon reasonable notice to each
party. After such hearing the arbitrator shall promptly
render a decision which shall be binding upon both parties
but the arbitrator shall have no power to render a decision
which adds to, subtracts from or modifies this agreement;
the decision shall be confined to the meaning o f the
contract provision which gave rise to the dispute. . .

Under advisory arbitration, the employer may accept,
reject, or m odify the arbitrator’s decision. Advisory
arbitration clauses, however, were in the minority in this

36




study. Usually, they designated the highest authority in
the agency or the city in whose hands power rested. It
could be the mayor, agency head, or a designated
official:
(67)
The arbitration panel shall render its decision
based on a majority vote not later than 30 calendar days
after the conclusion o f the final hearings. Such decision
shall be reported to the Chief Administrative Officer o f
the city o f Memphis and to the union and shall be a
matter o f public record, and shall be advisory to the Chief
Administrative Officer who is hereby designated by the
Mayor to render a final binding decision.

In

the

remaining

provisions,

the

status

o f the

arbitrator’s decision varied with the subject matter. For
example, in the following illustration, binding arbitra­
tion applied to grievances over wages, hours, and
working conditions
and advisory arbitration to
disciplinary matters:
(141)
The specific exceptions noted above are not
intended to limit the right o f the union to proceed to
final and binding arbitration in disputes affecting the
entitlement o f employes to existing and established
wages, hours, and conditions o f employment as
specifically set forth and referred to in Schedule “ A ”
attached
hereto
unless otherwise noted in said
schedule. . . .
. . . Only the union may request advisory
arbitration on behalf o f an employe who has been
disciplined, provided that the action is properly ap­
pealable under the provisions o f [pertinent] Wisconsin
Statutes in accordance with the rules and regulations
promulgated thereunder by the Commission; and
provided further, that the union shall file with the
Commission within 3 days following the determination by
such department head, an appeal in writing requesting
advisory arbitration. . .

One agreement indicated that arbitration was binding
on management, if it was in the city’s favor. However,
the arbitrator’ s decision, if not in favor, could be
overruled by a vote o f the city’s legislative body:
(142)
If the decision o f the arbitrator is in favor o f the
employer, the same shall be final.
The employer shall abide by the decision o f the
arbitrator unless by a majority vote o f all members o f the
Board o f Commissioners, the decision o f the arbitrator
shall be rejected.

The arbitrator’s decision usually had to be submitted
in writing. Over 90 percent o f the arbitration clauses also
called for equal sharing o f arbitration costs. However,
costs generated by one party often were paid by that
party:
(1 4 3>
Arbitration proceedings may be initiated by
either party within 15 days o f the written disposition o f

su ch

g riev a n ce

by

th e

D ep u ty

M ayor

fo r

L abor

m a y , w ith in 5 w o r k in g d a y s a fte r r e ce ip t o f n o t ic e o f su ch

N e g o tia tio n s . T h e d e c is io n o f su ch a r b itra to r shall b e in

a c t io n ,

w ritin g an d b in d in g u p o n th e parties h e re to .

d isch a rg e ,

. . . A ll e x p e n s e s w h ic h m ay b e in v o lv e d in the
a rb itra tio n
e q u a lly .

p ro c e e d in g s

H ow ever,

shall

expen ses

be

born e

relatin g

by

to

th e

th e

ca llin g

the p a rty at w h o s e req u es t su ch w itn esses o r

d e p o s it io n s are req u ired .

an

m e m b e r a p p o in t e d b y it a n d its o w n e x p e n s e s in v o lv e d in

shall b e

r e im b u rse m e n t

borne

of

e q u a lly

w a g es

fo r

by

th e B oa rd

cause

of

im p o s e d

th e

upon

c a lle d

and

s h o u ld

th at

be

su ch

b a se d o n g o o d

a c t io n

s h o u ld

be

an d s u ffic ie n t
ta k e n b y

th e

su p e rv iso r h a vin g su ch a u th o r it y o n l y a fte r h e has g iven
d u e c o n s id e r a tio n t o th e m a tte r.

th e p a rties. T h e

e m p lo y e e s

the ju s t

It is th e p o l i c y o f th e B o a rd that th e d isch a rg e o f
e m p lo y e e

re a so n

in c lu d in g the m a k in g o f a r e c o r d , as the B o a r d d e e m s it
n e ce s s a ry ,

to

d is cip lin e

In the following illustration, disciplinary cases first

(1 4 4 )

m a tter. A ll o t h e r e x p e n s e s in cu rred b y

as
or

would go through normal review procedures, and then
additionally might undergo advisory arbitration under a
contractually established grievance panel:

E a ch p a rty shall b e a r th e e x p e n s e s a n d fe e s o f th e

the

g rie v a n ce

h im . . . .

of

sim ilar e x p e n s e a s s o cia te d w it h su ch p r o c e e d in g s shall be

(8 5 )

a

su s p e n s io n ,

parties

w itn esses o r the o b ta in in g o f d e p o s it io n s o r a n y o th e r
b orne by

file

as

w itn esses , w h e re a loss o f w a g es h a d b e e n in c u r r e d b y said

I f a p er a n n u m o r p er m o n t h ly e m p lo y e e w ith

e m p lo y e e , shall b e p a id b y th e p a rty ca llin g s u ch w itn ess.

m o re

than

th re e

m o n th s

of

c o n t in u o u s

se rv ice

is

or if an hourly employee with more than the
equivalent of one school term o f continuous service is
discharged h e sh all, u p o n h is r e q u e s t, b e g iv e n a w r itte n
d isch a rg e d ,

Disciplinary procedures. Although disciplinary proce­
dures com m only are spelled out in civil service or
personnel manuals, they also were referred to in almost
40 percent o f the agreements studied. (See table 29.) In

n o t ic e o f d isch a rg e a n d a sta te m e n t o f th e g e n e ra l r e a so n s
fo r

many cases, the contract referred only to existing
procedures, in effect, and incorporated such procedures
into the contract. In the following illustration the only
addition,

would

appear

to

be

a

statement

su ch

a c t io n .

S u ch

e m p lo y e e

w ill

r e q u e s t, b e a f f o r d e d an o p p o r t u n it y

a ls o ,

upon

h is

f o r a p r o m p t an d

c a r e fu l re v ie w o f th e d isch a rg e in a c c o r d a n c e w it h th e
p r o v is io n s o f re v ie w p r o c e d u r e s p r e s c r ib e d b y th e B o a r d
o f E d u c a t io n .

that

T h e D isch a rg e R e v ie w P r o c e d u r e shall in c lu d e , as

reprimands would be made in private:

a fu rth e r ste p , a p r o v is io n fo r “ a d v is o r y a r b itr a tio n ” b y

(1 3 6 )

a g re e m e n t. T h e r e c o m m e n d a t io n

o f th e P anel shall b e

o r p o s it io n o r su sp e n sio n fo r m o re th a n 3 0 d a y s shall b e

tra n sm itte d b y

the S u p e r in te n d e n t o f

govern ed

S c h o o ls .

the G rie v a n ce P anel e sta b lish e d u n d e r A r tic le X II o f this
D iscip lin a ry a c t io n , d isch a rg e , r e d u c t io n in p a y
by

th e

R u les

of

the

B oard

of

F ire

C o m m is s io n e rs a n d th e C iv il S ervice C o m m is s io n . I f the

th e ch a irm a n t o

W ith in

r e c o m m e n d a t io n

10
is

school
r e ce iv e d

days
by

a fte r

th e

d a te

th e

th e S u p e r in te n d e n t o f

E m p lo y e r has rea son t o r e p rim a n d an e m p lo y e e it shall b e

S c h o o ls ,

d o n e in a m a n n er that w ill n o t em barrass th e e m p lo y e e

P an el’ s r e c o m m e n d a t io n . U nless th e S u p e r in te n d e n t o f

b e f o r e o t h e r e m p lo y e e s o r th e p u b lic .

S c h o o ls
sch ool

he

shall

in d ica te

d is a p p r o v e s
days

a fte r

th e

the

w h e th e r

h e w ill a c c e p t th e

r e c o m m e n d a t io n

w it h in

d a te it is r e ce iv e d b y

10

h im , th e

r e c o m m e n d a t io n shall b e d e e m e d t o b e his d e c is io n .

Some contracts defined the union role in disciplinary
cases. In some, the union was notified o f any planned

A

disciplinary

disciplinary actions. Steps o f the grievance procedure
could be by-passed by permitting the case to go directly
to binding arbitration:

actions.

The

union

or

association was

permitted to participate in the procedure, often
informally for lack o f any further contracted definition
o f the employee organization’ s role, to protect the rights
o f the disciplined em ployee:

few clauses also provided for speedy review o f

(5 1 )

E m p lo y e e s m a y e le c t t o

d is p o s itio n a r b itra te d . . . .

ha ve th e ir d is cip lin a ry

A n e m p lo y e e d issa tisfie d w it h

is

th e d is cip lin a ry d e c is io n o f the o f f i c e r issu ing su ch o r d e r

o f the

an d w h o sig n ifies a lo n g w it h h is b a rg a in in g agen t a d esire

ch arges p re fe rr e d again st h im a n d shall h a v e 10 d a y s t o

t o have h is d is cip lin e a rb itra te d w ith in 5 d a y s a fte r h e

(2 5 )

A

p rop o se d

p e rs o n
sh all b e

against

w hom

serv ed

w it h

d is cip lin a ry

a c t io n

a w r itte n c o p y

o f th e ch arges sh all a lso b e

receiv es the d e c is io n o f th e o f f i c e r issu in g s u ch o r d e r an d

served u p o n th e U n io n . T h e an sw er shall b e serv ed u p o n

he d o e s n o t a p p e a l t o th e C iv il S e rvice C o m m is s io n w ith in

th e D e p a r tm e n t H ea d . F ailu re t o serve a w r itt e n a n sw er

the tim e lim its set fo r t h in the C ity C h a rte r, h e shall have

an sw er in w ritin g . A

w ith in

th e

tim e

copy

p e r io d

p r o v id e d

fo r

h erein

shall b e

the d e cis io n o f th e o f f i c e r issu ing s u ch o r d e r , a rb itra te d .

d e e m e d a d m is s io n o f the ch a rg es.

T h e a rb itra to r sh all have the a u th o r it y t o a ffir m , d is a ffirm

More frequently, disciplined employees had recourse

T h e a r b itr a to r ’ s d e c is io n shall b e fin a l an d b in d in g o n all

o r m o d i f y th e d e c is io n o f th e o f f i c e r issu ing su ch o r d e r .

to the negotiated grievance procedure. (See table 29.)

p arties.

statu s,

Some o f the agreements provided that in discharge

s u s p e n d e d fo r m o re than 15 d a y s, r e m o v e d , o r d isch a rg e d

cases an employee could elect either to file a grievance

(1 0 7 )

Any

e m p lo y e e




who

is

redu ced

in

37

through the negotiated grievance procedure or utilize
pre-existing civil service or agency procedures:

s t o p p a g e , s lo w d o w n o r w it h h o ld in g o f se rv ice s , th e U n io n
shall fo r t h w it h d is a v o w a n y s u ch s trik e , w o r k s t o p p a g e ,
s lo w d o w n o r w it h h o ld in g o f se rv ice s an d shall re fu s e t o

(1 4 5 )

T h e e m p lo y e r shall n o t d isch a rg e a n y e m p lo y e e

r e c o g n iz e

w it h o u t ju s t ca u se. In a n y case in v o lv in g d is ch a rg e , the

any

p ick e t

line

esta b lish e d

in

c o n n e c t io n

h e r e w ith . F u r th e r m o r e , at the re q u e s t o f th e A u t h o r it y

e m p lo y e e m a y c o n t e s t th e d isch a rg e a n d m a y e le c t t o use

th e u n io n shall ta k e all re a so n a b le m eans t o in d u c e su ch

the

e m p lo y e e o r g r o u p o f e m p lo y e e s t o te rm in a te th e s trik e ,

g riev a n ce

p roced u re

a n d /o r

th e

C ivil

S ervice

p roced u re.

w o r k s t o p p a g e , s lo w d o w n o r w it h h o ld in g o f services an d
t o retu rn t o w o r k fo r t h w it h .

N o-strike

provisions. As

collective

bargaining

has

expanded, so have contract pledges not to resort to

Although not permitting a strike among city employees,

strikes

term o f the

the following clause allowed municipal employees to

agreement. Although most jurisdictions either explicitly

refuse to cross the picket line established by other
unions:

or

similar

actions

during

the

or implicitly prohibit work stoppages, such clauses
usually, are included as tradeoffs for an operating, viable
grievance and arbitration procedure that permits city

(1 4 8 )

T h ere

s lo w d o w n ,

w ill

sit

be

dow n

no

or

s trik e ,

p ick e tin g

re fu sa l
by

to

th e

w ork ,

u n io n

or

employees to initiate and carry their complaints through

m e m b e r s , o r l o c k o u t o n the part o f th e e m p lo y e r d u rin g

several levels o f appeal to

th e

final resolution. O f the

agreements studied, nearly two-thirds contained n o­
strike provisions:
All ag reem e nts.....................................
Having no-strike provisions
.............
No reference to no-strike provisions .

term o f th e a g r e e m e n t, p r o v id e d , h o w e v e r , that a

m em ber

of

th e

u n io n

m ay

re fu s e

to

e n te r u p o n

th e

p re m ise s o f a n y o t h e r e m p lo y e r , i f th e e m p lo y e e s o f su ch
e m p lo y e r are e n g a g e d in a strik e ra tifie d o r a p p r o v e d b y a

Agreements

Workers

re p re se n ta tiv e

of

286
190
96

613,490
463,195
150,295

e m p lo y e r

re q u ire d

is

su ch

e m p lo y e e s
to

w hom

r e c o g n iz e

s u ch

oth er

p u rsu a n t

to

an

a p p lic a b le S ta te law o r th e L a b o r M a n a g e m e n t R e la t io n s
A c t o f 1 9 4 7 , as a m e n d e d .

Some clauses strictly enjoined the signatory employee

O fficial tim e fo r grievances and negotiations. O f the 286

organization from engaging in any activities which might

agreements, 177 or 62 percent provided official time for
grievance
preparation
or
hearings,
or contract

result in a stoppage:
(1 4 6 )

T h e a s s o cia tio n shall n e ith er cause n o r c o u n s e l

its m e m b e r s , o r a n y o f t h e m , t o strik e fo r a n y rea son
d u rin g th e te rm o f this A g r e e m e n t , n o r shall it in a n y
m a n n er cause th e m d ir e c t ly o r in d ir e c t ly t o c o m m it a n y
c o n c e r t e d acts o f w o r k s t o p p a g e , s lo w d o w n , o r refusal t o
p e r f o r m a n y c u s t o m a r ily assign ed d u tie s f o r th e m u n icip a l
e m p lo y e r , n a m e ly , th e c i t y , fo r a n y rea son d u rin g th e
te rm o f this a g re e m e n t.

Under

the

following

provision,

the

employee

organization additionally acknowledged that it had no
right to strike, would disavow any stoppage that might
occur, and would work to bring about its termination:
(1 4 7 )

T h e re shall b e n o strik e o r l o c k o u t d u r in g th e

t e rm o f this a g re e m e n t. T h e u n io n r e c o g n iz e s th a t it d o e s
n o t h a v e th e right t o strik e again st th e A u t h o r it y o r t o
assist o r p a r tic ip a te in a n y su ch strik e o r im p o s e a d u t y o r

negotiations. (See table 30.)

In 28 percent o f the

agreements, employees or their representatives were
allowed paid time to prepare for grievance meetings, and
in 44 percent, they were allowed official time to engage
in hearings or otherwise process the grievance. The first
illustration allows time for both the employee and
employee organization representative. The other two
refer only to em ployee representatives. All require
notification to city management or its prior approval:
(1 1 5 )

An

e m p lo y e e

re p re se n ta tiv e
d u tie s

w ith

shall b e

pay

and

his

a llo w e d

ste w a rd

tim e

o ff

or

fr o m

f o r a tte n d a n c e at s c h e d u le d

oth er
regular

m e e tin g s

u n d e r th e g rie v a n ce p r o c e d u r e w ith p r o p e r n o t if ic a t io n t o
th e ir r e s p e ctiv e su p e rv iso rs.
(1 4 9 )

U p o n w r itt e n a p p lic a t io n b y th e p re s id e n t o f th e

o b lig a t io n t o c o n d u c t , assist, o r p a r tic ip a te in a n y su ch

P rin cip a ls C lu b t o th e d is tr ic t su p e r in te n d e n t in v o lv e d , a

strik e.

C lu b
No

e m p lo y e e c o v e r e d b y

th is a g reem en t shall

e n g a ge in , in d u c e o r e n c o u ra g e a n y s trik e , w o r k s t o p p a g e ,

re p re se n ta tiv e

m ay

be

a llo w e d

re a so n a b le

tim e

d u rin g s c h o o l h o u rs t o in v e stig a te g rie v a n ce s o f p rin cip a ls.
(1 5 0 )

R e a s o n a b le tim e n e ce ssa ry t o p ro c e s s g rie v a n ce s

s lo w d o w n , o r w it h h o ld in g o f s e rv ice . T h e u n io n agrees

w ill

th a t n e ith e r it n o r a n y o f its o ff i c e r s o r a gen ts w ill ca ll,

S econ d

in s tig a te , a u th o r iz e , p a r tic ip a te in , s a n c tio n o r r a tify a n y

A gent

s u ch s trik e , w o r k s t o p p a g e , s lo w d o w n o r w it h h o ld in g o f

a p p ro v a l b y th e A ssista n t C h i e f o r C h ie f.

b e g ra n te d
V ic e
and

to

th e P re s id e n t, F irst V ic e P re s id e n t,

P re s id e n t,

S ta tio n

S e cre ta ry -T re a su re r,

R e p re s e n ta tiv e

upon

th e

B usiness
s p e c if ic

se rv ices .
o r g r o u p o f e m p lo y e e s

The last two illustrations also referred to “ reason­

this a g re e m e n t en g a ge in a n y s trik e , w o r k

able” time to prepare or process grievances. In some

S h o u ld
covered

by

any

38




e m p lo y e e

instances, the amount o f time permitted was specified;
thus, time o ff was limited:
(151)

C h a p ter ch a irm e n shall b e a llo w e d tim e p e r w e e k

as fo llo w s fo r in v e stig a tio n o f g riev a n ces an d f o r o t h e r
a p p ro p ria te a ctiv ities relatin g t o th e a d m in is tra tio n o f the
ag re em en t an d t o the d u tie s o f th e ir o f f i c e :
(1 )

In

the e le m e n ta r y
fo u r

a d d itio n a l p re p a r a tio n p e r io d s e f ­

fe c t iv e S e p te m b e r 1 9 7 0 :
(2 )

s c h o o ls ,

r e lie f

fr o m

h om eroom

or

o ffic ia l

d u ty

io r

the a b o v e

A ll p a rties agree t o b e b o u n d b y th e fo llo w in g

su b p a ra g ra p h s . . . T h a t all g rie v a n ce s e x c e p t e m e rg e n cie s
in v o lv in g th e im m e d ia te sa fe ty o f the e m p lo y e e are t o b e
p r o c e s s e d o n th e e m p l o y e e ’ s tim e .
(1 5 4 )

In th e ju n io r h igh s c h o o ls , an d in the h ig h

fr o m

Other provisions stated that time spent processing
grievances or at the grievance hearing would not be paid:
(1 3 8 )

s c h o o ls , th ree a d d itio n a l

p re p a ra tio n p e rio d s e ffe c t iv e S e p te m b e r 1 9 6 9
an d

E m p lo y e e s e x c u s e d

p u r p o s e s shall n o t re ce iv e p a y fo r th e tim e o f f .

A ll g rie v a n ce h ea rin gs shall b e h e ld o u t s id e o f the

n orm al

w o r k in g

in v o lv e d

so

as

h o u rs
not

of

to

th e

g rieva n t

in te r fe r e

w it h

or
th eir

grieva nts
w o r k in g

r e s p o n s ib ilitie s . A re p re se n ta tiv e o f the A s s o c ia t io n m a y

class.

a c c o m p a n y an d re p re se n t th e g rieva n t at all ste p s o f th e
(8 0 )

C e r tifie d e x e c u t iv e b o a r d m e m b e rs o f th e u n io n ,

g rie v a n ce p r o c e d u re .

n o t t o e x c e e d o n e fo r e a c h term in a l, w ill e a c h b e a llo w e d
a

m a x im u m

c o m p e n s a te

of
th e m

20

h o u rs

pay

per

w eek

to

fu lly

fo r tim e c o n s u m e d in s e ttle m e n t o f

g rie v a n ces, assisting te rm in a l p ic k s o f runs a n d o f f d a y s ,
a tte n d in g d e p a rtm e n t s a fe ty m e e tin g s , a tte n d in g m eetin g s

More than 34 percent o f the agreements authorized
negotiations on the employer’s time. (See table 30.)
Clauses o f this type varied from simple statements that

w ith rep resen ta tiv es o f th e d e p a r t m e n t, w h e th e r sam e b e

compensation would be allowed for “ reasonable” time

ca lle d b y e m p lo y e r o r th e u n io n , assisting in th e U n ite d

spent while negotiating with the city to provisions which

F o u n d a t io n T o r c h D riv e, a n d o t h e r su ch c o m m u n it y w id e

limited the amount o f paid time permitted:

d rives, an d f o r e n g a gin g in a n y a ctiv itie s b e a rin g u p o n
la b o r rela tion s w ith th e D e p a r tm e n t o f S treet R a ilw a y s.

(1 5 5 )

E m p lo y e e s shall b e c o m p e n s a te d f o r re a so n a b le

Monthly or annual time allowances for grievances also

t im e sp en t a w a y f r o m w o r k w h ile re p re se n tin g th e U n io n

could be expressed:

in th e a rb itr a tio n o f a g rie v a n ce o r w h ile n e g o tia tin g a
c o n t r a c t w it h th e C ity o f B o s t o n .

(8 4 )

T h e h o s p ita l w ill p a y th e stra ight tim e regular rate

(1 2 2 )

T h e u n io n shall ad vise th e B o a rd o f th e n a m es o f

fo r a u th o riz e d tim e a ctu a lly sp en t b y u n io n rep resen ta tiv e

its n e g o t ia t o r s . T h e u n io n shall b e a llo w e d a to ta l o f n o t

e m p lo y e e s o f the h o s p ita l e n g a g e d in h a n d lin g g riev a n ces

to exceed

d u rin g th eir regular w o r k in g h o u r s n o t t o e x c e e d in t o ta l

sp e n t in n e g o t ia t io n s d u rin g th e regular w o r k in g h o u r s

th e first o n e h u n d r e d t w e n t y ( 1 2 0 ) h o u r s p er m o n t h so

d u rin g

sp e n t

d e te r m in e

fo r

all

stew a rd s

or

m e m b e rs

o f th e

g riev a n ce

c o m m it t e e c o m b in e d . T h e h o s p ita l sh all n o t b e req u ired

th e

16 h o u r s o f e m p l o y e e ’ s b a se salary f o r tim e
life
th e

of

this

a llo c a t io n

a g re e m e n t.
of

th e

The
h ou rs

u n io n
am ong

shall
the

m e m b e r s h ip d u rin g th e n e g o t ia t io n s .

t o p ay f o r an y tim e sp en t b y u n io n rep resen ta tiv e h o s p ita l
e m p lo y e e s in c o n n e c t io n w it h a rb itr a tio n p r o c e e d in g s .

(1 5 2 )

G rie v a n ce c o m m it t e e m e m b e r s w ill b e p e rm itte d

t o leave th eir w o r k w it h o u t lo ss o f p a y t o th e e x te n t o f
4 ,1 6 0 to ta l h ou rs fo r th e p u r p o s e o f h a n d lin g g riev a n ces
a b o v e the level o f s e n io r a u to rep a ir fo r e m a n , an d th e
h a n d lin g o f o t h e r u n io n -d e p a r tm e n t b u sin ess .

A few contracts provided that time lost in processing
or adjusting grievances would not be compensable, but
employees would be excused from duty for such
activities:
(1 5 3 )

Negotiation impasse procedures and related matters

A n y e m p lo y e e w h o has in v o k e d

th e g riev a n ce

p r o c e d u r e h erein b e f o r e set fo r t h w ill, u p o n a p p lic a t io n
t o his s u p e r io r , b e e x c u s e d fr o m d u t y f o r th e p u r p o s e o f

Negotiations involve the city management and the
employee organization in joint discussions and operate
within the constraints o f the city’s laws, administrative
rules, and budget. The purpose o f such negotiations is to
reach agreement on wages and working conditions
without resorting to strikes. Verbal agreements may be
involved or a unilateral promulgation o f the executive or
legislative branches may result in which the role o f the
union is not clearly identified. However, a written
contract similar to those in the private sector also may
culminate.

a tte n d in g a s c h e d u le d c o n fe r e n c e o r h ea rin g th e r e o n ; a n d

For negotiations, the employee organization usually

su ch e m p lo y e e w ill a lso b e e x c u s e d fr o m d u t y f o r the

assembles several members into a committee to meet

p u r p o s e o f c o n fe r r in g w it h U n io n o ff ic ia ls in regard t o

with management. In addition to the organization’ s

su ch g riev a n ce w h e re it is s h o w n t o th e s a tis fa ctio n o f h is

principal officers, it ordinarily may contain several

s u p e rio r that it is im p r a c tic a b le f o r s u ch c o n fe r e n c e t o b e
h e ld w h ile o f f d u t y , b u t e v e r y rea son a b le e f f o r t shall b e

stewards or specially elected members. In almost 15

m a d e b y U n io n o ffic ia ls t o h o ld s u ch c o n fe r e n c e s d u rin g

percent o f the agreements studied, a provision governed

n o n -d u t y p e rio d s .

such negotiating committees:




39

All agreem ents.......................................
Referring to negotiating
....................................
committees
No reference to negotiating
committees
....................................

A g r e e m e n ts

W o rkers

286

613,490

42

73,427

244

540,063

The preceding tabulation clearly understates the
extent o f negotiating committees since they exist in all
cases where an agreement has been reached.
Provisions usually specified the size of negotiating
committees and the regulations granting time off, with
or without pay, in negotiations:
(87)
The Employer agrees to recognize a Negotiating
Committee of seven employees from the plant who will
be released from work (unless an emergency exists) with
pay for negotiating sessions between the Union and the
Employer to a maximum of 12 sessions.
Negotiation pay for each session will amount to pay
for one shift at the employee’s regular straight-time
hourly rated pay, including shift differential, if any. Shift
paid for and not worked shall count as hours worked for
computing overtime.
A shift man scheduled for the night or evening shift
shall be excused with pay from his shift.

In city negotiations as in the private sector, collective
bargaining may become prolonged. To avoid undue
delays, negotiators in the private sector always have the
expiration date o f the existing agreement as a motivation
to complete bargaining. The “no contract, no work”
incentive, however, is constrained in many cities by law.
For this and other reasons dictated perhaps by budget
deadlines, the parties occasionally have written deadlines
and even negotiating schedules into current contracts:
(156)
Conferences and negotiations shall be carried on
by the parties hereto as follows:
Step 1.

Submission o f Association’s demands to
the city by February 1.

Step 2.

Submission o f city’s demands (within 6
weeks) by March 15.

Step 3.

Negotiating meetings shall commence
(within 4 weeks) by April 15.

Step 4.

Mediation, if any, begins by July 15.

Step 5.

Factfinding, if any, begins by August 1.

Step 6.

Recommendations of the factfinder
to be issued by October 15.

If the parties reach an impasse, they at times may
resort to the following third party procedures in
overco m in g obstacles: factfinding, mediation, and
arbitration. One or a combination o f these procedures
was specifically referred to in 62, or 22 percent, o f the
agreements studied. (See table 31.) Over half o f the 62

40




agreements provided for at least two of these
procedures. Mediation was found most frequently,
followed by factfinding and then arbitration. The low,
overall prevalence cannot be construed to mean that few
cities have impasse procedures, since in many cases they
are established on an ad hoc basis. For example, the
parties may request a prominent citizen or group of
citizens to enter the dispute as fact-finders or mediators,
and, in rare instances, as arbitrators.
The amount of detail on impasse procedures written
into the agreement may vary. The first illustration refers
to mediation. The second provision has considerable
detail on the make-up and responsibilities o f the
fact-finding committee. The third clause has given
somewhat less detail on the arbitration board to be
established in the event of impasse, size and composition
of the board, final and binding authority, and
prohibition against strike or lockout:
(157)
With respect to the status of this memorandum
o f understanding during negotiations and after termina­
tion thereof, the parties recognize joint responsibility and
agree to provide continuing service to the end that
educational processes and the work of the departments in
the bargaining unit be not interrupted. If, during the
course of negotiations, an impasse appears likely, every
effort shall be made fey them to resolve the dispute. In
accomplishing this purpose, joint request for mediation
services may be made.
(134)
If the parties fail to reach agreement by
November 15 of each year on any matters which are the
subject of negotiations, either party shall have the right to
refer such matters to a factfinding committee of not more
than three impartial persons to be selected by mutual
agreement. In the event the parties are unable to agree
upon persons to act as factfinders within 10 days after the
initiating party has notified the other o f its decision to
submit the disputed matters to factfinding, the fact­
finders, upon request of either party shall be designated
by the Board of Education Employment Relations Board.
The costs, if any, of such factfinding, shall be borne
equally by both parties.
The factfinding committee shall immediately, upon its
appointment, meet with the parties and endeavor to help
the parties reach a mutually satisfactory agreement. If no
such agreement is reached, the factfinding committee
shall submit to the parties its report with recommenda­
tions at least 1 week prior to the last scheduled meeting
o f the Board in December. The committee may withhold
any publication of its report if it believes that such
withholding will aid in the settlement of a dispute.
However, in such report either party shall have the right
to publish the report in the event no agreement is reached
10 days after its receipt. Notwithstanding the reference to
November 15, in the foregoing, any matters may be
submitted to a factfinder or factfinders at any time by
mutual consent of the parties. In that event, the other
provisions o f this Article shall apply.

(1 5 3 )

In th e ease o f an y la b o r d is p u te w h ere c o lle c t iv e

b a rga in in g

does

not

result

in

a g reem en t

a fter

re a so n a b le e ff o r t s t o agree in g o o d fa it h, the sam e
s u b m itte d

at

boa rd

a r b itra tio n

of

of

th ree

to

p erson s

in

t

;

n e a t !> • v !

'merits sunbed, covering 329.420
;.*>?poruicd a sa\mgs clause into the
provisions provided that invalid clauses
’lie
• •!
confuKt hot. instead,
tiated:

be

th e w r itte n req u est o f eith e r p:u->
com posed

iii.t

all
a
as

h e re in a fter p r o v id e d , o n e t o b e c h o s e n 1 v th>' V u 'h - 'r v
o n e t o b e c h o s e n b y the U n io n , and th e t w o thus selected

f i * • *’

• *s

employees, incontract. These
would not harm
i-»V he renego­

t o se le ct a third d isin te re s te d a r b itr a to r ; th e fin d in gs o f
th e m a jo r ity o f said b o a r d o f a r b itra tio n shall b e fin a l and
b in d in g

o n th e p arties t h e r e t o ; all c o n t r a c t c o n d it io n s

(1 0 4 )

I f any a rticle o r s e c tio n o f th is a g re e m e n t o r a n y

shall rem a in u n d is tu rb e d an d th ere shall b e n o lo c k o u t s ,

a d d iii >n t h e r e to sh o u ld b e h e ld in valid b y o p e r a tio n o f

strik es, w a lk o u ts o r in t e r fe r e n c e w ith o r in te r ru p tio n o f

law o r b y a n y trib u n a l o f c o m p e t e n t ju r is d ic t io n , o r i f

serv ice d u rin g th e a rb itra tio n p ro c e e d in g s .

c o m p lia n c e w it h o r e n f o r c e m e n t o f a n y a rticle o r s e c tio n
s h o u ld b e restrain ed b y su ch t rib u n a l, th e re m a in d e r o f
th is a g re e m e n t a n d a d d e n d a shall n o t b e a f fe c t e d t h e r e b y ,

Savings Clauses. Once the agreement is ratified and

and

signed, conditions are set for the duration o f the
contract—unless a clause subsequently is declared invalid
or illegal. To permit the rest o f the agreement to remain

th e

p a rtie s

shall e n te r

in t o

im m e d ia te

c o lle c t iv e

b a rg a in in g n e g o t ia t io n s fo r the p u r p o s e o f arriving at a
m u tu a lly

s a tis fa cto r y

re p la ce m e n t

fo r

su ch

a rticle

or

s e c tio n .

Table 7.
U nion security, dues checkoff, and management rights provisions in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith
populations o f 250,000 and over, by region, 19701

Region

All agreements
Agree­
ments
Workers

Union security
Agree­
ments
Workers

Dues checkoff
With reimbursement
Total
of costs to the city Management rights
Agree­
Agree­
Agree­
ments
Workers
ments
Workers
ments
Workers

Total .............................

286

613,490

92

103,276

220

538,410

New England........................
Middle A tla n tic ...................
East North Central ............
West North C e n tra l............
South Atlantic ...................
East South Central ............
West South C e n tra l............
Mountain ............................
Pacific...................................

24
71
82
7
24
20
3
13
42

22.630
342,800
137,849
6,750
48,612
8,690
3,960
10,478
31,721

21
13
32
1
2
10
1
2
10

22,001
15,946
53,379
650
2,550
981
60
178
7,531

21
55
71
6
20
20
2
8
17

20,001
304,652
134,366
4,050
38,612
8,690
760
8,828
18,451

1See table 1, fo o tn o te 1.




NO TE:

19

18,785

4
7

7,050
3,685

1
1

350
100

5
1

7,350
250

169

249,180

21
22
72
5
20
9
1
4
15

1 7,716
54,246
101,191
3,650
37,262
7,635
60
8,100
19,320

Data are nonadditive.

41

Table 8.
U n io n security, dues checkoff, and management rights provisions in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith
populations o f 250,000 and over, by occupational group and government activity, 19701

Occupational group and
government activity

All agreements
Agree­
ments
Workers

Union security
Agree­
ments
Workers

Dues checkoff
With reimbursement
Total
of costs to city
Agree­
Agree­
ments
Workers
ments
Workers

Manacjement
rigihts
Agree­
ments
Workers

O C C U P A T IO N A L G R O U P

Total ..........................
Blue-collar or manual crafts
Professional or technical . .
C le ric a l.................................
Police or f i r e ........................
Blue-collar and clerical2 . .
Professional and clerical . .
Blue-collar and professional
Blue-collar, clerical,
professional, or technical
Occupation not given . . . .

286

613,490

92

103,276

220

538,410

19

18,785

169

249,180

119
68
11
46
8
5
3

133,668
210,889
10,850
57,424
5,016
14,200
2,200

48
14
4
9
3
1
2

34,880
17,796
3,600
12,200
3,050
600
1,750

91
54
10
32
6
4
2

102,484
194,726
10,250
38,264
3,316
12,300
1,750

10
4
1
1

9,850
4,915
150
450

73
34
7
25
5
3
2

92,848
61,623
5,250
22,674
3,242
8,300
1,750

15
11

20,170
159,073

8
3

10,700
18,700

14
7

19,270
156,050

2
1

1,420
2,000

14
6

19,070
34,423

286

613,490

92

103,276

220

538,410

19

18,785

169

249,180

22
25
79
1

26,674
30,824
246,700
350

4
5
9

7,100
5,100
21,100

15
18
63
1

15,174
23,164
227,100
350

1

450

6

6,835

12
13
33
1

13,250
9,424
74,790
350

28
14
13

7,884
18,080
7,092

12
4
6

2,931
210
1,100

25
12
11

7,419
5,230
1,992

3

1,600

3

700

20
7
9

7,198
2,520
1,564

22
3

65,441
629

14
1

23,691
29

15
2

56,991
179

3

5,500

20
1

64,410
29

1

100

1

100

1

100

1

100

11
2

2,266
650

2

175

6
2

1,921
650

3
1

375
550

19
9

7,946
5,136

10
4

2,516
584

15
6

6,316
2,284

2

1,700

18
5

7,858
2,870

7
30

8,131
185,587

3
17

140
38,500

4
24

6,640
182,900

1

2,000

4
21

6,640
57,252

GOVERNMENT
A C T IV IT Y

Total ..........................
Police2 .................................
F ir e .........................................
E d u c a tio n .............................
Public w e lfa re ......................
Public works-maintenance
of buildings and roads . .
S a n ita tio n .............................
Housing a u th o rity ..............
Transit systems and
a u th o ritie s ........................
Port a u th o ritie s ....................

Turnpike and tollbridge
a u th o ritie s ........................
Public utilities: water,
electric, gas .....................
Recreation facilities

..........

Public health: hospitals
and clinics ........................
L ib ra rie s ...............................
Legislative, judicial, and
administrative activities .
City wide activities..............

1 See table 1, fo o tn o te 1.
2 Includes one police agreement covering civilian, blue-collar,
and clerical employees.

42




N O T E : Data are nonadditive.

Table 9.
Types o f union security provisions in municipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f 250,000 and
over, by city size, 1970

Provisions

All agreements
Agreements Workers

T o ta l........................................
Total with union security ............
Union shop ...............................
Modified union s h o p ..............
Agency shop .............................
Maintenance of membership .
No reference to union security . .

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

City size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

,286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

92
23
10
39
20
194

103,276
15,500
8,810
59,147
19,819
510,214

28
3
6
8
11
41

54,790
10,950
6,150
29,350
8,340
331,487

37
8

36,508
3,878

27
12
4
10
1
61

11,978
672
2,660
7,796
850
58,683

1 C ity size is based on the 1 9 7 0 Census o f Population, U.S.
Departm ent of Commerce, Bureau o f the Census. Tables cover

-

21
8
92

-

22,001
10,629
120,044

all cities o f 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 inhabitants or m ore which had w ritte n
agreements and which made these agreements available.

Table 10.
A n tid iscrim in a tio n provisions in m unicipal
agreements in cities w ith populations o f 250,000 and
over by region, 1970 1
Having an antidis­
crimination provision
All agreements
Agree­
Agree­
Workers
ments
ments
Workers

Region

Total .................

286

613,490

183

335,312

New England..............
Middle A tla n tic ..........
East North Central . .
West North Central . .
South Atlantic ..........
East South Central . .
West South Central . .
Mountain ...................
P acific..........................

24
71
82
7
24
20
3
13
42

22,630
342,800
137,849
6,750
48,612
8,690
3,960
10,478
31,721

24
46
44
5
18
19
2
11
14

22,630
135,156
101,175
3,400
35,562
8,616
3,900
9,928
14,945

1 See table 1, fo o tn o te 1.

Table 11.
Selected provisions governing activities o f em ployee organizations in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith
populations o f 250,000 and over, by c ity size, 1970

Provisions

T o t a l........................................
Meetings on company time
or premises....................................
Bulletin boards ...............................
Visitation rig hts...............................
Rights and duties of employee
organization personnel
Representative..........................
S te w a rd ......................................

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

58
155
105

220,153
332,619
225,838

19
34
25

134,715
162,655
89,975

30
82
54

63,938
128,814
102,694

9
39
26

21,500
41,150
33,169

70
68

124,541
74,593

19
17

50,000
22,080

25
28

43,005
36,026

26
23

31,536
16,487

1City size is based on the 1970 Census of Population, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Tables cover
all cities of 250,000 inhabitants or more which had written




City Size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

agreements and which made these agreements available.
NOTE: Data are nonadditive. Agreements may have more
than one provision.

43

Table 12.
Labor-management committees in municipal agreements in cities w ith populations of 250,000 and over,
by city size, 1970

Committees

A ll agreements
Agreement Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

C ity size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

Total . ................. .. .................

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

Joint conference (consultation,
c o o p e ra tio n ).................................
Safety ................................................
Apprenticeship t r a in in g ................
Professional is s u e s ..........................
Industrial relations issues..............

55
33
11
17
15

119,680
38,840
18,331
94,100
54,250

20
5
4
5
5

73,615
7,490
9,850
66,100
33,200

23
22
6
8
5

25,355
23,900
8,450
19,800
12,200

12
6
1
4
5

20,710
7,450
31
8,200
8,850

1 C ity size is based upon th e 1 9 7 0 Census o f P o p u la tio n , U .S .
D e p a rtm e n t o f C o m m e rc e , B ureau o f th e Census. Tables cover
all cities o f 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 in h a b ita n ts o r m o re w h ic h had w r itte n

agreem ents and w h ic h m ade these agreem ents available.
N O T E : D ata are n o n a d d itiv e ,

Table 13.
Prom otion and dem otion procedures in
municipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f
250,000 and over, 19701
Procedures
T o t a l....................................
Prom otion procedures specified . . .
Rules governing job p o s tin g ............
Rate o f pay fo r tem porary transfers
stipulated ........................................
Flutes governing d e m o tio n s ..............
Dem otion in lieu of la y o ff specified
1 See ta b le
NOTE:

1, fo o tn o te

Agreements

Workers

286

613,490

151
118

352,423
313,572

93
36
23

114,531
46,205
30,031

1.

D ata are n o n a d d itiv e .

Table 14.
Selected reduction-in-force procedures in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f 250,000
and over, by c ity size, 1970

Procedures

A ll agreements
Agreement Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

C ity size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

T o ta l........................................

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

Advance notice of l a y o f f ..............
Role of employee organization
in R I F .............................................
Bumping procedures ......................
Recall rig h ts ......................................

34

28,648

10

8,780

20

15,777

4

4,091

11
34
79

10,480
39,150
114,099

4
13
19

2,330
15,330
49,480

6
8
29

8,000
14,100
43,867

1
13
31

150
9,720
20,752

1 C ity size is based on th e 1 9 7 0 Census o f P o p u la tio n , U .S .
D e p a rtm e n t o f C o m m e rc e , Bureau o f th e Census. Tables cover
all cities o f 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 in h a b ita n ts or m o re w h ic h had w r itte n

44



agreem ents and w h ic h m ade these agreem ents available.
N O T E : D ata are n o n a d d itiv e

Table 15. Miscellaneous job security provisions in
municipal agreements in cities w ith populations of
250,000 and over, 19701
Provisions

Agreements

Workers

T o t a l....................................

286

613,490

Training and re tra in in g ......................
Subcontracting provisions .................
Advance notice of technological
change ...............................................
Attrition arrangements........................

30
8

154,464
14,924

3
1

2,329
450

^ e e table 1, fo o tn o te 1.
N O TE :

Data are nonadditive.

Table 16.
Hours and overtim e provisions in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f 25 0,000 and over,
by c ity size, 1970

Provisions

T o ta l........................................
Provisions governing:
Scheduled daily or weekly
hours ......................................
Daily o ve rtim e ..........................
Weekly overtime ......................
Equal distribution of
o v e rtim e ..................................
Right to refuse overtime . . . .
Compensatory time or
overtim e p a y ..........................
Compensatory time banned . .

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

City size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

286 •

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

186
110
107

480,723
108,934
223,023

48
27
24

323,805
47,090
163,305

90
54
56

114,123
40,151
42,193

48
29
27

42,795
21,693
17,525

77
47

89,371
64,457

14
8

24,850
8,350

33
26

48,913
45,801

30
13

15,608
10,306

10
52

14,281
190,903

18

164,355

9
26

14,235
19,263

1
8

46
7,285

^ i t y size is based on the 19 70 Census of Population, U.S.
Departm ent o f Commerce, Bureau o f the Census. Tables cover
all cities of 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 inhabitants or more which had w ritte n

agreements and which made these agreements available.
N O T E : Data are nonadditive. Agreements may contain more
than one overtim e provision.

Table 17.
Prem ium pay fo r weekend and holiday w o rk in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f
250,000 and over, by c ity size, 1970

Provision

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

City size1
500,000-9 99,999
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

T o t a l.........................................

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

Premium pay provision for:
Saturday/Sunday......................
Sixth and seventh d a y ............
Holidays ....................................

51
31
128

47,662
52,576
274,456

7
15
29

17,300
33,240
182,805

32
10
62

22,351
12,185
65,196

12
6
37

8,011
7,151
26,455

1City size is based on the 1970 Census of Population, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Tables cover
all cities of 250,000 inhabitants or more which had written




agreements and which made these agreements available.
NOTE: Data are nonadditive,

45

Table 18.
Wage adjustment provisions in municipal agreements in cities w ith populations of 250,000 and
over, by contract duration, 19701

Contract duration

All agreements
Agree­
Workers
ments

Total ..........................

Deferred wage
increase
Agree­
ments
Workers

Wage adjustment provisions
Provision for area
wage survey
Escalator clause
Agree­
Agree­
ments
Workers
ments
Workers

Contract
reopeners2
Agree­
ments
Workers

286

613,490

148

334,016

49

62,686

13

18,320

68

226,806

20
64
25
78
29
53
5
12

23,514
106,112
25,212
139,329
55,740
239,448
5,450
18,685

4
15
11
56
15
43
2
2

2,350
55,230
12,110
105,647
32,880
115,649
2,550
7,600

1
5
1
22
6
14

9,000
1,942
1,100
22,199
6,800
21,645

1
3
1
2
2
3
1

9,000
4,150
350
1,920
2,150
550
200

4
14
7
22
8
11
1
1

14,100
47,750
8,996
23,275
4,775
126,060
700
1,150

Less than 1 2 m o n th s..........
1 2 m onths.............................
13 through 23 months . . .
2 4 m onths.............................
2 5 through 35 months . . .
3 6 m onths............................
More than 36 months . . . .
Duration undetermined . . .

! See table 1, fo o tn o te 1.
2 Includes 11 contracts covering 16 ,459 workers,
perm it reopening the contract on nonwage matters only.

which

N O T E : Data are nonadditive. Agreements m ay contain more
than one provision,

Table 19.
Wage adjustm ent and contract reopener provisions in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f
250,000 and over, by c ity size, 1970

Provisions

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

City size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

T o ta l........................................

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

Deferred wage increase .................
Escalator clause...............................
Provision for area wage survey . . .
Contract reopeners2 ......................

148
49
13
68

334,016
62,686
18,320
226,806

47
10
7
20

219,095
25,050
11,900
168,430

69
25
3
27

88,848
26,680
750
37,305

32
14
3
21

26,073
10,956
5,670
21,071

1 C ity size is based on the 1 9 7 0 Census of Population, U.S.
D epartm ent o f Commerce, Bureau o f the Census. Tables cover
all cities o f 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 inhabitants or more which had w ritte n
agreements and which made these agreements available.

46



2 Includes all provisions, covering 16 ,4 5 9
reopen the contract fo r non wage matters only.

workers, which

N O T E : Data are nonadditive. Agreements may have more
than one provision.

Table 20.
Role o f employee organization in job classification in municipal agreements in cities w ith populations
o f 250,000 and over by occupation, 1970 1

Employee organization role
in job classification

All agreements
Agree­
ments
Workers

Total ..........................

286

Referring to job classification
and reclassification..........
64
Unilateral management determination ..........................
48
Organizations right to
appeal ........................
29
No reference to appeal
r ig h t.............................
19
Union participation............
16
No reference to job classification
and reclassification..........
222

Referring to job classification
and reclassification..........
Unilateral management deter­
mination ..........................
Organizations right to
appeal ........................
No reference to appeal
rig h t.............................
Union participation......................
No reference to job classification
and reclassification..........

Occupational group
Professional or
technical
Clerical
Agree­
Agree­
Workers
ments
Workers
ments

Police or
fire
Agree­
ments
Workers

613,490

119

133,668

68

210,889

11

10,850

46

57,424

67,374

24

25,334

14

4,364

2

1,600

6

5,260

44,556

18

11,762

12

4,118

1

100

6

5,260

35,068

14

9,684

6

3,360

9,488
22,818

4
6

2,078
13,572

6
2

758
246

1
1

100
1,500

6

5,260

546,116

95

108,334

54

206,525

9

9,250

40

52,164

Blue-collar
and clerical
Agree­
Workers
ments
Total ..........................

Blue-collar
and manual crafts
Agree­
ments
Workers

Professional
and clerical
Agree­
ments
Workers

Blue-collar and
professional
Agree­
Workers
ments

Blue collar, cleri­
cal, professional
and technical
Agree­
ments
Workers

Occupation
not jiven
Agree­
ments
Workers

8

5,016

5

14,200

3

2,200

15

20,170

11

159,073

5

1,266

1

1,200

1

1,400

8

8,250

3

18,700

5

1,266

1

1,200

3

3,850

2

17,000

4

1,174

3

3,850

2

17,000

1

92

3

3,750

1

4

1,200

13,000

1

1,400

5

4,400

1

1,700

2

800

7

11,920

8

140,373

*See table 1, fo o tn o te 1.

Table 21.
Travel tim e pay, mileage allowance, and special clothing allow ance or m aintenance in m unicipal agree­
ments in cities w ith populations o f 250,000 and over, by occupation, 19701
Pay allowance for
Occupation

All agreements
Agreements Workers

Travel time
Agreements Workers

Mileage
Agreements Workers

Clothing allowance or
maintenance
Agreements Workers

T o t a l.........................................

286

613,490

16

64,331

71

309,354

111

213,613

Blue-collar or manual c ra fts .........
Professional and te c h n ic a l............
Clerical .............................................
Police and f i r e .................................
Blue-collar and clerical...................
Professional and clerical.................
Blue-collar and professional..........
Blue-collar, clerical, professional
and technical ...............................
Occupation not given......................

119
68
11
46
8
5
3

133,668
210,889
10,850
57,424
5,016
14,200
2,200

9
3

51,981
7,100

2
1
1

3,400
650
1,200

20
20
2
10
1
1
2

24,889
93,673
950
23,000
92
6,500
1,750

50
8
1
35
5
1
1

104,213
29,148
700
50,410
2,192
600
450

15
11

20,170
159,073

9
6

13,650
144,850

7
3

6,650
19,250

l See table 1, fo o tn o te 1.
N O TE :

Data are nonadditive.




47

Table 22.
Selected payments fo r tim e not worked in municipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f 250,000
and over, by occupational group, 19701

Selected payments

All agreements
Agree­
ments
Workers

Blue-collar or
manual crafts
Agree­
ments
Workers

Occupational group
Professional
or technical
Clerical
Agree­
Agree­
ments
Workers
ments
Workers

Police or fire
Agree­
ments
Workers

Total ..........................

286

613,490

119

133,668

68

210,889

11

10,850

46

57,424

Funeral leave........................
Jury duty or court witness
Sick leave .............................
Rest periods ........................
Paid meal periods ..............
W ash-up/clean-up..............
Call-in/callback...................
Reporting p a y .....................
Military service-reserve
d u t y ....................................

173
166
221
53
15
27
116
48

282,570
300,405
544,595
65,958
19,748
35,287
254^542
49,003

72
77
91
26
7
19
49
30

92,579
85,342
111,942
15,243
10,424
21,367
45,847
22,538

39
39
56
11
1
4
14
6

94,308
126,122
189,020
13,115
4,500
2,870
4,342
3,442

6
5
6
2

4,400
4,800
5,850
5,650

3
1

1,300
100

24
18
30
1
5
1
21
1

20,624
18,174
42,824
700
3,074
550
17,860
1,200

113

211,567

42

26,542

35

119,558

4

4,900

12

8,724

Blue-collar
and clerical
Agree­
ments
Workers

Professional
and clerical
Agree­
ments
Workers

Blue-collar
and professional
Agree­
ments
Workers

Blue-collar, cleri­
cal, professional,
or technical
Agree­
ments
Workers

Occupation
not given
Agree­
ments
Workers

Total ..........................

8

5,016

5

14,200

3

2,200

15

20,170

11

159,073

Funeral leave........................
Jury duty or court witness
Sick leave .............................
Rest periods ........................
Paid meal periods ..............
W ash-up/clean-up..............
C all-in/callback...................
Reporting p a y .....................
Military service-reserve
d u t y ....................................

6
4
7
1

3,316
1,174
4,016
350

4
3
5
1

12,300
11,700
14,200
1,200

3
2
3
2
2

2,200
1,750
2,200
1,750
1,750

13
13
15
6

16,520
16,720
20,170
8,650

6
5
8
3

36,323
34,623
154,373
19,300

2
1

1,350
650

3
1

8,300
1,200

2

1,750

2
14
5

2,500
19,420
7,450

1
8
3

8,000
154,373
12,423

3

1,700

4

12,300

10

14,520

3

23,323

‘ See table 1, fo o tn o te 1.

NOTE:

Data are nonadditive. Agreements may have m ore

th a n o n e p r o v is io n .

48



Table 23.
size,w 1970

Maximum paid vacation in municipal agreements in cities with populations o f 250.00C am
■•;

- i

A ll agreements
Agreements Workers

M axim um vacation allowed

1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 and over
Agreements Workers

C ity size 1
500,000-999,999
Agreements | Workers

250,003
Agree me

99 999
•
kers

?

T o t a l........................................
Agreements w ith vacation
p ro v is io n s ......................................
M aximum vacation provisions
s p e c ifie d .................................
O

iaip p Uc^

0-11//O
i /wpp!\o
U'C
Z
Z WcC

• .........................

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

I 156,552

88

201

399,594

53

281,255

98

I 85 368

50

160
7

244,867
39,250

44
5

142,705
37,950

79

77,397
1,300

37

1

100

1

100

3,340

7

5,450

2

110

weeks ...............................
w e e k s ........................
w e e k s ...............................

17
5
50
3
67
5
5

8,893
1,960
75,029
1,993
112,497
1,780
3,365

M axim um cannot be
d e te rm in e d .............................
No reference to v a c a tio n ..............

41
85

154,727
213,896

3 weeks ...............................
T -1 /0 lAfPP

4 w e e k s ...............................
A. 1
•-T
1//04. \A/ppk«;
VVCCIXO 5

5 -1 / 2
6

8

12

2

43,934
93
26,330
30

27

2 2 ,0 0 0

2

37

5

75,650
400
3,365

9
16

138,550
105,022

19
31

12
2

1C ity size is based on th e 1 9 7 0 Census o f P o p u la tio n , U .S .
D e p a rtm e n t of C o m m e rc e, B ureau o f th e Census. Tables cover
all cities o f 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 in h a b ita n ts or m ore w h ic h had w r itte n

1

;

0 ,6 6 1

32,971
24,765
. .

■ 3 3:
103
11850

2

3
1

9,045
1,900
10,517
1,350

1
1

18
2

i'

7,971
71,184

8,206
37,690

13
38

agreem ents and w h ic h m ade these nc a m e n ts available.
2 In cludes one a g reem en t covering 8 0 0 p a rt-tim e
crossing guards w h o receive 7 da'

school

Table 24.
Number of paid holidays in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and ove^ by
region, 19701

Number o f paid
holidays

Total ..........................
Agreements w ith paid
h o lid a y s .............................
Less than 5 d a y s .........
5 days .............................
6 days 2 ..........................
6 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
7 days .............................
7 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
8 days .....................
8 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
9 days .............................
9 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
1 0 d a y s ..........................
1 0 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
1 1 d a y s ..........................
1 1 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
1 2 d a y s ..........................
12
days plus 1 or more
half days ...................




A ll agreements
Agree­
Workers
ments

New England
Agree­
Workers
ments

Regions
East N orth Central West N orth Central
M iddle A tla n tic
Agree­
Agree­
Agree­
Workers
ments
Workers
ments
Workers
ments
7

6,750

72,897
500

6

4,050

6

8,766

1

650

1

35
2,350

4

3,000

1

400

286

613,490

24

22,630

71

342,800

82

137,849

2 00

361,303
1,040
3,100
9,816

19

17,116

48

207,392
540

63
1

3
1

g
1

9
3

27
6

13
11

23
1

35

2

35
9,535

1

3

400
34,284

6

2,450

6

5

6,035
9,894

8

400
14,810
5,635
8,563
1,344
20,357

1,422
30,382

4

6,500

12

4,000
180,096

14

151,696

2

4,000
1,700

2

1,750

10

1

1

1 1 ,2 0 0

1

1 1 ,2 0 0

26

22,577

17

16,566

7

4,261

5

1,050

2

550

1

150

49

Table 24.
Number of paid holidays in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and over, by
region, 19701—Continued
Number of paid
holidays

All agreements
Agree­
ments
Workers

New England
Agree­
ments
Workers

Regions
Middle Atlantic
East North Central
Agree­
Agree­
ments
Workers
ments
Workers

13 days or more3
.,.
All recognized holidays
All local holidays . . . .
Reference to holidays,
no details given . . . .

5
3
1

13,564
4,350
3,000

4
2
1

13,550
4,150
3,000

1

14

17

15,523

6

9,895

4

2,673

No reference to paid
h olidays.............................

86

252,187

23

135,408

19

64,952

South Atlantic
Agreements
Workers
Total ..........................
Agreements with paid
h o lid ays.............................
Less than 5 d a y s ..........
5 days .............................
6 days2 ..........................
6 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
7 days .............................
7 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
8 days .............................
8 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
9 days .............................
9 days plus 1 or more
half days ............
10 days ..........................
10 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
11 days ..........................
11 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
12 d a y s ..........................
12 days plus 1 or more
half days ...................
13 days or more3 . . . .
All recognized holidays
All local holidays . . . .
Reference to holidays,
no details given . . . .
No reference to paid holidays

5

5,514

East South Central West South Central
Agree­
Agreements
ments
Workers
Workers

24

48,612

20

8,690

14
............

25,712

13

8,317

1

150

1

350

6

6,735

2

4,700

2

143

3

1,242

2

89

1

350

2

1,200

4

18,200

1

200

2

670

10

22,900




3,960

1

7

373

13

10,478

42

31,721

7

1,828

30

23,991

1
1

3,100
250

7

9,181

1

3

3,960

2,700

Pacific
Agree­
Workers
ments

100

1
1

78
450

3

1,525

4

1,200

11

7,300

2

350

2,285

5

1See table 1, footnote 1.
2 Includes one agreement covering 4,200 workers, which
provides 6 paid holidays in addition to regular school vacations.

50

3

Mountain
Agree­
ments
Workers

West North Central
Agree­
Workers
ments

6

8,650

12

7,730

3 Includes one agreement covering 1,700 workers, which
provides 13 paid holidays in addition to regular school vacations,

Table 25.
Leave of absence provisions in municipal
agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and
over, 19701
All agreements
Agreements Workers

Provision
Total .............................................

286

613,490

Referring to leave of absence ............
Personal reasons .............................
Union business ...............................
E d u c a tio n ........................................
Maternity ........................................
M ilita ry .............................................

212
109
120
85
107
121

538,537
260,397
316,632
381,292
417,663
226,101

No reference to leave of absence . . . .

74

74,953

1See table 1, footnote 1.
NOTE: Data are nonadditive. Agreements may contain more
than one leave of absence provision.

Table 26.
Negotiated and agency grievance procedures in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f
250,000 and over, by c ity size, 1970

Grievance procedures

T o ta l.........................................
Reference to negotiated or agency
grievance procedure ...................
Negotiated procedure only
Agency established procedure
only .........................................
Negotiated and agency
established p rocedure..........
No reference to negotiated or
agency p ro ced ure........................

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

City size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

249
216

574,157
431,650

63
60

365,507
245,307

118
98

149,499
132,988

68
58

59,151
53,355

1

120,000

1

120,000

32

22,507

2

200

20

16,511

10

5,796

37

39,333

6

20,770

11

7,053

20

11,510

1City size is based on the 1970 Census of Population, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Tables cover

all cities of 250,000 inhabitants or more which had written
agreements and which made these agreements available.

Table 27.
Negotiated grievance procedures in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f 250,000 and over,
by c ity size, 1970

Grievance procedures

T o t a l........................................
Reference to negotiated grievance
procedures ....................................
Notice to employee organization
of grievances.................................
Scope of procedure d e fin e d ..........
Any and all m a tte rs .................
Interpretation and application
of agreement..........................
Exclusions from procedure
specified .........................................

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

248

454,157

63

245,517

117

149,489

68

59,151

101
215
113

250,017
408,664
301,898

31
52
30

161,060
228,057
186,265

40
105
39

70,322
133,069
82,065

30
58
44

18,635
47,538
33,568

102

106,766

22

41,792

66

51,004

14

13,970

72

114,522

14

60,095

56

52,727

2

1,700

*C ity size is based on the 1970 Census of Population, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Tables cover
all cities of 250,000 inhabitants or more which had written




City size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

agreements and which made these agreements available.
NOTE: Data are nonadditive,

51

Table 28.
Selected arbitration procedures in municipal agreements in cities with populations of 250,000 and over,
by city size, 1970

Procedures

T o t a l.........................................
Reference to arbitration
procedures ....................................
Status of arbitrators decision
specified .........................................
Binding arbitration .................
Advisory arbitration ..............
Varies2 ......................................
Cost of arbitration s h a re d ............

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

City size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

203

402,060

53

239,105

97

122,071

53

40,884

188
147
32
9
185

384,122
334,828
48,370
924
374,160

50
48
2

226,755
226,290
465

37,196
33,946
3,250

220,055

120,171
74,592
44,655
924
117,971

43
40
3

47

95
59
27
9
88

50

36,134

1City size is based on the 1970 Census of Population, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Tables cover
all cities of 250,000 inhabitants or more which had written
agreements and which made these agreements available.
2 Includes eight agreements in which the status of the
arbitrator's decision varies with the subject matter, and one

agreement which provides that the decision will be binding if it
favors the employer and advisory if it favors the employee or
union.
NOTE: Data are nonadditive. Agreements may contain more
than one provision.

Table 29.
Selected d iscip lin a ry procedures in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith populations o f 2 5 0,000 and over,
by c ity size, 1970

Procedures

T o t a l.........................................
Reference to selected disciplinary
procedures2 ..................................
Union notified of discipli­
nary a c tio n .............................
Disciplinary action subject
to grievance procedure . . . .
No reference to selected discipli­
nary a c tio n ....................................

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers




250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

113

126,052

28

47,390

48

52,700

37

25,962

67

64,974

15

24,240

25

26,710

27

14,024

89

107,778

27

43,590

42

43,430

20

20,758

173

487,438

41

338,887

81

103,852

51

44,699

*C ity size is based on the 1970 Census of Population, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Tables cover
all cities of 250,000 inhabitants or more which had written

52

City size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

agreements and which made these agreements available.
2 Data are nonadditive. Agreements
notification and the right to grieve.

may

contain

both

Table 30.
O fficia l tim e allowances fo r em ployee organization business in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith
populations o f 250,000 and over, by c ity size, 1970

Allowances

T o t a l.........................................
Referring to official time allow*
ances for employee organization
business2 ......................................
Grievance p re p a ra tio n ............
Grievance hearings...................
Contract negotiations ............
No reference to official time allow­
ances for employee organization
business ........................................

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

250,000-499,999
Agreements Workers

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

177
81
125
98

334,232
176,703
254,820
227,737

38
24
31
22

162,255
114,155
145,905
135,825

91
30
65
48

120,868
39,884
78,711
57,021

48
27
29
28

51,109
22,664
30,204
34,891

109

279,258

31

224,022

38

35,684

40

19,552

1 City size is based on the 1970 Census of Population, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Tables cover
all cities of 250,000 inhabitants or more which had written

Table 31.

City size1
500,000-9 99,999
Agreements Workers

agreements and which made these agreements available.
2Data are nonadditive. Agreements may contain
allowances pertaining to more than one area.

time

Negotiation impasse procedures in m unicipal agreements in cities w ith populations of 250,000 and

over, by city size, 1970

Procedures

All agreements
Agreements Workers

1,000,000 and over
Agreements Workers

City size1
500,000-999,999
Agreements Workers

250,000-4159)999
Agreements Workers

286

613,490

69

386,277

129

156,552

88

70,661

62
6
16
5
30
1
3

61,284
7,000
19,400
5,570
23,814
3,800
1,100

3

4,260

2
1

310
3,950

47
4
8
4
27

37,809
3,300
8,670
1,620
22,519

12
2
6

19,215
3,700
10,420

3
1

1,295
3,800

3

1,100

1

600

1

600

No reference to impasse
procedures ....................................

224

552,206

66

382,017

82

118,743

76

51,446

Impasse procedures specified2 . . .
Factfinding ...............................
Mediation .................................
Arbitration ...............................

62
38
50
10

61,284
35,214
44,914
11,070

3

4,260

2
1

310
3,950

47
32
39
8

37,809
26,419
32,889
3,320

12
6
9
1

19,215
8,795
11,715
3,800

T o t a l.........................................
Agreements with impasse
procedures ....................................
Factfinding only ......................
Mediation only ........................
Arbitration only .....................
Factfinding and mediation . . .
Factfinding and arbitration . .
Mediation and arbitration . . .
Factfinding, mediation and
arbitration .............................

*C ity size is based on the 1970 Census of Population, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Tables cover
all cities of 250,000 inhabitants or more which had written




agreements and which made these agreements available.
2 Data are nonadditive. Each agreement may have one or
more impasse procedures.

53

Chapter 4. Teacher Provisions in Municipal Collective
Bargaining Agreements
Among the agreements in this study were 34 covering
195,000 teachers. In most respects these contracts are
similar to other public employee agreements and they
have been analyzed for all o f the provisions discussed so
far. In other respects, however, teacher agreements differ
in that they address themselves to matters o f particular
concern to educators, such as academic freedom,
professional behavior, teacher development, evaluations,
etc. Consequently, without reference to prevalence, a
number of provisions pertaining to these aspects of
teaching are cited for illustrative purposes.

(9 1 )

W H E R E A S , th e B o a r d a n d th e u n io n su b s c rib e t o

the c o n c e p t s o f A c a d e m ic F r e e d o m as e x p r e s s e d b y th e
A A U P as f o llo w s :
(a ) T h e

te a c h e r

is

resea rch

and

th e

in

e n t it le d

to

fu ll f r e e d o m

p u b lic a t io n

of

th e

in

re su lts,

s u b je c t t o th e a d e q u a te p e r fo r m a n c e o f his o t h e r
a c a d e m ic d u tie s ; b u t resea rch f o r p e cu n ia r y retu rn
s h o u ld b e b a se d u p o n an u n d e rsta n d in g w it h th e
a u th o ritie s o f th e in s tit u t io n .
(b ) T he

te a ch e r

is

e n t it le d

to

fr e e d o m

in

th e

c la s s r o o m in d iscu ssin g h is s u b je c t , b u t h e s h o u ld
be

c a r e fu l

not

to

in t r o d u c e

in t o

his

te a ch in g

c o n tro v e r s ia l m a tte r w h ic h has n o re la tio n t o his

Academic freedom . An issue o f major importance to

s u b je c t .

teachers is the protection o f academic freedom. Contract
clauses on this subject usually grant the teacher a great
deal o f latitude in preparing and presenting subject
material, within the framework o f policies established by
the Board o f Education:
(1 1 9 )

In

our

rep re se n ta tiv e

dem ocracy,

in

( c ) T h e c o lle g e o r u n iv e rsity te a c h e r is a c itiz e n , a
m e m b e r o f a le a rn e d p r o f e s s io n , a n d an o f f i c e r o f
an

e d u c a t io n a l

w rite s

as

a

in s titu tio n a l

in s tit u t io n .

c itiz e n ,

he

c e n s o r s h ip

W h en
s h o u ld

or

he
be

sp eak s
fr e e

d is c ip lin e ,

or

fr o m

but

his

s p e cia l p o s it io n in th e c o m m u n it y im p o s e s sp e cia l
o b lig a t io n s .

w h ic h

As

a

m an

of

le a rn in g

and

an

e d u c a t io n a l o f f i c e r , h e s h o u ld r e m e m b e r th a t th e

u ltim a te p o w e r is r e ta in e d b y th e p e o p le a n d e x e r cis e d
th e

p u b lic m a y ju d g e his p r o fe s s io n a n d his in s tit u t io n

A s s o c ia t io n a d v o c a te th e r e a liz a tio n o f th e fu ll p o te n tia l

b y h is u tte ra n ce s. H e n c e h e s h o u ld at all tim e s b e

th rou g h

d e le g a tio n

of

a u t h o r it y ,

th e

B oard

and

accurate, should exercise appropriate restraint,

o f e a c h in d iv id u a l b y r e c o g n it io n o f an d r e s p e ct f o r his

s h o u ld s h o w r e s p e ct f o r th e o p in io n o f o t h e r s , a n d

d ig n ity . It t h e r e fo r e a llo w s th a t th e e d u c a t io n o f e a c h
in d iv id u a l

m ust

d e v e lo p

th e

essen tia l

s h o u ld m a k e e v e r y e f f o r t t o in d ic a t e th a t h e is n o t

fu n d a m e n ta l

an in s titu tio n a l s p o k e s m a n .. . .

p ro ce s s e s a n d t h o s e sk ills, u n d e rsta n d in g s , a n d a ttitu d e s
w h ic h

w ill

a f fe c t

his

h a r m o n io u s

d e v e lo p m e n t

as

a

s o c ia l

Professional behavior. Occasionally agreements dealt

b e in g . I t is r e c o g n iz e d th a t th ese d e m o c r a t ic v a lu es can

with professional standards o f conduct and the role o f
the organization in maintaining them:

sp iritu a l,

in te lle c tu a l,

p h y s ic a l,

e m o t io n a l,

and

b e st b e tra n s m itte d in an a t m o s p h e r e w h ic h is fr e e fr o m
c e n s o r s h ip a n d a r tificia l restrain ts u p o n fr e e in q u ir y an d
le a rn in g , an d in w h ic h a c a d e m ic fr e e d o m f o r te a c h e r a n d

(1 5 8 )
U n it

A c a d e m ic

fr e e d o m

A lle g e d b r e a c h e s o f p ro fe s s io n a l b e h a v io r shall

b e p r o m p t ly r e p o r t e d t o th e o ff e n d in g te a c h e r an d t o th e

stu d e n t is e n c o u r a g e d .
shall

be

g u a ra n teed

to

te a c h e r s , a n d n o sp e c ia l lim it a t io n s sh all b e p la c e d u p o n

PR&R

R e p re s e n ta tiv e

of

th e

A s s o c ia t io n .

The

A s s o c ia t io n shall use e v e ry r e a s o n a b le e f f o r t t o c o r r e c t
b r e a c h e s o f p ro fe s s io n a l b e h a v io r b y a n y t e a c h e r .

s t u d y , in v e s tig a tio n , p res en tin g a n d in te rp re tin g fa cts an d
id eas c o n c e r n in g m a n , h u m a n s o c i e t y , th e p h y s ic a l an d

The

b io lo g ic a l w o r ld , a n d o t h e r b r a n ch e s o f lea rn in g , w h ic h d o

r e p e a te d in fr a c t io n s , o r fa ilu re t o p e r f o r m th e d u tie s an d

te a c h e r m a y b e s u b je c t t o d is cip lin a ry a c t io n f o r

n o t c o n f l i c t w it h th e p h ilo s o p h y , u n d e r ly in g p rin cip le s ,

r e s p o n s ib ilitie s o u t lin e d in th is A g r e e m e n t . T e a c h e r s are

o b je c t iv e s a n d c o n t e n t o f th e c o u r s e s o f s t u d y a d o p t e d b y

e n c o u r a g e d t o d is p la y e x e m p la r y c o n d u c t as an e x a m p le

th e B o a r d o f E d u c a t io n .

t o stu d e n ts a n d t o r e fra in fr o m a c t io n s w h ic h w ill d e tr a c t
f r o m th e a p p ro p r ia te im a g e o f th e t e a c h e r . . .

A few agreements include policy statements adopted
by other organizations concerned with academic
freedom. The following statement is an example:
54




Professional

development. Nearly
all agreements
provided opportunities for teachers to develop their

skills and increase subject knowledge. The teachers
themselves often play an important role in establishing
the programs or the criteria for participation. Additional
education, often facilitated by liberal leave policies,
varied experience, or involvement in other training
programs, was a common method o f upgrading
professional competence:

w ill b e in th e in te re sts o f th e C in cin n a ti P u b lic S c h o o ls .
T h e m a x im u m a m o u n t o f partial p a y an e m p lo y e e m a y
re ce iv e

w h ile

on

leave

under

the

p ro v is io n s

of

this

p aragra ph shall n o t e x c e e d e ith e r ,
(1 )

th e

d iffe r e n c e

b etw een

th e

p a y t o w h ic h th e

e m p lo y e e w o u ld b e e n t it le d i f se rv ice h a d b e e n
re n d e re d

d u rin g

th e

p e r io d

o f lea v e

and

th e

m in im u m salary o f a class I te a c h e r ( f o r m e r ly
(1 5 9 )

1. T h e

c o lle g e s

fo r

B o a rd

an

shall

e x t e n s io n

n e g o t ia t e
of

w ith

lo c a l area

in -service

tra ining

class I I I ), o r

in

c o o p e r a t io n w it h th e c o lle g e s w h e r e b y su ch co u r s e w o r k
w ill b e

r e c o g n iz e d

(2 )

fo r p u r p o s e s o f te a c h e r c e r t ific a t io n

o n e - h a lf o f th e p a y t o w h ic h the e m p lo y e e w o u ld
b e e n t it le d i f se rv ice h a d b e e n r e n d e re d d u rin g

an d a d v a n ce d d eg rees.

th e p e r io d o f le a v e , w h ic h e v e r is less.

2 a . A su m o f $ 6 0 0 ,0 0 0 shall b e a p p ro p r ia te d fo r

In d e te r m in in g th e p a rtia l p a y d u rin g th e p e r io d o f leave

the su m m e r o f 1 9 6 9 a n d a lik e su m f o r th e su m m er o f

a n d t h e salary a fte r re tu rn f r o m

1970

a c c r e d it e d

leave shall b e g ra n te d in c r e m e n ts an d a n y o t h e r salary

c o lle g e s an d un iversities, u n d e r th e criteria h e r e in a fte r set

a d ju stm e n ts as t h o u g h se rv ice ha d n o t b e e n in te r ru p te d

fo r t h . T h e in te n t is t o p r o v id e a gran t o f a su m e q u a l t o

p r o v id e d th e p ro g r a m o f p r o fe s s io n a l g r o w th is c o m p le t e d

7 0 p e rc e n t o f su m m er s c h o o l te a ch e rs’ sala ry. H o w e v e r ,

s a tis fa cto r ily .

fo r

te a c h e r

fe llo w s h ip s

fo r

stu d y

in

leave, the te a c h e r o n

sin ce th e su m m e r s c h o o l session s at th e v a rio u s s c h o o l
levels are su b sta n tia lly d iffe r e n t in le n g th , it is b e lie v e d
e q u ita b le t o esta b lish a fix e d su m t o b e p a id e a ch te a c h e r
p a rticip a tin g in th e p ro g r a m .

A p p lic a tio n - A p p l i c a t i o n s

shall

be

m ade

to

th e

S a b b a tica l L e a v e C o m m it t e e . T h e a p p lica n t shall s u b m it
plans f o r t h e use o f th e S a b b a tica l leave a n d shall m e e t all
o t h e r r e q u ir e m e n ts as e sta b lish e d b y th e c o m m it t e e . T h e

2 b . T o a llo c a te th ese fe llo w s h ip s e q u it a b ly , th e
S u p e r in te n d e n t shall in F e b r u a r y o f e a c h y e a r d e te r m in e

c o m n it t e e

sh all ask

th e

a p p lic a n t ’ s su p e rv iso r a n d /o r

p rin cip a l t o r e a ct t o t h e p r o p o s e d p lan o f s tu d y .

th e ra tio o f th e t o ta l p o s s ib le p a rticip a n ts t o th e t o ta l
n u m b e r o f a p p o in t e d t e a ch e rs . T h e n u m b e r o f p a r tic i­

S e le c tio n - T h e a s s o cia tio n sh all a p p o in t th re e te a ch e rs

p a n ts t o b e a llo c a te d t o e a c h s c h o o l shall b e d e te r m in e d

t o serve w it h t w o a d m in istra to rs o n th e S a b b a tica l L eave

b y a p p ly in g th e said ra tio t o all a p p o in t e d tea ch ers o n th e

C o m m it t e e .

p a y r o ll fo r su ch s c h o o l . . .
(1 6 0 )

T h e c o m m it t e e esta b lish e d b y th e term s o f th e

S e p te m b e r

1,

1969

A g reem en t,

“ fo rm e d

of

th ree

O n e h a lf o f 1 p e r c e n t o f th e te a ch e rs m a y b e g ra n te d
S a b b a tica l leaves in a n y 1 s c h o o l y e a r.

re p resen ta tiv es o f th e B o a r d a n d th re e rep resen ta tiv es o f
th e

A s s o c ia t io n

to

d e v e lo p

o n g o in g

p roced u res

fo r

P ro fe s s io n a l S t a ff D e v e lo p m e n t a n d sen sitiv ity tra in in g ,
a n d an o p tio n a l p ro g ra m o f p r o fe s s io n a l g r o w t h c o u r s e s ,”
sh all c o n t in u e u n d er th e term s o f th is A g re e m e n t .

Agreements also could provide some form o f
sabbatical leave for teachers who wish to attend school
full time. A minimum length of service and promise to
return to work for the school board are common
requirements for eligibility:

A ll e lig ib le t e a ch e rs , e x c e p t t h o s e w it h 25 y e a rs or
m ore

o f fu ll-tim e te a c h in g se rv ice in O h io , sh a ll, as a

c o n d it io n o f a p p ro v a l f o r leave o f a b se n ce f o r p ro fe s s io n a l
g r o w t h , sign

a w r itt e n a g re e m e n t t o re tu rn t o se rv ice

im m e d ia t e ly

f o llo w in g

p ro g ra m

p ro fe s s io n a l

of

s a t is fa c t o r y
g r o w th

c o m p le t io n

w ith in

th e

of

th e

s p e c ifie d

p e r io d o r t o r e fu n d t o th e B o a rd n o la ter than A u g u st 2 0
next

fo llo w in g

th e

s p e c ifie d

p e r io d

o f le a v e

or

any

a d d itio n a l le a v e , all o f th e p artial p a y re ce iv e d d u rin g th e
p e r io d o f lea v e. R e fu n d o f p a y re ce iv e d w h ile o n leave
shall

a lso

be

m ade

if

th e

te a ch e r

fails t o

c o m p le t e

s a tis fa cto r ily th e p ro g r a m o f p r o fe s s io n a l im p r o v e m e n t in
(1 6 1 )

S a b b a tica l lea ve
P u rp o se- T o

im p r o v e m e n t,

p r o v id e
S a b b a tica l

a c c o r d a n c e w it h th e p ro v is io n s o f S e c t io n 3 3 1 9 .1 3 1 , O h io
o p p o r t u n it ie s
leave

shall

fo r
be

p ro fe s s io n a l
a v aila ble

R e v is e d C o d e .

to

te a ch ers fo r fu ll-tim e p ro g ra m s o f s t u d y .
E lig ib ility - - A n y te a ch e r w h o has c o m p le t e d 5 o r m o re

Teacher exchange programs are provided for in a few
agreements:

years o f serv ice as a m e m b e r o f th e p r o fe s s io n a l s t a ff o f
th e C in c in n a ti P u b lic S c h o o ls , e x c lu s iv e o f a n y years o f

(1 1 8 )

In a n y 1 y e a r , a re a s o n a b le n u m b e r o f te a ch e rs,

s erv ice c o u n t e d f o r o b t a in in g a n y o t h e r leaves o f a b s e n c e ,

as d e te r m in e d b y th e S u p e r in te n d e n t, m a y b e e x c h a n g e d

an d w h o has a tta in e d c o n t in u in g c o n t r a c t sta tu s, m a y b e

fo r

g ra n ted a lea v e o f a b s e n c e in a c c o r d a n c e w it h S e c tio n

d istrict in the U n ite d S ta te s a n d in a fo r e ig n c o u n t r y .

3 3 1 9 .1 3 1 , O h io R e v ise d C o d e , t o in cre a se h is p ro fe s s io n a l

S u ch

p re p a ra tio n

S u p e r in te n d e n t t o th e C o m m it t e e o n A p p o in t m e n t a n d

stu d y ,

if

th rou gh
in

th e

a fu ll-tim e

ju d g m e n t

of

a p p rov ed
th e

p ro g r a m

S a b b a tica l

of

L ea v e

C o m m it t e e a n d th e su p e r in te n d e n t s u ch leave o f a b s e n ce




te a c h e r s

fr o m

exchan ge

som e

oth er

sch ool

a d m in is tra tio n

shall b e in itia lly r e c o m m e n d e d b y

the

I n s tr u c t io n , w h ic h shall r e c o m m e n d fin a l a c t io n t o th e
B oard .

55

In the following illustration, bargaining parties agreed to
review the student teaching program and compensation
to supervisors of student teachers:
(162)
Current efforts on the part o f the State
Superintendent’s office, colleges of education and
professional organizations may result in changes in
certification standards. At such a time, a study committee
composed of representatives from the Alliance and the
District, with consultants from colleges o f education, shall
be formed to write further recommendations in the area
o f cadet teacher supervision.
The District shall promote a closer working relationship
between cadet supervising teachers and university
faculties.
It is recognized that the training o f new members of the
profession is o f great valye and importance both to the
District and the profession. It is the obligation o f the
profession to work toward and assist in the education of
new members of the profession. Proper compensation for
this work is an important consideration as variations in
cadet supervision continue to evolve. The District shall
not participate in compensation o f cadet supervising
teachers, but will continue to explore with institutions
appropriate rates of pay by the institutions.
Teacher evaluation. The procedures used to evaluate
performance are important to professionals. This
concern is shown when teachers have negotiated a voice
in establishing the frequency of evaluation and the
recourse they will have if a report is unfavorable. As in
the following example, an evaluation of a probationary
teacher may be made by another teacher assigned by the
employee association:

(163)
The performance o f all teachers shall be
evaluated in writing. Probationary teachers shall be
evaluated at least two times during the school year: No
later than November 1 and December 17. In the event
that a “shall not recommend reelection” evaluation is
received on the December 17 evaluation, the teacher
and/or administrator may request and have conducted an
additional evaluation. Tenure teachers shall be evaluated
at least once every 5 years, and the evaluation report
should be submitted by March 1 o f the year o f evaluation.
Criteria for evaluation o f all teachers shall be clearly
defined.
A copy o f the written evaluation shall be submitted to
the teacher at the time of personal conference or within
10 days thereafter; one copy is to be signed and returned
to the Administration, the other is to be retained by the
teacher. In thfe event that the teacher feels that his
evaluation was incomplete or unjust, he may put his
objections in writing and have them attached to the
evaluation report, to be placed in his personnel file with a
copy to the Area Superintendent. In the event the teacher
desires to have further relief from such report he shall

56




utilize the grievance procedures described elsewhere in
this agreement within 10 days o f such report.
Any probationary teacher who shall have received a
second evaluation in the school year which he considers
substantially negative may, upon request, have his
performance evaluated by a tenure teacher assigned by
the Association. This evaluation shall be made using the
same criteria as that which resulted in the original
negative evaluation. The Administration may likewise,
upon request, have such evaluation by a tenure teacher
appointed by the Association in any case in which the
probationary teacher shall have filed an objection or
instituted a grievance procedure with respect to such
second evaluation. In designating such tenure teacher, the
Association shall consult and make arrangements therefor
through the Area Superintendent or his designee. The
tenure teacher shall arrange the times for his absence from
regular duties and the times for personal “in the class­
room” observations of the probationary teacher with
their respective principals or other applicable adminis­
trator. A person serving as such tenure teacher shall be
given released time to conduct the evaluation but may be
designated in a school year with respect to no more than
three probationary teachers and the time devoted with
respect to any one evaluation shall not exceed an
aggregate of 1/2 day. All such evaluations shall be in
addition to evaluations made by the Administration, shall
be in writing, shall be filed within 10 days of the original
request and shall be furnished the Administration, the
Association and the probationary teacher promptly fol­
lowing their completion.

Examination of material from the teacher’s personnel
file is usually an integral part of the evaluation process.
To prevent abuse, the right to inspect and comment on
material in these files is found in nearly every teacher
agreement:
(164)
Official teacher files in a school shall be
maintained under the following circumstances:
No material derogatory to a teacher’s conduct,
service, character or personality shall be placed in
the file unless the teacher has had an opportunity
to read the material. The teacher shall acknowledge
that he has read such material by affixing his
signature on the actual copy to be filed, with the
understanding that such signature merely signifies
that he read the material to be filed, and does not
necessarily indicate agreement with its content.
The teacher shall have the right to answer any
material filed and his answer shall be attached to
the file copy.
Upon appropriate request by the teacher, he shall
be permitted to examine his file.
Consultation,.

As professionals, teachers often are
consulted on policies which affect them and the children

they teach. In a number of cases, the teachers’ role has
been reduced to contract language.
The degree of participation varied from consultation
before programs are initiated to an active role in
curriculum planning, textbook selection, and other
programs of special interest or concern, such as the
implementation of integrated education.
Usually provisions for consultation are general and
offer little in the way of procedural rules or other
details:
(165)
The principal shall consult with the building
committee concerning the date of any evening meeting at
which the attendance of employes is required.
Prior to the initiation o f experimental programs
into a school, there shall be consultation with the
members o f the staff affected by such programs. In case
o f unresolved questions, further consultation shall be held
among the District Superintendent, employes and
principal.
A joint committee o f the Federation and the
Board shall be established for the purpose of planning the
orientation course which will be offered to all o f the
employes. The committee shall present its completed
reports as promptly as possible.
Substitute service shall be provided when: (1) a
Federation representative is absent during working hours
because he has been selected to attend a meeting
scheduled by the Administration and (2) when an
employe is scheduled to attend a meeting sponsored by
the Administration that would require an absence o f a
half day or more, except for attendance at the orientation
program, which will be held after the lunch periods
provided for in Section 15 o f this Article III.

Provisions which include procedural statements,
although they vary in degree, are found most frequently
in clauses pertaining to specific issues or to standing
committees as the following provisions illustrate:
(166)
Article 29-Curriculum guide and textbook evalua­
tion committees.
29-1. On each Curriculum Guide Committee and
Textbook Evaluation Committee, the union shall have 1
representative for every 10 committee members or any
major fraction thereof. Elementary teachers selected by
the union shall have at least 2 years o f experience in the
Chicago Public Schools on their certificate and have
competence in the subject area of the committee.
To serve on a high school Curriculum Committee, the
teacher shall have at least 2 years o f experience as a
regularly certificated teacher, teaching on his certificate,
such certificate 10 be in the subject area o f the
committee.
(167)
There shall be a textbook committee in each
subject field. Subject field directors and supervising
directors shall serve as general chairman o f the




committees for their respective Helds. Teachers shall have
a significant role in the selection o f textbooks and related
educational materials.
Each committee shall consist o f qualified teachers
from the committee’s subject field and two representa­
tives from the School Administration. Each committee
shall recommend for approval by the Board basic
textbooks, workbooks, supplementary texts and related
educational materials (transparencies, duplicating masters,
etc.).
Workbooks and other supplementary materials
(progress tests, practices, teachers* manuals, etc.) shah be
listed with basic texts and made available on an
expendable basis.
Each approved list shall include the reading level o f all
basic texts and shall be published by course titles
whenever possible for the convenience o f teachers.
Teachers shall be free to suggest books and
educational materials for consideration by the com­
mittees.
All teachers o f the subject field department in each
secondary school shall examine the materials on the
approved list and recommend to the School Administra­
tion the selections best suited for the program o f that
school.
All teachers o f a grade level or interest group in each
elementary school shall examine the materials on the
approved list and recommend to the School Adminis­
tration the selections best suited for the program o f that
school.. .
Working conditions. School operation and adminis­
trative regulations and procedures are of constant
concern to teachers since they have an important and
direct bearing on the effectiveness and efficiency with
which their duties in the classroom are performed.
Teachers are most competent to teach subjects for
which they have been trained specifically or have had
adequate experience. Therefore, clauses are common
that limit assignments to the teacher’s area or areas of
certification:

(109)
Teachers shall be assigned to teach in their area
or areas o f State and [city] certification. Even if a teacher
is certified to teach in more than one area o f certification
by the State Department o f Education, first consideration
in the area o f assignment will be based on the [city]
certification o f such a teacher. The preferences o f a
teacher with respect to a specific schedule assignment
within the area of his certification shall be honored unless
circumstances make this prohibited. However, primary
consideration in making any assignment shall be based
upon the competency, training, and experience o f the
teacher for undertaking such an assignment.

The number of pupils a teacher is responsible for
each period and each day is important, since class size
and teaching load often determine the amount of atten­
tion a teacher can give to each child. Provisions which
57

regulate these areas usually set specific limits, and strive
to reduce these figures:
(168)
The class size figures which are now: 27 in
kindergarten through Grade 6; 31 in Grades 7 through 12,
shall become, effective September 1, 1970; 26 in
kindergarten through Grade 6; 30 in Grade 7 through 12.
(26)

A.

B.

C.

The weekly teaching load in grades 7 through 12
shall be 25 teaching periods of no more than 45
minutes in the regular schedule. In addition,
there shall be at least five unassigned preparation
periods (at least one per school day). In the
vocational, technical, and comprehensive high
schools, each academic teacher shall be assigned
no more than five 45 minute teaching periods
per day. Of the remaining three periods, no more
than two (2) may be assigned to nonteaching
activities. The remaining period shall be an un­
assigned preparation period. Teachers of voca­
tional subjects shall be assured one unassigned
preparation period per day. Exceptions may be
agreed upon by the Federation Building Com­
mittee and the principal.
Travel time of teachers of the homebound shall
be considered as part of such teacher’s teaching
day, except that travel from and to the teacher’s
home shall not be considered.
Whenever possible, case loads for counselors
shall be limited to a 1 to 250 ratio. For the
purpose of computing such ratio, only those
counselors who are working directly with the
children on a full-time basis may be used.
Counselors shall not be required to act as Assist­
ant Principals or Department Chairmen or to
perform other noncounseling duties. The Board
and the Federation shall jointly study the feasi­
bility of an 11 month schedule for guidance
counselors.

D.

Teacher assignments outside the scope of his
teaching certificate or his major field of study
shall be voluntary.

E.

Split classes shall be eliminated whenever pos­
sible.

F.

Every effort shall be made to limit to two the
number of different lesson preparations in the
secondary schools.

(114)
The Board and the association recognize that a
teacher’s primary responsibility is to teach and that his
energies should, to the extent possible, be utilized to this
end. Therefore, the Board agrees to make every effort to
reduce the following nonteaching duties through the use
o f teacher aides and part-time clerical assistants so that
teachers will have more time to devote to teaching
activities: Nonteaching assignments, including but not
limited to, health services, supervision of study halls,
corridors, playgrounds, cafeterias, streets and sidewalks,
and buses. Collecting money from students, delivering
books to classrooms, taking inventories, duplicating
instructional and other materials, calculating attendance
records, and other similar clerical functions.
Teachers shall not be required to transport pupils to
activities which take place away from the school building.
The Board and association agree that the efficiency and
effective use o f teacher aides is an area that needs
continuing study and investigation. This will be taken up
by the Professional Council.
Yearly reports on the status of reducing non-teaching
duties with the use o f aides, part-time help and etc., shall
be presented to the Association and Professional Council.

A few contracts grant teachers a role in the selection,
assignment, and evaluation of teacher aides as the
following clause illustrates:
(169)
The Board and the association agree that teacher
aides enhance the learning environment by reinforcing
instructional skills and by assuming nonteaching school
functions where feasible.
A.

Teachers may assist in screening applicants for
teacher aide positions. Teachers desiring to screed
applicants or applications o f applicants for teacher
aide positions in their classrooms should notify the
Administrative Assistant. However, the Administra­
tive Assistant at each school will have final
responsibility for the selection of teacher aides
used in that school.
B.

G.

Inequities in assignments shall be proper subjects
of grievance.

H.

A master schedule for each school shall be
posted on the teachers’ bulletin board or shall
otherwise be made available to all teachers.

Many agreements provide for teachers’ aides who
reduce the amount of time a teacher must spend on
nonteaching duties.
58



Selection of aides:

Distribution o f aide time:
An attempt will be made to distribute aide time at
each school so that teachers at the same grade level
in that school will have approximately the same
amount of aide time scheduled per week. However,
aide time is not subject to redistribution due to
resignation or absence of an aide. Aides who resign
will be replaced as soon as a suitable replacement
can be employed. The restrictions of Federal and
State funded programs will be taken into account
in the distribution of aides and the Administrative
Assistant at each school will distribute aide time
within the scope of these programs. The
Administrative Assistant at each school will have

final responsibility for the distribution o f aides at
that school.
C.

Orientation:
The Administrative d is ta n t at each school will
orient newly employed aides to the needs o f the
individual school. It will be the responsibility o f
the teachers who are using the aide to orient the
aide to their specific needs.

C.

where the pupil is to be sent, which the principal or his
designee shall send immediately, may exclude from class a
pupil who is causing serious disruption.

Evaluation:
The teacher or team using an aide will be
responsible for the evaluation o f that aide. The
performance o f the teacher aide must be
satisfactory to the teacher or team using that aide
or the aide will be subject to dismissal or
reassignment by the Administrative Assistant.

When a child is excluded from class, the teacher will
confer with the principal, assistant principal, or counselor
to provide the necessary information concerning the
problem and shall provide a written statement o f the
problem within 24 hours. The principal will reinstate the
child after advising the teacher that some adjustment has
been made or following a conference which includes at
least two o f the following persons: a counselor, an
administrator, the child, a parent, the school psychologist,
or the attendance officer. Prior to the conference, there
shall be consultation between the teacher and the
principal regarding the teacher’s presence at this
conference. The teacher shall be informed as to the results
o f the conference and the adjustment made.

Nonpaid extra curricular activities often influence the
amount of time a teacher can devote to his primary
classroom duties. A few contracts make such participa­
tion purely voluntary and establish procedures to spread
such activity equally among all teachers.

After three written referrals, the principal shall have
the child and a parent attend a conference on school
rules. The school shall be represented at this conference
by the principal or his designee. If the teacher and the
principal agree that a procedure other than a parental
conference would be most beneficial to the child, that
procedure may be substituted. This shall be a prerequisite
to returning the child to class.

(16)
Participation in extra-curricular activities for
which no additional compensation is paid shall be strictly
voluntary.

If the child continues to cause serious disruption, the
principal shall suspend the child for a period not
exceeding 1 school month for each offense.

(123)
Assignment may be made to occasional extra
curricular activities for which teachers are not paid. The
principal will post a list o f known activities at the
beginning o f each school year. Teachers will indicate their
choice o f activities at which they prefer to work. When
the number o f teachers who have indicated a preference
for an activity does not equal the number o f teachers
required for that activity, the principal shall make
assignments. Teachers and the administration recognize
that assignments should be reasonable.

Classroom environm ent The learning process is carried
on with best results in an environment free from
disturbances and interruptions. Most agreements
recognize that control o f the classroom is vital to a
teacher’s effectiveness and contain provisions which
guarantee that the administration will endeavor to avoid
classroom interruptions:
(170)
Classroom interruptions are to be permitted only
in the case o f emergency or when no other reasonable
alternative is possible. Problems caused by classroom
interruptions both by teachers and administrators should
be discussed at each building level and effective practices
established to overcome said problems.

Additional clauses set forth the respective roles of
teachers and administrators in maintaining discipline:
(166)
A teacher, upon written notice to the principal
or his designee, and upon receipt o f written instruction of




When a child is suspended, the principal will initiate a
diagnostic review with the classroom teacher and the
adjustment teacher and/or the counselor to attempt to
determine the basic cause o f the child’s problem and the
corrective measures to be taken.
Principals shall notify the police in case o f serious
school-related offenses including but not limited to:
extortion, possession or use o f narcotics, arson or
attempted arson, possession or use o f alcohol, serious
theft, serious vandalism, false reports o f fire or bombs,
possession or use o f weapons, or assault on an employee.
A continuous record o f discipline cases shall be
maintained for the use o f the school staff.
In the event o f a school-related assault on an
employee, the law department o f the Board, when
notified, shall inform the employee o f his legal rights, and
he shall be assisted by the law department in court
appearances.

Some school systems still permit corporal punish­
ment as part of the disciplinary procedure:
(164)
Teachers are not denied the privilege of exercising
corporal punishment, as stated in Section 3319.41 of the
Ohio Revised Code, when the nature o f an act on
the part o f a pupil demands such disciplinary action.
Whenever corporal punishment is administered, it should
be done in a calm and deliberate manner with full

knowledge on the part o f the pupil why this action is
taken. The teacher should take into account any
individual handicaps. Corporal punishment should not be
administered in the heat o f anger, and striking a pupil
about the face or head should be avoided.

Almost without exception, as a part of the
disciplinary provisions, teachers are supported and
protected by the school in instances of assault by
students or others. Legal advice and injury compensation
are commonly provided for as part of this support:

(161)

TEACHER PROTECTION
Section 1.-Compensation
personal injury benefits

insurance

and

Assault on a teacher or injury to a teacher shall be
reported immediately to the Board. The Board shall
render assistance and advice to the teacher in securing
legal redress through law enforcement and judicial
authorities.

Section 6 . - Emergency
When the superintendent determines that weather
conditions are such that travel for pupils and teachers is
hazardous, schools should commence for pupils one hour
later than the regular starting time. Teachers should make
an effort to report to school at the regular starting time.
Section 1,-Liability
The Board and the Association shall cooperate in
achieving permissive legislation to provide personal
liability, including legal counsel, and personal property
damage insurance coverage to each teacher. Costs o f such
coverage shall be a matter for future negotiation.

A smaller number of agreements provide assistance
when complaints or charges are directed against the
teacher:
(171)

1.

The administrator or supervisor involved
and the president o f CFPS shall be given
full information as to the nature of serious
complaints or charges made by parents,
students, or any special interest groups
which appear to be organized, and be given
every opportunity, resource and help to
answer or cope with such complaints or
harrassment.

2.

If complaints or charges are made against
any administrator or supervisor, he may
have a conference with the Superintendent
o f Schools or his designee at the Deputy or
Assistant Superintendent level. At such
hearing, he may have the assistance of the
CFPS.

3.

Whenever, in the performance o f his duties
as an administrator or supervisor and in
carrying out the responsibilities thereof, an
administrator or supervisor becomes the
object o f legal action directed against him,
the Board o f Education will provide the
concerned with legal advice.

Workmen's compensation is available to cover injuries
or death attributable to assigned duties.
Section 2.-Civil disturbances
In case o f a severe civil disturbance which occurs
before the teacher leaves his residence for his assignment,
the teacher should make every effort to contact the
proper school authorities who will determine whether the
teacher will be required to report for work. The intent o f
this provision is that no teacher should be required to
report to a school where his person might be in danger.
Section 3.—
Pupils
Throughout the years teachers have considered the
disruptive pupil to be the greatest deterrent to teaching.
Adjustment classes should be established for pupils who
are disruptive.
The teacher may send pupils who are seriously
disturbing the class to the office for the day. The teacher
shall furnish the principal with information o f the
exclusion from class and the pupil will be readmitted only
upon written authority o f the principal, or after a
conference between all parties concerned. Disruptive
elementary pupils who are excluded from class must be
escorted to the office.
A pupil expressing flagrant insubordination to a
teacher shall be disciplined. A subsequent offense o f the
same nature may mean suspension by the principal until a
parent comes for a conference. Both the parent and pupil
must agree to cooperate before he can be readmitted. All
cases o f physical violence to members of the staff shall be
reported to the police and teachers should be encouraged
to sign warrants.

60



Professional integrity . The professional integrity of the

teacher with respect to pupil evaluation is protected in
many agreements which state that his judgement in
assigning pupil grades will not be reviewed or reversed by
others, subject on occasion, to certain restrictions:
(167)
The grade given to a pupil for the completion o f
an assigned task pursuant to the study o f a required or
elective subject in the curriculum taught by the teacher or
an approved extra-curricular activity under the super­
vision o f the teacher is the teacher’s indication o f the
quality o f performance by the pupil o f this particular
task.
The teacher shall be considered to be the expert in
evaluating the pupil’s work, and the integrity o f the
teacher shall be respected in grading the work o f the
pupil.

The grade given by the teacher shall not be changed by
another person. However, in the event that the grade
should be challenged by the pupil, his parents, or
guardian, and, after appropriate conferences it appears
that all factors involved in the performance o f the pupil
may not have been known or taken into consideration by
the teacher, the teacher has the prerogative and duty to
raise or lower such grade in accordance with all factors
involved. This provision shall not preclude the principal
from questioning a student’s grade with the teacher,
where the principal believes an error has been made.
No minimum or maximum limitation shall be set on
the number who pass or fail, but every teacher will be
expected to give all possible assistance and encouragement
to pupils whose work may be below passing standards,
and to challenge those who may be finding the work too
easy.

All final failing grades for 6th, 9th and 12th grade
students must be submitted to the school office by the
date established through agreement of the head of the
school and the School Chapter Advisory Committee for
such submission. Such date shall be at least 5 school days
prior to graduation. Any final grade submitted after such
date must be a passing grade.




As an important part of pupil evaluation as well as
normal school procedures, teachers often are required to
inform parents of any special problems. General
discussions of pupil performance with parents common­
ly are required through scheduled conferences:
(172)
One full school day or two half-days o f each
semester shall be designated for parent-teacher confer­
ences. These conferences shall be held on school time and
all regular classes shall be dismissed. The day or half-days
shall be established by the school principal and
announced to teachers and parents by the end of the
fourth week of each semester. In addition to the
scheduled conference day or half-days referred to above,
teachers shall confer with parents at other times mutually
convenient to the teacher and the parent.
Special education teachers may, with the approval of
the principal, utilize the 1 full day or 2 half-days
designated for parent-teacher conferences to make home
visits or follow-up calls. In cases of particular urgency,
additional time may be granted upon request and with the
approval of the principal and the region superintendent.
Elementary teachers may, with permission of the
principal, utilize the half-day or a part of the day now
designated for parent-teacher conferences for home visits.

61

Appendix. Identification of Clauses1

Clause
N um ber

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27

E m ployer and union

Seattle, Wash.; citywide, blue-collar crafts, Joint Crafts Council ..........................
Tampa, Fla., Firefighters (IAFF) .............................................................................
Rochester, N.Y., Firefighters ( I A F F ) ........................................................................
Boston, Mass.; power services, Firemen and Oilers ( I B F O ) ....................................
District of Columbia, Department of Sanitary Engineering, maintenance and
related employees, State, County and Municipal Employees, (AFSCME) . . .
Portland, Oreg.; Bureau of Fire (IAFF) ...................................................................
Baltimore, Md.; Metropolitan Transit Authority, Transit (ATU) ..........................
Louisville, Ky.; Works Department, street maintenance Teamsters (IBT)(Ind.) .
Chicago, 111.; Transit Authority, Teamsters (IBT) (Ind.) .......................................
Pittsburgh, Pa.; Board of Public Education, Teachers (AFT) ...............................
New York, N.Y.; Public Library, building maintenance, shipping and purchasing,
State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) .......................................
Tucson, Ariz., State, County and Municipal Employees (A FSC M E ).....................
Boston, Mass.; Police Department, Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association . . . .
Greater Indianapolis, Ind.; Department of Public Works, State, County and
Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ........................................................................
Baltimore, Md.; Board of School Commissioners, non-teaching aides, Teachers
(AFT) ......................................................................................................................
Rochester, N.Y.; Board of Education, teachers, Education Association(NEA) . .
Jersey City, N.J.; citywide, clerical, State, County and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME) ..............................................................................................................
Buffalo, N.Y., Police Benevolent Association .........................................................
Los Angeles, Calif.; Southern California Rapid Transit District, operators,
Transportation Union (UTU) ...............................................................................
Cleveland, Ohio; State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ...............
Omaha, Nebr.; International Brotherhood of Police Officers ...............................
Boston, Mass.; Housing Authority, stationary firemen, Firemen and Oilers
(IBFO) ....................................................................................................................
Milwaukee, Wis.; Board of School Directors, non-teaching personnel, State,
County and Municipal Employees (A FSC M E )....................................................
Baltimore, Md.; white-collar, nonclerical, Classified Municipal Employees
Association ............................................................................................................
Buffalo, N.Y.; pipe caulkers and repairmen, Directly affiliated local union . . . .
Buffalo, N.Y.; Board of Education, teachers, Education Association (NEA) . . .
Milwaukee, Wis.; Department of Public Works, Teamsters (IBT) ( I n d .) ................

1Employee organization affiliated with the AFL-CIO unless otherwise indicated as independent union or association.

62




Expiration date

September 1972
September 1972
June 1973
June 1972
May 1971
June 1971
September 1972
May 31,1971
November 1971
November 1971
June 1973
February 1973
March 1971
December 1971
August 1971
June 1973
December 1970
June 1972
May 1972
July 1972
December 1971
January 1973
December 1972
July 1971
June 1972
June 1972
December 1970

Appendix. Identification of Clauses — Continued
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59

District of Columbia; Department of Sanitary Engineering, Water Pollution
Control Division, Government Employees (AFGE) .........................................
District of Columbia; Department of Sanitary Engineering, Maintenance
Division, shop and office personnel, Government Employees (AFGE) ..........
Buffalo, N.Y.; blue-collar occupations, State, County and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME) ..............................................................................................................
Toledo, Ohio; Toledo Police Command Officers Association, Patrolmen’s
Benevolent Association, and Fraternal Order of P o lic e ....................................
Boston, Mass.; Youth Activities Commission, Department of Health and
Hospitals, and others, Service Employees (SEIU) ..............................................
Seattle, Wash.; Department of Lighting, Electrical Workers (IB E W ).....................
Sacramento, Calif.; Transit Authority, Electrical Workers (IB E W ).......................
Toledo, Ohio; refuse, sanitary landfills and main wastewater treatment plant,
Teamsters (IBT) (Ind.) ..........................................................................................
Chicago, 111.; Transit Authority, bus operations, Transit (ATU) ..........................
Portland, Oreg.; city wide, blue-collar occupations, District Council of Trade
Unions ...................................................................................................................
Detroit, Mich.; policemen, Detroit Police Officers Association ............................
Detroit, Mich.; Library Commission, Association of Professional Librarians of
the Detroit Public Library .....................................................................................
Rochester, N.Y.; citywide, blue-collar and white-collar occupations, State,
County and Municipal Employees (A FSC M E )...................................................
Cleveland, Ohio; bridge operations, Electrical Workers (IB E W )............................
Boston, Mass.; Public Library, Boston Public Library Professional Staff
Association .......................................................................................................
Toledo, Ohio; Firefighters (I A F F ).............................................................................
San Jose, Calif.; San Jose Peace Officers Association ............................................
Detroit, Mich., supervisory nurses, Nurses Association (ANA) ............................
Detroit, Mich.; Department of Street Railways, non-operating white-collar
occupations, State, County and Municipal Employees (A FSC M E )..................
Baltimore, Md.; Board of Fire Commissioners, firefighters, Firefighters (IAFF) .
Seattle, Wash.; Seattle Police Officers’ G u i l d ...........................................................
Philadelphia, Pa.; citywide, blue-collar and white-collar occupations, State,
County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ...................................................
Detroit, Mich.; Board of Education, blue-collar occupations Teamsters (IBT)
(Ind.) ......................................................................................................................
Toledo, Ohio; citywide blue-collar and white-collar occupations, State, County
and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ................................................................
Memphis, Tenn.; Board of Education, blue-collar occupations, State, County
and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ................................................................
Louisville, Ky.; Works Department, garage, stores, transportation, operations and
maintenance, Teamsters (IBT) (Ind.) ...................................................................
Boston, Mass.; Housing Authority, Teamster (IBT) (Ind.) ....................................
Kansas City, Mo.; Firefighters (IAFF) .....................................................................
Rochester, N.Y., Rochester Police Locust Club ......................................................
Buffalo, N.Y.; Board of Education, blue-collar occupations, State, County and
Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ........................................................................
Boston, Mass.; Typographical Union (ITU) ..............................................................
Omaha, Neb., Firefighters ( I A F F ) .............................................................................




March 1972
February 1972
June 1973
December 1972
June 1972
March 1972
September 1972
July 1972
November 1971
July 1972
December 1970
July 1971
June 1972
July 1972
June 1971
July 1972
July 1971
August 1971
July 1971
June 1972
December 1971
June 1971
July 1972
July 1972
June 1971
May 1971
January 1972
September 1970
June 1972
June 1973
May 1972
December 1971
63

Appendix. Identification of Clauses — Continued
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

Cleveland, Ohio; Metropolitan General Hospital, non-professional classifications,
State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) .......................................
Louisville, Ky.; Sanitation Department, Teamsters (1BT) (Ind.) ..........................
Jersey City, N.J.; public health nurses, United Nurses Organization of Jersey
City .........................................................................................................................
Boston, Mass.; Administrative Services Department, Printing Pressmen (IPPA) .
Jersey City, N.J.; Jersey City Medical Center, white-collar occupations, State,
County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ....................................................
Cincinnati, Ohio; Board of Education, blue-collar occupations, State, County
and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ................................................................
Memphis, Tenn.; Housing Authority, Maintenance Department, State, County
and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ................................................................
Memphis, Tenn.; Automobile Testing Bureau, State, County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME) ..........................................................................................
Buffalo, N.Y., The Buffalo Crossing Guards Association .......................................
Jacksonville, Fla.; Housing Authority, Laborers (LIUNA) ....................................
Buffalo, N.Y.; Firefighters (IAFF) ..........................................................................
Oklahoma City, Okla; Central Oklahoma Transportation and Parking Authority,
Transit (A T U ).........................................................................................................
Los Angeles, Calif.; Housing Authority, State, County and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME) ...............................................................................................................
Detroit, Mich.; citywide, operating engineers, Operating Engineers (IUOE) . . . .
Cleveland, Ohio; citywide blue-collar occupations, Laborers (LIUNA) ...............
Buffalo, N.Y.; white-collar occupations, Civil Service Employees Association
(CSEA) ....................................................................................................................
Buffalo, N.Y.; Board of Education, Civil Service Employees Association
(CSEA)
.................................................................................................................
Jersey City, N.J.; Jersey City Medical Center, United Nurses Organization of
Jersey City ...............................................................................................................
New York, N.Y.; Fire Department, fire officers, Firefighters (IAFF) ..................
Buffalo, N.Y., Recreation Society of the City of B u ffa lo .......................................
Detroit, Mich.; Department of Street Railways, operating personnel, Transit
(A T U )......................................................................................................................
Denver, Colo.; School District No. 1, Denver Association of Specialized Services
Personnel .................................................................................................................
District of Columbia; Department of Sanitary Engineering, Revenue Branch,
Government Employees (AFGE) ........................................................................
Atlanta, Ga.; Housing Authority, Service Employees (SEIU) ...............................
Akron, Ohio; City Hospital, State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
Sacramento, Calif.; Transit Authority, Transit (ATU) .........................................
New York, N.Y.; Department of Marine and Aviation, Maritime (N M U ).............
Denver, Colo.; Metropolitan Denver Sewage Disposal District No. 1, Operating
Engineers (IUOE) ..................................................................................................
Milwaukee, Wis.; Board of School Directors, school accountants, Education
Association (N E A )..................................................................................................
New York, N.Y.; Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority, State, County and
Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ........................................................................
Omaha, Nebr.; State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ..................

64



February 1973
May 1971
December 1971
May 1972
December 1970
Open End
June 1973
June 1972
June 1972
September 1972
June 1972
August 1973
August 1972
June 1971
July 1972
December 1972
June 1973
December 1971
December 1970
June 1972
June 1974
April 1972
January 1972
December 1971
July 1972
March 1974
June 1970
September 1972
December 1972
June 1972
December 1971

Appendix. Identification of Clauses — Continued
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124

New York, N.Y.; Board of Higher Education, Teachers (AFT) ............................
Boston, Mass.; Police Department, Boston Police Collective Bargaining
Federation ..............................................................................................................
Los Angeles, Calif.; Housing Authority, Los Angeles Building and Construction
Trades Council .......................................................................................................
Buffalo, N.Y.; Operating Engineers (IUOE) ...........................................................
Cincinnati, Ohio; University of Cincinnati and Cincinnati General Hospital,
Operating Engineers (IUOE) ...............................................................................
Boston, Mass.; Housing Authority, Boston Building and Construction Trades
Council ...................................................................................................................
New York, N.Y.; Transit Authority, subway supervisors ......................................
Milwaukee, Wis.; Bureau of Sanitation, Laborers (LIUNA) .................................
New York, N.Y.; Manhattan and Bronx Surface Transit Operating Authority,
Transport Workers (TWU) ....................................................................................
Milwaukee, Wis.; Board of School Directors, substitute teachers, Education
Association (N E A ).................................................................................................
Seattle, Wash.; School District No. 1, Teamsters (Ind.) ..........................................
Memphis, Tenn.; Division of Hospitals and Health Services, State, County and
Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ........................................................................
Akron, Ohio; Board of Education, Firemen and Oilers (IBFO) ............................
Cincinnati, Ohio; University of Cincinnati and 2 hospitals, non professional
occupations, State, County and Municipal Employees (A FSC M E )..................
Boston, Mass.; Housing Inspection Department, Boston Environmental
Sanitation Inspectors’ Assn.....................................................................................
Chicago, 111.; Transit Authority Carpenters (CTA) .................................................
Milwaukee, Wis.; Board of School Directors, custodial employees, Service
Employees (SEIU) .................................................................................................
Seattle, Wash.; Nurses Association (ANA) ..............................................................
Newark, N.J.; Board of Education, Teachers (AFT) ..............................................
Memphis, Tenn.; Park Commission, State, County and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME) ..............................................................................................................
Cleveland, Ohio; custodial employees, Service Employees (SEIU) .......................
New York, N.Y.; Board of Education, bilingual teachers, Teachers (AFT) . . . .
Detroit, Mich.; State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ..................
Denver, Colo.; School District No. 1, teachers, Education Association (NEA) . .
Columbus, Ohio; State, County and Municipal Employees (A F S C M E )................
District of Columbia; Department of Sanitary Engineering, Sewer Operations,
Pumping Station, Government Employees (AFGE) .........................................
Chicago, 111.; Transit Authority, rapid transit operations, Transit (A T U ).............
Milwaukee, Wis.; Board of School Directors, teachers, Education Association
(NEA) ......................................................................................................................
Jersey City, N.J.; Board of Education, Education Association (NEA) ................
Cincinnati, Ohio; Parks, Health, Recreation, State, County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME) ..........................................................................................
Cleveland, Ohio; Transit System, Transit (ATU) ...................................................
Milwaukee, Wis.; Board of School Directors, cafeteria employees, Service
Employees (SEIU) .................................................................................................
Indianapolis, Ind.; Public Schools, Education Association (NEA) .......................
Detroit, Mich.; Board of Education, non-teaching blue-collar personnel, State,
County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ...................................................




August 1972
February 1972
July 1972
June 1972
September 1972
December 1972
June 1972
November 1972
December 1971
December 1972
May 1972
June 1972
June 1972
September 1972
June 1972
November 1971
December 1972
September 1972
January 1973
June 1972
July 1972
September 1972
June 1971
April 1972
March 1972
June 1972
November 1971
December 1972
August 1972 '
February 1971
July 1972
December 1972
December 1971
January 1972
65

Appendix. Identification of Clauses — Continued
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159

New York, N.Y.; Board of Education, school secretaries, Teachers (AFT) . . . .
Denver, Colo.; School District No. 1, vocational teachers, Teachers (AFT) . . . .
District of Columbia; Department of Highways and Traffic, Government Em­
ployees (AFGE) ....................................................................................................
District of Columbia; Department of Sanitary Engineering, Water Operations
Division, Government Employees (AFGE) .........................................................
Milwaukee, Wis.; Professional Policemen’s Protective Association .......................
Denver, Colo.; School District No. 1, Denver Public Schools Association of
Buildings and Grounds Service Personnel ...........................................................
Louisville, Ky.; Dept, of Public Safety, civilian police employees, State, County
and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)...................................................................
Chicago, 111.; Transit Authority, Machinists (IAM) .................................................
New York, N.Y.; Board of Education, Guidance Counselors, Teachers (AFT) . .
Buffalo, N.Y.; Board of Education, Buffalo Public School Administrators
Association ...........................................................................................................
Tucson, Ariz.; Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) ......................................................
Baltimore, Md.; Board of Fire Commissioners, fire officers, Firefighters (IAFF)
San Francisco, Calif.; Laguna Honda Hospital, Service Employees (SEIU) . . . .
Milwaukee, Wis.; Operating Engineers (IUOE) ..........................................................
Greater Indianapolis Ind.; Department of Transportation, State, County and
Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ........................................................................
Boston, Mass.; Police Department, Boston Police School Traffic Supervisors
Assn............................................................................................................................
Milwaukee, Wis.; Technicians, Engineers and Architects of Milwaukee ...............
Denver, Colo.; Housing Authority, State, County and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME) ..............................................................................................................
Akron, Ohio; State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) .....................
New York, N.Y.; Board of Education, school lunch employees, State, County
and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ................................................................
Memphis, Tenn.; Division of Public Works, State, County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME) ..........................................................................................
Milwaukee, Wis.; Fire Department, firefighters, Firefighters (IAFF) ..................
Boston, Mass.; Housing Authority, Laborers (LIUNA) .........................................
Louisville, Ky.; Traffic Engineering Department, electrical maintenance,
Electrical Workers (IB E W )....................................................................................
Chicago, 111.; Board of Education, principals, Chicago Principals Club ................
Jacksonville, Fla.; Firefighters (IAFF) .....................................................................
New York, N.Y.; Board of Education, teachers, Teachers ( A F T ) ..........................
Detroit, Mich.; Department of Street Railways, non-operating personnel, State,
County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) ...................................................
Kansas City, Mo.; Area Transportation Authority, Transit (ATU) .........................
Columbus, Ohio; Board of Education, nonteaching personnel, Columbus School
Employees A ssociation..........................................................................................
Boston, Mass.; Library and Administrative Services, Bookbinders (IBB) .............
Milwaukee, Wis.; Fire Department, marine firemen, Firefighters ( I A F F ) .............
Memphis, Tenn.; Board of Education, Distributive Workers (NCDWA) (Ind.) . .
Phoenix, Ariz.; Board of Education, Union High School System, Education
Association (N E A ).................................................................................................
Philadelphia, Pa.; Board of Education, teachers, Teachers (AFT) .......................

66




September 1972
April 1972
November 1971
March 1972
November 1972
June 1972
May 1970
November 1971
September 1972
June 1972
August 1973
June 1973
July 1972
November 1972
December 1971
September 1972
December 1971
January 1972
March 1971
June 1971
June 1972
November 1973
September 1971
June 1970
December 1970
September 1971
September 1972
July 1971
October 1971
June 1973
March 1972
December 1971
June 1974
July 1972
August 1972

Appendix. Identification of Clauses — Continued
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172

Columbus, Ohio; Board o f Education, teachers, Education Association (NEA) .
Cincinnati, Ohio; Board o f Education, Education Association (NEA) ................
Seattle, Wash*; School District No. 1, Education Association (NEA) ...................
Portland, Oreg.; School District No. 1, Multanomah County, Education
Association ( N E A ) ......................................................................................................
Cleveland, Ohio; Board o f Education, teachers, Teachers (AFT) ...........................
Philadelphia, Pa.; Board o f Education, nonteaching assistants, Teachers (AFT) .
Chicago, 111.; Board o f Education, teachers, Teachers (AFT) ................................
District o f Columbia; Board of Education, Teachers (AFT) ...................................
Boston, Mass.; School Committee, Teachers (AFT) ................................................
Phoenix, Ariz.; Board o f Trustees, Wilson District No. 7, Education Association
(NEA) ...........................................................................................................................
Baltimore, Md.; Board o f School Commissioners, teachers, Teachers (AFT) . . .
Cleveland, Ohio; Board o f Education, administrative and supervisory personnel,
Teachers ( A F T ) ...........................................................................................................
Detroit, Mich.; Board of Education, teachers, Teachers (AFT) .............................

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OFFICE : 1972 O - 512376 (18)

August 1973
January 1971
June 1973
June 1973
May 1971
August 1972
December 1970
June 1971
September 1971
July 1973
June 1971
December 1970
July 1971




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