Sunday, May 16, 2010

OPEIU Trial Court Pros & Clericals win huge arbitration...$30million in Retro PAY! ....NAGE and 509 losers by comparison

WOW.... this is huge.... some very interesting and important issues are highlighted in this arbitration award..... I'll be getting to them in future posts.... 

OPEIU union makes NAGE SEIU 5000/ACORN and Local 509 look like the pathetic do-nothing dues sucking losers that they are..... Grunko and Holway you pathetic dopes..... take a look at how a real union operates....
Politico story on SEIU Pennsylvania ad buy)

....among other things the arbitrator cites the BTU case as the " wellspring of the law regarding funding of collective bargaining agreements under G.L.c. 150E, § 7.

In BTU, the Boston School Committee advanced essentially the same contention that the Trial Court makes here:

......contends that the salary increases for the second and third years of the collective bargaining agreement are unenforceable in the absence of an appropriation by the city council to fund those increases. It argues that in enacting G.L.c. 150E, the Legislature intended to preserve the annual appropriation process so as to require an appropriation by the city council as a condition precedent to the enforceability of any part of a collective bargaining agreement entered into pursuant to c. 150E that would require an appropriation of funds.
We disagree. 
We think that the requirement in § 7 (b), that the employer submit a request to the appropriate legislative body for an appropriation sufficient to fund the cost items of the agreement, applies only to funds needed in the first year of the agreement, and that an appropriation funding the first year of the contract constitutes an approval by the legislative body of the entire agreement. The context of this provision suggests that this is the proper interpretation. Section 7 (b) states that a request for an appropriation is to be submitted "within thirty days after the date on which the agreement is executed by the parties." It further states that if the legislative body rejects the request, "such cost items shall be returned to the parties for further bargaining." We conclude that these terms are intended to apply only to the first year of the agreement. In order for § 7 (b) to be construed consistently with § 7 (a), authorizing contracts of three years' duration, the statute must be read as contemplating an initial approval of the contract by the legislative body, followed by appropriations as a matter of course in the succeeding years of the contract.
AWARD
The Trial Court violated the collective bargaining agreement by failing to pay certain salary increases described in the July'07 to June'10 collective bargaining agreements.
  • (And by the way, this was no NAGE-like giveback contract....it called for 1st year 3% plus new step 8, 2nd year 3%, and 3rd year 3%....while NAGE keeps telling you 0% with Furloughs... "is not a great contract, but a good one, or the best you can hope for.... you pathetic dues paying sheeple!....ws)
As a remedy, the Trial Court shall make affected employees in both bargaining units whole for all contractual wage increases,including those attributable to the new Step 8 where applicable, retroactive to June 1,2007,the effective date of both collective bargaining agreements.

The Trial court shall also make affected employees whole for all benefits that are directly contingent upon wage rates,such as retirement contributions.

It'll probably take me several posts to go through them.... but off the top of my head here are few comments:

1) This is what can be done for employees that have a real union working on their behalf
(unlike the lazy, shiftless, self-serving scum at SEIU/Acorn 5000 (aka NAGE)

2) Is Deval Patrick planning the same Farschimmelt rotten trick on us that he tried (and still may) to pull on the clerical and professional employees of the trial court?


3) Congratulations to Mary Mahoney President of Local 6 OPEIU Office and Professional Employees International Union on stunning victory for your members....

Fellow NAGE members.... do you think OPEIU is considering a decertification campaign to throw out these useless self-serving dogs at SEIU/ACorn 5000 (aka NAGE)???....
  • hey there are millions of dollars in dues up for grabs.... most of the poor NAGE members would welcome the opportunity to have a successful, democratically oriented union take over as bargaining agent!!!!

That four-flushing Polecat Holway tried to raid the OPEIU  shop!!!!
Turn about is fair play.....most members would love it!


4) How does this look to other Trial Court employees still stuck with NAGE/ACORN?.... 

While the OPEIU was successfully negotiating a fair contract, and in an understated and professional manner seeking to vindicate the rights of the members in face of a double cross by the Deval Patrick administration.... 


David J. Holway an A-Hole for our times......

More to follow......

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Massive layoffs pending.... important post

Based on house Budget figures for FY11 it's fair to assume that the Administration is putting in place massive lay-off plans for state employees.... including many in SEIU/ACORN 5000 (AKA "NAGE") and Local 509.
In that context I am repeating an important post that outlines a case where a NAGE member in good standing (and a Steward!) was abandoned by NAGE, but successfully pressed his claims of NAGE's failure in their duty of fair representation.

With lay-offs coming it behooves you to be prepared for the dirty underhanded tricks that have been employed by NAGE in the past, in an effort shirk their duties to you the members.......

Here's my favorite line fromm the frivolous appeal NAGE filed in repsonse to the LRC finding that they had miserably failed to represent a member who paid his dues and got nothin in return.... but grief:

NAGE's argument that it would be burdensome to process grievances when many members have, as here, been laid off. Apart from the remarkable suggestion that grievances may be ignored because it is hard work to process them, NAGE has conceded that it simply neglected Moshkovitz's grievance. The LRC was warranted, on the substantial evidence, in concluding that NAGE had violated its fair duty of representation to Moshkovitz by failing to process his grievance.(No wonder NAGE never provides the membership with regular reports on the processing and outcomes of grievances!.....ws)


Here's the post:
NAGE screwed brother Moshkovitz.....

AND they'll screw YOU too!

Here's what brother M got from NAGE in his time of need, and here's what you might expect to get from the self-serving ingrates at NAGE ... in return for your hard earned and ever increasing dues:

This sad story comes as no surprise to any of us who've taken the time to look into the shadowy, secretive and self-dealing practices of the scallywags at NAGE.... why is it that they continually fail and refuse to provide regular financial and operational reporting to the members who fund their enterprise?

Hey, they may need our dues to pay for their exorbitant salaries, their expense accounts, their fancy banquets and x-mas parties,.... oh and don't forget the million$ they ship directly to the social engineers and legends-in-their-own-minds at SEIU international for their irrelevant causes.....

....and, They don't mind spending your dough trying to organize illegal immigrants, but they've got nothing for you dues payers, when you need it.....

.....Based on Brother M's tale.... I think its fair to infer that these self-serving scum don't want to spend a nickel on the interests of the members who are actually paying them ... "representational expenses" in NAGE-speak means paying obscene salaries to do-nothing "officers", lay-abouts and their relatives at NAGE headquarters, but does not apparently include prosecuting the individual rights of dues paying members..... well not if it takes any real effort or costs any money!!!!

In fact, based on this case, one can conclude that NAGE isn't willing to spend any of it's due$ hoard DEFENDING the rights of individual members, but they are only too willing to spend it, big time, on legal fees in attempts to the trample the rights of their own members under bargaining agreements and state law...

......but anyway on with the Ballad of Herbert M ....


Laid off and abandoned by NAGE

Herbet Moshkovitz, was a tax examiner and a NAGE member "in good standing." He was laid off from his position at DOR.

He filed,with NAGE, two grievances and a request to exercise his bumping and transfer rights under the collective bargaining agreement. Herb found out that being a member of NAGE, is more like being bent over a chair with your shorts on backwards, than being "in good standing". Unfortunately brothers and sisters, you're likely to suffer same fate if you put your faith in NAGE....

NAGE never responded to Moshkovitz, and, indeed, NAGE conceded (in court and Labor Relations Commission proceedings) that it never investigated, or even evaluated his grievances, letters,or requests for representation !.... sound familiar?


The scum!, after taking his dues for years, they chose simply to ignore his pleas for representation.... Hey, his usefulness to the
Burgin Parkway Bandits was at an end after all.... he'd been laid off and his dues were no longer being deducted from his pay check. It was Probably the first time brother M ever asked anything of the NAGE , they just gave him the brush-off.... I ask you folks, can a Union go any lower than that?.... (by the way this was one of the cases that inspired Judge Brown's rant about NAGE.)

NAGE tried the old flim-flam.... but Herb Moshkovitz out-smarted them.
Herb was smart cookie, all his dealings with NAGE were IN WRITING, TIMELY and sent REGISTERED MAIL...... Moshkovitz probably had good reason to think he'd better put everything in writing and keep copies...... having been a NAGE UNION STEWARD , no doubt he knew the kind of underhanded treatment he could expect .... scallywags would likely have just denied, denied, denied..... look how these dissembling scum handled things even when Herb had them dead to rights!

SO, LESSON NUMBER ONE learned from Herb's resounding victory, is when your dealing with these slippery weasels ....don't trust them and put things in writing, and send them registered, return receipt requested so you have proof you sent it (and of course you need to keep copies of everything.)

LRC -Labor Relations Commission
Armed with copies of his correspondence, grievances and the proof they had been filed with NAGE in timely fashion, he charged unfair labor practice with the Mass Labor Relations Commission.

NAGE's lame defense before the LRC was that Moshkovitz had failed to follow the correct procedure for filing a grievance and that he had no meritorious grievance. (And the guy had been a STEWARD for Christ's sake, can you imagine the run-around an ordinary member would have gotten?)

The LRC found that Moshkovitz's notices of grievances were sent registered mail in timely fashion to all persons required to receive them at NAGE and DOR. NAGE did not elaborate why it thought Moshkovitz's grievance letters inadequate.

Neither the LRC nor the Appeals Court were persuaded by NAGE's lame arguments that since Moshkovitz's grievances were not written on the correct "form" or letter head that they were "procedurally" flawed and therefore NAGE was entitled to ignore them...(what crap!). As to the merits of his grievances, the LRC determined that Moshkovitz had an arguable complaint on both the issue of promotion and the issue of how DOR went about selecting who was to be laid off.

NAGE, the LRC found, had done worse than decline consciously to represent Moshkovitz in his grievances; it simply ignored him. The union made no effort to advise Moshkovitz about how to proceed with his grievances after, by reason of his lay-off, he had ceased being a union steward. The LRC further found that an arbitrator might reasonably have found Moshkovitz entitled to a remedy on the basis of the two grievances he had alleged.

Frivolous APPEAL
In a fruitless and mean-sprited attempt to crush Moshkovitz and trample his rights (by using his own dues money against him) NAGE appealed the finding of the LRC.

The appeals court disposed of the frivolous appeal with tongue planted firmly in cheek and noted in relevant part:


In light of NAGE's undertaking to represent its members and avowed skill in so doing, the defense of improper processing by its member is redolent of afterthought, rather than a rational policy related to legitimate union purpose. See Pattison v. Labor Relations Commn., 30 Mass. App. Ct. at 16-17 (union's justification of technical processing failures by employee rejected). Similarly an apparent afterthought is NAGE's argument that it would be burdensome to process grievances when many members have, as here, been laid off. Apart from the remarkable suggestion that grievances may be ignored because it is hard work to process them, NAGE has conceded that it simply neglected Moshkovitz's grievance. The LRC was warranted, on the substantial evidence, in concluding that NAGE had violated its fair duty of representation to Moshkovitz by failing to process his grievance.


Once the LRC had made its findings and rulings, there was no reasonable expectation of reversal by an appellate court. The appeal was frivolous. Acting under Mass.R.A.P. 25, as amended, 376 Mass. 949 (1979), we order that NAGE pay to the LRC just damages of $2,000, and that its counsel on appeal pay to the LRC just damages of $1,000. See Allen v. Batchelder, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 453, 457-458 (1984).
If you'd like to read the whole case here it is.....





NATL. ASSN. OF GOVT. EMP. v. LABOR REL. COMMN., 38 Mass. App. Ct. 611 (1995)
650 N.E.2d 101


NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES vs. LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION.


No. 94-P-354.


Appeals Court of Massachusetts.


Suffolk.


February 7, 1995.


May 26, 1995.




Present: BROWN, KASS, & GREENBERG, JJ.


Labor, Fair representation by union, Action against labor union. Contract, Collective bargaining contract. Labor Relations Commission.


The Labor Relations Commission's determination that a union had violated its duty of fair representation to a union member was supported by substantial evidence. [612-614] A frivolous appeal warranted this court's award of just damages to the appellee pursuant to the provisions of Mass.R.App.P. 25. [614]


APPEAL from a decision of the Labor Relations Commission.


Mark J. Dalton for the plaintiff.


Tammy Brynie for the defendant.


KASS, J.


After an evidentiary hearing and findings by the hearing examiner, the Labor Relations Commission (LRC) decided that National Association of Government Employees (NAGE) had violated its duty of fair representation to one of its members, Herbert Moshkovitz. The LRC ordered a variety of remedies to compensate Moshkovitz and, as well, ordered NAGE to post ostentatiously a notice confessing its errors and announcing that it would sin no more — at least not in the same way. NAGE has appealed. See G.L.c. 150E, § 11, par. 4. We affirm.


Moshkovitz, a tax examiner in the Department of Revenue (DOR), had been laid off in the spring of 1991, a fate he shared with eighty-seven other DOR employees. He was one of thirteen tax examiners being laid off out of twenty-three who had an original "hire date" with DOR of July 10, 1988. Page 612
The collective bargaining agreement between NAGE and DOR contained machinery allowing discharged employees with the requisite skills to bump those with less seniority but contained no provision for retention priorities among those with equal seniority. By letters dated March 25, 1991, and March 29, 1991, Moshkovitz notified NAGE of two grievances and a request to exercise certain "bump and transfer" rights. One of the two grievances protested the promotion of two employees by DOR without posting the promotion opportunity, as required by the collective bargaining agreement. The point here was that, had Moshkovitz achieved the higher position, he might have escaped the reduction in force in tax examiners. Moshkovitz's second grievance protested that his layoff had been determined in an unfairly discriminatory fashion considering his attendance, evaluations, and "other variables." Those notifications of grievance and request to the union anticipated the announced layoff. The termination ax in fact fell on Moshkovitz on April 5, 1991.
On May 10, 1991, Moshkovitz wrote to John Bent, the NAGE representative for his bargaining unit, that he had yet to hear from NAGE about his grievances and request. He added, "I am writing you with full expectation that the union will be representing me, and any others who may have similar concerns." NAGE never responded to Moshkovitz, and, indeed, NAGE concedes that it never investigated or evaluated his grievances, letters, or requests for representation.
NAGE's defense before the LRC was that Moshkovitz had failed to follow the correct procedure for filing a grievance and that he had no meritorious grievance. The LRC found that Moshkovitz's notices of grievances were sent registered mail in timely fashion to all persons required to receive them at NAGE and DOR. NAGE does not elaborate why it thought Moshkovitz's grievance letters inadequate. In its brief before us, NAGE makes invidious comparisons between those letters and grievances filed on NAGE grievance complaint forms. We are not persuaded by an argument that Moshkovitz's grievances stand or fall on whether he wrote to Page 613 the union on the right letterhead. As to the merits of his grievances, the LRC determined that Moshkovitz had an arguable complaint on both the issue of promotion and the issue of how DOR went about selecting who was to be laid off.


A union has a duty to represent its members fairly in connection with issues that arise under a collective bargaining unit. Vaca v. Sipes, 386 U.S. 171, 177 (1967). Switzer v. Labor Relations Commn., 36 Mass. App. Ct. 565, 567 (1994). In the discharge of that duty, there is room for discretion, consideration of the interests of the over-all union membership in relation to that of the individual aggrieved member, and even for honest mistake or negligence about whether a grievance ought to be pressed. That fairly generous scope for inaction is exceeded when the union's conduct is arbitrary, discriminatory, in bad faith, or (and this may be a variant on arbitrary conduct) grossly inattentive or grossly negligent. Graham v. Quincy Food Serv. Employees Assn. & Hosp., Library & Pub. Employees Union, 407 Mass. 601, 606 (1990). Trinque v. Mount Wachusett Community College Faculty Assn., 14 Mass. App. Ct. 191, 197-202 (1982). Baker v. Local 2977, State Council 93, Am. Fedn. of State, County & Municipal Employees, 25 Mass. App. Ct. 439, 441-442 (1988). Pattison v. Labor Relations Commn., 30 Mass. App. Ct. 9, 16 (1991).


NAGE, the LRC found, had done worse than decline consciously to represent Moshkovitz in his grievances; it simply ignored him. The union made no effort to advise Moshkovitz about how to proceed with his grievances after, by reason of his lay-off, he had ceased being a union steward. The LRC further found that an arbitrator might reasonably have found Moshkovitz entitled to a remedy on the basis of the two grievances he had alleged. Reviewing courts generally accord substantial deference to determinations by the LRC, assuming, as here, settled legal standards, that a party has committed a prohibited labor practice. Quincy City Hosp. v. Labor Relations Commn., 400 Mass. 745, 749 (1987). Boston Police Superior Officers Fedn. v. Labor Relations Commn., 410 Mass. 890, 892 (1991). Pattison v. Labor Relations Page 614 Commn., 30 Mass. App. Ct. at 16. Felton v. Labor Relations Commn., 33 Mass. App. Ct. 926, 927 (1992). We are not disposed to discuss cavils of the union such as whether Moshkovitz improperly combined Step 1 and Step 2 grievances in one document. There was substantial evidence to support the LRC's underlying point that Moshkovitz properly processed his claim up to the time he was laid off and that NAGE failed entirely to continue the process thereafter. In light of NAGE's undertaking to represent its members and avowed skill in so doing, the defense of improper processing by its member is redolent of afterthought, rather than a rational policy related to legitimate union purpose. See Pattison v. Labor Relations Commn., 30 Mass. App. Ct. at 16-17 (union's justification of technical processing failures by employee rejected). Similarly an apparent afterthought is NAGE's argument that it would be burdensome to process grievances when many members have, as here, been laid off. Apart from the remarkable suggestion that grievances may be ignored because it is hard work to process them, NAGE has conceded that it simply neglected Moshkovitz's grievance. The LRC was warranted, on the substantial evidence, in concluding that NAGE had violated its fair duty of representation to Moshkovitz by failing to process his grievance.


Once the LRC had made its findings and rulings, there was no reasonable expectation of reversal by an appellate court. The appeal was frivolous. Acting under Mass.R.A.P. 25, as amended, 376 Mass. 949 (1979), we order that NAGE pay to the LRC just damages of $2,000, and that its counsel on appeal pay to the LRC just damages of $1,000. See Allen v. Batchelder, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 453, 457-458 (1984).


Decision of Labor Relations Commission affirmed.
Page 615









Friday, May 14, 2010

Ray McGrath can't get Unit 1,3&6 contracts funded....but....

He does alright for himself... he managed to get one of those "sweet-heart" deals/special legislation FOR HIMSELF allowing him to accrue creditable service towards his retirement ...even though he was not working as a cop..... just a full time toady for NAGE/IBPO.

.....the other Worcester cops had to actually put their asses on the line in order to accrue creditable service.... Not good Ole Ray, he only had to put his fat ass on a bar stool...or his barca lounger at his  Burgin Parkway offices (see the legislation below for the period in question...)

......he managed to pull that off..... but he can't get us a stinkin'  1/2 % raise.....

Ray collects well over $100k per year of your hard earned dues ..... we support this pant-load.... and his main accomplishments seem to be to kiss Holway's ass and live off the fat of the land.

.....When it comes to legislative affairs.... he does well for himself.... but for the members?.... we get stugats!....

Chapter 186.          AN ACT RELATIVE TO THE RETIREMENT RIGHTS OF RAYMOND McGRATH, A POLICE OFFICER OF THE CITY OF WORCESTER. 
Be it enacted, etc., as follows:
SECTION 1. Raymond McGrath, a police officer of the city of Worcester, shall, while on leave of absence from his position as police officer for the city of Worcester for the purpose of acting as a full-time representative of the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, be considered, for the purposes of chapter thirty-two of the  General Laws, to be on leave of absence without pay. He shall receive credit in the Worcester retirement system for service from February first, nineteen hundred and eighty-four to December thirty-first, nineteen hundred and eighty-seven, inclusive. This period of creditable service will be dependent upon his contribution to the annuity savings fund of the retirement system of the city of Worcester, the amount which he would have contributed to said fund had he remained in the service of the city of Worcester as a police officer for the applicable period pursuant to subsection three of section three of said chapter thirty-two of the General Laws.
No retirement allowance under said chapter thirty-two will become effective for him until he has paid
to the annuity savings fund of the Worcester retirement system, a make-up payment, calculated with interest, for the amount equal to that which he would have been withheld as regular deductions from the regular compensation he would have earned during the applicable period pursuant to said subsection three.
He shall be entided (sic) to all benefits and privileges, except the payment of salary, (WHOA! does that mean he accrued vacation time and sick time?....sweet!) as provided under chapters thirty, thirty-one, thirty-two and thirty-two A of the General Laws, during the leave of absence.
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon its passage. Approved September 15, 1992.


While we all sit around year after year without contracts, (and when one finally passes it's concessions with  NO retro pay )...is Ray  enjoying meetings in Florida resorts, and generally taking good care of himself?...... or what.
......so....when he's NOT feathering his own nest or working on give-backs ad concessions from the members, or failing to prevent the erosion of our health insurance benefits.... just what does the grossly over-paid Mr. McGrath spend all his time on?.....
....who knows, but some of the time he's out there for malingerers.....getting legislation filed that would allow them to malinger in private....

......like that Gonzalez cop that was just indicted (unlike McGrath's brother Dave whose disability claim case was referred to  Marsha Coakley (after surveillance tapes allegedly showed him performing heavy yard work, causing him to withdraw his disability claim...)

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

NAGE about to lose court officers...Decertification vote pending!

That's about 2,400 members, or up to $1.3 million in NAGE swag at stake (aka dues.)


Mass Trial Court Blog


Tony Petitions.jpg


04/30/2010 - 10:49am



“SHOW OF INTEREST OVERWHELMING”

April 29, 2010 – NO MORE…Next Year, Next Month, Next Week, Next Christmas…NO MORE NAGE LIES!

FALSE PROMISES OF TOMORROW’S THAT NEVER CAME…LIKE, YOU – New England PBA HAS HAD ENOUGH!

Today, at 12:29 pm the New England PBA, I.U.P.A., AFL-CIO after
receiving an overwhelming response to our “Show of Interest” cards and
petitions filed a decertification petition with the Massachusetts
Division of Labor Relations for the Massachusetts Trial Court currently
represented by NAGE/SEIU.

We would like to thank all the hard working and dedicated members
of the Massachusetts Trial Court who took the time to sign our “Show of
Interest” cards/petitions and we will continue to work just as hard to
inform those who are still unsure, intimidated by NAGE e-board members
or just misinformed as a result of the NAGE propaganda. We would like
to especially thank those who took the time to work with us and saw the
type of 1st Class operation we run and how well we treat our members and those who are part of the New England PBA Law Enforcement Family.

We are encouraged by the sheer number of members looking to be
represented by the largest all exclusive law enforcement labor
organization in New England. The members of the Massachusetts Trial
Court have blatantly rejected the half-baked promises, half-truths and
outright lies of their current union, NAGE/SEIU and have sent a
crushing message to the “Most Decertified Labor Union in the Country” – WE WANT AND DESERVE BETTER!

We understand and truly hope the membership understands this is a
Three-Phase process with Phase 1 being the decertification process;
Phase 2 is the upcoming election against your current union, but Phase
3 is the representation you need and deserve! The New England PBA,
I.U.P.A., AFL-CIO has been diligently working to ensure our message of
representing the Massachusetts Trial Court is as important to US as it
is to YOU! NO other organization will provide better service, work
harder or protect your interest and those of your family – than NEW
ENGLAND PBA, I.U.P.A., AFL-CIO!

Today is a NEW beginning and Tomorrow will bring greater
challenges – NEW ENGLAND PBA IS READY FOR THE CHALLENGE AND WE ARE
LOOKING FORWARD TO REPRESENTING THE CO’s, ACO’s, AACO’s, PO’s, APO’s ,
ACPO’s and POIC’s of the Massachusetts Trial Court.

Thank you for the confidence you have displayed in our
organization and we look forward to working with you and you fellow
members as we embark on a promise of honest and truthful
representation!

STAY TUNED FOR NEW & UPDATED ELECTION INFORMATION!