Skip to content
<!-- Decorative image -->

Supreme Court to Review State Furlough Case

California Attorneys, Administrative Law Judges and Hearing Officers in State Employment v. Schwarzenegger (2010) 182 Cal.App.4th 1424, review granted, 106 Cal.Rptr.3d 702.The California Supreme Court has granted review in CASE v. Schwarzenegger. Pursuant to the order granting review, the issue before the Court is, “Does the Governor have the authority to furlough the state employees at issue in this case by executive order?” While this sounds like something that might have far-reaching effect throughout the state, the reality is that the decision will likely be much more limited. In CASE v. Schwarzenegger, the issue is whether the Governor’s furlough authority extends…

Read More
<!-- Decorative image -->

Mendocino Attorneys Not Entitled To 1% Raise Under Former MOU

[UPDATE (5/20/10): Just received word that MCPAA has filed an appeal of this decision, so it's not yet final.]County of Mendocino (2010) PERB Decision No. 2104-M (Issued on 4/21/10) Facts:In 2006, the Mendocino County Public Attorneys Association (MCPAA) successfully petitioned to remove several attorney classifications from bargaining units represented by two other unions, the Mendocino County Management Employees Association (MCMEA) and Service Employees International Union (SEIU). Under the MCMEA and SEIU contracts, the attorneys would have gotten a 1% salary increase effective September 2006 if they had remained in those bargaining units. The County’s position was that the attorneys were…

Read More
<!-- Decorative image -->

PERB: It’s Interference To Offer Better Benefits to Non-Union Members

State of California (Department of Personnel Administration) (2010) PERB Decision No. 2106-S (Issued on 4/30/10)Facts:The contract between the State of California (State) and the California Correctional Peace Officer Association (CCPOA) provided that dental and vision benefits would be provided to bargaining unit members through the CCPOA Benefit Trust Fund, an independent corporation established by CCPOA.  Through the CCPOA Benefit Trust Fund, an employee with two dependents would pay $41.80 per month for the dental benefit.In October 2007, CCPOA informed the State that non-members (ie fair share fee payers) would no longer be provided dental and vision benefits through the CCPOA…

Read More
<!-- Decorative image -->

Oral Argument Held in San Jose Case

City of San Jose v. Operating Engineers Local Union No. 3 (Case No. S162647)Oral argument was held in the San Jose case on May 5, 2010.  The issue in this case is:  Does the Public Employment Relations Board have the exclusive initial jurisdiction to determine whether certain "essential" public employees covered by Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (Gov. Code, sections 3500 3511) have the right to strike, or does that jurisdiction rest with the superior court? Practically, the dispute is over whether employers must initially go to PERB when seeking injunctive relief against an essential employee strike or whether the employer can go directly…

Read More
<!-- Decorative image -->

AFSCME’s Leafletting Was Not an Unfair Practice

AFSCME, Local 3299 (2010) PERB Decision No. 2105-H (Issued on 4/21/10)Facts:This case involved an unfair practice charge filed by the University of California (UC) against AFSCME. During bargaining, AFSCME began leafleting in front of several medical centers at various UC campuses. The expired contract between UC and AFSCME required the union to abide by specific access guidelines promulgated at each campus. Those guidelines set forth exactly where AFSCME could engage in leafleting and where it couldn’t (for example, because of patient access issues). During the leafleting at issue, it appears undisputed that AFSCME violated the access guidelines by leafleting in prohibited areas. …

Read More