NATIONAL RAILROAD ADJUSTMENT BOARD
SECOND DIVISION
The Second Division consisted of the regular members and in
addition Referee Lloyd H. Bailer when award was rendered.
EMPLOYES' STATEMENT OF FACTS: In accord with the provisions of Rule 21 (a) the employes working in the districts and agencies had positions established with eight hours per day, five days per week with no exceptions in any work week. When a holiday occurred the employe holding a position that included that day as a work day was permitted to work and was compensated at the rate of time and one-half for service performed on the holiday in accord with Rule 24. This meant that he worked forty hours that week and was compensated in the amount of forty-four hours. But the employe who held a position that had the holiday as a relief day worked forty hours in his work week and received forty hours' pay. There was no overtime considered in this application of the agreement because this was the employe's regular bulletined hours of service. This was in effect from September 1, 1949 through November 1, 1954.
On November 2, 1954, an agreement was signed providing for eight hours' pay at the pro rata hourly rate of pay to the employe in a position when a holiday fell on one of the work days of his position if he was compensated by the company the last work day preceding the holiday and the first work day following the holiday. This holiday pay was retro-active to May 1, 1954. This agreement did not change Rule 21 (a) or Rule 24. These two rules continued to be applied as outlined above, that is, when a holiday occurred the employe holding a position that included that day as a work day was permitted to work the holiday in accord with Rule 21 (a); and he was compensated at the time and one-half rate of pay for service performed on the holiday in accord with Rule 24. He worked forty hours that week and he received forty-four hours' pay. If
In this exparte submission the company has shown that Electrician Karr was not entitled to work the hours of his regular position on New Year's Day, 1958, as claimed. Also, the company has shown that neither the fringe benefit agreement nor the rules of the agreement contemplate that management must work a regularly-assigned hourly-rated employe on a holiday and pay him 8 hours holidays pay and 8 hours at the rate of time and one-half. Further, the company has shown that awards of the National Railroad Adjustment Board support management's position in this dispute.
FINDINGS: The Second Division of the Adjustment Board, upon the whole record and all the evidence, finds that:
The carrier or carriers and the employe or employes involved in this dispute are respectively carrier and employe within the meaning of the Railway Labor Act as approved June 21, 1934.
This Division of the Adjustment Board has jurisdiction over the dispute involved herein.
The confronting question is the same as was decided in Award No. 3515. There is no difference in the pertinent facts or in the agreement language upon which the petitioner relies. Award No. 3515 therefore governs the disposition of this case.
The majority admit that prior to December 25, 1957 (the date the carrier introduced a unilateral change in its policy with respect to district employes such as the claimants) the carrier had regularly assigned or required employes in districts and agencies to work on holidays occurring on a work day of their work week. The claimants are employes in districts and under the express terms of Rule 1(a) "The bulletined hours of service for employes in districts . . . shall be 8 consecutive hours per day . . . 5 days per week; i.e. 40 hours per week..." This language is plain as to its meaning and should be enforced as made; the record shows that it was mutually agreed to and enforced until the unilateral change made by the carrier on December 25, 1957.
The findings of the majority uphold the carrier in its evasion of the command of Sec. 2 Seventh of the Railway Labor Act that "No carrier, its officers or agents, shall change the rates of pay, rules or working conditions of its employes, as a class as embodied in agreements except in the manner prescribed in such agreements or in section 6 of this Act."