The Third Division consisted of the regular members and in addition Referee Peter R. Meyers when award was rendered.
The Third Division of the Adjustment Board, upon the whole record and all the evidence, finds that:
This Division of the Adjustment Board has jurisdiction over the dispute involved herein.
The Organization filed the instant claim on behalf of the Claimants, alleging that the Carrier violated the parties' Agreement by using a subcontractor to perform the work of inspecting and maintaining gear boxes and engines on the Berwick Bridge at Morgan City, Louisiana.
The Organization initially contends that Rules I and 2 of the Agreement clearly embrace the classes of employees - such as B&B Structure Mechanics and Welders - required to perform the work involved in this dispute. The Organization asserts that the repair and maintenance of drawbridges offer unique challenges and such work rests with Maintenance of Way forces. The Organization points out that monthly maintenance and repair work includes inspecting and maintaining the gear boxes and the engines that move the drawbridge. The Organization argues that this work lies at the very heart of the Agreement, and this clearly is work encompassed within the scope of the Agreement.
The Organization maintains that to assign this type of work to anyone other than those holding seniority under the Agreement would be to defeat the very intent and purpose of the collective bargaining process. Citing a number of Awards, the Organization insists that it is fundamental that work of a class belongs to those for whose benefit the contract was made and that delegation of such work to others not covered thereby is a violation of the contract. The Organization contends that the work in question is encompassed within the scope of the Agreement, and this work customarily and historically has been performed by B&B forces throughout the Form 1 Award No. 39522
Carrier's extensive system and on this particular bridge. The Organization asserts that the Carrier has not refuted this. The Organization argues that there can be no doubt that the work involved in this dispute accrues to B&B forces.
The Organization then emphasizes that Appendix 8 specifically stipulates that when the Carrier plans to contract out work within the scope of the Agreement, the Carrier must notify the General Chairman in writing as far in advance as practicable, but not less than 15 days prior thereto. The Organization points out that the parties reaffirmed this provision in a Letter of Understanding dated December 11, 1981, doing so in order to ensure that the Carrier would make a goodfaith effort to reduce outside contracting and increase the use of its Maintenance of Way forces.
The Organization maintains that despite these provisions, the Carrier flatly failed to give any advance notice of its intent to use outside forces to perform the work at issue. Moreover, this is not the first time the Carrier failed to comply with its contractual obligation to notify the General Chairman of its plan to contract out scope-covered work. The Organization cites a number of prior Awards that have upheld the principle that a carrier must make a good-faith attempt to use its forces and/or procure rental equipment in order to comply with the December 11, 1981 Letter of Understanding.
The Organization further argues that the Carrier failed to present any valid defense to the instant claim. Instead, as it does in every case involving the contracting out of work, the Carrier raised the so-called exclusivity issue, asserting that the Organization must prove exclusivity in order to prevail. The Organization insists that this argument is in serious error. Citing a number of Awards, the Organization argues that the "exclusivity" test has no application here. A large number of Awards have held that the exclusivity test does not apply to disputes over the contracting out of work. With regard to the Carrier's argument that the Claimants are not entitled to any monetary remedy because they were fully employed during the claim period, the Organization maintains that as numerous Awards have held, such a monetary claim is proper and the Claimants are entitled to receive the requested monetary remedy. The Organization emphasizes that any time the Carrier siphons off work accruing to BMWE-represented employees and assigns it to non-Agreement employees, the result is a loss of work opportunity that damages BMWE-represented employees. Form I Award No. 39522
Turning to the Carrier's argument that the instant claim was time-barred, the Organization maintains that the Carrier is in serious error. It insists that the instant claim was timely filed in compliance with the time limits set forth in Rule 14(a). The Organization points out that the first date cited in the claim is February 6, 2003. The Organization argues that under the well-accepted method of applying such time limits, the first day is not counted and the final day is counted. The Organization therefore asserts that for the purposes of Rule 14(a) the Organization had until April 7 to present the instant claim. Because the Carrier admitted that it received the claim on April 7, 2003, there can be no question that the Organization met the stipulated time limits. Moreover, placement in the mail, and not when it is received by the Carrier, determines when a claim is properly presented.
The Organization ultimately contends that the instant claim should be sustained in its entirety.
The Carrier initially contends that instead of offering proof of the exclusivity of the performance of the work, the Organization offered only allegations. Pointing to prior Awards, the Carrier argues that allegations are not enough. The Organization failed to submit even one iota of evidence that B&B employees could have performed the work, or that the Carrier did not have the right to use an outside party for the alleged work. The Carrier asserts that because the Organization failed to show that the work belonged to B&B forces, the instant claim must fail. The Organization failed to meet its burden of proving every essential element of its claim.
The Carrier then emphasizes that the Organization failed to show how the Carrier violated the Rules cited in the claim. The Carrier points out that the Scope and Seniority Rules simply do not reserve the work at issue to BMWE-represented employees. Moreover, before the Bulletining Rule may be invoked to support the claim, the Organization would have to prove that the work belonged to Carrier forces, which the Organization failed to do. The Carrier argues that the Organization failed to offer any evidence that the Carrier violated any Agreement Rule when it contracted the work in question, so the instant claim must be denied.
The Carrier contends that as a matter of common sense, the work of maintaining electrical gear boxes and motors on a bridge is professional Electrician work. Moreover, when repairs are required, a professional Machinist is needed for Form 1 Award No. 39522
the repairs to the gear box. The Carrier contends that although it does not concede that the work of removing and repairing electrical motors and electrical equipment is reserved to any of its employees, it would appear that the Carrier's System Electricians have a better claim than do B&B employees, while Carrier Machinists could have a claim to the work of repairing the gear box. The Carrier argues that the Organization failed to present any evidence to support its assertion that the cited work is B&B work.
The Carrier points out that the Organization failed to support any of its assertions with probative evidence. The Carrier asserts that it is well established that unsupported, self-serving statements are not evidence and cannot take the place of probative evidence. It insists that the work in question was not that of B&B employees, and it should be performed by a qualified Electrician or a professional Machinist. Inspection and maintenance of gear boxes and electrical motors, quite simply, is outside the scope of the Agreement. Moreover, the Carrier argues that any reference to the performance of this work on the Southern Pacific Eastern Lines is anachronistic because the Claimants no longer are employed by the SP. The Carrier contends that all of the Organization's arguments must fail for lack of proof.
The Carrier goes on to point out that because the Organization alleged an exclusive right to perform the work, it should be required to prove exclusivity of actual performance. The Carrier asserts, however, that even if the proper test here was something less than "exclusivity," it is clear that the Organization has not satisfied even a lesser burden. There is no proof to support the claims in this case. The Carrier points out that the Organization is relying on the parties' general Scope Rule. Citing prior Awards, the Carrier argues that because the Scope Rule is general, the Organization bears the burden of proving, by clear and convincing evidence, that the claimed work has been exclusively assigned to B&B employees in the past. Because it has not met this burden, the Carrier contends that the Organization's claim must fail.
The Carrier ultimately contends that the instant claim should be denied in its entirety.
The Board reviewed the procedural argument raised by the Carrier and finds that the Organization filed a timely claim in this matter. Form I Award No. 39522
The Board reviewed the record in this case and finds that the Carrier failed to give the General Chairman advance written notice of its plans to contract out the work that is involved in this dispute. Consequently, the Carrier violated Appendix No. 8, Article IV, of the May 17, 1968 National Agreement and the December 11, 1981 Letter of Understanding. Therefore, the claim must be sustained.
In Appendix 8, Article IV, Contracting Out of the National Agreement dated May 17, 1968, the parties agreed:
The Organization contends and has provided evidence that the work that was performed, the inspection and maintenance of gear boxes and engines in the East and West Tower of the Berwick Drawbridge and walkway repair at the Berwick Railroad Bridge at Morgan City, Louisiana, by the outside contractors on February 6, 7, 12, 13, and March 6, 14, and 16, 2003, was maintenance-of-way work. The Board recognizes that the IBEW, another Organization, also claims that work. But it is not necessary that the Organization in this case perform that work exclusively. Exclusivity relates to the Scope Agreement when two different bargaining units are contending for work and one bargaining unit contends that it has the exclusive right to perform that work. In this case, the work that is at issue was performed by an outside contractor and, therefore, the exclusivity argument is not relevant. It is only necessary for the Organization to show that BMWE-represented employees have performed this work on occasions in the past. In this case, the Organization made that showing.
The Carrier in these kinds of cases often has the right to subcontract the very work that is in dispute. In this case, it is very possible that the Carrier had that right. The problem here for the Carrier is that it failed to give the Organization's General Chairman advance written notice of its plans to contract out the work. That is the clear violation of the Agreement that occurred here. The purpose of that section is obvious; the parties have shown their desire to make sure that it is necessary for the Carrier to subcontract work before it hires outside parties to perform work that is usually performed by its own employees. Without notice, the Organization cannot engage in that discussion because it does not even have any indication that the Carrier is going to take that action.
Because the Carrier failed to give the Organization advance written notice of its plans to contract out, this claim must be sustained. As far as the Carrier's position that the Organization failed to raise the notice issue on the property, the record reveals that on April 3, 2003, the first Vice Chairman of the Organization sent a letter to the Assistant Director of Labor Relations and on the last page of that letter stated that no proper notice was given to the General Chairman in regards to the contracting out of the work. Form 1 Award No. 39522
Once the Board has decided to sustain the claim, we must turn our attention to the remedy sought by the Organization. In this case, the Organization seeks pay for two Claimants because they would have been able to perform that work because they hold seniority as Structure Mechanic and Welder. The Board sustains the claim in its entirety and orders that the two Claimants be allowed 32 hours' pay at their respective straight-time rates of pay and twelve hours at their respective time and one-half rates of pay.
This Board, after consideration of the dispute identified above, hereby orders that an award favorable to the Claimant(s) be made. The Carrier is ordered to make the Award effective on or before 30 days following the postmark date the Award is transmitted to the parties.