The Third Divan of the Advent Board, upon the whole record and all the evidence, finds that:
The carrier or carriers and the employee or employees involved in this dispute are respectively carrier and employee within the meaning of the Railway Labor Act, as approved June 21,1934.
This Division of the Adjustment Board has jurisdiction over the ate involved herein-
The Organization protested subcontractors performing bridge repair work at MP 108.19 as part of the extensive upgrading of the Carrier's main line and bridges. This extensive project was the result of the Carrier obtaining millions of dollars in funding for the upgrade project.
The Organization maintains that (1) the instant work of performing bridge repairs was clearly work of the Claimants (2) the Carrier did not conduct good faith discussions with the Organization about contracting out and (3) the Claimants were willing and able to perform the work, but the Carrier did not give them a good faith opportunity to have the work assigned to them. By reducing the workforce by more than 50 percent, the Carrier has not operated in good faith and now seeks to avoid having Organization members perform scope covered work through subcontracting. The Organization claims that the Carrier was obligated to supplement its workforce to meet its responsibilities. Form 1 Award No. 39725
The Carrier responds that the repair of the bridge at MP 108.19 did not violate the Agreement because (1) the work ins not covered by the Scope Rule (2) the scope and urgency of the entire project met the requirements of Rule 29 for contracting (3) the Carrier engaged in the notice and conferencing process as required under Rule 29 and (4) stare decisis requires the instant claims to be denied. The record shows that the Carrier's stated reasons for the subcontracting of the upgrading work pertained to the lack of sufficient manpower, as well as special tools and equipment that were required for the work to be completed in a timely manner. The Organization cannot show that work of this extensive nature was customarily or historically performed by Organization represented employees. Moreover, BMWE-represented employees were not adversely affected by this subcontracting because they were fully employed,
We have career reviewed the evidence and find that the Organization failed to prove a violation of the Agreement in this case. The work at MP 108.19 is similar to the work addressed in Third Division Award 37009. That Award dealt with an earlier phase of the extensive upgrading project on the Carrier's line. Here, the Carrier served the Organization with a subcontracting notice on April 23, 2003. The Organization replied on April 29, claiming the notice was vague. The Carrier provided additional information in a letter served April 29, 2003. This letter included the five bridges to be repaired and included the bridge at MP 108.19. The parties conferenced the Carrier's notice on May 8, 2003 and no understanding was reached. While Award 37009 dealt with an earlier phase of the upgrade project, the Carrier's rationale for subcontracting was the same.
As the Board found in Award 37009, we so find here because the Organization failed to prove that (1) work of this extensive nature was reserved to Organization-represented employees under the Scope Rule (2) the work had been historically and customarily performed by them as opposed to contractors or (3) that Rule 29 precluded the Carrier from contracting out work on this extensive upgrade project. Form 1 Award No. 39725
Because the Carrier complied with the notice and conferencing requirements and supported its reasons for contracting the bridge work at MP 108.19, the claim is denied.