Form 1 NATIONAL RAILROAD ADJUSTMENT BOARD
THIRD DIVISION
Award No. 43391 Docket No. MW-42693 19-3-NRAB-00003-140299
The Third Division consisted of the regular members and in addition Referee I. B. Helburn when the award was rendered.
(Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes Division - (IBT Rail Conference
PARTIES TO DISPUTE: (
(BNSF Railway Company (Former Burlington Northern (Railroad)
STATEMENT OF CLAIM:
"Claim of the System Committee of the Brotherhood that:
(1) The Agreement was violated when the Carrier assigned outside
forces (Casper Industrial Lubricants) to perform Maintenance of Way and Structures work (remove curve greasers) at various locations on the Canyon Subdivision on September 4, 5 and 6, 2012 (System file C-13-C100-19/10-13-0038 BNR).
(2) The Agreement was further violated when the Carrier failed to
provide the General Chairman with advanced notice of its intent to contract out the aforesaid work or make a good-faith effort to reduce the incidence of subcontracting and increase the use of Maintenance of Way forces as required by Rule 55 and Appendix Y.
(3) As a consequence of the violations referred to in Parts (1) and/or
(2) above, Claimants J. Hytrek and H. Henning shall each be compensated for twenty-four (24) hours at their applicable straight time rates of pay."
FINDINGS:
The Third Division of the Adjustment 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 dispute involved herein.
Parties to said dispute were given due notice of hearing thereon.
This claim arose from the September 4-6¸ 2012 contracting out of the removal of curve greasers to outside forces without the required notice to the Organization. The resulting claim, not resolved on the property, was advanced to this Board. The Claimants all had seniority within their respective Maintenance of Way Department classifications and all were regularly assigned to their respective positions at times relevant. The claim was timely presented, progressed on the property without resolution and is properly before the Board
The Organization asserts that Rules 1, 2, 5 and the Note to Rule 55 established the disputed work as that of the Carrier's Maintenance of Way and Structures Department. (1)The evidence shows that Maintenance of Way employees with appropriate seniority in the appropriate classes have done the disputed historically done this fundamental maintenance work which is reserved to the bargaining unit. The Organization does not have to establish the disputed work as exclusively that of the affected the Claimants, but only that historically the work has been done by Maintenance of Way employees. There is no mutually recognized past practice that would allow the work to be contracted out.
The Carrier failed to provide the proper minimum fifteen- (15) day notice required by the Note to Rule 55 and Appendix Y or to act in good faith to reduce subcontracting. Both provisions specify the only conditions under which work may be contracted out, but even when those conditions may exist, the Carrier must still inform the Organization of the intent to contract out and discuss this if asked. Appendix Y is an applicable, binding agreement. The Carrier's reliance on a BMWE/Northern Pacific Letter of agreement is misplaced. While there are similarities to Appendix Y, there are important differences so that the Board should give no weight to the document.
The Organization further contends that the Carrier has not presented a valid defense to the instant claim. Moreover, because the Carrier did not provide the required notice of intent to contract out, the Board should not consider the defenses. The Organization has presented a prima facie claim that shifts the burden of proof to the Carrier to show that the claim is not valid. However, the disputed work obviously was contracted out. The Carrier's contention that special equipment was lacking should not be considered because there was no notice or conference and because the Carrier has not identified specific equipment or skills that were lacking. This contention simply attempts to shift the burden of proof to the Organization. The Carrier's contention that the curve oiler position went unbid for three bid cycles before the subcontracting has no merit because there is no proof that this happened or that there were no qualified employees. The Carrier's "purchase" or FOB defense is without merit. How the material was purchased is irrelevant as the work was scope covered, notice was still required and no contract with Casper Industrial Lubricants was ever produced. This was clearly Organization work that was contracted out and who delivered the material is irrelevant as the work fell within the scope of the Note to Rule 55. The argument that there were scheduling difficulties is a red herring, as track windows would had to have been obtained regardless of who did the work. Dates were scheduled for the outside forces and could have been scheduled for Maintenance of Way employees as well.
The remedy set forth in the claim is appropriate as it would make the Claimants whole for lost work opportunities and would protect the integrity of the Agreement. That the Claimants were fully employed on the days in question should not deprive them of remedies. The Carrier could have rescheduled the work had it chosen to do so. The Organization has the right to designate the Claimants who would receive remedies should the claim be sustained.
For reasons summarized below, the Carrier asserts that the claim should be denied. (2)The Organization has not met its burden of proof by providing one selfserving statement "initially suspect as to . . . its accuracy and veracity" to show that the disputed work was that of the Carrier's employees. The statement is not probative evidence. Nor has the Organization proved that the disputed work was reserved to its members. Rule 1 Scope is a general rule that does not in and of itself reserve work to Maintenance of Way forces. The Organization has not shown that it has done the disputed work "system wide, to the exclusion of others". At best there has been a mixed practice that allows the work to be contracted out. Moreover, as this is a dispute over facts, the "Board must either dismiss the case or rule against the moving party". Rules cited by the Organization do not reserve the work. The Carrier has not violated Appendix Y, which does not restrict contracting out, but "is a statement of the parties' intention to set up a vehicle to discuss reduction in contracting out" . Appendix Y is not applicable unless the Organization shows that disputed work is reserved to Maintenance of Way employees. Appendix Y does not apply on the property and is not derived from Article IV of the May 17, 1968 National Agreement.
Assuming, arguendo, that the claim is meritorious, no damages are due because the Claimants were fully employed at times relevant. The Organization has not submitted proof of damages and the negotiated agreement has no provisions allowing for liquidated or punitive damages. Moreover, Claimants unavailable for work at times relevant are not to receive damages.
It is well settled that the Organization must prove all elements of its claim. See Third Division Awards 24975, 26219 and 36208. The eyewitness statement signed by Claimant H. Henning and employees Weaver and Holt documents the outside forces at work on August 9, 2012 and the locations where they were working. Moreover, the Carrier has not denied that outside forces were used. Rather they have defended that use. Therefore, the Organization has made the necessary prima facie case that the work was contracted out.
In addition to making a prima facie case that outside forces were used, the Organization also must provide evidence that the disputed work has been customarily, traditionally and historically--as opposed to exclusively, systemwide--performed by Maintenance of Membership forces. See on-property Third Division Award 40565. In on-property Third Division Award 40564, the Organization's proof that the disputed work was customarily, historically and traditionally performed by Maintenance of Way employees was the Local Chairman's statement that Maintenance of Way forces had done similar work in the past. That Board found that the statement fell short of the required proof. In a statement provided for the claim considered herein, Claimant Henning and two others said that "These greasers were being removed for scheduled Maintenance projects and Maintenance of Way has historically performed all maintenance on these greasers and its well within or (sic) scope to complete these tasks. Assertions in the Organization's on-property correspondence and the above-noted sentence are unsupported assertions without sufficient detail as to precisely the work that was done. When was the work customarily done? At what locations? By whom? Where are the statements by those who performed the work or by those who saw the work being performed by Maintenance of Way forces. Unsupported assertions are not sufficient to carry the Organization's burden of proof. Thus, the claim fails.
AWARD
Claim denied.
ORDER
This Board, after consideration of the dispute identified above, hereby orders that an Award favorable to the Claimant(s) not be made.
NATIONAL RAILROAD ADJUSTMENT BOARD By Order of Third Division
Dated at Chicago, Illinois, this 18th day of January 2019.
All Organization contentions refer to support from previous Third division and
Public Law Board awards, many of them on-property awards. The support will
not be noted in the summary of the Organization's contentions but will be
referenced as appropriate in the analysis that follows.
2. Carrier references to NRAB and PLB decisions, both on-property and
offproperty will not be referenced in this summary but will be
referenced as appropriate in the analysis that follows.