Form 1                 NATIONAL RAILROAD ADJUSTMENT BOARD

THIRD DIVISION

Award No. 43919 Docket No. MW-45346 19-3-NRAB-00003-190241

The Third Division consisted of the regular members and in addition Referee Kathryn A. VanDagens when award was rendered.

(Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes Division (IBT Rail Conference

PARTIES TO DISPUTE: (

(National Railroad Passenger Corporation (AMTRAK)

STATEMENT OF CLAIM:

“Claim of the System Committee of the Brotherhood that:

(1)     Theclaim*assubmittedby AssistantGeneralChairmanD.Bealby letter dated November 2, 2017 to Division Engineer T. Mason shall be allowed as presented because it was not disallowed by Division Engineer T. Mason in accordance with Rule 14 (Carrier’s File BMWE-620 NRP).

(2)     As a consequence of the violation referred to in Part (1) above, Claimant S. Humphries must be compensated for eleven and onehalf (11.5) hours at his applicable overtime rate of pay.

*The initial letter of claim will be reproduced within our initial submission.”

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.

Claimant established and holds seniority within the Carrier’s Maintenance of Way Department. On September 11, 12, and 13, 2017, the Carrier assigned junior employe J. Teeter to perform on track flagging protection for outside forces installing overhead power lines at Mile Post 173 in the vicinity of Glenwood, Michigan. The Carrier’s records indicate that Teeter completed eight and a half hours of overtime work flagging for contractors on September 12, 2017 and three and a quarter hours on September 13, 2017. He did not work overtime on September 11, 2017.

By letter dated November 2, 2017, the Organization filed a claim contending that the Carrier violated the Agreement by assigning the junior employe. In a letter dated November 16, 2017, the Carrier denied the claim, but mailed it to an outdated address for the Assistant General Chairman. There is no evidence that Beal received the Carrier’s denial. Thus, on January 16, 2018, Beal appealed the claim and notified the Carrier that because it had failed to respond to the grievance within the sixty-day time limit, the claimwas inproceduraldefaultand must be awarded aspresented.On March 9, 2018, the Carrier responded, stating that the Carrier had timely responded to the claim and attaching the delivery receipts. As the parties were unable to resolve the dispute on-property, it is properly before this Board for final adjudication.

The Organization contends that the sole issue before this Board is whether the claim must be allowed due to the Carrier’s failure to timely disallow the initial Claim, pursuant to Rule 14(1):

“RULE 14 – GRIEVANCES

1.      All claims or grievances other than those involving Discipline must be presented in writing by, or on behalf, of the employee(s) involved, to the supervisor within sixty (60) days from the date of theoccurrenceonwhichtheclaimorgrievanceisbased.Shouldany such claim or grievance be disallowed, the supervisor shall, within sixty (60) days from the date same is filed, notify whoever filed the

claim or grievance (the employee or the representative) in writing of the reasons for such disallowance. If not so notified, the claim or grievance shall be allowed as presented.”

The Organization contends that the Agreement was initially violated when the Carrier assigned a junior employee to perform flagging protection duties for outside forces. The Organization contends that it properly presented a claim to the appropriate Carrier official but did not receive a timely response. The Organization contends that it providedpropernoticeoftheAssistantGeneralChairman’snew address,sotheCarrier had no excuse for failing to properly mail the denial.

The Carrier concedes that it sent its denial to an outdated address but contends thatthisclaimshouldnotbeallowedduetoasimpleclericalerror.TheCarriercontends that it responded to the claimat the firstleveland the Organizationhad the opportunity to respond to the Carrier’s denial and address the merits of the claim.

The Carrier contends that it properly assigned the overtime to Teeter because he performed the samework during his regularshifts andthuswasentitled totheovertime under Rule 11 of the Agreement. The Carrier contends that the Organization failed to address or rebut this argument at its third level appeal. The Carrier takes exception to the request for payment at the overtime rate, especially here where the claimed-against employee was paid at his straight time rate.

The Carrier official denied the claim in a letter but sent the letter to the wrong address, even though two months earlier, the Organization had notified the Carrier of his new address, which appears on the face of the claim filed. The Organization presented evidence that when the Carrier was asked to share the information, its officials replied, “Thanks, David. Noted and will do so.”

When it did not receive the Carrier’s denial, the Organization appealed, asking that the claim be granted on procedural grounds. The Carrier argues that it made a good faith effort to comply and the Organization was able to reply to the denial.

There is precedent that a simple clerical error should not cause a claim to be allowed when a good faith effort to comply was shown. Fourth Division Award 4602. There, however, the Board found that the error occurred due to the actions of both parties because there was no evidence that the Organization had notified the Carrier of

the General Chairman’s new address. The on-property recordhere showsthatboththe Carrier’s file and the letterhead contained the Assistant General Chairman’s new address, but the Carrier official did not send the denial there.

The Organization raised the timeliness argument at its earliest opportunity and again at each appeal. When the Carrier’s denial fails to comply with the specific requirements set forth in Rule 14, the parties’ Agreement requires that the claim shall be allowed as presented. Third Division Award 39957; Third Division Award 36047.

We therefore find because the Carrier failed to timely deny the claim, the claim must be sustained. This decision is based solely on the procedural violation by the Carrier and expresses no opinion on the merits of the claim.

AWARD

Claim sustained.

ORDER

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.

NATIONAL RAILROAD ADJUSTMENT BOARD By Order of Third Division

Dated at Chicago, Illinois, this 28th day of January 2020.