Sunday, May 14, 2006

Guarantee Shortages - Sharp Practice

From:>From: gilgore1@gmail.com [mailto:gilgore1@gmail.com] Sent: Friday, May 12, 2006 5:00 AMTo: All BLET UP Southern Region GCA Subject: Guarantee Shortage Brothers, Attached you will find two awards dealing with employees allegedly engaging in sharp practice of using compensated leave strategically to enhance entitlement to guarantee payments. In my inquiry to the other BLET Up General Chairmen, Brother Hannah provided some earlier awards from the West addressing this same issue. (SBA 18 Awards 5503 and 3636 dated in 1983 and 1962 respectively). Neither the UTU or BLET General Chairmen are in agreement with Union Pacific’s position on these awards. I have been informed that some of our officers are using these decisions in the form of recruiting tools to gain trainmen members. I am formally requesting that practice to cease immediately. These issues have been looming on the horizon for sometime with the previous two awards attached dating back to 1962 and 1983. We are in the boat together on this and fighting and badmouthing each other will only further the Carrier’s agenda. The January 27, 2006 letter from President’s Hahs and Thompson announced a cooperative effort on the National level to deal with the carriers in this round of bargaining. This type of effort has been going on for quite some time at the General Committee level between our office, and Brothers Johnson and Bumpurs offices. We (Johnson, Bumpurs and I) have been united in our efforts to secure a long overdue ebb and flow (home rule) agreement only to have the Carrier balk and cancel our last meeting scheduled for our office in New Orleans this week. Make no mistake who our real enemy is…. UPRR. Brother Johnson is currently pursuing an agenda to have these awards negated in another venue that you will be apprised about at a later date. We are supporting that effort and these awards hit the property via the below response received from Randy Guidry to me on a guarantee shortage case we were dealing with. This documentation was distributed for informational purposes only and was not intended to be used against anyone in a negative way. If that is going on, please cease and desist that activity immediately and let’s focus on the real enemy of rail labor. With that said, below is a work history from one of our members who has been shorted guarantee for the first half of April. Another case has been brought to our attention as well. We are working to handle both of these cases and will keep you apprised of further developments. I have communicated with the other 5 BLET GCAs on this issue and received the attached response from two of them regarding similar problems on their property. It is imperative that we notify the membership that we believe UP’s position here to be erroneous and we will come out with instructions on how they are to deal with this problem as soon as we have completed our investigation into remedies available to address this issue. For the time being, do not submit any claims into our system on this issue until further notice. I would also ask that you review Guidry’s response below to keep yourself fully apprised of this issue. I will put out further information next week after consultation with the National Division. Gil -----Original Message----- From: Gil Gore [mailto:thegores1@cox.net] Sent: Monday, May 08, 2006 9:08 AM To: 'Mark Rogers' Subject: FW: MT Rogers Guarantee Shortage -----Original Message----- From: RPGUIDRY@up.com [mailto:RPGUIDRY@up.com] Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2006 2:35 PM To: Gil Gore Cc: ROROSCO@up.com; FRANKATAMISIEA@UP.COM; SFBOONE@up.com; VLWARREN@UP.COM Subject: Re: MT Rogers Guarantee Shortage This refers to our discussion this date concerning Mr. M. T Rogers and my commitment to review facts and circumstances. Attached below are Awards 1 and 2 from Special Board of Adjustment created by Agreement dated August 10, 2005. These two recent decisons underscored several employment relationship fundamentals. First and foremost, the stable income provided an employee assigned to any Guaranteed Board (or circumstance) is only one-half of the equation. The other half of the equation - the quid pro quo for the guarantee - is the employee’s contractual obligation to provide reliable, full time service and remain available for call. All guarantees, specifically and implicitly, are designed to assure employees will perform service as intended and contemplate that employees will protect their assignment on a full time basis. Moreover, all Agreements that are signed by the parties hold to this expectation. Neutral Binau affirmed that perspective in relevant part: “… The Board finds that the overall intent of the agreements is to pay employees assigned to Guaranteed Extra Boards and Supplemental Extra Boards fixed amounts of pay subject to availability. The Board also agrees that the quid pro quo for the guarantee is the obligation of Extra Board and Supplemental Extra Board employees to remain available for call. The principle is supported by Decision 5503 of Special Board No. 18 which held: ‘The quid pro quo of trainmen availability for a guaranteed income is implicit in the rule’.” Awards 1 and 2, as well as the several other on property precedents, have likewise held that Agreements providing for guaranteed income are not intended to be manipulated to provide a monetary windfall and it is “proper for the Carrier to deny guarantee payments” when an employee attempts to do so. Moreover, the purpose of single day vacation and personal leave days, “ was to allow an employee to take care of personal business or family obligations that are difficult to achieve when protecting a pool or extra board.” Single day vacations, personal leave days and/or non-compensated layoffs are not to be used or chained together to avoid work obligations. Such conduct violates the basic underpinnings of the employer-employee relationship and inauspiciously affects co-workers. employees, including those assigned to guaranteed boards, are reviewed when they fail to demonstrate consistent patterns of work following and/or between reasonable absences (compensated or non-compensated). In Mr. Rogers case, his absences were highlighted by chaining single day vacation days to avoid working eight days from March 30 through April 6, 2006, chaining compensated days and non-compensated days to avoid working eight days April 12 through April 19, 2006 and again April 28 through April 30, 2006. With respect to Mr. Rogers' laying off for union business on Saturday, April 29 and Sunday April 30, Union Pacific and several respected labor arbitrators apply the twin concepts of reasonableness and undue burden as limitations upon requests for leaves of absence for Union activities. What these two concepts mean, when construed together with regularity of attendance, is that if the union activity in question reasonably can be done on off-duty time without encroaching on work hours, it should be done then. In such case the need of the Company for services exceeds the need to be absent from work, which is what undue burden means. Given the amount of guarantee in question and time off during the month, there was a considerable time available to have scheduled and completed union activities without encroaching on work hours. Replacing an absent extra board employee ordinarily places an undue burden and added expense. A concept of reasonableness requires accommodation by both sides. Any perceived entitlement to extra board guarantee for service under the auspices of union activities and chaining together layoffs is simply not reasonable by any measure nor is it supported by the agreement. Case 1, Award 1 Case 2, Award 2 (See attached file: Priv Arb 040 A001.pdf) (See attached file: Priv Arb 040 A002.pdf) "Gil Gore" Subject: MT Rogers Guarantee Shortage 05/02/2006 01:14 Randy, Here is the info we discussed on the phone regarding MT Rogers Guarantee Shortage Please get back to me. Gil (See attached file: Rogers MT PSW.pdf)(See attached file: Rogers MT PSG.pdf)

From gilgore1gmailco



From: gilgore1@gmail.com [mailto:gilgore1@gmail.com] Sent: Friday, May 12, 2006 5:00 AMTo: All Local Chairmen BLET UP Southern RegionSubject: Guarantee Shortage

Brothers,

Attached you will find two awards dealing with employees allegedly engaging in sharp practice of using compensated leave strategically to enhance entitlement to guarantee payments.  In my inquiry to the other BLET Up General Chairmen, Brother Hannah provided some earlier awards from the West addressing this same issue. (SBA 18 Awards 5503 and 3636 dated in 1983 and 1962 respectively).  Neither the UTU or BLET General Chairmen are in agreement with Union Pacific’s position on these awards.  I have been informed that some of our officers are using these decisions in the form of recruiting tools to gain trainmen members.  I am formally requesting that practice to cease immediately.  These issues have been looming on the horizon for sometime with the previous two awards attached dating back to 1962 and 1983.  We are in the boat together on this and fighting and badmouthing each other will only further the Carrier’s agenda.  The January 27, 2006 letter from President’s Hahs and Thompson announced a cooperative effort on the National level to deal with the carriers in this round of bargaining.  This type of effort has been going on for quite some time at the General Committee level between our office, and Brothers Johnson and Bumpurs offices.  We (Johnson, Bumpurs and I) have been united in our efforts to secure a long overdue ebb and flow (home rule) agreement only to have the Carrier balk and cancel our last meeting scheduled for our office in New Orleans this week.  Make no mistake who our real enemy is…. UPRR.   Brother Johnson is currently pursuing an agenda to have these awards negated in another venue that you will be apprised about at a later date.  We are supporting that effort and these awards hit the property via the below response received from Randy Guidry to me on a guarantee shortage case we were dealing with.  This documentation was distributed for informational purposes only and was not intended to be used against anyone in a negative way.  If that is going on, please cease and desist that activity immediately and let’s focus on the real enemy of rail labor.
   
With that said, below is a work history from one of our members who has been shorted guarantee for the first half of April.  Another case has been brought to our attention as well.  We are working to handle both of these cases and will keep you apprised of further developments.  I have communicated with the other 5 BLET GCAs on this issue and received the attached response from two of them regarding similar problems on their property.  It is imperative that we notify the membership that we believe UP’s position here to be erroneous and we will come out with instructions on how they are to deal with this problem as soon as we have completed our investigation into remedies available to address this issue.  For the time being, do not submit any claims into our system on this issue until further notice.  I would also ask that you review Guidry’s response below to keep yourself fully apprised of this issue.

I will put out further information next week after consultation with the National Division.

Gil

Insert Image

-----Original Message-----
From: RP GUIDRY  
Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2006 2:35 PM
To: Gil Gore
Subject: Re: MT Rogers Guarantee Shortage

      This refers to our discussion this date concerning Mr. M. T Rogers
and my commitment to review facts and circumstances.

      Attached  below  are  Awards 1 and 2 from Special Board of Adjustment
created  by  Agreement  dated  August 10, 2005.  These two recent decisions
underscored   several   employment  relationship  fundamentals.  First  and
foremost, the stable income provided an employee assigned to any Guaranteed
Board (or circumstance) is only one-half of the equation. The other half of
the  equation  -  the  quid  pro  quo for the guarantee - is the employee’s
contractual  obligation  to  provide reliable, full time service and remain
available  for  call.  All  guarantees,  specifically  and  implicitly, are
designed   to  assure  employees  will  perform  service  as  intended  and
contemplate  that  employees  will  protect their assignment on a full time
basis. Moreover, all Agreements that are signed by the parties hold to this
expectation. Neutral Binau affirmed that perspective in relevant part:

      “…  The  Board  finds that the overall intent of the agreements is to
      pay  employees  assigned  to Guaranteed Extra Boards and Supplemental
      Extra  Boards fixed amounts of pay subject to availability. The Board
      also agrees that the quid pro quo for the guarantee is the obligation
      of  Extra  Board  and  Supplemental  Extra  Board employees to remain
      available  for  call.  The principle is supported by Decision 5503 of
      Special  Board  No.  18  which  held:  ‘The  quid pro quo of trainmen
      availability for a guaranteed income is implicit in the rule’.”

      Awards  1 and 2, as well as the several other on property precedents,
have  likewise held that Agreements providing for guaranteed income are not
intended to be manipulated to provide a monetary windfall and it is “proper
for the Carrier to deny guarantee payments” when an employee attempts to do
so. Moreover, the purpose of single day vacation and personal leave days, “
was  to  allow  an  employee  to  take  care of personal business or family
obligations  that  are difficult to achieve when protecting a pool or extra
board.”  Single  day  vacations, personal leave days and/or non-compensated
layoffs  are  not to be used or chained together to avoid work obligations.
Such  conduct  violates  the  basic  underpinnings of the employer-employee
relationship  and  inauspiciously  affects co-workers. Employees, including
those  assigned  to  guaranteed  boards,  are  reviewed  when  they fail to
demonstrate consistent patterns of work following and/or between reasonable
absences (compensated or non-compensated).

      In  Mr. Rogers case, his absences were highlighted by chaining single
day  vacation  days to avoid working eight days from March 30 through April
6,  2006,  chaining  compensated  days  and  non-compensated  days to avoid
working  eight  days  April  12  through  April 19, 2006 and again April 28
through April 30, 2006.

      With  respect  to  Mr.  Rogers'  laying  off  for  union  business on
Saturday, April 29 and Sunday April 30, Union Pacific and several respected
labor  arbitrators  apply  the  twin  concepts  of reasonableness and undue
burden  as  limitations  upon  requests  for  leaves  of  absence for Union
activities.  What  these  two  concepts  mean, when construed together with
regularity  of  attendance,  is  that  if  the  union  activity in question
reasonably  can be done on off-duty time without encroaching on work hours,
it  should  be done then. In such case the need of the Company for services
exceeds  the need to be absent from work, which is what undue burden means.
Given  the  amount  of guarantee in question and time off during the month,
there  was  a  considerable  time available to have scheduled and completed
union  activities  without  encroaching  on work hours. Replacing an absent
extra board employee ordinarily places an undue burden and added expense. A
concept  of  reasonableness  requires  accommodation  by  both  sides.  Any
perceived  entitlement  to  extra  board  guarantee  for  service under the
auspices  of  union  activities and chaining together layoffs is simply not
reasonable by any measure nor is it supported by the agreement.

Gil Gore Wrote

Randy,

Here is the info we discussed on the phone regarding MT Rogers Guarantee
Shortage

Please get back to me.
Gil

 (See attached file: Rogers MT PSW.pdf)(See attached file: Rogers MT
PSG.pdf)

Sunday, May 07, 2006

Labor College plans radioactive waste handling course

From: Gil Gore [mailto:thegores1@cox.net]
Sent: Saturday, May 06, 2006 8:30 AM
To: All Local Chairmen
Subject: Hazmat Training

Labor College plans radioactive waste handling course
CLEVELAND, May 5 — The National Labor College (NLC) is offering a special radioactive materials training course to railroad workers at the George Meany Center during the week of July 10. According to the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), the number of rail shipments involving radioactive materials is expected to increase in coming years. Beginning as early as 2007, the DOE is expected to begin a 38-year project to transport spent nuclear fuel and high level radioactive waste from DOE sites to storage and disposal facilities. With the increase in rail shipments comes the increased risk for rail incidents involving radioactive material. This year, the Rail Workers Hazmat Training Program was awarded funding to provide training to rail workers to increase their knowledge of the transportation of radioactive materials. To meet this training need, during the week of July 10, 2006, the Rail Program will conduct a 3-1/2 day hazmat awareness and security training course combined with a radiological transportation train the trainer course. The 10-hour hazmat awareness and security training course will be followed by a two-day DOE-sponsored Modular Emergency Response Radiological Transportation Training (MERRTT) train the trainer course. All training will be conducted on the George Meany Campus of the National Labor College in Silver Spring, Md.The program will begin on Monday, July 10, at 7 p.m., and end by 3 p.m. on Thursday, July 13. Funding for this course will cover overnight room accommodations and three meals a day at NLC. Limited scholarships are available to cover travel expenses and provide stipends for participants unable to secure paid time off from the railroad, or other sources. Call Carol Rodgers at the Hazmat office (301-439-2440) for more information on scholarships.Since space for this course is limited, completed registration forms should be faxed, mailed or e-mailed to the Hazmat office (see below) as soon as possible. Interested rail workers may also call the Hazmat office to register by phone, or register online:http://www.hazmatgmc.org.Rail Workers Hazardous Materials Training Program10000 New Hampshire AvenueSilver Spring, Maryland 20903(301) 439-2440(301) 628-0165 -faxcrodgers@nationallaborcollege.orgThis training is funded in whole or in part with Federal Funds from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and supplemental funding to support peer training from the North American Railway Foundation (NARF).A copy of the registration form is available as PDF from the BLET website at: http://www.ble-t.org/pr/pdf/DOEtrainingapp.pdf
Friday, May 05, 2006bentley@ble.org
http://www.ble.org/pr/news/newsflash.asp?id=4294
© 2006 Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmenhttp://www.ble.org

FMLA Lawsuit

From: Gil Gore [mailto:thegores1@cox.net] Sent: Monday, January 16, 2006 7:23 PM To: All Local Chairmen BLET UP Southern Region GCA Subject: FW: FMLA Lawsuit Brothers, I have sent the attached communication to John Marchant via overnight delivery (Click here to view in PDF) regarding the FMLA lawsuit filed by BLET and various other unions. Please advise everyone who is having compensated days deducted from them to claim time as outlined below for each compensated day that they lose. I will advise you regarding the response received. Fraternally, Gil Gore From: Gil Gore [mailto:gilgore@bletsr.org] Sent: Friday, January 13, 2006 1:28 PM To: All Local Chairmen BLET Southern Region Subject: FMLA Lawsuit Brothers, I have been verbally advised by Union Pacific that their attorneys are considering appealing the FMLA decision rendered by the United States District Court Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. (Case No. 03 C 9419 and consolidated Case No 04 C 163). We have also been advised that UP intends to continue enforcement of their policy until that appeals process is complete. I am circulating a letter now internally that will go to Marchant on this issue the first part of next week. The same will be provided to you when it has been determined that my language will cause no problems with handling of our court case. In the meantime, I suggest that all members who are forced to take compensated leave when laid off Family Medical Leave, should submit a claim for each day compensation is forced on them using the following language: This claim for a basic day is being processed without prejudice to the organization’s position that the carrier’s revised FMLA policy is unenforceable because it was implemented unilaterally in violation of the carrier’s status quo and bargaining obligations under the Railway Labor Act and in violation of the Family and Medical Leave Act. The organization is litigating that issue in federal court. The carrier has refused to suspend the requirements of the contract claims process until that dispute is resolved. Therefore, the organization is processing this claim at this time to ensure that the contractual requirements are satisfied in the event the court holds that the dispute must be resolved via the Section 3 processes of the Rail Way Labor Act. I will work on a claim code over the weekend and get the same out to you for handling the claims via our online claims process. I will also keep you apprised of further development in this case. Fraternally, Gil Gore