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Bargaining Structure

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Title: Bargaining Structure


1
Bargaining Structure
  • The structure of bargaining is a broad concept
    referring to the group or groups of employees and
    employers who help determine or are affected by a
    collective agreement.

2
Bargaining Structure
  • Bargaining structure can be thought of as
    consisting of FOUR COMPONENTS which are not
    necessarily distinct
  • Informal Work Group
  • Election Unit
  • Negotiations Unit
  • Unit of Direct Impact

3
Informal Work Group
  • Workers that would have a tendency to have a
    common view of their work environment.
  • It may consist of workers in one or more
    occupations that come into frequent contact with
    each other

4
Election Unit
  • A group or groups of workers that the NLRB feels
    is an appropriate one for the purpose of
    collective bargaining.
  • It is the certified bargaining unit, and it may
    consist of one or more informal work groups

5
Election Unit
  • There are three categories of Election Units
  • Single-employer, Single-location
  • Single-employer, Multi-location
  • Multi-employer

6
Negotiations Unit
  • The Negotiations Unit can be the same as the
    Election Unit, but if both parties agree to a
    broader bargaining unit the Negotiations Unit can
    include more than one Election Unit.

7
Negotiations Unit
  • Negotiations Units may encompass multiple
    Election Units in a single plant, several plants
    of the same employer, or among more than one
    employer.
  • Typically such units involve workers organized by
    the same union. Coalition bargaining is an
    exception.

8
Unit of Direct Impact
  • Extends beyond the boundaries of negotiations
    units. It may cover more than one industry, as
    when settlements by auto companies have a direct
    impact on auto parts companies.

9
The Appropriate Bargaining Unit
  • Before a unit can be elected and certified as a
    representative of a group of employees, the NLRB
    must determine the appropriate bargaining unit
    that the union is to represent.

10
The Appropriate Bargaining Unit
  • If the union and employer can agree on which
    employees should be in the Election Unit, the
    board will run the election in that unit.
  • Absent that agreement the responsibility for
    selecting the appropriate unit rest entirely with
    the board.

11
Unit Determination Standards
  • Since the law provides few guidelines for unit
    determination, the board has developed its own
  • Mutuality or community of interests
  • Geography or physical proximity
  • Employers administrative /
  • territorial division

12
Unit Determination Standards
  • Functional integration
  • Interchange of employees
  • Bargaining history
  • Employee desires
  • Extent of organization
  • Other guidelines may be considered

13
Board Limitations on Certifications
  • The only limitation on the boards authority with
    respect to its unit certification powers relates
    specifically to Professional, Craft, and Guard
    employees.

14
Professional Employees
  • The board is not allowed to include both
    professional and nonprofessional employees in the
    same unit unless a majority of such professional
    employees vote for inclusion in such unit.

15
Craft Employees
  • The board is prohibited from deciding that any
    craft unit is inappropriate for such purposes on
    the ground that a different unit has been
    established by a prior board determination.

16
Guards
  • The board is not permitted to certify guards in
    the same unit as nonguards.

17
Additional Observation on Certifications
  • The board is not required to seek and certify the
    most appropriate or optimal unit
  • The board certifies units based on the jobs or
    job classifications and not on specific
    individuals employed in these classifications.

18
Additional Observation on Certifications
  • And
  • (to be somewhat redundant)
  • Membership in the unit and in the union are not
    necessarily the same.

19
The Craft Bargaining Unit
  • The NLRB has defined a true craft unit as a
    distinct and homogeneous group of skilled
    journeymen, craftsmen, working as such, together
    with apprentices and/or helpers.

20
The Craft Bargaining Unit
  • From the point of view of Industrial Unions, it
    is not desirable to permit craft workers separate
    representations.

21
The Craft Bargaining Unit
  • However,
  • The bargaining status of craft employees within a
    firm depends on the nature of the craft, type of
    industry, collective bargaining history in the
    industry, and, most important, on the policies
    and practices of the NLRB.

22
The Craft Bargaining Unit
  • Employers have a general bias toward bargaining
    with as few unions as possible.
  • Bargaining with multiple units increases costs
    and makes it more difficult to plan reliable
    production and marketing schedules.

23
The NLRB and Craft Bargaining
  • Craft bargaining unit cases can be divided into
    two broad categories
  • Initial Certification
  • Severance Cases

24
The NLRB and Craft Bargaining
  • In both instances, the NLRB has to decide whether
    the craft satisfies the appropriate criteria for
    certification.
  • It should be noted, however, that it is easier
    for a craft to gain separate certification rights
    when there is no successful history of collective
    bargaining within the context of a larger unit.

25
Craft Certification Criteria
  • The craft employees are unrepresented.
  • They are engaged in traditional craft work that
    is performed in a separate and distinct location
    apart from other employees.
  • They have a separate community of interests and
    do not interchange with other employees.
  • The union seeking recognition is a craft union
    traditionally representing the craft in question.

26
Craft Certification Criteria
  • The board, confronted with the dilemma between
    the right of self-determination of craft
    employees and a potential threat to stability in
    industrial relations, will typically opt for
    stability.

27
Significance of Board Certification Decisions
  • The certification not only acts as a catalyst to
    collective bargaining, but it also influences
    collective bargaining outcomes.
  • Although the parties are free to expand
    bargaining beyond the unit selected by the board
    this initial selection by the board establishes
    the required basis for bargaining.

28
Significance of Board Certification Decisions
  • A union considers several factors when deciding
    on its desired unit
  • The predominant factor seems to be its
    ability to win and election.
  • Sometimes its agreeing to the employers desired
    unit in order to get a quick election
  • A third set of factors involves attempts to
    maximize the units potential bargaining power.

29
Significance of Board Certification Decisions
  • Employers favor election units in which it would
    be difficult for a union to organize and obtain a
    majority.
  • Employers usually favor large election units
    primarily because it is more difficult for unions
    to win elections in such units.
  • There is less solidarity in large units, and
    Management has more staffing flexibility when all
    of its employees are in one large unit.

30
Significance of Board Certification Decisions
  • In the end, which side has the upper hand in
    determining size of bargaining units may depend
    on the boards political coloration at the moment.

31
The Structure of Collective Bargaining in the
United States
  • Two thirds (66.6) of employees covered by
    collective bargaining agreements in the United
    States are in situations where the actual
    negotiation area, represented by the people
    sitting at the bargaining table, is different
    from the area covered by the NLRB Certification.

32
Bargaining Structure Union and Management
Interests
  • Union bargaining interest is described as being
    either narrow, as in a craft union representing
    workers with a narrow group of skills, or broad,
    as in an industrial union representing all
    employees in an industry.

33
Bargaining Structure Union and Management
Interests
  • Management interests are either centralized, as
    in multiemployer or single-employer multiplant
    negotiations, or decentralized, as in
    single-employer, single-plant bargaining.

34
Determinants of Bargaining Structure
  • The term bargaining structure denotes a
    multiplicity of units tied together in a
    complicated network of relationships by social,
    legal, administrative and economic factors.

35
Market Factors
  • Both employers and unions take into account the
    market context when devising the dimensions of
    bargaining structures.
  • Under conditions of sever product market
    competition, some employers have opted for
    multiemployer bargaining to reduce at least one
    aspect of competitive pressure.

36
Bargaining Issues and Structures
  • Bargaining issues can be classified as
  • Market-wide - (wages)
  • Company-wide - (benefits)
  • Local - (plant rules)
  • Current tend is toward more decentralized
    bargaining - more emphasis on productivity and
    job security.

37
Representational Factors
  • Individual firms and unions are sometimes willing
    to enter into comprehensive alliances in order to
    increase their bargaining power.

38
The Impact of Government
  • The bargaining unit decisions of the NLRB
    undoubtedly shape and influence the
    characteristics and nature of the present
    bargaining structure.

39
Power Tactics
  • Each party seeks to develop bargaining structures
    that would maximize their bargaining power.
  • Multiplant employers engaged in the production of
    the same product in a number of plants, would
    typically opt for a structure that consists of
    individual single-plant bargaining units.
    Vertically integrated production units would
    incline the employer in the opposite direction.
    And of course the union would object.

40
Individual Employee Influence
  • Individual influence is perhaps greatest in
    narrow, decentralized bargaining units where the
    union represents only one occupation and
    negotiations are with a single employer, perhaps
    at the plant level.

41
The Multiemployer Bargaining Unit
  • When a number of employers join forces for
    purposes of collective bargaining, the unit
    structure is described as a multiemployer
    bargaining unit.
  • Sometimes agreements negotiated by a few large
    employers are also signed by smaller employers,
    who may agree to essentially the same terms as
    those approved by a larger employer.

42
The Multiemployer Bargaining Unit
  • The primary form of bargaining in the
  • Transportation,
  • Food Products and,
  • Apparel Industries

43
Effects of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • Competitive pressures are the dominant force
    encouraging both unions and employers to enter
    into multiemployer or industry-wide bargaining
    relationships.

44
Effects of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • Small employers in highly competitive and
    labor-intense fields may find it easier to
    operate with uniformity of labor costs.

45
Effects of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • The multiemployer unit is particularly
    advantageous to both sides in industries composed
    of many small, financially weak employers.
  • (Neutralize the cost of benefits.)

46
Effects of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • Multiemployer bargaining provides both unions and
    management with significant cost savings in
    negotiation of labor agreements.

47
Effects of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • On the down side, multiemployer bargaining may
    overlook the needs of various employee groups,
    and ignore particular requirements of individual
    employers.
  • (causing high levels of internal stress)

48
Effects of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • It should also be noted that multiemployer
    agreements are much more difficult to conclude
    than the single-employer contracts.

49
Effects of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • In some multiemployer units, master contracts
    cover only items such as wages and major
    benefits, with other issues negotiated at the
    local level.

50
Bargaining Power in the Multiemployer Unit
  • There are a number of reasons for employers
    forming multiemployer units
  • Some give up power to lessen competition in the
    product market, or to achieve industrial peace
    and greater stability in labor relations.

51
Bargaining Power in the Multiemployer Unit
  • Some employers have a need for a countervailing
    power in the face of strong unions.
  • Some unions also favor mutiemployer bargaining as
    means of increasing their power.

52
Bargaining Power in the Multiemployer Unit
  • In some instances, the bargaining power of a
    union may decline under industry-wide bargaining.
  • And in some instances it may be in the interest
    of the union to give up some of its power as a
    means of satisfying its other objectives. The
    survival of the firm.

53
The Pros and Cons of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • One consequence of multiemployer bargaining is
    uniformity of contract terms.
  • There is opposition to such standardization on
    the grounds that it may be detrimental to the
    public interest.

54
The Pros and Cons of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • One of the major counters to this criticism is
    that this type of bargaining has reduced the
    frequency of strikes and produced more stable and
    mature labor relations.
  • Additionally, the level of expertise and
    sophistication of negotiators on both sides is
    considerably higher.

55
The Law and Mutiemployer Bargaining
  • Although establishment of multiemployer
    bargaining is done on a consensual basis, the
    NLRB does impose some constraints on union and
    management behavior.
  • Under Supreme Court law, either side may withdraw
    at any time before negotiations actually begin as
    long as notice is given to the other side.

56
The Future of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • The number of employers and workers covered by
    multiemployer labor contracts have significantly
    declined over the past 15 years.
  • The nature of the external environment is
    changing the focus of negotiations from industry
    stability to international competitiveness.

57
The Future of Multiemployer Bargaining
  • If the key issues continue to be those best
    addressed at the firm or plant level, such as
    productivity, job classifications, work rules,
    performance-based pay, and job security, the
    trend toward decentralization of bargaining may
    be expected.

58
Coordinated or Coalition Bargaining
  • These terms refer to two or more unions seeking
    to negotiate similar terms with an employer.
  • In its strong form, one master agreement might be
    signed covering all employees of all unions.

59
Coordinated or Coalition Bargaining
  • The unions target of coordinated bargaining is
    the large multiplant corporation with an
    objective of increasing their bargaining power.

60
Coordinated or Coalition Bargaining
  • Some National unions suffer a lack of power when
    they compete.
  • One way to improve their position and to achieve
    a greater uniformity of terms in an industry is
    to employ coordination.

61
Coordinated or Coalition Bargaining
  • The main reason some employers have opposed
    coordinated bargaining is potential loss of
    bargaining power.
  • Employer consent is generally withheld in most
    large multiplant employer environments.

62
Pattern Bargaining
  • An informal means of spreading the terms and
    conditions of employment negotiated on one formal
    bargaining structure to another.
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