Milwaukee County cannot reduce employee hours to address projected
budget shortfall
The circuit court vacated the arbitration award that prevented
Milwaukee County from cutting employee hours. But the appeals court
reversed the circuit court, ruling that the arbitrator had authority to
make the award.
By Joe Forward, Legal Writer,
State Bar of Wisconsin
Dec. 28,
2010 – The District I Wisconsin appeals court recently upheld an
arbitration award that said Milwaukee County could not reduce employee
hours without a board resolution.
After Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker, Wisconsin’s
governor-elect, projected a $14.9 million deficit in the 2009 budget, he
ordered department heads to cut employee work-weeks by five hours per
week to save an estimated $4.5 million.
David Eisner, the local union president of Milwaukee District Council
48, filed a grievance on behalf of all union members affected by the
order. The arbitrator ruled that, under the bargaining agreement, the
county could only reduce employee hours “temporarily,” and
Walker’s order was considered “permanent” because it
would exceed 45 days.
The arbitrator next looked to Milwaukee County General Ordinance
section 17.28 to determine that increases or decreases in employee hours
cannot be changed without a resolution by the county board, and the
board did not pass a resolution.
Relying on a 1975 umpire’s ruling cited by the county, the
circuit court vacated the arbitrator’s award, ruling that
Eisner’s grievance could not trigger arbitration because Eisner
was not personally impacted by the reduced-hours order.
In Milwaukee
County District Council 48 v. Milwaukee County, 2010AP535 (Dec.
21, 2010), the appeals court reversed the circuit court and upheld the
arbitrator’s award, ruling that the arbitrator was not bound by
the 1975 umpire’s ruling.
“[T]he collective-bargaining contract itself makes the
Arbitrator the final word on whether there is arbitration jurisdiction
under the collective bargaining contract,” wrote Judge Ralph Fine.
“This is a significant grant of authority … by the
collective-bargaining contract.”
The appeals court explained that a circuit court cannot overturn an
arbitration award unless an arbitrator manifestly disregards the law,
exceeds powers through perverse misconstruction, the award is illegal,
or the award violates a strong public policy. The appeals court ruled
that none of those factors were present in this case.
“It thus makes no difference if courts disagree with the
Arbitrator’s analysis or even if that analysis is
‘wrong,’” Fine wrote.
Because the bargaining agreement gave the arbitrator vested authority
to decide whether the parties’ collective bargaining agreement
allowed the county to unilaterally reduce the union members’
hours, the arbitrator’s decision should be upheld, the appeals
court ruled. The appeals court reversed and remanded with directions to
the circuit court.