History
Created by the General Court in Chapter 730 of the Acts and Resolves
of 1977, the Joint Labor-Management Committee (JLMC) began operations
in January of 1978 and has, since that time, exercised broad oversight
responsibility for all collective bargaining negotiations between
municipal police officers or firefighters and municipalities in
the Commonwealth. Through mediation and other voluntary forms of
dispute resolution, the JLMC assists labor and management in reaching
negotiated settlements to the disputes that arise over the terms
of collective bargaining agreements. If the dispute persists for
an unreasonably long period, the Committee is empowered by Chapter
589 of the Acts of 1987 to invoke various forms of arbitration.
At the outset of the Committee in 1978, arbitration awards were
binding on the municipality, its executive and legislative branches.
In 1980, Proposition 2-1/2 led the Committee to use only mediation
as a means to resolve disputes. As a consequence the Committee began
to accumulate a significant backlog of unresolved disputes.
In December of 1987, the General Court enacted and the Governor
signed into law Chapter 589 of the Acts and Resolves of 1987, providing
an additional mechanism available to the Committee to resolve disputes
that have proven difficult to settle for a long period. Section
3(a) of that act states that in cases that "have remained unresolved
for an unreasonable period of time resulting in the apparent exhaustion
of the process of collective bargaining" and that "constitute
a potential threat to public welfare" the Committee may invoke
various specified forms of “limited” arbitration. Any
decision resulting from this process, if supported by material and
substantive evidence on the whole record, shall be binding upon
the executive arm of the public employer and upon the employee organization,
subject to the approval of a funding request by the municipal legislative
body (City or Town Council or Town Meeting). The award is limited
in that it is not binding on the legislative body that appropriates
the funds. This dispute resolution process was reaffirmed and made
a continuing part of the Committee's legislation by the General
Court in March of 1990, eliminating a sunset provision.
In fiscal year 1990, the Committee developed, for the first time,
a variation on the limited arbitration process: voluntary limited
arbitration. Under this procedure both management and labor in cases
before the Committee voluntarily agree to use the process outlined
in Section 3(a), that is an arbitration decision that is binding
on the municipal executive, but not on the municipal appropriating
authority, to resolve their dispute. This new voluntary process
that typically reduces elapsed time to a settlement gives the Committee
another variant of a useful tool in assisting communities in resolving
their public safety labor disputes expeditiously.
When a fact-finding or limited arbitration procedure with an outside
neutral is employed, normally a list is circulated to both parties,
allowing them the opportunity to rank the proposed neutrals. By
this process, the parties indicate their preferred joint choice
who is normally appointed by the Committee. On occasions, the Committee
may exercise its authority to appoint a neutral, without sending
the parties a list to be ranked. The cost of the outside neutrals
is borne equally by the parties to the dispute.
The Committee has utilized a variety of dispute resolution techniques
to achieve settlements. In many cases, agreement is achieved by
means of mediation alone, conducted by the JLMC staff field investigators.
In many other cases, senior staff members, committee members or
the Chairman or Vice-Chairman are called upon to assist in the mediation
process. In some cases, the Committee votes to enlist the aid of
an outside neutral to serve as a fact finder (who may or may not
make recommendations), or an arbitrator in a limited form of arbitration.
On occasion, the Committee has appointed an outside neutral as a
special master or conciliator to assist in a particular case.
The Committee is pleased to report that its relationship with
the Board of Conciliation and Arbitration continues to grow and
strengthen. This relationship has allowed the Committee to refer,
on occasion, a few specific cases to the Board or to particular
members of its staff where they have had experience with the parties
involved.
At the end of calendar year 2003, the Massachusetts Joint Labor-Management
Committee will complete twenty-six years of service to the citizens
of the Commonwealth. During this twenty-six year period, the Committee
has utilized a variety of dispute resolution techniques to achieve
resolution in greater than 1765 cases.
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