3.06.02
5:10 p.m.
The Providence
Journal presented virtually no defense against the major charges in
its trial on federal labor-law violations this week and last.
The core questions
in the case concern whether an impasse occurred in negotiations
and, if so, whether the Journal responded appropriately.
But Journal
lawyer Richard A. Perras addressed the impasse question only in
his opening arguments -- and even then in a way that prompted the
judge to question his logic.
The issue never
came up again in the company's presentation, nor is it addressed
in documents other than those that chronicle bargaining history.
The Journal's
defense was so feeble that the National Labor Relations Board prosecutors
are considering asking the NLRB Regional Director for permission
to try to force the Journal to pay for the board's costs in prosecuting
the case. Typically, the NLRB seeks to recoup costs only when a
company's position is plainly without merit.
A company can
declare impasse and impose terms of employment when extensive good-faith
bargaining fails to yield an agreement. But the evidence presented
at trial points to bad-faith bargaining and delay tactics by the
Journal.
The only testimony
on bargaining came from Guild Administrator Tim Schick. Even someone
unfamiliar with labor issues, hearing Schick's account, would be
hard-pressed to sympathize with the company's point of view.
Detailing the
bargaining session by session, Schick described how the Guild made
offers, how the company rejected those offers but made few changes
in their own proposal, and how the company then gradually imposed
on workers selected terms of its original contract proposal.
Two
types of other charges
The other charges
against the Journal can be divided into two categories: allegations
that the company failed to provide timely responses to the Guild's
requests for information, and allegations of numerous unilateral
changes in working conditions.
On the information
issue, the company defended itself by cross-examining Schick --
which is like doing catechism with the Pope. There was not one moment
of bargaining history, not one subsection of the contract, that
Schick was not thoroughly acquainted with.
Perras may
have won a point or two -- Schick's testimony, for example, suggested
that one information request may have been overbroad -- but his
cross-examination served primarily to give Schick fresh opportunities
to promote the Guild's case. On a couple of occasions, Perras's
questions even opened the door for Schick to mention Journal misdeeds
that were not part of the trial.
The Journal
also had Human Resources Director Thomas J. McDonough testify on
the information requests. McDonough appeared so befuddled and hesitant
that it seemed apparent that he is not a key decision-maker. In
one instance McDonough did respond with confidence and clarity --
but his answer backed up the Guild's position.
Perras, a partner
with the prestigious law firm of Edwards & Angell, has spent
many bargaining sessions and grievance meetings with McDonough at
his side and Schick across the table from him. He must have known
how these witnesses would perform -- and he must have had nothing
better to offer on his client's behalf.
It probably
did not escape the judge's notice that McDonough, who attended every
bargaining session, was never asked to testify about bargaining.
Unilateral
changes defense
The Journal
reserved most of its firepower for the charges of unilateral changes,
bringing in seven managers as witnesses in arguably the least important
part of the case.
These charges
involved the sort of issue that would normally be handled by grievances
and arbitration. Under an expired contract, the Guild can file grievances,
but except in limited situations, it cannot seek arbitration. The
unilateral-change charges involve cases of alleged contract violations
that the Guild grieved and the company rejected. With arbitration
unavailable, the Guild filed unfair-labor-practice charges.
The Journal
probably won a few rounds in this arena.
When Advertising
Director Maura Brodeur testified that the ads in a special business
section, sold by a subcontractor, were no different from the ads
that the company normally accepts from advertising agencies, the
NLRB (in consultation with the Guild) decided to drop the charge
that the company had farmed out bargaining-unit work.
City editor
Susan Areson's testimony about a training program for sports editors
left questions about how late employees worked the night in question
and how much overtime they were owed.
In other cases,
the documents will clarify what testimony left ambiguous. Jack Simeone,
special projects manager, testified that security changed little
in May 2001, when the NRLB alleges the company eliminated 24-hour
security at Fountain Street. This assertion is not only contrary
to the experience of anyone who walked in and out the building during
that time -- it is contradicted in a letter to the Guild from Perras.
The NLRB lawyers will surely note the inconsistency in their brief.
Interesting
but not crucial
Some aspects
of the trial that held great interest to readers of these reports
are actually not very important to the Guild's case.
No one will
forget Managing Editor Pat Welker's attempt to discredit Editorial
Assistant Doreen Tracey, but Welker's action will probably have
little bearing on the outcome. Even if the judge believes that Tracey
deliberately misrepresented her work on one time sheet way back
in 1998, the facts of the issue at hand remain uncontested: In previous
years Tracey received a differential for doing graduation lists;
in 2000, the company stopped paying it. (The Guild has requested,
but not yet received, a copy of the time sheet for Tracey to review;
Tracey denies doing anything improper.)
And while it's
amusing that Welker and Areson fingered each other for cutting off
"small grid" differentials to copy editors, their disagreement
doesn't really matter. They agreed about the issues that are critical
to the Guild: Both testified that the company changed a pay policy
without informing or involving the Guild
What it all
means for Guild members
Guild members
have looked forward to the NLRB trial as chance to seek justice.
Now that we've had our day in court, we must face what we've known
all along -- that justice will be delayed, and delayed, and delayed.
The trial was
repeatedly postponed for almost a year. Yesterday, when the company
refused to allow a separate hearing for additional charges that
the NLRB is likely to file, the prospect of further delays arose.
If additional charges are filed, the same judge will have to return
to Rhode Island, probably in late summer or early fall, to hear
the new charges before issuing a ruling.
And the Journal,
ever litigious and dilatory, is likely to appeal the ruling as far
as it can take it.
Meanwhile,
though, virtually all the terms of our expired contract remain in
effect. Members still have the protection of union representation,
and the Guild still effectively protects their interests. Recently
the Guild stepped in to ensure that an intern transferred to the
Sports Department was hired as a reporter at full reporter's pay.
A few days before the trial began, the Guild won an important arbitration
ruling concerning small grid payments in Features. (A future Guild
Leader newsletter will explain.)
When Belo called
for staff cuts, some 70 people at the unionless Dallas Morning News
were handpicked for layoffs based on managers' whims. At the Journal,
because we have a union, voluntary buyouts were offered instead.
Guild members
know why we need a union here. But only Guild members can preserve
the union. The NLRB may take our issues to court, and it may well
win, but the federal government isn't going to get us a contract.
Only we can do that.
It's not easy
-- but it's possible -- to turn around an intransigent company bent
on destroying a union. But it will require the ongoing efforts --
and endless patience -- of many, many Guild members.
No outside
agency can provide the strength that must come from within.
Felice
J. Freyer is the Providence Journal's award-winning medical
writer. She joined the paper in 1982 and was assigned to the medical
beat in 1989. A member of the Guild's Executive Committee since
1994, she has taken a leave from the newspaper to cover the trial.
There is
much more information about the dispute at the Guild's main website,
www.riguild.org. E-mail the
Guild at png@riguild.org. The
union's mailing address is: The Providence Newspaper Guild, 270
Westminster St., Providence, RI 02903. Telephone: (401) 421-9466.
FAX: (401) 421-9495.
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