Those who negotiate union contracts
njjel
1,235 Posts
For the formite who are part of a contract negotiation team, what number of members are on your negotiation team and why? I have always thought there should be at least 3 members on management's side of the table. Also who serves on the team and why?
Comments
1)Me, because I love that kind of work!
2)Personnel Analyst - She takes notes of the process and does analysis of cost, comparables, etc. Also for input/suggestions when I can't see the big picture.
3)At least one management member who understands how current language or changes will actually affect the day-to-day function of the department(s) involved. To keep me from making mistakes, and to keep us moving toward a usable product. Again, for input/suggestions and to answer questions about function.
In our case, just two -- myself and the director of finance who was chosen for her working knowledge of the agency’s policies and procedures and her uncanny ability to recall minute details. Obviously, one is not enough, but who and how many you need beyond that depends on the union(s) you are negotiating with and the complexity of the issues being negotiated. My rule of thumb is the fewer, the better. We may occasionally bring in someone to address a specific concern, but for the most part, just two.
GENO, SPHR
The last one I was in, I was the lead negotiator, the CFO, to whom I reported, was present, the director of manufacturing and his boss, a Vice President over engineering and manufacturing. I had given all supervisors and managers two months to submit to me their ideas in written format for changes to the contract, and we had at least five meetings to iron those out before negotiations.
The orchestration part was the minority owner (money wise) appeared on the third day and the primary, majority owner, appeared on next to last day.
Of course all of us, whether in the room or not, met constantly in the room reserved for that purpose, throughout the day and at night to keep our ducks organized.
As things developed and were reduced to the more important issues toward the end of the week, the primary owner came in for the morning and listened and talked a bit and announced that he and his family were leaving for a week tomorrow. That shocked the union into knowing they needed to cut bait or fish and either sit on their hands for a week till he got back or accept one of our packages. They knew he had the final say on lots of proposals.
I'll say this though; we should have had the accounting expert in there. As it was, he was not invited, but we constantly were on the phone to him and had him working into the evenings providing numbers on all the scenarios. It would have served the purpose better had he been at the table, listening and calculating.
There's also something to be said for 'numbers'. You will get your share of the credit but not all of the blame.
Your question dealt with who would be on the bargaining team, but others have made some very good points: start preparing for next negotiations as soon as this one is over; keep notes, ask for input, meet with the individuals who will work with the contract during its term, etc.
And numbers absolutely have meaning. A junior manager without decision making power or a set of co-managers sitting across from eight or ten pseudo-powerful IBEW dinosaurs, plus several out of town heavyweights, one a lawyer, is quite an impossible imbalance. If nothing else it has the outcome of those two (you in this case) being overwhelmed by a feeling of powerlessness and lack of authority. There's not only strength in numbers, but there's also knowledge in numbers.
(edit) There is also the possibility that if you populate your table with managers or lower, you will be charged with refusal to bargain in good faith since you have nobody with decision making authority at the negotiations. Union officials do not like the prospect of bargaining with messengers.