"meet & confer" versus "collective bargaining"
Reysa
13 Posts
I work in a non-union environment. Can anyone give me a working definition of these terms and tell me what the difference is?
Comments
We have "Meet and confer" between agency management and union on issues which are subject to mandatory negotiations under the state's public employee relations laws but the timing occurs during the life of the contract. For example, management may want to implement a new working condition in an existing contract. It would then have to negotiate that change. If no agreement was reached, then management would have to wait until the cotnract came up for renewal and then negotiate it as part of the contract package.
To a large extent "meet and confer" is a euphemism for "labor negotiations." For years, governments would not acknowledge a formal contracted labor relation with their employees. Thus, for example, instead of calling an agreement with a union a labor contract, it is called a Memorandum of Understanding. In fact, for years, governments never acknwleldged contracting with anybody, including private companies and other governmental jurisdictions, but only having Memoranda of Understanding. Supposedly that allowed the government to renege on its commitments without being charged with violating terms of a contract.
There is also "meet and consult." These are also meetings between management and union but not in the areas that are subject of mandatory negotiaions and collective bargaining. Usually these may be little perks or local office issues that are wages hours and working conditions. Meet and consults are more of management trying to be cooperative with union rather than just going ahead an imposig it desire without getting union's thoughts. If there is no agreement, management may still impose its desire. Again, this is on matters that are not subject to mandatory negotiations as identified in the state's public employee relation laws.
Makes my job interesting!
Collective bargaining in the private sector is regulated by the National Labor Relations Act for most employers. The railroad and airline industries are regulated by the Railway Labor Act. Collective bargaining means that the employer and the employee's representative meet in good faith at reasonable times and places in an attempt to reach an agreement on wages, hours of work, and terms and conditions of work.
If you are nonunion, public or private, you have no legal obligation to meet and confer with your employees or to engage in collective bargaining with them. In fact, if you are a private employer, you may violate the law by engaging in collective bargaining with your employees.
I hope this helps.
Vance Miller
Editor, Missouri Employment Law Letter
Armstrong Teasdale LLP
(314) 621-5070
[email]vmiller@armstrongteasdale.com[/email]