Published: February 16, 2011
UALPAPAE: World's Largest Pilots' Union Violated Its Own Employees' Labor Rights, Says National Labor Relations Board Judge
HERNDON, Va. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) Administrative Law Judge Bruce
Rosenstein issued his decision February 15 in the unfair labor practice
case filed by Unit 1 of the Union of Air Line Pilots Association
Professional and Administrative Employees (Unit 1) against the Air Line
Pilots Association, International (ALPA). Unit 1 is the labor union that
has represented ALPA's professional employees since the early 1950s.
Judge Rosenstein found that ALPA had committed all of the unfair labor
practices alleged in a complaint filed in 2009 by the NLRB based on
charges submitted by Unit 1. In his ruling, the administrative law judge
found that ALPA had violated the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA)
when it illegally laid off 12 employees and imposed changes to pay,
fringe benefits and work rules before the two sides reached a lawful
impasse in bargaining.
"This ruling confirms what Unit 1 has been saying for the last two
years," said Don McClure, Unit 1 president, "that ALPA acted unlawfully
and has repeatedly ignored the law and the rights of its own employees."
In March 2009, Unit 1 filed a charge of unfair labor practices against
ALPA management with the NLRB. The in-house union contended ALPA
management failed to meet its obligation to disclose information
requested by Unit 1 about ALPA's plan to conduct employee layoffs in
early 2009. Unit 1 also claims ALPA management failed to meet its
obligation to bargain over the planned layoffs in violation of the NLRA.
In a May 2009 move unprecedented in the half-century of the relationship
between ALPA and Unit 1, management at ALPA unilaterally imposed changed
pay, fringe benefits and work rules on their unionized Unit 1
professional staff after contract negotiations between the two failed to
produce an agreement. Unit 1 filed a charge over this imposition of the
changes without bargaining to impasse, which was then added to the
complaint.
The
ruling, which can be viewed on the NLRB website, outlines several
remedies including rescinding the imposed terms and reinstatement and
make whole of the employees who were laid off.
The Board estimates that the backpay ALPA owes the 12 Unit 1 employees
who were illegally laid off currently exceeds $700,000, and Unit 1
estimates that it will cost ALPA well in excess of $2 million to rescind
the unilaterally imposed terms.
"This type of intransigent behavior is what ALPA fights against on
behalf of its members every single day," said McClure. "For the world's
largest pilots' union to flaunt the law in such an egregious manner is
reprehensible. The law judge agreed with us."
The nearly 60 year old Unit 1 of UALPAPAE represents 168 professional
staffers, including labor lawyers, economic analysts, retirement
specialists, air safety engineers and communications practitioners at
ALPA. ALPA represents 54,000 pilots at 36 airlines in North
America.

Unit 1 of UALPAPAE
Don McClure, 540-270-9436
or
Kimberly
Seitz, 703-609-1650
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