HomeMy WebLinkAbout19-030 - Resolution RESOLUTION NO. 19-030
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF RANCHO
CUCAMONGA, CALIFORNIA, UPDATING ORDERLY
PROCEDURES FOR THE ADMINISTRATION OF EMPLOYER-
EMPLOYEE RELATIONS BETWEEN THE CITY AND ITS
EMPLOYEE ORGANIZATIONS
WHEREAS, Government Code Sections 3507 and 3507.5 empower a City to adopt
reasonable rules and regulations after consultation in good faith with representatives of its employee
organizations for the administration of employer-employee relations; and
WHEREAS, The City of Rancho Cucamonga desires to update its orderly procedures
for administering employer-employee relations between the City and its various recognized employee
organizations; and
WHEREAS, this Resolution implements Chapter 10, Division 4, Title 1 of the
Government Code of the State of California (Sections 3500 et seq.) otherwise known as the Meyers-
Milias-Brown Act; and
WHEREAS, This Resolution shall be known as the Employer-Employee Relations
Resolution of the City of Rancho Cucamonga;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED:
Article I -- General Provisions
Sec. 1. Statement of Purpose:
This Resolution implements Chapter 10, Division 4, Title 1 of the Government Code of the
State of California (Sections 3500 et seq.) captioned "Local Public Employee Organizations," (the
Meyers-Milias-Brown Act) by providing orderly procedures for the administration of employer-employee
relations between the City and its employee organizations. However, nothing contained herein shall be
deemed to supersede the provisions of state law, ordinances, resolutions and rules which establish
and regulate the civil service system, or which provide for other methods of administering employer-
employee relations. This Resolution is intended, instead, to strengthen civil service and other methods
of administering employer- employee relations through the establishment of uniform and orderly
methods of communications between employees, employee organizations and the City.
It is the purpose of this Resolution to provide procedures for meeting and conferring in good
faith with Recognized Employee Organizations regarding matters that directly and significantly affect
and primarily involve the wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment of employees in
appropriate units and that are not preempted by federal or state law. However, nothing herein shall be
construed to restrict any legal or inherent exclusive City rights with respect to matters of general
legislative or managerial policy, which include among others: The exclusive right to determine the
mission of its constituent departments, commissions, and boards; set standards of service; determine
the procedures and standards of selection for employment; direct its employees; take disciplinary
action; relieve its employees from duty because of lack of work or for other lawful reasons; determine
the content of job classifications; subcontract work; maintain the efficiency of governmental operations;
determine the methods, means and personnel by which government operations are to be conducted;
take all necessary actions to carry out its mission in emergencies; and exercise complete control and
discretion over its organization and the technology of performing its work.
Sec. 2. Definitions:
i
As used in this Resolution, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
(a) "Appropriate unit" means a unit of employee classes or positions, established pursuant
to Article II hereon.
(b) "City" means the City of Rancho Cucamonga, and, where appropriate herein, refers to
the City Council or any duly authorized City representative as herein defined.
(c) "Confidential Employee" means an employee who, in the course of his or her duties,
has access to confidential information relating to the City's administration of employer- employee
relations.
(d) "Consult/Consultation in Good Faith" means to communicate orally or in writing with all
affected recognized employee organizations for the purpose of presenting and obtaining views or
advising of proposed actions in a good faith effort to reach a consensus; and, as distinguished from
meeting and conferring in good faith regarding matters within the required scope of the meet and confer
process, does not involve an exchange of proposals and counterproposals in an endeavor to reach
agreement in the form of a Memorandum of Understanding, nor is it subject to Article IV hereof.
(e) "Day" means calendar day unless expressly stated otherwise.
(f) "Employee Relations Officer" means the City Manager or his/her duly authorized
representative.
(g) "Exclusively Recognized Employee Organization" means an employee organization
which has been formally acknowledged by the City as the sole employee organization representing the
employees in an appropriate representation unit pursuant to Article II hereof, having the exclusive right
to meet and confer in good faith concerning statutorily required subjects pertaining to unit employees,
and thereby assuming the corresponding obligation of fairly representing such employees. Such
recognition status may only be challenged by another employee organization as set forth in Article II
section 8.
(h) "Impasse" means that the representatives of the City and a Recognized Employee
Organization have reached a point in their meeting and conferring in good faith where their differences
on matters to be included in a Memorandum of Understanding and concerning which they are required
to meet and confer, remain so substantial and prolonged that further meeting and conferring would be
futile.
(i) "Management Employee" means an employee having responsibility for formulating,
administering or managing the implementation of City policies and programs.
(j) "Proof of Employee Support" means (1) an authorization card recently signed and
personally dated by an employee, provided that the card has not been subsequently revoked in writing
by the employee (2) a verified authorization petition or petitions recently signed and personally dated
by an employee,or(3) employee dues deduction authorizations, using the payroll register for the period
immediately prior to the date a petition is filed hereunder, except that dues deduction authorizations
for more than one employee organization for the account of any one employee shall not be considered
as proof of employee support for any employee organization. The only authorization which shall be
considered as proof of employee support hereunder shall be the authorization last signed by an
employee. The words "recently signed" shall mean within ninety (90) days prior to the filing of such
proof of support.
(k) "Supervisory Employee" means any employee having authority, in the interest of the
City, to hire, transfer, suspend, lay off, recall, promote, discharge, assign, reward, or discipline other
employees, or responsibly to direct them, or to adjust their grievances, or effectively to recommend
such action if, in connection with the foregoing, the exercise of such authority is not of a merely routine
or clerical nature, but requires the use of independent judgment.
(1) Terms not defined herein shall have the meanings as set forth in the MMBA.
Article II -- Representation Proceedings
Sec. 3. Filing of Recognition Petition by Employee Organization:
An employee organization which seeks to be formally acknowledged as an Exclusively
Recognized Employee Organization representing the employees in an appropriate unit shall file a
petition with the Employee Relations Officer containing the following information and documentation:
(a) Name and address of the employee organization.
(b) Names and titles of its officers.
(c) Names of employee organization representatives who are authorized to speak on
behalf of the organization.
(d) A statement that the employee organization has, as one of its primary purposes, the
responsibility of representing employees in their employment relations with the City.
(e) A statement whether the employee organization is a chapter of, or affiliated directly or
indirectly in any manner, with a local, regional, state, national or international organization, and, if so,
the name and address of each such other organization.
(f) Certified copies of the employee organization's constitution and bylaws.
(g) A designation of those persons, not exceeding two in number, and their addresses, to
whom notice sent by regular United States mail will be deemed sufficient notice on the employee
organization for any purpose.
(h) A statement that the employee organization has no restriction on membership based
on race, color, religion, creed, sex, national origin, age, sexual orientation, mental or physical disability
or medical condition.
(i) The job classifications or position titles of employees in the unit claimed to be
appropriate and the approximate number of member employees therein.
(j) A statement that the employee organization has in its possession proof of employee
support as herein defined to establish that a majority of the employees in the unit claimed to be
appropriate have designated the employee organization to represent them in their employment
relations with the City. Such written proof shall be submitted for confirmation to the Employee Relations
Officer or to a mutually agreed upon disinterested third party.
(k)A request that the Employee Relations Officer formally acknowledge the petitioner as the
Exclusively Recognized Employee Organization representing the employees in the unit claimed to be
appropriate for the purpose of meeting and conferring in good faith.
The Petition, including the proof of employee support and all accompanying documentation, shall be
declared to be true, correct and complete, under penalty of perjury, by the duly authorized officer(s) of
the employee organization executing it.
Sec. 4. City Response to Recognition Petition:
Upon receipt of the Petition, the Employee Relations Officer shall determine whether:
(a) There has been compliance with the requirements of the Recognition Petition,
and
(b) The proposed representation unit is an appropriate unit in accordance with Sec.
9 of this Article 11.
If an affirmative determination is made by the Employee Relations Officer on the
foregoing two matters, he/she shall so inform the petitioning employee organization, shall give
written notice of such request for recognition to the employees in the unit and shall take no action
on said request for thirty (30) days thereafter. If either of the foregoing matters are not affirmatively
determined, the Employee Relations Officer shall offer to consult thereon with such petitioning
employee organization and, if such determination thereafter remains unchanged, shall inform that
organization of the reasons therefore in writing.
The petitioning employee organization may appeal such determination in accordance
with Sec. 12 of this Resolution.
Sec. 5. Open Period for Filing Challenging Petition:
Within thirty (30) days of the date written notice was given to affected employees that a
valid recognition petition for an appropriate unit has been filed, any other employee organization
may file a competing request to be formally acknowledged as the exclusively recognized
employee organization of the employees in the same or in an overlapping unit (one which
corresponds with respect to some, but not all the classifications or positions set forth in the
recognition petition being challenged), by filing a petition evidencing proof of employee support in
the unit claimed to be appropriate of at least thirty (30) percent and otherwise in the same form
and manner as set forth in Sec. 3 of this Article II. If such challenging petition seeks establishment
of an overlapping unit, the Employee Relations Officer shall call for a hearing on such overlapping
petitions for the purpose of ascertaining the more appropriate unit, at which time the petitioning
employee organizations shall be heard. Thereafter, the Employee Relations Officer shall
determine the appropriate unit or units in accordance with the standards in Sec. 9 of this Article
II. The petitioning employee organizations shall have fifteen (15) days from the date notice of such
unit determination is communicated to them by the Employee Relations Officer to amend their
petitions to conform to such determination or to appeal such determination pursuant to Sec. 12 of
this Article 11.
Sec. 6. Granting Recognition Without an Election:
If the Petition is in order, and the proof of support shows that a majority of the employees
in the appropriate unit have designated the petitioning employee organization to represent them,
and if no other employee organization filed a challenging petition, the petitioning employee
organization and the Employee Relations Officer shall request the California State Mediation and
Conciliation Service, or another agreed upon neutral third party, to review the count, form,
accuracy and propriety of the proof of support. If the neutral third party makes an affirmative
determination, the Employee Relations Officer shall formally acknowledge the petitioning
employee organization as the Exclusive Recognized Employee Organization for the designated
unit.
Sec. 7. Election Procedure:
Where recognition is not granted pursuant to Sec. 6, the Employee Relations Officer
shall arrange for a secret ballot election to be conducted by a party agreed to by the Employee
Relations Officer and the concerned employee organization(s), in accordance with such party's
rules and procedures subject to the provisions of this Resolution.
All employee organizations who have duly submitted petitions which have been determined to be in
conformance with this Article II shall be included on the ballot. The ballot shall also reserve to
employees the choice of representing themselves individually in their employment relations with the
City. Employees entitled to vote in such election shall be those persons employed in regular permanent
positions within the designated appropriate unit who were employed during the pay period immediately
prior to the date which ended at least fifteen (15) days before the date the election commences,
including those who did not work during such period because of illness, vacation or other authorized
leaves of absence, and who are employed by the City in the same unit on the date of the election. An
employee organization shall be formally acknowledged as the Exclusively Recognized Employee
Organization for the designated appropriate unit following an election or run-off election if it received a
numerical majority of all valid votes cast in the election. In an election involving three or more choices,
where none of the choices receives a majority of the valid votes cast, a run-off election shall be
conducted between the two choices receiving the largest number of valid votes cast; the rules
governing an initial election being applicable to a run-off election.
There shall be no more than one valid election under this Resolution pursuant to any petition
in a 12-month period affecting the same unit.
In the event that the parties are unable to agree on a third party to conduct an election, the
election shall be conducted by the California State Mediation and Conciliation Service.
Costs of conducting elections shall be borne in equal shares by the City and by each
employee organization appearing on the ballot.
Sec. 8. Procedure for Decertification of Exclusively Recognized Employee Organization:
A Decertification Petition alleging that the incumbent Exclusively Recognized Employee
Organization no longer represents a majority of the employees in an established appropriate unit may
be filed with the Employee Relations Officer only during the month of March of any year following the
first full year of recognition or during the thirty (30) day period commencing one hundred twenty (120)
days prior to the termination date of a Memorandum of Understanding then having been in effect less
than three (3) years, whichever occurs later. A Decertification Petition may be filed by two or more
employees or their representative, or an employee organization, and shall contain the following
information and documentation declared by the duly authorized signatory under penalty of perjury to
be true, correct and complete:
(a) The name, address and telephone number of the petitioner and a designated
representative authorized to receive notices or requests for further information.
(b) The name of the established appropriate unit and of the incumbent Exclusively
Recognized Employee Organization sought to be decertified as a representative of that unit.
(c) An allegation that the incumbent Exclusively Recognized Employee Organization no
longer represents a majority of the employees in the appropriate unit, and any other relevant and
material facts relating thereto.
(d) Proof of employee support that at least thirty (30) percent of the employees in the
established appropriate unit no longer desire to be represented by the incumbent Exclusively
Recognized Employee Organization. Such proof shall be submitted for confirmation to the
Employee Relations Officer or to a mutually agreed upon disinterested third party within the time
limits specified in the first paragraph of this Section.
An employee organization may, in satisfaction of the Decertification Petition requirements
hereunder, file a Petition under this Section in the form of a Recognition Petition that evidences proof
of employee support of at least thirty(30) percent,that includes the allegation and information required
under this Section 8, and otherwise conforms to the requirements of Section 3 of this Article.
The Employee Relations Officer shall initially determine whether the Petition has been filed
in compliance with the applicable provisions of this Article II. If his/her determination is in the negative,
he/she shall offer to consult thereon with the representative(s) of such petitioning employees or
employee organization and, if such determination thereafter remains unchanged, shall return such
Petition to the employees or employee organization with a statement of the reasons therefore in writing.
The petitioning employees or employee organization may appeal such determination in accordance
with Sec. 12 of this Article II. If the determination of the Employee Relations Officer is in the affirmative,
or if his negative determination is reversed on appeal, he/she shall give written notice of such
Decertification or Recognition Petition to the incumbent Exclusively Recognized Employee
Organization and to unit employees.
The Employee Relations Officer shall thereupon arrange for a secret ballot election to be
held on or about fifteen (15) days after such notice to determine the wishes of unit employees as to the
question of decertification and, if a Recognition Petition was duly filed hereunder, the question of
representation. Such election shall be conducted in conformance with Sec. 7 of this Article II.
During the "open period" specified in the first paragraph of this Sec. 8, the Employee
Relations Officer may on his/her own motion, when he/she has reason to believe that a majority of unit
employees no longer wish to be represented by the incumbent Exclusively Recognized Employee
Organization, give notice to that organization and all unit employees that he/she will arrange for an
election to determine that issue. In such event any other employee organization may within fifteen (15)
days of such notice file a Recognition Petition in accordance with this Sec. 8, which the Employee
Relations Officer shall act on in accordance with this Sec. 8.
If, pursuant to this Sec. 8, a different employee organization is formally acknowledged as
the Exclusively Recognized Employee Organization, such organization shall be bound by all the terms
and conditions of any Memorandum of Understanding then in effect for its remaining term.
Sec. 9. Policy and Standards for Determination of Appropriate Units:
The policy objectives in determining the appropriateness of units shall be the effect of a
proposed unit on (1) the efficient operations of the City and its compatibility with the primary
responsibility of the City and its employees to effectively and economically serve the public, and
(2) providing employees with effective representation based on recognized community of interest
considerations. These policy objectives require that the appropriate unit shall be the broadest feasible
grouping of positions that share an identifiable community of interest. Factors to be considered shall
be:
(a) Similarity of the general kinds of work performed, types of qualifications required, and
the general working conditions.
(b) History of representation in the City and similar employment; except however, that no
unit shall be deemed to be an appropriate unit solely on the basis of the extent to which employees in
the proposed unit have organized.
(c) Consistency with the organizational patterns of the City.
(d) Effect of differing legally mandated impasse resolution procedures.
(e) Number of employees and classifications, and the effect on the administration of
employer-employee relations created by the fragmentation of classifications and proliferation of
units.
(f) Effect on the classification structure and impact on the stability of the employer-
employee relationship of dividing a single or related classification among two or more units.
Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this Section, managerial, supervisory and
confidential responsibilities, as defined in Sec. 2 of this Resolution, are determining factors in
establishing appropriate units hereunder, and therefore managerial, supervisory and confidential
employees may only be included in a unit consisting solely of managerial, supervisory or
confidential employees respectively. Managerial, supervisory and confidential employees may not
represent any employee organization which represents other employees.
Peace Officers have the right to be represented in separate units composed solely of
such peace officers.
Also, under the MMBA, professional employees have the right to be represented
separately from non-professional employees.
The Employee Relations Officer shall, after notice to and consultation with affected
employee organizations, allocate new classifications or positions, delete eliminated classifications
or positions, and retain, reallocate or delete modified classifications or positions from units in
accordance with the provisions of this Section. The decision of the Employee Relations Officer
shall be final.
Sec. 10. Procedure for Modification of Established Appropriate Units:
Requests by employee organizations for modifications of established appropriate units
may be considered by the Employee Relations Officer only during the period specified in Sec. 8
of this Article Il. Such requests shall be submitted in the form of a Recognition Petition and, in
addition to the requirements set forth in Sec. 3 of this Article, shall contain a complete statement
of all relevant facts and citations in support of the proposed modified unit in terms of the policies
and standards set forth in Sec. 9 hereof. The Employee Relations Officer shall process such
petitions as other Recognition Petitions under this Article 11.
The Employee Relations Officer may by his own motion propose that an established unit
be modified. The Employee Relations Officer shall give written notice of the proposed
modification(s) to any affected employee organization and shall hold a meeting concerning the
proposed modification(s), at which time all affected employee organizations shall be heard.
Thereafter the Employee Relations Officer shall determine the composition of the appropriate unit
or units in accordance with Sec. 9 of this Article II and shall give written notice of such
determination to the affected employee organizations. The Employee Relations Officer's
determination may be appealed as provided in Section 12 of this Article. If a unit is modified
pursuant to the motion of the Employee Relations Officer hereunder, employee organizations may
thereafter file Recognition Petitions seeking to become the Exclusively Recognized Employee
Organization for such new appropriate unit or units pursuant to Sec. 3 hereof.
Sec. 11. Procedure for Processing Severance Requests:
An employee organization may file a request to become the recognized employee
organization of a unit alleged to be appropriate that consists of a group of employees who are
already a part of a larger established unit represented by another recognized employee
organization. The timing, form and processing of such request shall be as specified in Sec. 10 for
modification requests.
Sec. 12. Appeals:
An employee organization aggrieved by an appropriate unit determination of the
Employee Relations Officer; or an employee organization aggrieved by a determination of the
Employee Relations Officer that a Recognition Petition (Sec. 3), Challenging Petition (Sec. 5),
Decertification Petition (Sec. 8), Unit Modification Petition (Sec. 10) --- or employees aggrieved
by a determination of the Employee Relations Officer that a Decertification Petition (Sec. 8) or
Severance Request (Sec. 11) ---has not been filed in compliance with the applicable provisions of
this Article, may, within ten (10) days of notice of the Employee Relations Officer's final decision,
request to submit the matter to mediation by the State Mediation and Conciliation Service, or may,
in lieu thereof or thereafter, appeal such determination to the City Council for final decision within
fifteen (15) days of notice of the Employee Relations Officer's determination or the termination of
mediation proceedings, whichever is later.
Appeals to the City Council shall be filed in writing with the City Clerk, and a copy thereof
served on the Employee Relations Officer. The City Council shall commence to consider the
matter within thirty (30) days of the filing of the appeal. The City Council may, in its discretion,
refer the dispute to a non-binding third party hearing process. Any decision of the City Council on
the use of such procedure, and/or any decision of the City Council determining the substance of
the dispute shall be final and binding.
Article III --Administration
Sec. 13. Submission of Current Information by Recognized Employee Organizations:
All changes in the information filed with the City by an Exclusively Recognized Employee
Organization under items (a.) through (h.) of its Recognition Petition under Sec. 3 of this
Resolution shall be submitted in writing to the Employee Relations Officer within fourteen
(14) days of such change.
Exclusively Recognized Employee Organizations that are party to an agency shop
provision shall provide annually to the Employee Relations Officer and to unit members within 60
days after the end of its fiscal year the financial report required under Government Code Section
3502.5 (f) of the Meyers-Milias Brown Act.
Sec. 14. Employee Organization Activities -- Use of City Resources:
Access to City work locations and the use of City paid time, facilities, equipment and
other resources by employee organizations and those representing them shall be authorized only
to the extent provided for in Memoranda of Understanding and/or administrative procedures, shall
be limited to lawful activities consistent with the provisions of this Resolution that pertain directly
to the employer-employee relationship and not such internal employee organization business as
soliciting membership, campaigning for office, and organization meetings and elections, and shall
not interfere with the efficiency, safety and security of City operations.
Sec. 15. Administrative Rules and Procedures:
The City Manager is hereby authorized to establish such rules and procedures as
appropriate to implement and administer the provisions of this Resolution after consultation with
affected employee organizations.
Article IV-- Impasse Procedures
Sec. 16. Initiation of Impasse Procedures:
If the meet and confer process has reached impasse as defined in Section 2 of this
Resolution, either party may initiate the impasse procedures by filing with the other party a written
request for an impasse meeting, together with a statement of its position on all issues.
An impasse meeting shall then be scheduled promptly by the Employee Relations Officer. The
purpose of such meeting shall be:
(a) To review the position of the parties in a final effort to reach agreement on a
Memorandum of Understanding;and
(b) If the impasse is not resolved,to discuss arrangements for the utilization of the impasse
procedures provided herein.
Sec. 17. Impasse Procedures:
Impasse procedures are as follows:
(a) If the parties agree to submit the dispute to mediation, and agree on the selection of a
mediator, the dispute shall be submitted to mediation. All mediation proceedings shall be private. The
mediator shall make no public recommendation, nor take any public position at any time concerning
the issues.
(b) If the parties agree to, and do participate in mediation, and if mediator is unable to
effect settlement of the controversy, the employee organization may present a request to the City and
the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) to submit the impasse to fact-finding. This request by
the employee organization to submit the impasse to fact-finding must be made no sooner than 30 days,
but no later than 45 days, following the selection of a mediator by the parties.
(c) If the parties do not agree to participate in mediation, the employee organization may
present a request to the City and PERB to submit the impasse to fact-finding no later than 30 days
following the date that either party has provided the other a written notice of declaration of impasse.
(d) Within five (5)working days after PERB's determination that the request for fact-finding
is sufficient, a fact-finding panel of three (3) shall be appointed in the following manner: One member
of the panel shall be appointed by the Employee Relations Officer, and one member shall be appointed
by the Exclusively Recognized Employee Organization. PERB shall, within five (5) working days after
making its determination that the request for fact-finding is sufficient, submit the names of seven
persons, drawn from the list of neutral fact-finders established pursuant to Government Code section
3541.3(d). PERB shall thereafter designate one of the seven persons to serve as the chairperson
unless notified by the parties within five
(5) working days that they have mutually agreed upon a person to chair the panel in lieu of a
chairperson selected by PERB.
(e) The following constitute the jurisdictional and procedural requirements for fact-
finding:
(1) The panel shall, within ten (10) days after its appointment, meet with the
parties or their representatives, either jointly or separately, and may make inquiries and investigations,
hold hearings, and take any other steps it deems appropriate. The panel shall have subpoena power
with regard to hearings, investigations and inquiries.
(2) Subject to the stipulations of the parties, the fact-finders shall consider,
weigh and be guided by the following measures and criteria in arriving at their findings and
recommendations:
I. State and federal laws that are applicable to the employer.
public agency. II. Local rules, regulations, or ordinances.
III. Stipulations of the parties.
IV. The interests and welfare of the public, and the financial ability of the
V. Comparison of the wages, hours, and conditions of employment of the
employees involved in the fact-finding proceeding with the wages, hours, and conditions of
employment of other employees performing similar services in comparable public agencies.
VI. The consumer price index for goods and services, commonly known
as the cost of living.
VII. The overall compensation presently received by the employees,
including direct wage compensation, vacations, holidays, and other excused time, insurance and
pensions, medical and hospitalization benefits, the continuity and stability of employment, and all
other benefits received.
VIII. Any other facts not confined to those specified in paragraphs (1)-(VII),
inclusive, which are normally or traditionally taken into consideration in making the findings and
recommendations, including, but not limited to:
A. Maintaining appropriate compensation relationships between
classifications and positions within the City;
B. Other legislatively determined and projected demands on agency
resources (i.e., budgetary priorities as established by the governing body);
C. Allowance for equitable compensation increases for other
employees and employee groups for the corresponding fiscal period(s);
D. Revenue projections not to exceed currently authorized tax and
fee rates for the relevant fiscal year(s);
E. Assurance of sufficient and sound budgetary reserves; and
F. Constitutional, statutory, and Municipal Code limitations on the
level and use of revenues and expenditures.
(3) Within thirty (30) days after the appointment of the fact-finding panel, or,
upon agreement by both parties within a longer period, the panel shall make written findings of
fact and advisory recommendations for the resolution of the issues in dispute, which shall be
presented in terms of the criteria and limitations specified above. Any member of a fact-finding
panel shall be accorded the right to file dissenting written findings of fact and recommendations.
The fact-finder or chairperson of the fact-finding panel shall serve such findings and
recommendations on the Employee Relations Officer and the designated representative of the
Exclusively Recognized Employee Organization before they are made available to the public.
(f) If these parties have not resolved the impasse within ten (10) days
after service of the findings and recommendations upon them, the City shall make them public by
submitting them to the City Clerk for consideration by the City Council in connection with the
Council's legislative consideration of the impasse.
(g) After any applicable mediation and fact-finding procedures have been
exhausted, but no earlier than ten (10) days after the fact finders' written findings of fact and
recommended terms of settlement have been submitted to the parties, the City Council may hold a
public hearing regarding the impasse, and take such action regarding the impasse as it in its discretion
deems appropriate as in the public interest, including implementation of the City's last, best and final
offer. Any legislative action by the City Council on the impasse shall be final and binding.
(h) The costs for the services of the panel chairperson agreed upon by the
parties shall be equally divided between the parties, and shall include per diem fees, if any, and actual
and necessary travel and subsistence expenses.The per diem fees shall not exceed the per diem fees
stated on the chairperson's resume on file with PERB. The chairperson's bill showing the amount
payable by the parties shall accompany his or her final report to the parties and PERB. The parties
shall make payment directly to the chairperson.
(i) Any other mutually incurred costs shall be borne equally by the parties.
Any separately incurred costs for the panel member selected by each party shall be borne by that party.
Sec. 18. Costs of Impasse Procedures:
The cost for the services of a mediator and chairperson of a fact-finding panel utilized by the
parties, and other mutually incurred costs of mediation and fact-finding, shall be borne equally by the
City and Exclusively Recognized Employee Organization. The cost for a fact- finding panel member
selected by each party, and other separately incurred costs, shall be borne by such party.
Article V -- Miscellaneous Provisions
Sec. 19. Construction:
This Resolution shall be administered and construed as follows:
(a) Nothing in this Resolution shall be construed to deny to any person, employee,
organization, the City, or any authorized officer, body or other representative of the City, the rights,
powers and authority granted by federal or state law.
(b) This Resolution shall be interpreted so as to carry out its purpose as set forth in Article
I.
(c) Nothing in this Resolution shall be construed as making the provisions of California
Labor Code Section 923 applicable to City employees or employee organizations.
Sec. 20. Severability:
If any provision of this Resolution, or the application of such provision to any persons or
circumstances, shall be held invalid, the remainder of this Resolution, or the application of such
provision to persons or circumstances other than those as to which it is held invalid, shall not be
affected thereby.
PASSED, APPROVED, AND ADOPTED this 15th day of May, 2019.
Lynne B. Kenne , May Pro Tem
ATTEST:
/anice C. Reynolds, Clerk
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF SAN BERNARDINO ) ss
CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA )
I, Janice C. Reynolds, City Clerk of the City of Rancho Cucamonga, do
hereby certify that the foregoing Resolution was duly passed, approved, and adopted by the
City Council of the City of Rancho Cucamonga, at a Regular Meeting of said Council held on
the 15th'day of May 2019.
AYES: Hutchison, Kennedy and Scott
NOES: None
ABSENT: Michael and Spagnolo
ABSTAINED: None
Executed this 16th day of May, 2019, at Rancho Cucamonga, California.
Janice C. Reynolds, Clerk