Friday, October 11, 2019
Ambiguous language Essay
Ambiguous language is often a cause for concern when employment contracts are involved, and this is clearly the situation outlined in ââ¬Å"Case Study 9-1: Contract Interpretation. â⬠1. The most important point were I arbitrator, would be the intent of the Company regarding the involved provision. ââ¬Å"The company stated that the double-time provision was added to the contract as a means of combating absenteeism during the weekâ⬠(Carrell, M. , & Heavrin, C. J. D. , 2006, p. 445). Based on this statement, it is clear that the purpose of the provision focused on an employeeââ¬â¢s being gone for the day, not late for the shift. (One must concede that the terms ââ¬Å"tardyâ⬠and ââ¬Å"absentâ⬠certainly have different meanings, and by the Companyââ¬â¢s own admission, the involved provision focused on ââ¬Å"absenteeism. â⬠) Although failing to arrive on time is a form of absenteeism, it is a temporary, short-lived event, and in this case, was clearly unintentional and out of the employeeââ¬â¢s control. Under the outlined circumstances, the grievantââ¬â¢s being 10 minutes late simply does not equate to his being absent. 2. Regardless of the arbitratorââ¬â¢s decision, no ââ¬Å"effectâ⬠would be given to the bargain. The Case Study states, ââ¬Å"there had been previous grievances on the same issue, but those arbitration awards were inconsistentâ⬠(p. 445). Therefore, a case-by-case analysis seems to be the rule. I do believe that denying the over-time would be dangerous to the long-term relations between the Company and the Union as it is obvious that the two sides clearly disagree on the meaning of this particular issue. Given the Unionââ¬â¢s (i. e. the employeeââ¬â¢s) position is that ââ¬Å"reasonable tardinessâ⬠would be overlooked, a denial could result in walk-outs and/or strikes (p. 445). 3. Although the contract language is clear, an arbitrator should be involved because neither party agrees about the interpretation, the intent, or the common practice applied to the involved provision of the collective bargaining agreement. The Case Study states that ââ¬Å"a meeting of the mindsâ⬠was out of the question as the Union and the Company disagreed about what was contained in the collective bargaining agreement (p. 445). The difficulty seems to stem, in part, from ââ¬Å"the parties [having] a different understanding during the negotiation process from the companyââ¬â¢s current interpretation of the double-time section of the contractâ⬠(p. 445). The Union stated, ââ¬Å"the companyââ¬â¢s negotiator had agreed not to count reasonable tardiness against the double-time provision but had refused to change the language used in the contractâ⬠however, ââ¬Å"the companyââ¬â¢s negotiator [. . . ] stated that the very purpose of the double-time section was to allow for double-time pay only if there was no absenteeism in the previous weekâ⬠(p. 445). The negotiator did recall a statement regarding ââ¬Å"reasonable application,â⬠but stated that it ââ¬Å"was in response to a maintenance worker on the negotiating committeeâ⬠and the negotiator recalled ââ¬Å"in that situation, he would agree to apply a reasonable standard to maintenance workers for Sunday double-time following a tardiness on Saturdayâ⬠due to the difference in weekend scheduling for the ââ¬Å"25 maintenance workersâ⬠(p. 445). Neither version rings completely true: it seems unlikely that the Union would allow the Company to concede a point and then agree that no change be made to the languageââ¬âa union simply has no reason to settle for a verbal agreement when a contract negotiation is underway. On the other hand, the negotiator recalls something along the lines of what the Union recalled being said, but the negotiator applies that statement to a special situation involving only the maintenance workers. Looking solely at this case, it is obvious that the employee neither intended nor could control the event that caused his tardiness. It might further be argued that arriving only 10 minutes late under the circumstances (i. e. being a passenger in a vehicle that sustained a flat tire), indicates a likelihood that had the flat not occurred, the grievant actually would have arrived to work early. Looking at this employeeââ¬â¢s past record of tardiness (or lack thereof) might reveal the truth of his intentions that day. Given the facts presented and the difficulties raised, it is apparent that the contract language is ambiguous, and to avoid further/future confusion, frustration, and arbitration, an amendment and/or clarification to the contract language should be added during the next bargaining session, if not sooner. Reference Carrell, M. , & Heavrin, C. J. D. (2006). Case Study 9-1: Contract Interpretation. Labor relations an collective bargaining: Cases, practice, and law (8th ed. ). Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall. 445.
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