spongebob
New member
mrplunkey said:Taken directly from the National Labor Relations Act ( http://www.nlrb.gov/nlrb/legal/manuals/rules/act.asp )
(d) [Obligation to bargain collectively] For the purposes of this section, to bargain collectively is the performance of the mutual obligation of the employer and the representative of the employees to meet at reasonable times and confer in good faith with respect to wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment
Probationary periods and leaves of absence are clear and obvous "terms and conditions of employment". Hell, just go ask your shop steward if your company can set the Probationary period for employees to some large timeframe -- like two years. Also, go ask your shop steward if your union has the right to negotiate leaves of absence in your next contract. Not if they are going to -- if they have the RIGHT to raise the issue to management.
The only reason probationary periods were an issue was because the Teamsters were saying that if we went 90 days, we may be able to discrimintate against those "temporary" employees and not convert them to full-time status because by then we'd have enough time to ascertain their pro or anti-union leanings. And guess what? They'd be right.
i dont have a shop steward to ask. but what you've pointed out is a good point. but from the last two companies i worked for that item along with others were covered in the company policy. it covered all employees probation period, even salary.
also when i made that statement i was generally referring to your specific situation. it sounded like company policy covered it, therefore the union had no right to negotiate it. sounds like they didnt get it in the long run.