AB68-ASA2-AA6,86,521
5. `Voluntary impasse resolution procedures.' In addition to the other impasse
22resolution procedures provided in this paragraph, a municipal employer that
23employs a transit employee
or a municipal employee in a collective bargaining unit
24containing a frontline worker and
a labor organization may at any time, as a
25permissive subject of bargaining, agree in writing to a dispute settlement procedure,
1including binding interest arbitration, which is acceptable to the parties for
2resolving an impasse over terms of any collective bargaining agreement under this
3subchapter. The parties shall file a copy of the agreement with the commission. If
4the parties agree to any form of binding interest arbitration, the arbitrator shall give
5weight to the factors enumerated under subds. 7. and 7g.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,86,217
111.70
(4) (cg) 6. a. If
, in any collective bargaining unit containing transit
8employees
or a frontline worker, a dispute has not been settled after a reasonable
9period of negotiation and after mediation by the commission under subd. 3. and other
10settlement procedures, if any, established by the parties have been exhausted, and
11the parties are deadlocked with respect to any dispute between them over wages,
12hours, or conditions of employment to be included in a new collective bargaining
13agreement, either party, or the parties jointly, may petition the commission, in
14writing, to initiate compulsory, final, and binding arbitration, as provided in this
15paragraph. At the time the petition is filed, the petitioning party shall submit in
16writing to the other party and the commission its preliminary final offer containing
17its latest proposals on all issues in dispute. Within 14 calendar days after the date
18of that submission, the other party shall submit in writing its preliminary final offer
19on all disputed issues to the petitioning party and the commission. If a petition is
20filed jointly, both parties shall exchange their preliminary final offers in writing and
21submit copies to the commission when the petition is filed.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,341be
22Section 341be. 111.70 (4) (cg) 7r. d., e. and f. of the statutes are amended to
23read:
AB68-ASA2-AA6,87,224
111.70
(4) (cg) 7r. d. Comparison of wages, hours
, and conditions of employment
25of the
transit municipal employees involved in the arbitration proceedings with the
1wages, hours, and conditions of employment of other employees performing similar
2services.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,87,63
e. Comparison of the wages, hours
, and conditions of employment of the
transit 4municipal employees involved in the arbitration proceedings with the wages, hours,
5and conditions of employment of other employees generally in public employment in
6the same community and in comparable communities.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,87,107
f. Comparison of the wages, hours
, and conditions of employment of the
transit 8municipal employees involved in the arbitration proceedings with the wages, hours,
9and conditions of employment of other employees in private employment in the same
10community and in comparable communities.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,341bf
11Section 341bf. 111.70 (4) (cg) 7r. h. of the statutes is amended to read:
AB68-ASA2-AA6,87,1612
111.70
(4) (cg) 7r. h. The overall compensation presently received by the
transit 13municipal employees
involved in the arbitration proceedings, including direct wage
14compensation, vacation, holidays, and excused time, insurance and pensions,
15medical and hospitalization benefits, the continuity and stability of employment,
16and all other benefits received.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,88,518
111.70
(4) (cg) 8m. `Term of agreement; reopening of negotiations.' Except for
19the initial collective bargaining agreement between the parties and except as the
20parties otherwise agree, every collective bargaining agreement covering transit
21employees
or a frontline worker shall be for a term of 2 years, but in no case may a
22collective bargaining agreement for any collective bargaining unit
consisting of
23transit employees subject to this paragraph be for a term exceeding 3 years. No
24arbitration award involving transit employees
or a frontline worker may contain a
25provision for reopening of negotiations during the term of a collective bargaining
1agreement, unless both parties agree to such a provision. The requirement for
2agreement by both parties does not apply to a provision for reopening of negotiations
3with respect to any portion of an agreement that is declared invalid by a court or
4administrative agency or rendered invalid by the enactment of a law or promulgation
5of a federal regulation.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,88,217
111.70
(4) (d) 1. A representative chosen for the purposes of collective
8bargaining by a majority of the
public safety employees or transit municipal 9employees voting in a collective bargaining unit shall be the exclusive representative
10of all employees in the unit for the purpose of collective bargaining.
A representative
11chosen for the purposes of collective bargaining by at least 51 percent of the general
12municipal employees in a collective bargaining unit shall be the exclusive
13representative of all employees in the unit for the purpose of collective bargaining. 14Any individual employee, or any minority group of employees in any collective
15bargaining unit, shall have the right to present grievances to the municipal employer
16in person or through representatives of their own choosing, and the municipal
17employer shall confer with the employee in relation thereto, if the majority
18representative has been afforded the opportunity to be present at the conferences.
19Any adjustment resulting from these conferences may not be inconsistent with the
20conditions of employment established by the majority representative and the
21municipal employer.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,90,1023
111.70
(4) (d) 2. a. The commission shall determine the appropriate collective
24bargaining unit for the purpose of collective bargaining and shall whenever possible
25avoid fragmentation by maintaining as few collective bargaining units as practicable
1in keeping with the size of the total municipal workforce. The commission may
2decide whether, in a particular case, the municipal employees in the same or several
3departments, divisions, institutions, crafts, professions, or other occupational
4groupings constitute a collective bargaining unit. Before making its determination,
5the commission may provide an opportunity for the municipal employees concerned
6to determine, by secret ballot, whether they desire to be established as a separate
7collective bargaining unit. The commission may not decide, however, that any group
8of municipal employees constitutes an appropriate collective bargaining unit if the
9group includes both professional employees and nonprofessional employees, unless
10a majority of the professional employees vote for inclusion in the unit. The
11commission may not decide that any group of municipal employees constitutes an
12appropriate collective bargaining unit if the group includes both school district
13employees and general municipal employees who are not school district employees.
14The commission may not
decide that any group of municipal employees constitutes
15an appropriate collective bargaining unit if the group includes both public safety
16employees and general municipal employees, if the group includes both transit
17employees and general municipal employees, or if the group includes both transit
18employees and public safety employees place public safety employees in a collective
19bargaining unit with employees who are not public safety employees or place transit
20employees in a collective bargaining unit with employees who are not transit
21employees. The commission may place frontline workers in a collective bargaining
22unit with municipal employees who are not frontline workers if the commission
23determines it is appropriate; if the commission places in a collective bargaining unit
24frontline workers and municipal employees who are not frontline workers, the
25collective bargaining unit is treated as if all employees in the collective bargaining
1unit are frontline workers. The commission may not decide that any group of
2municipal employees constitutes an appropriate collective bargaining unit if the
3group includes both craft employees and noncraft employees unless a majority of the
4craft employees vote for inclusion in the unit. The commission shall place the
5professional employees who are assigned to perform any services at a charter school,
6as defined in s. 115.001 (1), in a separate collective bargaining unit from a unit that
7includes any other professional employees whenever at least 30 percent of those
8professional employees request an election to be held to determine that issue and a
9majority of the professional employees at the charter school who cast votes in the
10election decide to be represented in a separate collective bargaining unit.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,341bj
11Section 341bj. 111.70 (4) (d) 3. a. and c. of the statutes are consolidated and
12renumbered 111.70 (4) (d) 3.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,341bL
14Section 341bL. 111.70 (4) (mb) (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB68-ASA2-AA6,90,1815
111.70
(4) (mb)
Prohibited subjects of bargaining; general municipal employees. 16(intro.) The municipal employer is prohibited from bargaining collectively with a
17collective bargaining unit containing
a only general municipal
employee employees 18with respect to any of the following:
AB68-ASA2-AA6,90,2520
111.70
(4) (mbb)
Consumer price index change. For purposes of determining
21compliance with par. (mb), the commission shall provide, upon request, to a
22municipal employer or to any representative of a collective bargaining unit
23containing
a only general municipal
employee employees, the consumer price index
24change during any 12-month period. The commission may get the information from
25the department of revenue.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,91,112
111.70
(4) (p)
Permissive subjects of collective bargaining; public safety and
3employees, transit employees, and municipal employees in a collective bargaining
4unit containing a frontline worker. A municipal employer is not required to bargain
5with public safety employees
or, transit employees
, or municipal employees in a
6collective bargaining unit containing a frontline worker on subjects reserved to
7management and direction of the governmental unit except insofar as the manner
8of exercise of such functions affects the wages, hours, and conditions of employment
9of the public safety employees
or in a collective bargaining unit, of the transit
10employees in a collective bargaining unit
, or of the municipal employees in the
11collective bargaining unit containing a frontline worker, whichever is appropriate.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,91,2013
111.70
(7m) (c) 1. a. Any labor organization that represents public safety
14employees
or, transit employees
, or a frontline worker which violates sub. (4) (L) may
15not collect any dues under a collective bargaining agreement or under a fair-share
16agreement from any employee covered by either agreement for a period of one year.
17At the end of the period of suspension, any such agreement shall be reinstated unless
18the labor organization is no longer authorized to represent the
public safety
19employees or transit municipal employees covered by the collective bargaining
20agreement or fair-share agreement or the agreement is no longer in effect.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,341bp
21Section 341bp. 111.81 (1) of the statutes is renumbered 111.81 (1s) and
22amended to read:
AB68-ASA2-AA6,92,1023
111.81
(1s) “Collective bargaining" means the performance of the mutual
24obligation of the state as an employer, by its officers and agents, and the
25representatives of its employees, to meet and confer at reasonable times, in good
1faith, with respect to the subjects of bargaining provided in s. 111.91 (1)
, with respect
2to for public safety employees,
with respect to the subjects of bargaining provided in
3s. 111.91 (1w) for employees in a collective bargaining unit containing a frontline
4worker, and
with respect to the subjects of bargaining provided in s. 111.91 (3)
, with
5respect to for general employees
who are in a collective bargaining unit that does not
6contain a frontline worker, with the intention of reaching an agreement, or to resolve
7questions arising under such an agreement. The duty to bargain, however, does not
8compel either party to agree to a proposal or require the making of a concession.
9Collective bargaining includes the reduction of any agreement reached to a written
10and signed document.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,92,1312
111.81
(1d) “Authority” means a body created under subch. II of ch. 114 or ch.
13231, 232, 233, 234, 237, 238, or 279.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,92,1515
111.81
(7) (ag) An employee of an authority.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,92,1717
111.81
(8) “Employer" means the state of Wisconsin
and includes an authority.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,92,2519
111.81
(9) “Fair-share agreement" means an agreement between the employer
20and a labor organization representing public safety employees
or a frontline worker 21under which all of the public safety employees
in the collective bargaining unit or all
22of the employees in a collective bargaining unit
containing a frontline worker are
23required to pay their proportionate share of the cost of the collective bargaining
24process and contract administration measured by the amount of dues uniformly
25required of all members.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,93,32
111.81
(9b) “Frontline worker” means an employee who is determined to be a
3frontline worker under s. 111.817.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,93,65
111.81
(9g) “General employee" means an employee who is not a public safety
6employee
or a frontline worker.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,93,118
111.81
(12) (intro.) “Labor organization" means any employee organization
9whose purpose is to represent employees in collective bargaining with the employer,
10or its agents, on matters that are subject to collective bargaining under s. 111.91 (1)
,
11(1w), or (3), whichever is applicable; but the term shall not include any organization:
AB68-ASA2-AA6,93,2113
111.81
(12m) “Maintenance of membership agreement" means an agreement
14between the employer and a labor organization representing public safety employees
15or a frontline worker which requires that all of the public safety employees
or
16employees who are in a collective bargaining unit containing a frontline worker 17whose dues are being deducted from earnings under s. 20.921 (1) or 111.84 (1) (f) at
18the time the agreement takes effect shall continue to have dues deducted for the
19duration of the agreement, and that dues shall be deducted from the earnings of all
20public safety such employees who are hired on or after the effective date of the
21agreement.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,94,323
111.81
(16) “Referendum" means a proceeding conducted by the commission in
24which public safety employees in a collective bargaining unit
or all employees in a
25collective bargaining unit containing a frontline worker may cast a secret ballot on
1the question of directing the labor organization and the employer to enter into a
2fair-share or maintenance of membership agreement or to terminate such an
3agreement.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,94,255
111.815
(1) In the furtherance of this subchapter, the state shall be considered
6as a single employer and employment relations policies and practices throughout the
7state service shall be as consistent as practicable. The division shall negotiate and
8administer collective bargaining agreements. To coordinate the employer position
9in the negotiation of agreements, the division shall maintain close liaison with the
10legislature relative to the negotiation of agreements and the fiscal ramifications of
11those agreements. Except with respect to the collective bargaining units specified
12in s. 111.825 (1r) and (1t), the division is responsible for the employer functions of the
13executive branch under this subchapter, and shall coordinate its collective
14bargaining activities with operating state agencies on matters of agency concern
and
15with operating authorities on matters of authority concern. The legislative branch
16shall act upon those portions of tentative agreements negotiated by the division that
17require legislative action. With respect to the collective bargaining units specified
18in s. 111.825 (1r), the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System is
19responsible for the employer functions under this subchapter. With respect to the
20collective bargaining units specified in s. 111.825 (1t), the chancellor of the
21University of Wisconsin-Madison is responsible for the employer functions under
22this subchapter. With respect to the collective bargaining unit specified in s. 111.825
23(1r) (ef), the governing board of the charter school established by contract under s.
24118.40 (2r) (cm), 2013 stats., is responsible for the employer functions under this
25subchapter.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,95,7
2111.817 Duty of commission; determination of frontline workers. The
3commission shall determine that an employee is a frontline worker if the commission
4finds that the employee has regular job duties that include interacting with members
5of the public or with large populations of people or that directly involve the
6maintenance of public works. The commission may not determine that a public
7safety employee is a frontline worker.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,341cc
8Section 341cc. 111.82 of the statutes is renumbered 111.82 (1) and amended
9to read:
AB68-ASA2-AA6,95,1810
111.82
(1) Employees have the right of self-organization and the right to form,
11join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through representatives of
12their own choosing under this subchapter, and to engage in lawful, concerted
13activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection.
14Employees also have the right to refrain from any or all of such activities. A general
15employee
may not be covered by a fair-share agreement unless the general employee
16is in a collective bargaining unit containing a frontline worker. Unless the general
17employee is covered by a fair-share agreement, a general employee has the right to
18refrain from paying dues while remaining a member of a collective bargaining unit.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,96,220
111.82
(2) General employees who are not in a collective bargaining unit
21containing a frontline worker have the right to have their employer consult with
22them, through a representative of their own choosing, with no intention of reaching
23an agreement, with respect to wages, hours, and conditions of employment. The
24right may be exercised when the employer proposes or implements policy changes
1affecting wages, hours, or conditions of employment or, if no policy changes are
2proposed or implemented, at least quarterly.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,96,94
111.825
(1) (intro.) It is the legislative intent that in order to foster meaningful
5collective bargaining, units must be structured in such a way as to avoid excessive
6fragmentation whenever possible. In accordance with this policy, collective
7bargaining units for employees in the classified service of the state
and for employees
8of authorities are structured on a statewide basis with one collective bargaining unit
9for each of the following occupational groups:
AB68-ASA2-AA6,96,1811
111.825
(3) The commission shall assign employees to the appropriate
12collective bargaining units set forth in subs. (1), (1r), (1t), and (2).
The commission
13may place frontline workers in a collective bargaining unit with employees who are
14not frontline workers if the commission determines it is appropriate; if the
15commission places in a collective bargaining unit frontline workers and employees
16who are not frontline workers, the collective bargaining unit is treated as if all
17employees in the collective bargaining unit are frontline workers and may bargain
18as provided in s. 111.91 (1w).
AB68-ASA2-AA6,97,820
111.825
(5) Although supervisors are not considered employees for purposes
21of this subchapter, the commission may consider a petition for a statewide collective
22bargaining unit of professional supervisors or a statewide unit of nonprofessional
23supervisors in the classified service, but the representative of supervisors may not
24be affiliated with any labor organization representing employees. For purposes of
25this subsection, affiliation does not include membership in a national, state, county
1or municipal federation of national or international labor organizations. The
2certified representative of supervisors who are not public safety employees
or
3frontline workers may not bargain collectively with respect to any matter other than
4wages as provided in s. 111.91 (3),
and the certified representative of supervisors who
5are public safety employees may not bargain collectively with respect to any matter
6other than wages and fringe benefits as provided in s. 111.91 (1)
, and the certified
7representative of supervisors who are frontline workers may bargain as provided in
8s. 111.91 (1w).
AB68-ASA2-AA6,97,2310
111.83
(1) Except as provided in sub. (5), a
representative chosen for the
11purposes of collective bargaining by at least 51 percent of the general employees in
12a collective bargaining unit shall be the exclusive representative of all of the
13employees in such unit for the purposes of collective bargaining. A representative
14chosen for the purposes of collective bargaining by a majority of the
public safety 15employees voting in a collective bargaining unit shall be the exclusive representative
16of all of the employees in such unit for the purposes of collective bargaining. Any
17individual employee, or any minority group of employees in any collective bargaining
18unit, may present grievances to the employer in person, or through representatives
19of their own choosing, and the employer shall confer with the employee or group of
20employees in relation thereto if the majority representative has been afforded the
21opportunity to be present at the conference. Any adjustment resulting from such a
22conference may not be inconsistent with the conditions of employment established
23by the majority representative and the employer.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,98,102
111.83
(4) Whenever an election has been conducted under sub. (3)
(a) in which
3the name of more than one proposed representative appears on the ballot and results
4in no conclusion, the commission may, if requested by any party to the proceeding
5within 30 days from the date of the certification of the results of the election, conduct
6a runoff election. In that runoff election, the commission shall drop from the ballot
7the name of the representative who received the least number of votes at the original
8election. The commission shall drop from the ballot the privilege of voting against
9any representative if the least number of votes cast at the first election was against
10representation by any named representative.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,98,2112
111.84
(1) (d) To refuse to bargain collectively on matters set forth in s. 111.91
13(1)
, (1w), or (3), whichever is appropriate, with a representative of a majority of its
14employees in an appropriate collective bargaining unit. Where the employer has a
15good faith doubt as to whether a labor organization claiming the support of a majority
16of its employees in appropriate collective bargaining unit does in fact have that
17support, it may file with the commission a petition requesting an election as to that
18claim. It is not deemed to have refused to bargain until an election has been held and
19the results thereof certified to it by the commission. A violation of this paragraph
20includes, but is not limited to, the refusal to execute a collective bargaining
21agreement previously orally agreed upon.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,99,623
111.84
(1) (f) To deduct labor organization dues from the earnings of a public
24safety employee
or an employee who is in a collective bargaining unit containing a
25frontline worker, unless the employer has been presented with an individual order
1therefor, signed by the
public safety employee personally, and terminable by at least
2the end of any year of its life or earlier by the
public safety employee giving at least
330 but not more than 120 days' written notice of such termination to the employer
4and to the representative labor organization, except if there is a fair-share or
5maintenance of membership agreement in effect. The employer shall give notice to
6the labor organization of receipt of such notice of termination.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,99,168
111.84
(2) (c) To refuse to bargain collectively on matters set forth in s. 111.91
9(1)
, (1w), or (3), whichever is appropriate, with the duly authorized officer or agent
10of the employer which is the recognized or certified exclusive collective bargaining
11representative of employees specified in s. 111.81 (7) (a)
or (ag) in an appropriate
12collective bargaining unit or with the certified exclusive collective bargaining
13representative of employees specified in s. 111.81 (7) (ar) to (f) in an appropriate
14collective bargaining unit. Such refusal to bargain shall include, but not be limited
15to, the refusal to execute a collective bargaining agreement previously orally agreed
16upon.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,99,2518
111.85
(1) (a) No fair-share or maintenance of membership agreement
19covering public safety employees under this subchapter may become effective unless
20authorized by a referendum. The commission shall order a referendum whenever it
21receives a petition supported by proof that at least 30 percent of the public safety
22employees in a collective bargaining unit
or at least 30 percent of the employees in
23a collective bargaining unit containing a frontline worker desire that a fair-share or
24maintenance of membership agreement be entered into between the employer and
25a labor organization. A petition may specify that a referendum is requested on a
1maintenance of membership agreement only, in which case the ballot shall be limited
2to that question.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,100,133
(b) For a fair-share agreement to be authorized, at least two-thirds of the
4eligible public safety employees voting in a referendum shall vote in favor of the
5agreement
or at least two-thirds of the employees in a collective bargaining unit
6containing a frontline worker shall vote in favor of the agreement. For a
7maintenance of membership agreement to be authorized, at least a majority of the
8eligible public safety employees voting in a referendum shall vote in favor of the
9agreement
or at least a majority of the employees in a collective bargaining unit
10containing a frontline worker shall vote in favor of the agreement. In a referendum
11on a fair-share agreement, if less than two-thirds but more than one-half of the
12eligible
public safety employees vote in favor of the agreement, a maintenance of
13membership agreement is authorized.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,101,314
(c) If a fair-share or maintenance of membership agreement is authorized in
15a referendum
ordered under par. (a), the employer shall enter into such an
16agreement with the labor organization named on the ballot in the referendum. Each
17fair-share or maintenance of membership agreement shall contain a provision
18requiring the employer to deduct the amount of dues as certified by the labor
19organization from the earnings of the
public safety employees affected by the
20agreement and to pay the amount so deducted to the labor organization. Unless the
21parties agree to an earlier date, the agreement shall take effect 60 days after
22certification by the commission that the referendum vote authorized the agreement.
23The employer shall be held harmless against any claims, demands, suits and other
24forms of liability made by
public safety the employees
affected by the agreement or
25by local labor organizations which may arise for actions taken by the employer in
1compliance with this section. All such lawful claims, demands, suits
, and other forms
2of liability are the responsibility of the labor organization entering into the
3agreement.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,101,104
(d) Under each fair-share or maintenance of membership agreement,
a public
5safety an employee
affected by the agreement who has religious convictions against
6dues payments to a labor organization based on teachings or tenets of a church or
7religious body of which he or she is a member shall, on request to the labor
8organization, have his or her dues paid to a charity mutually agreed upon by the
9public safety employee and the labor organization. Any dispute concerning this
10paragraph may be submitted to the commission for adjudication.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,102,312
111.85
(2) (a) Once authorized
under sub. (1), a fair-share or maintenance of
13membership agreement
covering public safety employees shall continue in effect,
14subject to the right of the employer or labor organization concerned to petition the
15commission to conduct a new referendum. Such petition must be supported by proof
16that at least 30 percent of the public safety employees in the collective bargaining
17unit
or at least 30 percent of the employees in a collective bargaining unit containing
18a frontline worker desire that the fair-share or maintenance of membership
19agreement be discontinued. Upon so finding, the commission shall conduct a new
20referendum. If the continuance of the fair-share or maintenance of membership
21agreement is approved in the referendum by at least the percentage of eligible voting
22public safety employees required for its initial authorization, it shall be continued
23in effect, subject to the right of the employer or labor organization to later initiate a
24further vote following the procedure prescribed in this subsection. If the
25continuation of the agreement is not supported in any referendum, it
is deemed
1terminated terminates at the termination of the collective bargaining agreement, or
2one year from the date of the certification of the result of the referendum, whichever
3is earlier.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,102,124
(b) The commission shall declare any fair-share or maintenance of
5membership agreement suspended upon such conditions and for such time as the
6commission decides whenever it finds that the labor organization involved has
7refused on the basis of race, color, sexual orientation or creed to receive as a member
8any
public safety employee in the collective bargaining unit involved, and the
9agreement shall be made subject to the findings and orders of the commission. Any
10of the parties to the agreement, or any
public safety employee covered thereby, may
11come before the commission, as provided in s. 111.07, and petition the commission
12to make such a finding.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,102,1714
111.85
(4) The commission may, under rules adopted for that purpose, appoint
15as its agent an official of a state agency
or authority whose
public safety employees
16are entitled to vote in a referendum to conduct a referendum
provided for herein 17under this section.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,102,2519
111.86
(2) The division shall charge a state department
or, agency
, or authority 20the employer's share of the cost related to grievance arbitration under sub. (1) for any
21arbitration that involves one or more employees of the state department
or, agency
,
22or authority. Each state department
or, agency
, or authority so charged shall pay the
23amount that the division charges from the appropriation account or accounts used
24to pay the salary of the grievant. Funds received under this subsection shall be
25credited to the appropriation account under s. 20.505 (1) (ks).
AB68-ASA2-AA6,103,122
111.88
(1) If a dispute has not been settled after a reasonable period of
3negotiation and after the settlement procedures, if any, established by the parties
4have been exhausted, the representative which has been certified by the commission
5after an election, or, in the case of a representative of employees specified in s. 111.81
6(7) (a)
or (ag), has been duly recognized by the employer, as the exclusive
7representative of employees in an appropriate collective bargaining unit, and the
8employer, its officers and agents, after a reasonable period of negotiation, are
9deadlocked with respect to any dispute between them arising in the collective
10bargaining process, the parties jointly, may petition the commission, in writing, to
11initiate fact-finding under this section, and to make recommendations to resolve the
12deadlock.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,103,1614
111.90
(1) Carry out the statutory mandate and goals assigned to a state agency
15or authority by the most appropriate and efficient methods and means and utilize
16personnel in the most appropriate and efficient manner possible.
AB68-ASA2-AA6,103,2018
111.90
(2) Manage the employees of a state agency
or authority; hire, promote,
19transfer, assign or retain employees in positions within the agency
or authority; and
20in that regard establish reasonable work rules.