Monday, August 04, 2014

12 hour days?

I came back from vacation last week and landed in the land of the 12 hour day scuttlebutt. 

Background

5 years ago the Hennepin County Sheriff's Office took us off of the 6/3 schedule, and with the pound of a fist put us on the 28/8 schedule.

For 5 years the Sheriff's Office  REFUSED to discuss or entertain other options. As recently as a few weeks ago at negotiations with MNPEA Detention Deputies and Dispatchers they again refused citing, "employer right."

For some very relevant background read my post form 2005, Schedule Facts For Teamsters (we were Teamsters then.)

It seems an odd coincidence that once the HCSDA endorsed challenger Ediie Frizell for Hennepin County Sheriff that the current Sheriff is suddenly interested in changing from the unpopular 28/8 schedule.

All of the sudden there's a steamroller blazing the way to a 12 hour day. 

Fact 1

While refusing to talk to MNPEA Detention Deputies about alternate schedules for 5 years, a letter from Chief Deputy Carlson reveals they have been discussing just that with the HCSDA (licensed deputies) since last February!

They then added some Detention Deputies to this committee a couple of weeks ago, that as far as I can tell is only interested in a 12 hour schedule and how best to implement it. THERE WAS NO SURVEY OF DETENTION DEPUTIES! It is a piggyback onto seven months of licensed deputy talks. When I questioned Sheriff Stanek about this when he addressed us at a "meet and greet" on July 29th he said, "If it's good for the licensed deputies, it's good for detention, right?" 

Not so fast.

In an effort to find out what schedule preferences our members want a survey is going out with the contract vote ballots this week. We want to know what you want. To be sure some want 12's and some don't. To properly represent we need to know.

Bum Rush

Major Storms told the committee that they need an answer by this Wednesday. According to one of our stewards, when informed that the survey being mailed out wouldn't be back by then, Major Storms said to just verbally ask our members, because they needed to know it by Wednesday in time to implement the shift bid.

So for five years they won't discuss the schedule now they want an answer pronto. 

Sounds more like they are trying to appease themselves and implement a new schedule like they did the 28 day, but if it proves unpopular they can say, "This was the Union's idea."

Fact 2

The schedule is an inherent managerial right. (Minnesota State Statute 179A.07, Agreement Article 6, Sec. 1.)

The Sheriff can put us on whatever schedule he sees fit. Any schedule is ultimately the Sheriff's.

However,

That schedule must fall within the guidelines of the contract.

Here's what our contract says:

ARTICLE 10 - WORK SCHEDULES - PREMIUM PAY 

Section 1. This Article is intended only to define the normal hours of work and to provide the basis for the calculations of overtime premium and other premium pay. Nothing herein shall be construed as a guarantee of hours of work per day or per week. 

Section 2. A payroll period shall be an averaged eighty (80) hours

Section 3. Work shifts, work breaks, staffing schedules and the assignment of employees thereto, shall be established by the EMPLOYER. 

Section 4. For Detention Deputies, worked hours in excess of the assigned work shift of eight (8) or more hours or an averaged eighty (80) hours per payroll period, with the exception of the twelve mandatory training hours for employees on a 6-3 schedule, shall be overtime and compensated at one and one-half (1 1/2) times the employee's base pay rate, or one and one-half (1 1/2) hours compensatory time for each hour worked, subject to the provision that no employee shall be eligible for overtime premium unless prior approval of the overtime work was granted by the Sheriff or his designee
(bold type mine)

As long as a 12 hour schedule equals 80 hours a pay period, the Sheriff can impose it. The problem is every pattern I've seen laid out in the string of emails is 84 hours a pay period. That's an increase of 104 hours a year more at work.

There are two ways around it. One, pay that extra 4 hours as time and a half or make one workday every two weeks an 8 hour day.

Problems

1).There is an idea floating around that the union can just get a Letter of Understanding with the Sheriff to make the extra 4 hours a pay period straight time. That is not true. It is solid contract language and as such can only be NEGOTIATED at contract time. They let that window pass, and the next time that can be opened is in 2 years, but hey, for the last 5 they had no interest in discussing it.

2).The cynic in me can see the Sheriff claiming the 12 hour day can't work without concessions, concessions that can't be made outside of contract negotiations, and then blaming the Union because it couldn't work. I suspect this is a ploy to either feign wanting another schedule or a ploy to get your first 104 hours of overtime at straight time.

3). According to steward Phil M., Major Storms said that 16 hour days were a possibility if we were short.

4). Drafts on days off are possible. Currently at Dispatch they are on a 10 hour day schedule, 4 on 3 off. Well, not exactly. Due to short staffing they work overtime almost every day and are often forced to work 1 and sometimes 2 of their days off. This could happen to us if we go to 12's.

Reality is, going to 12's would be a hardship to anyone with kids in daycare, anyone who wants to attend their kids activities and anyone trying to go to school.

If implemented as I've seen emailed, you would be at work 104 more hours a year than now. There are 80 hours in a pay period, that's almost two and a half weeks MORE time at work!

At first there would be little to no overtime. Then the extra deputies would be transferred to the very short Courts Division.

Again, OK at first.

Then as staff continues to leave due to low pay, and maybe some due to the 12 hour day our compliment will fall.

Now add in some 2 man hospital guards, sick calls, and prime time vacation and you have 16 hour days and drafts on days off. Suddenly you aren't off, "half the year," as I hear some proponents saying.

Speaking of sick time, vacation time and holidays. This is how it would work with current contract language. Which again, can't be changed for 2 years if they actually choose to negotiate.

If you call in sick you will burn 12 hours a day. If you stay home 2 days to care for a child with the flu you just burned 24 hours. It'll take you 3  months to get that back, and let's not forget how quickly you will hit their 96 hour sick time limit.

If you take a vacation day, again you burn 12 hours.

Sick and vacation accruals WILL NOT CHANGE. It is a county wide benefit and accrues as hours, not days. 

Holidays would work like this. If you work a Holiday you would get paid 12 hours at time and a half and still get only 8 hours of either Deferred Holiday or Deferred Holiday paid out.

If you took the Holiday off, you would receive ONLY 8 hours of Holiday pay. I don't know how the other 4 hours would be accounted for. 

These are just some of the problems I see with a 12 hour day. 

I will not hide the fact I am no fan of 12's, but if the survey comes back and a majority of our members want it, as a steward I will support you.

I just want you to go in with both eyes open.






7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great point!!! It will suck if we go to 12 hour days...

Anonymous said...

Great points! This would suck if we got stuck with 12 hour shifts...

Anonymous said...

So, as a steward that works for the majority... Why not explain some of the positives of the 12? Why do so many agencies go to 12's, with people bitching the entire time, only to them NEVER wanting to return to 8's again? Give it a try... Maybe it'll be the best thing that's ever happened to this place!

Anonymous said...

So if you're a good steward that will fight for the majority of its members, why not speak of all the positives for the 12 hour day? If the licensed guys want it, there must be something good about it... What do they know that we don't?

Steward 320 said...

There are positives. A set schedule, in most cases and less days going to work. Yes, some folks love them.

IMO though that works ok in smaller less busy jails.

Imagine an 84 inmate night in booking grinding on for 12 hours?

12 hours in finger prints? etc etc etc

I think I outlined most of my objections in the post, but a deputy reminded me of the 2 year rule. No more than 50% of a shift can be less than 2 years experience. This means many more senior deps getting removed from mids or days to nights.

Also a mid shifter today is worried that a fall switch to 12's will cost him $5,000 in lost tuition for the Skills he paid for.

This would effectively end any chance of a detention deputy going to school to get licensed.

So, as a steward that works for the majority, if this is what you want, and it shows in the survey I will back it...however, be careful what you wish for and have both eyes open.

Steward 320 said...

anonymous, your recent comment, "So if you're a good steward that will fight for the majority of its members, why not speak of all the positives for the 12 hour day? If the licensed guys want it, there must be something good about it... What do they know that we don't?"

Which administrative stoolie are you? Stanek himself said the same thing in his talk with us.

I don't care what the licensed guys want for a schedule. They work in several divisions. I only care about the jail schedule.

BTW the majority of members I speak to do not want 12's. When we get the survey back from our members we'll know for sure what our people want.

Anonymous said...

I am still trying to figure out how they can force people to work potentially 16 hours and come back 8 hours later and do it again. I work 48 minutes each direction away from the jail. By the time you shower, eat, wind down, etc.... I will get a 4-5 hour NAP. How is that SAFE?

How can they potentially draft people on their scheduled days off for 12 hours? And, is this not going directly against the benefits of a set schedule? I will already be screwed financially with being forced to put the kids in daycare and my wife being forced to change her schedule to accommodate this. We will be forced to pay full time daycare rates where as now, we don't have the kids in daycare at all.

How can they penalize people and not change how time off, vacation, and holidays are accrued? Must be nice to take 2 days off and lose the hours for 3. How does that recharge or benefit us in any way? Again, we are losing family time and now we will not be able to have time for family vacations, etc.

There are so many things wrong with this 12 hr schedule, I don't even know where to begin.