I. Statement of the Case
This case is before the Authority on exceptions to the award of Arbitrator
Edward P. Archer filed by the Agency under § 7122 of the Federal Service
Labor-Management Relations Statute (the Statute) and part 2425 of the
Authority's Regulations. The Union filed an opposition.
The Arbitrator found that the Agency violated its internal procedures
governing the processing of requests for reasonable accommodations for persons
with disabilities and ordered backpay for the grievant. For the following
reasons, we deny the Agency's exceptions to the Arbitrator's award.
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II. Background and Arbitrator's Award A. Background
The grievant is an investigator for the Agency. After developing medical
problems, the grievant was treated by a doctor, who provided a disability
certificate advising that she would be able to return to work on June 1, 2001.
Specifically, the doctor recommended that the grievant work a limited duty
schedule and a "work-at-home/home office program[,] if it was available." Award
at 3.
The grievant met with her supervisor, a management official, and a Union
representative on June 1, 2001 and it was agreed that "she would return to work
in the Agency office for four hours a day." Id. On June 4, 2001, her doctor
provided the Agency with a refined diagnosis of the grievant's illness and
recommended that she not work, if work at home was unavailable. He also stated
that, after an endocrinology assessment, she could work four hours a day,
gradually increasing work in the office as she could tolerate. Subsequently,
another doctor, her endocrinologist, noting that her medication made her
fatigued, recommended that she have a 2-3 hour break in her 8 hour work
schedule.
On October 15, 2001, the grievant requested that she begin an 8 hour work
schedule on October 22. In particular, she requested that, initially, she work 4
hours at home and then, after a period of weeks, shift to working 2 hours at
home. She also requested that her work schedule include a 2-3 hour rest period
during the 8-hour day. The grievant's request was forwarded to the Agency's
Headquarters Disability Program Manager.
The grievant received no response to her request and, on December 21, 2001,
she submitted another request to the Agency. She included a recommendation from
her family doctor that she begin with 4 hours of work at home, a 2-3 hour rest
period, followed by 4 hours of work in the office. After some delay, this second
request was also forwarded to the Disability Program Manager.
Upon request, the grievant gave permission for her doctor to talk to the
Disability Program Manager. Based on conversations between the grievant's doctor
and the Disability Program Manager, the Agency agreed that, effective February
5,
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2002, the grievant's work schedule would be adjusted to allow her to work 4
hours at home and 4 hours in the office. This schedule was to terminate on April
7, 2002.
The grievant filed a grievance on February 28, 2002, requesting back pay for
the period of delay in processing her request for an accommodation. The Agency
denied the grievance on the grounds that: (1) it was untimely; (2) the grievant
was not disabled within the meaning of the Rehabilitation Act; and (3) she was
not a qualified individual with a disability during the relevant time period.
The grievance was not resolved and was submitted to arbitration.
B. Arbitrator's Award 1. Arbitrability
While the Arbitrator did not expressly state the arbitrability issue, he
considered whether the grievance was timely filed under Article 41.07 of the
parties' collective bargaining agreement.!./ In this regard, the Arbitrator
noted that the Agency's "Procedures for Providing Reasonable Accommodation for
Individuals with Disabilities" (Procedures) provide that requests for
accommodation must be processed within 20 days if submitted to the Disability
Program Manager, except for extenuating circumstances.
Because the grievant's request had been submitted to the Disability Program
Manager, the Agency argued that the grievance should have been filed within 25
days from the date that the Disability Program Manager had possessed the request
for 20 days without making a response. According to the Agency, under this
interpretation, the February 28 grievance was untimely regardless of whether the
grievant's October 15 or December 21 requests were considered.
The Arbitrator determined that the time limit for filing a grievance was
triggered by the grant on February 5, 2002, of
!/ Article 41.07 of the parties' collective bargaining agreement provides as
follows:
Written grievances must be filed within 25 calendar days after the incident
giving rise to the grievance occurs.
the grievant's requested accommodation because until that time the grievant
had no basis for requesting back pay. Accordingly, the Arbitrator determined
that the grievance was arbitrable.
2. Whether the Agency Violated the Procedures
Turning to the merits of the grievance, the Arbitrator addressed whether the
Agency had complied with the Procedures. The Agency maintained that it had done
so, citing the following provision of the Procedures: "If medical documentation
is necessary, the decision will be made within 20 business days from the receipt
of documentation." Award at 9 (quoting the Procedures). Because the Agency had
granted the grievant's request within five days of the receipt of material from
her personal doctor, the Agency claims it complied with that provision.
The Arbitrator noted that the Disability Program Manager had: (1) the
grievant's October 15 request for over two months and did not request
documentation; and (2) the grievant's December 21 request for almost a month
before asking the grievant to grant permission for the release of information,
which the grievant promptly gave. The Arbitrator also noted that the grievant's
doctor responded the day after the Disability Program Manager contacted him. The
Arbitrator concluded, therefore, that neither the grievant nor the grievant's
doctor delayed the Agency's action on the requests.
The Arbitrator found that "this very delayed response was not in compliance
with the spirit of the Procedures, that were designed to expedite Agency
responses to employee accommodation requests." Award at 11. According to the
Arbitrator, the Agency's interpretation of the Procedures would allow it to
delay indefinitely the request for medical information and thus to postpone the
employee's requested accommodation. Further, the Arbitrator found that nothing
in the facts of the case constituted extenuating circumstances, as defined by
the Procedures, that would justify the delay. Finally, the Arbitrator rejected
the remaining Agency arguments attempting to justify its delay in responding to
the grievant's requests.
The Arbitrator concluded that "the Agency's inaction on [the grievant's]
October 15 and December 21, 2001t,] requests to modify her accommodation were in
breach of the Agency's
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Procedures for employees to seek such accommodations." Id. at 13.
3. Whether the Agency Violated the Rehabilitation and Americans with
Disabilities Acts
The Arbitrator next addressed whether the Agency's actions with respect to
the grievant violated the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 791 et seq., or the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. In this regard,
the Agency asserted that the grievant: (1) "did not have an impairment that
limited a major life activity;" (2) was not "'substantially limited'" in a major
life activity because her condition was "temporary,-" and (3) was not "a
qualified individual with a disability who could, with or without accommodation,
do the essential functions of her position." Award at 14 (referencing the ADA,
42 U.S.C § 12102(2)(A)).
Citing her doctor's reports, the Arbitrator found that "it was anticipated by
all that her accommodation would be temporary to allow her to regain her stamina
and return to work fulltime [sic] without an accommodation." Id. at 15. In this
regard, the Arbitrator stated that "it is clear from the record that [the
grievant's] disability was always represented as a temporary one." Id. Citing
Evans v. City of Dallas, 861 F.2d 846 (5th Cir. 1988) and Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC) regulations, 29 C.F.R. §§ 35.104 and 1630.2J, the
Arbitrator noted that under the Rehabilitation Act and the ADA, an important
consideration in determining whether an individual is covered by those statutes
is the duration of that individual's impairment. Because he found that the
grievant's disability was considered to be temporary, the Arbitrator concluded
her "requests for an accommodation were not covered by the Rehabilitation [Act]
or [the ADA] and so the Agency's actions or inactions regarding those requests
did not violate either of those Acts." Award at 16.
4. Remedy
The Arbitrator noted that he had found a violation of the Agency's Procedures
and that the "violation did not rise to the level of a statutory violation."
Award at 16. The Arbitrator also noted that the Agency had acknowledged that "it
has granted accommodations to employees with temporary
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disabilities." Id. Further, the Arbitrator stated that the Agency's
Procedures, in Article XIII, provide that the Procedures are "'in addition to
statutory and collective bargaining protections for persons with disabilities
and the remedies they provide for the denial of requests for reasonable
accommodation.'" Id. (quoting Article XIII).
Based on his interpretation of the quoted portion of Article XIII, the
Arbitrator concluded that: (1) the Procedures "are commitments the Agency has
undertaken regarding the processing of requests for accommodation that are
independent of statutorily required procedures;" and (2) "breaches of those
commitments would render the Agency liable." Id.
The Arbitrator found, based on the amount of time it took the Agency to act
on the grievant's request once it received documentation, that if the Agency had
acted on the grievant's October 15 request in the same manner, "the 20-day
process for processing her request would have had to [have] been delayed for
only that two days." Id. at 17. The Arbitrator also found that the Agency would
have granted the grievant's October 15 request for an accommodation if it had
acted promptly on that request. Accordingly, he found that the grievant would
have returned to an 8-hour work day at that time and "would have accrued leave
and other benefits and received pay in accordance with working full eight-hour
days from that time on." Id. Consequently, the Arbitrator ordered the Agency to
make the grievant whole "by paying her the additional earnings and providing her
the additional benefits she would have obtained had her October 15, 2001 request
for an accommodation been granted 22 working days after October 15, 2001 instead
of on February 5, 2002."2/ Id.
2/ The Arbitrator denied the Union's request for attorney fees because that
request had been premised on alleged violations of the Rehabilitation Act and
the ADA and he did not find such violations. No exceptions have been filed to
that part of the award and it will not be considered further herein.
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III. Positions of the Parties A. Agency's Exceptions
As to the Arbitrator's arbitrability determination, the Agency contends that
it is so "illogical as to amount to a denial of a substantive right." Agency's
Exceptions (Exceptions) at 6. Specifically, the Agency argues that statutes of
limitation, such as the time limits for filing grievances, usually start from
the denial of a legal right, while the Arbitrator calculated the time limits
governing the grievance in this case from the date that the Agency "gratuitously
granted a benefit." Id. (emphasis in original). According to the Agency, if it
had ignored the grievant's requests and not allowed the grievant to work at
home, which it had the legal right to do, the logic of the Arbitrator's
determination would mean that the Union would not have any time limit to file a
grievance.
As to the Arbitrator's award on the merits, the Agency contends that the
Arbitrator properly found the grievant was not disabled and, thus, not entitled
to an accommodation under the Rehabilitation Act and the ADA. The Agency argues
that the Procedures only apply to employees who are disabled under those
statutes. Consequently, the Agency maintains, the grievant had no cause of
action for a violation of the Procedures. In this regard, the Agency asserts
that the Procedures were promulgated pursuant to Executive Order 13164, which
provided that it created no rights or benefits enforceable against the
Government.
The Agency claims that the award of back pay violates the Back Pay Act
because the delay in granting an accommodation to the grievant is not an
unjustified or unwarranted personnel action. The Agency also maintains that the
award is not consistent with the principle of sovereign immunity.
Finally, the Agency claims that the Arbitrator's award establishes a bad
policy. Specifically, the Agency argues that since it had no legal obligation to
afford the grievant an accommodation, it is being punished for the fact that it
nevertheless accommodated her. Such a result, the Agency maintains, discourages
agencies "from volunteering to provide benefits not specifically required."
Exceptions at 6.
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The Union contends that the Agency has stated no grounds for finding the
Arbitrator's procedural arbitrability ruling deficient under Authority
precedent.
As to the Agency's contrary to law arguments, the Union notes that the
Arbitrator clearly stated his finding that his award was not based on the
Rehabilitation Act or the ADA. Rather, according to the Union, the award is
based upon a violation of the Procedures which, as interpreted by the
Arbitrator, explicitly provide certain employee entitlements that are in
addition to any statutory rights. In this regard, the Union points out that the
Procedures state as follows: "As a model employer, EEOC may take steps, as
appropriate, beyond those required by the reasonable accommodation process."
Union Opposition at 6 (quoting Procedures at 2) . The Union also asserts that
the testimony of Agency supervisors establishes that the Procedures were used to
grant employees accommodations for temporary disabilities. The Union contends
that, for these, reasons, the award is consistent with law.
With respect to the Agency's arguments with respect to the award of back pay,
the Union contends that the award in this respect "would not be in violation of
sovereign immunity, since the statute permits such an award." Id. at 7.
Moreover, according to the Union, the issue of sovereign immunity was not raised
before the Arbitrator. As to the Agency's argument that the award creates bad
policy, the Union asserts that such an argument does not provide a basis for
finding the award deficient.
IV. Analysis and Conclusions
A. Procedural Arbitrability
An arbitrator's determination regarding the timeliness of a grievance
constitutes a procedural arbitrability determination, which may be found
deficient only on grounds that do not challenge the determination itself. See
United States Dep't of Defense, DLA, Def. Distrib. Depot, New Cumberland, Pa.,
58 FLRA 750, 753 (2003). Such grounds include arbitrator bias or the fact that
the arbitrator
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exceeded his or her authority. See AFGE, Local 2921, 50 FLRA 184, 185-86
(1995).
The Agency's exception arguing that the Arbitrator's finding that the
grievance was timely filed is illogical challenges the Arbitrator's procedural
arbitrability determination itself. Consequently, the Agency's exception
provides no basis for finding that the award in this respect is deficient.
Accordingly, we deny the Agency's procedural arbitrability exception.
B. Contrary to Law
An award is deficient under § 7122(a)(1) of the Statute if it is contrary to
the Back Pay Act. See, e.g., United States Dep't of Justice, Fed. Bu. of
Prisons, Fed. Correctional Complex, Beaumont, Tex., 59 FLRA 466, 467 (2003). An
award is also deficient if it is contrary to a governing agency regulation.3_/
See, e.g., United States Dep't of the Army, Fort Campbell Dist., Third Region,
Fort Campbell, Ky. 37 FLRA 186, 192 (1990). As the Agency's exception challenges
the award's consistency with the Back Pay Act and the Procedures, we review the
questions of law raised by the exception de novo. See, e.g., United States Dep't
of the Navy, Commander, Military Sealift Command, Washington, D.C., 57 FLRA 930,
931 (2002); AFGE, Local 1203, 55 FLRA 528, 530 (1999). In applying a de novo
standard of review, the Authority assesses whether an arbitrator's legal
conclusions are consistent with the applicable standard of law. See NFFE, Local
1437, 53 FLRA 1703, 1710 (1998) . In making that assessment, the Authority
defers to the arbitrator's underlying factual findings. See id.
The Agency argues that the Arbitrator's award of back pay is contrary to law
because the Arbitrator improperly found that it violated the Procedures.
Specifically, the Agency claims that the grievant is not entitled to an
accommodation
3_/ While the Agency claims that the Procedures do not apply to the grievant,
it does not challenge the fact that, if the Procedures do apply, they govern the
disposition of the grievance.
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because she is not "disabled" within the meaning of the Rehabilitation Act
and the ADA and thus the Procedures do not apply to her because the procedures
provide entitlements only to employees who fall within the protections of those
statutes. The validity of the award of backpay under the Back Pay Act,
therefore, depends on whether the award is inconsistent with the Procedures.
The Authority has long held that, under the Back Pay Act, an award of back
pay is authorized only when an arbitrator finds that: (1) the aggrieved employee
was affected by an unjustified or unwarranted personnel action; and (2) the
personnel action has resulted in the withdrawal or reduction of the grievant's
pay, allowances, or differentials. See, e.g., United States Dep't of Health and
Human Services, 54 FLRA 1210, 1218-19 (1998). A violation of a governing agency
regulation constitutes an unjustified or unwarranted personnel action. See,
e.g., United States Dep't of the Air Force, Aerospace Guidance and Metrology
Center, Newark AFB, Ohio, 41 FLRA 550, 558-59 (1991) (Newark AFB).
The Agency argues that the Arbitrator erred in applying the Procedures to the
grievant because she was not disabled within the meaning of the Rehabilitation
Act and the ADA and, thus, was not covered by the Procedures. However, the
Arbitrator specifically found that the Procedures applied to the grievant
despite the fact that he had also found that she was not covered by the
Rehabilitation Act and the ADA. In this regard, the Arbitrator found that the
Agency had granted accommodations to employees, such as the grievant, who had
temporary disabilities and thus were not "disabled" within the meaning of the
Rehabilitation Act and the ADA. He also found, based on Article XIII of the
Procedures, that "the Procedures are commitments the Agency has undertaken
regarding the processing of requests for accommodation that are independent of
statutorily required procedures." Award at 16. Thus, the Arbitrator found that
the Procedures established requirements for the processing of requests for
accommodation for employees who would not be entitled to accommodation under the
Rehabilitation Act or the ADA. Based on that finding, he concluded that the
Agency had violated the processing requirements of the Procedures.
The Agency does not dispute the Arbitrator's finding that it had previously
provided accommodations to employees with
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temporary disabilities. The Agency also does not challenge the Arbitrator's
interpretation of Article XIII as creating "commitments" to employees that are
independent of statute. Id. Further, the Agency does not demonstrate that
Executive Order 13164 precludes agencies from extending protections to employees
who are temporarily disabled. Consequently, the Agency has not demonstrated that
the Arbitrator erred in applying the Procedures to the grievant or in finding a
violation of those procedures in the circumstances of this case.
The Agency's argument that the award establishes a "bad policy" simply
quarrels with its own practice of extending accommodations to temporarily
disabled employees and the terms of its own Procedures as interpreted by the
Arbitrator. The argument provides no basis for finding the award deficient.
The Agency has not demonstrated that the Arbitrator's award is inconsistent
with the Procedures. We note in this regard that, as the Arbitrator found, the
Procedures specifically provide that the Agency may take steps, as appropriate,
beyond those required by the reasonable accommodation process. See Procedures,
Attachment 3 at 2, to Exceptions. Thus, the Arbitrator's finding that the Agency
violated the Procedures is sufficient to establish an unjustified or unwarranted
personnel action under the Back Pay Act. See Newark AFB, 41 FLRA at 558-59.
Consequently, the Agency has not established that the award of back pay to the
grievant in this case is deficient under law. In this regard, as the Agency
implicitly recognizes, the Back Pay Act is a waiver of sovereign immunity. See
United States Dep't of Transportation, FAA, 52 FLRA 46, 49 (1996) (citing United
States v. Testan, 424 U.S. 392, 405 (1976)).
Accordingly, we deny the Agency's contrary to law exception.
V. Decision
The Agency's exceptions are denied.
ERRATA
On July 13, 2004, the Authority issued its Decision in the above-captioned
case. The Authority's citation (60 FLRA No. 18) was in error. The correct
citation is 60 FLRA No. 20.
Enclosed is a corrected copy of the Authority's July 13, 2004, Decision. We
apologize for any confusion this may have caused.
5 USC 7112
29 USC 791
42 USC 12101
42 USC 12102(2)(A)
29 CFR 35.104
29 CFR 1630.2J
861 F.2d 846
58 FLRA 750
50 FLRA 184
59 FLRA 466
37 FLRA 186
57 FLRA 930
55 FLRA 528
53 FLRA 1703
54 FLRA 1210
41 FLRA 550
424 U.S. 392