Law Enforcement Collective Bargaining. The Public Employees' Collective Bargaining Act (PECBA) provides for collective bargaining of wages, hours, and working conditions with employees of cities, counties, and other political subdivisions. Police have the authority to collectively bargain under PECBA, as do the officers of the Washington State Patrol and the Department of Fish and Wildlife. PECBA is administered by the Public Employment Relations Commission (PERC). Under PECBA, grievance procedures and discipline are mandatory subjects of bargaining and the parties may agree to binding arbitration to resolve grievances.
Many police agencies in Washington are represented for the purposes of collective bargaining and have collective bargaining agreements that call for binding arbitration to resolves grievances. Grievance procedures vary depending on the agreement, but may include an agreed-upon list of arbitrators. The parties may also request a list of arbitrators from PERC, the American Arbitration Association, or the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service.
Civil Service Commissions. State law requires most cities and counties to provide civil service for city police and and county sheriffs. If a city or county must provide for civil service, state law requires the creation of a civil service commission. State law requires a civil service commission to:
State civil service laws related to city police do not apply to cities and towns that provide for civil service that substantially accomplishes the purpose of state civil service laws.
Law Enforcement Collective Bargaining Agreements. Collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) covering law enforcement officers are prohibited from:
Appeal of Disciplinary Decisions. Discipline of law enforcement officers for misconduct are not subject to arbitration. Appeals of disciplinary decisions for misconduct are subject to a civil service commission. The employer may choose to use an administrative law judge (ALJ) or hearing examiner in lieu of a civil service commission to hear disciplinary appeals.
Any civil service commissioner, ALJ, or hearing examiner who hears appeals must:
A party may appeal a decision of a civil service commission, ALJ, or hearing examiner regarding discipline for misconduct to superior court only if the decision violates an explicit, well-defined, and dominant public policy established by case law.
The civil service commission, ALJ, or hearing examiner must uphold the discipline imposed and may not reduce the discipline unless they find it was arbitrary, capricious, or based on an illegal reason.
For appeals of discipline of misconduct:
Discipline and Discharge for Misconduct. An employer may not consider past discipline practices as an extenuating circumstance and may not impose discipline other than discharge based on past practice for similar misconduct.
The following specific misconduct must result in discharge of the law enforcement officer:
The state, cities, towns, counties, and other municipalities or political subdivisions must establish procedures for receiving and investigating complaints of misconduct and imposing discipline on law enforcement officers. The process for adopting the procedures must include the opportunity for public review and comment and review and comment by civilian oversight officials if a jurisdiction has them.
Law enforcement officer means any full-time, fully compensated and elected, appointed, or employed officer of a general authority Washington law enforcement agency who is commissioned to enforce the criminal laws of the state of Washington generally. Law enforcement officer does not include peace officers employed by the Department of Fish and Wildlife.
PRO: The bill sends appeals to a civil service commission and entities that do not have conflicts of interest while still allowing for due process and appeals. The bill addresses many police reform issues that have come up through the years. The bill helps hold police accountable while preserving collective bargaining. Collective bargaining stands in the way of reforms the citizens and cities have passed. The current system conceals discipline from public scrutiny. Extensive research shows that the inclusion of certain collective bargaining terms cause the issues that erode public trust.
CON: The bill attacks the fundamental tenets of collective bargaining. The bill only acknowledges individual problem cases and not systemic issues. The bill leaves the responsibility at the feet of workers instead of management who also perpetuate systemic issues. Management does not get it right all the time and the bill prevents holding them accountable. Washington is already a leader in police reform under current labor laws. This bill tips the scale to the employer and erodes hard-earned protections. The bill has the Legislature getting far too into the details of collective bargaining agreements between management and workers.
OTHER: Some of the bill goes too far instead of trying to strike a balance with bargaining. The bill may overwhelm civil service commissions. Sheriffs and police chiefs are opposed to the provisions that require discharging the officer for certain acts listed in the bill.