State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > California > Edc > 92625-92625.9

EDUCATION CODE
SECTION 92625-92625.9



92625.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
   (a) In the course of fulfilling its educational mission, the
University of California is required to participate in the
marketplace, both as a purchaser of goods and services and as a
provider of services to its customers, such as students who contract
with the university for room and board and medical consumers who
utilize the university's hospitals and clinics. In that role, the
university also functions as a proprietor of real property and other
physical assets located at its campuses and medical facilities.
   (b) In the marketplace, the university must make prudent business
decisions, as does any private business entity, to ensure efficient
and cost-effective management of its business concerns, and to
maximize benefit and minimize risk. One of those risks is the
possibility of labor-management conflict arising out of labor union
organizing campaigns. This conflict can adversely affect the
university's operation of facilities in which it has a proprietary
business interest by causing an interruption in service.
   (c) A major potential source of labor-management conflict that
threatens the economic interests of the university as a participant
in the marketplace is the possibility of economic action taken by
labor unions against employers when labor unions seek to organize
their workers over employer opposition to unionization. Experience
has demonstrated that organizing drives pursuant to formal and
adversarial union certification processes often deteriorate into
protracted and acrimonious labor-management conflicts.
   (d) One way to reduce risk where the university has a proprietary
interest in the operation of its facilities is to require, as a
condition of the university's entering into a lease or service
contract, that employers operating in the facility agree to a lawful,
nonconfrontational alternative process for resolving a union
organizing campaign. That alternative process is a so-called
"cardcheck," wherein employee preference regarding whether or not to
be represented by a labor union to act as their exclusive collective
bargaining representative is determined based on signed authorization
cards. Private employers are authorized under existing federal law
to agree voluntarily to use this procedure in lieu of election
procedures under the supervision of the National Labor Relations
Board.
   (e) The sole purpose of this article is to protect the university'
s proprietary interest in the operation of its facilities and to
assume the university's ability to procure and provide uninterrupted
services in the marketplace. This article is not enacted to favor any
particular outcome in the determination of employee preference
regarding union representation, nor to skew the procedures in that
determination to favor or hinder any party to the determination.
Likewise, this article is not intended to enact or express any
generally applicable policy regarding labor-management relations, or
to regulate those relations in any way, but is intended only to
protect the university's proprietary interest as a participant in the
marketplace.



92625.1.  As used in this article:
   (a) "Cardcheck agreement" means a written agreement between an
employer and a labor organization providing a procedure for
determining employee preference on the subject of whether to be
represented by a labor organization for collective bargaining, and if
so, by which labor organization to be represented, that provides, at
a minimum, the following:
   (1) The determination of employee preference regarding union
representation shall be by a cardcheck procedure conducted by a
neutral third party in lieu of a formal election.
   (2) All disputes over interpretation or application of the parties'
cardcheck agreement, and over issues regarding how to carry out the
cardcheck process or specific cardcheck procedures shall be submitted
to binding arbitration.
   (3) The forbearance by any labor organization from economic action
against the employer at the worksite of an organizing drive covered
by this section, and in relation to an organizing campaign only (not
to the terms of a collective bargaining agreement), so long as the
employer complies with the terms of the cardcheck agreement.
   (4) Language and procedures prohibiting the labor organization or
the employer from coercing or intimidating employees, explicitly or
implicitly, in selecting or not selecting a bargaining
representative.
   (b) "Collective bargaining agreement" means an agreement between
an employer and a labor organization regarding wages, hours, and
other terms and conditions of employment of the employer's employees.
For purposes of this article, a collective bargaining agreement does
not include a cardcheck agreement as defined in subdivision (a).
   (c) "Facility" means any campus, school, cafeteria, store,
hospital, clinic, institute, laboratory, or office owned or operated
by the university, or at which the normal educational or
administrative functions of the university are conducted.
   (d) "Labor organization" means any organization of any kind, or
any agency or employee representation committee or plan, in which
employees participate and which exists for the purpose, in whole or
in part, of dealing with employers concerning grievances, labor
disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours of employment, or conditions or
work.
   (e) "Proprietary interest" means any nonregulatory arrangement or
circumstances in which the financial or other nonregulatory interests
of the university in a service contract could be adversely affected
by labor-management conflict or consumer boycotts potentially
resulting from a union organizing campaign.
   (f) "Service contract" means a lease, management agreement,
service agreement, loan bond, guarantee, or other similar agreement
to which the university is a party and in which the university has a
proprietary interest.
   (g) "Service contractor" means an individual, corporation,
unincorporated association, partnership, or other entity, other than
a collection agency retained by the university to enforce a financial
obligation owed to the university, that, pursuant to a service
contract, provides goods or services to the university.
   (h) "University" means the University of California and its
governing body, the Regents of the University of California.



92625.3.  (a) A service contractor shall enter into and comply with
a cardcheck agreement, as defined in Section 92625.1, with any labor
organization that requests the agreement for the purpose of seeking
to represent the service contractor's employees performing services
covered by the service contract. If a service contractor enters into
a cardcheck agreement with a labor organization, it shall offer that
same agreement to any other labor organization seeking to represent
the service contractor's employees. Any labor organization that was
not a party to the initial cardcheck agreement may, in its
discretion, reject the terms negotiated by the first union, and
negotiate for a different cardcheck agreement. In the event that a
labor organization and the service contractor are unable to negotiate
an agreement within the 30-day period, this section shall apply.
   (b) The university shall include in any service contract a
provision requiring any service contractor to abide by the
requirements imposed under subdivision (a) as essential consideration
for the university entering into the service contract.
   (c) All requests for proposals or invitations to bid or similar
documents regarding service contracts shall include a summary
description of, and reference to, the policy and requirements of this
article. Failure to include the description or reference to this
article in a document may not exempt any service contractor otherwise
subject to the requirements of this article.
   (d) This article may not apply to any service contractor signatory
to a valid and binding collective bargaining agreement covering the
terms and conditions of employment for its employees performing
services subject to the service contract, which includes a no-strike
provision, and which extends at least through the term of the service
contract.



92625.5.  The university or any other interested party may bring an
action for an injunction or specific performance in order to secure
compliance with the requirements of this article. The university
shall also have the right to terminate the service contract, upon 30
days' written notice to the service contractor, to cure its breach,
where the service contractor has failed to comply with the
requirements of this article.



92625.7.  If any provision of this article is declared illegal,
invalid, or inoperative, in whole or in part, by any court of
competent jurisdiction, the remaining provisions and portions thereof
and applications not declared illegal, invalid, or inoperative shall
remain in full force or effect. Nothing in this article may be
construed to impair any contractual obligations of the university.
This article may not be applied to the extent it will cause the loss
of any federal or state funding of university activities.



92625.9.  This article shall apply to the University of California
only to the extent that the Regents of the University of California
act, by resolution, to make it applicable.


State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > California > Edc > 92625-92625.9

EDUCATION CODE
SECTION 92625-92625.9



92625.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
   (a) In the course of fulfilling its educational mission, the
University of California is required to participate in the
marketplace, both as a purchaser of goods and services and as a
provider of services to its customers, such as students who contract
with the university for room and board and medical consumers who
utilize the university's hospitals and clinics. In that role, the
university also functions as a proprietor of real property and other
physical assets located at its campuses and medical facilities.
   (b) In the marketplace, the university must make prudent business
decisions, as does any private business entity, to ensure efficient
and cost-effective management of its business concerns, and to
maximize benefit and minimize risk. One of those risks is the
possibility of labor-management conflict arising out of labor union
organizing campaigns. This conflict can adversely affect the
university's operation of facilities in which it has a proprietary
business interest by causing an interruption in service.
   (c) A major potential source of labor-management conflict that
threatens the economic interests of the university as a participant
in the marketplace is the possibility of economic action taken by
labor unions against employers when labor unions seek to organize
their workers over employer opposition to unionization. Experience
has demonstrated that organizing drives pursuant to formal and
adversarial union certification processes often deteriorate into
protracted and acrimonious labor-management conflicts.
   (d) One way to reduce risk where the university has a proprietary
interest in the operation of its facilities is to require, as a
condition of the university's entering into a lease or service
contract, that employers operating in the facility agree to a lawful,
nonconfrontational alternative process for resolving a union
organizing campaign. That alternative process is a so-called
"cardcheck," wherein employee preference regarding whether or not to
be represented by a labor union to act as their exclusive collective
bargaining representative is determined based on signed authorization
cards. Private employers are authorized under existing federal law
to agree voluntarily to use this procedure in lieu of election
procedures under the supervision of the National Labor Relations
Board.
   (e) The sole purpose of this article is to protect the university'
s proprietary interest in the operation of its facilities and to
assume the university's ability to procure and provide uninterrupted
services in the marketplace. This article is not enacted to favor any
particular outcome in the determination of employee preference
regarding union representation, nor to skew the procedures in that
determination to favor or hinder any party to the determination.
Likewise, this article is not intended to enact or express any
generally applicable policy regarding labor-management relations, or
to regulate those relations in any way, but is intended only to
protect the university's proprietary interest as a participant in the
marketplace.



92625.1.  As used in this article:
   (a) "Cardcheck agreement" means a written agreement between an
employer and a labor organization providing a procedure for
determining employee preference on the subject of whether to be
represented by a labor organization for collective bargaining, and if
so, by which labor organization to be represented, that provides, at
a minimum, the following:
   (1) The determination of employee preference regarding union
representation shall be by a cardcheck procedure conducted by a
neutral third party in lieu of a formal election.
   (2) All disputes over interpretation or application of the parties'
cardcheck agreement, and over issues regarding how to carry out the
cardcheck process or specific cardcheck procedures shall be submitted
to binding arbitration.
   (3) The forbearance by any labor organization from economic action
against the employer at the worksite of an organizing drive covered
by this section, and in relation to an organizing campaign only (not
to the terms of a collective bargaining agreement), so long as the
employer complies with the terms of the cardcheck agreement.
   (4) Language and procedures prohibiting the labor organization or
the employer from coercing or intimidating employees, explicitly or
implicitly, in selecting or not selecting a bargaining
representative.
   (b) "Collective bargaining agreement" means an agreement between
an employer and a labor organization regarding wages, hours, and
other terms and conditions of employment of the employer's employees.
For purposes of this article, a collective bargaining agreement does
not include a cardcheck agreement as defined in subdivision (a).
   (c) "Facility" means any campus, school, cafeteria, store,
hospital, clinic, institute, laboratory, or office owned or operated
by the university, or at which the normal educational or
administrative functions of the university are conducted.
   (d) "Labor organization" means any organization of any kind, or
any agency or employee representation committee or plan, in which
employees participate and which exists for the purpose, in whole or
in part, of dealing with employers concerning grievances, labor
disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours of employment, or conditions or
work.
   (e) "Proprietary interest" means any nonregulatory arrangement or
circumstances in which the financial or other nonregulatory interests
of the university in a service contract could be adversely affected
by labor-management conflict or consumer boycotts potentially
resulting from a union organizing campaign.
   (f) "Service contract" means a lease, management agreement,
service agreement, loan bond, guarantee, or other similar agreement
to which the university is a party and in which the university has a
proprietary interest.
   (g) "Service contractor" means an individual, corporation,
unincorporated association, partnership, or other entity, other than
a collection agency retained by the university to enforce a financial
obligation owed to the university, that, pursuant to a service
contract, provides goods or services to the university.
   (h) "University" means the University of California and its
governing body, the Regents of the University of California.



92625.3.  (a) A service contractor shall enter into and comply with
a cardcheck agreement, as defined in Section 92625.1, with any labor
organization that requests the agreement for the purpose of seeking
to represent the service contractor's employees performing services
covered by the service contract. If a service contractor enters into
a cardcheck agreement with a labor organization, it shall offer that
same agreement to any other labor organization seeking to represent
the service contractor's employees. Any labor organization that was
not a party to the initial cardcheck agreement may, in its
discretion, reject the terms negotiated by the first union, and
negotiate for a different cardcheck agreement. In the event that a
labor organization and the service contractor are unable to negotiate
an agreement within the 30-day period, this section shall apply.
   (b) The university shall include in any service contract a
provision requiring any service contractor to abide by the
requirements imposed under subdivision (a) as essential consideration
for the university entering into the service contract.
   (c) All requests for proposals or invitations to bid or similar
documents regarding service contracts shall include a summary
description of, and reference to, the policy and requirements of this
article. Failure to include the description or reference to this
article in a document may not exempt any service contractor otherwise
subject to the requirements of this article.
   (d) This article may not apply to any service contractor signatory
to a valid and binding collective bargaining agreement covering the
terms and conditions of employment for its employees performing
services subject to the service contract, which includes a no-strike
provision, and which extends at least through the term of the service
contract.



92625.5.  The university or any other interested party may bring an
action for an injunction or specific performance in order to secure
compliance with the requirements of this article. The university
shall also have the right to terminate the service contract, upon 30
days' written notice to the service contractor, to cure its breach,
where the service contractor has failed to comply with the
requirements of this article.



92625.7.  If any provision of this article is declared illegal,
invalid, or inoperative, in whole or in part, by any court of
competent jurisdiction, the remaining provisions and portions thereof
and applications not declared illegal, invalid, or inoperative shall
remain in full force or effect. Nothing in this article may be
construed to impair any contractual obligations of the university.
This article may not be applied to the extent it will cause the loss
of any federal or state funding of university activities.



92625.9.  This article shall apply to the University of California
only to the extent that the Regents of the University of California
act, by resolution, to make it applicable.



State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > California > Edc > 92625-92625.9

EDUCATION CODE
SECTION 92625-92625.9



92625.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
   (a) In the course of fulfilling its educational mission, the
University of California is required to participate in the
marketplace, both as a purchaser of goods and services and as a
provider of services to its customers, such as students who contract
with the university for room and board and medical consumers who
utilize the university's hospitals and clinics. In that role, the
university also functions as a proprietor of real property and other
physical assets located at its campuses and medical facilities.
   (b) In the marketplace, the university must make prudent business
decisions, as does any private business entity, to ensure efficient
and cost-effective management of its business concerns, and to
maximize benefit and minimize risk. One of those risks is the
possibility of labor-management conflict arising out of labor union
organizing campaigns. This conflict can adversely affect the
university's operation of facilities in which it has a proprietary
business interest by causing an interruption in service.
   (c) A major potential source of labor-management conflict that
threatens the economic interests of the university as a participant
in the marketplace is the possibility of economic action taken by
labor unions against employers when labor unions seek to organize
their workers over employer opposition to unionization. Experience
has demonstrated that organizing drives pursuant to formal and
adversarial union certification processes often deteriorate into
protracted and acrimonious labor-management conflicts.
   (d) One way to reduce risk where the university has a proprietary
interest in the operation of its facilities is to require, as a
condition of the university's entering into a lease or service
contract, that employers operating in the facility agree to a lawful,
nonconfrontational alternative process for resolving a union
organizing campaign. That alternative process is a so-called
"cardcheck," wherein employee preference regarding whether or not to
be represented by a labor union to act as their exclusive collective
bargaining representative is determined based on signed authorization
cards. Private employers are authorized under existing federal law
to agree voluntarily to use this procedure in lieu of election
procedures under the supervision of the National Labor Relations
Board.
   (e) The sole purpose of this article is to protect the university'
s proprietary interest in the operation of its facilities and to
assume the university's ability to procure and provide uninterrupted
services in the marketplace. This article is not enacted to favor any
particular outcome in the determination of employee preference
regarding union representation, nor to skew the procedures in that
determination to favor or hinder any party to the determination.
Likewise, this article is not intended to enact or express any
generally applicable policy regarding labor-management relations, or
to regulate those relations in any way, but is intended only to
protect the university's proprietary interest as a participant in the
marketplace.



92625.1.  As used in this article:
   (a) "Cardcheck agreement" means a written agreement between an
employer and a labor organization providing a procedure for
determining employee preference on the subject of whether to be
represented by a labor organization for collective bargaining, and if
so, by which labor organization to be represented, that provides, at
a minimum, the following:
   (1) The determination of employee preference regarding union
representation shall be by a cardcheck procedure conducted by a
neutral third party in lieu of a formal election.
   (2) All disputes over interpretation or application of the parties'
cardcheck agreement, and over issues regarding how to carry out the
cardcheck process or specific cardcheck procedures shall be submitted
to binding arbitration.
   (3) The forbearance by any labor organization from economic action
against the employer at the worksite of an organizing drive covered
by this section, and in relation to an organizing campaign only (not
to the terms of a collective bargaining agreement), so long as the
employer complies with the terms of the cardcheck agreement.
   (4) Language and procedures prohibiting the labor organization or
the employer from coercing or intimidating employees, explicitly or
implicitly, in selecting or not selecting a bargaining
representative.
   (b) "Collective bargaining agreement" means an agreement between
an employer and a labor organization regarding wages, hours, and
other terms and conditions of employment of the employer's employees.
For purposes of this article, a collective bargaining agreement does
not include a cardcheck agreement as defined in subdivision (a).
   (c) "Facility" means any campus, school, cafeteria, store,
hospital, clinic, institute, laboratory, or office owned or operated
by the university, or at which the normal educational or
administrative functions of the university are conducted.
   (d) "Labor organization" means any organization of any kind, or
any agency or employee representation committee or plan, in which
employees participate and which exists for the purpose, in whole or
in part, of dealing with employers concerning grievances, labor
disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours of employment, or conditions or
work.
   (e) "Proprietary interest" means any nonregulatory arrangement or
circumstances in which the financial or other nonregulatory interests
of the university in a service contract could be adversely affected
by labor-management conflict or consumer boycotts potentially
resulting from a union organizing campaign.
   (f) "Service contract" means a lease, management agreement,
service agreement, loan bond, guarantee, or other similar agreement
to which the university is a party and in which the university has a
proprietary interest.
   (g) "Service contractor" means an individual, corporation,
unincorporated association, partnership, or other entity, other than
a collection agency retained by the university to enforce a financial
obligation owed to the university, that, pursuant to a service
contract, provides goods or services to the university.
   (h) "University" means the University of California and its
governing body, the Regents of the University of California.



92625.3.  (a) A service contractor shall enter into and comply with
a cardcheck agreement, as defined in Section 92625.1, with any labor
organization that requests the agreement for the purpose of seeking
to represent the service contractor's employees performing services
covered by the service contract. If a service contractor enters into
a cardcheck agreement with a labor organization, it shall offer that
same agreement to any other labor organization seeking to represent
the service contractor's employees. Any labor organization that was
not a party to the initial cardcheck agreement may, in its
discretion, reject the terms negotiated by the first union, and
negotiate for a different cardcheck agreement. In the event that a
labor organization and the service contractor are unable to negotiate
an agreement within the 30-day period, this section shall apply.
   (b) The university shall include in any service contract a
provision requiring any service contractor to abide by the
requirements imposed under subdivision (a) as essential consideration
for the university entering into the service contract.
   (c) All requests for proposals or invitations to bid or similar
documents regarding service contracts shall include a summary
description of, and reference to, the policy and requirements of this
article. Failure to include the description or reference to this
article in a document may not exempt any service contractor otherwise
subject to the requirements of this article.
   (d) This article may not apply to any service contractor signatory
to a valid and binding collective bargaining agreement covering the
terms and conditions of employment for its employees performing
services subject to the service contract, which includes a no-strike
provision, and which extends at least through the term of the service
contract.



92625.5.  The university or any other interested party may bring an
action for an injunction or specific performance in order to secure
compliance with the requirements of this article. The university
shall also have the right to terminate the service contract, upon 30
days' written notice to the service contractor, to cure its breach,
where the service contractor has failed to comply with the
requirements of this article.



92625.7.  If any provision of this article is declared illegal,
invalid, or inoperative, in whole or in part, by any court of
competent jurisdiction, the remaining provisions and portions thereof
and applications not declared illegal, invalid, or inoperative shall
remain in full force or effect. Nothing in this article may be
construed to impair any contractual obligations of the university.
This article may not be applied to the extent it will cause the loss
of any federal or state funding of university activities.



92625.9.  This article shall apply to the University of California
only to the extent that the Regents of the University of California
act, by resolution, to make it applicable.