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Waterloo Community School District v. Public Employment Relations Board

IowaSeptember 5, 2002No. 01-0494Cited 7 times
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Carter
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The Iowa Supreme Court reversed and affirmed portions of the district court's decision on mandatory collective bargaining subjects. The court held that time and place of wage payments and sick leave pooling are mandatory bargaining subjects, while employee evaluation criteria and additional compensation for extended teaching hours are not.

What This Ruling Means

**What Happened** The Waterloo Community School District and its teachers' union disagreed about which workplace issues the school district was legally required to negotiate with the union. The dispute centered on four specific topics: when and where teachers get paid their wages, whether teachers could pool their sick leave together, how teacher performance would be evaluated, and extra pay for teachers who work longer hours. **What the Court Decided** The Iowa Supreme Court made a split decision. The court ruled that the school district must negotiate with the union about wage payment timing and location, as well as sick leave pooling arrangements. However, the court said the district did not have to negotiate about teacher evaluation methods or additional compensation for extended teaching hours. **Why This Matters for Workers** This ruling clarifies which workplace issues unionized employees can force their employers to bargain over. Workers gained the right to negotiate practical matters like pay schedules and benefit sharing (sick leave pooling), but lost ground on performance evaluation standards and certain types of extra compensation. For unionized workers, this establishes clearer boundaries about what they can collectively bargain for versus what management can decide unilaterally.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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