Historically, FA and the District have been able to resolve over 90 percent of potential faculty grievances at the conciliation step in the grievance process. Experienced FA-appointed campus conciliators work confidentially with grievants and their managers to re-open closed communication channels, define contractual problem areas, explore compromise solutions, and work with the parties to design their own solutions to contractual problems.
Foothill College Conciliator
Eric Reed
(650) 949-7091
faeric@fafhda.org
De Anza College Conciliator
Ilan Glasman
(408) 864-5574
daconciliator@fafhda.org
FA conciliators are contract experts who will immediately answer most contract questions from either faculty or management (the deans with the fewest grievances in their divisions are often the deans who talk to their campus conciliator before acting), or will research your question and get back to you later.
Here is a chronological outline of a typical conciliation effort.
The first two categories are normally easy to resolve. If the Board has behaved correctly, there is no VMM and therefore there is nothing to grieve. If the Board clearly committed a VMM, it is normally sufficient for the FA to explain the contract issues to the dean, or failing that, to the dean’s supervisor. The third category, unclear cases, is the difficult one. The rest of this outline is devoted to that category.
All discussions and correspondence between faculty members and campus conciliators are strictly confidential. Discussions and actions during conciliation meetings are not only confidential, they are also contractually protected; evidence of such discussions and actions cannot be used by either party in subsequent Internal Review Hearings or Arbitration Hearings (see Article 5.1.3). This protection is intended to encourage honest (and sometimes heated) dialogue between the parties in order to get all relevant issues out on the table for discussion.
A campus conciliator’s most important role is advocate for the Agreement. As a representative of the Faculty Association, the conciliator is of course keenly interested in advancing the interests of faculty members over management interests. But unlike lawyers who are bound to defend their client regardless of their guilt or innocence, the campus conciliators are bound to uphold the terms of the Agreement. This makes perfect sense: the Agreement represents literally thousands of hours of exasperating and meticulous effort by the FA and District to bargain equitable working conditions, compensation and procedures for changing job status for all District faculty members. It would be foolhardy for an FA representative to either advocate or allow a single union member to violate the terms of the Association’s and District’s hard-won Agreement.