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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> R (Cable & Wireless Services UK Ltd) v Central Arbitration Committee & Anor [2008] EWHC 115 (Admin) (04 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/115.html Cite as: [2008] IRLR 425, [2008] EWHC 115 (Admin), [2008] ICR 693 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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R(Cable & Wireless Services U.K. Limited) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Central Arbitration Committee - and - The Communication Workers Union |
Defendant Interested Party |
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Mr Paul Nicholls (instructed by Messrs Pattinson & Brewer) for the Interested Party
The Defendant was not represented
Hearing date: 18 January 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Collins :
"(a) whether the proposed bargaining unit is appropriate;
(b) whether the union has … the support of a majority of the workers constituting the bargaining unit". (Paragraph 12(2)).
" (2) The CAC must take these matters into account –
(a) the need for the unit to be compatible with effective management,
(b) the matters listed in sub-paragraph (3), so far as they do not conflict with that need
(3)(a) the views of the employer and of the union (or unions),
(b) existing national and local bargaining arrangements
(c) the desirability of avoiding small fragmented bargaining units within an undertaking;
(d) the characteristics of workers falling within the bargaining units under consideration and of any other employees of the employer whom the CAC considers relevant;
(4) In taking an employer's views into account for the purpose of deciding whether the proposed bargaining unit is appropriate, the CAC must take into account any view the employer has about any other bargaining unit that he considers would be appropriate."
Paragraph 171 specifies a general duty on the CAC to "have regard to the object of encouraging and promoting fair and efficient practices and arrangements in the workplace, so far as having regard to that object is consistent with applying other provisions of this Schedule in the case concerned".
"63.[T]he workforce within Field Services is fragmented because colleagues are based at so many different locations (either at customer sites, home or one of 20 Cable and Wireless offices) throughout the U.K. At many of these sites, colleagues from Field Services are within single figures and make up a negligible proportion of the total numbers at those sites …
64. As well as being a geographically dispersed team, Field Services is far from the homogenous unit as suggested by the [IP]. In fact it is also fragmented by reference to the work that people within the team actually do. The team is split between both engineers and non-engineers … Moreover, it would be incorrect to characterise all colleagues with Field Services as simply those who work "in the field". Out of the whole of U.K. Field Services, 245 work in the field and 125 are desk based.
65. It would also be wrong to characterise Field Services as the directorate containing all engineers who work in the field … there are 179 engineers who are members of other directorates but who work in the field. Moreover, the vast majority of field engineers from Field Services could do the same work as the field engineers who operate outside of Field Services and vice-versa.
66. Moreover, if Field Services could in principle be treated as a separate bargaining unit, by application of the same reasoning so, too, could many of the other 29 directorates within Cable & Wireless that are at the same organisational level. This would be unworkable."
"41. The Panel noted the Employer's argument on the instability of the proposed bargaining unit i.e. that groups of staff had been taken out of Field Services in recent years but no groups of workers had moved into the Directorate, only individuals. The Panel accepts that there may be a reorganisation in the future but the Panel cannot take into account the undefined. Field Services is a Directorate with its own management team. It has a section in the ECF with constituents belonging to Field Services electing their own dedicated representative, currently Mr Duffy. Field Services seems to have been a recognised unit for some time and appears to be more stable than other areas. It is the Panel's view that it is a core group within core skills and core identity. This fact that not all engineers are grouped with Field Services does not deny the central organisational logic. If it did the company would have changed its structure. It would appear that within the telecommunications industry field service engineers are generally a recognisable occupational group.
42. The Panel does not accept the Employer's argument that the bargaining unit would create a fragmented unit. Fragmentation is not measured numerically as a given proportion of the workforce but in terms of whether a bargaining unit would divide up the workforce into numerous groups prone to compete with each other. The stability and occupational identity of field service workers, who also have a strong company identity, militates against fragmentation. The outcome of other groups of workers seeking to gain recognition for their own bargaining unit, should they seek to do so, cannot be predicted by the Panel. During the course of the hearing evidence was given of a bargaining unit being extended in another company in the industry as other workers sought recognition.
43. The Panel recognises the level of interaction of multi-skilled teams working together and the operational necessity for this in order to satisfy corporate customer expectations. The Union is clear about what it wants to achieve and how things would work and what it will do if recognised i.e. to establish one branch of the Union solely for Cable & Wireless. The Union stated that the branch and any forums established would be elected on a 'by and from' basis. Joint training sessions would be held to build a mutual understanding and an effective partnership. The Union would also put forward to the Employer a customised recognition agreement. These are laudable aspirations and the Panel notes the Union's appreciation of the fast moving nature of the industry and its strong desire not to damage efficiency and effectiveness achieved through multi-skilled, customer dedicated teams. However, these remain aspirations which the Panel cannot rely upon in making its current decision. Nonetheless, the Panel is aware of many examples in both the private and the public sector where different types of workers, each with their own trade union and distinct bargaining unit cooperate closely with each other in customer facing teams. Examples here are frequently found in aviation and the health sector. The Panel does not accept that union recognition will necessarily inhibit inter-group cooperative team working".