3201.7
. (a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), the Department
of Industrial Relations and the courts of this state shall recognize
as valid and binding any labor-management agreement that meets all of
the following requirements:
(1) The labor-management agreement has been negotiated separate
and apart from any collective bargaining agreement covering affected
employees.
(2) The labor-management agreement is restricted to the
establishment of the terms and conditions necessary to implement this
section.
(3) The labor-management agreement has been negotiated in
accordance with the authorization of the administrative director
pursuant to subdivision (d), between an employer or groups of
employers and a union that is the recognized or certified exclusive
bargaining representative that establishes any of the following:
(A) An alternative dispute resolution system governing disputes
between employees and employers or their insurers that supplements or
replaces all or part of those dispute resolution processes contained
in this division, including, but not limited to, mediation and
arbitration. Any system of arbitration shall provide that the
decision of the arbiter or board of arbitration is subject to review
by the appeals board in the same manner as provided for
reconsideration of a final order, decision, or award made and filed
by a workers' compensation administrative law judge pursuant to the
procedures set forth in Article 1 (commencing with Section 5900) of
Chapter 7 of Part 4 of Division 4, and the court of appeals pursuant
to the procedures set forth in Article 2 (commencing with Section
5950) of Chapter 7 of Part 4 of Division 4, governing orders,
decisions, or awards of the appeals board. The findings of fact,
award, order, or decision of the arbitrator shall have the same force
and effect as an award, order, or decision of a workers'
compensation administrative law judge. Any provision for arbitration
established pursuant to this section shall not be subject to Sections
5270, 5270.5, 5271, 5272, 5273, 5275, and 5277.
(B) The use of an agreed list of providers of medical treatment
that may be the exclusive source of all medical treatment provided
under this division.
(C) The use of an agreed, limited list of qualified medical
evaluators and agreed medical evaluators that may be the exclusive
source of qualified medical evaluators and agreed medical evaluators
under this division.
(D) Joint labor management safety committees.
(E) A light-duty, modified job, or return-to-work program.
(F) A vocational rehabilitation or retraining program utilizing an
agreed list of providers of rehabilitation services that may be the
exclusive source of providers of rehabilitation services under this
division.
(b) (1) Nothing in this section shall allow a labor-management
agreement that diminishes the entitlement of an employee to
compensation payments for total or partial disability, temporary
disability, vocational rehabilitation, or medical treatment fully
paid by the employer as otherwise provided in this division; nor
shall any agreement authorized by this section deny to any employee
the right to representation by counsel at all stages during the
alternative dispute resolution process. The portion of any agreement
that violates this paragraph shall be declared null and void.
(2) The parties may negotiate any aspect of the delivery of
medical benefits and the delivery of disability compensation to
employees of the employer or group of employers that are eligible for
group health benefits and nonoccupational disability benefits
through their employer.
(c) Subdivision (a) shall apply only to the following:
(1) An employer developing or projecting an annual workers'
compensation insurance premium, in California, of fifty thousand
dollars ($50,000) or more, and employing at least 50 employees, or
any employer that paid an annual workers' compensation insurance
premium, in California, of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), and
employing at least 50 employees in at least one of the previous three
years.
(2) Groups of employers engaged in a workers' compensation safety
group complying with Sections 11656.6 and 11656.7 of the Insurance
Code, and established pursuant to a joint labor management safety
committee or committees, that develops or projects annual workers'
compensation insurance premiums of five hundred thousand dollars
($500,000) or more.
(3) Employers or groups of employers, including cities and
counties, that are self-insured in compliance with Section 3700 that
would have projected annual workers' compensation costs that meet the
requirements of, and that meet the other requirements of, paragraph
(1) in the case of employers, or paragraph (2) in the case of groups
of employers.
(4) The State of California.
(d) Any recognized or certified exclusive bargaining
representative in an industry not covered by Section 3201.5, may file
a petition with the administrative director seeking permission to
negotiate with an employer or group of employers to enter into a
labor-management agreement pursuant to this section. The petition
shall specify the bargaining unit or units to be included, the names
of the employers or groups of employers, and shall be accompanied by
proof of the labor union's status as the exclusive bargaining
representative. The current collective bargaining agreement or
agreements shall be attached to the petition. The petition shall be
in the form designated by the administrative director. Upon receipt
of the petition, the administrative director shall promptly verify
the petitioner's status as the exclusive bargaining representative.
If the petition satisfies the requirements set forth in this
subdivision, the administrative director shall issue a letter
advising each employer and labor representative of their eligibility
to enter into negotiations, for a period not to exceed one year, for
the purpose of reaching agreement on a labor-management agreement
pursuant to this section. The parties may jointly request, and shall
be granted, by the administrative director, an additional one-year
period to negotiate an agreement.
(e) No employer may establish or continue a program established
under this section until it has provided the administrative director
with all of the following:
(1) Upon its original application and whenever it is renegotiated
thereafter, a copy of the labor-management agreement and the
approximate number of employees who will be covered thereby.
(2) Upon its original application and annually thereafter, a
statement signed under penalty of perjury, that no action has been
taken by any administrative agency or court of the United States to
invalidate the labor-management agreement.
(3) The name, address, and telephone number of the contact person
of the employer.
(4) Any other information that the administrative director deems
necessary to further the purposes of this section.
(f) No collective bargaining representative may establish or
continue to participate in a program established under this section
unless all of the following requirements are met:
(1) Upon its original application and annually thereafter, it has
provided to the administrative director a copy of its most recent
LM-2 or LM-3 filing with the United States Department of Labor, where
such filing is required by law, along with a statement, signed under
penalty of perjury, that the document is a true and correct copy.
(2) It has provided to the administrative director the name,
address, and telephone number of the contact person or persons of the
collective bargaining representative or representatives.
(g) Commencing July 1, 2005, and annually thereafter, the Division
of Workers' Compensation shall report to the Director of Industrial
Relations the number of labor-management agreements received and the
number of employees covered by these agreements.
(h) The data obtained by the administrative director pursuant to
this section shall be confidential and not subject to public
disclosure under any law of this state. However, the Division of
Workers' Compensation shall create derivative works pursuant to
subdivision (g) based on the labor-management agreements and data.
Those derivative works shall not be confidential, but shall be
public. On a monthly basis, the administrative director shall make
available an updated list of employers and unions entering into
labor-management agreements authorized by this section.