Skip to main content

Open up the layoff process and preserve academic freedom!

June 4, 2008
From SPSE:


Last week SPSE-UPTE asserted that every laid-off employee has grounds to grieve his or her layoff. These employees have a number of reasons to file a grievance. The layoff process had irregularities and its outcome may reflect an unlawful bias in the decision making process. Moreover, grievances over the layoff would benefit everyone who remains at LLNL. Chief among these benefits would be exposing the LLNS layoff process to scrutiny, protecting academic freedom, and preserving the right to grieve.

Employees have only 30 days after the offending event to file a grievance or request an extension. For those laid off May 22nd or 23rd, this deadline falls on the weekend of June 21st. Since LLNS refuses to release information on the number and composition of many of the business units formed to implement the layoffs, merely gathering the evidence to form a viable case will take longer than 30 days. SPSE-UPTE is painstakingly interviewing the laid-off employees to refine the list of those laid off, and to record the circumstances of individual layoffs.

In categorically urging every separated employee to challenge his or her layoff, we were responding to the irregularities that surrounded this particular involuntary separation. The most obvious of these irregularities was the large fraction of the Lab's workforce that was excluded. We also noted that some organizations subdivided their employees into so many layoff units that seniority played little if any role in determining the order of layoff for the non-200 series employees within a given job code. Manipulating layoff units to circumvent seniority would be a violation of policy and the law. We are also looking carefully at the possibility of age discrimination in the choices that LLNS made.

In pursuing grievances, laid-off employees stand to learn much more than LLNS has volunteered to date about the layoff process, particularly if the grievances proceed to arbitration. With information such as the composition of business units, everyone can better assess how consistently and properly the layoff was carried out.

Bringing public scrutiny to LLNS' layoff procedures would discourage their removing someone who chooses to disagree with a dominant or politically expedient view and is therefore branded as a maverick and not a "team player." Management by UC had its faults, but academic freedom and transparency were valued. SPSE-UPTE is determined to preserve these values, even in a private sector limited liability company.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Thank you SPSE-UPTE for your offer to assist the career workers that were laid off from LLNL on May 22 and May 23. I have 3 decades of faithful and productive service to LLNL. I have a perfect work history and always got very good or outstanding employee appraisals and was told on 5-22-08 to get out and we don't want you back. For Management to treat me and my co-workers like they did on the lay off day was outrageous.

I will take your advice and file a complaint resolution form before June 20 as the seniority rules were not followed in my work group. One big issue is the lay off unit I was placed in - management won't tell me which one my co-workers and I were placed in. All of us that were unfairly laid off need to FIGHT BACK.

Anyone know the name of a good Labor Law attorney that has many years of experience with this type of case as I believe a class action suit should be started.
Anonymous said…
Look on the side bar to the right. $80M the goal.
Anonymous said…
The goal needs to be higher. At least the amount of "savings" they were trying to make.

Popular posts from this blog

Plutonium Shots on NIF.

Tri-Valley Cares needs to be on this if they aren't already. We need to make sure that NNSA and LLNL does not make good on promises to pursue such stupid ideas as doing Plutonium experiments on NIF. The stupidity arises from the fact that a huge population is placed at risk in the short and long term. Why do this kind of experiment in a heavily populated area? Only a moron would push that kind of imbecile area. Do it somewhere else in the god forsaken hills of Los Alamos. Why should the communities in the Bay Area be subjected to such increased risk just because the lab's NIF has failed twice and is trying the Hail Mary pass of doing an SNM experiment just to justify their existence? Those Laser EoS techniques and the people analyzing the raw data are all just BAD anyways. You know what comes next after they do the experiment. They'll figure out that they need larger samples. More risk for the local population. Stop this imbecilic pursuit. They wan...

Trump is to gut the labs.

The budget has a 20% decrease to DOE office of science, 20% cut to NIH. NASA also gets a cut. This will  have a huge negative effect on the lab. Crazy, juts crazy. He also wants to cut NEA and PBS, this may not seem like  a big deal but they get very little money and do great things.

LLNL un-diversity

Actual post from Dec. 15 from one of the streams. This is a real topic. As far as promoting women and minorities even if their qualifications are not as good as the white male scientists, I am all for it. We need diversity at the lab and if that is what it takes, so be it.  Quit your whining. Look around the lab, what do you see? White male geezers. How many African Americans do you see at the lab? Virtually none. LLNL is one of the MOST undiverse places you will see. Face it folks, LLNL is an institution of white male privilege and they don't want to give up their privileged positions. California, a state of majority Hispanics has the "crown jewel" LLNL nestled in the middle of it with very FEW Hispanics at all!