Allegations: The authorities refused to suspend the Public Sector Salary
Negotiation Committee for some days to allow for internal consultations, and concluded the
corresponding salary agreement without the participation of the complainant
organizations
- 199. The complaint is contained in a communication of 16 February 2015,
signed by the National Educators’ Association (ANDE), the Secondary School Teachers’
Association (APSE), the National Federation of Employees of the Social Security System
and Fund (UNDECA), the Independent Union of Public Sector Workers (SITECO) and the
General Confederation of Workers (CGT).
- 200. The Government sent its observations in a communication of 13
November 2015.
- 201. Costa Rica has ratified the Freedom of Association and Protection of
the Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No. 87), and the Right to Organise and
Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98).
A. The complainant organizations’ allegations
A. The complainant organizations’ allegations- 202. In their communication of 16 February 2015, the complainant
organizations denounce the authorities’ refusal to grant their request for the temporary
suspension of the session of the Public Sector Salary Negotiation Committee in order to
allow for consultations. They allege that this led to the imposition of a decision
without consideration for representativeness, and that, consequently, faith in
negotiation procedures has been lost.
- 203. The complainant organizations indicate that, starting in January
2015, they attended various meetings of the Public Sector Salary Negotiation Committee
(which is responsible for the review and negotiation of public sector salaries and
includes representatives of each of the trade union confederations, a representative of
ANDE, a representative of APSE and a representative elected by the five most
representative public sector workers’ organizations not incorporated into federations)
in order to discuss the salary adjustment for the first half of the year. They indicate
that the purpose of their participation was to obtain a salary adjustment that reflected
the increase in the cost of living, but that from the beginning of the series of
meetings the Government was determined not to increase salaries by more than 0.94 per
cent (the inflation accumulated over the previous six months). As a counterproposal, the
complainant organizations called for a 1.94 per cent increase for professionals (0.94
per cent to account for inflation plus 1 per cent, equal to half the inflation forecast
for the first half of 2015), and an extraordinary adjustment of 2.06 per cent for
non-professionals, whose salary increment would increase to 4 per cent, with a view to
reducing the gap between the salaries of the two categories (in both cases it was
necessary to add the 0.14 per cent due as a result of the salary negotiations of the
second half of 2014). Weeks after the complainant organizations made public their
rejection of the Government’s proposal and presented this counterproposal, the
Government convened another meeting of the Public Sector Salary Negotiation Committee,
for 4 February.
- 204. The complainant organizations indicate that at the meeting of 4
February: (i) the Government presented a proposed adjustment that maintained the 0.94
per cent increase, with the only addition being a 0.5 per cent increase for
non-professional posts, to be granted gradually and in phases (it did not provide the
details of this additional adjustment curve); (ii) the complainant organizations
requested a suspension of the session for a few days, to allow their respective boards
of directors time to familiarize themselves with the expanded proposal, and with a
technical report with details of the proposed additional 0.5 per cent adjustment curve
(the fact that the Government’s new proposal did not contain any additional increase for
professionals was a sensitive issue for some of the complainants, such as ANDE and APSE
– the largest Costa Rican public sector trade unions, and therefore the only ones with
seats in their names on the Public Sector Salary Negotiation Committee, and the majority
of whose members are professional educators); (iii) in response to the request for a
suspension of the session, the other group of trade union organizations, comprising
various confederations and federations, indicated their intention to proceed with the
session, with the Government; (iv) the Government representatives took a unilateral
decision not to suspend the session, without a vote or consideration of the criterion
concerning the most representative organizations, thus denying the complainants the
opportunity to hold the necessary internal consultations and failing to enable genuine
negotiations which might lead to an increase for the professional category; (v) as a
result of the Government’s authoritative stance and its failure to recognize the
complainants’ legitimate position as the most representative organizations, the
complainants withdrew from the session, expressly indicating that they would wait until
the next meeting when they would have a clear position on the proposal; and (vi) in
spite of this, the Government continued the meeting with the other organizations and
proceeded, with them, to sign a salary adjustment agreement that maintained only a 0.94
per cent increase for the professional category (as well as the pending 0.14 per cent
owed) and established an additional increase of up to 0.66 per cent for
non-professionals (the complainants consider that there was consequently no substantial
improvement made to the Government’s initial proposal that would justify the new
agreement concluded with certain trade unions).
- 205. The complainant organizations allege that the Conventions ratified
by Costa Rica demand transparency and good faith in negotiations, as well as a need to
establish objective criteria for joint decision-making. The complainants consider that,
by unilaterally refusing the request of the various most representative organizations to
suspend discussions for a few days for internal consultation purposes, the Government
denied them their right to collective bargaining and trade union representation, which
precluded their participation in the negotiation of the salary adjustment
agreement.
B. The Government’s reply
B. The Government’s reply- 206. In its communication of 13 November 2015, the Government indicates
that the actions its representatives were in conformity with Costa Rican law, and the
principles of good faith and free and voluntary negotiation promoted by the ILO, and
therefore requests that the complaint be dismissed.
- 207. The Government indicates that three meetings of the Public Sector
Salary Negotiation Committee were held (on 15 and 20 January and 4 February 2014), and
that at the last meeting, on 4 February: (i) the Government presented its salary
proposal and discussions began; (ii) subsequently, the complainant organizations
proposed suspending the session with a view to submitting the initiative to their
executive bodies for consideration; (iii) the other trade union organizations present,
which represent the trade union confederations (except for the CGT) agreed to continue
negotiating; (iv) to respect the wishes of the trade union delegations which wanted to
proceed with the session, the Government representatives decided to keep the space open
for dialogue and the session therefore continued; and (v) at the close of the meeting
the Government and trade union representatives who were present agreed on a salary
adjustment proposal for the first half of 2015, which improved on the Government’s
initial proposal, with the proposed 0.5 per cent increasing to 0.66 per cent for the
first-level salary group.
- 208. The Government regrets that, despite its willingness and that of the
other trade unions, the complainant organizations left the session of the Public Sector
Salary Negotiation Committee. While it recognizes that these situations can occur in
forums for dialogue, the Government indicates that it always maintains the hope that
there will be a willingness to conclude negotiations, in order to find common ground
which may support the executive in its decision-making. The Government emphasizes that
it never intended to exclude any trade union representatives from the salary discussion;
on the contrary, it responded to the willingness to negotiate of the trade union
representatives who remained for the entire session. The Government recalls that social
dialogue must be voluntary and that representatives cannot be prevented from leaving or
obligated to take part in a discussion, and that, when no agreement is reached or there
are delays in reaching agreement it is not appropriate to speak of a failure of social
dialogue. The Government states that since 2009 a total of 13 salary adjustments have
been made and that agreement between trade unions and the Government was possible on
only three occasions (23 per cent).
- 209. The Government recalls that setting the policy on public sector
salaries is a constitutional responsibility of the executive and that, as the
Constitutional Chamber has ruled, the Public Sector Salary Negotiation Committee, as a
joint body, is consultative in nature and is a forum for dialogue that is not authorized
to set salary increases definitively. However, the Government emphasizes that this body
provides a space for social dialogue in which the representatives of public sector
workers can debate, exchange ideas on and analyse matters of salary adjustments.
C. The Committee’s conclusions
C. The Committee’s conclusions- 210. The Committee observes that the complaint concerns the refusal of
the authorities to suspend a session of the Public Sector Salary Negotiation Committee
for some days to allow the complainant organizations – which include a trade union
confederation and the only two trade unions to hold their own seats on the Committee,
owing to their significant public sector representativeness – to hold internal
consultations. In response to the salary adjustment proposal presented by the Government
at the meeting of 4 February 2015, the complainant organizations requested that the
session be suspended to allow them to consult their respective boards of directors, in
the light of an additional technical report requested from the Government. The other
organizations present – comprising various federations and confederations – indicated
that they preferred to continue with the meeting. In these circumstances, the Government
did not agree to the request for suspension, the complainant organizations withdrew from
the meeting (indicating that they would await a future meeting, to which they would come
prepared with a clear position), and the other organizations present and the Government
continued with the meeting and reached agreement on a salary adjustment without the
participation of the complainant organizations.
- 211. In the context of voluntary collective bargaining and a spirit of
good faith, the Committee does not consider unreasonable the complainant organizations’
request to suspend the work of the Public Sector Salary Negotiation Committee for some
days, to allow for internal consultations on a proposal which the Government submitted
during that meeting and about which – according to the complainants, and not denied by
the Government – further technical details were needed. As the Government did not
indicate why it was not possible or advisable to agree to this request for a brief
suspension of the proceedings of the Public Sector Salary Negotiation Committee (beyond
the alleged willingness of the other organizations present to continue with the
meeting), the Committee encourages the Government and the social partners to take
appropriate measures in the future to foster the continued participation in the work of
the Public Sector Salary Negotiation Committee of the different organizations which
comprise it, with a view to promoting, to the extent possible, social dialogue and
agreements supported by all the organizations concerned.
The Committee’s recommendation
The Committee’s recommendation- 212. In the light of its foregoing conclusions, the Committee invites the
Governing Body to approve the following recommendation:
- The Committee encourages
the Government and the social partners to take appropriate measures in the future to
foster the continued participation in the work of the Public Sector Salary
Negotiation Committee of the different organizations which comprise it, with a view
to promoting, to the extent possible, social dialogue and agreements supported by
all the organizations concerned.