Privacy Issues in the Workplace

Thus, a balancing is required between the union’s need to have information so that it can effectively carry out its functions as bargaining representative of the employees and the employee’s legitimate right to privacy and the employer’s interest in maintaining the confidentiality of his or her personnel file. The relevancy of the information sought by the union, the employee’s privacy interest in the information sought and the safeguards provided to the employer to protect that privacy interest are the principal elements to be considered. 372 Regarding employee home addresses, the California Supreme Court determined in County of Los Angeles v. Los Angeles County Employee Relations Commission that a public employer must disclose home contact information for all bargaining unit members (even non-union members) to the representatives for the bargaining unit. 373 It held that the failure to provide relevant information about non-member employees violated the County’s obligation under the Meyers- Milias-Brown Act (MMBA) to bargain in good faith. The Court noted that the parties could negotiate or the Commission could adopt specific procedures to allow non-members to opt-out of providing their home contact information. A public entity is required to disclose the work locations of various members even if the work location reveals that the member was under disciplinary and/or criminal investigation. In the PERB Decision Los Angeles Unified School District 374 , the district temporarily assigned employees under disciplinary and/or criminal investigation to one of its Educational Service Centers (“ESCs”). The union demanded to bargain the working conditions of the ESCs and as part of the bargaining over this, asked the district to identify all unit members who were temporarily assigned to either an ESC or their home while under investigation, and the specific ESC to which they were assigned. The district provided the information but only after it gave the employees the opportunity to opt-out of the disclosure. Fifteen of the 276 employees opted - out of the disclosure. The union filed an unfair practice charge for not receiving all of the information requested. The ALJ decided that the unit members did not have a substantial privacy interest against the union’s right to the information, and also that the district did not bargain the opt-out procedure in good faith before it implemented it. PERB affirmed, determining that the privacy interest of the members was minimal against the union’s need for the information, and that the request was tailored to accommodate any privacy concerns (not asking for personnel files or investigation reports and offered to keep confidential the contact information). A public entity has no affirmative obligation to provide a union information about a pending disciplinary action about a represented employee without a request and without the employee’s consent. 375 4. W ORKSITE I NSPECTIONS OF P ERSONNEL F ILES BY I MMIGRATION E NFORCEMENT A GENTS Effective January 1, 2018, the California Immigrant Worker Protection Act (AB 450) provides that, “except as otherwise required by federal law,” an employer, or a person acting on behalf of the employer, shall not provide “voluntary consent” for an immigrant enforcement agent to:

Privacy Issues in the Workplace ©2019 (s) Liebert Cassidy Whitmore 111

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