Maine Code § 26-965

Obligation to bargain
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1. Negotiations. It is the obligation of the public employer and the bargaining agent to bargain
collectively. "Collective bargaining" means, for the purposes of this chapter, their mutual obligation:
A. To meet at reasonable times; [PL 1969, c. 424, §1 (NEW).]
B. Except as provided in paragraph B-1, to meet within 10 days after receipt of written notice from
the other party requesting a meeting for collective bargaining purposes, as long as the parties have
not otherwise agreed in a prior written contract. This obligation is suspended during the period
between a referendum approving a new regional school unit and the operational date of the regional
school unit, as long as the parties meet at reasonable times during that period; [PL 2021, c. 752,
§1 (AMD).]
B-1. For a public employer that is a school administrative unit and the bargaining agent
representing employees within that school administrative unit, to meet within 10 days after receipt
of written notice from the other party requesting a meeting for collective bargaining purposes, as
long as the parties have not otherwise agreed in a prior written contract, except that explicit waivers
of collective bargaining over wages, hours, working conditions and contract grievance arbitration
in a prior written contract may not be enforced for purposes of this paragraph. The obligation to
meet within 10 days of notice is suspended during the period between a referendum approving a
new regional school unit and the operational date of the regional school unit, as long as the parties
meet at reasonable times during that period; [PL 2023, c. 95, §1 (AMD).]
C. To confer and negotiate in good faith with respect to wages, hours, working conditions and
contract grievance arbitration, except that by such obligation neither party may be compelled to
agree to a proposal or be required to make a concession and except that public employers of teachers
shall in accordance with subsection 1-A meet and consult but not negotiate with respect to
educational policies, except that educational policies related to preparation and planning time and
transfer of teachers are permissive subjects of negotiation; for the purpose of this paragraph,
educational policies may not include wages, hours, working conditions or contract grievance
arbitration; [PL 2021, c. 96, §1 (AMD).]
D. To execute in writing any agreements arrived at, the term of any such agreement to be subject
to negotiation but may not exceed 3 years; and [PL 2009, c. 107, §5 (AMD).]
E. To participate in good faith in the mediation, fact-finding and arbitration procedures required
by this section. [PL 1973, c. 788, §119 (AMD).]
[PL 2023, c. 95, §1 (AMD).]
1-A. Meet and consult. The obligation of public employers of teachers and the bargaining agent
to meet and consult under subsection 1, paragraph C is governed by this subsection.
A. A public employer of teachers shall give written notice to the bargaining agent when a change
in educational policy is planned by the public employer of teachers. Upon receipt of the written
notice, the bargaining agent may initiate the meet and consult process by notifying the public
employer of teachers, including the superintendent. The public employer of teachers may also

initiate the meet and consult process by notifying the bargaining agent. [PL 2021, c. 96, §2
(NEW).]
B. The public employer of teachers shall, upon receipt of a request from the bargaining agent,
provide to the bargaining agent information necessary for the bargaining agent and the employees
to understand the planned change and make suggestions or express concerns about the planned
change. [PL 2021, c. 96, §2 (NEW).]
C. When notice to initiate the meet and consult process is given under paragraph A, authorized
representatives of the public employer of teachers and the bargaining agent shall meet and consult
at reasonable times and places about the planned change. The parties shall meet and consult openly,
honestly and in good faith, and the public employer of teachers shall consider the employees'
suggestions and concerns. [PL 2021, c. 96, §2 (NEW).]
D. The authorized representatives of the public employer of teachers shall give full and fair
consideration to the employees' suggestions and concerns before the change in educational policy
is implemented, and the public employer of teachers shall decide in good faith whether employees'
suggestions or concerns can be accommodated. [PL 2021, c. 96, §2 (NEW).]
E. The bargaining agent may initiate the meet and consult process by notifying the public employer
of teachers when an existing educational policy of the public employer is changed by practice or if
the written notice required under paragraph A is inadvertently omitted. [PL 2021, c. 96, §2
(NEW).]
[PL 2021, c. 96, §2 (NEW).]
2. Mediation.
A. It is the declared policy of the State to provide full and adequate facilities for the settlement of
disputes between employers and employees or their representatives and other disputes subject to
settlement through mediation. [PL 1975, c. 564, §13 (AMD).]
B. Mediation procedures must be followed whenever either party to a controversy requests such
services prior to arbitration, or, in the case of disputes affecting public employers, public employees
or their respective representatives as defined, whenever requested by either party prior to arbitration
or at any time on motion of the Maine Labor Relations Board or its executive director. Requests
for grievance mediation are handled in accordance with paragraph F. [PL 2001, c. 92, §1 (AMD).]
C. The Panel of Mediators, consisting of not less than 5 nor more than 10 impartial members, must
be appointed by the Governor from time to time upon the expiration of the terms of the several
members, for terms of 3 years. The Maine Labor Relations Board shall supply to the Governor
nominations for filling vacancies. Vacancies occurring during a term must be filled for the
unexpired term. Members of the panel are entitled to a fee for services in the amount of $300 for
up to 4 hours of mediation services provided and $300 for each consecutive period of up to 4 hours
thereafter and also are entitled to traveling and all other necessary expenses. Notwithstanding the
provisions of Title 5, section 12003-A, subsection 9, members of the panel who provide mediation
services in more than one dispute in a given day are entitled to the compensation as provided in
this paragraph in each such case. The necessary expenses incurred by the members must be
allocated to the mediation session that required the costs. The costs for services rendered and
expenses incurred by members of the panel and any state cost allocation program charges must be
shared equally by the parties to the proceedings and must be paid into a special fund administered
by the Maine Labor Relations Board. Authorization for services rendered and expenditures incurred
by members of the panel is the responsibility of the Executive Director of the Maine Labor
Relations Board. All costs must be paid from that special fund. The executive director may
estimate costs upon receipt of a request for services and collect those costs prior to providing the
services. The executive director shall bill or reimburse the parties, as appropriate, for any difference
between the estimated costs that were collected and the actual costs of providing the services. Once

one party has paid its share of the estimated cost of providing the service, the mediator is assigned.
A party who has not paid an invoice for the estimated or actual cost of providing services within
60 days of the date the invoice was issued is, in the absence of good cause shown, liable for the
amount of the invoice together with a penalty in the amount of 25% of the amount of the invoice.
Any penalty amount collected pursuant to this provision remains in the special fund administered
by the Maine Labor Relations Board and that fund does not lapse. The executive director is
authorized to collect any sums due and payable pursuant to this provision through civil action. In
such an action, the court shall allow litigation costs, including court costs and reasonable attorney's
fees, to be deposited in the General Fund if the executive director is the prevailing party in the
action. [PL 2013, c. 553, §1 (AMD).]
D. The employer, union or employees involved in collective bargaining shall notify the Executive
Director of the Maine Labor Relations Board, in writing, at least 30 days prior to the expiration of
a contract, or 30 days prior to entering into negotiations for a first contract between the employer
and the employees, or whenever a dispute arises between the parties threatening interruption of
work, or under both conditions. [PL 1975, c. 564, §15 (AMD).]
E. The Executive Director of the Maine Labor Relations Board shall serve as Executive Director
of the Panel of Mediators. The Executive Director of the Maine Labor Relations Board shall
annually, on or before the first day of July, make a report to the Governor. The Executive Director
of the Maine Labor Relations Board, upon request of one or both of the parties to a dispute between
an employer and its employees, shall, or upon the Executive Director of the Maine Labor Relations
Board's own motion or motion of the Maine Labor Relations Board may, proffer the services of
one or more members of the panel to be selected by the Executive Director of the Maine Labor
Relations Board to serve as mediator or mediators in the dispute. The member or members so
selected shall exert every reasonable effort to encourage the parties to the dispute to settle their
differences by conference or other peaceful means. If the mediator or mediators are unable to
accomplish this objective and to obtain an amicable settlement of the dispute between the parties,
it is the duty of the mediator or mediators to advise the parties of the services available to assist
them in settlement of their dispute. At this time, the mediator or mediators shall submit a written
report to the Executive Director of the Maine Labor Relations Board stating the action or actions
that have been taken and the results of their endeavors. [RR 2023, c. 2, Pt. E, §51 (COR).]
F. The services of the Panel of Mediators must be provided for grievance mediation only when the
parties jointly agree to request grievance mediation services. Notwithstanding this option, neither
party is obligated under subsection 1 to bargain over the inclusion of grievance mediation
procedures in a collective bargaining agreement. The services of the Panel of Mediators are always
available as a technique for impasse resolution in contract negotiations and may be invoked as
described in paragraph B. [PL 2001, c. 92, §2 (RPR).]
G. Any information disclosed by either party to a dispute to the panel or any of its members in the
performance of this subsection shall be privileged. [PL 1973, c. 617, §2 (RPR).]
[RR 2023, c. 2, Pt. E, §51 (COR).]
3. Fact-finding.
A. If the parties, either with or without the services of a mediator, are unable to effect a settlement
of their controversy, they may jointly agree either to call upon the Maine Labor Relations Board to
arrange for fact-finding services and recommendations to be provided by the Maine Board of
Arbitration and Conciliation, or to pursue some other mutually acceptable fact-finding procedure,
including use of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service or the American Arbitration
Association according to their respective procedures, rules and regulations. [PL 1975, c. 564,
§17 (RPR).]

B. If the parties do not jointly agree to call upon the Maine Labor Relations Board or to pursue
some other procedure, either party to the controversy may request the executive director to assign
a fact-finding panel. If so requested, the executive director shall appoint a fact-finding panel,
ordinarily of 3 members, in accordance with rules and procedures prescribed by the board for
making the appointment. The fact-finding panel shall be appointed from a list maintained by the
board and drawn up after consultation with representatives of state and local government
administrators, agencies with industrial relations and personnel functions and representatives of
employee organizations and of employers. Any person who has actively participated as the
mediator in the immediate proceedings for which fact-finding has been called may not sit on that
fact-finding panel. The panel shall hear the contending parties to the controversy. The panel may
request statistical data and reports on its own initiative in addition to the data regularly maintained
by the Bureau of Labor Standards, and has the power to administer oaths and to require by subpoena
the attendance and testimony of witnesses, the production of books, records and other evidence
relative or pertinent to the issues represented to them. The members of the fact-finding panel shall
submit their findings and recommendations only to the parties and to the Executive Director of the
Maine Labor Relations Board. [RR 1995, c. 2, §61 (COR).]
C. The parties shall have a period of 30 days, after the submission of findings and recommendations
from the fact finders, in which to make a good faith effort to resolve their controversy. If the parties
have not resolved their controversy by the end of said period, either party or the Executive Director
of the Maine Labor Relations Board may, but not until the end of said period unless the parties
otherwise jointly agree, make the fact-finding and recommendations public. [PL 1975, c. 564,
§17 (RPR).]
D. If the parties do not agree to follow the fact-finding procedures outlined in paragraph A, they
may jointly apply to the executive director or the executive director's designee to waive fact-
finding. The executive director or the executive director's designee may accept or refuse to accept
the parties' agreement to waive fact-finding and that decision is not reviewable. [RR 2023, c. 2,
Pt. E, §52 (COR).]
[RR 2023, c. 2, Pt. E, §52 (COR).]
4. Arbitration. In addition to the 30-day period referred to in subsection 3, the parties shall have
15 more days, making a total period of 45 days from the submission of findings and recommendations,
in which to make a good faith effort to resolve their controversy.
If the parties have not resolved their controversy by the end of said 45-day period, they may jointly
agree to an arbitration procedure which will result in a binding determination of their controversy. Such
determinations will be subject to review by the Superior Court in the manner specified by section 972.
If they do not jointly agree to such an arbitration procedure within 10 days after the end of said 45-day
period, then either party may, by written notice to the other, request that their differences be submitted
to a board of 3 arbitrators. The bargaining agent and the public employer shall within 5 days of such
request each select and name one arbitrator and shall immediately thereafter notify each other in writing
of the name and address of the person so selected. The 2 arbitrators so selected and named shall, within
10 days from such request, agree upon and select and name a neutral arbitrator. If either party shall not
select its arbitrator or if the 2 arbitrators shall fail to agree upon, select and name a neutral arbitrator
within said 10 days, either party may request the American Arbitration Association to utilize its
procedures for the selection of the neutral arbitrator. As soon as possible after receipt of such request,
the neutral arbitrator will be selected in accordance with rules and procedures prescribed by the
American Arbitration Association for making such selection. The neutral arbitrator so selected will
not, without the consent of both parties, be the same person who was selected as mediator pursuant to
subsection 2 nor any member of the fact-finding board selected pursuant to subsection 3. As soon as
possible after the selection of the neutral arbitrator, the 3 arbitrators or if either party shall not have
selected its arbitrator, the 2 arbitrators, as the case may be, shall meet with the parties or their

representatives, or both, forthwith, either jointly or separately, make inquiries and investigations, hold
hearings, or take such other steps as they deem appropriate. If the neutral arbitrator is selected by
utilizing the procedures of the American Arbitration Association, the arbitration proceedings will be
conducted in accordance with the rules and procedures of the American Arbitration Association. The
hearing shall be informal, and the rules of evidence prevailing in judicial proceedings shall not be
binding. Any and all documentary evidence and other data deemed relevant by the arbitrators may be
received in evidence. The arbitrators shall have the power to administer oaths and to require by
subpoena the attendance and testimony of witnesses, the production of books, records and other
evidence relative or pertinent to the issues represented to them for determination.
If the controversy is not resolved by the parties themselves, the arbitrators shall proceed as follows:
With respect to a controversy over salaries, pensions and insurance, the arbitrators shall recommend
terms of settlement and may make findings of fact; those recommendations and findings are advisory
only and must be made, if reasonably possible, within 30 days after the selection of the neutral
arbitrator; the arbitrators may in their discretion make those recommendations and findings public, and
either party may make those recommendations and findings public if agreement is not reached with
respect to those findings and recommendations within 10 days after their receipt from the arbitrators;
the arbitrators shall make determinations with respect to a controversy over subjects other than salaries,
pensions and insurance if reasonably possible within 30 days after the selection of the neutral arbitrator;
those determinations may be made public by the arbitrators or either party; and, if made by a majority
of the arbitrators, those determinations are binding on both parties and the parties shall enter an
agreement or take whatever other action that may be appropriate to carry out and effectuate those
binding determinations; and those determinations are subject to review by the Superior Court in the
manner specified by section 972. The results of all arbitration proceedings, recommendations and
awards conducted under this section must be filed with the Maine Labor Relations Board at the offices
of its executive director simultaneously with the submission of the recommendations and award to the
parties. In the event the parties settle their dispute during the arbitration proceeding, the arbitrator or
the chair of the arbitration panel shall submit a report of the arbitrator's or the chair's activities to the
Executive Director of the Maine Labor Relations Board not more than 5 days after the arbitration
proceeding has terminated.
[RR 2023, c. 2, Pt. E, §53 (COR).]
5. Costs. The costs for the services of the mediator, the members of the fact-finding board and of
the neutral arbitrator including, if any, per diem expenses, and actual and necessary travel and
subsistence expenses and the costs of hiring the premises where any mediation, fact-finding or
arbitration proceedings are conducted, must be shared equally by the parties to the proceedings. All
other costs must be assumed by the party incurring them.
[PL 1991, c. 622, Pt. O, §5 (AMD).]
6. Arbitration administration. The cost for services rendered and expenses incurred by the State
Board of Arbitration and Conciliation, as defined in section 931, and any state cost allocation program
charges must be shared equally by the parties to the proceedings and must be paid into a special fund
administered by the Maine Labor Relations Board. Authorization for services rendered and
expenditures incurred by members of the State Board of Arbitration and Conciliation is the
responsibility of the executive director. All costs must be paid from that special fund. The executive
director may estimate costs upon receipt of a request for services and collect those costs prior to
providing the services. The executive director shall bill or reimburse the parties, as appropriate, for
any difference between the estimated costs that were collected and the actual costs of providing the
services. Once one party has paid its share of the estimated cost of providing the service, the matter is
scheduled for hearing. A party who has not paid an invoice for the estimated or actual cost of providing
services within 60 days of the date the invoice was issued is, in the absence of good cause shown, liable
for the amount of the invoice together with a penalty in the amount of 25% of the amount of the invoice.
Any penalty amount collected pursuant to this provision remains in the special fund administered by

the Maine Labor Relations Board and that fund does not lapse. The executive director is authorized to
collect any sums due and payable pursuant to this provision through civil action. In such an action, the
court shall allow litigation costs, including court costs and reasonable attorney's fees, to be deposited
in the General Fund if the executive director is the prevailing party in the action.
[PL 1991, c. 798, §5 (AMD).]

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