Some Employer-Employee Relations Resolutions are so old they were typed on a typewriter, copied on a mimeograph, photocopied for 30 years, scanned into a PDF, and then photocopied again for good measure. By the time we see them, the text is often at a 15-degree angle and appears to be bargaining over whether it wants to stay on the page. When the document looks like it’s been through impasse, mediation, fact-finding, and a small earthquake, it’s time for a comprehensive update.
For agencies subject to the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (MMBA), an Employer-Employee Relations Resolution (EERR) serves as the framework governing labor-management relations. Government Code Section 3507 of the MMBA permits a local public agency to adopt reasonable rules and regulations for the administration of employer-employee relations. Many agencies adopted these rules shortly after the MMBA was signed into law in 1968 – and have never updated them.
Because public sector labor law has evolved dramatically over the past several decades, an outdated resolution can create confusion, increase legal risk, and fail to reflect how the agency actually conducts labor relations today.
We hope this article inspires you to update your EERR or start from scratch with a fresh 2026 version.
Your Agency’s Labor Relations Rulebook
An EERR is an agency’s labor-relations rulebook. While the content varies from agency to agency, an EERR can address a wide range of labor-relations procedures, including:
- Procedures and criteria for handling recognition and representation changes, such as exclusively recognizing employee organizations, determination of appropriate bargaining units, unit modification, decertification, withdrawal of recognition, and more.
- Employee organization rights, such as access to agency facilities and use of meeting space, access to represented employees, use of bulletin boards and communication systems, participation in employee orientations, release time for representational activities, and distribution of literature.
- Meet-and-Confer and Impasse Procedures, such as notice requirements for negotiations, procedures for information requests, emergency bargaining procedures, declaration of impasse, impasse procedures such as mediation procedures, fact-finding procedures that reference the factfinding requirements and criteria of the MMBA, timelines and costs associated with impasse proceedings, and governing body hearings following fact-finding.
- Labor Relations Administration, such as identification of management officials authorized to act on behalf of the agency in regard to labor relations matters, and maintenance of labor relations records.
State Labor Law Has Significantly Changed Since Disco Was Popular
Legislative changes have expanded employee and union rights under the MMBA, imposed new procedural obligations, and created additional bargaining requirements. For example:
- PERB Jurisdiction: In 2001 under Senate Bill (SB) 739, enforcement of the MMBA was transferred to PERB. Prior to SB 739, a party seeking to enforce provisions of the MMBA had to seek relief directly in superior court. Jurisdiction gave PERB the authority to declare employee relations rules unreasonable and allowed PERB regulations to control when a local agency has no rule governing a particular situation.
- Fact-finding: In 2011 under Assembly Bill 646, fact-finding was added to the MMBA as a mandatory impasse procedure subject to the union’s request.
- Agency Shop Declared Unconstitutional: In 2018, The landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in Janus v. AFSCME declared that agency fees in the public sector violate the First Amendment right to free speech.
- Regulation of Dues Processing and Safeguards to Union Access: In direct response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s Janus v. AFSCME decision, California adopted SB 866 in 2018, which strictly regulated public-sector union dues authorizing and processing, safeguarded union access to new employees, and limited employer interference in union membership. It also expanded union rights during mandatory new employee orientations to guaranteed union access to present information to newly hired public workers.
- Temporary Employee Rights: In 2024 under AB 1484, AB 1484 enhanced representational rights for temporary employees at California cities, counties, and special districts, allowing for automatic inclusion in bargaining units with permanent employees who perform the same or similar work, and mandatory bargaining requirements.
- Annual Public Hearing Requirement on Staffing and Vacancies: In 2025 under AB 2561, the MMBA was amended to require public agencies to hold an annual public hearing on staffing and vacancies.
- New Contracting Out Notice Requirements: In 2026 under AB 339, local public agencies are now required to give recognized labor unions at least 45 days’ written notice before outsourcing, renewing, or extending contracts for services that fall within the scope of work of represented employees.
An EERR that reflects a decades-old understanding of labor law may no longer accurately describe an agency’s obligations.
From Mimeographs to Microsoft Teams: Collective Bargaining in the Modern World
The evolution from mimeographs to platforms like Microsoft Teams encapsulates the transformation of collective bargaining processes over the decades, reflecting broader technological and cultural shifts in the workplace. Where once unions and management exchanged hard-copy proposals, scheduled face-to-face negotiations, and painstakingly distributed updates via printed materials, today’s stakeholders leverage digital communication tools to coordinate, share documents, and even negotiate in real time, sometimes across continents. This modernization facilitates transparency, broader participation, and rapid dissemination of information, although it also introduces challenges related to data security, the digital divide, and the preservation of confidential discussions. The integration of advanced technologies into collective bargaining underscores both the adaptability of labor relations and the critical need for parties to remain vigilant about privacy, inclusivity, and equitable access as the bargaining table expands into the virtual realm.
Many EERRs were drafted in an era when labor relations communications occurred through paper notices, physical bulletin boards, and hand-delivered correspondence. Collective bargaining has evolved from locked-door table talks and reams of paper to a digital landscape. We now have electronic communications, virtual negotiations and meetings, electronic service of notices, digital document exchange and recordkeeping, and remote and hybrid work arrangements. Your agency’s EERR should reflect these communication advancements. Updating the resolution allows agencies to incorporate modern communication methods and administrative practices.
Why an EERR that Predates PERB’s Jurisdiction Puts an Agency at a Disadvantage
An EERR contains rules for recognition of employee organizations, which give a local agency significant authority over the determination of an appropriate bargaining unit. Now that PERB has jurisdiction over the MMBA, where there are no local agency rules governing certain types of representational changes, (e.g., unit modification) PERB regulations control, and an agency must relinquish control to PERB for determination of an appropriate bargaining unit. Modernizing these provisions can help avoid confusion when representation issues arise, and ensure that your agency controls the decision-making process.
Bargaining Units May Change Over Time
Few agencies look the same as they did ten, twenty, or thirty years ago. Departments merge. New classifications are created. Existing classifications are eliminated. Supervisory and confidential positions evolve. An EERR should accurately reflect the agency’s current bargaining unit structure and clearly identify which classifications must be represented separately because they are management, confidential, or supervisory employees. A re-written EERR can provide greater flexibility to modify units which may be beneficial to management.
Be Aware of What an EERR Cannot Do
An EERR cannot waive, diminish, or override rights granted by the MMBA, PERB regulations, or other applicable laws, and rules must be reasonable. For example, an agency cannot use its resolution to eliminate bargaining obligations, restrict protected employee rights, or create procedures inconsistent with PERB’s jurisdiction.
The “Meet and Consult” Requirement
Government Code Section 3507 of the MMBA requires an employer to “meet and consult” with employee organizations before adopting and implementing local employment relations rules. The consultation required under Government Code section 3507 over employment relations rules is no different from the good faith meet and confer process; however, if the parties are unable to reach an agreement after meeting and consulting in good faith, the agency may unilaterally impose.
For many agencies, labor relations resolutions have not received a comprehensive review in decades. A thoughtful update provides an opportunity to align the document with current law, modern labor relations practices, and the agency’s operational needs.
If your EERR was drafted before email was invented, before PERB assumed its current role under the MMBA, or before anyone in the organization can remember where the original signed copy is located, it may be time for a fresh look. Even absent a specific legal issue, periodic review of an employer-employee relations resolution is good governance.
HAVE WE CONVINCED YOU? Are you inspired to make 2026 the year you get a new EERR? Reach out to your trusted legal advisors for assistance.







