City of Pittsburgh v. PLRB - Arbitration Award Enforcement
Summary
The Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania affirmed the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board's order requiring the City of Pittsburgh to comply with an arbitration award reinstating police officer Aaron Fetty with back pay. The City challenged the Board's finding that it committed an unfair labor practice under the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Act and Act 111 by failing to implement the arbitration award. The court rejected the City's substantial evidence challenge and affirmed the Board's decision.
What changed
The Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania affirmed an order by the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board (PLRB) requiring the City of Pittsburgh to comply with an arbitration award. The arbitration award had directed reinstatement of Aaron Fetty, a police officer terminated by the City, along with back pay and other relief. The Fraternal Order of Police filed an unfair labor practice charge after the City failed to implement the award. The Board's Hearing Examiner found the City violated the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Act and Act 111, and the Board dismissed the City's exceptions. On appeal, the court rejected the City's argument that substantial evidence did not support the Board's findings.
Public employers subject to arbitration awards under Act 111 and the PLRA must implement reinstatement and back pay awards or risk unfair labor practice findings. The court's affirmance means the City remains obligated to reinstate Fetty and provide back pay. Employers with collective bargaining agreements covering public safety personnel should ensure compliance processes are in place for arbitration decisions. Continued non-compliance could result in additional enforcement action.
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April 2, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
City of Pittsburgh v. PLRB
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: 1365 C.D. 2024
- Precedential Status: Non-Precedential
Judges: Wallace
Lead Opinion
by Wallace
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
City of Pittsburgh, :
Petitioner :
:
v. : No. 1365 C.D. 2024
: Submitted: December 8, 2025
Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board, :
Respondent :
BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge
HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION
BY JUDGE WALLACE FILED: April 2, 2026
The City of Pittsburgh (the City) petitions for review of an Order by the
Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board (the Board), entered on September 17, 2024.
That Order dismissed the City’s exceptions to a Proposed Decision and Order by a
Hearing Examiner of the Board, dated February 1, 2024. The Proposed Decision
and Order concluded that the City committed an unfair labor practice under the
Pennsylvania Labor Relations Act1 (PLRA) and the Policemen and Firemen
Collective Bargaining Act2 (Act 111) by failing to implement an arbitration award
1
Act of June 1, 1937, P.L. 1168, as amended, 43 P.S. §§ 211.1-211.15.
2
Act of June 24, 1968, P.L. 237, No. 111, as amended, 43 P.S. §§ 217.1-217.12, commonly
known as Act 111.
that directed reinstatement of Aaron Fetty (Fetty), a police officer whose
employment the City terminated, and other relief including back pay. The City
contends that substantial evidence does not support the Board’s findings of fact and
the Order should be reversed. After careful review, we affirm.
I. Background
Intervenor, the Fraternal Order of Police, Fort Pitt Lodge No. 1 (the Union),
filed an unfair labor practice charge against the City (the Charge) alleging it failed
to comply with the arbitration award in Fetty’s favor. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at
91a. After a hearing, the Hearing Examiner issued his Proposed Decision and Order,
setting forth facts including the following facts which the parties do not dispute:
The City is a public employer and political subdivision under
Act 111 as read in pari materia with the PLRA.The Union is a labor organization under Act 111 as read in pari
materia with the PLRA. The Union is the exclusive bargaining
unit representative of City of Pittsburgh police officers.The parties were subject to a collective bargaining agreement
(CBA) with the effective dates of January 1, 2019, through
December 31, 2022. The parties entered into a Tentative
Agreement on March 7, 2023.On November 28, 2022, Arbitrator Ralph Colflesh issued an award
(Colflesh Award or Award) over a dispute between the parties over
the discipline of Police Officer Aaron Fetty. The Colflesh Award
states in relevant part:
In the instant case, an accusation was made against Officer
Fetty of sexual “assault” on another City police officer on
the evening of June 19, 2021. The City knew of the
allegation on June 28, 2021, when its Office of Municipal
Investigations (“OMI”) received an anonymous complaint
regarding Officer Fetty “engaged in an indecent sexual
assault” in that he “groped” a co-worker. The City
conducted an investigation as reported in a Disciplinary
2
Action Report known as DAR 21-099. On or about
September 22, 2021, that investigation resulted in Officer
Fetty’s acceptance of a 3-day unpaid suspension, a forced
transfer from the Police Zone in which he and his putative
victim worked, and a five-year last chance agreement under
which any further such incidents would result in his
termination.
....
On December 30, 2021, Officer Fetty’s accuser filed an
emergency motion for Sexual Violence Abuse Order
(“SVPO”) based on the same set of June 2021 allegations
for which Officer Fetty was disciplined earlier in the year.
Also on December 30, 2021, the accuser sent an email to all
members of the City’s Police Bureau, making the same
charge of sexual assault against Officer Fetty. The
following day the accuser’s motion was granted on an
interim basis by a Family Court Judge, and on
March 23, 2022, after a plenary hearing, the same Judge
issued a Final Order for Protection of Victims of Sexual
Violence. The Judge found Officer Fetty committed
“sexual violence” and characterized Officer Fetty’s
behavior “at minimum” as “sexual assault.” On
July 14, 2022, the City issued the instant DAR [22-059,
which ultimately led to Fetty’s termination and the Union’s
grievance] . . . .
AWARD
The FOP’s grievance is granted. The City’s termination of
Officer Aaron Fetty based on disciplinary action taken in
September 2022 was barred by the 120-day limit in the
[CBA]. The City shall reinstate him to his pre-termination
paygrade and duty as soon as practical and make him
whole for all lost wages with an offset for any
unemployment benefits or wages from other work
performed at the same time he would otherwise have
worked for the City while separated, and for all lost City
benefits, and seniority. Further, his termination shall not be
considered in any future decisions concerning any aspect of
employment with the City. . . .
3
5. On December 29, 2022, the City filed an appeal of the Colflesh
Award in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County.
On April 20, 2023, . . . the Allegheny County Court of CommonPleas issued an order affirming the Colflesh Award.
On May 19, 2023, the City filed an appeal of the Court of CommonPleas decision to the Commonwealth Court.[3]
....
The City did not file a motion for a stay of the Colflesh Award.As of the date of the hearing, the City had not returned Fetty to
work in any capacity.
R.R. at 91a-93a (internal citations to hearing exhibits omitted).
As a result of the City’s failure to implement the relief, including reinstating
Fetty, the Union filed the Charge. In its defense the City argued it was not
“practical” to return Fetty to employment with the Bureau of Police (the Bureau)
because doing so would adversely affect other police officers and the work of the
Bureau. R.R. at 94a-95a, 111a-12a. The City asserted that its refusal to reinstate
Fetty therefore complied with the Colflesh Award because that Award only required
reinstatement “as soon as practical,” and, the City argued, did not impose any
specific deadline. Id. at 95a. The Award was, the City argued, at least ambiguous
as to whether “as soon as practical” meant as quickly as the actions directed by the
3
This Court affirmed the decision of the Allegheny County Common Pleas Court. City of
Pittsburgh, Pa. v. Fraternal Order of Police, Fort Pitt Lodge No. 1, No. 535 C.D. 2023, 316 A.3d
656 (Table) (Pa. Cmwlth., March 6, 2024). The City then filed a Petition for Allowance of Appeal
in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court asserting that the arbitrators exceeded their authority by issuing
an award contrary to public policy. This Court had rejected that argument based on controlling
authority from the Supreme Court. Id. at *5 (citing Pa. State Police v. Pa. State Troopers Ass’n
(Smith), 741 A.2d 1248 (Pa. 1999)). The City’s Petition for Allowance of Appeal is being held by
the Supreme Court pending its resolution of that public policy issue in another case. See City of
Pittsburgh, Pa. v. Fraternal Order of Police, Fort Pitt Lodge No. 1, No. 118 WAL 2024 (Pa., filed
September 24, 2024).
4
arbitrators could be done, or whenever the City determined that doing so was
“practical,” based on the impact on the Bureau and its officers. Id. at 95a-96a.
The Hearing Examiner rejected the City’s argument, stating that “I do not
agree with the City that the Award is ambiguous.” R.R. at 96a. He explained that
“the [Colflesh] Award does not say ‘when the City determines it to be practical’ and
I find such interpretations to be unreasonable.” Id. The Hearing Officer concluded
that the use of the word “soon” meant the arbitrators intended “that Fetty shall be
returned to work as quickly as possible. The City’s interpretation that it has
indefinite discretion is a complete misreading of the Award.” Id. at 97a.
The Hearing Examiner further stated:
The important facts on this issue are that the City put Fetty back to work
in Zone One[4] in September 2021, and he worked there until September
2022. The record shows that he worked in Zone One without any issue.
Fetty worked in Zone One after December 30, 2021, when Fetty’s
accuser filed an emergency motion for Sexual Violence Abuse Order
based on the same set of June 2021 allegations for which Officer Fetty
was disciplined earlier in the year. He worked in Zone One after the
Family Court issued a temporary restraining order on December 31,
2021. And he worked in Zone One after the Family Court issued a Final
Order for Protection of Victims of Sexual Violence on March 23, 2022,
against Fetty. Other than the general concerns of Vinansky [a Police
Commander and Fetty’s former supervisor] and Kubiak [the City
Solicitor], there is no evidence of record that shows that any of these
incidents made it impractical for Fetty to work in Zone One. Indeed,
Vinansky testified that there were no complaints about Fetty when he
worked in Zone One for approximately one year until he was terminated
in September 2022. The record shows that it is practical for Fetty to
work in Zone One.
Id. at 96a. The Hearing Examiner added that “[i]t is clearly practical, possible,
viable, workable, and feasible to return him [Fetty] to work since he already worked
4
Fetty and his accuser worked in Zone Five before the incident that led to Fetty’s discipline. A
requirement of Fetty’s five-year, last-chance agreement was his transfer to a work location away
from his accuser, in this case to Zone One. R.R. at 93a.
5
without issue for substantial periods of time in the same conditions the City now
claims are impractical.” Id. at 97a.
The Hearing Examiner ruled that the City’s failure to reinstate Fetty and
implement the other relief in the Colflesh Award constituted an unfair labor practice
and ordered the City to reinstate Fetty and provide the other relief immediately. Id.
at 98a.
The City filed timely exceptions with the Board, again arguing that the
language “as soon as practical” was ambiguous and that the City’s interpretation,
allowing it to defer reinstatement and other relief based on its judgment about the
adverse effect of reinstatement on the Bureau, was reasonable. The Board also
rejected this argument:
Here, it is clear from the language of the award that the arbitrator
intended Officer Fetty to be made whole in all regards, including being
put back on duty. Indeed, there is nothing in the language of the award
to indicate that the City has the discretion to delay the reinstatement of
Officer Fetty until they determine if, and when, it is “practical” to do
so. The arbitrator’s choice of the word “practical” after the phrase “as
soon as,” does not alter the clear intent of the arbitrator in entering the
award, i.e., to return Officer Fetty to his pre-termination status without
delay.
To be sure, in the Award, Arbitrator Colflesh noted that Officer Fetty
worked in Zone 1, away from the accuser, for approximately one year
after the incident, without any complaints or problems under a last
chance agreement. Despite that intervening year, Officer Fetty was
terminated a year later for the same offense for which he received the
3-day suspension, transfer to Zone 1, and issued a 5-year last chance
agreement. Clearly, it is reasonably construed that the arbitrator’s
intent in the Colflesh Award to remedy the unjust termination a year
later, is to immediately return Officer Fetty to the same position he had
been working for one year without incident in Zone 1 under the last
chance agreement.
Id. at 47a.
6
The Board determined that “the Hearing Examiner properly concluded that
the City violated . . . the PLRA, as read in pari materia with Act 111, when it refused
to abide by the Colflesh Award, which directed it to return Officer Fetty to duty and
otherwise make him whole for all lost wages and benefits.” Id. The Board dismissed
the City’s exceptions and made the Proposed Decision and Order “absolute and
final.” Id. at 48a.
II. Issues
The City’s brief presents a single question: whether the Board’s “finding,
inferences, and conclusions [were] drawn from the facts of record and supported by
substantial evidence.” City Br. at 6. In arguing that question the City reiterates its
contention that the Colflesh Award is ambiguous, and that the words “as soon as
practical” reasonably could be read to give the City discretion to determine that it is
not “practical” to reinstate Fetty because doing so would adversely affect other
police officers and the work of the Bureau. Id. at 19-20.
The City contends that the Board’s interpretation of the phrase “as soon as
practical” was based on its finding that “in the Award, Arbitrator Colflesh noted that
Officer Fetty worked in Zone One, away from the accuser, for approximately one
year after the incident, without any complaints or problems under a last chance
agreement.” City Br. at 21 (citing R.R. at 47a). The City argues that substantial
evidence does not support this finding because the Colflesh Award “does not make
any mention, whatsoever, about whether any complaints were filed against [Officer]
Fetty while he worked in Zone One. Stated differently, the language . . . the Board
relies upon does not exist.” City Br. at 21 (citation omitted). The City further argues
that no other evidence of record supports the Board’s finding that Fetty worked in
Zone One for approximately one year without any incidents. Id. at 22.
7
III. Analysis
We have jurisdiction to review the Board’s Order under 42 Pa.C.S. § 763.
We review the Board’s final orders to determine whether substantial evidence
supports the Board’s necessary findings of fact and whether the Board violated the
parties’ constitutional rights or erred as a matter of law. Schuylkill Cnty. v. Pa. Lab.
Rels. Bd., 197 A.3d 1256, 1260 n.6 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018) (citation omitted).
“Substantial evidence is such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might
accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Chester Upland Sch. Dist. v. Pa. Lab.
Rels. Bd., 150 A.3d 143, 149 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016) (citation omitted). The Board’s
factual determinations are conclusive if supported by substantial evidence.
Commonwealth v. Pa. Lab. Rels. Bd., 463 A.2d 409, 411 (Pa. 1983).
With respect to questions of law our scope of review is plenary and the
standard of review is de novo. Schuylkill County, 197 A.3d at 1260 n.6. “In other
words, we do not defer to the . . . [Board’s] conclusions of law, and we reassess the
record with a fresh pair of eyes.” Allegheny Cnty. Dep’t of Health v. Wilkerson, 329
A.3d 111, 117 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2024).
The complainant in an unfair labor practice charge asserting failure to comply
with a grievance arbitration award bears the burden of proving that (1) the award
exists; (2) the appeal process has been exhausted; and (3) the employer failed to
comply with the award. State Sys. of Higher Ed. v. Pa. Lab. Rels. Bd., 528 A.2d
278, 281 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1987). The arbitration award becomes final and binding
when the appeal process is complete. City of Scranton v. Pa. Lab. Rels. Bd., 50 A.3d
774, 783 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012). In determining whether the employer complied the
Board “must ascertain the arbitrator’s intent.” See City of Phila. v. Pa. Lab. Rels.
8
Bd., 772 A.2d 460, 463 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2001), app. granted, 784 A.2d 120 (Table) (Pa.
2001), app. discontinued, No. 32 EAP 2001 (Pa., filed May 15, 2002).
The City does not dispute that the Colflesh Award exists, that the appeal
process has been exhausted, or that the Award is final and binding. Instead it argues
that the complainant did not establish that the City failed to comply, because the
term “as soon as practical” is ambiguous and reasonably could be read to give the
City discretion to defer the reinstatement and other relief. City Br. at 19-20.
The City contends that the Board’s interpretation of that language as having
only a temporal meaning is based on a finding that the Colflesh Award found that
Fetty worked for a year after his original suspension without any additional
complaints or problems. Pointing to the absence of any specific language to that
effect in the Award, the City contends that no substantial evidence supports the
finding and therefore the Board’s interpretation is a conclusion not “drawn from the
facts of record.” City Br. at 20-21 (citing St. Joseph’s Hosp. v. Pa. Lab. Rels. Bd.,
373 A.2d 1069 (Pa. Super. 1976)). Furthermore, the City argues, no substantial
evidence in the record before the Board supports such a finding. City Br. at 22-23.
The City’s argument fails because the Hearing Examiner and the Board
properly concluded that the language “as soon as practical” is unambiguous and
required prompt implementation of the relief in the Colflesh Award. R.R. at 47a,
96a. That reading does not depend on whether the Award contained a finding that
Fetty worked after his initial suspension without additional complaints or problems,
or whether the Board could find that fact based on the record.
The City acknowledges the Board’s authority to interpret the meaning of an
arbitration award in the context of an unfair labor practice charge alleging failure to
comply. City Br. at 20. See City of Philadelphia, 772 A.2d at 463. Both the Hearing
9
Examiner and Board rejected the City’s contention that the language “as soon as
practical” is ambiguous or reasonably could be read to give the City the discretion it
claims. R.R. at 47a, 86a.
The City also acknowledges that ambiguity requires more than one reasonable
interpretation of the award. City Br. at 20 (citing Mut. Fire, Marine & Inland Ins.
Co. v. Norad Reins. Co., 868 F.2d 52 (3d Cir. 1989)). But the City cites no authority
supporting its ambiguity argument. It purports to rely upon Hughes v. City of
Bethlehem, No. 05-5444, 2007 WL 7563735 (E.D. Pa., March 27, 2007), but that
decision interprets the term “as soon as practicable” in relation to notice given by an
employee under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), a question not
presented here. And nothing in that decision suggests that this similar term in the
FMLA would give an employee entitled to family or medical leave the discretion to
determine when to give the required notice, as opposed to obligating the employee
to do so as soon as she was able.
The Board concluded that the Colflesh Award is unambiguous and required
prompt reinstatement of Fetty and implementation of the other relief the arbitrators
granted, and that the City failed to comply with the Award. Whether an arbitration
award is ambiguous is a question of law determined by the Court. Chirico v. Bd. Of
Supervisors, 439 A.2d 1281, 1284 n.6 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1981), aff’d in relevant part,
rev’d in part on other grounds, 470 A.2d 470 (Pa. 1983). We agree with the Board
that the Colflesh Award is not ambiguous; that it required prompt reinstatement and
other relief for Fetty; and that the City’s reading of the language “as soon as
practical,” as granting the City discretion to defer that relief indefinitely, is
unreasonable. The City’s reading is contrary to the clear temporal meaning of the
words “as soon as,” and its interpretation of the word “practical” is inconsistent with
10
the ordinary meaning of that word. The City’s reading also renders the grant of relief
in the Award illusory.
Further, even if the validity of the Board’s interpretation of the Award
depended on a finding that Fetty worked for a year after his initial suspension
without additional complaints or problems, as the City asserts here, see City Br. at
21-22, the City’s argument still would fail, because substantial evidence supports
that finding.
Commander Vinansky, a senior officer who supervised Fetty at the time of
the incident, R.R. at 113a (N.T. 43:18-25), and who assessed the effect of that
incident on the Bureau and its other officers, id. at 115a-16a (N.T. 52:1-56:15),
testified that he (Vinansky) did not hear about any additional complaints or problems
while Fetty worked in Zone One after his original suspension, id. at 117a (N.T.
60:15-61:11). It is reasonable to infer that a senior officer in that position would be
aware of any additional complaints or problems. Also, the City certainly would have
been aware of additional complaints or problems, but it presented no evidence of
any to the Board; its brief refers only to expressions of concern by other officers and
employees about the original complaint that led to Fetty’s suspension. See City Br.
at 22-23. Finally, it was undisputed that Fetty worked after the original suspension
under a “last chance” agreement that permitted termination if there were any
additional similar incidents. R.R. at 117a (N.T. 59:11-16), 142a. The City presented
no evidence of additional incidents to the Board, and presumably if they existed
Fetty would have been terminated under the “last chance” agreement.
All of this, taken together, is evidence that a “reasonable mind might accept
as adequate to support . . . [the] conclusion” that Fetty worked after his original
suspension without any additional complaints or problems. Chester Upland School
11
District, 150 A.3d at 149 n.2. It is the function of the Board, not this Court, to resolve
conflicts in the evidence, assess the credibility of witnesses, and draw the inferences
necessary to resolve the matter. State Sys. of Higher Ed. v. Pa. Lab. Rels. Bd., 757
A.2d 442, 446-47 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2000).
IV. Conclusion
We do not condone the underlying conduct on which this termination of
employment was based. But the Board correctly determined that the Colflesh Award
was not ambiguous and required immediate reinstatement and other relief, and
therefore properly concluded that the City’s failure to implement that relief was an
unfair labor practice. And the Board’s findings of fact, to the extent relevant to
resolution of the Charge, are supported by substantial evidence. Accordingly, we
affirm.
STACY WALLACE, Judge
12
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
City of Pittsburgh, :
Petitioner :
:
v. : No. 1365 C.D. 2024
:
Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board, :
Respondent :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 2nd day of April 2026, the September 17, 2024 Order of the
Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board is AFFIRMED.
STACY WALLACE, Judge
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