Associated General Contractors of California v. San Francisco Unified School District

431 F. Supp. 854, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15844
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMay 17, 1977
DocketC-76-2244 SAW
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 431 F. Supp. 854 (Associated General Contractors of California v. San Francisco Unified School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Associated General Contractors of California v. San Francisco Unified School District, 431 F. Supp. 854, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15844 (N.D. Cal. 1977).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

WEIGEL, District Judge.

The plaintiffs fall into two classes: (1) unincorporated associations of general contractors and subcontractors engaged in the building and construction industry in San Francisco and (2) contractors and subcontractors so engaged. None of the plaintiffs is a “nonwhite” owned business. Defendant San Francisco Unified School District (hereafter “District”) is a duly organized public body consisting of the public schools in San Francisco. Defendant San Francisco Board of Education (hereafter “Board”) is the responsible governing body of the District. Intervenors are two associations of minority contractors, respectively, National Association of Minority Contractors and Minority Contractors’ Association of Northern California, Inc.

On March 17, 1977, this Court issued a preliminary injunction preventing the District and the Board from carrying out what was called an Affirmative Action Policy. That so-called policy required that a bidder, in order to be awarded a construction contract as a general contractor, utilize minority owned businesses for no less than twenty-five percent of the base bid amount, or *855 that the bidder be a minority owned business. The injunction was granted on the sole ground that the evidence had failed to establish that the so-called policy was “the will of the Board established by Board action appropriate to carry out that will.”

On March 22, 1977, the Board, voting unanimously, took appropriate action to declare and enforce a new and considerably different Affirmative Action policy. Based upon the adoption of the new Policy, the District and Board now move for dissolution of the preliminary injunction. Plaintiffs, of course, oppose.

At the hearing on the motion, all parties stipulated to this effect: In deciding the matter, the Court should pass upon the new Affirmative Action Policy to the same extent as if plaintiffs were moving to enjoin its enforcement. 1 Accordingly, the Court now considers the new Policy and, in determining whether or not the preliminary injunction should be dissolved, reaches its decision on the same basis as if the issues were generated by plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction against carrying out the new Policy.

The Board action establishing it may be summarized as follows: 2

The Board found, inter alia, that in 1966 the San Francisco Supervisors adopted an ordinance “requiring affirmative action non-discrimination practices in the award of all city contracts” and that, in 1968, the Board adopted the provisions of that ordinance “prohibiting discrimination in the award of contracts for and on behalf of the San Francisco Unified School District.” The Board made further findings showing that in 1975 it adopted and implemented a policy requiring a 25% “minority participation in the dollar amount of all contracts” awarded by or on behalf of the Board and that, as a consequence, the percentage of dollar amount awards to minority contractors rose to 33.4% compared with 4.99% during a prior period of over ten years. The Board also found that competent and qualified minority contractors and subcontractors are ready, willing and able to perform school construction contracts.
The Board’s findings conclude with a statement to the effect that an effective Affirmative Action Policy requires the Board to act in a manner which will insure the awarding of contracts “to the lowest responsible bidder whose bid is consistent with the affirmative action policy” of the District.
Based upon the foregoing and other findings, the Board’s Affirmative Action Policy proceeds to declare its purposes and goals to be these: (A) to assure that competitive nonwhite business participation corresponds with the present availability of nonwhite firms seeking an opportunity to compete for San Francisco School District Construction jobs on the same terms as white business firms; (B) to overcome the historic unwillingness of white business firms to participate in joint business ventures with nonwhite business firms; (C) to assure that the effects of past discrimination against nonwhite firms are not perpetuated by the District’s construction program; and (D) to guarantee that the largest possible pool of qualified contracting firms will be available for competitive bidding on District Construction projects.

*856 The Board resolution then lays down the following requirements:

General contractors bidding upon school construction projects over $100,-000.00 will be required to employ nonwhite owned businesses for individual contract dollar amounts which total at least 25% of the general contract dollar bid. A general contractor who submits a bid that does not meet the 25% requirement will not be considered a responsible bidder and will not be awarded the bid unless he establishes at a hearing that he has taken every possible measure to comply with the 25% requirement.
If the low monetary bidder is found not to have met the 25% nonwhite owned business participation requirement, he shall be informed and notified of the opportunity for a hearing to rebut any finding of non-compliance and to present evidence on his own behalf.
The Board may award a contract notwithstanding non-compliance “where the Board determines either that the contractor has taken every possible measure to comply, or that it is not practicable in the best interests of the District to require compliance in the specific case.”
The Board resolution defines a number of terms including “nonwhite”. “[A] nonwhite person is a person whose racial ancestry is one, or a mix, of the following: Black, Asian, Latin American, American Indian, or any native Pacific Island group. A person whose ancestry is a mixture of white and nonwhite will be considered ‘nonwhite,’ if such ancestry is one-quarter or more nonwhite.”

The good faith and good intentions of the Board are not open to question. There is no evidence to suggest that it had any purpose, in laying down the Affirmative Action Policy, other than the laudable one of curbing and correcting racial discrimination which the Board found to have been practiced with respect to nonwhite owned subcontracting businesses. The Board’s purpose is manifestly based upon the premise — requisite to the freedoms protected by our Constitution — that there be an end to racial discrimination denying equality of economic opportunity.

Plainly, then, the crucial legal question here presented is not one of purpose. It is one of power.

Does the Board have legal authority to proclaim and carry out the Affirmative Action Policy?

As the law now stands, there is little doubt that the State of California itself could require compliance with an Affirmative Action Policy of the kind here before the Court. The state could also authorize school boards to declare and effectuate such policies.

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Bluebook (online)
431 F. Supp. 854, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/associated-general-contractors-of-california-v-san-francisco-unified-cand-1977.