Boling v. Public Employment Relations Board

10 Cal. App. 5th 853
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 2017
DocketD069626; D069630
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 Cal. App. 5th 853 (Boling v. Public Employment Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boling v. Public Employment Relations Board, 10 Cal. App. 5th 853 (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion

McCONNELL, P. J.

In June 2012 the voters of City of San Diego (City) approved a citizen-sponsored initiative, the “Citizens Pension Reform Initiative” (hereafter, CPRI), which adopted a charter amendment mandating changes in the pension plan for certain employees of City. In the proceedings below, the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) determined City was obliged to “meet and confer” pursuant to the provisions of the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (MMBA) (Gov. Code, 1 § 3500 et seq.) over the CPRI before placing it on the ballot and further determined that, because City violated this purported obligation, PERB could order “make whole” remedies that de facto compelled City to disregard the CPRI.

We conclude, for the reasons stated below, that under relevant California law the meet-and-confer obligations under the MMBA have no application when a proposed charter amendment is placed on the ballot by citizen proponents through the initiative process, but instead apply only to proposed charter amendments placed on the ballot by the governing body of a charter city. We also conclude that, although it is undisputed that Jerry Sanders (City’s mayor during the relevant period) and others in City’s government provided support to the proponents to develop and campaign for the CPRI, PERB erred when it applied agency principles to transform the CPRI from a citizen-sponsored initiative, for which no meet-and-confer obligations exist, into a governing-body-sponsored ballot proposal within the ambit of People ex rel. Seal Beach Police Officers Assn. v. City of Seal Beach (1984) 36 Cal.3d 591 [205 Cal.Rptr. 794, 685 P.2d 1145] (Seal Beach). Accordingly, we hold PERB erred when it concluded City was required to satisfy the concomitant “meet-and-confer” obligations imposed by Seal Beach for governing-body-sponsored charter amendment ballot proposals, and therefore PERB erred when it found Sanders and the San Diego City Council (City Council) committed an unfair labor practice by declining to meet and confer over the CPRI before placing it on the ballot.

*857 I

OVERVIEW

The San Diego Municipal Employees Association and other unions representing the prospectively affected employees (Unions) made repeated demands on Sanders and the City Council for City to meet and confer pursuant to the MMBA over the CPRI before placing it on the ballot. (San Diego Municipal Employees Assn. v. Superior Court (2012) 206 Cal.App.4th 1447, 1451-1452 [143 Cal.Rptr.3d 49] (San Diego Municipal Employees).) However, there was no dispute the proponents of the CPRI had gathered sufficient signatures to qualify the CPRI for the ballot, and the City Council declined Unions’ meet-and-confer demands and placed it on the ballot. (Id. at pp. 1452-1453.) The citizens of San Diego ultimately voted to approve the CPRI.

Unions filed unfair practice claims with PERB, asserting the rejection by Sanders and the City Council of their meet-and-confer demands constituted an unfair practice under the MMBA. PERB commenced proceedings against City and ultimately ruled City violated the MMBA by refusing to meet and confer over the CPRI before placing it on the June 2012 ballot. PERB ordered, among other remedies, that City in effect refuse to comply with the CPRI. City filed this petition for extraordinary review challenging PERB’s conclusion that, because high level officials and other individuals within City’s government publicly and privately supported the campaign to adopt the citizen-sponsored charter amendment embodied in the CPRI, City committed an unfair labor practice under the MMBA by placing the CPRI on the ballot without complying with the MMBA’s meet-and-confer requirements.

In Seal Beach, supra, 36 Cal.3d 591, our high court was required to harmonize the provisions of the meet-and-confer requirements of the MMBA with the constitutional grant of power to a “governing body” to place a charter amendment on the ballot that would impact the terms and conditions of employment for employees of that city. The Seal Beach court concluded that, before a governing body may place such a charter amendment on the ballot, it must first comply with the meet-and-confer obligations under the MMBA. (Seal Beach, at pp. 597-601.) The Seal Beach court cautioned, however, that the case before it “[did] not involve the question whether the meet-and-confer requirement was intended to apply to charter amendments proposed by initiative.” (Id. at p. 599, fn. 8.)

The present proceeding requires that we first determine the issue left open in Seal Beach: does the meet-and-confer requirement apply when the charter amendment is proposed by a citizen-sponsored initiative rather than a *858 governing-body-sponsored ballot proposal? We conclude the meet-and-confer obligations under the MMBA apply only to a proposed charter amendment placed on the ballot by the governing body of a charter city, but have no application when such proposed charter amendment is placed on the ballot by citizen proponents through the initiative process. With that predicate determination, we must then decide whether PERB properly concluded City nevertheless violated its meet-and-confer obligations because the CPRI was not a citizen-sponsored initiative outside of Seal Beach’s holding, but was instead a “City”-sponsored ballot proposal within the ambit of Seal Beach. Although several people occupying elected and nonelected positions in City’s government did provide support for the CPRI, we conclude PERB erred when it applied agency principles to transform the CPRI into a governing-body-sponsored ballot proposal. Because we conclude that, notwithstanding the support given to the CPRI by Sanders and others, there is no evidence the CPRI was ever approved by City’s governing body (the City Council), we hold PERB erred when it concluded City was required to satisfy the concomitant meet-and-confer obligations imposed by Seal Beach for governing-body-sponsored charter amendment ballot proposals.

II

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. DeMaio’s Pension Reform Proposal

In early November 2010, City Councilmember Carl DeMaio announced his comprehensive plan to reform the City’s finances. His wide-ranging plan to reform the City’s finances included, among its many proposals, a proposal to replace defined benefit pensions with 401(k)-style plans for newly hired employees.

B. Sanders’s Pension Reform Proposal

In late November 2010, Sanders also announced that he would attempt to develop and place a citizens’ initiative on the ballot to eliminate traditional pensions for new hires at City and to replace them with a 401(k)-style plan for nonsafety new hires. Sanders believed replacing the old system with the new 401(k)-style plan was necessary to solve what he viewed to be the unsustainable cost to City of the defined benefit pension for City employees.

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Boling v. Public Employment Relations Board
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Cal. App. 5th 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boling-v-public-employment-relations-board-calctapp-2017.