Flaherty v. Kanaway Seafoods, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedNovember 15, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-00155
StatusUnknown

This text of Flaherty v. Kanaway Seafoods, Inc. (Flaherty v. Kanaway Seafoods, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flaherty v. Kanaway Seafoods, Inc., (D. Alaska 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF ALASKA

CODY FLAHERTY, et al., Plaintiffs, v. KANAWAY SEAFOODS, INC., Case No. 3:22-cv-00155-SLG Defendant.

ORDER RE ALL PENDING MOTIONS Before the Court is Defendant Kanaway Seafoods, Inc. d/b/a Alaska General Seafoods’ (hereinafter “AGS”) Motion for Summary Judgment on Plaintiffs’ “Closed

Campus” Claims at Docket 48. Plaintiffs Cody Flaherty, Jerry Ross, Kegan Flaherty, John Bauman, Elizabeth Patton, and Bryan Barlahan filed a response in opposition at Docket 67, and AGS filed a reply at Docket 70. Plaintiffs filed a supplemental brief at Docket 74 and AGS filed a response at Docket 75. Additionally before the Court at Docket 52 is AGS’s Motion to Certify a Question

to the Alaska Supreme Court and to Stay Proceedings. Plaintiffs filed a response in opposition at Docket 65, to which AGS replied at Docket 66. Also before the Court at Docket 54 is Plaintiffs’ Motion for Certification of a Rule 23 Class Action. AGS responded in opposition at Docket 62, to which Plaintiffs replied at Docket 69. And at Docket 56, Plaintiffs filed a Motion for Conditional Certification of a FLSA Collective Action. AGS responded in opposition at Docket 59, and Plaintiffs replied at Docket 68. The Court held oral argument on August 22, 2023. BACKGROUND

This lawsuit arises from certain policies that AGS put into place in April 2020 to address the COVID-19 pandemic. AGS is a seafood processing company that purchases fresh salmon from independent fisherman and processes it to produce canned, fresh, and frozen salmon. AGS operates two seasonal fish processing plants in Naknek and Ketchikan, Alaska.1 AGS also operates a seasonal fish camp

in Egegik, Alaska.2 AGS hires hourly employees to operate its processing facilities.3 As relevant to this lawsuit, AGS employees work as either machinists, seafood processors, or members of the beach gang.4 Members of the beach gang are responsible for dock repair and putting boats in the water.5 The employees who work at AGS in

Naknek have been unionized for decades.6 During the relevant timeframe, there was a machinist union, a processor union, and a beach gang union; each union

1 Docket 49 at ¶ 4. 2 Docket 49 at ¶ 5. 3 See, e.g., Docket 55-14 at 3; Docket 55-15 at 3; Docket 55-16 at 3. 4 Docket 51-1 at 10; Docket 51-2 at 10; Docket 51-3 at 8; Docket 51-4 at 5; Docket 51-5 at 7; Docket 51-7 at 4. 5 Docket 51-7 at 4. 6 Docket 49 at ¶ 22. Case No. 3:22-cv-00155-SLG, Flaherty, et al., v. Kanaway Seafoods, Inc. negotiated a unique Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”).7 On March 19, 2020, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency identified seafood processing

facilities, such as AGS, as a critical infrastructure industry and directed these industries “to ensure continued operations” in a manner that “appropriately balance[d] public safety while ensuring the continued delivery of critical infrastructure services and functions.”8 The next day, the State of Alaska similarly identified seafood processing as a critical infrastructure industry.9 To address the

safety concerns posed by the continued operation of critical infrastructure industries during the COVID-19 pandemic, both the state and federal governments directed these industries to create plans for safe operation.10 The mandate for AGS to continue operating was complicated by the fact that two of its facilities were in Bristol Bay. Indigenous people in Bristol Bay lost 30 to

40 percent of their population during the 1919 Spanish flu epidemic.11 As a result,

7 Docket 51-15; Docket 51-16; Docket 51-17. 8 Docket 50-3 at 2-3, 7. 9 Docket 50-4 at 4. 10 Docket 50-5 at 2 (State of Alaska COVID-19 Health Mandate 010 required critical infrastructure to submit a plan “outlining how [they would] avoid the spread of COVID-19 and not endanger the lives of the communities in which [they] operate” and explained that failure to follow the mandate was “punishable by a fine of up to $25,000, or imprisonment of not more than one year, or both.”); Docket 49-1 at 2-3 (Interim Guidance from the CDC, OSHA, and FDA directed “seafood processing worksites [to] develop[] plans to continue operations while COVID- 19 outbreaks occur” by “work[ing] directly with appropriate state, local, tribal, and territorial (SLTT) public health officials and occupational safety and health professionals.”). 11 Ash Adams, COVID-19 threatened Alaska’s fishermen. Here’s how they persevered., National Geographic (Aug. 10, 2021), https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/covid- Case No. 3:22-cv-00155-SLG, Flaherty, et al., v. Kanaway Seafoods, Inc. there were heightened concerns regarding the potential impact of COVID-19 on the local population. On April 6, 2020, the Mayor of the City of Dillingham and the First Chief of the Curyung Tribal Council sent a letter to the Governor of Alaska

asking him to consider closing the Bristol Bay commercial salmon fishery because of the significant risks posed by the influx of seasonal workers to the remote area.12 To determine how the seafood industry could safely operate in Bristol Bay, AGS joined the Naknek/King Salmon Infectious Disease Taskforce in March 2020 along with medical providers, state and local governments, tribal leaders, and other

seafood industry operators in Naknek and King Salmon.13 The taskforce developed a “guideline list of safety protocols” for the seafood industry, which included the recommendation that these companies operate as a “closed campus,” meaning that visitors would be prohibited from the plant and employees would be restricted to company property.14

AGS developed a May 2020 Workforce Protection Plan for Naknek and a May 2020 Workforce Protection Plan for Ketchikan.15 Under the heading “Protecting the Public,” the plans stated that employees residing in company housing were required to remain on the property and warned that violations would

19-threatened-alaskas-fishing-industry-but-fishermen-fought-back--and-won. 12 Docket 51-14 at 2-3. 13 Docket 49 at ¶ 12. 14 Docket 49-3 at 2. 15 Docket 50-7; Docket 50-8. Case No. 3:22-cv-00155-SLG, Flaherty, et al., v. Kanaway Seafoods, Inc. result in further training and disciplinary action.16 To enforce this closed campus policy, AGS Naknek erected a fence around the property, and a private security company patrolled to ensure compliance.17

AGS implemented a closed campus policy at its Naknek location from April 25, 2020, to June 15, 2022.18 Jerry Ross, Cody Flaherty, and Kegan Flaherty (the “Named Plaintiffs”), and Bryan Barlahan, Elizabeth Patton, and John Bauman (the “Opt-In Plaintiffs”) were all subject to AGS’s closed campus policy at some point during the relevant time period. Each of the Named and Opt-In Plaintiffs was also

a member of a union subject to a CBA during this time.19 Mr. Ross worked as a port engineer at the Naknek location in 2021 and 2022 and at the Ketchikan location in 2021.20 However, Mr. Ross testified that the closed campus policy did not apply to him when he worked at the Ketchikan location in 2021 because his ”position there was a little different” and he could come and go

from the facility when he was not working.21 Cody Flaherty worked as a machinist for AGS at the Naknek location in 2020, 2021, and 2022.22 Kegan Flaherty also

16 Docket 50-7 at 4; Docket 50-8 at 4. 17 Docket 49 at ¶¶ 15, 17; Docket 55-12 (photos of the fence and signs). 18 Docket 49 at ¶ 7. 19 Docket 51-1 at 23-24; Docket 51-2 at 33; Docket 51-3 at 38; Docket 51-18 at 2, 4-5. 20 Docket 51-1 at 10, 16, 19, 23. 21 Docket 51-1 at 21-22. 22 Docket 51-2 at 10, 62. Case No. 3:22-cv-00155-SLG, Flaherty, et al., v. Kanaway Seafoods, Inc. worked as a machinist for AGS at the Naknek location in 2020, 2021, and 2022.23 Ms.

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