Houston Contractors Ass'n v. METRO. TRANSIT AUTH. OF HARRIS CTY.

993 F. Supp. 545, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18149
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1997
DocketCivil Action H-93-3651
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 993 F. Supp. 545 (Houston Contractors Ass'n v. METRO. TRANSIT AUTH. OF HARRIS CTY.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston Contractors Ass'n v. METRO. TRANSIT AUTH. OF HARRIS CTY., 993 F. Supp. 545, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18149 (S.D. Tex. 1997).

Opinion

Opinion On Summary Judgment

HUGHES, District Judge.

1. Introduction.

Race is politics not biology. Who is who and what happens to them depends entirely on political decisions about society and economics — not on genetics.

Because race is inescapably arbitrary, basing governmental action on race offends the American Constitution. Race is arbitrary because it is unrelated to the accomplishment of a public service and because the categories are hollow. Assigning governmental benefits to people by their skin color does not quit being arbitrary because the advocates claim that a program has a progressive purpose; a principle wrong for Eugene Talmadge is wrong for Jesse Jackson.

Because it must operate under the Constitution, the Metropolitan Transit Authority may not use its power to treat similar people differently unless the distinction is directly related to an objective function of its legitimate responsibility for transportation. Nothing about transportation depends on the race of the person — not employees, officers, taxpayers, riders, suppliers, or contractors.

An individual may reliably be identified by sex, eliminating the problem -of' imprecise categories, but sex remains unrelated to the provision of public transportation.

2. Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County.

Created in 1978, Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County is a dependent governmental district furnishing transportation to the Houston metropolitan area, as authorized by the Texas legislature. Its policy is set by a board appointed by its constituent city governments. In 1996, Metro had a capital budget of $500 million, much of which is equipment. The construction budget for roads, bridges, terminals, and similar projects is about $200 million, representing in recent years about 25% of that kind of construction in Houston.

Metro derives its funds from four sources: fares, local sales tax, Texas grants, and federal grants. State and federal grants tend to be project-specific, and they carry requirements about social responsiveness. Metro uses subcontractors’ race and sex to allocate 21% of its purchases.

3. Houston Contractors Association.

Houston Contractors Association is a private voluntary group of construction-related businesses. Some of its members bid frequently on jobs with Metro.

An association may bring a lawsuit if its member contractors are directly harmed by the program. To be a party to what the Constitution calls a “case or controversy,” the association must show that (a) one of its members suffered harm directly from Metro’s program and (b) a decision in its favor would alleviate the harm. Simply put, the Constitution does not permit suits by mere bystanders or if the result will be an empty gesture.

Houston Contractors Association may bring this action about the constitutionality of the program; it stands in a direct relation to the program and its injurious consequences because:

• Some constituent contractors have been hurt because Metro required them to *547 use higher-cost subcontractors than they would have without the racial program;
• Favored contractors do not have to incur the higher compliance costs of the program;
• The program has caused some of the members to lose subcontracting opportunities; and
• Metro’s program makes the contractors vulnerable to a “responsiveness” review that is pure bureaucratic discretion.

4. Federal Program.

The United States Department of Transportation administers grants to state and local transit agencies through its component known as the Federal Transit Authority. FedTran must approve a transit agency’s program for helping minority businesses before it can receive a grant under the federal program. FedTran treats the program as a legal obligation, with a failure to follow it being a violation of the grant’s conditions.

For preference purposes the federal program defines minority-group membership as an individual who claims membership as a minority and who is “so regarded by that particular minority group.” 1

The difference between the two programs is relatively minor; the federal program uses “minority,” “socially and economically disadvantaged individuals,” “small business concern,” and “disadvantaged” interchangeably while Metro uses “disadvantaged business enterprise.” The essential commonality between them is that they require awarding contracts to people defined by sex, race, and ethnicity. The federal program requires the grant recipient to maintain a disadvantaged program with “practical” numerical goals as a condition for federal grants. 2 At least 10% of the Department of Transportation’s budget is devoted to designated beneficiaries. 3

5. Texas Program.

Since 1987, Texas has had a law encouraging participation in contracts for businesses owned by minorities or disadvantaged people. By 1993, the state set recommended shares of the segments of project expenditures and defined categories it considered disadvantaged.

• Disadvantaged businesses are to share in 17% of construction, 11% of purchasing, and 24% of professional services, or a weighted average of these categories combined.
• The law approved these groups: women, blacks, Hispanics, Asian Americans, American Indians, and Alaska natives. 4

It declares that a “minority business” includes entities more than 50% owned and controlled by members of minorities or majority ownership and control by females.

6. Metro Program.

In 1990, Metro adopted its Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program. The program requires bidders on Metro’s contracts to use qualifying disadvantaged subcontractors and suppliers for at least 21% of the gross contract price. The program speaks of “good faith efforts,” but when a bid is submitted, the contractor must identify the DBEs, their work, and their prices.

According to Metro, a disadvantaged business enterprise is a small business, managed and owned over 50% by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals.

Metro says that a person through whom an enterprise may qualify is someone who has suffered actual social disadvantage but not someone who merely has membership in a socially disadvantaged class. Metro says it considers whether the person individually has suffered disadvantage in education, employment, and business, but it does not examine the actual status of people in these categories: Black, Hispanic, Native American, Asian-Pacific, Asian-Indian, and female. Metro presumes that every member of these *548

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
993 F. Supp. 545, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-contractors-assn-v-metro-transit-auth-of-harris-cty-txsd-1997.