Houston Contractors Ass'n v. Metropolitan Transit Authority

945 F. Supp. 1013
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedMay 8, 1996
DocketCivil Action H-93-3651
StatusPublished

This text of 945 F. Supp. 1013 (Houston Contractors Ass'n v. Metropolitan Transit Authority) 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. Metropolitan Transit Authority, 945 F. Supp. 1013 (S.D. Tex. 1996).

Opinion

Opinion on Preliminary Injunction

HUGHES, District Judge.

1. Introduction.

An association of local construction contractors has sued Houston’s Metropolitan Transit Authority for using race and sex as criteria in its contracting process. The contractors complain that Metro’s use of these factors in its bidding and contract administration is an instance of a government’s treating similar people differently in violation of the constitutional restrictions on governmental power. Metro responds that it does not have a racial preference: it says it has a program merely to encourage bids for contracts and subcontracts by a wide variety of contractors and subcontractors.

The parties worked to settle this dispute between the filing of the suit in 1993 and now. When the negotiations reached an impasse, the parties asked the court to proceed formally. The court is now obliged to address the contractors’ application for an order that keeps Metro from using its policy between now and when the case is finally decided. As the case progresses, the parties’ understanding of the facts may change so that the tentative, preliminary findings and conclusions will be shown to have been in error. When that happens, of course, either side may seek a modification of the order. Like the preliminary injunction they support, these early determinations are precisely preliminary.

Because it uses race and sex as criteria in the bid process and as a contract term, Metro’s disadvantaged business enterprise program will be suspended until the final decision in this case.

2. Houston Contractors & Metro.

Houston Contractors Association is a private voluntary group of construction-related businesses. Some of its members bid frequently on jobs with the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County.

Metro is a dependent governmental district, authorized by the Texas legislature, furnishing transportation to parts of Harris County and the Houston metropolitan area. Metro was created in 1978. Its policy is set by a board appointed through its constituent city governments. Metro has a capital budget this year of $500 million, much of which is equipment. The construction budget for roads, bridges, terminals, and similar projects is about $200 million, representing about 25% of that kind of construction in the Houston region.

Metro derives its funds from four sources: fares, its local sales tax, Texas transportation grants, and federal transportation grants. Although state and federal grants tend to be project-specific, they are partial support for the project; therefore, it is impossible to identify separate activities by the source of funds. The state and federal grants carry *1015 requirements about social responsiveness. This case arises from the way Metro has conducted its contracting process in connection with race and sex.

3. The Policy.

In 1990 Metro adopted its Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program. The program requires bidders on Metro’s prime contracts to make a good faith effort to use qualifying DBE subcontractors and suppliers for at least 21% of the gross contract price. When a bid is submitted, the contractor must identify the DBEs, their work, and their price.

According to Metro, a disadvantaged business enterprise is a small business, managed and owned over 50% by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals. To qualify as a disadvantaged person through whom an enterprise may qualify, the owners and controllers must have suffered social disadvantage beyond mere membership in a socially disadvantaged class. Metro says it considers whether the person has suffered social disadvantage in education, employment, and business history. Metro does not examine the actual social and economic status of a person in these categories: Black, Hispanic, Native American, Asian Pacific, Asian Indian, or female. Metro presumes that every member of these groups is socially and economically disadvantaged.

These groups are historically victims of racial, sexual, and ethnic discrimination; none has been legally or customarily discriminated against by Metro, except in the odd individual instance of a personal failure among its other employees. The program has one level of required participation by these groups in the aggregate: 21%; therefore, under Metro’s program, the social histories of these groups are fungible.

When a contractor has submitted the low bid, the bid is reviewed for technical and fiscal compliance. For instance, a bid that appears unreasonably low is scrutinized for errors that might cause problems for Metro later. Beyond engineering and financial double checking, no bid is sent to the board for approval 'until the Affirmative Action Office has approved it.

The review by the affirmative action- office is based on the contractor’s certification, including Metro form letters, of its . intent to use specific DBEs. Correspondence from Metro about the program is through the actual contract administration officer. It is expressed in mandatory terms, like:

Evaluation of ... your bid involves ... an evaluation of your response to the Disadvantaged Business Enterprise provisions. As evidence of commitment in this regard, Metro réquests that you enter into a Letter of Intent for each subcontractor and supplier____ Sample Letters of Intent are attached.
The ... percentages ... are expected to match those ... submitted with your bid. Failure to provide the required Letter(s) of Intent ... will be cause for rejection of your bid.

Letter from Günther Schieb, Sr. Contracts Administrator, Metropolitan Transit Authority, to Karen S. Steinem, Beyer Construction, Inc. (March 21, 1996) (exhibit 3 to April 18, 1996, Hearing on Houston Contractors Association’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction).

Part of the program requires that for some contracts Metro will consider only bids made by DBEs, which effectively segregates part of Metro’s third-party work to those officially-favored contractors, meaning that the disfavored ones will never have an opportunity to receive some of the contracts. Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program, Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County, § X “Set-Aside” Program (1990).

4. Standing.

Metro has questioned whether the association has members who have been directly harmed by the program. This must be tentatively decided early in the litigation-as a means of assuring that law suits are brought by those who have a direct interest in a real dispute. Access to courts is limited to those who have standing, as it is called.

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 *1016 not permit suits if brought by bystanders nor if the result will be an empty gesture.

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Bluebook (online)
945 F. Supp. 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-contractors-assn-v-metropolitan-transit-authority-txsd-1996.