Metro Milwaukee v. Milwaukee County

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 2005
Docket05-1531
StatusPublished

This text of Metro Milwaukee v. Milwaukee County (Metro Milwaukee v. Milwaukee County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metro Milwaukee v. Milwaukee County, (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 05-1531 METROPOLITAN MILWAUKEE ASSOCIATION OF COMMERCE, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

MILWAUKEE COUNTY, Defendant-Appellee. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 01-C-0149—Lynn Adelman, Judge. ____________ ARGUED SEPTEMBER 12, 2005—DECIDED DECEMBER 5, 2005 ____________

Before POSNER, ROVNER, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. POSNER, Circuit Judge. This is a suit to enjoin enforcement of Chapter 31 of the General Ordinances of Milwaukee County, primarily on the ground that the chapter is pre- empted by the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 151 et seq. (We will not have to discuss the plaintiff’s other grounds.) Chapter 31 requires firms that have con- tracts with the County for the provision of transportation and other services for elderly and disabled County residents to negotiate “labor peace agreements” with any union that wants to organize employees who work on County con- 2 No. 05-1531

tracts. Few of the contractors were unionized when the ordinance was adopted in 2000. The plaintiff, a business association that includes contractors affected by Chapter 31, appeals from the dismissal of the suit on the County’s motion for summary judgment. The ordinance requires the mandatory labor-peace agreement to contain a variety of provisions, such as “language and procedures prohibiting the employer or the labor organization from coercing or intimidating employees, explicitly or implicitly, in selecting or not select- ing a bargaining representative.” General Ordinances, § 31.02(f)(7). If the parties cannot agree on the terms of their labor-peace agreement, an arbitrator will specify them. § 31.03(b). An employer who fails to correct a violation of the labor-peace agreement can be terminated as a County contractor. § 31.05(a). Although Chapter 31 is supported by and tilted in favor of unions (among the other mandatory provisions of a labor-peace agreement, the employer must furnish the union with “a complete and accurate list of the names, addresses and phone numbers” of those of his employees who provide services to the County, § 31.02(f)(3)), the ordinance does forbid the union and its members to engage in any “economic action” against the employer so long as he complies with the agreement. § 31.02(f)(6). But no sanction is specified for a union that violates this provision other than to excuse the employer from further compliance with Chapter 31 in regard to that union. § 31.04(a). There is no doubt that if the County weren’t a party to contracts with the employers who are affected by Chapter 31, the ordinance would be preempted by the National Labor Relations Act. States and their subdivisions are not permitted to regulate activities that are either expressly No. 05-1531 3

permitted or forbidden by the Act or that are “reserved [by the Act] for market freedom.” Building & Construction Trades Council v. Associated Builders & Contractors of Massachu- setts/Rhode Island, Inc., 507 U.S. 218, 226-27 (1993) (Boston Harbor). But if the state is intervening in the labor rela- tions just of firms from which it buys services, and it is doing so in order to reduce the cost or increase the quality of those services rather than to displace the authority of the National Labor Relations Act and the National Labor Re- lations Board, there is no preemption. That is the holding of the Boston Harbor case; see also Colfax Corp. v. Illinois State Toll Highway Authority, 79 F.3d 631, 633-35 (7th Cir. 1996); Hotel Employees & Restaurant Employees Union, Local 57 v. Sage Hospitality Resources, L.L.C., 390 F.3d 206, 216 (3d Cir. 2004); Building & Construction Trades Dept., AFL-CIO v. Allbaugh, 295 F.3d 28, 34-35 (D.C. Cir. 2002). The state has the same interest as any other purchaser in imposing conditions in contracts with its sellers that will benefit the state in its capacity as a buyer, as distinct from enforcing or modifying the NLRA. Boston Harbor, supra, 507 U.S. at 231-33; Wisconsin Dept. of Industry, Labor & Human Relations v. Gould, Inc., 475 U.S. 282, 290-91 (1986); Colfax Corp. v. Illinois State Toll Highway Authority, supra, 79 F.3d at 635. It is implicit in this distinction that the state may not invoke its spending power and argue that because the greater power includes the lesser and a state doesn’t have to hire a particular contractor, it can condition payment to him on his agreeing to submit to a scheme of labor relations that the state considers an improvement over the National Labor Relations Act. And thus in Wisconsin Dept. of Industry, Labor & Human Relations v. Gould, Inc., supra, 475 U.S. at 287-89 (1986), the Supreme Court struck down a Wisconsin statute that forbade state procurement agents to hire any contractor that had been found by judicially enforced orders of the 4 No. 05-1531

NLRB to have committed three or more violations of federal labor law in the previous five years. The state had argued that “the statutory scheme invoked against [the employer] escapes pre-emption because it is an exercise of the State’s spending power rather than its regulatory power.” The Court called this “a distinction without a difference, at least in this case, because on its face the debarment statute serves plainly as a means of enforcing the NLRA.” Id. at 287. “That Wisconsin has chosen to use its spending power rather than its police power does not significantly lessen the inherent potential for conflict when ‘two separate remedies are brought to bear on the same activity.’ To uphold the Wisconsin penalty simply because it operates through state purchasing decisions therefore would make little sense.” Id. at 289 (citation omitted). Gould might appear to be inapplicable to our case on the ground that there the state was penalizing contractors for conduct outside the scope of the state’s contracts; the three or more adjudicated violations of the National Labor Relations Act might have occurred in labor disputes aris- ing from work pursuant to contracts to which the state was not a party. But the principle of that decision goes deeper; it is that the spending power may not be used as a pretext for regulating labor relations. As a practical matter, moreover, the labor-peace agreements at issue in this case are bound to affect the contractors’ labor relations even when the contracts are with private hospitals and nursing homes. It would hardly be feasible for the contractors to segregate their workforces, with one part governed by labor-peace agreements and the other not even though the two groups of workers would be doing identical work, just for different customers. Cf. Chamber of Commerce v. Reich, 74 F.3d 1322, 1338 (D.C. Cir. 1996). There is nothing distinctive about the work that the contractors do for the No. 05-1531 5

County; doubtless all or most of their employees who work on County contracts also work on private ones.

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Metro Milwaukee v. Milwaukee County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metro-milwaukee-v-milwaukee-county-ca7-2005.