Portland Regional Chamber of Commerce v. City of Portland

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 1, 2021
DocketCUMcv-20-518
StatusUnpublished

This text of Portland Regional Chamber of Commerce v. City of Portland (Portland Regional Chamber of Commerce v. City of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Portland Regional Chamber of Commerce v. City of Portland, (Me. Super. Ct. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-20-518

PORTLAND REGIONAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, et al.,

Plaintiffs V. ORDER

CITY OF PORTLAND, et al., Plaintiffs-John Aromando, Esq. Defendants-Dawn Harmon, Esq. Defendants lntervenors-Shelby Leighton, Esq.

and

CALEB HORTON, et al.,

Intervenor - Defendants

This case involves a challenge to the validity of a minimum wage provision applicable to

declared emergencies that was enacted by the voters of Portland last November as part of a

successful citizen's initiative to increase the minimum wage for work performed in the City of

Portland.

The plaintiffs are the Portland Regional Chamber of Commerce, the Alliance for Addiction

& Mental Health Services (a nonprofit with member organizations located in Portland), and four

Portland businesses: Slab LLC, Nosh LLC, Gritty McDuffs, and Play It Again Sports. Plaintiffs

(collectively, "PRCC") contend in Count I of their complaint that the emergency minimum wage

provision in the citizen's initiative was not validly enacted under the direct initiative provision

applicable to municipalities in Art. 4, Pt. 3 § 21 of the Maine Constitution. In Count II of the

complaint PRCC asse1ts that the emergency minimum wage provision was not validly enacted

under section 9-36(a) of the Portland City Code. In Count III of the complaint PRCC contends that, if the emergency minimum wage provision is otherwise valid, it does not take effect until

J rumruy 1, 2022.

PRCC's complaint named the City of Portland and its City Manager, Jon Jennings, as

defendants (collectively, the "City"). In most respects, the City's position is not adverse to that of

PRCC. Specifically, the City did not take a clear position with respect to the first two claims raised

by PRCC, the City agrees with PRCC as to the effective date, and the City also raises an additional

ru·gument that the Initiative is invalid because it purports to apply to city employees. The defense

of the emergency minimum wage provision has therefore been conducted by two Intervenor­

Defendants, Caleb Horton and Mario Roberge-Reyes. Intervenors are employees who work in

Portland at wages that are lower than they contend ru·e required under the emergency minimum

wage provision, which they assert went into effect on December 6, 2020. 1

The parties agreed to an expedited schedule and are now before the court on PRCC's

motion for summary judgment. The material facts are undisputed,2 and oral argument on the

motion was held on January 20, 2021.

In ruling on this dispute, the court is not ruling on the wisdom of the proposed emergency

minimum wage provision or whether its effects will be beneficial or harmful. Although PRCC and

1 Mr. Horton has been working at the Whole Foods store in Po1tland since July 2020 and is paid $15 per hour. Mr. Roberge-Reyes has been working at the Whole Foods store in Po1tland since November 2020 and is paid $16 per hour. If the emergency minimum wage provision is valid and in effect, they would each now be entitled to a minimum wage of $18 per hour for as long as the pandemic state of emergency exists. 2 Almost all of the factual asse1tions in PRCC's statement of material facts and in the statements of additional facts submitted by the City and by Intervenors are admitted. There are a small number of qualifications and denials, but none create a disputed issue of material fact for trial. Intervenors denied two factual assertions with respect to the hann alleged by PRCC, but it is evident - and Intervenors do not dispute-that there currently exists a significant and justiciable controversy between PRCC and Jntervenors. For its pa1t, PRCC objects that a number of the factual assertions by Intervenors are immaterial. Subject to that objection, however, and with one exception, PRCC has admitted those facts for purposes of summaiy judgment. The one exception does not create a disputed factual issue for trial.

2 Intervenors have differing views on those issues, 3 the court's role is solely to consider whether the

emergency minimum wage provision is valid under the municipal initiative provisions of the

Maine Constitution and the Portland City Code and, if so, the effective date of that provision.

As stated below, the court concludes that the emergency minimum wage provision is not

invalid under either Me. Const. Art. 4, Pt. 3 § 21 or under section 9-36(a) of the Portland City

Code, but that, under its plain language, it does not take effect until January 1, 2022.

1. Citizens' Initiatives on Municipal Affairs under Maine Constitution and Portland City Code

Article 4, Part 3, section 21 of the Maine Constitution provides that municipalities may

establish a process for direct initiative and people's veto by the citizens of the municipality:

The city council of any city may establish the direct initiative and people's veto for the electors of such city in regard to its municipal affairs, provided that the ordinance establishing and providing the metl10d of exercising such direct initiative and people's veto shall not tal

Pursuant to that provision a direct initiative provision was enacted by the Portland City

Council and ratified by the voters in 1991. It is contained in Article III of Chapter 9 of the City

Code. Section 9-36 provides in pertinent pait as follows:

Sec. 9-36. How invoked.

(a) In general. The submission to the vote of the people of any proposed ordinance dealing with legislative matters on municipal affairs or of any such ordinance enacted by the city council and which has not yet gone into effect, may be accomplished by the presentation of a petition therefor to the city council in the

3 Thus, plaintiffs have submitted affidavits asse1ting that they will have to lay off employees and suspend ce1tain aspects of their business or activities if the emergency minimum wage is in effect, while lnte1venors argue that the emergency minimum wage is appropriate "hazard pay" for workers whose work puts them at 1isk during the pandemic.

3 manner hereinafter provided and signed by at least one thousand five hundred (1,500) voters. The submission of a proposed ordinance, or amendment or repeal, in whole or in pait, of an ordinance already in effect shall be hereinafter referred to as the direct initiation of legislation or "initiative." The submission of a petition to ove1Tide any ordinance passed by the city council but which has not yet gone into effect shall be hereinafter referred to as the "people's veto."

(b) Applicability. Neither this article, nor ordinances dealing with appropriations, tax levy, or with wages or hours of city employees shall be subject to the initiative and "people's veto" referendum provisions herein established.

This procedure was invoked by the proponents of a citizens' initiative to amend P01tland's

Minimum Wage Ordinance (the "Initiative"). They submitted the required 1500 signatures and the

initiative was placed on the Portland ballot at last November's election. On November 6, 2020, the

City declared that the Initiative had been approved by a majority of the voters. Under section 9-42

of the City Code, ordinances enacted by initiative take effect 30 days after the official results ai-e

declai-ed.

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Portland Regional Chamber of Commerce v. City of Portland, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/portland-regional-chamber-of-commerce-v-city-of-portland-mesuperct-2021.