State of Washington v. Trump

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Washington
DecidedSeptember 17, 2020
Docket1:20-cv-03127
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
State of Washington v. Trump, (E.D. Wash. 2020).

Opinion

1 2 FILED IN THE U.S. DISTRICT COURT 3 EASTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON Sep 17, 2020 4 5 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SEAN F. MCAVOY, CLERK 6 EASTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON 7 8 STATE OF WASHINGTON, STATE OF No. 1:20-CV-03127-SAB 9 COLORADO, STATE OF 10 CONNECTICUT, STATE OF ILLINOIS 11 STATE OF MARYLAND, STATE OF 12 MICHIGAN, STATE OF MINNESOTA, 13 STATE OF NEVADA, STATE OF NEW 14 MEXICO, STATE OF OREGON, STATE ORDER GRANTING 15 OF RHODE ISLAND, STATE OF PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR 16 VERMONT, COMMONWEALTH OF PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION 17 VIRGINIA, and STATE OF 18 WISCONSIN, 19 Plaintiffs, 20 v. 21 DONALD J. TRUMP, in his official 22 capacity as President of the United States 23 of America; UNITED STATES OF 24 AMERICA; LOUIS DEJOY, in his official 25 capacity as Postmaster General; UNITED 26 STATES POSTAL SERVICE, 27 Defendants.

28 1 Before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction, ECF No. 2 54. A hearing on the motion was held on September 17, 2020. Plaintiffs were 3 represented by Kristen Beneski and Noah Purcell; Defendants were represented by 4 Joseph Borson, who appeared by videoconference. The following attorneys also 5 participated by telephone: Andrew Hughes (Washington); Cristina Sepe 6 (Washington); Karl Smith (Washington); Emma Grunberg (Washington); Tera 7 Heintz (Washington); Nathan Bays (Washington); Daniel DeCecco (Colorado); 8 Danny Rheiner (Colorodo); Joshua Perry (Connecticut); Jeffrey Dunlap 9 (Maryland); Angela Behrens (Minnesota); Nicholas Sydow (New Mexico); 10 Elleanor Chin (Oregon); Carol Lewis (Virginia); and Colin Roth (Wisconsin). The 11 Court also considered the briefs of amici curiae. ECF Nos. 57-1; 63-1; 66-1; and 12 78. 13 Background Facts 14 The case is a result of Defendant Postmaster General Louis DeJoy’s 15 institution of “transformative” changes that caused “immediate, lasting, and 16 impactful changes” in the operations and culture on the United States Postal 17 Service (“Postal Service”). These changes were set forth in a “Mandatory Stand-up 18 Talk: All Employees, July 10, 2020” document. Bullet points identified specific 19 examples of “transformative” changes that were being implemented immediately:

20  All operations must meet our 24-hour clock commitment 21  All trips will depart on time (Network, Plant and Delivery); late trips are no longer authorized or accepted 22  Extra trips are no longer authorized or accepted 23  There must be proper annotation in the scanner, if a Contractor Failure occurs 24  All PVS/HCR drives must be notified that trips depart on time 25  Function 3 must start on time and end on time and we must make scheduled DUT 26  Carriers must begin on time, leave for the street on time, and return on 27 time 28 1  Carriers must make the final dispatch of value; no additional transportation will be authorized to dispatch mail to the Plant after the 2 intended dispatch 3  The right mail must go on the right truck – every time 4  ALL EMPLOYEES have an essential role with trips departing on time

5 The document noted that “[o]ne aspect of these changes that may be difficult 6 for employees is that–temporarily–we may see mail left behind or mail on the 7 workroom floor or docks, (in P&DCs), which is not typical.” 8 Other actions taken by DeJoy include: (1) eliminating overtime; (2) 9 decommissioning sorting machines; (3) removing mailboxes; (4) reducing 10 operating hours; and (5) changing how election mail is classified. Plaintiffs assert 11 the Postal Service has indicated that it will no longer treat election mail as First 12 Class mail regardless of the paid class of service and do so could delay the delivery 13 of the ballots by 1-5 days. 14 Plaintiffs allege these changes were made for political reasons, a few months 15 before a presidential election and in the middle of a global pandemic, with no 16 analysis on how they would affect voters or people relying on delivery of time- 17 critical items. Plaintiffs allege that while the removal of sorting machines is taking 18 place across the county, the removals would particularly affect sorting capacity in 19 states where recent presidential elections have been particularly close. Plaintiffs 20 assert the removal of the sorting machines are diminishing and will continue to 21 diminish the Postal Service’s capacity to speedily process flat mail, such as ballots. 22 If the states are required to pay the First Class rate, it will cost them tens of 23 millions of dollars. 24 In their Complaint, Plaintiffs state that reports have confirmed that delivery 25 has been delayed because of the new policy. “People have reported delay in 26 receiving time-sensitive medications, businesses that rely on the mail have reported 27 delays harming their finances, and state agencies have seen delays in delivery of 28 1 important documents and benefits.” ECF No. 1. Plaintiffs report that in Tennessee, 2 trucks are leaving sorting facilities for cross-country trips completely empty as a 3 result of the new policy not allowing a truck to remain even five minutes so it can 4 be loaded with mail. They allege that postal workers report that the mail is piling 5 up in their offices and that mail is backed up across the country. Plaintiffs assert 6 the effects of the mail delays are widespread, with troubling impacts on vulnerable 7 populations, small business, and political franchise. Medications and prescriptions 8 provided by the Department of Veterans Affairs are taking weeks to be delivered, 9 causing veterans to miss doses of their vital medications. Other Americans rely on 10 the Postal Service for delivery of prescriptions, as well and the delays affect the 11 delivery of their medications. 12 Plaintiffs assert the changes to the Postal Service operations threaten to 13 disrupt the successful use of mail in balloting. States are reporting increased 14 anxiety on the part of voters who have expressed concern that their mail-in ballots 15 will not be delivered on time or at all. Officials in some states are concerned that 16 voters may choose to vote in-person thereby increasing the risk of COVID-19 17 transmission at the voting centers. 18 On August 18, 2020, the day Plaintiffs filed their lawsuit, DeJoy announced 19 the suspension of some operational changes to the Postal Service, including the 20 nationwide removal of hundreds of mail processing and sorting machines, the 21 removal of mail collection boxes, and the reduction in post office retail hours. The 22 policy described above, referred to by Plaintiffs as the “Leave Mail Behind” 23 policy, however, still remains in place. Moreover, it appears that the Postal Service 24 will not treat election mail as First Class mail unless First Class postage is paid. 25 Plaintiffs assert that the delays in delivery and postmarking caused by the 26 “Leave Mail Behind” policy and the Postal Service’s decision to no longer treat 27 Election Mail as First Class mail have already disenfranchised voters and will 28 disenfranchise many more in November. 1 Plaintiffs’ Complaint 2 In their Complaint, Plaintiffs are bringing eight claims. First, they are 3 seeking a writ of mandamus under 28 U.S.C. § 1361, directing Defendants to 4 “submit a proposal . . . to the Postal Regulatory Commission requesting an 5 advisory opinion on the ‘transformative’ changes and enjoining Defendants from 6 implementing these changes pending receipt of the requested advisory opinion.” 7 Second, Plaintiffs also seek declaratory relief that declares Defendants’ 8 “transformative” changes unlawful and enjoined because they are ultra vires. 9 Third, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants’ actions violate the States’ right to 10 prescribe “the Time, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and 11 Representatives” guaranteed by Article I, Section 4, Clause 1 of the United States 12 Constitution.

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State of Washington v. Trump, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-trump-waed-2020.