Staten Island Bus, Inc. v. New York City Department of Education

41 Misc. 3d 836
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 9, 2013
StatusPublished

This text of 41 Misc. 3d 836 (Staten Island Bus, Inc. v. New York City Department of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staten Island Bus, Inc. v. New York City Department of Education, 41 Misc. 3d 836 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Peter H. Moulton, J.

Petitioners in this CPLR article 78 proceeding are private bus contractors that have long contracted with the City to transport New York City public school children to and from school. They challenge a request for bids issued by respondent Department of Education (DOE) in December 2012 (the December RFB), and the subsequent award of school bus contracts pursuant to the December RFB.

Petitioners assert that their existing contracts for other school bus routes — routes not covered by the December RFB — obligate them to submit bids for the December RFB containing various labor provisions that favor unionized school bus drivers, dispatchers, mechanics, and chaperones. Petitioners assert that the necessary inclusion of these provisions, called “Employee Protection Provisions” (EPPs), embeds a cost in petitioners’ bids that places them at a competitive disadvantage with respect to other bidders who are not bound by these EPPs.

EPPs have long been required by the DOE — and its predecessor the Board of Education — in bidding out school bus contracts. However, the continued viability of EPPs was cast in doubt by the Court of Appeals’ recent decision in Matter of L&M Bus Corp. v New York City Dept. of Educ. (17 NY3d 149 [2011]). Petitioners argue that the EPPs are unlawful under the L&M decision.

[838]*838In their reply papers petitioners articulate a second argument: that the December RFB was fatally ambiguous because it did not make it sufficiently clear that EPP provisions in existing contracts are not to be included in any bid for the routes covered by the RFB.

As their requested relief, petitioners first sought a declaration that the EPPs in their existing contracts are unlawful. In the petition, they sought the removal of the EPPs from their existing contracts, contracts which will last until 2015. At oral argument and in their latter papers, petitioners changed their request for relief: they now seek a declaration “modifying” or “amending” the EPPs in petitioners’ existing contracts to make it clear that the EPPs do not apply to any bid they make on a new RFB. They also seek preliminary and permanent injunctive relief preventing DOE from proceeding with any contracts awarded pursuant to the December 2012 RFB.

In response, the DOE asserts that it omitted any requirement for EPPs in the December RFB because of the Court of Appeals’ decision in L&M. However DOE contends that the L&M Court did not find that EPPs were per se illegal. Rather, respondents argue that the L&M Court held that the EPPs at issue in that case ran afoul of New York State’s bidding laws because they could not pass a heightened scrutiny test that would show that the EPPs were designed to protect the public fisc, “encourage robust competition,” or prevent favoritism (at 153).

For the December RFB, the DOE made a determination that an EPP provision would not pass heightened scrutiny. However, the DOE does not take the position that L&M voids EPP provisions in existing contracts. DOE notes that the Court in L&M was looking at an RFB for new bus routes, not in existing contracts, and so that case provides no authority for disturbing the existing contracts.

Intervenor Local 1181-1061, Amalgamated Transit Union, AFL-CIO asserts that it is the largest union representing the drivers, mechanics and matrons/escorts employed by petitioners and other school bus companies that contract with DOE. Local 1181 claims that it is a third-party beneficiary of the petitioners’ contracts with DOE. It opposes petitioners’ attempt to excise EPPs from existing contracts.

Background

DOE’s authority to provide bus transportation to New York City public school students is set forth in various state and [839]*839federal statutes. There are two general categories of school bus service: (1) “special busing,” for children with disabilities and (2) “general busing” for students who do not have disabilities and for students with disabilities who do not require special modes of transportation.

The inclusion of EPPs in their present form in school bus contracts began in the wake of a 1979 strike by Local 1181. The strike was precipitated by DOE’s removal of two provisions that had favored workers from a bid solicitation that year. First, prior to 1979 the DOE’s school bus contracts contained some version of the following provision: “employees of private bus companies who lose their jobs as a result of the loss of the contract by a previous contractor must be given priority in hiring according to seniority by any replacement contractor.”

The second labor-friendly provision that was omitted from the 1979 bid solicitation was a requirement that bus companies pay their employees’ wages and benefits at a rate tied to the rates afforded New York City Transit Authority workers.

The strike lasted three months. It was concluded by a stipulation of settlement negotiated in part by Milton Mollen, then the Presiding Justice of the Second Department. The “Mollen Agreement” as it came to be known, essentially restored the first of the two provisions that DOE had sought to exclude from the RFB. The EPPs that became standard in the industry as a result of the Mollen Agreement establish two “industry-wide master seniority lists,” one list for drivers, mechanics and dispatchers, and the second list for chaperones/escorts. If any employee becomes unemployed because her employer loses its contract with DOE, then the employee’s name gets listed on the appropriate master list ranked by her seniority. Bus companies seeking to hire must hire their employees from these seniority lists.

With a few exceptions, since 1979 the DOE has negotiated extensions of school bus contracts, rather than putting them up for bid. The bus companies performing pursuant to the extensions would change from time to time, but remained fairly stable. EPPs were included in all extensions of contracts.

This regime was altered when responsibility for school bus contracts for prekindergarten (Pre-K) and early intervention (El) students was transferred from the Department of Transportation (DOT) to DOE. The DOT contracts had not included EPPs. When it came time to rebid these Pre-K and El contracts, DOE included the EPP requirement in its requests for bids.

[840]*840The EPPs in the Pre-K and El RFBs were challenged by certain school bus companies, which alleged that the provisions were anti-competitive and therefore in violation of the state’s public contracting laws. The trial court agreed with petitioners, and its ruling was upheld in the First Department and in the Court of Appeals.

The Court of Appeals found that bidders on the RFB would inflate their labor costs in submitting bids because they did not know the wage rates of persons they would be forced to hire from the master lists. The Court noted that General Municipal Law § 103 mandates that “all contracts for public work ... be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder” (at 156). The Court analogized EPPs to public labor agreements (PLAs). PLAs are pre-bid labor agreements between unions and a contractor seeking to bid on a public project that mandate certain labor protections. The Court has found that PLAs have an anti-competitive effect, and that they therefore must pass a heightened scrutiny test that demonstrates the PLAs serve some other important public purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Misc. 3d 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staten-island-bus-inc-v-new-york-city-department-of-education-nysupct-2013.