Virginia Mason v. Washington State Nurses Association

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 2007
Docket06-35073
StatusPublished

This text of Virginia Mason v. Washington State Nurses Association (Virginia Mason v. Washington State Nurses Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Mason v. Washington State Nurses Association, (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

VIRGINIA MASON HOSPITAL, a  division of Virginia Mason Medical Center, a Washington non-profit corporation, No. 06-35073 Plaintiff-Appellant,  D.C. No. v. CV-05-01434-MJP WASHINGTON STATE NURSES ASSOCIATION, a labor union, Defendant-Appellee. 

VIRGINIA MASON HOSPITAL, a  division of Virginia Mason Medical Center, a Washington No. 06-35130 non-profit corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee,  D.C. No. CV-05-01434-MJP v. OPINION WASHINGTON STATE NURSES ASSOCIATION, a labor union, Defendant-Appellant.  Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington Marsha J. Pechman, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted November 6, 2007—Seattle, Washington Filed December 21, 2007 Before: William C. Canby, Susan P. Graber, and Ronald M. Gould, Circuit Judges. 16581 16582 VIRGINIA MASON HOSP. v. WASHINGTON STATE NURSES Opinion by Judge Gould 16584 VIRGINIA MASON HOSP. v. WASHINGTON STATE NURSES

COUNSEL

Howard N. Goodfriend and Devin T. Theriot-Orr, Edwards, Sieh, Smith & Goodfriend, P.S., Seattle, Washington, for the appellant/cross-appellee.

Lawrence Schwerin, Schwerin Campbell Barnard LLP, Seat- tle, Washington, for the appellee/cross-appellant. VIRGINIA MASON HOSP. v. WASHINGTON STATE NURSES 16585 Barbara Allan Shickich and Charlick S. Fitzpatrick, Ridell Williams, P.S., Seattle, Washington; Mary Sooter, Faegre & Benson, LLP, Boulder, Colorado; and Alice L. Bodley, Amer- ican Nurses Association, Silver Spring, Maryland, for the amici curiae.

OPINION

GOULD, Circuit Judge:

In this appeal, we review the district court’s decision grant- ing summary judgment to the Washington State Nurses Asso- ciation (“WSNA” or “the union”) and upholding an arbitral award prohibiting Virginia Mason Hospital (“Virginia Mason” or “the hospital”) from unilaterally implementing a mandatory flu immunization regime as a “fitness for duty” requirement for all nurses and other employees. The hospital contends that the arbitrator exceeded his authority by failing to apply relevant provisions of the parties’ collective bargain- ing agreement (“CBA”) and by imposing a duty, which is not part of the CBA’s text, to bargain collectively over all terms and conditions of employment. Virginia Mason also argues that the arbitral award should be set aside as contrary to pub- lic policy. WSNA cross-appeals the district court’s refusal to award the union the attorneys’ fees that it accrued in defend- ing the arbitrator’s award. Reviewing the district court’s anal- ysis of the arbitrator’s actions de novo, Line Drivers, Pickup & Delivery Local Union No. 81 v. Roadway Express Inc., 152 F.3d 1098, 1099 (9th Cir. 1998), and its decision on the attor- neys’ fees issue for abuse of discretion, Wellman v. Writers Guild of Am., W., Inc., 146 F.3d 666, 674 (9th Cir. 1998), we affirm.

I

Virginia Mason is a 336-bed acute care hospital in Seattle, Washington. It employs between 600 and 700 registered 16586 VIRGINIA MASON HOSP. v. WASHINGTON STATE NURSES nurses, all of whom are represented by WSNA. Because the elderly and immune-compromised patient population that Vir- ginia Mason serves is at high risk for contracting the flu if exposed to it and for suffering severe and even fatal conse- quences if infected, the hospital has long recommended that its employees, including nurses, be vaccinated for influenza to reduce the chance of transmitting the virus from staff to patients. Studies have shown that staff-to-patient flu transmit- tal is prevalent in hospitals and other health care facilities because about half of those infected with influenza are asymptomatic and because as many as 70% of health care workers continue to go to work even when experiencing flu symptoms.

Virginia Mason implemented a voluntary flu immunization program in 1998 under which flu vaccines were given free of charge to hospital staff, as a cart made the rounds to nursing stations, the hospital cafeteria, staff meetings, and other loca- tions that employees frequented. Although this voluntary pro- gram had some success, after six years it had achieved a staff immunization rate of only 55%. As a result, the hospital decided in September of 2004 to make its flu immunization program mandatory. Virginia Mason then circulated a memo to all staff stating that, except in cases of a religious objection or documented vaccine allergy, proof of flu vaccination was going to become a “ ‘fitness for duty’ requirement” and that anyone who could not show proof of vaccination by January 1, 2005, would “face termination” unless he or she agreed to take flu prophylaxis medication at his or her own expense. Virginia Mason’s board of directors approved a correspond- ing amendment to the hospital’s “fitness for duty” policy in November of 2004, adding the following language: “as condi- tions of hire or initial assignment, . . . all prospective work- force members shall . . . undergo . . . annual influenza . . . vaccination.”

The hospital deferred implementation of the new manda- tory policy to the 2005-06 flu season because of a vaccine VIRGINIA MASON HOSP. v. WASHINGTON STATE NURSES 16587 shortage, but in the meantime WSNA filed a grievance about the proposed policy under the CBA, stating that, although “re- ceiving influenza vaccine is a good choice for most nurses, it is just that — a choice” and that “receipt of any medical treat- ment is up to the individual.” The grievance was submitted to an arbitrator who held a hearing on June 1, 2005. Although the policy had not yet been enforced because the 2005-06 flu season had not begun, both parties authorized the arbitrator to determine prospectively whether, under the CBA that was in place when the policy was first promulgated in September 2004,1 the hospital had the right to impose such a policy unilaterally without bargaining over it with representatives of the union.

In a written decision circulated on August 8, 2005, the arbi- trator sustained WSNA’s grievance and ordered that the man- datory flu immunization protocol be rescinded and that the hospital’s fitness for duty policy be amended to delete the requirement of annual flu vaccination. The arbitrator grounded his decision on his interpretation of the CBA’s pre- amble and union recognition clause, which he read as requir- ing the hospital to bargain collectively with WSNA representatives over all terms and conditions of employment. He further stated that because it was incorporated into the hospital’s “fitness for duty” policy, the flu vaccination requirement was a condition of both initial and continued employment and thus a mandatory subject for bargaining that did not fall within the CBA’s management rights clause, which allowed hospital management to “promulgate . . . per- sonnel policies” and take other types of actions unilaterally. The arbitrator concluded that this management rights clause covered only “operational decisions” and did not extend to 1 The hospital and the union negotiated and entered into a new CBA after WSNA filed its grievance about the mandatory immunization policy and before that grievance was submitted to arbitration. The new CBA went into effect on November 16, 2004, and remained in force until November 15, 2007. This case is governed by the CBA that was in effect from June 21, 2001, through November 15, 2004. 16588 VIRGINIA MASON HOSP. v. WASHINGTON STATE NURSES policies that “directly affect[ed]” terms and conditions of employment, as the mandatory immunization policy did.

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