Warmtex Enterprises v. Lynn Martin, Secretary of Labor
This text of 953 F.2d 1133 (Warmtex Enterprises v. Lynn Martin, Secretary of Labor) 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.
Opinion
I
Warmtex Enterprises sought an alien labor certification from the Department of Labor to permit it to employ Huang Rong Yeh, an alien, for the position of import manager. The Department’s Certification Officer denied certification. Warmtex appealed to the Board of Alien Labor Certification Appeals (Board), which affirmed. Warmtex filed suit in District Court seeking review of the Board’s decision. The district court granted the Department’s motion for summary judgment. Warmtex appealed. We affirm.
Warmtex filed its Application for an Alien Employment Certification on behalf of Mr. Yeh pursuant to section 212(a)(14) of the Immigration and Nationality Act 1 and *1135 Department regulation 20 CFR § 656.21(a). After filing the application, Warmtex advertised the availability of the position. Nine United States workers responded. Warmtex wrote to all nine applicants, scheduling personal interviews at Warm-tex’s headquarters in Alhambra, California. Warmtex cited job related reasons for rejecting four of the applicants (e.g. insufficient experience, lack of language skills). The remaining five were rejected because, in Warmtex’s words, they “did not appear at interview.”
In denying certification, the Certifying Officer relied upon the fact that applicants contacted by the Certifying Officer reported Warmtex had “refused to interview by phone, demanding instead that qualified applicants travel to Alhambra at their own [considerable] expense”; applicant Schmidt added that Warmtex “did not give enough information for me to make a decision.” The Certifying Officer concluded Warm-tex’s conduct “does not convincingly show good-faith effort to recruit U.S. workers and the reasons given for rejection are not job-related.” In affirming the Board said:
In the instant case, the Employer rejected five applicants solely on the basis of failing to appear for an interview at their own expense. The Employer made no effort to determine the qualifications of the applicants, either through telephone interviews or by paying the applicants’ travelling expenses. According to the CO [Certifying Officer], applicant Schmidt was not even given enough information to make a decision as whether to interview for the position. The Employer’s conduct in recruitment suggests that it was using the interview requirement as a means to reject U.S. workers. An employer cannot lawfully reject a U.S. applicant solely on the basis of the applicant’s unwillingness to pay travel-ling expenses, (citations omitted).
The Employer has not specified lawful, job-related reasons for rejecting each U.S. worker as required by § 656.-21(b)(7);[ 2 ] therefore, the CO [Certifying Officer] properly denied certification.
II
By the terms of the statute, the Department must certify “there are not sufficient workers who are able, willing, qualified ... and available” to perform the work in question. See Note 1. To enable the Secretary to make an informed decision based on reliable evidence, the employer has the burden of producing documentation of its recruitment efforts. See Production Tool Corp. v. Employment and Training Admin., 688 F.2d 1161, 1170 (7th Cir.1982). To discharge this burden, the Department requires the employer to show, among other things, that a good faith effort has been made to recruit United States workers for the position and that no United States worker has been rejected for reasons unrelated to the job. See, e.g., In re Misak’s Gen. Bldg. Contractors, 89 INA 39 (BALCA Oct. 25, 1989); In re Hipoint Dev., Inc., 88 INA 340, 1989 WL 90729 (BALCA May 31, 1989); In re Lin & Associates, Inc., 88 INA 7 (BALCA, Apr. 14, 1989); In re L.A. United Investment Co., 87 INA 738 (BALCA, Apr. 20, 1988). These requirements are reflected in various Department regulations. 20 CFR § 656.-21(b)(1)(E), (b)(7), (j)(iv); § 656.24(b)(1), (b)(2).
In implementing these requirements, the Board has held the employer must make adequate inquiry by telephone or otherwise to determine whether United States workers who apply are qualified for the position, see, e.g., Lin & Associates; L.A. United Investment, and that the employer may not reject as unqualified or unavailable United States workers who seem, after adequate *1136 inquiry, to be qualified but are unable or unwilling to appear for a personal interview at their own expense. See, e.g., Misak’s Gen. Bldg. Contractors; Hipoint Div. Failure to make a reasonable effort to determine whether United States applicants are qualified, or insisting upon a personal interview with an apparently qualified United States applicant at the applicant's expense, reflects a lack of good faith effort to recruit qualified United States workers. Misak’s Gen. Bldg. Contractors. Rejection without a suitable inquiry into an applicant’s qualifications, or because an apparently qualified United States worker is unable or unwilling to appear for a personal interview at the worker’s own expense, constitutes rejection for other than job related reasons. Hipoint Dev.; Lin & Associates. 3
These Board decisions and the regulations upon which they rest are patently consistent with Section 212(a)(14) of the Act and reasonably related to its enforcement. Under well-established principles applied by the Seventh Circuit in this context, 4 they are therefore well within the Department’s authority to interpret and apply the statute.
m
Warmtex argues the Board relied solely 5 on subsection (b)(7) of 20 CFR § 656.21 (see Note 2), and this reliance was error because the language of this subsection indicates it applies only when the employer’s recruitment effort is undertaken before the employer files an application for an alien labor certificate, and not when, as in this case, the employer defers recruitment of United States workers until after filing the application.
Warmtex’s argument finds some support in the bare language of the subsection, 6 but in little else. Clearly, the requirement that United States workers be rejected only for job related reasons is essential to the implementation of the statutory command that aliens not be admitted to perform jobs United States workers are able, willing, qualified and available to perform. The Department could not have intended to impose this condition only when the employer chose to undertake recruitment before rather than after filing an application for alien certification.
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953 F.2d 1133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warmtex-enterprises-v-lynn-martin-secretary-of-labor-ca9-1992.