19 SOLID WASTE DEPARTMENT MECHANICS, Sam Aguilar, Rudy
Archuleta, Jr., Edward Baca, Paul Barboa, M.E. Barreras,
Gary L. Chavez, Johnny Chavez, Anthony Demello, Michael
Gutierrez, Jimmy Herrera, Bill Lipitz, John Lujan, Frank
Ortega, Aaron Romero, Donald Scott, Frank Serna, Arturo
Torres, Jr., James Vigil, and Rory Wessel, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE; Louis E. Saavedra, Mayor, individually
and in his official capacity; Arthur Blumenfeld, Ph.D.,
Chief Administrative Officer, individually and in his
official capacity; Lawrence Rael, Assistant Chief
Administrative Officer, individually and in his official
capacity; David Campbell, City Attorney and Chairman of the
Substance Abuse Task Force, individually and in his official
capacity, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 96-2177.
United States Court of Appeals,
Tenth Circuit.
Sept. 22, 1998.
Charles W. Kolberg, Assistant City Attorney, City of Albuquerque, Albuquerque, NM, appearing for Defendants-Appellants.
Paul S. Livingston, Albuquerque, NM, appearing for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
Before TACHA, BRORBY, and BRISCOE, Circuit Judges.
TACHA, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiffs are nineteen Solid Waste Department mechanics who originally filed suit in 1993 to challenge the constitutionality of the drug- and alcohol-testing policy of the City of Albuquerque as it was applied to them. The mechanics challenged the policy on several grounds. Germane to this appeal is the mechanics' assertion that the policy violated their right to be free from unreasonable searches as guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment.
BACKGROUND
The mechanics' primary job responsibility is the repair of the City's fleet of large diesel trash trucks. Their work includes repairs to the brakes, steering, front end, hydraulics, and electrical systems of the trucks. They perform their work in an industrial repair shop where large machines and replacement parts are mechanically lifted for repairs. They work under general supervision, and usually their work is not inspected by others before a repaired truck is returned to service. The mechanics are not authorized to drive City vehicles on the streets or highways.
The drug-testing policy under consideration here was initially set forth in 1991. The policy required employees with jobs requiring a commercial driver's license (CDL) to submit to and pass a substance abuse test before they could obtain or renew a CDL. In 1992, the City placed Mechanics III, a classification that includes the Solid Waste Department mechanics, on a list of job categories for which a CDL (and therefore a substance abuse test) was required. The policy also stated that no employee could operate or drive City vehicles or equipment that require a CDL without a current City vehicle/equipment operator's permit. Obtaining a permit, like a CDL, required that the applicant undergo a substance abuse test.
Both the plaintiffs and defendants moved for summary judgment on Fourth Amendment grounds. The district court entered judgment for the plaintiffs and struck down the City policy, concluding "that while the city has valid public interests in establishing a drug enforcement program, those interests do not outweigh the interference with individual liberty that results from requiring this particular class of employees--nondriving, solid waste mechanics--to undergo warrantless drug tests." 19 Solid Waste Dep't Mechanics v. City of Albuquerque, CIV No. 93-1385, slip op. at 11 (D.N.M. Oct. 11, 1994). In reaching this conclusion, the court examined in some detail the City's assertion that it instituted the drug testing policy because of concerns for workplace and public safety and employee health. The district court evaluated the City's proffered safety and health reasons and determined that they were not "compelling" enough under Supreme Court precedent to justify warrantless and suspicionless drug tests. Following the district court's decision, the City repealed the drug-testing policy. Subsequently, the district court awarded $2,700 in damages to the mechanics. The City now appeals that damage award by attacking the correctness of the district court's decision on the merits. The City argues the district court erred in granting the plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment by misapplying the balancing test that governs the constitutionality of urinalysis drug tests under the Fourth Amendment. The City asserts that a proper application of that balancing test should have led the district court to grant the City's motion for summary judgment. We affirm the decision of the district court.
DISCUSSION
We first address the mechanics' assertion that the case should be dismissed as moot. After the district court granted summary judgment to the mechanics, the City revoked the drug-testing policy at issue. The district court, however, awarded the mechanics $2,700 in damages, and, at the time of oral argument, the plaintiffs also had a motion for attorney's fees pending in the district court. In order for the City to contest its liability for the damage award or for any attorney's fees, it must challenge the merits of the underlying decision. Thus, the City's liability for damages and attorney's fees as a result of the judgment against it "saves this cause from the bar of mootness." Memphis Light, Gas & Water Div. v. Craft,
We review a district court's grant or denial of summary judgment de novo. See Wolf v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
When a government employer requires its employees to submit to a urinalysis test for the purpose of detecting illegal drug use, the test is a search subject to the Fourth Amendment and must be reasonable. See Benavidez v. City of Albuquerque,
In each of the above Supreme Court cases, in evaluating the constitutionality of the respective testing programs, the Court balanced the intrusion on individuals' privacy interests against the promotion of legitimate governmental interests. See, e.g., Vernonia Sch. Dist. 47J v. Acton,
In Chandler v. Miller,
We turn to the details of Chandler to understand what the government's special need showing requires. Chandler involved a Georgia requirement that candidates vying for designated state offices certify that they have taken a drug test and that the test result was negative. See id. 520 U.S. at ----,
In reaching this conclusion, the Court identified how the government may demonstrate a special need for a suspicionless drug testing scheme. See id. 520 U.S. at ---- - ----,
Second, the Court examined whether the testing scheme met the related goals of detection and deterrence. See id. 520 U.S. at ----,
In light of the Supreme Court's analysis in Chandler, the special need showing is best viewed as a preliminary examination of the government interests at stake. While the testing program's ultimate validity depends on a comparison of the government interests and privacy interests, the government must also be able to show, as a threshold matter, that its case for suspicionless testing is legitimate. Thus, even if the privacy interest is virtually non-existent, the special need requirement prevents suspicionless searches where the government has failed to show either that it has a real interest in testing or that its test will further its proffered interest. See id. 520 U.S. at ----,
Applying these considerations to the policy before us, we find that the City has failed to show a special need for its drug testing policy. We note that the City's proffered rationale for adopting its drug-testing program was a concern for workplace and public safety and employee health, and we do not discount this rationale. Indeed, these concerns seem very real to us, unlike the concerns proffered in Chandler, despite the absence of a documented drug problem among the mechanics or any evidence that drug use by the mechanics has resulted in accidents involving the City's trash trucks. The mechanics clearly perform a job in which safety is an important concern. Cf. Skinner,
Nevertheless, the City is unable to satisfy the second part of the special need showing. The manner in which the City's drug-testing policy is executed indicates that it lacks a real capacity to address drug use in the workplace. First of all, the drug tests occur in predictable intervals--when a mechanic obtains or renews a CDL. Thus, a mechanic should know well in advance when he will have to produce a specimen, and can easily evade detection merely by detoxifying his system prior to the tests. Additionally, the tests are very limited in frequency. Renewal of a CDL occurs only once every four years. Although frequent testing is not necessarily required to establish the efficacy of a drug testing program, the City has failed to show that its infrequent testing would effectively detect and deter drug use. Therefore, this program is not at all well-designed to detect drug use among its employees and lacks any deterrent effect. Cf. Chandler,
In the end, we must evaluate whether the safety and health concerns cited by the City would genuinely be advanced by the testing program. While we recognize that the City has important safety and health concerns in testing its mechanics for drug use, given that the scheme that the City devised would not effectively detect or deter drug use, we must conclude that the City has failed to show a special need for suspicionless drug testing. Because we find that the program is not based on a special governmental need, we do not need proceed to balance the parties' respective interests. The judgment is therefore AFFIRMED.
BRISCOE, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur in the majority's affirmance of the district court's judgment in favor of plaintiffs. I write separately because I do not believe the City has demonstrated a real and immediate interest in conducting suspicionless drug testing of mechanics in its Solid Waste Department.
To pass constitutional muster, the City's "proffered special need for drug testing must be substantial--important enough to override the individual's acknowledged privacy interest, sufficiently vital to suppress the Fourth Amendment's normal requirement of individualized suspicion." Chandler v. Miller,
Here, there is little evidence of what actually motivated the City to subject mechanics in the Solid Waste Department to suspicionless drug testing. For the most part, we have only the City's arguments as presented to the district court and to this court. At best, there is a general policy statement in the City's Administrative Instruction No. 123 that the City has an "interest in maintaining safe, healthful and efficient working conditions for its employees," and that "[b]eing under the influence of alcohol, or the presence of certain drugs in the body system, may pose serious safety and health risks not only to the user but to all those in contact with the user." However, this rationale could arguably be applied to any and all City employees and, in my opinion, it does not rise to the level of a real and immediate interest that could justify suspicionless drug testing.
Notably absent is any evidence suggesting a past history of drug use among mechanics in the Solid Waste Department (or, for that matter, among any City employees), or even any fear or suspicion of such drug use. Although such evidence may not always be necessary, the Supreme Court has emphasized that such evidence will "shore up an assertion of special need" by helping to "clarify" and "substantiate ... the precise hazards posed by such use." Chandler,
Nor has the City adequately demonstrated plaintiffs' job responsibilities are such that suspicionless drug testing is justified in the absence of a demonstrated problem of drug use. In Von Raab, the Supreme Court approved suspicionless drug testing of certain Customs Service employees even though there was no concrete evidence of a problem of drug use among such employees. However, as the Court subsequently emphasized in Chandler, "Von Raab must be read in its unique context."
Here, there is a troubling lack of evidence concerning what tasks are actually performed by plaintiffs.1 Even overlooking this problem, I am not convinced the tasks performed and the risks faced by plaintiffs are sufficiently comparable to the employees in Von Raab to allow us to conclude the City has a special interest that justifies departure from the Fourth Amendment's usual requirement of reasonable individualized suspicion. Thus, I agree with the district court's conclusion on this point: "On the record before me, I cannot conclude that solid waste mechanics have a significant impact upon the safety of the public, that they expose other employees to hazardous conditions or that their specific job requirements require responsibility for the safety of others." Memorandum Opinion and Order at 9.
Finally, it should be noted that the record on appeal contains evidence (i.e., an affidavit from Assistant City Attorney Peggy Hardwick) suggesting plaintiffs were subjected to drug testing solely because of the City's alleged interest in maintaining consistent policies with respect to all mechanics employed by the City and not because of any safety or health concerns peculiar to plaintiffs' positions. As the district court concluded after reviewing this evidence, "[i]t appears that the primary reason the [C]ity ... included" plaintiffs in its random drug testing policy was "the [C]ity's administrative convenience." Id. at 10.
For these reasons, the only conclusion that can be reached is that the City's alleged interests in random testing are, like the government concerns alleged in Chandler, "hypothetical" rather than "real."
Notes
The City's motion for summary judgment contained a limited number of statements regarding plaintiffs' job responsibilities. Although the City cited to deposition testimony to support those statements, none of the cited testimony was attached to the City's motion or otherwise included in the record on appeal. Further, there was no indication the cited testimony was submitted to the district court
