ASSOCIATED GENERAL CONTRACTORS OF CALIFORNIA, INC., a
nonprofit California corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
COALITION FOR ECONOMIC EQUITY, et al.,
Defendants-Intervenors-Appellees.
City and County of San Francisco, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 90-16582.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted March 15, 1991.
Decided Dec. 6, 1991.
John H. Findley, Pacific Legal Foundation, Sacramento, Cal., for plaintiff-appellant.
William C. McNeill, III, Employment Law Center, San Francisco, Cal., for intervenors-appellees.
Mara E. Rosales, Deputy City Atty., San Francisco, Cal., for defendants-appellees.
Theodore Hsien Wang, San Francisco Lawyers' Committee for Urban Affairs; Judith Kurtz, Equal Rights Advocates, San Francisco, Cal.; and Esteban Lizardo, Mexican-American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Los Angeles, Cal., for defendants.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.
Before FLETCHER, THOMPSON and O'SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judges.
FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
We confront once again the tension between the efforts of the City and County of San Francisco ("the City") to ameliorate the effects of past discrimination in City contracting processes on disadvantaged groups and the constraints imposed by the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee of equal treatment to all citizens, as well as other provisions of state and federal law. Appellant, Associated General Contractors of California, Inc. ("AGCC"), appeals the district court's denial of its motion for a preliminary injunction enjoining the enforcement of San Francisco's Minority/Woman/Local Business Utilization Ordinance--II, No. 175-89 ("1989 Ordinance") insofar as it applies to prime construction contracts.
FACTS
The challenge to San Francisco's use of racial and gender preferences to remedy discrimination in city contracting dates back more than seven years. In April 1984, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors (the "Board") passed the Minority/Women/Local Business Utilization Ordinance, No. 139-84 ("1984 Ordinance"), which required the City to set aside designated percentages of its contracting dollars to minority-owned business enterprises ("MBEs") and women-owned business enterprises ("WBEs"). In addition, the 1984 Ordinance required that MBEs, WBEs and locall-owned business enterprises ("LBEs") receive a five percent bidding preference to be taken into account when the City calculated the low bid on city contracts.
AGCC, an organization of contractors engaged in the building and construction industry, which has a substantial number of members who are not within the classes granted preferences by the 1984 Ordinance, challenged the implementation of the 1984 Ordinance in court. In reviewing the ordinance, this circuit upheld the provisions favoring WBEs and LBEs against AGCC's constitutional challenge but invalidated the provisions favoring MBEs. AGCC v. City and County of San Francisco,
Shortly after our decision in AGCC I, the Supreme Court considered a similar minority set-aside plan in City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co.,
Rather than providing the set-asides mandated by the 1984 Ordinance, the 1989 Ordinance gives bid preferences to prime contractors who are members of groups found disadvantaged by previous bidding practices. Specifically, the Ordinance provides a five percent bid preference for LBEs, WBEs, and MBEs. Because the WBE and MBE preferences are treated cumulatively with the LBE preferences under the ordinance, local MBEs and WBEs become eligible for a ten percent total bid preference, representing the cumulative total of the five percent preference given LBEs and the 5% preference given MBEs and WBEs. § 12D.8(B)(2). The Ordinance defines "MBE" as an economically disadvantaged business that is owned and controlled by one or more minority persons. § 12D.5. "Minority" is defined to include Asians, Blacks, and Latinos. "WBE" is defined as an economically disadvantaged business that is owned and controlled by one or more women. "Economically disadvantaged", insofar as the term applies to public works construction contracts, is defined as a business whose average gross annual receipts in the three fiscal years immediately preceding its application for certification as a MBE do not exceed fourteen million dollars. The Ordinance allows non-MBEs and non-WBEs to benefit from the bid preferences given these groups by extending a five percent preference to those who engage in a joint venture with a local MBE or WBE provided the MBE's or WBE's participation is between 35% and 51%. § 12D.8(B)(2). Those who engage in a joint venture with a local MBE or WBE whose participation is 51% or more, receive a ten percent preference. Id. A waiver of the bid preference is provided where no MBE or WBE is available to provide the necessary goods or services. § 12D.13.
Subsequent to the passage of the 1989 Ordinance, the Board enacted Ordinance No. 424-89, which raised the threshold for competitive bidding for city contracts previously set at $50,000 by section 7.200 of the San Francisco City Charter, to $10,000,000 ("the competitive bidding threshold ordinance"). Ordinance No. 424-89 was enacted pursuant to an amendment to the city charter passed the prior year, by which the electorate authorized the Board of Supervisors to increase or decrease the competitive bidding threshold. After the implementation of the new bid threshold ordinance, contracts valued at over $10,000,000 would still be subject to the city charter's "lowest reliable and responsible bidder" requirement. Contracts below that level presumably would be subject to the new bid preference system.
Soon after the effective dates of the 1989 Ordinance and the competitive bidding threshold ordinance, AGCC filed this action and sought a preliminary injunction. The motion for preliminary injunction challenges both the constitutionality of the MBE provisions of the 1989 Ordinance insofar as they pertain to public works construction contracts and the validity under state law of the competitive bidding threshold ordinance.2 In a well-reasoned opinion, the district court denied the motion for preliminary injunction. Although the district court held that the alleged violation of the constitutional rights of AGCC's members would, if meritorious, produce irreparable injury, it found that plaintiffs were unlikely to prevail on their constitutional claim. It rejected AGCC's charter claim based on its finding that AGCC had failed to demonstrate the requisite possibility of irreparable injury. AGCC now appeals the district court's denial of its motion for preliminary injunction to this court.
DISCUSSION
Because the grant or denial of a preliminary injunction lies within the discretion of the district court, our review of the denial of a preliminary injunction is limited. Johnson Controls, Inc. v. Phoenix Control Sys.,
I. AGCC's STANDING TO PURSUE THIS ACTION
As an initial matter, Appellees-Intervenors The Coalition for Economic Equity, et al. ("Intervenors"), argue that this case fails to present a case or controversy for Article III purposes because AGCC lacks standing to sue on behalf of its members. This issue was not raised below. However, because a "threshold question in every federal case" is "whether the plaintiff has made out a 'case or controversy' between himself and the defendant within the meaning of Article III," Warth v. Seldin,
In order for an organization to have representational standing to sue on behalf of its members, it must meet the three-pronged test set out by the Supreme Court in Hunt v. Washington Apple Advertising Comm'n,
The Intervenors argue that no AGCC member would have standing individually to bring these claims because no member has asserted a sufficient risk of injury. The Intervenors point out that the record evidence indicating that any of AGCC's members will suffer injury stemming from the 1989 Ordinance is limited to a declaration from one AGCC member stating that the ordinance has discouraged him from bidding on San Francisco contracts and AGCC's more general assertions that the ordinance could cause its members to lose contracts for which they are bidding.4 The Intervenors contend that such assertions are insufficient to confer standing upon any of AGCC's members, and therefore upon AGCC.
It has long been "established principle that to entitle a private individual to invoke the judicial power to determine the validity of executive or legislative action he must show that he has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining a direct injury as the result of that action...." Ex parte Levitt,
A long line of Supreme Court cases delineate the type of injury or risk of injury deemed so remote or hypothetical as to be insufficient to confer standing. In Laird v. Tatum,
[i]n none of these cases, however, did the chilling effect arise merely from the individual's knowledge that a governmental agency was engaged in certain activities or from the individual's concomitant fear that, armed with the fruits of those activities, the agency might in the future take some other and additional action detrimental to that individual. Rather, in each of these cases, the challenged exercise of governmental power was regulatory, proscriptive, or compulsory in nature, and the complainant was either presently or prospectively subject to the regulations, proscriptions, or compulsions that he was challenging.
. . . . .
The respondents do not meet this test; their claim, simply stated is that ... the very existence of the Army's data-gathering system produces a constitutionally impermissible chilling effect upon the exercise of their First Amendment rights.... Allegations of a subjective "chill" are not an adequate substitute for a claim of specific present objective harm or a threat of specific future harm....
Id. at 11, 13-14,
We believe that the injury asserted here is sufficient to confer standing on AGCC. In all cases in which the Supreme Court denied standing because the injury was too speculative there was either little indication in the record that the plaintiffs had firm intentions to take action that would trigger the challenged governmental action, or little indication in the record that, even if plaintiffs did take such action, they would be subjected to the challenged governmental action. Here, by contrast, the record indicates that AGCC members have firm intentions to bid for San Francisco city contracts, and that the application of the ordinance to such city bids is compulsory in nature. See Coral Const. Co. v. King County,
Neither do we find that the third prong of the Hunt test, the requirement that the suit not demand "the participation of individual members," bars AGCC from standing in this court. We have previously found this requirement to be met when the claims proffered and relief requested do not demand individualized proof on the part of its members. Compare United Union of Roofers v. Insurance Corp. of America,
In a post-argument submission to this court, the Intervenors call to our attention Maryland Highways Contractors Association v. Maryland,
the members of the Association in this case have conflicting interests. Some of the members of the Association are certified MBEs; they benefit from the continued enforcement of the MBE statute. Other non-minority members of the Association would benefit if the MBE statute were declared unconstitutional. Thus, there are actual conflicts of interest which would require that the individual members come into the lawsuit to protect their interests.
Id. at 1253; see also Associated Gen. Contractors v. Otter Tail Power Co.,
We reject the invitation to expand our interpretation of Hunt's third prong to require that no actual or potential conflict exist between the organization's members for several reasons. First, we do not believe that the Supreme Court intended this requirement to be included in Hunt's third prong. In Hunt, the Supreme Court found that the Washington Apple Advertising Commission, a Washington state agency formed to promote apple sales, had standing to contest a North Carolina law restricting the labeling of containers in which apples were shipped. The Court found the third prong of the test met simply because "neither the interstate commerce claim nor the request for declaratory and injunctive relief requires individualized proof and both are thus properly resolved in a group context."
In addition, we believe that the Supreme Court implicitly decided the issue of whether unanimity of membership should be required for standing in UAW v. Brock. In that case, the Secretary urged that the Hunt test be overruled and that, instead, the Court apply the rules for class actions set out in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure Rule 23 on the ground that only the class action rules "contain[ ] special safeguards to ensure that the diverse interests of class members are properly represented by the named plaintiff seeking to bring a case on their behalf ... [while] [n]o such adequacy of representation ... is guaranteed by the approach this Court has taken to associational standing." Id. at 288-89,
Furthermore, as a matter of policy, we reject the suggestion that unanimity of membership be required in organizations seeking standing. Most organizations are formed with far broader purposes than could be represented by a single piece of legislation or other policy challenged. Unanimous opinions within an organization's membership will be few and far between with regard to most issues controversial enough to engender litigation. To insist that there be neither conflict nor potential for conflict on any issue litigated would, in effect, lead to the eradication of associational standing in most suits. Such a rule would disserve the public interest, which frequently would not be represented but for these suits.
Accordingly, we conclude that an organization's internal conflicts properly should be resolved through its own internal procedures, not through limitations on standing. Our ruling should not be deemed to allow the silencing of dissenters' voices within an organization: the interests of these dissenters should be taken into account either through liberal approval of their intervention in the lawsuit or, as the Brock Court suggested, through refusal to preclude subsequent claims by dissenting members. Accord National Maritime Union v. Commander, Military Sealift Command,
We next consider whether the district court properly denied AGCC's motion for preliminary injunction. To obtain a preliminary injunction, the moving party must demonstrate either a combination of probable success on the merits and the possibility of irreparable injury or that serious questions are raised and the balance of hardships tips sharply in his favor. William Inglis & Sons Baking Co. v. ITT Continental Baking Co.,
A. AGCC's Charter Claim
Prior to the passage of the 1989 Ordinance, City Charter § 7.200 provided:
When the expenditure for any public work ... shall exceed the sum of ... fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), the same shall be done by contract.... The head of the department in charge of or responsible for the work for which a contract is to be let, ... shall let such contract to the lowest reliable responsible bidder.
In 1986, by vote, the City's residents amended the section to add the following language:
Beginning with fiscal year 1987-88, the board of supervisors shall be authorized to increase or decrease by ordinance the dollar amount set forth in any provision in this section.
On the basis of the amended provision, the Board enacted the bidding threshold ordinance, which raised the competitive bidding threshold from $50,000 to $10,000,000, thereby allowing the bid preference system established in the 1989 Ordinance to become effective for bids under $10,000,000.
AGCC argues that both the bidding threshold ordinance and the amendment to section 7.200 violate the California constitution, which mandates that all amendments to city charters be made by vote of the city's residents. The court below denied AGCC's motion for preliminary injunction on the charter claim based on its finding that AGCC had failed to demonstrate a sufficient risk of irreparable injury. The court found that, as a factual matter, an insufficient risk of injury was presented because no AGCC member asserted denial of a contract due to the MBE provisions and only one member asserted that he was deterred from bidding by the Ordinance. It also found that any injury suffered by AGCC's members would be pecuniary and redressable at law. Because of its finding on the issue of irreparable injury, the district court did not consider the likelihood that AGCC would prevail on the merits of its charter claim. On appeal, AGCC challenges the district court's conclusion.
1. Possibility of irreparable injury
AGCC argues that the district court erred in concluding that it failed to demonstrate a sufficient possibility of irreparable injury. According to AGCC, as a factual matter, it had demonstrated far more than a slight possibility that its members would suffer injury. AGCC also contends that the district court erred as a matter of law in determining that any injury suffered could be compensated by money damages and was therefore not irreparable.
We need not determine whether any injury suffered would be irreparable. We determine only that, if any irreparable injury were suffered, it would not be so great as to require issuance of a preliminary injunction given our preliminary assessment of the merits. As stated infra, we find that AGCC has failed to demonstrate that it is likely to succeed on the merits of the charter issue; at most, it has raised serious questions on the merits. Thus, to warrant the issuance of a preliminary injunction, AGCC must demonstrate that the balance of hardships tips sharply in its favor. In this case, the hardships that would be caused to women and minorities by issuance of a preliminary injunction barring implementation of the 1989 Ordinance in combination with the City's important interest in remedying discriminatory practices must be weighed against any hardships incurred by AGCC. In balancing these interests, we conclude that AGCC has failed to make the requisite showing that the balance of hardships tips sharply in its favor.
2. Likelihood of success on the merits
The basic outlines of California law on the issue of charter amendments are clear. California Constitution article XI, section 3, provides that a county or city may adopt a charter by majority vote of its electorate voting on the question and amend the charter in the same manner. According to the Supreme Court of California, this procedure "is exclusive and controlling, and any charter provision in conflict therewith is invalid." Uhl v. Collins,
Despite this clear dictate of California law, application of the principle to the case at hand produces no clear results. While California law emphatically prohibits the Board from amending the charter, it does not provide guidance to aid in our determination of whether the bidding threshold ordinance challenged here should be deemed such an unlawful amendment to a charter. Left to predict how California would determine this issue, however, we conclude that while AGCC may have raised serious questions on the merits, it has not demonstrated probable success on them. In requiring that all amendments to a city charter be by vote of the people, California intended to ensure that the ultimate power to govern remained in the hands of its citizens. We are not convinced that the actions taken by the electorate and the Board implicate this concern. At argument, AGCC's counsel conceded that if the City had passed a charter amendment repealing the previous $50,000 bidding threshold and stating that Board could set a new bidding threshold within a particular range, the amendment would be legitimate. Although the charter amendment passed was less specific, it clearly was intended to accomplish exactly that.6 See also AGCC I,
B. AGCC's Constitutional Claims
AGCC also contends that the preferences given to MBEs7 violate the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.8 The court below found that AGCC demonstrated the requisite possibility of irreparable injury on the ground that such injury is assumed where constitutional rights have been alleged to be violated. It denied the motion for preliminary injunction on AGCC's constitutional claim, however, on the ground that AGCC failed to demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits. On appeal, AGCC argues that the district judge incorrectly applied relevant law in concluding that it was unlikely to prevail on its claims.
1. Possibility of irreparable injury
We have stated that "[a]n alleged constitutional infringement will often alone constitute irreparable harm." Goldie's Bookstore v. Superior Ct.,
2. Likelihood of success on the merits
A city may use "some form of narrowly tailored racial preference" where such a measure is "necessary to break down patterns of deliberate exclusion." Croson,
A. Compelling state interest
In Croson, a majority of the Supreme Court delineated the scope of discrimination that a race-conscious remedy could properly seek to redress. According to the Court, a municipality has a compelling interest in redressing, not only discrimination committed by the municipality, itself, but also discrimination committed by private parties within the municipality's legislative jurisdiction, so long as the municipality in some way perpetuated the discrimination to be remedied by the program. See
In applying these guidelines to the race-conscious ordinance at issue in Croson, the Supreme Court found that Richmond's factual predicate fell short of its constitutional mark. According to the Court, the city's mere recitation of a remedial basis for its racial classifications was entitled to little or no weight.
Our decision in AGCC I provides further direction in our assessment of the factual predicate necessary to justify San Francisco's race-conscious remedy.10 In that case, this circuit found that statistics relied upon by San Francisco to support the 1984 Ordinance failed to identify discrimination with the precision required to demonstrate a compelling interest. We noted that by comparing the percentage of MBEs who received contracts from the City with the percentage of MBEs in the city at large, the City failed to take into account that a disproportionate number of MBEs in the city at large might not provide goods or services subject to significant contracting by the City; thus the disproportionate number of contracts awarded to non-MBEs might be explainable by reasons other than discrimination in the contracting process. AGCC I,
Measuring the 1989 Ordinance against these principles, we believe that AGCC has failed to demonstrate that it is sufficiently likely to prevail on the merits of its constitutional claim to warrant the issuance of a preliminary injunction. In contrast to the "mere recitation of a 'benign' or legitimate purpose" criticized in Croson,
The City's findings appear supported by the record. A study commissioned by the City and prepared by BPA Economics, Inc., indicates the existence of large disparities between the award of city contracts to available non-minority businesses and to MBEs. Using the City and County of San Francisco as the "relevant market," the study compared the number of available MBE prime construction contractors in San Francisco with the amount of contract dollars awarded by the City to San Francisco-based MBEs for the 1987-88 fiscal year. It found that available MBEs received far fewer city contracts in proportion to their numbers than their available non-minority counterparts. Specifically, the study found that with respect to prime construction contracting, the disparities between the number of available Asian, Black, and Hispanic owned locally based firms and the number of contracts awarded to such firms was statistically significant and supported an inference of discrimination. For example, in prime contracting for construction, although MBE availability was 49.5%, MBE dollar participation was only 11.1%; in prime contracting for equipment and supplies, although MBE availability was 36%, MBE dollar participation was only 17%; and in prime contracting for general services, MBE availability was 49% although MBE dollar participation was only 6.2%. In our recent decision, Coral Const., we emphasized that such statistical disparities are "an invaluable tool" in demonstrating the discrimination necessary to establish a compelling interest. Coral Const.,
Moreover, the record documents a vast number of individual accounts of discrimination, which bring "the cold numbers convincingly to life." Coral Const.,
AGCC challenges specific pieces of evidence proffered by San Francisco to justify the 1989 Ordinance. It argues first that the results of the BPA study, which the Board relied on heavily to support its findings of discrimination, were skewed to underrepresent the amount of contract dollars awarded to minorities. As support, AGCC points to statistics presented in the City's Budget Analysis of March 17, 1989, that indicate that MBEs received 36.7% of prime contract dollars awarded in fiscal year 1987-88, a far higher percentage than reflected in the BPA study. Data used in the City's Budget Analysis were also used to calculate the BPA statistics. The City argues that the disparity in the results of the two studies stems from refinements made to the relevant data in the BPA study in order to tailor the data more closely to the 1989 Ordinance's scope. For example, the City contends that BPA limited the data to contracts awarded to MBEs in the City and County area and verified particular data used in the City's Budget Analysis before including it in the BPA study. AGCC responds that refinements made to the data in the BPA study are improper, but it specifically faults only one refinement: the alleged exclusion of all Public Works construction contracts of less than $250,000 from the data. AGCC argues this exclusion would result in undercounting MBEs, which would presumably be newer, smaller, and more apt to bid for smaller contracts. The City, however, points to evidence within the record indicating that BPA in fact included the lower-priced contracts within the BPA data. Because AGCC raises no other specific contention regarding the inaccuracy of the BPA study, and because of evidence in the record contradicting BPA's assertion regarding the inclusion of lower-priced contracts, we conclude that the district court's finding that the BPA statistics were reliable was not clearly erroneous.
AGCC also argues that the statistics relied upon by the City to demonstrate discrimination in its contracting processes fail to meet the standards we established in AGCC I because they consider only MBEs located within San Francisco. Again, AGCC fails to demonstrate a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of this issue. In AGCC I, we faulted the City for failing to determine whether its past actions had visited racial discrimination on MBEs outside of its borders because the scheme adopted by the 1984 Ordinance allowed non-resident MBEs to obtain benefits.
Furthermore, AGCC contends that the City's findings of discrimination fail to rise to the level of specificity demanded by both AGCC I and Croson. However, the City's findings are substantially more specific than those found inadequate in these prior cases. In addition, they are clearly based upon dozens of specific instances of discrimination that are laid out with particularity in the record, as well as significant statistical disparities in the award of contracts. As pointed out by the City, it must simply demonstrate the existence of past discrimination with specificity; there is no requirement that the legislative findings specifically detail each and every instance that the legislative body has relied upon in support of its decision that affirmative action is necessary. Cf. Croson,
B. Narrowly Tailored
To survive strict scrutiny, not only must a race-conscious remedy serve a compelling state interest, it must be narrowly tailored to redress the consequences of discrimination. Croson,
AGCC argues that the Ordinance does not possess the first indicium of narrow tailoring; according to AGCC the City improperly failed to adopt race-neutral means to accomplish its objectives. The record indicates, however, that the City considered, but rejected as not viable, specific race-neutral alternatives including creating a fund to assist newly established MBEs in meeting bonding requirements. As we stated in Coral Const., "while strict scrutiny requires serious, good faith consideration of race-neutral alternatives, strict scrutiny does not require exhaustion of every possible such alternative.... however irrational, costly, unreasonable, and unlikely to succeed such alternative may be."
The 1989 Ordinance at issue in this case also appears to possess the requisite flexibility necessary to withstand a motion for preliminary injunction. Rather than the rigid quota system found faulty in Croson, the City has adopted a more modest system, that of bid preferences. As we noted in AGCC I, the advantages provided by such preferences "are relatively slight[;] ... there are no goals, quotas, or set-asides."
In addition, the burdens of the bid preferences on those not entitled to them appear relatively light and well distributed. During the first six months the 1989 Ordinance was in effect, 92.7% of all construction prime contracting dollars awarded to San Francisco firms went to non-MBEs. In addition, in contrast to remedial measures struck down in other cases, those bidding have no settled expectation of receiving a contract. See Metro Broadcasting Inc. v. Fed. Communications Comm'n, --- U.S. ----,
That the 1989 Ordinance is "limited in its geographical scope to the boundaries of the enacting jurisdiction," Coral Const.,
CONCLUSION
The district court did not abuse its discretion in denying AGCC's request for a preliminary injunction enjoining enforcement of the bid preference ordinance pending decision on the merits. On its charter claims, AGCC at most raises serious questions, but fails to demonstrate that the balance of hardships tips sharply in its favor. On its constitutional claims, AGCC fails to demonstrate a sufficient likelihood of success on the merits.
AFFIRMED.
O'SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judge, specially concurring:
While I agree with my colleagues that the district court properly denied AGCC's request for preliminary injunctive relief, I cannot concur in their analytical approach.
* I am unable to accept the assertion that AGCC has not demonstrated probable success on the charter amendment issue. As the opinion acknowledges, ante at 1411, California law is clear. A vote of the people, as provided in the California Constitution, is the sole and exclusive means of amending a city charter. Uhl v. Collins,
The majority can point to no instance in which the constitutional requirement has not been rigidly applied. Policy arguments against its imposition in this circumstance, see ante at 1411, cannot overcome the "clear dictate of California law," ante at 1411. I am persuaded that AGCC has demonstrated a substantial likelihood of success on this issue.
Accordingly, I must go on to reach the question of whether AGCC has shown a possibility of irreparable harm justifying the issuance of a preliminary injunction. I conclude that it has not. AGCC's members will be harmed by the allegedly invalid charter amendment only if they are denied contracts valued at over $50,000 but less than $10,000,000 due to the bid preferences for MBEs and WBEs. The sole evidence of injury to AGCC members in the record is the declaration of Paul Hodgson. Although Mr. Hodgson declares that his firm has been discouraged from bidding on city contracts by the 1989 Ordinance, he does not mention the size of the contracts his firm would otherwise have sought. Thus, there is no evidence in the record that any AGCC member has lost a bid due to the charter amendment, or has even been discouraged from bidding by that amendment. I must therefore conclude that AGCC has not met its burden of "demonstrat[ing] immediate threatened injury" rather than simply alleging speculative harm.1 Caribbean Marine Servs. Co. v. Baldrige,
II
Although I agree with the majority that AGCC has not shown a likelihood of success on the merits of its equal protection claim, I write separately to emphasize the limited nature of appellate review of the grant or denial of a preliminary injunction. Detailed consideration of the merits of AGCC's constitutional claim is neither necessary nor appropriate in this context. The issue is not the constitutionality of the 1989 Ordinance, but simply whether AGCC has shown a sufficient probability of success on the merits to justify preliminary relief.
Although I do not necessarily disagree with it, the detailed discussion of the statistical evidence presented to the district court, see ante at 1414-15, as well as much of the discussion of whether the 1989 Ordinance meets the requirements of Croson, is inappropriate. Because the Ordinance reasonably appears to comply with Croson, the district court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to grant a preliminary injunction. This court need not say more. Our decision on this narrow issue today should not be regarded as determinative of the ultimate resolution of the dispute. See Big Country Foods,
Notes
The decision produced no single opinion that reflected the majority's views. Instead, Justice O'Connor announced the judgment of the Court and delivered the opinion of the Court with respect to several portions of an opinion in which Chief Justice Rehnquist, and Justices White, Stevens, and Kennedy joined. Other portions of Justice O'Connor's opinion were joined by Judges Rehnquist, White, and Kennedy. Both Justices Stevens and Kennedy filed opinions concurring in part and concurring in the judgment. Justice Scalia filed an opinion concurring in the judgment. Justices Brennan, Marshall, and Blackmun dissented from the result reached by the majority
The action does not challenge the lawfulness of provisions of the ordinance relating to purchase or service contracts or those providing preferences favoring LBEs
An organization may also have standing to sue on its own behalf. See Warth v. Seldin,
The record contains a number of other declarations from AGCC members detailing the injuries caused by San Francisco's MBE ordinance. These declarations, however, relate solely to the injury caused by the 1984 Ordinance. Because of the significant differences between the 1984 and 1989 Ordinances, detailed supra, we decline to assume that any injury that may have been caused by the 1984 Ordinance would also be caused by the 1989 Ordinance
For the same reasons that we find this injury not to be so speculative as to warrant denial of standing, we reject any claim that the issues presented here are not ripe for review because the case involves uncertain future events. The ordinance challenged in this suit is currently in effect; those determining whether to bid on city contracts are currently basing their decisions on its existence. Thus, the ordinance's effects are not confined to the future. See Supreme Court of Virginia v. Consumers Union,
AGCC also argues that Ordinance No. 424-89 is unlawful because it was passed for racially discriminatory reasons and therefore violates AGCC's members' rights to equal protection. While there is little evidence in the record regarding the Board's motivations for passing the ordinance, it appears reasonable to assume that the Board passed it in order to facilitate its MBE preference scheme. However, AGCC's claims that the ordinance constitutes unlawful discrimination based on race would warrant the issuance of a preliminary injunction only if AGCC demonstrates a likelihood of success on the merits of its equal protection claims. We consider these claims infra at Part II.B.2
Although AGCC's charter claims challenge the preferences given to both WBEs and MBEs, its constitutional claims challenge only the preferences given to MBEs
AGCC also asserts that the MBE bid preferences violate rights secured by 42 U.S.C. § 1981 and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Section 1983 provides a cause of action for the deprivation under color of state law of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and federal laws. The rights protected by section 1983 are coextensive with the equal protection clause's guarantee against racial discrimination. See AGCC I,
Section 1981 provides in pertinent part: "All persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall have the same right in every State and Territory to make and enforce contracts ... as is enjoyed by white citizens...." This section prohibits discrimination against nonminorities as well as minorities. McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transp. Co.,
We note that in Northeastern Fla. Chapter of Ass'n of Gen. Contractors v. Jacksonville, Fla.
The declaration of the Croson plurality that a city "can use its spending powers to remedy private discrimination,"
AGCC also contends that the 1989 Ordinance must be struck down because it fails to identify specific bid practices that caused the racial imbalance as required by the Supreme Court in Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio,
We find AGCC unlikely to prevail on its argument that tailoring the remedy to specific minority groups is insufficient to meet constitutional requirements, and that to pass constitutional muster any remedy adopted must provide redress only to specific individuals who have been identified as victims of discrimination. To reach any other decision would thwart the Supreme Court's directive in Croson that race conscious remedies may be permitted in some circumstances. As pointed out by the district court, "an iron clad requirement limiting any remedy to individuals personally proven to have suffered prior discrimination would render any race conscious remedy superfluous."
We also find AGCC unlikely to prevail on its contention that the remedy encompassed within the 1989 Ordinance is not sufficiently tailored to the discrimination found by the Board because it does not individually remedy each type of discrimination suffered. For example, AGCC argues that the bid preference is not narrowly tailored to remedy injuries suffered by those who have been the low bidder on contracts but were still not awarded contracts by City officials. Race-conscious plans, by their nature, are not tailored to remedy individual injuries suffered by individual victims. Here, the City has found that continued discrimination places MBEs at a competitive disadvantage and seeks to counteract this situation by providing MBEs with a counterbalancing advantage. We find this nexus between violation and remedy to be close enough to warrant affirmance of the district court's denial of the motion for preliminary injunction.
Because I find that AGCC has not shown a sufficient possibility of any injury due to the charter amendment, I need not determine if allegations of loss of profits due not to the city's refusal to award the contract to a low bidder but rather to failure to bid at all would justify preliminary injunctive relief
