Opinion
In Cаlifornia, labor relations between most local public entities and their employees are governed by the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (MMBA) (Gov. Code, § 3500 et seq.), which recognizes the right of public employees to bargain collectively with their employers over wages and other terms of employment. The administrative agency authorized to adjudicate unfair labor practice charges under the MMBA is California’s Public Employment Relations Board (PERB). Subject to certain exceptions, local public agencies and their employees must exhaust their administrative remedies under the MMBA by applying to PERB for relief before they can ask a court to intervene in a labor dispute.
California allows public employees to go on strike to enforce their collective bargaining demands unless the striking employees perform jobs that are essential to public welfare. But whether a particular employee’s job is so essential that the employee may not legally strike is a complex and fact-intensive matter, and оne on which public employee organizations and public entities may disagree.
Here, we address this issue: If a public entity is of the view that a threatened strike by its employees will be unlawful because a strike by some or all of the employees creates a substantial and imminent threat to public health and safety, must the public entity first file an unfair labor practice complaint with PERB and await PERB’s adjudication of the complaint before asking a court for an injunction prohibiting the strike?
We agree with the Court of Appeal that PERB has initial jurisdiction over a claim by a public entity that a strike by some or all of its employees is illegal. In addition, we conclude that a public entity must exhaust its administrative remedies before PERB before seeking judicial relief unless one of the recognized exceptions to the exhaustion of administrative remedies requirement is established.
I
In January 2006, plaintiff City of San Jose (City) and defendant Operating Engineers Local Union No. 3 (Union), which represented some 808 full-time
On May 31, 2006, the Union filed with PERB an unfair labor рractice charge against the City. The Union alleged that the City’s threatened court action interfered with the Union’s right to represent its members, interfered with the rights of its members to participate in activities of an employee organization, and breached the City’s obligation to meet and confer with the Union in good faith.
On June 1, 2006, the City filed a complaint in the superior court seeking to enjoin 110 employees (identified by name and employment position) from engaging in any work stoppage, as such action would endаnger public health and safety. Specifically, the complaint alleged that such work stoppage would: (1) disrupt the City’s environmental service department’s operation and maintenance of the San Jose/Santa Clara Water Pollution Control Plant, which treats waste and sewage water of some 1.3 million people before discharge into San Francisco Bay; (2) impair the ability of the City’s department of transportation to maintain and repair traffic signals and streetlight poles; and (3) impair the ability оf the City’s general services department to adequately service facilities that support communications among emergency personnel, such as the police and fire departments.
The Union opposed the City’s request for injunctive relief, as did PERB. In denying relief, the superior court pointed to the City’s failure to exhaust administrative remedies by not first seeking relief from PERB, which the court ruled had exclusive initial jurisdiction over the matter.
The City filed a notice of appeal, and it petitioned the Court of Appеal for a writ of supersedeas. That court issued a stay prohibiting a strike by the 59 employees identified in the City’s petition. 1
When the Court of Appeal learned that the parties had in November 2006 ratified a labor agreement, it deemed the appeal to be moot but, at the urging of both parties, nevertheless addressed the issues presented because of their
II
When a public employer is of the view that a threatened strike by certain public employees will endanger the public welfare, must it generally first seek relief from PERB before asking a superior court for injunctive relief? Our answer is “yes.” This is why: The Legislature has expressly vested in PERB initial jurisdiction over claims of unfair labor practices arising under the MMBA. (Gov. Code, § 3509.) Because a public entity’s claim that a threatened public employee strike is illegal generally constitutes an unfair labor practice claim, the claim comes within PERB’s initial jurisdiction. We begin our analysis by reviewing the history of local public employment labor law in California, particularly as it has affected PERB’s jurisdiction and the right of public employees to strike.
A. PERB Jurisdiction and Public Employee Strikes
In 1961, the Legislature enacted the George Brown Act (Stats. 1961, ch. 1964, § 1, pp. 4141-4143, adding Gov. Code, § 3500 et seq.), which granted public employees in California the right to organize and have their reprеsentatives “meet and confer” with their employers over wages and working conditions (Gov. Code, former § 3505). That right was expanded in 1968, when the Legislature enacted the MMBA (Gov. Code, §§ 3500-3510) authorizing public entities and labor representatives not only to confer but also to reach binding agreements on wages, hours, and working conditions. (Gov. Code, § 3505;
Coachella Valley Mosquito & Vector Control Dist. v. California Public Employment Relations Bd.
(2005)
The history of PERB begins in 1975, when the Legislature enacted the Educational Employment Relations Act (EERA) (Gov. Code, §§ 3540-3549.3). That law established the Educational Employment Relations Board (EERB), which in 1977 was renamed the Public
We discussed Government Code section 3541.5 first in
San Diego Teachers Assn.
v.
Superior Court
(1979)
In
San Diego Teachers, supra,
In
El Rancho, supra,
Neither
San Diego Teachers, supra,
In 2000, the Legislature extended PERB’s jurisdiction to cover matters arising under the MMBA—this was done through enactment of Government Code section 3509, which became effective July 1, 2001. (Stats. 2000, ch. 901, § 8.) Subdivision (b) of that statute provides in relevant part: “A complaint alleging any violation of [the MMBA] . . . shall be processed as an unfair practice charge by [PERB].
The initial determination as to whether the charge of unfair practice is justified
and, if so, the appropriate remedy necessаry to effectuate the purposes of this chapter, shall be a matter within the
exclusive jurisdiction
of [PERB].” (Italics added.) This enactment removed “from the courts their initial jurisdiction over MMBA unfair practice charges”
(Coachella Valley, supra,
B. Initial Jurisdiction over Public Employee Strikes
The City contends that because the right of public employees to strike is founded in the common law, the statute vesting initial jurisdiction in PERB for claims of unfair practices arising under the MMBA (Gov. Code, § 3509, subd. (b)) is inapplicable to public employee strikes. We disagree. As we will explain, to accept the City’s argument would be at odds with the body of public employment labor law as it has developed in California.
The language in Government Code section 3509, subdivision (b), which is part of the MMBA, is virtually identical to the language in Government Code
Because of the similar language in these two jurisdictional statutes, and because of the legal presumption that the Legislature is deemed to be aware of existing judicial decisions that have a direct bearing on the particular legislation enacted
(Harris v. Capital Growth Investors XIV
(1991)
The City insists, however, that this body of decisional law is inapplicable in this case, which arises under the MMBA, because no provision of the MMBA either “arguably protects] or prohibit^]”
(El Rancho, supra,
The City notes that under the “arguably protected or prohibited” principle
(El Rancho, supra,
The City contends that regardless of whether a public employee strike falls within the “arguably protected or prohibited” рrinciple
(El Rancho, supra,
The City’s argument overstates the reach of the local concern doctrine. The doctrine applies primarily when the subject of the action is peripheral to the labor dispute
(Service by Medallion, Inc. v. Clorox Co.
(1996)
To summarize, a claim by a public entity that a proposed strike by public employees includes employees who perform services essential to the public welfare is generally subject to PERB’s initial jurisdiction. We next discuss whether a public entity may nevertheless bypass that administrative forum by applying to a court for relief if it can establish a recognized exception to the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies.
III
The Union contends that the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies
always
applies in actions pertaining to public employee strikes that give rise to claims of unfair labor practices under the MMBA, and that therefore the doctrine’s еxceptions are never applicable to such strikes. The City, on the other hand, argues that the exhaustion doctrine
never
applies to
When remedies before an administrative forum are available, a party must in general exhaust them before seeking judicial relief.
(Coachella Valley, supra,
The exhaustion doctrine has certain exceptions.
(Coachella Valley, supra,
The Union contends that the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies always applies to public employee strikes arising under the MMBA because of the adequacy of PERB’s administrative remedies. It relies on this court’s statement in
San Diego Teachers, supra,
The Union also relies on this court’s statement in
San Diego Teachers, supra,
Contrary to the Union’s assertion, there is no legal obstacle to applying the exceptions to the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies to matters that are within PERB’s initial jurisdiction.
We now consider the City’s contention that the PERB remedy can never be effective when a proposed strike by public employees includes employees whose services may be essential to protect the public welfare.
We begin with a brief review of the statutory source establishing PERB’s authority over requests for injunctions in unfair labor practice charges arising under the MMBA, and the regulations implementing that authority. Government Code section 3509, subdivision (a), incorporates into the MMBA the powers and duties of PERB set forth in section 3541.3.
Under those regulations, a party may, after giving the opposing party 24 hours’ notice, file a request with PERB’s general cоunsel to have PERB apply to the court for injunctive relief. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 32450, subds. (a), (c).) The general counsel then initiates an investigation (id., § 32455), after which “the General Counsel shall make a recommendation to [PERB] within 120 hours after the receipt of a request, unless the request is made during a work stoppage or lockout, in which case the General Counsel shall make a recommendation to [PERB] within 24 hours after the request is received” (id., § 32460). PERB then decides whether to seek injunctive relief in court. (Id., § 32465.) If PERB is unable to act within 24 hours of receiving the general counsel’s recommendation, the general counsel is authorized to apply to the court for an injunction if the general counsel has “reasonable cause to believe that such action is in accordance with [PERB] policy and that legal grounds for injunctive relief are present.” (Id., § 32470.)
The City is wrong in asserting that in a case such as this the PERB remedy can never be adequate because PERB’s regulations prevent it from acting with sufficient speed to prevent the proposed public emplоyee strike from leading to irreparable harm to the public welfare. As noted above, the minimum time for PERB to seek injunctive relief from a court is 24 hours. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 32450, subds. (a), (c).) In this case the Union agreed to give, and did give, the City at least 72 hours’ notice of the possibility of a strike. Thus, even if we assume that injunctive relief was appropriate here, there was sufficient time for the City to have asked PERB for injunctive relief and sufficient time for PERB to have decided whether to apply for such relief in court.
IV
Whenever possible, labor disputes asserting unfair labor practices under the MMBA should be submitted first to PERB rather than a court. If an exception to the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies is claimed, the trial court should afford due deference to PERB and issue injunctive relief only when it is clearly shown that PERB’s remedy would be inadequate.
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
George, C. J., Baxter, J., Werdegar, J., Chin, J., Moreno, J., and Corrigan, J., concurred.
Notes
The record before us contains no explanation why, after identifying in the trial court 110 employees whose services were alleged to be essential to public health and safety, the City’s writ petition in the Court of Appeal put the number of such employees at 59.
In the Court of Appeal, PERB filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of the Union. But it did not do so in this court. In response to our invitation to file a friend-of-the-court brief, PERB stated that it would not do so for “reasons that include diminished resources” and because of its preference to maintain “a neutral role in the current litigation.”
Government Code section 3541.5, which appears in the EERA, states in relevant part: “The initial determination as to whether the charges of unfair practices are justified, and, if so, what remedy is necessary to effectuate the purposes of this chaptеr, shall be a matter within the exclusive jurisdiction of the board.” (Italics added.)
Government Code section 3509, subdivision (b), which the Legislature added to the MMBA after this court’s decision in
County Sanitation, supra,
Subdivisions (a) and (b) of Government Code section 3509.5 provide that a party aggrieved by a final decision or order of PERB in an unfair practice matter—except for a decision not to issue a complaint—may seek writ relief in the Court of Appeal. When the writ petition is filed timely, the Court of Appeal has jurisdiction to grant “any temporary relief or restraining order” (Gov. Code, § 3509.5, subd. (b)) and to enforce, modify, or set aside PERB’s decision or order. Although this statute authorizes judicial review of PERB’s final decisions or orders, it does not address the issue confronted here. The question here is whether a court is without jurisdiction or authority to act when PERB has not yet issued a final order or decision but there is a potential substantial and imminent threat of harm to the public welfare.
