OPINION AND ORDER
This is a class action challenging the constitutionality of the toll schedule for crossing the Newport/Claiborne Pell Bridge (“Newport Bridge”). The case is before the Court on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, Defendant’s motion is granted and Plaintiffs motion is denied.
I. BACKGROUND 1
Newport, located on Aquidneck Island, is one of Rhode Island’s most attractive tourist destinations. It is visited by thousands of Rhode Island residents and nonresidents alike for both work and play. The
Defendant Rhode Island Turnpike and Bridge Authority (“RITBA”) is a state entity charged with maintaining and operating the Newport and Mount Hope Bridges. Drivers cross the Mount Hope Bridge for free but must pay a toll to cross the Newport Bridge. All of RITBA’s funds come from the tolls it collects at the Newport Bridge. RITBA uses all these funds to operate and maintain the Newport and Mount Hope Bridges, and to satisfy debt service. Formerly, those crossing the Newport Bridge could pay the toll by cash or token. In either event, the cost for crossing the Bridge was the same for Rhode Island residents and nonresidents. This situation changed in January 2009, when RITBA scrapped the use of tokens and promulgated a toll schedule reflecting a discount for Rhode Island residents that is not available to nonresidents. The discount applies to users of E-ZPass, an electronic toll system that automatically charges drivers who attach a small electronic device known as a transponder to their car. The new schedule is as follows: 2 _
Non-RI RI transponder transponder
RI resident $ 0.83 $4.00
RI nonresident $ 4.00 $4.00
RI nonresident $ 0.91 $4.00 making 6 + trips per 30-day period
Cash $ 4.00 $4.00
Unlimited $40.00 every 30
Crossing days Unavailable
Plaintiff Isabel S. Cohen is a Connecticut resident who has crossed the Newport Bridge “for many reasons, including to purchase items while in Newport,” and has paid tolls at the nonresident rate. (Joint Statement of Undisputed Facts ¶ 2, ECF No. 29.) She has now brought suit — as the representative of the certified class of “all non-Rhode Island residents who paid tolls to cross the Newport/Claiborne Pell Bridge using an E-ZPass, FastLane or other comparable system, and who did not receive the discount given to Rhode Island residents pursuant to the RI E-ZPass Discount Plan” (id. ¶ 23) — challenging the constitutionality of the toll schedule.
As the chart makes apparent, the current toll schedule reflects at least four forms of differentiation — between: (1) Rhode Island residents and nonresidents; (2) users of Rhode Island and non-Rhode Island transponders; (3) cash payers and E-ZPass users; and (4) frequent and infrequent users. This class action challenges only the first disparity, claiming that the favorable treatment afforded to Rhode Island residents violates the Commerce Clause, the Privileges and Immunities Clause, and the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution. 3
A. Commerce Clause
The Commerce Clause provides, in pertinent part, “Congress shall have Power ... [t]o regulate Commerce ... among the several States .... ” U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3. “Though phrased as a grant of regulatory power to Congress, the Clause has long been understood to have a ‘negative’ aspect that denies the States the power unjustifiably to discriminate against or burden the interstate flow of articles of commerce.”
Oregon Waste Sys., Inc. v. Dep’t of Envt’l Quality,
1. The Market Participant Doctrine
RITBA argues that the resident-only discount is immune from Commerce Clause scrutiny because, in implementing it, RITBA acts as a “market participant” and not in a governmental capacity. The market participant doctrine “differentiates between a State’s acting in its distinctive governmental capacity, and a State’s acting in the more general capacity of a market participant; only the former is subject to the limitations of the negative Commerce Clause.”
New Energy,
RITBA’s market participant argument relies on
Endsley v. Chicago,
But the analysis does not stop there, because the Seventh Circuit went on in
Endsley
to conclude that the market participant doctrine would shield Chicago’s operation of the Skyway from Commerce Clause scrutiny “[ejven if plaintiffs had not plead themselves out of court.”
Id.
The court reasoned that in raising funds for the upkeep and operation of the Skyway by selling revenue bonds and charging drivers a toll, “the City was acting as a property owner, using its property to raise money,
The market participant doctrine is not as open-ended as RITBA would have the Court believe. It only “permits a State to influence ‘a discrete, identifiable class of economic activity in which [it] is a major participant.’ ”
South-Central Timber Dev., Inc. v. Wunnicke,
Nor is the bare assertion that “[cjourts have recognized the operation of private toll roads as legitimate economic activity,”
Endsley,
In view of these considerations, it is not surprising that other courts confronted with the issue in a similar context have declined to follow the
Endsley
court’s sweeping interpretation of the market participant doctrine.
See Selevan,
Given the clear language of RITBA’s enabling act, the general rule that “building and maintaining roads is a core governmental function,”
Selevan,
2. The Merits
The application of the dormant Commerce Clause to this class action must follow the framework erected by the Supreme Court in
Evansville-Vanderburgh Airport Auth. Dist. v. Delta Airlines, Inc.,
Though the
Northwest Airlines
test was first announced in connection with the “reasonableness” requirement of the Anti-Head Tax Act, the Supreme Court affirmed that it is “taken directly from our dormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence” and applied it to a dormant Commerce Clause challenge.
Northwest Airlines,
On closer inspection, however, the analogy to
Oregon Waste
falls apart. That decision spoke to “differential treatment of instate and out-of-state
economic interests
” — that is, transporters of in-state and out-of-state waste — not differential treatment of residents and nonresidents.
See id.
(emphasis added) (deeming it “obvious” that a surcharge imposed by Oregon on disposal of waste generated out of state was facially discriminatory because it did not apply to in-state waste). Indeed, although there is no dearth of jurisprudence on Commerce Clause challenges to bridge and highway tolls, not a single one of the decisions cited by the parties has held that
There is good reason for this forbearance: “The central rationale for the rule against discrimination is to prohibit state or municipal laws whose object is local economic protectionism, laws that would excite those jealousies and retaliatory measures the Constitution was designed to prevent.”
C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown,
Selevan involved a constitutional challenge to a bridge toll discount available only to residents of Grand Island, New York. The Second Circuit held that the plaintiffs could not demonstrate discrimination within the meaning of Northwest Airlines because they “failed to identify an in-state commercial interest that is favored, and they do not point to a particular out-of-state competitor that is harmed by NYTA’s toll policy.” Id. (internal citations, quotation marks, and brackets omitted).
As in Selevan, in this case Plaintiff has failed to identify a specific in-state commercial interest that is favored by the Newport Bridge toll discount at the expense of particular out-of-state competitors, so it cannot demonstrate that the discount discriminates against interstate commerce. Therefore, the discount satisfies the third prong of Northwest Airlines.
Turning now to the first two prongs, the Court must decide whether the Newport Bridge toll “(1) is based on some fair approximation of use of the facilities” and “(2) is not excessive in relation to the benefits conferred.”
Northwest Airlines,
Cohen argues that because RITBA uses some of the toll moneys collected at the Newport Bridge to maintain the non-tolled Mount Hope Bridge, the toll is not based on a fair approximation of the use of the Newport Bridge and is excessive in relation to the benefits conferred by it. In other words, according to Cohen, the fact that the tolls collected at the Newport Bridge are used to maintain and operate another facility shows that the toll amount exceeds the costs and benefits associated with the Newport Bridge itself. This argument relies on Bridgeport, which held that a fee imposed by a quasi-public authority of the State of Connecticut on the passengers of a ferry company transporting travelers from ports in Connecticut to New York violated the dormant Commerce Clause, because the fees were used to fund many activities that were not available to and did not benefit the ferry passengers. Id. at 87-88.
RITBA counters that the Mount Hope Bridge
does
benefit the users of the Newport Bridge, so the fact that part of the Newport Bridge toll moneys go towards maintaining the Mount Hope Bridge does not mean that the tolls are excessive. Specifically, RITBA relies on
Auto. Club of N.Y., Inc. v. Port Auth. of N.Y. & N.J.,
Cohen disputes the analogy to
Auto. Club.
She argues that there can be no functional relationship between the two bridges, for if there were, “then everyone would take the free crossing and no one would pay the $4.00 Newport Pell Bridge toll.” (PL’s Rep. Mem. at 5.) This argument confuses the concept of exact interchangeability with functional relationship. As previously mentioned
(supra
at 442), the Newport Bridge and the Mount Hope Bridge do not take drivers to exactly the same place, which explains why some drivers might prefer to take the former over the latter despite its cost. However, it is possible for the two bridges to be functionally related without operating as exact substitutes. This was indeed the case in
Auto. Club,
where although some of the bridges and tunnels did not have the identical origin and destination as the PATH railway, the Second Circuit held that the routes were functionally related because the bridges and tunnels would become overcrowded in the absence of PATH.
Applying the spillover effect analysis to this case, the question is whether the presence of the Mount Hope Bridge helps alleviate the traffic that would exist on the Newport Bridge in its absence. In other words, would “closing [the Mount Hope Bridge] inerease[ ] congestion” on the Newport Bridge? See id. at 423. Given that the Newport and Mount Hope Bridges comprise two of only three routes of driver access to Aquidneck Island, this question must be answered in the affirmative. If the Mount Hope Bridge were closed, drivers who now use it to get to Aquidneck Island would have to choose either the Newport Bridge or the Sakonnet River Bridge instead. In either event, increased congestion on the Newport Bridge is unavoidable: If they take the Newport Bridge, congestion on the Newport Bridge would increase. If they take the Sakonnet River Bridge, congestion on that bridge would increase, prompting some of its previous users to take the Newport Bridge instead, which would again increase congestion on the Newport Bridge. In short, given that Aquidneck Island is in fact an island with only three avenues of access for drivers, the conclusion that two of these three avenues are functionally related follows almost by definition.
This Court is not required to measure the strength of this functional relationship or the precise extent of added congestion that closing the Mount Hope Bridge would produce. Plaintiffs argument, relying on Bridgeport, is that because the Mount Hope Bridge does not benefit users of the Newport Bridge at all, the fact that the Newport Bridge tolls subsidize the Mount Hope Bridge is, by itself, sufficient to show that the toll schedule flunks the first two prongs of Northwest Airlines. To defeat this argument, all that must be shown is some functional relationship between the two bridges.
Nor has Plaintiff adduced any other evidence to show that the Newport Bridge tolls are not “based on some fair approximation of use of the facilities” or are “excessive in relation to the benefits conferred.”
See Northwest Airlines,
Once again, a point decried as “obvious” is a weak link. To begin with, the $0.83 versus $4.00 differential applies only to infrequent crossers; if a nonresident makes more than six trips a month, his EZPass toll is only eight cents higher than a resident’s, and the E-ZPass tolls for unlimited crossings, as well as the cash tolls, are the same for residents and nonresidents. See supra at 442. Therefore, this is not a case where a state generally charges its residents $0.83 and its nonresidents $4.00 for a bridge toll. The toll schedule incorporates multiple factors besides residency-including the type of transponder used, whether payment is by cash or by E-ZPass, and the frequency of use. Depending on all these factors, the toll difference between similarly situated residents and nonresidents can range from zero to $3.17.
Moreover, RITBA need not demonstrate that the toll fee exactly equals the costs of maintenance or the benefits conferred; all that is required is that the tolls “reflect a fair, if imperfect, approximation of the use of facilities for whose benefit
Because this Court has held that the toll discount does not discriminate against interstate commerce,
see supra
at 446-47, the differentiation between residents and nonresidents is subject to deferential review.
See Oregon Waste,
In sum, the Newport Bridge toll schedule passes muster under Northwest Airlines because (1) it is based on a fair approximation of use of the facilities operated by RITBA; (2) it is not excessive in relation to the benefits conferred; and (3) it does not discriminate against interstate commerce. Therefore, the toll discount does not run afoul of the Commerce Clause. 11
B. Privileges and Immunities Clause
The Privileges and Immunities Clause provides that “[t]he Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States.” U.S. Const. art. IV, § 2, cl. 1. It “was designed to insure to a citizen of State A who ventures into State B the same privileges which the citizens of State B enjoy.”
Toomer v. Witsell,
Cohen’s Privileges and Immunities claim is based on a purported violation of her right to travel. It is undisputed that the right to travel is a fundamental right protected by the Privileges and Immunities Clause.
See, e.g., Saenz v. Roe,
However, the Supreme Court has “always carefully distinguished between bona fide residence requirements, which seek to differentiate between residents and nonresidents, and residence requirements, such as durational, fixed date, and fixed point residence requirements, which treat established residents differently based on the time they migrated into the State.”
Id.
at 903 n. 3,
A bona fide residence requirement, appropriately defined and uniformly applied, furthers the substantial state interest in assuring that services provided for its residents are enjoyed only by residents.... It does not burden or penalize the constitutional right of interstate travel, for any person is free to move to a State and to establish residence there. A bona fide residence requirement simply requires that the person does establish residence before demanding the services that are restricted to residents.
Martinez v. Bynum,
The resident-only discount in this case plainly qualifies as a “bona fide residence requirement” under the Supreme Court’s definition. As such, because all members of the Plaintiff class are “free to move to [Rhode Island] and to establish residence there” and take advantage of the resident discount, Plaintiffs right to travel claim under the Privileges and Immunities Clause is foreclosed by
Soto-Lopez
and
Martinez. See also Kelen,
Perhaps the analysis would be different if Plaintiff had premised the Privileges and Immunities claim on the right to work and earn a living in Newport. It is firmly established that a “nonresident’s right to pursue a livelihood in a State other than his own” is “a right that is protected by the Privileges and Immunities Clause.”
Baldwin,
C. Equal Protection
The Equal Protection claim stands on the same “right to travel” footing as the Privileges and Immunities claim and fails for the same reasons.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment is DENIED and Defendant’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
JOINT STATEMENT OF UNDISPUTED FACTS
The Parties hereby stipulate to the following facts for the purpose of their cross-motions for summary judgment:
1. Defendant, the Rhode Island Turnpike and Bridge Authority (“RITBA”), is a body corporate and politic governed by R.I. Gen. Laws 1956 § 24-12-1 et seq.
2. Plaintiff is a resident of the State of Connecticut who utilized the Newport/Claiborne Pell Bridge (“Newport Pell Bridge”) and paid tolls at the non-resident rate for doing so. She crossed the Newport Pell Bridge for many reasons, including to purchase items while in Newport.
3. RITBA presently owns, and is responsible for the maintenance and operation of, among other things, the Newport Pell Bridge and the Mount Hope Bridge and their associated buildings and grounds (the “Bridges”). All of RITBA’s funding comes from tolls charged for crossing the Newport Pell Bridge. The tolls from the Newport Pell Bridge are used to fund the operation and maintenance of the Bridges as well as to satisfy debt service.
4. The Newport Pell Bridge is a four (4) lane structure linking Newport, RI. and Jamestown, R.I.
5. The Mount Hope Bridge is a two (2) lane suspension bridge built over the Mount Hope Bay that connects Bristol, R.I. and Portsmouth, R.I. Portsmouth and Newport are both located on Aquidneck Island. The Mount Hope Bridge is located approximately ten (10) miles from the Newport Pell Bridge.
7. The $47 million will be paid from tolls collected for crossing the Newport Bridge.
8. In addition, a portion of the Newport Pell Bridge tolls are used to fund upkeep, insurance, utilities, and maintenance cost for the Mount Hope Bridge.
9. The Newport Pell Bridge is one of three (3) bridges that drivers may use to access Aquidneck Island where Newport is located.
10. Newport is one Rhode Island’s tourist destinations.
11. Out-of-State residents utilize the Newport Pell Bridge in connection with tourism.
12. OuNof-State residents also utilize the Newport Pell Bridge to reach their places of employment in Newport.
13. Travelers crossing the Newport Pell Bridge must pay a toll.
14. Pursuant to statute, the RITBA is empowered to set the amount of the tolls for crossing the Newport Pell Bridge.
15. Prior to January, 2009, travelers had the option of paying the toll on the Newport Pell Bridge either by cash, or by token. Cash payments could be made at the toll gate in the amount of $2.00. Tokens could be purchased at the toll gate at the rate of eleven (11) tokens for $10.00. In addition, tokens could be purchased at certain designated locations at the rate of sixty (60) tokens for $50.00. Rhode Island residents and nonresidents could purchase tokens at the same price at these locations,
16. RITBA uses all toll revenue for debt service or expenses incurred in the operation and maintenance of the Bridges.
17. In January, 2009, RITBA installed and instituted E-ZPass.
18. E-ZPass is an electronic toll system. Under this system, a driver attaches a small electronic device known as a transponder to his or her car. The transponder is linked to an account in the name of the holder of the transponder. When the driver passes through the toll gates, the transponder is read by a corresponding device connected to the gates. Tolls are automatically charged to the account linked to the transponder.
19. By instituting E-ZPass, RITBA eliminated the use of tokens and developed a pricing structure for use with E-ZPass.
20. RITBA developed the following pricing schedule for single crossings over the Newport Pell Bridge:
Newport Pell Bridge Toll Non-Rhode Island Schedule RI transponder transponder
RI Resident $0.83 $1.75
Non-RI Resident $1.75 $1.75
Non-RI Resident making 30 + trips per 30 day period $0.91 $1.75
Cash $2.00 $2.00
20. On September 8, 2009, RITBA altered the pricing schedule for single crossings as follows:
Newport Pell Bridge Toll Non-Rhode Island Schedule RI transponder transponder
RI Resident $0.83 $4.00
Non-RI Resident $4.00 $4.00
Non-RI Resident making 26 + trips per 30 day period $0.91 $4.00
Cash $4.00 $4.00
22. On February 15, 2010, RITBA altered the pricing schedule for single crossings as follows:
RI Resident $ 0.83 $4.00
Non-RI Resident $ 4.00 $4.00
Non-RI Resident making 6+ trips per 30 day period $ 0.91 $4.00
Cash_$ 4.00_$400_
$40.00 every Unlimited thirty Crossing (30) days Unavailable
23. On April 28, 2010, this Court entered an Order certifying the class as consisting of “all non-Rhode Island residents who paid tolls to cross the Newport/Claiborne Pell Bridge using an E-ZPass, Fast-Lane or other comparable system, and who did not receive the discount given to Rhode Island residents pursuant to the RI E-ZPass Discount Plan.”
Notes
. The facts recited in this section are taken from the parties’ Joint Statement of Undisputed Facts, which is appended to this opinion.
. Since January 2009, three different toll schedules have been in place, all of them preserving the resident-only discount. Because the parties do not attach any importance (except for the purpose of calculating damages) to the differences among these toll schedules, this opinion will set forth only the most recent schedule. All three schedules can be viewed in the Appendix.
. The difference between Rhode Island and non-Rhode Island transponders is not challenged because Rhode Island transponders are available to everyone, including nonresidents.
. Indeed, the decisions cited in
Endsley
for the proposition that "[cjourts have recognized the operation of private toll roads as legitimate economic activity,”
. The First Circuit has not ruled on the issue.
See Doran v. Mass. Turnpike Auth.,
. In view of the First Circuit's application of the
Evansville/Northwest Airlines
test to a Commerce Clause challenge to a toll discount
. The fact that other state programs favoring residents over nonresidents have been upheld as constitutional lends additional support to the conclusion that the "differentiation equals discrimination” logic does not always apply in a non-economic context.
See, e.g., Baldwin v. Fish & Game Comm’n of Mont.,
. In
Doran,
the First Circuit had no occasion to decide whether differentiation equals discrimination in the context of tolls, because the toll discount challenged there did not differentiate between residents and nonresidents of Massachusetts, and was available to both.
.
Auto. Club
involved a challenge under the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1987, and the plaintiffs had abandoned their Commerce Clause claim by the time the case reached the Second Circuit.
Auto. Club of N.Y., Inc. v. Port Auth. of N.Y. & N.J.,
. It would be a different matter if Plaintiff had shown that the differentiation between residents and nonresidents amounts to discrimination against interstate commerce. If that were the case (which it is not), the discount would be subjected to strict scrutiny, which it might not survive.
See Oregon Waste,
. Two other courts assessing a similar challenge also concluded, albeit after applying a different test than
Northwest Airlines,
that a toll discount available only to residents of East Boston, South Boston, and the North End in Boston did not discriminate against interstate commerce.
See Kelen,
. In
Soto-Lopez
the Supreme Court considered the "right to travel” in general, having "not felt impelled to locate this right definitively in any particular constitutional provision.”
Attorney General of N.Y. v. Soto-Lopez,
. Indeed, per Plaintiff’s request, the certified class is not the class of nonresidents working in Newport but "all non-Rhode Island residents who paid tolls to cross the Newport/Claiborne Pell Bridge using an E-ZPass, FastLane or other comparable system, and who did not receive the discount given to Rhode Island residents pursuant to the RI EZPass Discount Plan.” (Order Granting Mot. for Class Certification) (emphasis added). There is no telling how many, if any, of the class members actually work in Newport.
