CONTRACTORS ASSOCIATION OF EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA, INC.;
General Building Contractors Association, Inc.; Associated
Master Painters & Decorators of Philadelphia, Inc.;
Employing Bricklayers Association of Delaware Valley, Inc.;
Interior Finish Contractors Association, Inc.; Mechanical
Contractors Association of Eastern Pennsylvania, Inc.;
Roofing and Sheet Metal Contractors Association, Inc.;
Sub-Contractors Association of Delaware Valley, Inc.;
National Electrical Contractors Association, Inc.
v.
CITY OF PHILADELPHIA; Elizabeth Reveal, as Director of
Finаnce for the City of Philadelphia; Curtis Jones, Jr., as
Director of the Minority Business Enterprise Council;
United Minority Enterprise Associates, Inc.
United Minority Enterprise Associates, Inc., Intervening
Defendant in district court, Appellant in 92-1880.
City of Philadelphia, Elizabeth Reveal, as Director of
Finance for the City of Philadelphia, and Curtis
Jones, Jr., as Director of the Minority
Business Enterprise Council,
Appellants in 92-1887.
Nos. 92-1880, 92-1887.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued June 17, 1993.
Decided Oct. 7, 1993.
Robert T. Vance, Jr. (argued), Vance, Jackson, Simpson & Vance-Lewis, Philadelphia, PA, for appellant, United Minority Enterprise Associates, Inc.
Judith E. Harris (argued) and E. Jane Hix, Office of City Sol., Philadelphia, PA, for appellants, City of Philadelphia, Elizabeth Reveal, as Director of Finance for the City of Philadelphia, and Curtis Jones, Jr., as Director of the Minority Business Enterprise Council.
John J. McAleese, Jr. (argued) and John H. Widman, McAleese, McGoldrick & Susanin, King of Prussia, PA, for appellees, Contractors Ass'n of Eastern Pennsylvania, Inc., Gen. Bldg. Contractors Ass'n, Inc., Employing Bricklayers Ass'n of Delaware Valley, Inc., and Sub-Contractors Ass'n of Delaware Valley, Inc.
Before: SCIRICA, COWEN and GARTH, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
SCIRICA, Circuit Judge.
In this action, nine associations of construction contractors challenge on equal protection grounds a City of Philadelphia ordinance creating preferences in City contracting for businesses owned by racial and ethnic minorities, women, and handicapped persons. The district court granted summary judgment to the Contractors, holding they had standing to bring this lawsuit and invalidating the Ordinance in all respects. Contractors Association v. City of Philadelphia,
I.
Facts and Procedural History
A.
In 1982, the Philadelphia City Council enacted an ordinance to increase participation in City contracts by minority-owned and women-owned businesses. Phila.Code Sec. 17-500. In its present form,1 the Ordinance establishes "goals" for the participation of "disadvantaged business enterprises." Sec. 17-503. "Disadvantaged business enterprises" (DBEs) are defined as those enterprises at least 51 percent owned by "socially and economically disadvantaged individuals," defined in turn as:those individuals who have been subjected to racial, sexual or ethnic prejudice because of their identity as a member of a group or differential treatment because of their handicap without regard to their individual qualities, and whose ability to compete in the free enterprise system has been impaired due to diminished capital and credit opportunities as compared to others in the same business area who are not socially disadvantaged.
Sec. 17-501(11). The Ordinance further provides that racial minorities and women are rebuttably presumed to be socially and economically disadvantaged individuals, Sec. 17-501(11)(a), but that a business which has received more than $5 million in City contracts, even if owned by such an individual, is rebuttably presumed not to be a DBE, Sec. 17-501(10).
The Ordinance sets goals for participation of DBEs in city contracts: 15 percent for minority-owned businesses, 10 percent for women-owned businesses, and 2 percent for businesses owned by handicapped persons. Sec. 17-503(1). The Ordinance applies to all City contracts, which are divided into three types--vending, construction, and personal and professional services. Sec. 17-501(6). The percentage goals relate to the total dollar amounts of City contracts and are calculated separately for each category of contracts and each City agency. Sec. 17-503(1).
To implement the program, the Ordinance established a Minority Business Enterprise Council and authorized it to promulgate regulations to ensure the goals are met by city agencies in awarding prime contracts and by private contractors in awarding subcontracts. Sec. 17-504(2)(e), (f), (i). The Ordinance specifies that, in developing regulations, the Council must consider: including DBEs on solicitation lists, assuring DBEs are solicited whenever they are potential contractors, structuring contract requirements to permit maximum participation by DBEs, and "investigating and making recommendations concerning the use of the Sheltered Market process, under which contracts would be set-aside so that only DBEs could bid for them." Sec. 17-504(2)(f). The regulations provide that "the contractor's efforts to meet [the] goals shall be considered an element of responsiveness to the bid," and require each contractor to submit a "Schedule for Participation" of DBEs in the contract at issue or to request a waiver if the contractor is unable to meet the goals after a good faith effort. Regulations Sec. 6.1.
The Ordinance also directed the Council to (1) develop a certification procedure for DBEs to prevent fraudulent or "front" DBEs from abusing the program, Sec. 17-504(2)(a); (2) grant exemptions for individual contracts or classes of contracts where there is "an insufficient number of DBEs ... to ensure аdequate competition and an expectation of reasonable prices on bids," Sec. 17-505(1); (3) grant waivers to contractors who are unable to meet the percentage goals after a good faith effort, as determined by the Council, Sec. 17-505(3); (4) "recommend contractual language which provides that compliance with DBE participation requirements is material to the City contract," Sec. 17-504(2)(h); and (5) develop and recommend remedies, including but not limited to, termination of the contract in the event a contractor fails to comply with the program, Sec. 17-506(a).
B.
On April 14, 1989, nine contractors associations brought suit in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania against the City of Philadelphia and two city officials, challenging the Ordinance as a facial violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.2 United Minority Enterprise Associates, Inc. (UMEA) intervened as a defendant. After the City moved for judgment on the pleadings contending the Contractors lacked standing, the Contractors moved for summary judgment on the merits.
The district court granted the Contractors' motion. It ruled the Contractors had standing, based on affidavits of individual association members alleging they had been denied contracts for failure to meet the DBE goals despite being low bidders.
On appeal, we affirmed the district court's ruling on standing but vacated its judgment on the merits as premature because the Contractors had not responded to certain discovery requests at the time the court ruled.
II.
This appeal presents three sets of questions: whether and to what extent the Contractors have standing to challenge the Ordinance, which standards of equal protection review govern the different sections of the Ordinance, and whether these standards justify invalidation of the Ordinance in whole or in part. We will address these issues in turn.
III.
Standing
A. General Principles
Our standing inquiry has two parts: whether the Contractors have standing to challenge the Ordinance at all, and if so, whether they have standing to challenge all or just part of the Ordinance. Prior to this appeal, the parties contested only the first of these issues. In our earlier opinion, we affirmed the district court's holding that four of the nine associations had standing to challenge the Ordinance because the affidavits submitted by their members alleged injury with sufficient particularity, and because the associations satisfied the standards for associational standing.
The Supreme Court has since confirmed that construction contractors have standing to challenge a minority preference ordinance upon a showing they are "able and ready to bid on contracts [subject to the ordinance] and that a discriminatory policy prevents [them] from doing so on an equal basis." Northeastern Fla. Chapter of the Associated Gen. Contractors of America v. City of Jacksonville, --- U.S. ----, ----,
B. Scope of the Issues
We next consider whether the Contractors have standing to challenge the entire Ordinance or only the provisions relating to construction contracts. Because standing seeks to ensure a party has a "personal stake in the controversy," Harris v. McRae,
1. Severability of the Ordinance
Courts considering constitutional challenges to statutes often analyze standing problems in terms of the severability doctrine. Under this principle, when a court determines the legislature intended the challenged sections of a statute to operate independently of the unchallenged sections and finds these sections can so operate, it will consider only the challenged sections, leaving the remainder of the statute intact. SeeUnited Stаtes v. Raines,
The severability doctrine governs whether the Contractors have standing to challenge the entire Ordinance, or just those provisions of the Ordinance affecting the construction industry. As we have noted, the Contractors only have a personal interest in obtaining construction contracts because these are the only types of contracts they are "ready and able" to bid on within the meaning of Northeastern Florida, --- U.S. at ----,
Because "[s]everability of a local ordinance is a question of state law," City of Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Pub. Co.,
Equipped with these principles, we must decide whether the Ordinance's provisions on different types of contracts "are distinct and not so interwoven as to be inseparable." Saulsbury v. Bethlehem Steel Co.,
In urging the Ordinance is not severable, the Contractors rely on Wyoming v. Oklahoma, --- U.S. ----,
there are no parts or separate provisions in the invalid [section] of the Act [because] it applies to "all entities providing electric power for sale to the consumer in Oklahoma" and commands them to purchase 10% Oklahoma-mined coal. Nothing remains to be saved once that provision is stricken. Accordingly, the Act must stand or fall as a whole.
--- U.S. at ----,
In assessing this contention, we look to the language of the Ordinance. The Ordinance provides it applies to: "all types of city contracts," Sec. 17-502(2), and defines "Types of City Contracts" to include: "all city contracts, whether competitively bid or negotiated, according to the following classes: (a) Vending, to include material, equipment, services and supplies; (b) Construction; and (c) Personal and professional services," Sec. 17-501(6).
These provisions reveal the Ordinance differs critically from the Oklahoma statute at issue in Wyoming. Here, the challenged and unchallenged provisions appear in different subsections, containing the "separate provisions" the Supreme Court found lacking in the Oklahoma statute. Also, the severability provision in the Ordinance is broader than that in the Oklahoma statute. The provision there only authorized severance of "any part or provision" of the statute found void, while the Ordinance directs severance of "any section, subsection, clause, sentence or phrase." Sec. 17-508. Because the provisions dealing with non-construction contracts constitute "subsections" of the Ordinance, Sec. 17-508 authorizes severing these provisions.
Moreover, the Ordinance makes clear that severance of the construction provisions would not prevent the non-construction provisions from continuing to operate. It expressly provides that the percentage goals for minority-owned and women-owned businesses, and businesses owned by handicapped persons, shall be "calculated by examining independently each type of City contract for each agency which lets such contracts." Sec. 17-503. This language demonstrates severance is feasible and indicates City Council envisioned the Ordinance would be administered separately for each type of contract. Therefore, we hold the provisions of the Ordinance dealing with construction contracts are severable from the remainder of the Ordinance. Because the Contractors only have a personal stake in the construction contract provisions, we must limit our review to these provisions unless we find the Contractors have standing to assert the rights of other businesses affected by the sections of the Ordinance dealing with contracts for vending and services.
2. Third-Party Standing
In United States v. Raines, the Supreme Court delineated certain situations where a party has "third-party standing" to assert the rights of others.
Denial of third-party standing is especially appropriate here, where all parties have proceeded under the shared assumption that this litigation concerns only the construction provisions of the Ordinance. Neither in the district court nor in this Court has any party focused on application of the Ordinance to other types of contracts. Indeed, we remanded the case so defendants could take discovery "that relates to a pattern of discriminatory practices or instances of discrimination in the Philadelphia-area construction industry."
IV.
Standards of Equal Protection Review
The Contractors challenge the preferences given by the Ordinance to businesses owned and operated by minorities, women, and handicapped persons. In analyzing these classifications separately, we first consider which standard of equal protection review applies to each classification.
A. Race, Ethnicity, and Gender
Choice of the appropriate standard of review turns on the nature of the classification. Because under equal protection analysis classifications based on race, ethnicity, or gender are inherently suspect, they merit closer judicial attention. City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center, Inc.,
those individuals who have either been subjected to racial, sexual or ethnic prejudice because of their identity as a member of a group or differential treatment because of their handicap without regard to their individual qualities, and whose ability to compete in the free enterprise system has been impaired due to diminished capital and credit opportunities as сompared to others in the same business area who are not socially disadvantaged. Sec. 17-501(11).
The district court interpreted this definition to apply only to minorities, women, and handicapped persons and viewed the definition's economic criteria as in addition to rather than in lieu of race, ethnicity, gender, and handicap. Therefore, it applied strict scrutiny to the racial preference under Croson and intermediate scrutiny to the gender preference under Mississippi University for Women v. Hogan,
Disputing this analysis, the City contends the two categories, "social disadvantage" (race, gender, or handicap), and "economic disadvantage" (diminished capital and credit opportunities), are disjunctive, so that a contractor who can satisfy either category qualifies as "socially and economically disadvantaged." Accordingly, the City continues, we should apply rational basis review to the Ordinance rather than strict or intermediate scrutiny because race and gender are only two criteria for determining whether a contractor is a DBE but are not prerequisites to that determination.
We agree with the district court that the definition of "socially and economically disadvantaged individuals" includes only individuals who are both victims of prejudice based on status and economically deprived. This is the only reasonable interpretation and is dictated by the conjunctive phrase "socially and economically disadvantaged," as well as the use of the word "and" connecting the descriptions of each category of disadvantage. Sec. 17-501(11) ("individuals subject to ... prejudice because of their identity as a member of a group ... and whose ability to compete in the free enterprise system has been impaired ...") (emphasis added). Additionally, the last clause of the definition describes economically disadvantaged individuals as those "whose ability to compete in the free enterprise system has been impaired ... as compared to others ... who are not socially disadvantaged." This clause demonstrates the drafters wished to rectify only economic disadvantage that results from social disadvantage, i.e., prejudice based on race, ethnicity, gender, or handicapped status. The plain language of the Ordinance forecloses the City's argument that a white male contractor could qualify for preferential treatment solely on the basis of economic disadvantage.
The City also relies on the affidavit of Curtis Jones, Executive Director of the Minority Business Enterprise Council, who asserts that "any disadvantaged member of plaintiff organizations ... [is] eligible for certification as a DBE without regard to their race, gender or physical capability. The [Council] considers economic and social factors in addition to race and gender in determining whether an applicant should be certified as a DBE." App. 123. But Jones' affidavit, which neither explains its interpretation nor has any legal force by itself, cannot overcome the plain language of the Ordinance. The affidavit is also inсonsistent with the Council's regulations, which incorporate the Ordinance's definition verbatim. Regulations Sec. 1.3(S).
Additionally, the City seeks to distinguish Croson on the ground that the Philadelphia City Council, unlike the Richmond City Council, does not have a Black majority. This distinction comes from United States v. Carolene Products Co.,
But the Croson Court expressly did not rely on the Carolene Products theory. In its discussion, the Court stated: "[e]ven were we to accept a reading of the guarantee of equal protection under which the level of scrutiny varies according to the ability of different groups to defend their interests in the representative process, heightened scrutiny would still be appropriate in the circumstances of this case...."
Even were the Philadelphia City Council comprised of a Black majority, we would not rely on this fact in choosing a standard of review. Application of this theory in a reverse discrimination case, if logical, is ahistorical; it renders somewhat hollow the promise of racial progress through political power. More generally, the Carolene Products theory puts a court in the awkward position of nullifying legislative outcomes based on judges' own assumptions about the political process. And as one commentator has noted, the process of selecting groups as discrete and insular minorities necessarily requires normative judgments about political outcomes, i.e., those groups identified as minorities are those whose interests the court believes are inadequately protected by existing policies. Terrance Sandalow, The Distrust of Politics, 56 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 446, 466-67 (1981). Such judgments improperly interfere with the legislative will. For these reasons, we conclude the district court properly applied strict scrutiny to the racial preference in the Ordinance.
We next consider the proper standard of review for the Ordinance's gender preference. In Hogan, the Court held a gender-based classification favoring women merited intermediate scrutiny.
B. Handicap
The district court reviewed the preference for handicapped business owners under the rational basis test.
The Contractors contend the district court erred in not applying some form of heightened scrutiny to the preference for handicapped individuals. Acknowledging Cleburne requires us to apply rational basis review, the Contractors maintain that decision is "obviously contrary to the sense of American society as a whole" given the Americans with Disabilities Act. In that Act, Congress expressly found that "individuals with disabilities are a discrete and insular minority, who have been faced with restrictions and limitations, subjected to a history of purposeful unequal treatment, and relegated to a position of political powerlessness in our society...." 42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 (1990). The Contractors maintain the ADA overruled Cleburne and requires us to apply heightened scrutiny to the preference for handicapped business owners.
We disagree. The Contractors offer no evidence that the ADA overruled Cleburne, and the limited case law is to the contrary. More v. Farrier,
V.
Constitutionality of the Ordinance
We now consider the district court's determination to invalidate the Ordinance in all respects.
A. Race and Ethnicity
1. Compelling Government Interest
Because strict scrutiny applies to the Ordinance's racial and ethnic preferences, we may only uphold them if they are "narrowly tailored" to a "compelling government interest." Wygant,
But in view of the Court's concern about race-based classifications, Croson requires the City to "identif[y] the discrimination with the particularity required by the Fourteenth Amendment." Id. In striking down the Richmond ordinance requiring prime construction contractors to subcontract 30 percent of the dollar amount of each contract to minority businesses, the Court emphasized the City's failure to show specific evidence of past discrimination in the Richmond construction industry.
Ruling the Philadelphia Ordinance's racial preference failed to overcome strict scrutiny, the district court concluded the Ordinance "possesses four of the five characteristics fatal to the constitutionality of the Richmond Plan,"
a. Anecdotal Evidence of Racial Discrimination
The City and UMEA contend the district court understated the evidence of prior discrimination available to the Philadelphia City Council when it enacted the 1982 ordinance. The City Council Finance Committee received testimony from at least fourteen minority contractors who recounted personal experiences with racial discrimination. In certain instances, these contractors lost out despite being low bidders. This anecdotal evidence significantly outweighs that presented in Croson, where the Richmond City Council heard "no direct evidence of race discrimination on the part of the city in letting contracts or any evidence that the city's prime cоntractors had discriminated against minority-owned subcontractors."
Although the district court acknowledged the minority contractors' testimony was relevant under Croson, it discounted this evidence because "other evidence of the type deemed impermissible by the Supreme Court ... unsupported general testimony, impermissible statistics and information on the national set-aside program, ... overwhelmingly formed the basis for the enactment of the set-aside ... and therefore taint[ed] the minds of city councilmembers."
The district court's approach appears inconsistent with the accepted proposition that "at the summary judgment stage the [trial] judge's function is not himself to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial." Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.
Yet given Croson's emphasis on statistical evidence, even had the district court credited the City's anecdotal evidence, we do not believe this amount of anecdotal evidence is sufficient to satisfy strict scrutiny. SeeCoral Constr.,
b. Statistical Evidence of Racial Discrimination
There are two categories of statistical evidence here, evidence undisputedly considered by City Council before it enacted the Ordinance in 1982 (the "pre-enactment" evidence), and evidence developed by the City on remand (the "post-enactment" evidence).
i. Pre-Enactment Statistical Evidence
The principal pre-enactment statistical evidence appears in the 1982 Report of the City Council Finance Committee and recites that minority contractors were awarded only .09 percent of City contract dollars during the preceding three years, 1979 through 1981, although businesses owned by Blacks and Hispanics accounted for 6.4 percent of all businesses licensed to operate in Philadelphia.11 These statistics do not satisfy Croson because they do not indicate what proportion of the 6.4 percent of minority-owned businesses were available or qualified to perform City construction contracts. Under Croson, available minority-owned businesses comprise the "relevant statistical pool."
ii. Post-Enactment Statistical Evidence
The "post-enactment" evidence consists of a study conducted by economiс consultant Andrew Brimmer to demonstrate the disproportionately low share of public and private construction contracts awarded to minority-owned businesses in Philadelphia. Brimmer's study provides the "relevant statistical pool" needed to satisfy Croson--the percentage of minority businesses engaged in the Philadelphia construction industry.13
As a threshold matter, we are not certain the Brimmer study is post-enactment evidence. The study uses statistics for the three years immediately preceding enactment of the Ordinance. As the Contractors concede, "the data used by Brimmer respecting MBE participation as prime contractors to the City prior to 1982 was before City Council when it enacted Sec. 17-500. Brimmer's simple mathematical conclusions respecting that data obviously were apparent to City Council at that time." Contractors Br. at 28. But because we cannot be certain the Brimmer study constituted pre-enactment evidence, we consider whether it was admissible as post-enactment evidence. The district court considered the evidence, but believed it insufficient to change the result. Accordingly, it did not comment on its pre- or post-enactment character.
Several courts have held post-enactment evidence is admissible in determining whether an Ordinance satisfies Croson. Coral Constr.,
Consideration of post-enactment evidence is especially appropriate here, where the principal relief sought and the only relief granted by the district court, was an injunction. Because injunctions are prospective only, it makes sense to consider all available evidence before the district court, including the post-enactment evidence, which the district court did. Although we recognize the risk of insincerity associated with post-enactment evidence, we believe that risk is minimal here because the Brimmer study consists essentially of an evaluation and re-ordering of pre-enactment evidence--contracts awarded to minority-owned businesses in the three years preceding the Ordinance. For these reasons, we hold the Brimmer affidavit and study were admissible evidence.
c. Sufficiency of the Evidence
We now consider whether the statistical evidence, when combined with the anecdotal evidence, was sufficient to enable the racial preference in the Ordinance to survive summary judgment. The district court beliеved it was not, stating in its opinion on remand that the City's "additional discovery has not produced any evidence which would cause the court to reconsider its prior ruling."
At least three Courts of Appeals have considered the type and amount of statistical data needed to support a municipal race-based contract preference program after Croson. Associated Gen. Contractors of California v. Coalition for Economic Equity,
In both Cone and AGC of California, where the courts refused to strike down the ordinances, the city and county presented the type of statistics Croson indicated were most probative--data showing minority contractors received a disproportionately low share of contracts given their representation in the total contractor population. Cone,
In O'Donnell, by contrast, the data were conflicting. The District of Columbia presented statistics that minority-owned contractors were "capable of performing 34 percent of the District's construction work,"
In determining whether the statistical evidence was adequate here, we look to its critical component--the "disparity index." The index consists of the percentage of minority contractor participation in City contracts divided by the percentage of minority contractor availability or composition in the "population" of Philadelphia area construction firms. This equation yields a percentage figure which is then multiplied by 100 to generate a number between 0 and 100, with 100 consisting of full participation by minority contractors given the amount of the total contracting population they comprise.
Other courts considering equal protection challenges to similar ordinances have relied on disparity indices in determining whether Croson's evidentiary burden is satisfied. Cone Corp.,
The Brimmer study reports a disparity index for City of Philadelphia construction contracts during the years 1979 through 1981 of 4 out of a possible 100. This index is significantly worse than that in other cases where ordinances have withstood constitutional attack. SeeCone Corp.,
The Contractors contend the Brimmer study is methodologically flawed because it considered only prime contractors and because it failed to consider the qualifications of the minority businesses or their interest in performing City contracts. In short, the Contractors maintain the Brimmer study does not indicate why there is a disparity between available minority contractors and their participation in contracting. The Contractors contend that these objections, without more, entitle them to summary judgment, arguing that under the strict scrutiny standard they do not bear the burden of proof and therefore need not offer a neutral explanation for the disparity to prevail.
The Contractors misconceive the allocation of the burden of proof in affirmative action cases. The Supreme Court has indicated that "[t]he ultimate burden remains with [plaintiffs] to demonstrate the unconstitutionality of an affirmative action program." Johnson v. Transport. Agency, Santa Clara County,
The Johnson Court also explained how the burden of proof operates in an affirmative action case, stating that a challenge by a white employee to an employer's voluntary affirmative action program under Title VII:fits readily within the analytical framework set forth in McDonnell Douglas [Corp. v. Green,
Although Johnson was a Title VII case involving a public employer's affirmative action hiring program, Croson indicated the same approach would apply in a constitutional case involving an affirmative action contracting program. There, thе Court stated:
Where there is a significant statistical disparity between the number of qualified minority contractors willing and able to perform a particular service and the number of contractors actually engaged by the locality or the locality's prime contractors, an inference of discriminatory exclusion could arise. See Bazemore v. Friday, 478 U.S. at 398, 106 S.Ct. [3000] at 3008 [
This language demonstrates that where a city defends an affirmative action ordinance as a remedy for past discrimination, issues of proof are handled as they are in other cases involving a pattern or practice of discrimination. Croson's reference to an "inference of discriminatory exclusion" based on statistics, as well as its citation to Bazemore and Teamsters, both Title VII pattern cases, supports this interpretation. Additionally, in Johnson, a Title VII case, the Court explicitly looked to the constitutional standard, stating the plaintiff bears the burden in such a case, and "we see no basis for a different rule regarding a plan's alleged violation of Title VII."
Courts of Appeals considering challengеs to affirmative action plans under Title VII have indicated that where the plan's proponent adduces evidence supporting an inference of discrimination, the plaintiff must rebut that inference to prevail. Thus, upholding a consent decree establishing an affirmative action program for the Omaha, Nebraska Police Department, the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit directed a verdict for the city where a white police officer "did not present evidence to rebut the City's showing that the plan was remedial and a response to a racial imbalance," based on the disproportionately small percentage of blacks hired by the department. Donaghy v. City of Omaha,
The Supreme Court has also offered guidance on the quantum of evidence needed to rebut statistical proof of discrimination. In Bazemore v. Friday,
As the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has observеd, "[i]mplicit in the Bazemore holding is the principle that a mere conjecture or assertion ... that some missing factor would explain the existing disparities ... generally cannot defeat the inference of discrimination created by ... statistics." Palmer v. Shultz,
Under these holdings, the City's statistical evidence has created an inference of discrimination which the Contractors would have to rebut at trial either by proving a "neutral explanation" for the disparity, "showing the statistics are flawed, ... demonstrating that the disparities shown by the statistics are not significant or actionable, ... or presenting contrasting statistical data." Coral Constr.,
Constr., the Contractors' objections to the study are properly presented to the trier of fact.
Consistent with strict scrutiny, we must examine the data for each minority group contained in the Ordinance. The Ordinance applies to businesses owned by persons who are "Black, Hispanic, Asian-American, or Native American." Sec. 17-501(1)(a)-(d). The Census data on which the Brimmer study relies demonstrates that in 1982, the year the Ordinance was enacted, there were construction firms owned in Philadelphia by Blacks, Hispanics, and Asian-Americans, but not Native Americans.16 Therefore, neither the City nor prime contractors could have discriminated against construction companies owned by Native Americans at the time of the Ordinance and we affirm summary judgment as to them.
The Census Report indicates there were 12 construction firms owned by Hispanic persons, 6 firms owned by Asian-American persons, 3 firms owned by persons of Pacific Islands descent, and 1 other minority-owned firm.17 The Brimmer study calculates Hispanic firms represented .15% of the available firms and Asian-American, Pacific-Islander, and "other" minorities represented .12% of the available firms, and that these firms received no City contracts during the years 1979 through 1981. We do not believe these numbers are large enough to create a triable issue of discrimination. The mere fact that .27 percent of City construction firms--the percentage of all of these groups combined--received no contracts does not rise to the "significant statistical disparity" Croson requires.
Nor does it appear that there was any anecdotal evidence of discrimination against construction businesses owned by people of Hispanic or Asian-American descent. The district court found "there is no evidence whatsoever in the legislative history of the Philadelphia Ordinance that an American Indian, Eskimo, Aleut or Native Hawaiian has ever been discriminated against in the procurement of city contracts,"
We recognize that the small number of Philadelphia-area construction businesses owned by Hispanic or Asian-American persons does not eliminate the possibility of discrimination against these firms. The small number itself may reflect barriers to entry caused in part by discrimination. But plausible hypotheses are not enough to satisfy strict scrutiny, even at the summary judgment stage. Because these groups appear in different subsections of Sec. 17-501 of the Ordinance, Secs. 17-501(b)-(d), in accordance with our earlier discussion of standing, we sever these subsections of the Ordinance. SeeAmerican Subcontractors Ass'n, v. City of Atlanta,
2. Narrowly Tailored
We next decide whether the Ordinance's racial preference was "narrowly tailored" to the compelling government interest of eradicating raciаl discrimination in the award of City construction contracts. Croson held this inquiry turns on four factors: (1) whether the city has first considered and found ineffective "race-neutral measures," such as enhanced access to capital and relaxation of bonding requirements, (2) the basis offered for the percentage selected, (3) whether the program provides for waivers of the preference or other means of affording individualized treatment to contractors, and (4) whether the Ordinance applies only to minority businesses who operate in the geographic jurisdiction covered by the Ordinance.
Holding the Ordinance was not "narrowly tailored," the district court believed the Ordinance failed to satisfy most of these criteria. It stated City Council had not considered race-neutral measures, stressed the testimony of a City Council member that the 15 percent number was arbitrarily chosen, and inferred that testimony regarding "front" minority businesses reflected there were not enough legitimate minority enterprises to meet the percentage requirement and therefore that it was too high.
On appeal, the City contends it enacted the Ordinance only after race-neutral alternatives proved insufficient to improve minority participation in City contracting. It relies on the affidavits of City Council President Joseph Coleman and former Philadelphia Urban Coalition General Counsel Oscar Gaskins who testified regarding the race-neutral precursors of the Ordinance--the Philadelphia Plan, which set goals for employment of minorities on publiс construction sites, and the Urban Coalition's programs, which included such race-neutral measures as a revolving loan fund, a technical assistance and training program, and bonding assistance efforts. We believe the information in these affidavits sufficiently establishes the City's prior consideration of race-neutral programs to withstand summary judgment.18 SeeConcrete Works,
Unlike the Richmond Ordinance, the Philadelphia Ordinance provides for several types of waivers of the fifteen percent goal. It exempts individual contracts or classes of contracts from the Ordinance where there are an insufficient number of available minority-owned businesses "to ensure adequate competition and an expectation of reasonable prices on bids or proposals," Sec. 17-505(1), (2), and allows a prime contractor to request a waiver of the fifteen percent requirement where the contractor shows he has been unable after "a good faith effort to comply with the goals for DBE participation," Sec. 17-505(3). Furthermore, as the district court noted, the Ordinance eliminates from the program successful minority businesses--those who have won $5 million in city contracts. Also unlike the Richmond program, the City's program is geographically targeted to Philadelphia businesses, as waivers and exemptions are permitted where there exist an insufficient number of MBEs "within the Philadelphia Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area." Sec. 17-505(1), (2).
Other courts have found these targeting mechanisms significant in concluding programs are narrowly tailored. SeeCone Corp.,
A closer question is presented by the Ordinance's fifteen percent goal. The City's data demonstrated that, prior to the Ordinance, only 2.4 percent of available construction contractors were minority-owned. We do not believe the goal must correspond precisely to the percentage of available contractors. Indeed, Croson does not impose this requirement, as the Court stated only that Richmond's 30 percent goal inappropriately assumed "minorities [would] choose a particular trade in lockstep proportion to their representation in the local population."
For these reasons, we will reverse the district court's grаnt of summary judgment to the extent it invalidated application of the construction contract provisions to businesses owned by Black persons.
B. Gender
Under the intermediate scrutiny standard, the gender preference is valid if it was "substantially related to an important governmental objective." In striking down the gender preference, the district court found insufficient comparisons between the percentage of city businesses owned by women and the percentage of contracts awarded to women-owned businesses. It also relied on testimony before City Council suggesting the preference was solely the product of political compromise.
The City contends the gender preference is aimed at the "important government objective" of remedying economic discrimination against women, and that the ten percent goal is substantially related to this objective. In assessing this argument, we note that "[i]n the context of women-business enterprise preferences, the two prongs of this intermediate scrutiny test tend to converge into one." Coral Constr.,
Few cases have considered the evidentiary burden needed to satisfy intermediate scrutiny in this context and there is no Croson analogue to provide a ready reference point. In particular, it is unclear whether statistical evidence as well as anecdotal evidence is required to establish the discrimination necessary to satisfy intermediate scrutiny, and if so, how much statistical evidence is necessary. The Supreme Court gender-preference cases are inconclusive. The Court has never squarely ruled on the necessity of statistical evidence of gender discrimination. And its decisions are difficult to reconcile on the point. The Court has upheld gender preferences where no statistics were offered, Schlesinger v. Ballard,
Lower court cases are similarly diverse. In Coral Constr.,
The Supreme Court has stated that an affirmative action program survives intermediate scrutiny if the proponent can show it was "a product of analysis rather than a stereotyped reaction based on habit." Metro Broadcasting, Inc. v. F.C.C.,
The City has not produced enough evidence of discrimination here. In its brief, the City relies on statistics in the City Council Finance Committee Report and one affidavit from a woman engaged in the catering business, but this evidence only reflects the participation of women in City contracting generally, rather than in the construction industry, which is the only cognizable issue here.
The evidence offered by the City regarding women-owned construction businesses is insufficient to create an issue of fact. Significantly, the Brimmer study contains no disparity index for women-owned construction businesses in City contracting, such as that presented for minority-owned businesses.20 Given the absence of probative statistical evidence, the City must rely solely on anecdotal evidence to establish gender discrimination necessary to support the Ordinance. But the record contains only one three-page affidavit alleging gender discrimination in the construction industry. The only other testimony on this subject consists of a single, conclusory sentence of one witness who appeared at a City Council hearing.21 This evidence is not enough to create a triable issue of fact regarding gender discrimination under the intermediate scrutiny standard. Therefore, we will affirm the grant of summary judgment invalidating the gender preference for construction contracts. We see no impediment to the City re-enacting the preference if it can provide probative evidence of discrimination.
C. Handicap
Finally we address the two-percent preference for businesses owned by handicapped persons. The district court struck down this preference under the rational basis test, believing Croson required some evidence of discrimination against business enterprises owned by handicapped persons and therefore that the City could not rely on testimony of discrimination against handicapped individuals.
A classification will pass the rational basis test if it is "rationally related to a legitimate government purpose," Cleburne,
The City stated it sought to minimize discrimination against businesses owned by handicapped persons and encourage them to seek City contracts. We agree with the district court that these are legitimate goals. But unlike the district court, we believe the two-percent preference is rationally related to this goal.
The City offered anecdotal evidence of discrimination against handicapped persons. Prior to amending the Ordinance in 1988 to include the preference, City Council held a hearing where eight witnesses testified regarding employment discrimination against handicapped persons both nationally and in Philadelphia. Four witnesses spoke of discrimination against blind people, and three testified to discrimination against people with other physical handicaps. Two of the witnesses, who were physically disabled, spoke compellingly of discrimination they and others had faced in the work force. One of these disabled witnesses testified he was in the process of forming his own residential construction company. Additionally, two witnesses testified that the preference would encourage handicapped persons to own and operate their own businesses.
We believe, under the rational basis standard, that the Contractors did not carry their burden of negativing every basis which supports the legislative arrangement, seeHeller, --- U.S. at ----,
VI.
For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate the district court's grant of summary judgment on the non-construction provisions of the Ordinance, reverse the grant of summary judgment on the construction provisions of the Ordinance as applied to businesses owned by Black persons and handicapped persons, affirm the grant of summary judgment on the construction provisions of the Ordinance as applied to businesses owned by Hispanic, Asian-American, or Native American persons or women, and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
The Ordinance was amended in 1987 and in 1988
The Contractors also asserted other federal statutory claims and two claims under the Pennsylvania Constitution, but the district court ruled only on the federal constitutional claim, and that is the only claim we consider
The district court had federal question jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1331. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291 and exercise plenary review over the court's grant of summary judgment. Sacred Heart Med. Ctr. v. Sullivan,
The City urges us to reverse our earlier ruling on standing on two of the associations because subsequent evidence reveals their affiants no longer have standing, one because he is in liquidation and the other because he is no longer a member of the association. The Contractors maintain our prior ruling on standing is law of the case. We need not resolve this dispute in view of Northeastern Florida and because it is undisputed that the remaining two associations have standing. U.S. Dept. of Labor v. Triplett,
H.L. v. Matheson,
Courts of Appeals have also severed statutes to limit plaintiffs' standing to raise constitutional challenges. SeeJoyner v. Mofford,
The Philadelphia Code also contains a general severability provision. Phila.Code Sec. 1-106
Sec. 17-508 states: "[i]f any section, subsection, clause, sentence or phrase of this Chapter is found to be unlawful by reason of other superior laws of the United States or the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, such a determination shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this Chapter."
To illustrate this exception, the Raines Court cited NAACP v. Alabama,
Under strict scrutiny, a law may only stand if it is "narrowly tailored" to a "compelling government interest." Wygant,
The district court also interpreted Croson to require "specific evidence of systematic prior discrimination in the industry in question by th[e] governmental unit" enacting the ordinance.
In numerical terms, this data showed that the 4,418 Black-owned firms and 199 Hispanic-owned firms and an unspecified number of firms owned by members of other minority groups received only $177,000 of the $240 million in City contracts awarded during the years 1979 through 1981. We note that the number of Black- and Hispanic-owned firms represents data from 1977, rather than 1979 or 1981
A law professor who assisted in drafting the Ordinance, conceded in his testimony to the Finance Committee in 1982 that the City lacked this data. We believe the district court properly relied on this concession in finding the evidence inadequate
The study also presents data showing that minority subcontractors were underrepresented in the private sector construction market. This data may be relevant if at trial the City and UMEA can link it to discrimination occurring in the public sector construction market because the Ordinance covers subcontracting
Although not all of these cases explicitly compute disparity indices, each relies on the percentage disparities to find a pattern of discrimination
Croson itself did not directly consider application of strict scrutiny at the summary judgment stage, because the district court denied cross-motions for summary judgment and held a full bench trial. SeeCroson,
The report indicates there were no construction firms owned by "American Indians" or "Alaskan Natives" in Philadelphia in 1982. It listed one firm owned by an "other minority" at that time. At oral argument, UMEA contended the "other minority" was a Native American. But this is contradicted both by the existence of a separate category for American Indians and Alaskan Natives, and by the fact that in another section of the Census Report, "other minority" is defined as "persons of Hispanic ethnicity who reported their race as other than White or Black." U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1982 Survey of Minority-Owned Business Enterprises: Asian-Americans, American Indians, and Other Minorities 2 (1982)
We consider these three categories together under the rubric of "Asian American" persons, which the Ordinance defines as persons "having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, the Indian Subcontinent or the Pacific Islands." Sec. 17-501(1)(d)
We disagree with the district court's assumption that City Council's consideration of race-neutral measures must be contemporaneous with enactment of the Ordinance. A legislative body does and should draw on past experience in formulating public policy
As with the racial preference, we consider only the gender preference for construction contracts
In the years immediately preceding the Ordinance, there were only 18 women-owned construction businesses in Philadelphia--two-tenths of one percent of the total of 8,050 Philadelphia construction firms
The record contains an additional affidavit from a woman contractor and other oral testimony by the City Council witness referred to but this testimony and affidavit complain of racial rather than gender discrimination. SeeCoral Constr.,
