OPINION OF THE COURT
Corey D. White (“White”) appeals an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania granting summary judgment in favor of the Communications Workers of America and the Communications Workers of America Local 1300 (collectively the “CWA”). For the reasons stated below, we affirm.
I.
White began employment with Bell Atlantic-Pennsylvania, Inc. (“Bell”) in 1986. The CWA and Bell are parties to a collective bargaining agreement (the “CBA”), two provisions of which are pertinent to the present appeal. 1 First, the CBA provides that the CWA is the exclusive representative of the employees in White’s workplace in negotiations with Bell management. Second, the CBA contains an “agency shop” provision, 2 which requires all employees in White’s workplace, as a condition of continued employment, to pay dues to the CWA, regardless of whether they choose to join the union. Accordingly, despite the fact that White never became a member of the CWA, he was required to pay union dues.
The Supreme Court has held that under Section 8(a)(3) of the NLRA, 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3), a plaintiff who works in an agency shop may be required to pay only
*348
those fees “necessary to performing the duties of an exclusive representative of the employees in dealing with the employer on labor-management issues.”
Communications Workers of Am. v. Beck,
In 1988, in order to comply with Beck, the CWA adopted a procedure (the “Opt>Out Procedure”) under which employees who work in agency shops and are represented by the CWA may notify the CWA during May of a given year that they intend to refrain from paying the portion of their compulsory dues that the CWA does not mean to use for labor-management negotiations. Employees availing themselves of the Opt-Out Procedure are not charged for this portion of the union dues for the period beginning in the July after notification and ending in the June of the following year. 3 After a year, the CWA resumes charging the full amount of dues unless employees again opt out. The CWA informs Bell employees of the Opt-Out Procedure by placing a notice in its newsletter, the CWA News. The CWA publishes ten issues of the CWA News per year and inserts the notice in one such issue.
At all relevant times, the CWA relied on information supplied by Bell to determine the addresses of the Bell employees whom it represented, and the CWA sent the CWA News to those addresses. It is undisputed that, between 1988 and 1997, Bell did not give the CWA White’s correct address. Consequently, White did not receive the CWA News until 1997. White began receiving the CWA News in 1997, he declined to read it because, according to White, “on their face, the CWA News magazines look[ed] like union propaganda newspapers, and there [was] no hint that notice of anything pertinent to a non-union employee would be contained therein.” App. II at 139. 4 As a result, the CWA charged White both the bargaining-related and non-bargaining-related portions of his dues between 1988 and 1998.
White learned of his right to opt out by word of mouth in August or September of 1998. In October of 1998, White filed a complaint against the CWA with the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”). White claimed that the CWA had violated the NLRA by “failing to adequately notify [him] of his Beck rights.” Id. at 127. By letter, the Acting Regional Director of the NLRB (“Director”) dismissed White’s complaint, finding that “[t]he evidence does not establish that the Unions violated Section 8(b)(1)(a) of the [NLRA] by failing to notify [White] of [his] rights” under Beck. Id. at 76. White appealed the Director’s decision to the General Counsel of the NLRB, who affirmed the Director’s decision for substantially the reasons set forth in the Director’s letter. White requested that the General Counsel reconsider his decision, but the General Counsel refused.
*349 In September 1999, White filed a pro se complaint against the CWA in the District Court. In his complaint, White claimed (1) that the defendants had breached their duty of fair representation by failing to notify him of his Beck rights and (2) that the Opt-Out Procedure infringed his “First Amendment rights not to associate and ... [his NLRA] Section 7 rights not to support non-collective bargaining activity.” Id. at 186. 5 Wfiiite sought a refund of the non-bargaining-related dues that he paid between 1988 and 1998, as well as an injunction prohibiting the use of the Opt-Out Procedure in the future.
The defendants moved for summary judgment, and the District Court granted the motion. The Court held that it lacked jurisdiction over White’s Section 7 claim because the National Labor Relations Board had exclusive jurisdiction over such claims. As to White’s First Amendment claim, the Court stated that the Opt-Out Procedure did not amount to state action and was thus not subject to constitutional constraints. The Court relied on two courts of appeals decisions holding that agency-shop clauses in collective bargaining agreements do not constitute state action,
see Price v. UAW,
Wfiiite filed a timely notice of appeal, and we granted his request for appointed counsel. On appeal, White argues that the District Court erred in failing to reach the merits of his First Amendment claim because the CWA’s implementation of the Opt-Out Procedure in fact constitutes state action. White does not contest the denial of his NLRA and duty-of-fair-representation claims.
II.
We note at the outset that the courts of appeals are divided on the question whether actions taken by a union pursuant to an agency-shop provision in a collective bargaining agreement constitute state action.
Compare Price v. UAW,
A.
To establish that challenged conduct was state action, a plaintiff must demonstrate two things. First, the conduct at issue must either be mandated by the state or must represent the exercise of a state-created right or privilege.
Am. Manufacturers Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sullivan,
In determining whether a person or entity can be fairly described as a state actor, “it is relevant to examine the following: the extent to which the actor relies on governmental assistance and benefits; whether the actor is performing a traditional governmental function; and whether the injury [to the plaintiff] is aggravated in a unique way by the incidents of governmental authority.”
Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete, Inc.,
Although White attempts to analogize the conduct of the CWA to the conduct at issue in Edmonson — a civil litigant’s exercise of peremptory challenges — the analogy is flawed. In
Edmonson,
the Court held that a civil litigant who exercises a peremptory challenge “relies on governmental assistance and benefits” because “the peremptory challenge system, as well as the jury trial system of which it is a part, simply could not exist” “without the overt, significant participation of the government.”
In the present case, White draws a comparison between the exercise of a peremptory challenge and the CWA’s OpI^Out Procedure. Just as state participation is needed to effectuate a peremptory challenge, White maintains, the NLRA is needed to effectuate the OpNOut Procedure. In other words, he contends, if Section 158(a)(3) of the NLRA did not permit *351 agency-shop clauses, non-union employees could not be forced to pay dues, and thus there would be no need to devise procedures permitting non-union employees to decline to pay part of their compulsory dues.
This argument, however, overlooks a significant difference between peremptory challenges and agency-shop clauses. The right to exercise peremptory challenges is conferred by statute or rule, not by virtue of an agreement between the parties. See, e.g., 28 U.S.C. § 1870; Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 47(b); Fed. R.Crim. Proc. 24(b). Agency-shop clauses result from agreements between employers and unions. As the District of Columbia Circuit has observed:
While the NLRA provides a framework to assist employees to organize and bargain collectively with their employers, the NLRA is neutral with respect to the content of particular agreements. See NLRA § 8(d), 29 U.S.C. § 158(d); Local 24, International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. Oliver,358 U.S. 283 , 294-95,79 S.Ct. 297 , 303-04,3 L.Ed.2d 312 (1959). The NLRA does not mandate the existence or content of, for example, seniority clauses, work rules, staffing requirements, or union security provisions like agency shop clauses or mandatory payroll deductions for union dues. Even though federal law provides an encompassing umbrella of regulation, the parties, like any two parties to a private contract, were still free to adopt or reject an agency shop clause with or without government approval. Thus, the authorization for agency shop clauses provided by NLRA section 8(a)(3) does not transform agency shop clauses into a right or privilege created by the state or one for whom the state is responsible.
Kolinske,
White objects to this reasoning on the ground that federal labor law gives unions greater bargaining power than they would have otherwise possessed. But for the additional leverage that the NLRA affords unions, the argument runs, unions would never be able to extract concessions like agency-shop clauses from employers at the bargaining table.
See
Brief for Appellant at 19 (citing
Am. Communications Ass’n. v. Douds, 339
U.S. 382, 401,
*352
In
Jackson,
a Pennsylvania regulatory agency granted a utility a monopoly over the sale of electrical power in the plaintiffs area. Acting pursuant to a state regulation that permitted utilities to “discontinue service to any customer on reasonable notice of nonpayment of bills,” the utility terminated the plaintiffs service.
Jackson,
The state’s grant of a monopoly to the utility surely increased the utility’s power to bargain with its customers concerning the terms on which the utility would supply power — including, presumably, the process due customers suspected of failing to pay their bills. Nonetheless, the Court held that the utility’s termination of the plaintiffs service was not state action. Similarly, in this case, it could be plausibly argued that “the NLRA grants unions something of an exclusive franchise through majority representation.”
Kolinske,
B.
White points to a pair of Railway Labor Act (“RLA”) cases to support the proposition that the CWA Opt-Out Procedure amounts to state action.
See Railway Employees’ Dept. v. Hanson,
*353
The
Hanson
Court further observed that the NLRA, unlike the RLA, does not make similar provisions in collective bargaining agreements supersede conflicting state law.
See Hanson,
The RLA does not apply to the collective bargaining agreement at issue here, as the RLA governs only collective bargaining involving “railroad[s] subject to the jurisdiction of the Surface Transportation Board, ... any company which is directly or indirectly owned or controlled by or under common control with any carrier by railroad,” 45 U.S.C. § 151(a), and “common carrier[s] by air,” 45 U.S.C. § 181;
see also Capraro v. United Parcel Serv. Co.,
The same reasoning applies to
Shea,
in which the Fifth Circuit found that a procedure by which non-union employees in agency shops could decline to pay non-bargaining-related dues amounted to state action because “the RLA expressly states that it supersedes state law, and hence federal law is the authority through which private rights are lost.”
Shea,
C.
We have carefully considered the court of appeals’ decisions holding that state action is present when a union takes action pursuant to an agency-shop provision in a collective bargaining agreement governed by the NLRA, but we find those decisions unconvincing. In
Linscott v. Millers Falls Co.,
In
Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sullivan, supra,
however, the Supreme Court rejected the argument that a legislature’s express permission of a practice is sufficient to make the act of engaging in that prac
*354
tice state action. The Pennsylvania law at issue in
Sullivan
permitted an insurer providing workers’ compensation insurance to a private employer to withhold payments of medical expenses to an employee of the insured, pending the completion of a “utilization review” assessing the reasonableness of the employee’s claim. To obtain permission to withhold benefits during utilization review, an insurer was required to file a form with a state agency “detailing the employee’s injury, and the medical treatment to be reviewed.”
Sullivan,
The Supreme Court rejected this argument. The Court did “not doubt that the State’s decision to provide insurers the option of deferring payment for unnecessary and unreasonable treatment pending review can in some sense be seen as encouraging them to do just that.”
Id.
at 53,
A similar analysis applies to the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Beck v. Communications Workers of Am.,
III.
For the reasons set out above and in Price and Kolinske, we hold that the CWA’s implementation of the Opt-Out Procedure did not constitute state action. Accordingly, we affirm the District Court’s judgment.
Notes
. Unfortunately, the CBA is not in the record, but the parties agree on the content of the relevant provisions.
.
See Kolinske v. Lubbers,
. For example, if a non-CWA member employed by a CWA agency shop notifies the CWA in May of 2004 that he does not wish to pay non-bargaining-related dues, he will not be charged for such dues between July of 2004 and June of 2005.
. Although White makes much of the CWA’s failure to send the CWA News to the correct address, this failure does not appear to form the basis for his First Amendment claim. Instead, White contends that requiring him to comply with the Opt-Out Procedure runs afoul of the First Amendment.
. The precise language of the First Amendment claim reads as follows:
Defendant infringes plaintiff's First Amendment rights not to associate and plaintiff's Section 7 rights not to support non-collective bargaining activity by mandating that plaintiff object to paying full union dues annually, in the manner designated by defendant, at the time designated by defendant.
App. II at 186.
. Two other courts of appeals have reached First Amendment claims in challenges to provisions of collective bargaining agreements governed by the NLRA without discussing the question of state action.
See Hammond v. United Papermakers & Paperworkers Union,
. Since we hold that White has not established the presence of the first Edmonson factor, we need not decide whether White could have shown that the CWA is a state actor based solely on that factor.
.
Shelley v. Kraemer,
