OPINION
This case requires us to assess the propriety of a district court’s anti-strike injunction, which was issued to enforce an arbitration decision made pursuant to the Interstate Commerce Act (“ICA”). CSX Transportation sought to consolidate four separate railroads that it had acquired. The unions representing the railroads’ employees opposed the consolidation. After the arbitrator’s award in favor of CSX’s proposed consolidation was upheld by the Interstate Commerce Commission (“ICC”), the unions threatened a strike. CSX then obtained an injunction prohibiting that strike. The unions now appeal this injunction, contending that the NorrisLaGuardia Act (“NLGA”) prohibits anti-strike injunctions to enforce arbitration awards under the Interstate Commerce Act. We disagree. The NLGA may not be used to circumvent the “final, binding, and conclusive” arbitration process that is undertaken pursuant to the ICC’s interpretation of the ICA, 49 U.S.C. § 11347 (now recodified at 49 U.S.C. § 11326).
New York Dock Railway-Control-Brooklyn Eastern Dist. Terminal,
I.
CSX Transportation, Inc. was formed from eleven rail carriers and their subsidiaries, including the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (“B & 0”), the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad (“C & O”), the Western Maryland Railway (“WM”), the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, Seaboard Coast Line Railroad, and the Richmond, Fredericksburg, and Potomac Railroad (“RF & P”). The CSX network is one of the nation’s largest, totaling 18,800 miles in 19 states, the District of Columbia, and Ontario, Canada. Its employees are represented by the United Transportation Union and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers (“unions”).
CSX has attempted to merge these various operations into a single, integrated network. It is one of these attempts at consolidation that gave rise to the present dispute. CSX claimed that its attempts at integration were hindered by the existence of separate labor *348 agreements with the railroads’ unions. The practical result of these separate agreements was that CSX could not use its engineers and trainmen throughout its system, but was forced to operate separate workforces within the geographic confines of each former railroad. This apparently caused train delays (as trains passing from one railroad to the next had to switch crews) and frustrated CSX’s ability to efficiently allocate manpower across railroad boundaries.
On January 10, 1994, CSX gave notice to the unions that it intended to consolidate train operations on the WM, RF & P, a portion of the C & 0, and then merge these into the B & 0. This would create a unified operation between southern Pennsylvania and southern Virginia called the Eastern B & 0 Consolidated District. The new territory was to be governed by the collective bargaining agreement applicable to the former B & 0 district, and the consolidation therefore would require changes in the collective bargaining agreements for the WM, RF & P, and the C & 0. In particular, the working and seniority lists of the various territories would be consolidated, there would be a temporary loss of positions (CSX anticipated adding more trains and positions after the consolidation), some supply points would be closed, and reporting points would be changed for some employees, thus requiring their transfer. Otherwise, the terms of the collective bargaining agreements applicable to the employees on these lines would remain unchanged in the new B & 0 district.
Pursuant to § 11347 of the ICA as interpreted by the ICC’s decision in
New York Dock,
O’Brien held a hearing on March 28, 1995. At this hearing, both parties presented extensive arguments and a “plethora of evidence.” On April 24, the ALJ, pursuant to New York
Dock,
Both parties appealed aspects of O’Brien’s decision to the ICC. On November 22,1995, the ICC affirmed O’Brien’s findings of fact and conclusions of law:
Because the proposed implementing agreements are necessary to effect the proposed transaction and would not override any “rights, privileges, and benefits” that must be preserved under our New York Dock labor protection conditions, we conclude that those agreements satisfy the requirements of our labor protection conditions. The agreements should therefore be adopted.
The unions then sought a stay from the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. The court denied this motion on January 5,1996.
On January 15, CSX notified the unions that it would implement the consolidation on January 30. Four days before the consolidation was to take place, the unions announced that they would strike unless CSX rescinded its plans. CSX then obtained a preliminary injunction from the district court that barred *349 the proposed strike. On January 30, CSX implemented its consolidation. This appeal followed.
II.
Congress has bestowed significant powers on the ICC with respect to rail mergers. The ICC is vested with the “exclusive authority to examine, condition, and approve proposed mergers and consolidations.”
Norfolk & Western Ry. Co. v. American Train Dispatchers Ass’n.,
New York
Dock’s interpretation of § 11347 has long been relied upon in settling labor disputes that result from railroad consolidations.
See American Train Dispatchers Ass’n.,
Section 11347 and
New York Dock
seek to achieve a balance between the interests of labor and management. Labor receives guaranteed wage protections while management benefits by avoiding a strike. The avoidance of strikes is crucial to the public interest in maintaining the nation’s transportation system.
International Ass’n. of Machinists v. Soo Line Railroad Co.,
III.
The unions claim that the “final, binding, and conclusive” arbitration provided for by the ICC is unenforceable if the unions choose to strike. The unions contend that because the NLGA generally prohibits labor injunctions, see 29 U.S.C. §§ 101-107, unions may strike if they choose and federal courts are without jurisdiction to enjoin them. Such a strike, however, would unilaterally frustrate the arbitrator’s decision, undermine the ICC’s efforts to “ensure the development and continuation of a sound rail transportation system,” 49 U.S.C. § 10101(4), and shut down part of the nation’s vital rail transportation network.
The NLGA does not command any such result. In fact, the Supreme Court has clearly held that the NLGA will not be interpreted to frustrate the results of binding arbitration.
See Boys Markets, Inc. v. Retail Clerks Union,
A.
While the NLGA generally removes from federal courts the jurisdiction to enjoin labor strikes, its provisions are not absolute. The NLGA allows for an injunction when “unlawful acts have been threatened and will be committed unless restrained,” 29 U.S.C. § 107, and when such an injunction would not be “contrary to the public policy declared in” the NLGA, 29 U.S.C. § 101. Moreover, the Supreme Court has curtailed the sweeping nature of the NLGA in the face of subsequent statutes:
As labor organizations grew in strength and developed toward maturity, congressional emphasis shifted from protection of the nascent labor movement to the encouragement of collective bargaining and to administrative techniques for the peaceful resolution of industrial disputes. This shift in emphasis was accomplished, however, without extensive revision of many of the older enactments, including the anti-injunction section of the Norris-LaGuardia Act. Thus it became the task of the courts to accommodate, to reconcile the older statutes with the more recent ones.
Boys Markets,
Of substantial concern to courts faced with accommodating the NLGA has been the conflict between the NLGA’s prohibition of labor injunctions and more recent statutes’ arbitration provisions. If a federal court cannot enjoin a strike when a union deems an arbitration award unfavorable, the practical result is that arbitration is meaningless.
Id.
at 247,
Recognizing these principles, the Supreme Court has held that the NLGA cannot be used to circumvent the arbitration provided for by the Railway Labor Act (“RLA”).
Chicago River,
So too has the Court accommodated the NLGA to arbitration provisions in collective bargaining agreements. In
Boys Markets,
the union called a strike despite the existence of a clause in its collective bargaining agreement requiring that labor disputes be resolved by arbitration.
In
Boys Markets,
the Court focused on the purpose of the NLGA explaining that “a refusal to arbitrate was not ‘part and parcel of the abuses against which the [NLGA] was aimed.’ ”
Id.
at 242,
While the NLGA’s purpose provides the basis for limiting its scope, strikes in the face of labor arbitration awards also fall within the NLGA’s exception for “unlawful acts.” 29 U.S.C. § 107. Subsequent statutes, such as the Railway Labor Act, establish arbitration as the remedy for certain labor disputes.
See
45 U.S.C. § 153. If a union, as in
Chicar go River,
seeks to use a strike to violate such a law, this should qualify as an “unlawful act” within the meaning of the NLGA and should therefore preserve the jurisdiction necessary to grant an injunction. The Supreme Court recognized as much when it stated that there “is no substitute for an immediate halt to an
illegal
strike.”
Boys Markets,
Whether one accommodates the NLGA to arbitration clauses on the basis of the NLGA’s purpose or because of the NLGA’s “unlawful acts” exception, the result is the same. “[T]he Norris-LaGuardia Act must be accommodated to the subsequently enacted provisions ... and the purposes of arbitration.”
Boys Markets,
B.
The same principles that mandate accommodation of the NLGA to arbitration clauses in the RLA and in collective bargaining agreements generally also apply to 49 U.S.C. § 11347. The unions seek to distinguish the RLA provision at issue in
Chicago River
from § 11347 by arguing that the former is a labor statute deserving of accommodation and the latter is a transportation statute undeserving of accommodation. But the arbitration procedures under both statutes are indistinguishable provisions governing labor-management disputes. The arbitration process under both statutes operates to protect interstate commerce (as well as labor and railroads) by prohibiting strikes. Section 11347 also guarantees substantial benefits for labor — presumably in exchange for the prohibition on the right to strike — including wage maintenance for a period of years following a consolidation. Accordingly, § 11347, like the RLA’s arbitration provision, 45 U.S.C. § 153, is “part of a pattern of labor legislation.”
*352
Chicago River,
Moreover, the unions’ argument that the NLGA should only be accommodated to other statutes when the result furthers the interests of labor, misses the point of both
Chicago River
and
Boys Markets.
In both of those cases, the unions’ proffered interpretation of the NLGA was rejected by the Supreme Court because it would have rendered arbitration involving labor unions meaningless. Such a result, the Supreme Court held, was contrary to both the NLGA and subsequent statutes.
See Boys Markets,
The “final, binding, and conclusive” arbitration at issue here is simply indistinguishable from the arbitration provisions at issue in Chicago River and Boys Markets. Certainly when Congress enacted § 11347 and the ICC adopted the New York Dock conditions, neither contemplated that the NLGA would frustrate a “final, binding, and conclusive” arbitration that protects workers while obviating the concern that a strike might hold hostage a portion of our national transportation system. The Eighth Circuit recognized this in Burlington Northern:
[WJhen a consolidation transaction [is] subject to 49 U.S.C. §§ 11341, 11347, statutory provisions which specifically exempt carriers from all other law and require mandatory employee protective conditions, neither the RLA nor Norris-LaGuardia could operate to restrict the terms of the ICA.
To hold otherwise would thwart the operation of the arbitration provisions in
New York Dock.
Like previous courts addressing these issues, we too decline to create a conflict between the ICA and the NLGA.
See Railway Labor Executives’ Ass’n. v. CSX Transportation,
the very purpose of arbitration procedures is to provide a mechanism for the expeditious settlement of industrial disputes without resort to strikes, lockouts, or other self-help measures. This basic purpose is *353 obviously largely undercut if there is no immediate, effective remedy for those very tactics that arbitration is designed to obviate.
Boys Markets,
IV.
For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
As for the unions’ argument that CSX lacked standing to seek the injunction in the first instance, CSX (as the prevailing party in the arbitration and the party that would be injured by the strike) is the logical one to seek enforcement of the arbitration.
See Chicago River,
