DAVID A. FIELDS, ROBERT P. WEISS, et al., Petitioners, versus UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW BOARD, Respondent.
No. 98-2614
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
April 21, 1999
D. C. Docket No. 97-070(ARB); 96-ERA-22(ALJ)
Before MARCUS, Circuit Judge, HILL, Senior Circuit Judge, and ADAMS*, District Judge.
*Honorable Henry Lee Adams, Jr., U. S. District Judge for the Middle District of Florida, sitting by designation.
PER CURIAM:
Petitioners were control room operators at FPC‘s Crystal River 3 nuclear power plant (the plant). They were concerned that maintaining hydrogen pressure in accordance with FPC‘s mandated procedure (designated Curve 83) was unsafe and notified the engineering department. They were not satisfied with the engineering department‘s assurance that maintaining pressure according to Curve 8 was “accurate and reasonably conservative.” Petitioners felt that their safety concerns had not been adequately addressed and that they needed to respond. In order to obtain data that would show whether their concerns about Curve 8 were valid, petitioners decided to conduct their own tests. They contend that they believed the tests complied with existing procedures and were within their authority to perform. Petitioners claim that, as licensed nuclear operators, they owed a duty to the public to verify a critical safety issue that they believed was being ignored by FPC.
Following the September 5 test, petitioners prepared a problem report. They did not mention the September 4 test. In response to the problem report, FPC transferred petitioners to positions other than as control room operators. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) instituted an investigation. When FPC subsequently learned of the September 4 test, it discharged Weiss and Fields and transferred Stewart out of operations with a written reprimand.
Thereafter petitioners filed this Section 211 discrimination action with the DOL, alleging that FPC disciplined them, demoted Stewart, and discharged Fields and Weiss because they were engaging in activities protected under the ERA. After an evidentiary hearing, the DOL ALJ concluded that the undisputed facts provided overwhelming evidence that petitioners had acted deliberately and without direction
In reviewing cases arising under the ERA, we are required to conform to the standard of review set forth in the Administrative Procedure Act.
It is clear from the record that, regardless of their motives, good or bad, petitioners moved knowingly and dangerously beyond their authority when, on their own, and fully aware that their employer would not approve, they conducted experiments inherently fraught with danger. The tests conducted during the midnight shifts were expected by petitioners to produce conditions sufficiently perilous to set off alarms. While it is possible that they meant, by their actions, to demonstrate that prescribed FPC policy was dangerous, it is clear that petitioners’ unauthorized frolics were just what Congress envisioned when it made the whistleblower statute inapplicable to “any employee who, acting without direction from his or her employer (or the employer‘s agent), deliberately causes a violation of any requirement of this chapter . . . .” Section 211(g),
AFFIRMED.
Notes
(1) No employer may discharge any employee or otherwise discriminate against any employee with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment because the employee . . .
(A) notified his employer of an alleged violation of this Act or the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (
Subsection (a) of this section [prohibiting discrimination] shall not apply with respect to any employee who, acting without direction from his or her employer (or the employer‘s agent), deliberately causes a violation of any requirement of this chapter or of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended [
