The International Paper Company (“IP”), an industry operating in the town of Jay, Maine (“the Town” or “Jay”), brought suit to invalidate and enjoin enforcement of a
*482
municipal ordinance (“the Ordinance”) which regulated the emission of pollutants by Jay industries, including IP. IP claimed that the Ordinance placed undue restrictions upon its bargaining power in a labor dispute with striking unions and violated various federal and state laws. In a comprehensive opinion,
How It All Began
In June 1987, two unions representing 1,200 workers at the Jay, Maine, pulp and paper processing facility of IP went on strike. IP managed to continue operations at the mill by hiring replacement workers. In August, the Jay Board of Selectmen, which mostly included striking IP employees, enacted two ordinances, neither of which is involved in the present appeal. One of the ordinances prohibited IP from housing replacement workers at the mill, while the other authorized town officials to oversee enforcement of various federal, state, and local environmental laws and regulations at the mill. Apparently in response to a lawsuit filed by IP to invalidate these ordinances, again unrelated to this appeal, the Board repealed them voluntarily-
In November 1987, the town’s legal counsel, at the Board’s behest, drafted the Jay Environmental Control and Improvement Ordinance (the Ordinance). This third Ordinance — the subject of IP’s present attack — is an elaborate regulatory scheme. Its primary requirement is that Jay industries and businesses obtain such a permit from a special planning board before they may discharge pollutants. In order to obtain a permit, an applicant must comply with local environmental regulations contained in the Ordinance. In December the Board proposed that the Ordinance be put to a public referendum. Two public hearings followed, and the town enacted the Ordinance by referendum vote on May 21, 1988.
The strike was resolved in IP’s favor after commencement of this suit. A second referendum followed, where Jay citizens rejected a proposal to repeal the Ordinance. The Ordinance remains the law of Jay.
IP’s amended complaint lists several counts, all of which were dismissed below on various motions. IP appeals the district court’s Rule 12(c) 1 dismissal of Counts I, II, and III, which present the following contentions: (1) the Jay Ordinance imper-missibly interfered with.IP’s collective bargaining rights in the 1987-88 strike, curtailing self-help and frustrating the operation of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 151 et seq.; (2) the Ordinance represents an abuse of governmental powers depriving IP of its Equal Protection and Due Process rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution; and (3) the Ordinance violates Maine’s conflicts of interest statute, 30 M.R.S.A. § 2251 (1978), and Maine common law.
Standard of Review
We review the district court’s grant of the Town’s Fed.R.Civ.P. Rule 12(c) motion
de novo,
as if we were considering the Town’s motion anew.
See Frissell v. Rizzo,
NLRA Preemption
IP first attacks the Jay Ordinance on the ground that it violates the policy of Congress, implicit in the NLRA, to leave certain unregulated self-help weapons in a labor dispute, such as lockouts, strikes, and the hiring of replacement workers, to the “free play of economic forces.”
Machinists v. Wisconsin Employment Relations Comm’n,
Because it is critical to IP’s approach, we think
Golden State
warrants detailed discussion. In
Golden State,
a company which operated taxicabs in the Los Angeles area applied to the city for renewal of its operating franchise. The city’s Board of Transportation Commissioners initially recommended renewal of the franchise. While the application was pending, the cab company’s drivers went on strike, halting its operations. The City Council consequently delayed action on the renewal application and ultimately defeated a motion to extend the franchise, allowing it to expire. During discussion on the application, the Council reached a consensus “for rejection of the extension with a possibility for reopening the issue if the parties settled their labor dispute before the franchise expired. ...”
Id.
at 611,
The Supreme Court, applying the
Machinists
preemption principle, held the City Council’s action illegal. The
Machinists
doctrine, the Court stated, “precludes state and municipal regulation ‘concerning conduct that Congress intended to be unregulated.’ ”
Id.
at 614,
As the trial court correctly determined, the instant case is easily distinguishable from
Golden State.
IP’s proposal to apply that case here would require an unprecedented extension of the
Machinists
doctrine and NLRA preemption.
See
In any event, we prefer not to rest our holding on this ground, for we are unwilling to apply
Golden State
to such state action which only remotely affects the bargaining powers of the parties to a labor dispute. While the Court in
Golden State
may have retreated from its prior steadfast position that only state actions passed with the intent of directly altering the substantive outcome of a labor dispute should be preempted, it remains the law that actions which regulate activity only peripherally related to labor policy, without placing conditions on the conduct of the parties to the dispute, are not subject to preemption.
See id.
On the other hand, reading IP’s complaint in its most favorable light, there is no reasonable, conceivable set of facts suggested by IP to convince either the trial court or this Court that the Jay Ordinance forced IP to accede to the unions’ demands.
See Conley,
[I]n any industry the price of whose product or service — such as electric power, telephone, natural gas, or even rent controlled real estate — is regulated, a state would find its regulatory system vulnerable to preemptive attack on the ground that the overall control of price was too inhibiting an influence on collective bargaining. Logic, however, would carry beyond simple price control. Any state or municipal program that substantially increased the costs of operation of a business in a competitive market would be similarly vulnerable to the preemption argument.
Id.
(emphasis added).
See also, Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Arkansas Public Service Comm’n,
Furthermore, the present allegations are not significantly different from those ás-serted by the union in
Massachusetts Nursing Ass’n
even though IP charges that environmental health and safety was merely a pretext for the Board’s actual plan to pressure IP. The fact that the Jay Ordinance is the product of a popular referendum robs this argument of its thunder and leads us to restate our belief that indirect intrusions into collective bargaining, such as
“[c]lean air and water laws,
selective cutting requirements in forest operations, industrial safety standards, [and] tax increases," are rarely preempted by labor statutes such as the LMRA and the NLRA.
Equal Protection and Substantive Due Process
IP’s claim that the Ordinance represents an abuse of governmental powers and deprives IP of the Equal Protection and Due Process rights guaranteed it by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United *485 States Constitution is similarly without merit. The trial court applied the rational basis test and found that the Ordinance is not constitutionally infirm since it is rationally related to legitimate municipal ends. We agree.
Social or economic legislation such as the Jay Ordinance, which purports to protect the health and safety of Jay citizens, is presumed to be valid and not violative of the Due Process or Equal Protection Clauses “if the classification drawn by the statute is rationally related to a legitimate state interest.”
Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center,
The district court’s thorough analysis here needs no improvement: while courts may look to legislators’ motives where a suspect or quasi-suspect classification is subjected to discrimination or a fundamental right is infringed,
see e.g., Wallace v. Jaffree,
Focusing upon the Ordinance itself, there cannot be any doubt that it serves the legitimate governmental interest of controlling the discharge of pollutants into the air, water, and ground, and that its regulatory means are logically related to its stated purpose of protecting “the public health, safety and welfare of the inhabitants of the Town of Jay and ... the Town of Jay’s environment.” Jay Environmental Control and Improvement Ordinance § 1-102. We conclude that IP did not demonstrate or even suggest any conceivable Conley set of circumstances which could have overcome the presumption of validity which the Ordinance enjoys. IP’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 substantive due process and equal protection claims were therefore properly dismissed.
Conflict of Interest
Finally, IP argues that the Ordinance is void under Maine’s conflicts of interest statute 3 and the state’s common *486 law. IP argues that each of the Jay Board members had at least an indirect pecuniary interest in passing the Ordinance, and therefore the district court should have allowed IP’s claim under this statute to go forward. The complaint contains no allegations that the Board members’ “pecuniary interest” fits within the statutory definition, however, which provides that a conflict of interest is present where the official is:
... an officer, director, partner, associate, employee or stockholder of a private corporation, business or other economic entity to which the question relates ... [and] only where the official is directly or indirectly the owner of at least 10% of the stock of the private corporation or owns at least a 10% interest in the business or other economic entity.
30 M.R.S.A. § 2251(4). IP’s failure to allege that any member of the Board satisfies this provision is fatal to its statutory claim. 4
Maine common law notions of conflicts of interest sufficient to merit the invalidation of a municipal ordinance are broader than § 2251, but not as broad as IP would have us interpret them to be. All of the eases upon which IP relies involve the conferring of a pecuniary benefit to be gained directly and personally from the municipal action.
See, e.g., Tuscan v. Smith,
In light of the foregoing discussion, we conclude that the district court was clearly correct in disposing of all of the matters presented in this appeal by way of Rule 12(c) dismissal.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Rule 12(c) provides, in pertinent part:
(c) Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings.
After the pleadings are closed but within such time as not to delay the trial, any party may move for judgment on the pleadings____
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c).
. This general rule does not apply when the statute involves suspect classifications such as race, alienage, or national origin, or "quasi-suspect" classifications such as gender and illegitimacy, or if the statute affects personal and fundamental rights.
Id.
. Maine’s conflicts of interest statute is found at 30 M.R.S.A. § 2251 (1978), and provides in relevant part:
1. Voting. The vote of a body is voidable when any official in his official position votes on any question in which he has a direct or an indirect pecuniary interest.
. We also agree with the district court that the plain language of the statute makes the vote taken by the Board voidable rather than void, and leaves discretion whether to uphold such actions to the courts.
