The City of Cedar Rapids (the City) appeals from a final order entered in the District Court 1 for the Northern District of Iowa compelling the City to arbitrate a claim for cost over-runs submitted by Johnson Controls, Inc. (Johnson) pursuant to Johnson’s contract with the City. For reversal the City argues (1) that the district court misconstrued its contract with Johnson by finding that this dispute was subject to the contract’s mandatory arbitration clause and (2) that the tenth amendment to the United States Constitution precludes the court from ordering the City to arbitrate this dispute in contravention of Iowa state law. We affirm the order of the district court for the following reasons.
I. Background Facts
The City and Johnson entered into a construction contract in which Johnson agreed to provide the instrumentation and the computer for the City’s federally funded Water Pollution Control Facility. During Johnson’s phase of the project’s construction, a dispute between Johnson and the City arose over the amount of compensation that Johnson was entitled to for “additional” work. On September 4, 1981, Johnson *373 submitted an “equitable adjustment” claim to the City for damages and cost over-runs of about $1.2 million. The original total contract price for Johnson’s services was just over $2 million. The City denied Johnson’s claim on November 4, 1981. Nine days later Johnson filed a demand for arbitration of the dispute under the terms of the contract’s “mandatory” arbitration clause. The “mandatory” arbitration clause provides that if one party demands arbitration of a particular dispute governed by the clause, then the other party must submit to arbitration. The City rejected Johnson’s demand for arbitration on December 2, 1981, by claiming that the contract’s “voluntary” arbitration clause superseded the mandatory arbitration clause. Under the contract’s “voluntary” arbitration clause, a dispute can be arbitrated only if both parties agree to arbitrate that dispute. Thus, because the City did not wish to arbitrate the issue of additional compensation, arbitration could not be had under the terms of the contract. In response, Johnson filed this suit to compel arbitration based upon diversity jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1332 (1976), and the federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 4 (1976). The district court rejected the City’s tenth amendment challenge to forced arbitration and ruled that the mandatory arbitration clause governed this particular dispute. Johnson Controls, Inc. v. City of Cedar Rapids, No. C 81-140, slip op. at 3-6 (N.D.Iowa Mar. 26, 1982). The district court therefore ordered the City to arbitrate the cost over-run. This appeal ensued.
II. Contract Construction Under the Arbitration Act
When a party to an interstate contract invokes the Arbitration Act to enforce a putative arbitration clause within that contract, the court’s review is limited to two issues: (1) whether an express written agreement to arbitrate the subject matter of the present dispute exists between the parties, and (2) if so, whether the agreement to arbitrate has been breached.
National R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Missouri Pacific R.R.,
The actual structure of a written document is often helpful in construing its contents. The present contract is divided into two main parts: the General Conditions, and the Supplemental Conditions. The mandatory arbitration clause is contained in § 30.1 of the General Conditions [hereinafter cited as General § 30.1]. It provides:
30 ARBITRATION
30.1 All claims, disputes and other matters in question arising out of, or relating to, the CONTRACT DOCUMENTS or the breach thereof ... shall be decided by arbitration .... This agreement to arbitrate shall be specifically enforceable under the prevailing arbitration law. - The award rendered by the arbitrators shall be final, and judgment *374 may be entered upon it in any court having jurisdiction thereof.
The voluntary arbitration clause is contained in § 7 of the Supplemental Conditions [hereinafter cited as Supplemental § 7]. It provides:
7. Remedies
Except as otherwise provided in this contract, all claims, counterclaims, disputes and other matters in question between the Owner and the Contractor arising out of or relating to this agreement or breach thereof will be decided by arbitration if the parties hereto mutually agree, or in a court of competent jurisdiction within the State in which the Owner is located.
Also of importance is § 1 of the Supplemental Conditions, which states that the provisions contained in the Supplemental Conditions “shall supersede any conflicting provisions of this contract.”
The City advances four main arguments relating to the construction of the contract. The City’s first argument is that the mandatory arbitration clause and the voluntary arbitration clause are “conflicting” and, therefore, under Supplemental § 1 the voluntary arbitration clause controls because it is contained in the Supplemental Conditions. As a corollary to this argument, the City asserts that the voluntary arbitration clause is more specific than the mandatory arbitration clause and under Iowa law the more specific clause will control a general clause.
This argument has superficial appeal. Yet, an elementary rule of contract interpretation is that a contract should be construed so as to give effect to all the contract’s provisions.
SCM Corp. v. United States,
The City’s second argument is that the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) role in funding the project and drafting the project’s contracts is relevant to show what the parties intended the contract’s language to mean. The EPA was the major source of funds for the City’s construction of its water treatment project. The project was constructed in three phases. Johnson’s contract was to be performed as part of the second phase. When the first phase started, the EPA required all contracts for the project to contain the General § 30.1 mandatory arbitration clause. But when the City submitted the second phase contracts, including Johnson’s contract, to the EPA for the EPA’s approval, the EPA reversed its position on mandatory arbitration. According to the City, the EPA discovered that mandatory arbitration created too many problems and had become counterproductive. Thus, starting in February 1977, all contracts for EPA funded projects were required to contain a Supplemental *375 § 7 voluntary arbitration clause. Johnson’s second phase contract was drafted before 1977 and, therefore, it contained a General § 30.1 mandatory arbitration clause. But because it was not sent to the EPA for approval until after February 1977, the City also included a Supplemental § 7 voluntary arbitration clause in order to comply with the EPA regulations and ensure EPA approval. The City claims that the continued inclusion of General § 30.1 in the contract after February 1977 was a mere oversight and that the City’s failure to delete it should be given no significance. In the City’s view the real intent of the parties was to comply with the directives of the EPA, which clearly rejected mandatory arbitration in favor of voluntary arbitration. Thus, the City argues that the vicarious intent of the parties was to have Supplemental § 7’s voluntary arbitration provision supersede General § 30.1.
While this argument is interesting and novel, we find it unpersuasive as applied to the facts before us. It must be remembered that our function in construing this contract is to determine the parties’ intent from what they said and not from what they meant to say.
Cf. Commercial Metals Co. v. United States,
[T]he [proposed remedies] clause was read by many commentators as mandating arbitration. That was not the intent. The clause has been revised to reduce the emphasis on arbitration, and now speeifically mentions both the option of arbitration and the option of remedy in the courts. The parties could also agree in the basic agreement to some other mechanism, such as a Board of Contract Appeals, or the like, in the larger municipalities.
41 Fed.Reg. 56634 (Dec. 29, 1976).
It is clear from this statement that although mandatory arbitration is no longer required by the EPA, neither is mandatory arbitration forbidden. That is why Supplemental § 7 includes the phrase “except as otherwise provided for in this contract” so that the parties may provide for mandatory arbitration as was done in this case. Thus, it is not true that after 1977 the EPA required voluntary arbitration. All the EPA required was that Supplemental § 7 be included. Supplemental § 7, by its purpose and express language, leaves it to the parties’ discretion whether they want to provide for voluntary arbitration or would prefer another type of dispute resolution mechanism — such as mandatory arbitration. The City, by leaving General § 30.1 in the contract, so provided. If any ambiguity has been created by the incorporation of both of these clauses in the contract, that ambiguity must be resolved against the drafter of the contract, which in this case is the City.
Thanet Corp. v. United States,
The City’s third argument is based on federal policy. The City acknowledges that there exists a general federal policy that favors arbitration in contracts governed by the Arbitration Act. However, the City asserts that the EPA has expressed a more specific federal policy which disfavors mandatory arbitration in EPA funded municipal construction contracts. The City argues that this more specific federal policy *376 disfavoring arbitration must prevail over the general federal policy of the Arbitration Act. This argument lacks merit. First of all, we are not convinced that the EPA has articulated a federal policy disfavoring mandatory arbitration. As noted above, the EPA has taken a flexible approach to the issue. Secondly, even if there were such an EPA policy, it would be highly inappropriate to credit the policy of an administrative agency over the express policy of Congress as articulated in an applicable statute.
The City’s final contract argument is also based on public policy, specifically Iowa public policy. The City claims that at the time this contract was entered into, Iowa law rendered executory arbitration agreements generally unenforceable.
Joseph L. Wilmotte & Co.
v.
Rosenman Bros.,
Guided by this policy and the above rules of contract construction, we agree with the district court that in this case the mandatory arbitration provision prevails over Supplemental § 7’s voluntary arbitration provision. Only this interpretation gives reasonable effect to all the terms of the contract.
III. The Tenth Amendment
The City advances a rather forceful tenth amendment challenge to the enforcement of the mandatory arbitration clause under the Arbitration Act. The City relies heavily on the Supreme Court’s ruling in
National League of Cities v. Usery,
(1) The federal action must regulate the “state as a state”;
(2) The federal action must regulate “matters that are indisputable ‘attribute^] of state sovereignty’ ”;
(3) The state’s compliance with the federal action or statute must directly impair the state’s “ability ‘to structure integral operations in areas of traditional governmental functions’ ”; and
(4) In situations where there is a weighty federal interest, the state must show that the nature of the federal interest advanced is not so great that it justifies state submission to the federal action.
Hodel v. Virginia Surface Mining & Reclamation Ass’n,
*377
The City contends that the exercise of federal commerce power to compel the City to arbitrate would force the City and the State of Iowa to adopt the federal government’s choice of forum for the resolution of Iowa’s municipalities’ disputes. According to the City, its choice of forum, and Iowa’s regulation of Iowa municipalities, are essential decisions about integral local governmental functions. Thus, the City argues that under
National League of Cities,
compelling the City to arbitrate under the Arbitration Act would be an unconstitutional intrusion upon state sovereignty. In reality, the City’s tenth amendment argument has two aspects. First, the City contends that the City itself is the state entity protected by the tenth amendment and that the Arbitration Act impermissibly regulates the City’s sovereign prerogative not to arbitrate. Second, the City contends that the State of Iowa is the state entity protected by the tenth amendment and that the Arbitration Act impermissibly preempts Iowa’s regulation of its municipalities’ affairs, including the manner in which its municipalities resolve their disputes. The City has standing to assert both aspects of its tenth amendment argument.
National League of Cities,
A. The City As The Protected State Entity
It seems clear that enforcement of the Arbitration Act directly against the City regulates the City
qua
state entity. It is less clear that entering into an interstate contract is an attribute of state sovereignty. However, when a federal law is being applied directly against a state entity in order to compel the state entity to conduct its own affairs in conformity with the federal law, the Supreme Court has avoided the first two parts of the
National League of Cities
test and has proceeded directly to the third or “key prong” of that test.
See, e.g., Transportation Union v. Long Island R.R.,
In analyzing a tenth amendment defense to the exercise of Congress’s commerce power, it is important to note at the outset the precise federal law that is being brought to bear against the state entity and what is the precise state activity or concern at which the federal law is being directed. If a generally applicable regulation, in its present specific application, is being
primarily
directed at a state entity’s own activities in a traditional local governmental function or has a severe debilitating impact on a state entity’s ability to perform a traditional local governmental function, then the state entity may well meet the third part of the
National League of Cities
test.
See EEOC v. Wyoming,
Here the federal law is obviously the Arbitration Act. The Arbitration Act is primarily directed at the interpretation and enforcement of interstate arbitration clauses and not at regulating the City’s operation of its waste treatment facility. Hence, this case is unlike
Transportation Union v.
*378
Long Island R.R. Co.,
The present case is actually analogous to
National League of Cities
itself, as well as to
EEOC v. Wyoming,
which is the Supreme Court’s latest pronouncement on the tenth amendment. In both cases, the Supreme Court’s tenth amendment analysis focused on the secondary
impact
that the federal regulation had on traditional local governmental functions, even though the regulation was not primarily directed at a traditional local governmental activity. The decisive issue in these cases was whether the federal regulation had such a debilitating impact on the state entity’s ongoing relationship with its employees in areas of traditional local governmental functions that the state entity would have to restructure the delivery of those vital public services in order to comply with the federal regulation. In
National League of Cities,
the Court held that the minimum wage and maximum hour regulations of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 206, 207 (1976) (FLSA), did have such an impact and, therefore, ruled that the tenth amendment barred enforcement of the FLSA against state entities. In
EEOC v. Wyoming,
the Court held that the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (1976) (ADEA), did not have such an impact and, therefore, enforced the ADEA against Wyoming. In our view, these two cases are irreconcilable. To the extent
National League of Cities,
The City seeks to draw an analogy between this case and
National League of Cities.
The City contends that the Arbitration Act will “significantly alter or displace [its] abilitfy] to structure [its contractual] relationships in such areas as ... sanitation, public health and parks and recreation,” which are all traditional local governmental functions.
National League of Cities,
Although superficially appealing, the City’s argument proceeds from incorrect premises. First, the Arbitration Act does not compel a party to arbitrate an interstate contract dispute, unless of course that party has voluntarily agreed to arbitrate the dispute and that voluntary agreement is evidenced by a writing. Here, the City, of its own free choice, entered into the contract with Johnson, and as discussed above, the City voluntarily incorporated mandatory arbitration into the terms of that contract.
5
All the Arbitration Act does is to make the City’s voluntary commitment to arbitration specifically enforceable. It does not control, limit, or eliminate the City’s initial choice of any forum for the resolution of its disputes. Thus, the Arbitration Act has not withdrawn any authority from the City to structure its own affairs in any way.
See National League of Cities,
Second, the consequential impact of the order compelling arbitration in this case will have a negligible effect on the City’s provision of vital public services, including sanitation. As the Supreme Court made plain in
EEOC v. Wyoming,
the
National League of Cities
financial impact test does not depend on “ ‘particularized assessments of actual impact,’ which may vary from State to State and time to time, but on a more generalized inquiry, essentially legal rather than factual, into the direct and obvious effect of the federal legislation on the ability of the States to allocate their resources.”
B. Iowa As The Protected State Entity
The City asserts that Iowa municipalities, in general, are without power to enter into contracts that are inconsistent with Iowa law. According to the City, the Iowa Supreme Court has expressly held on several occasions that executory common law arbitration agreements are unenforceable. Proceeding from these two premises, the City, in a disingenuous leap of logic, argues that the State of Iowa has denied Iowa municipalities the power to enter into executory arbitration agreements. Because a state’s control over the municipalities it creates and empowers goes to the very core of the state’s sovereignty, the City argues that the tenth amendment should prohibit any federal attempt to grant an Iowa municipality a power that the municipality is expressly denied under Iowa law. For several reasons, we find this aspect of the City’s tenth amendment challenge to be without merit.
First, we have found no Iowa statute or Iowa Supreme Court case that would specifically forbid a municipality from entering into an executory arbitration agreement or from arbitrating disputes such as the one present in this case.
See, e.g., Hawkins/Korshoj v. State Board of Regents,
Second, even if under Iowa law an Iowa municipality has no power to enter into executory common law arbitration agreements as argued by the City, we hold that the tenth amendment does not immunize the City from enforcement of the Arbitration Act. Again, it is important to note the precise state activity at which the federal law is being primarily directed. As far as the State of Iowa is concerned, the Arbitration Act is being enforced directly against two private parties over whom both Iowa and the federal government have sovereign authority. In this way the Arbitration Act is not being enforced directly against Iowa as a State. Instead, the Arbitration Act’s effect on Iowa is to displace Iowa’s exercise of its police powers over these two parties’ activities in interstate commerce. As was noted in
Hodel:
“The Court long ago rejected the suggestion that Congress invades areas reserved to the States by the Tenth Amendment simply because it exercises its authority under the Commerce Clause in a manner that displaces the States’ exercise of their police powers.”
The second aspect of the City’s tenth amendment challenge also fails the fourth part of the
National League of Cities/Hodel
test. This is the balancing test first articulated by Justice Blackmun in his concurring opinion in
National League of Cities,
In conclusion, as a matter of federal law, we read the contract between the City and Johnson as requiring arbitration of this cost-overrun dispute upon the demand of either party. The tenth amendment does not bar the enforcement of this provision of the contract against the City under the Arbitration Act. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s order compelling the City to submit to the arbitration of Johnson’s claim for additional compensation.
Notes
. The Honorable Edward J. McManus, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa.
.
Accord Douglas v. United States Tobacco Co.,
.
Accord Kimbell Foods, Inc. v. Republic Nat'l Bank,
.
Accord Truelsen v. European Health Spa of Nebraska,
. The City’s response is that it did not voluntarily incorporate the mandatory arbitration clause into the contract, but did so only because it was required to under the then prevailing EPA regulations. A state entity, however, may not rely upon the tenth amendment to avoid or disavow as involuntary its compliance with a condition attached to the receipt of federal funds. See
Federal Energy Regulatory Comtn’n v. Mississippi,
. See
Litchsinn v. American Interinsurance Exchange,
. An argument may be raised that the City is not a “private” party and, therefore, the
Hodel
and
FERC v. Mississippi
cases, which hold that under the tenth amendment “Congress may impose conditions on the state’s regulation of
private
conduct in a pre-emptible area,” are inapposite.
FERC v. Mississippi,
