Opinion
In this consolidated appeal we are asked to decide whether plaintiffs were required to bring their disputes over the compulsory organizational service fee to the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) before they can challenge the constitutionality of that fee requirement in court. We conclude that the PERB has initial jurisdiction over these matters and plaintiffs are requirement is unconstitutional on its face and as applied to them. Specifically, they contended that a portion of the fee is used for ideological and political pur-
The plaintiffs in the Link lawsuit (hereinafter Link) are public school employees for defendant Antioch Unified School District. The plaintiffs in the Bianchini lawsuit (hereinafter Bianchini) are public school employees for the defendant Jefferson School District. Other defendants include the Antioch Education Association (AEA) and the California School Employees Association (CSEA) and their affiliates, the California Teachers Association and the National Education Association. The AEA is the exclusive bargaining representative for all teachers in the Antioch Unified School District and the CSEA is the exclusive bargaining representative for all classified employees in the Jefferson School District. Neither the Link plaintiffs nor the Bianchini plaintiffs are union members.
Pursuant to collective bargaining agreements negotiated between the unions and the school districts, nonunion employees were required to pay a “service fee” not to exceed the amount of union dues. This “service fee” provision was authorized by the Education Employment Relations Act (Gov. Code, § 3540 et seq.). Section 3540.1, subdivision (i)(2) provides, inter alia: “[A]n employee, as a condition of continued employment, [must] either [1] join the recognized or certified employee organization, or . . . pay the organization a service fee in an amount not to exceed the standard initiation fee, periodic dues, and general assessments of such organization . . . .”
In separate civil actions, Link and Bianchini alleged that the service fee requirement is unconstitutional on its face and as applied to them. Specifically, they contended that a portion of the fee is used for ideological and political pur *768 poses, not approved by plaintiffs, and is unrelated to collective bargaining, contract administration and grievance adjustment. As a result, plaintiffs argue, the service fee provision violates their rights of substantive due process and their rights of free speech and free association.
In dismissing the complaints, the respective trial courts concluded that the alleged unconstitutional grievances arguably constituted unfair labor practices which are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the PERB and that plaintiffs should have first exhausted their administrative remedies before seeking judicial relief.
On appeal, plaintiffs allege that the constitutional violations raised in their complaints do not constitute “unfair practices” as defined by Government Code sections 3541.5, 3543.5 and 3543.6 and they are outside the jurisdiction of the PERB. Plaintiffs contend that the PERB could not satisfy the three-part test for preemption which was enunciated in
San Diego Teachers Assn.
v.
Superior Court
(1979)
The issues plaintiffs raise are identical to those addressed in
Leek
v.
Washington Unified School Dist.
(1981)
Plaintiffs argued that sections 3543.5 and 3543.6 defined what acts constituted unfair practices and that none of the acts alleged in the complaint fell within those categories.
(Leek
v.
Washington Unified School Dist., supra,
Looking beyond the constitutional label given to plaintiffs’ grievances herein (see
Abood
v.
Detroit Board of Education
(1977)
Plaintiffs contend that the PERB remedy is unsatisfactory or otherwise unworkable. We decline to speculate whether further judicial relief will be necessary or to what extent. Where, as here, an administrative remedy has been created, it must be exhausted despite plaintiffs’ predictions. (See
Security-First Nat. Bk.
v.
County of L.A.
(1950)
The judgment is affirmed.
King, J., and Haning, J., concurred.
