Seven City of Fort Wayne firefighters brought this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, challenging a . provision in a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between the City and the Firefighters Union that prohibits city firefighters from participating in other firefighting organizations. The firefighters also challenge a provision of the Union’s constitution that prohibits advocacy of, or membership in, other firefighting organizations. The firefighters, who want to serve as volunteers in other fire departments while off duty, alleged that the CBA and the Union’s constitution violate their First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and association.
The CBA, ratified on September 15,' 1995, and effective on January 1,1996, contains the following provision in Article 20, Section 7:
Other than provided in.Article 29, Section- 1(f), active members of the Fort Wayne Fire Department shall not be restricted in off-duty employment, except that they may not work for, or volunteer for, any other paid or volunteer fire department within Allen County, or with any fire department outside Allen County which has a mutual aid agreement with the City of Fort Wayne.
Article XI, Section IE, of the Union’s constitution provides that “advocating or encouraging any labor or other rival organization or acquiring membership in any such organization, including volunteer fire departments or associations” is misconduct subject to reprimand, fine, suspension from office or membership, and expulsion from the Union. Additionally, another portion of the CBA is important, for reasons that will become clear; city firefighters are entitled to- up to a year of paid sick leave if an injury necessitating a leave of absence occurs when a firefighter is off duty.
The firefighters sued the City and the Union alleging that the CBA and the constitution “effectively bar Plaintiffs both from participating in volunteer firefighting service and from verbally advocating, defending, or even mentioning such service.” The firefighters assert that the City and the Union “conspired to deprive Plaintiffs’ exercise of their [First] Amendment rights of free association and their First Amendment rights of free speech.” The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment and the firefighters lost. In granting summary judgment for the City and the Union, the district judge determined that the firefighters failed to establish that their, speech and expressive association touched on matters of public concern and, in the alternative, that the City’s interest in promoting the efficiency of the fire department far outweighed any minimal interest the firefighters might have in providing their services to others on a volunteer basis.
On. appeal, the firefighters challenge the district court’s conclusion that their participation in other- firefighting organizations does not touch on issues of public concern and, further, argue that the district court judge botched the often cited Pickering/Con-nick balancing test when he concluded that the City’s interest in the prohibition outweighed their First Amendment interests.
As a preliminary matter, the Union argues that it is home free on at least half the ease because it is not a “state actor” for purposes of the First Amendment or §. 1983. In general, a union is not a state actor. See Wegscheid v. Local Union 2911,
The firefighters, relying on Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
The mere fact that the constitution encourages and reinforces the CBA is insufficient, however, to bring the Union’s enactment of the constitutional provision under the rubric of “state action.” See Jackson,
Moreover, a bare allegation of a conspiracy between private and state entities is insufficient to bring the private entity within the scope of § 1983. Leahy,
As to the firefighters’ claim that the CBA provision violates their right to Neely associate, Connick v. Myers dictates a three-step sequence for analyzing public employees’ First Amendment claims.
In this case, as in many association cases, the first and second steps of the Connick test overlap. See Roberts v. United States Jaycees,
The .third step of the Connick test requires a weighing of the firefighters’ interest in freedom of association against the City’s interests as an employer. In Waters v. Churchill the Supreme Court explained the reasoning behind this balancing:
Government agencies are charged by law with doing particular tasks. Agencies hire employees to help do those tasks as effectively and efficiently as possible. When someone who is paid a salary so that she will contribute to an agency’s effective operation begins to do or say things that detract from the agency’s effective operation, the government employer must have some power to restrain her.
whether the [expressive association] impairs discipline by superiors or harmony among coworkers, has a detrimental impact on close working relationships for which personal loyalty and confidence are necessary, or impedes the performance of the [employee’s] duties or interferes with the regular operation of the enterprise.
Rankin v. McPherson,
The defendants set forth a litany of reasons for prohibiting off-duty firefighting by city firefighters. But, like the district court, we believe only a few bear discussion given the factors noted in Rankin. They are: (1) promoting efficiency in the fire department’s service delivery through a reduction in off-duty injuries, avoidance of conflicts between firefighters’ duties to Fort Wayne and their
Efficiency and fiscal responsibility are powerful governmental interests. Although one may harbor doubts about the City’s argument that it limited off-duty firefighting to improve overall morale because other firefighters opposed off-duty firefighters’ activities. We agree that reducing off-duty injuries, avoiding conflicts between city firefighters’ duties to the City and duties to other firefighting organizations, and minimizing liability for paid sick leave are interests that outweigh the firefighters’ interests in volunteering for other firefighting organizations.
Relying on United States v. National Treasury Employees Union, the firefighters argue that the interests propounded by the City are unsupported by evidence and invalid because other off-duty activities pose the same threat to Fort Wayne’s interests as does off-duty firefighting.
The firefighters assert that, the City put forth no evidence of injuries resulting from off-duty firefighting, or that it provided paid sick leave as a result of such injuries. Moreover, the firefighters argue, even given the prohibition against volunteer firefighting, a host of other ultrahazardous nonspeech activities presenting an even higher risk of injury remain open to them in their off-duty hours. As to the assertion that duties to the City might conflict with duties to other firefighting organizations, the firefighters argue that any Fort Wayne firefighter who has an off-duty job will have such a conflict and point to evidence that other off-duty jobs require paid firefighters to be away from the Fort Wayne area. They argue that, under National Treasury, the prohibition singling out their off-duty firefighting activities for prohibition when the same harms to the City’s interests result from so many other off-duty occupations is unconstitutional because the purported interests served are highly suspect. Finally, the firefighters bolster their National Treasury argument by pointing to evidence that the real reason for the prohibition is the City’s desire to “squelch” political support for the independence of the surrounding communities.
National Treasury, however, is easily distinguishable from our case. The law at issue in National Treasury imposed a blanket prohibition on the speech of 1.7 million federal employees; that is, the federal employees were prohibited from accepting honoraria from anyone for speaking on any topic no matter how remote from their jobs. Although the government justified the speech ban on the grounds that it minimized the appearance of impropriety on the part of government employees and was easy to administer, the Court held that the nexus between the government interest and the speech at issue was simply too tenuous to support the all-out ban on speech. Moreover, that law was internally inconsistent.
The prohibition at issue here is very different from the one in National Treasury. Here, the ban on off-duty firefighting closely relates to the harms Fort Wayne wishes to avoid. Moreover, the prohibition is not a blanket restriction on speech; the City has not cut off all, or even many, of the alternate venues available for firefighters to voice their support for the unannexed communities. Although the Union rules may dictate expulsion if the firefighters engage in such advocacy, the firefighters have not identified any harm resulting from union expulsion. In any
Finally, although cases such as Waters and Rankin suggest that we have the power to review the City’s actual motive for including the off-duty firefighting ban in the CBA, we do not. Waters and Rankin involved individual personnel decisions about single employees, not broad-based rules applying to all employees. The Supreme Court consistently refuses to examine the motive behind the lawful exercise of executive or legislative power. See United States v. O’Brien,
For these reasons, the district court’s judgment is
Affirmed.
Notes
. As to the CBA provision, the City is clearly . subject to § 1983 liability under Monell v. Department of Soc. Servs.,
. But see Balton v. City of Milwaukee,
