NATIONAL FEDERATION OF FEDERAL EMPLOYEES, et al.
v.
Richard B. CHENEY, Secretary of Defense, et al., Appellants.
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO, et al.
v.
Richard B. CHENEY, Secretary of Defense, et al., Appellants.
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO, et al.
v.
Richard B. CHENEY, Secretary of Defense, et al., Appellants.
NATIONAL FEDERATION OF FEDERAL EMPLOYEES, et al.
v.
Richard B. CHENEY, Secretary of Defense, et al., Appellants.
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO, et al.
v.
Richard B. CHENEY, Secretary of Defense, et al., Appellants.
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO, et al.
v.
Richard B. CHENEY, Secretary of Defense, et al., Appellants.
Nos. 88-5080 to 88-5082, 88-5245, 88-5246.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Oct. 18, 1988.
Decided Aug. 29, 1989.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (Civil Action Nos. 86-00681, 87-01797, 87-02350, 86-00681, 87-01797 and 87-02350).
John R. Bolton, Asst. Atty. Gen., Dept. of Justice, with whom Jay B. Stephens, U.S. Atty., Leonard Schaitman, and Robert V. Zener, Attys., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., were on the brief, for appellants.
Joe Goldberg, with whom Mark D. Roth, Washington, D.C., was on the brief, for appellees, American Federation of Government Employees, et al.
H. Stephan Gordon and Jeffrey Sumberg were on the brief, for appellees, Nat. Federation of Fedеral Employees. Bruce P. Heppen and Suzanne L. Kalfus, Washington, D.C., also entered appearances for Nat. Federation of Federal Employees.
Before WALD, Chief Judge, and MIKVA and SENTELLE, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
SENTELLE, Circuit Judge:
In this appeal we are called upon to assess the constitutionality of the United States Department of the Army's practice of subjecting certain of its civilian employees to compulsory, random toxicological urine testing. Implemented in 1986, the testing program requires more than 9,000 of the Army's 450,000 civilian employees be tested in any of four circumstances, including "[pe]riodically ... on the basis of random criteria." Appellees, National Federation of Federal Employees and American Federation of Government Employees--union representatives of the covered employees--filed actions to enjoin the random aspect of the program. The District Court concluded that suspicionless urinalysis testing constituted an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and accordingly entered a nationwide preliminary injunction against such testing. National Fed'n of Fed. Employees v. Carlucci,
I.
A.
In 1971, Congress directed the Secretary of Defense to "prescribe and implement procedures ... [to] identify, treat, and rehabilitate mеmbers of the Armed Forces who are drug or alcohol dependent persons." PUB.L. NO. 92-129, tit. V, Sec. 501(a), 85 Stat. 348, 361 (1971). Pursuant to this command, the Army initiated mandatory toxicological testing of its military forces, a program that by 1982 resulted in comprehensive military testing. See Joint Appendix ("J.A.") at 237. On April 8, 1985, the Department of Defense issued Directive 1010.9, authorizing urinalysis testing of civilians occupying or applying for "critical jobs,"2 and requiring each "DoD Component" to submit proposals for critical job designations. The Directive provided that covered civilians "may be required to participate in urinalysis testing" in four circumstances: (1) before appointment or selection; (2) "[p]eriodically ... on the basis of neutral criteria;" (3) upon probable cause to believe on-duty drug impairment; and (4) as part of a "mishap or safety investigation." Directive 1010.9 para. F.2.a. (1)-(4).
In order to implemеnt the Directive, in 1986 the Army promulgated Army Regulation 600-85, Interim Change I11 ("AR 60085"). AR 600-85 provides for testing under the same four circumstances listed in the Department's Directive.3 Testing was authorized for any of fourteen classes of critical jobs, categorized as follows: aviation, guard and police, "personnel reliability program," and the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Program. Id. Table 5-1.4 A brief description of classes of critical jobs accompanied the Regulation.
After Directive 1010.9 and Army Regulation 600-85 were issued, the Department of Health and Human Services, in accordance with Executive Order 12,564, "Drug-Free Federal Workplace," 3 C.F.R. Sec. 224 (1987), promulgated regulations to govern federal drug testing. See "Mandatory Guidelines for Federal Workplace Drug Testing Programs," 53 Fed.Reg. 11,970 (April 11, 1988) ("HHS Regulations" or "HHS Reg."). Congress ordered the Army to comply with the HHS Regulations. See Supplemental Appropriation Act of 1987, PUB. L. NO. 100-71, Sec. 503, 101 Stat. 391, 468-71 (codified at 5 U.S.C. Sec. 7301 note (Supp. V 1987)). The parties agree that the constitutionality of the Army's testing program is to be judged with reference to the procedures as they currently exist, rather than as originally announced. See Brief for Appellants at 6 n. 1; Brief for Appellees at 8 & n. 3; see generally California Bankers Ass'n v. Shultz,
The HHS Regulations provide that, upon arriving at an assigned time and collection site, the subject employee is to prepare for the test by removing unnecessary outer garments and washing his hands. Thereafter the subject employee is to "remain in the presence of the collection site person." HHS Reg. Sec. 2.2(f)(6), 53 Fed.Reg. at 11,980. The sample is to be provided "in the privacy of a stall or otherwise partitioned area," id. Sec. 2.2(f)(7), 53 Fed.Reg. at 11,981, "unless there is reason to believe that a particular individual may alter or substitute the specimen to be provided," id. Sec. 2.2(e), 53 Fed.Reg. at 11,980.
The sample is then sent to an HHS-approved laboratory, under procedures ensuring a secure chain of custody, id. Sec. 2.2(f)(17)-(26), 53 Fed.Reg. at 11,981, where it is tested for proscribed drugs.5 The sample is initially subject to a radioimmunoassay (RIA) test, and if the results of that test exceed certain cut-off levels, to a gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) test. See J.A. at 242. A sample is considered positive only if it is positive on both tests. HHS Reg. Sec. 2.4(g)(2), 53 Fed.Reg. at 11,983.
Any applicant who tests positive for proscribed drugs "will be denied further consideration" for employment, AR 600-85 para. 5-14c (3)(a), and employees who test positive "may be subject to adverse action," identified as reassignment or demotion to a noncritical job, or "if there is no job available for which the employee is qualified, separat[ion] from the service." Id. para. 5-14c (1)(b). Among the potential penalties for refusing to submit to a test or attempting to adulterate the test sample is "[r]emov[al] from Federal service." Id. para. 5-14c (4)(b) & c (5). The Regulation provides that any employee testing positive "shall, if eligible," be offered counseling or treatment. Id. para. 5-14e (4). Collateral use of the test results is proscribed by regulation and statute alike. See HHS Reg. Sec. 2.8, 53 Fed.Reg. at 11,986; Sec. 503(e), PUB. L. NO. 100-71, 101 Stat. 471; cf. AR 600-85 para. 5- 14e(5).
B.
Appellees filed actions challenging the legality of the random aspect of the Army testing program.6 The Army argued that compulsory testing was justified by compelling governmental interests in the safety, security, and integrity of its workforce. The District Court, relying on our since vacated decision in Jones v. McKenzie,
II.
A.
In decisions issued during the pendency of this appeal, the Supreme Court rejected Fourth Amendment challenges to two federally mandated drug testing programs. In the first, National Treasury Employees Union v. Von Raab, --- U.S. ----,
In Skinner v. Railway Labor Executives' Association, --- U.S. ----,
Von Raab and Skinner make clear, consistent with our own precedent, see National Fed'n of Fed. Employees v. Weinberger,
Even where a testing regime is motivated by needs other than law enforcement, the question remains whether the governmental interests asserted are so substantial as to justify the suspicionless privacy intrusions at issue. In Von Raab and Skinner the Supreme Court laid out a balancing test that, while not self-executing, focuses our attention on a single question: Does the government's need to conduct the suspicionless searches outweigh the privacy interests of the covered employees in such a fashion that it is "impractical to require a warrant or some level of individualized suspicion?" If so, the Army's testing scheme cannot be deemed unreasonable. See Von Raab,
B.
Initially, appellees ask that we find Von Raab and Skinner of "little or no impact" on the present case, since the Army tests on a random, rather than post-accident or pre-ascension basis. Supplemental Brief for Appellees, American Federation of Government Employees at 2.7 To settle this contention, we need look no further than our recent decision in Harmon v. Thornburgh,
Throughout this litigation appellees have argued that testing is unreasonable because the Army has no interest in off-duty conduct that does not have some effect on on-duty performance. "At best," appellees correctly observe, "a pоsitive result indicates only that at some time in the past, maybe days or weeks before the test, the tested employee ingested a drug in some unknown quantity." Brief for Appellees at 36 (footnote omitted). The District Court, relying on the Ninth Circuit's opinion in Railway Labor Executives' Association v. Burnley,
As a means of uncovering the information in which the Army has a legitimate interest, we agree that urine testing--unaided by blood or breath testing--is a blunt instrument. A single positive urine test result is silent as to when or how much of the drug was taken, the pattern of the employee's drug use, or whether the employee was intoxicated when the test was given. See J.A. 90-91, 102-04. While the question may have been a close one beforе the Supreme Court's recent pronouncements, particularly in view of our original opinion in Jones, see Jones v. McKenzie,
In Skinner, the Ninth Circuit, like the District Court in the present case, concluded that drug testing was constitutionally infirm because of its inability to differentiate drug use that results in on-duty impairment from that which does not. Burnley,
Because Skinner can reasonably be read to depend for its conclusion on the co-administration of blood and urine tests, the Court's analysis in Von Raab--where the Customs Service administered only urine tests--is perhaps the more telling. In sustaining the Customs Service's practice of urine testing those whose new duties would require carrying a firearm, the Court identified the gоvernmental interest as preventing on-the-job impairment--"the risk that employees who may suffer from impaired perception and judgment will be promoted to positions where they may need to employ deadly force."
III.
A.
It is readily appаrent that the Army has a compelling safety interest in ensuring that the approximately 2,800 civilians who fly and service its airplanes and helicopters are not impaired by drugs. Employees in each of the covered positions--air traffic controllers, pilots, aviation mechanics and aircraft attendants--perform tasks that are frought with extraordinary peril: A single drug-related lapse by any covered employee could have irreversible and calamitous consequences.
The Supreme Court adverted to the government's compelling interest in maintaining air safety in Von Raab, quoting with apparent approval from United States v. Edwards,
Without quarrelling with the profound significance of these interests, appellees contend that testing is nevertheless unreasonable because the risk posed by a drug-impaired aviation employee is abated by the Army's extensive system of safeguards and supervision already in place. Brief for Appellees at 6 n. 2. This contention is a derivative of an argument appellees successfully pressed before the District Court: Drug testing is unreasonable because the Army's interests could be adequately achieved through the implementation of less intrusive alternatives such as supervisory observation and neurobehavioral testing. The District Court agreed, concluding that trained supervision and neurobehavioral testing would be both less intrusive and better able to detect those who are impaired at work because of drug use. Carlucci,
While the Supreme Court has indicated that "the supervision to which the [ ] employees are already subject" is a relevant factor in determining the reasonableness vel non of testing, Von Raab,
Initially, it does not appear from the record that neurobehavioral testing--which counsel for appellees described as "a computerized manual dexterity test," Transcript of Proceedings ("Tr.") at 26 (Oct. 24, 1989)--is either less intrusive or less degrading than urinalysis testing. Nor does the record reveal that it would be feasible to subject aviators or their work-product to the kind of day-to-day scrutiny that would appear necessary in order for supervisory observation to be effective. Cf. Von Raab,
B.
The second category of tested civilians occupy "[c]hemical and nuclear surety pоsitions" within the Personnel Reliability Program ("PRP"). AR 600-85, Table 5.1. This category includes nuclear reactor operators, nuclear weapons technicians, chemical ammunition maintenance specialists, quality assurance personnel, material handlers, laboratory workers, and "intrusion detection system maintenance personnel." J.A. at 204. Chemical and nuclear sureties are ostensibly "responsible for the custody, transportation, storage, maintenance, demilitarization, and security of surety materials." J.A. at 204.
We are, for reasons unrelated to the seriousness of the governmental interests invoked, unable to determine the reasonableness of this aspect of the testing program. On the current record it appears that among the employees tested as part of the PRP program are secretaries, engineering technicians, research biologists, and animal caretakers. See J.A. 533-65. It is not intuitive that a secretary would be "responsible for the custody, transportation, storage, maintenance, demilitarization, and security of surety materials." Nor is there any evidence in the record to assuage our doubt. Indeed, the only record material, an affidavit from a subject secretary, is to the effect that although she had been issued "protective equipment," she had not used it for anything but training. Nor does it appear that she has access to chemical or nuclear materials. See J.A. at 535-36.
We are likewise unable to discern the reasonableness of the inclusion of animal caretakers, of whom the record reveals nothing more than access to animals located in secured areas. See J.A. at 560. Although we might be more inclined to deem reasonable thе testing of engineering technicians and research chemists who are exposed to an unspecified "chemical agent," J.A. at 540, 550, or of research biologists, who have access to facilities located in secured areas maintained under the Chemical Surety Program, J.A. at 545, 555, we see little reason to resolve these questions of the category's coverage when the District Court may on remand develop a more complete factual record.
It may very well be, as the record appears to reflect, that all of these individuals are required to report all prescription drug use, to update background information, and to be regularly medically examined. See J.A. at 292. If such is the case, the employees' privacy expectations may be considerably diminished. See supra p. 608 & infra pp. 612-613. It may also be that these employees have as part of their assigned duties access to highly dangerous chemical and nuclear material and sensitive information, such that compelling safety and security interests would be advanced by toxicological testing. Cf. Skinner,
C.
Appellants maintain that compelling safety and security interests justifying testing the approximately 3,700 civilians employed in positions pertaining to law enforcement, most notably civilian police and guards. See J.A. at 203-04. The threat to public safety posed by drug-impaired, gun-toting civilian officers is manifest; the most apparent risk arising from the fact that these personnel are armed, "many with automatic weapons," J.A. at 362, and may have access to other munitions. At the Anniston Army Depot in Georgia, for example, guards have access not only to the .38 caliber revolvers that they carry, but also to shotguns, semi-automatic and automatic rifles, machine guns, grenades, and grenade launchers. J.A. at 275.
Appellees contend that the risk to public safety posed by a drug-impaired Army guard is more theoretical than real, as "the work of an Army guard is far less dangerous and far more mundane than that of their counterpаrts on the outside, who may have to use their firearms at any moment." Supplemental Brief for Appellees at 6. Our reading of Von Raab convinces us that this contention, while substantial, must fall. In Von Raab, the Supreme Court determined that the public interest "to prevent the promotion of drug users to positions that require the incumbent to carry a firearm" warranted pre-ascension testing of such personnel.
Furthermore, a second, and perhaps more grievous threat is posed by a drug-impaired guard in the present case; stationed as he is in an extraordinarily hazardous setting. Several of the installations where the security personnel are stationed test the newest and most technologically advanced weapons systems. For example, the Aberdeen Proving Ground and White Sands Missile Range house nuclear reactors. J.A. at 250. The Anniston Depot stores more than 2 million small arms and munitions ranging from .22 caliber to 1,000 pound bombs, toxic chemical agents, and thousands of rockets. J.A. at 272; Tr. at 9. In such settings, the careless discharge of a weapon or failure to prevent or detect fire, theft, or accidental or willful destruction to property carries the attendant risk of catastrophic consequences. While counsel for appellees argued that we ought not be influenced by "nightmare scenarios," Tr. at 23, as we have already explained, the reasonableness of the testing plan is determined in part by the potential gravity of the feared harm. In the context of this case, risk assessment weighs heavily, if not determinatively, in favor of reasonableness.
Nor can we agree with appellees that a different balance should be struck in the present case than in Von Raab and Skinner because "unlike Customs agents and railroad employees, the Army's civilian guards ... possess undiminished privacy expectations." Supplemental Brief for Appelleеs at 6-7. We are, to say the least, baffled by this contention. Civilian guards and police undergo a variety of privacy diminishing tests and investigations as a condition of employment in a high-security, military context. Not only are security guards subject to a series of pre-employment screenings, including investigations into criminal, medical, employment, and educational histories, once hired, security personnel are subject to quarterly blood tests, annual medical examinations, annual criminal records checks, and periodic security investigations. J.A. at 275. Von Raab explicitly teaches that such intrusions may be expected to reduce one's expectation of privacy, and, hence, may enhance the reasonableness of testing. Von Raab,
In short, "[t]he operational realities of the workplace," O'Connor v. Ortega,
D.
The fourth category of tested positions includes those "[c]ivilian treatment staff of the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Program (ADAPCP) whose duties involve direct contact with clients, civilian employees of the Army's Drug Testing Laboratories (DTL), and all employees involved in the chain of custody process for biochemical testing." J.A. at 203. Table 5.1 breaks down the employees into two classes: "direct service staff"--who, as best we can determine, are primarily drug counsellors--and employees at Army forensic drug testing laboratories. The Army initially justified testing these drug counsellors and laboratory workers as necessary to maintain the testing program's "continued credibility" and to ensure proper identification and treatment among other personnel. J.A. at 203. In this litigation the Army has similarly argued that testing is justified оn the basis of its "strong integrity interest in insuring an absence of all drug use" within the Army. Brief for Appellants at 34. In short, for these civilians "drug use is inconsistent with the job." Id. at 34-35.
The Army's assertion of "credibility" and "integrity" interests to support testing these civilians is akin to the rationale employed by Von Raab to approve the Customs Service's program of testing its front-line interdiction personnel. Although in Harmon we characterized the interest sanctioned by the Supreme Court as the "government's interest in maintaining the integrity of its workforce," Harmon,
In Harmon we concluded that the Justice Department's generic interest in the integrity of its workforce did not justify the testing of any of the three categories there under review: prosecutors in criminal cases, employees with access to grand jury proceedings, and personnel holding top secret national security clearances. Harmon,
The most basic rationale to support testing ADAPCP personnel is that successful performance of their assigned duties may reasonably be viewed as depending on their abstinence from illicit drug use. It is apparent that drug counselors who themselves use illicit drugs, like drug-using interdiction agents, may "because of their own drug use, [be] unsympathetic to their mission." See Von Raab,
As in the case of the "drug prosecutor" alluded to in Harmon, illicit drug use by an employee whose assigned duty is to counsel against the use of drugs is so dissonant with his responsibilities, he should reasonably expect to provide extraordinary assurances of trustworthiness and probity. While "most ... government employees in general" have no reason to expect inquiry into their fitness and probity, id.
The Army also possesses a legitimate interest in ensuring effective treatment and rehabilitation of known drug users. ADAPCP personnel service both military and civilian personnel, J.A. at 365, who, upon successful completiоn of a treatment and rehabilitation program are eligible to return to their former jobs, J.A. at 235-36. The Army's interest in rehabilitation is even more urgent when the client is a critical employee, who, it appears from the regulations, may remain in his critical position after testing positive for proscribed drugs. See AR 600-85 para. 5-14c(4). Thus, ADAPCP personnel represent a vital phase in the Army's campaign to detect and eradicate ongoing drug use. Their own drug use portends the possible frustration of these efforts.
The Army's compelling interest in preventing drug use among the other categories of critical personnel carries a collateral interest in ensuring effective detection. To this extent, serious governmental interests may be furthered by testing those in the laboratory and in the biochemical chain of custody, upon whom the legitimacy of the entire progrаm depends. However, a drug-related lapse by such an employee does not portend either direct or irreparable harm, as would, for example, a lapse by an air traffic controller, pilot, or guard. Absent either a "clear, direct nexus" between the duties of a lab technician or other employee in the chain of custody and the nature of the feared harm, Cf. Harmon,
While it is certainly true that a drug-using lab technician might be susceptible to bribery, so might a drug-using antitrust prosecutor, who we concluded in Harmon, cannot be made subject to testing. We note that the likelihood оf complicity is minimized by the absence of the tested individual's name on the specimen label. See HHS Reg. Sec. 2.2(f)(19)-(20), 53 Fed.Reg. at 11,981 (label to include individual's specimen number and initials). Significantly, these personnel work in a more "traditional office environment[ ]" than the other employees we have considered, such that drug use might more easily be detected.9 See Von Raab,
IV.
The District Court correctly determined that the governmental interests in testing laboratory workers and those involved only in the chain of sample custody do not outweigh the individuals' expectations of privacy, and to that extent only we affirm its decision. We hold that random, mandatory urinalysis testing of those employees who occupy positions in the aviation, police/guard, and direct service staff (ADAPCP) program is reasonable. We acknowledge, of course, that the integrity of bodily freedom is a cherished value in our society, cf. Schmerber v. California,
So ordered.
Notes
The District Court previously dismissed the cause on jurisdictional grounds. National Fed'n of Fed. Employees v. Weinberger,
The Directive defined "critical jobs" as "[t]hose jobs or classes of jobs sufficiently critical to the DoD mission or protection of public safety that screening to detect the presence of drugs is warranted as a job-related requirement." Directive 1010.9 para. C.3
The provision for random testing is altered in the Regulation from the Directive's "[p]eriodically ... on the basis of neutral criteria" to "[p]eriodically ... on a random basis." Compare Directive 1010.9 para. F.2.a. (2) with AR 600-85 para. 5-14e (1)(b)
Table 5.1 lists the following specific job categories subject to testing: air traffic controller, pilot, aircraft engine mechanic, aircraft overhaul specialist, propeller and motor mechanic, aircraft mechanic, aircraft servicer, guard, police, criminal investigator, correctional officer, chemical and nuclear surety positions, direct service staff, and all employees at Army forensic drug testing laboratories. AR 600-85, Table 5-1
With marijuana and cocaine, the tests reveal the presence of the inactive product resulting from the body's breakdown of the drugs' metabolites, benzoylecgonine in the case of cocaine, and Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol-9-carboxylyic acid, with marijuana. The tests detect the actual presence of phencyclidine (PCP), opiates, and amphetamines, each of which is excreted directly into the urine. HHS Reg. Secs. 2.4(e)-(f), 53 Fed.Reg. at 11,983
The three actions consolidated below were filed in three different district courts. In the first, the District Court for the Southern District of Georgia enjoined civilian testing at the Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield in Georgia, American Fed'n of Gov't Employees v. Weinberger,
Appellee American Federation of Government Employees also argues that we should disregard Skinner and Von Raab because they "ignored" prior Supreme Court precedent in favor of "a free-form 'analysis' based upon 'reasonableness.' " Supplemental Brief for Appellees, American Federation of Government Employees at 9. See also id. at 8 ("[n]either RLEA nor NTEU provides a workable Fourth Amendment analysis"). Such a contention, evidencing nothing more than dissatisfaction with the authority we are duty-bound to apply faithfully, avails appellees nothing
Indeed, the District Court appears to have recognized as much: "At this stage of the scientific development of drug testing, urinalysis testing does not advance [the Army's safety] interest because there is no convincing evidence that a positive result can ipso facto be equated to on-duty impairment."
Although different considеrations may apply to the employee at the collection site--he may, for example, like the front-line interdiction agent in Von Raab, be expected to be tempted by bribes--we are not free to separate those within a particular classification who may be made subject to testing from those who may not. See Harmon,
The HHS Regulations appear to require only that lab personnel provide the following information:
resume of training and experience; certification or license, if any; references; job descriptions; records of performance evaluation and advancement; incident reports; and results of tests which establish employee competency for the position he or she holds.
HHS Reg. Sec. 2.3(f), 53 Fed.Reg. at 11,982. It does not appear that laboratory personnel are required to make any extraordinary disclosures or to subject themselves to special investigations or tests.
