Plaintiff-appellant Robert Hull, Jr. brought this action on behalf of a class composed of hourly employees of the Alabama State Dock Department, alleging they had been unconstitutionally denied longevity pay benefits as provided under Alabama law. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant-appellee on the grounds that Alabama’s longevity pay statute, as applied to employees of the Docks Department, is preempted by the Railway Labor Act. We affirm.
I.
The Docks Department is an Alabаma state agency responsible for operation of the port facilities at Mobile and Terminal Railway, a switching railroad. It is a non-budgetary agency and receives no appropriations from the state treasury for compensation of its employees; these expenses are completely funded from its own operating revenues. The Docks Department has been determined to be a “carrier” within the meaning of the Railway Labor Act (“RLA”) 1 and, unlike other state departments, is therefore required to bargаin collectively with its employees. 2 The hourly employees of the Docks Department, both union and nonunion, are represented by various craft unions and a local of the International Longshoremen’s Association, who act as their exclusive bargaining representatives.
Under Alabama’s longevity pay statute, all state employees are entitled each December to a lump sum payment ranging from $300 to $600 based on their length of employment with the state. 3 The statute states that “it shall be the duty of ... all department, board, authority and commission ... heads with regard to all state department, board and commission employees, to determine which state employees are entitled to longevity pay pursuant to this act.” 4 After this statute went into effect in 1987, defendant John B. Duttоn, executive director of the Docks Department, determined that none of his employees were eligible for longevity pay on the grounds that the collective bargaining agreements constituted the exclusive terms and conditions of employment.
After this suit was brought and the class certified, the district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the grounds that Alabama’s longevity pay statute is preempted by the RLA and the collective bargaining agreements negotiated pursuant to that Act. It found that the collective bargaining prоcess prescribed in the RLA provided the exclusive basis for fixing the terms of employment for Docks Department workers and that any unilateral change in the rates of pay or working conditions by the Alabama legislature infringed on this regime imposed by federal law. Because the statute constituted a unilateral increase in rates of pay, a mandatory subject of bargaining under the RLA, the district court held that it was preempted by federal law, as applied to employees of the Docks Department. As a result, the plaintiff class had no entitlement to longevity pay under the statute and therefore could not make out a constitutional deprivation.
II.
A.
This case presents the question of whether Alabama’s longevity pay statute, as applied to hourly employees of the Docks Deрartment, is preempted by the collective bargaining agreements negotiated under the auspices of the Railway Labor Act.
5
It is well-settled that “[a] union agreement made pursuant to the [RLA] has ... the imprimatur of the federal law upon it and, by force of the Supremacy Clause ... could not be made illegal nor vitiated by any provisions of the laws of a
Applying these basic principles, it is quite obvious that the longevity pay statute, if applied to the employees of the Docks Department, infringes upon one of the mandatory subjects of collective bargaining. The statute therefore not only violates an express provision of the RLA, but is also preempted by that Act. As the district court noted, the “statute completely avoids the bargaining process and bypasses the unions representing Docks Department employees.... [thereby] interfering] with the employees’ right to bargain collectively.” This conclusion is justified, despite the irony in this case of a state agency embracing the view that it is preempted by federal law. The RLA reflects Congress’ determination that the collective bargaining process is best promoted if negotiated agreements are shielded from any unilateral changes by a carrier. Thus, as the bitter so often goes with the sweet, this prohibition must be rigorously enforced, whether or not the changes sought by the carrier are beneficial to employees.
As the district court noted, we need look no further than the Act itself to settle this question. The RLA imposes a duty on bоth management and labor “to exert every reasonable effort to make and maintain agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, and working conditions.” 7 The Act also forbids carriers from altering these terms, as embodied in a collective bargaining agreement, in any manner other than that prescribed by the agreement itself or the RLA. 8 Thus, a unilateral change in the terms and conditions of employment by a carrier is a circumvention of the duty to bargain that is embodied within the Act. 9 This prohibition applies in particular to any change, whether it be an increase or a decrease, in the wages paid by carriers to employees. 10 By enforcing a hard and fast rule against any unilateral changes in the terms of an agreement, the integrity of the collective bargaining mechanism, which lies at thе heart of the RLA, is further promoted and enhanced. 11
B.
Hull contends, however, that application of Alabama’s longevity pay statute to hourly employees of the Docks Department is not preempted by the RLA under the rationale of the Supreme Court’s deсisions in
Metropolitan Life Insur. Co. v. Commonwealth of
Massachusetts,
12
and
These cases, however, are easily distinguishable and do not require us to alter our previous conclusion that the Docks Department is preemрted from applying the longevity pay statute to its hourly employees. Although the Supreme Court did not define what it considered to be a “minimum labor standard,” we find that Alabama’s longevity pay statute is not such a beast. The statutes in controversy in both Metropolitan and Fort Halifax were “valid and unexceptiоnal exercise[s] of the [state’s] police power” 18 and applied not only to union and nonunion members, but also to those workers not employed by the state. In short, these statutes were an ordinary part of the grist for the legislative mill that turns daily in our various statehouses. Although these laws may “touch[] and concern[ ] ... the complex interrelationships between employees, employers, and unions,” 19 Congress did not intend that they be preempted by federal labor legislation. 20
In contrast, Alabama’s longevity pay statute applies оnly to its own employees and not to its citizens generally. The statute is an expression of the state’s power as an employer to regulate relations with its own employees, rather than the state’s authority to regulate in the interest of the health, welfare, and mоres of its citizens.
21
Thus, the state,
when acting as an employer,
has a much narrower latitude to enact laws that trench upon the terms of a collective bargaining agreement negotiated under the regime of federal labor laws. The “state civil service relationship,” as the
III.
Alabama’s longevity pay statute, as applied to hourly employees of the Docks Department, is preempted by the RLA because it is a unilаteral change by a carrier in a mandatory subject of bargaining and is not a “minimum labor standard” within the meaning of the Supreme Court’s decisions. The order and judgment of the district court is therefore AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
See
45 U.S.C. § 151 et seq. (1988);
United States
v.
Feaster,
. See 45 U.S.C. § 152 (first); see abo Ala.Code § 33-1-16 (1975).
. Ala.Code § 36-6-11 (Supp.1990).
. Id. § 36-6-11(c).
. At the outset, we note there is some doubt as to whether the Alabama legislature actually intended the longevity pay statute to apply to employees of the Docks Department. Although the statute does not, on its face, exclude class members from its coverage, see id. § 36-6-11(a), the legislature directed that these benefits be funded through the statе treasury. See id. § 36-6-ll(c). Thus, there is some inconsistency in extending the statute to the employees of a nonbudgetary agency of the state, who are paid through the agency’s own operating revenues. In reaching the question of preemption, we, like the district court,' assume without deciding that the employees of the Docks Department are intended beneficiaries of the longevity pay statute.
.
Railway Employees’ Department v. Hanson,
. 45 U.S.C. § 152 (first);
accord International Bhd. of Teamsters v. Southwest Airlines Co.,
. See id. §152 (seventh). Section 156 sets out the prescribed statutory method for altering rates of pay, rules, and working conditions outside the scope of a collective bargaining agreement. Neither of the parties contend nor does the record support any finding that this procedure has been followed in this case.
.
See NLRB v. Katz,
.
See May Department Stores Co. v. NLRB,
.
See California v. Taylor,
.
.
.
See Fort Halifax,
.
See Metropolitan,
.
Id.
at 755,
.
See Fort Halifax,
.
Metropolitan,
.
See id.
at 757,
.
See Trainmen,
.
Cf. White v. Massachusetts Council of Construction Employers, Inc.,
.
Taylor,
