Lead Opinion
In griеvance proceedings initiated by employees of the Arkansas State Highway Department, the State Highway Commission will not consider a grievance unless the employee submits his written complaint directly to the designated employer representative. The District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas found that this procedure denied the union represеnting the employees the ability to submit effective grievances on their behalf and therefore violated the First Amendmеnt.
The First Amendment protects the right of an individual to speak freely, to advocate ideas, to associate with others, and to petition his government for redress of grievances. And it protects the right of associations to engage in advocacy on behalf of their members. NAACP v. Button,
But the First Amendment is not a substitute for the national labor relations laws. As the Court of Appeals for thе Seventh Circuit recognized in Hanover Township Federation of Teachers v. Hanover Community School Corp.,
In the case before us, there is no claim that the Highway Commission has prohibited its employees from joining together in a union, or from pеrsuading others to do so, or from advocating any particular ideas. There is, in short, no claim of retaliation or discrimination proscribed by the First Amendment. Rather, the complaint of the union and its members is simply that the Commission refuses to cоnsider or act upon grievances when filed by the union rather than by the employee directly.
Were public employers such as the Commission subject to the same labor laws applicable to private employers, this refusal might well constitute an unfair labor practice. We may assume that it would and, further, that it tends to impair or undermine — if only slightly
But this type of “impairment” is not one that the Constitution prohibits. Far from taking steps to prohibit or discourage union membership or association, all that the Commission has done in its challenged conduct is simply to ignore the union. That it is free to do.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is therefore reversed.
It is so ordered.
Notes
This suit was brought by the Arkansas State Highway Employees, Local 1315, and eight of its individual members, after the Commission refused to consider grievances submitted by the union on behalf of twо of its members. The facts in these two cases are not in dispute:
“[E]ach employee sent a letter to Locаl 1315, explaining the nature of their grievance and requesting the union to process the grievances on their*464 behalf. In еach case the union forwarded the employee’s letter to the designated employer’s representative and included its own letter stating that it represented the employees and desired to set up a meeting. The employer’s representative did not respond to the union’s letter. Thereafter each employee filed a written complaint directly with the employer representative. Local 1315 represented each employеe at subsequent meetings with the employer representative.”585 F. 2d, at 877 .
The individual Commissioners of the Arkansas State Highway Commission аnd the Director of the State Highway Department were named as defendants, and are the petitioners in this Court.
See Hanover Township Federation of Teachers v. Hanover Community School Corp.,
The union does represent its members at all meetings with employer representatives subsequent to the filing of a written grievance. See n. 1, supra. The “impairment” is thus limited to the requirement that written complaints, to be considered, must initially be submitted directly to the employer representative by the employee. There appears to be no bar, however, on the employee’s securing any form of advice from his union, or
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Now this Court is deciding vital constitutional questions without even a plenary hearing. I dissent.
This Court has long held that the First Amendment protects the right of unions to secure legal representation for their members. Mine Workers v. Illinois State Bar Assn.,
I decline to join a summary reversal that so cavalierly disposes of substantial First Amendment issues.
Moreover, summary reversal seems to me an especially inappropriate means of resolving conflicts between the United States Courts of Appeals. Compare Arkansas State Highway Employees Local 1315 v. Smith, 585 F. 2d 876 (CA8 1978), with Hanover Township Federation of Teachers v. Hanover Community School Corp.,
