107 Lab.Cas. P 10,065,
107 Lab.Cas. P 10,121
SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY, Appellee,
v.
ARKANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION; Robert E. Johnston,
Chairman; Patricia S. Qualls, Commissioner; and
James W. Daniel, Commissioner; Appellants.
Communications Workers of America, (Intervenor Below), Appellee.
No. 86-2100.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted April 15, 1987.
Decided July 29, 1987.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Sept. 24, 1987.
Art Stuenkel, Little Rock, Ark., for appellant.
T. Michael Payne, St. Louis, Mo., for appellee.
Before LAY, Chief Judge, ARNOLD and WOLLMAN, Circuit Judges.
LAY, Chief Judge.
In 1983, Southwestern Bell Telephone Company (SWB or Company) and the Communications Workers of America (CWA) negotiated and signed a three-year labor contract. The contract contained the usual delineation of wages and benefits for jobs included in the bargaining unit. In July, 1984, SWB filed an application with the Arkansas Public Service Commission (Commission) to increase intrastate telephone rates by some $61 million. At hearings on the request, the Commission staff took the position that the Company's wage expenses should be reduced by approximately $7 million because they wеre unreasonable when compared with expenses for wages and benefits for similar jobs at similar companies in the geographic region.1 The Company maintained that the Commission was prohibited by the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) from making adjustments to wages that were the product of collective bargaining. The Commission rejected the Company's position and adjusted downward by some $5 million its wage and benefit expenses for sixteen job positions, thirteen of which were included in the bargaining unit.2
The Company appealed the Commission's decision to the Arkansas Court of Appeals in July, 1985, raising the question of federal preemption along with the contention that the order was arbitrary and capricious in many other respects. In December, 1985, after oral argument but before the state court had rendered its opinion, SWB filed a petition in federal district court for a declaratory judgment and a permanent injunction. In July, 1986, the district court3 determined that the Commission's actions were preempted by the NLRA. This appeal followed.4 We reverse.
Abstention
As a threshold matter, the Commission maintains that the district court abused its discretion in failing to abstain from deciding the case because the identical issue was already before the state court of appeals. This argument overlooks our discussion and holding in Middle South Energy, Inc. v. Arkansas Pub. Serv. Comm'n,
The Commission's appeal centers on the argument that the NLRA does not prevent a state regulatory body from adjusting downward the еxpenses a public utility may recover for wages and benefits that were the product of collective bargaining. There is no doubt that a tension exists between federal labor laws protecting the collective bargaining process and state laws charging regulatory bodies with the task of assessing the reasonableness of а public utility's expenses, rates, and revenues. A labor organization invariably uses the collective bargaining process to obtain higher wages and better benefits. At the same time, state regulatory bodies seek to control the cost of utilities, a substantial portion of which goes toward paying wages and benefits. We conclude, nonetheless, that the Commission's disallowance of what it deemed to be unreasonably high wage expenses, while perhaps indirectly affecting future bargaining strategy, does not control the terms of any particular collective bargaining agreement and does not interfere in any impermissible way with the exercise of collective bargaining rights protected by the NLRA.
Arkansas law gives the Commission the authority to establish reasonable rates to be charged for intrastate public utilities. Ark.Stat.Ann. Secs. 73-202a, -204 (Repl.1979). To set these rates, the Commission establishes the total reasonable cost of providing utility service based on the value of the investment the Company has mаde to provide the service, plus operating expenses. Operating expenses include labor costs. The Commission determined that certain wage and benefit expenses claimed by the Company were disproportionately high when compared with those at similar companies.6 It accordingly adjusted downward the sаlary expenses component of overall operating costs.
The Commission's order has no relation to the substantive portions of the labor contract between SWB and CWA and thus has no relation to the substantive enforcement of the NLRA, a role that Congress has reserved for the National Labor Relations Board (Board). San Diego Bldg. Trades Council v. Garmon,
The Commission's order also is not an intrusion on the economic self-help measures available to labor and management that Congress meant to be unregulated. Machinists v. Wisconsin Employment Relations Comm'n,
Golden State was entirely justified in using its economiс power to withstand the strike in an attempt to obtain bargaining concessions from the union. * * * [This] resort to economic pressure was a legitimate part of the collective bargaining process. * * * The Act leaves the bargaining process largely to the parties. It does not purport to set any time limits on negotiations or economic struggle. Instead the Act provides a framework for the negotiations; it "is concerned primarily with establishing an equitable process for determining terms and conditions of employment."
These operative facts are clearly distinguishable from the facts in this case. Here, the Commission has the authority under Arkansas law to establish intrastate telephone rates. This is not disputed, nor is the Commission's authority to consider the reasonableness of claimed expenses in the ratemaking process. The problem, according to SWB, is that this authority to set rates and protect the interests of the ratepaying public infringes on the duty under the NLRA of both the Company and CWA to bargain in good faith. When the Commission essentially becomes a third party at the bargaining table, its power of the purse strings invariably affects the parties' negotiations. The Company claims that it would be placed in a "take it or leave it" position with the union in future negotiations if the Commission has the power еffectively to veto a wage agreement by denying the Company the funds to pay for it. The Company further maintains that the Commission's action overlooks the complex nature of labor negotiations, the give and take by both parties on many issues, not just wages. It urges that by isolating wages from other bargained-for components of a labor contract, and by further isolating particular jobs, the Commission has ignored the integrated nature of labor negotiations and has interfered with the economic forces that shape the final agreement.
We cannot agree. Nothing in the Commission's order encroaches upon either party's ability to use economic рressure in future negotiations to gain concessions from the other. The Company remains free to resist the union's demands, and CWA may authorize a strike if its terms are not met. Furthermore, the Commission has not vetoed the wage agreement. As we have already pointed out, the Company stipulated that notwithstanding the Commission's order, it is obligated tо pay the bargained-for wages. Finally, nothing in the NLRA guarantees that wages agreed upon in collective bargaining will be recovered from consumers, whether the business is regulated or not. This, therefore, is not a case where either Machinists or Garmon preemption is appropriate.
The First Circuit addressed a similar situation in Massachusetts Nursing Ass'n v. Dukakis,
The court held that the statute was not preempted by federal labor laws because it affected the labor-management relationship only indirectly through its regulation of the hospitals' annual gross income. Id. at 43; see also Amalgamated Transit Union v. Byrne,
First of all, in any industry the price of whose product or service--such as electric power, telephone, natural gas, or even rent controlled real estate--is regulated, a state would find its regulatory system vulnerable to preemptive attack on the ground that the overall control of price was too inhibiting an influence on collective bargaining. Logic, however, would carry beyond simple price control. Any state or municipal program that substantially increased the costs of operation of a business in a competitive market would be similarly vulnerablе to the preemption argument. Clean air and water laws, selective cutting requirements in forest operations, industrial safety standards, tax increases--all pro tanto hobble collective bargaining in that they constitute part of the universe in which collective bargaining takes place, just as do general prosperity or dеpression. But they do not add to or detract from the rights, practices, and procedures that together constitute our collective bargaining system.
Conclusion
The Arkansas Commission is charged with the responsibility of setting rates that state telephone users will pay and determining a fair rate of return that SWB may earn. As part of this process, the Commission assesses the Company's expenses to determine whether they are reasonable. If the Commission finds that they are not reasonable, an issue controlled by state law standards of arbitrariness and capriciousness, then the Commission will not pass them on to consumers in the form of rate increases. We conclude that the Commission's actiоn disallowing recovery of certain nonmanagement wage and benefit expenses does not rise to the level of an impermissible intrusion into or control over the relationship between the Company and CWA. We finally observe, as did the Ninth and First Circuits, that in any regulated industry, myriad governmental decisions, from ratesetting to the imposition of sаfety standards, undoubtedly will affect labor relations. Any indirect effect of the ratesetting action taken in this case, however, falls short of the kind of state interference with the labor-management relationship that Congress intended to proscribe. The district court's order accordingly is reversed.
Notes
The Commission refused to allow SWB to recover for wage and benefit expenses that exceeded by ten percent the average wage and benefit expenses for comparable jobs at other companies
Federal Communications Commission regulations require allocation of the Company's expenses between interstate and intrastatе operations. In its first order, the Commission failed to allocate any of the wage and benefit costs to interstate operations, thus overstating the amount of the downward adjustment. At a rehearing, the Commission adjusted the wage and benefit allowance to reflect this allocation. The Commission ultimately disallowed $2,596,986 in nonmanagement wages and $256,542 in nonmanagement benefits and payroll taxes. It granted SWB an overall rate increase of $22,957,000
The Honorable George Howard, Jr., United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas
Approximately two months after the district court's order, the Arkansas Court of Appeals held that the NLRA did not preempt the Commission's power to deny the wage expenses and affirmed the Commission's order in all respects. Southwestern Bell Tele. Co. v. Arkansas Pub. Serv. Comm'n,
The numerous cases supporting this principle are set out in Kentucky W. Va. Gas Co. v. Pennsylvania Pub. Util. Comm'n,
In its appeal in state court, the Company claimed that the Commission's findings and order were arbitrary and capricious. The court disagreed and affirmed the Commission's order in all rеspects
A typical example of Garmon preemption can be found in Wisconsin Dept. of Indus. v. Gould,
Because Wisconsin's debarment law functiоns unambiguously as a supplemental sanction for violations of the NLRA, it conflicts with the Board's comprehensive regulation of industrial relations. * * * The manifest purpose and inevitable effect of the debarment rule is to enforce the requirements of the NLRA. That goal may be laudable, but it assumes for the State of Wisconsin a role Congrеss reserved exclusively for the Board.
S.Ct. at 1062
The dissenters in Amalgamated Transit Union v. Byrne distinguished the situation in the instant case from what they considered an impermissible intrusion into the collective bargaining process under the facts of that case:
[T]here exists a critical difference between a state communicating to all affected parties the extent of finances it intends to grant for carriers' operations and a state communicating that it will not continue its subsidization if the carriers agree with the unions to retain uncapped cost of living clauses in their employment contracts. The former communication presumably does not constitute interference with negotiations over wages and working conditions, as it is not a state attempt "to influence the substantive terms of collective bargaining agreements."
