6 Indiv.Empl.Rts.Cas. 510,
TRANSPORT WORKERS' UNION OF PHILADELPHIA, LOCAL 234,
Appellant in No. 88-1206,
v.
SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY,
Appellant in No. 88-1160.
TRANSPORT WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA, LOCAL 2013
v.
SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY
and
Louis F. Gould, Jr., Esquire, Individually and in his
official capacity as Chairman of the Board of SEPTA; Robert
J. Thompson, Individually and in his official capacity as
Vice Chairman of the Board of SEPTA; Brian W. Clymer;
Judith E. Harris, Esquire; Mary C. Harris; Thomas M.
Hayward, C.P.A.; Frank W. Jenkins, Esquire; Richard E.
Kutz, Esquire; David W. Marston, Esquire; James C. McHugh
and Franklin C. Wood, Individually and in their official
capacities as Members of the Board of SEPTA, Appellants.
BROTHERHOOD OF LOCOMOTIVE ENGINEERS, DIVISION 71 and
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Thomas C.
Brennan, Appellants in No. 88-1207,
v.
SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY
and
Louis F. Gould, Jr., Esquire, Individually and in his
official capacity as Chairman of the Board of SEPTA; Robert
J. Thompson, Individually and in his official capacity as
Vice Chairman of the Board of SEPTA; Brian W. Clymer;
Judith E. Harris, Esquire; Mary C. Harris; Thomas M.
Hayward, C.P.A.; Frank W. Jenkins, Esquire; Richard E.
Kutz, Esquire; David W. Marston, Esquire; James C. McHugh
and Franklin C. Wood, Individually and in their official
capacity as Members of the Board of SEPTA, Appellants in No.
88-1162.
UNITED TRANSPORTATION UNION, Brotherhood of Railway, Airline
and Steamship Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and Station
Employees, Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees,
Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen, Appellants in No. 88-1208,
v.
SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY,
Appellant in No. 88-1163.
Nos. 88-1160, 88-1206, 88-1161, 88-1162, 88-1207, 88-1163
and 88-1208.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued Aug. 30, 1988.
Decided Dec. 22, 1988.
On Remand From The Supreme Court of the United States June 26, 1989.
Opinion Sept. 1, 1989.
John F. Smith, III, Richard S. Meyer, Hope A. Comisky, James J. Rodgers, Barbra Shotel, Dilworth, Paxson, Kalish & Kauffman, Philadelphia, Pa., for Southeastern Pennsylvania Transp. Authority.
Michael Brodie, Michael R. Kopac, III, Sacks, Basch, Brodie & Sacks, Philadelphia, Pa., for Transport Workers' Union of Philadelphia, Local 234.
Harold A. Ross, Joseph E. Prekop, Ross & Kraushaar Co., L.P.A., Cleveland, Ohio, Cornelius C. O'Brien, Jr., Cornelius C. O'Brien, III, Cornelius C. O'Brien, Jr., P.C., Philadelphia, Pa., for Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Div. 71, Thomas C. Brennan, Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, United Transp. Union, Brotherhood of Ry., Airline and S.S. Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and Station Employees, Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees, Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen.
Before SLOVITER, GREENBERG and COWEN, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
SLOVITER, Circuit Judge.
I.
We consider this case on remand from the Supreme Court in light of two cases it decided last term in the rapidly developing area of constitutional and statutory law regarding employee drug testing. In our opinion in Transport Workers' Union of Philadelphia v. Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA),
In a separate part of our opinion, we concluded that SEPTA's institution of a random drug and alcohol testing program for employees covered by the Railway Labor Act (RLA), 45 U.S.C. Sec. 151 et. seq. (1982), violated the employer's duties under sections 5 and 6 the RLA, 45 U.S.C. Secs. 155 & 156, to submit to the extensive notice, mediation and conciliation procedures required for resolution of "major" disputes.
On June 26, 1989, the Court granted the UTU's petition for certiorari, vacated our judgment, and remanded for reconsideration in light of Skinner v. Railway Labor Executives' Association, --- U.S. ----,
We have solicited the views of the parties and we will now consider in turn the effect of the Court's opinions in Skinner and Consolidated Rail on our prior judgment.1
II.
In Skinner, the Court considered the permissibility under the Fourth Amendment of regulations promulgated by the Federal Railroad Administration mandating blood and urine tests for alcohol and drugs of employees involved in major train accidents and authorizing breath and urine tests of employees found to have violated safety rules.
The Court acknowledged that it "usually required 'some quantum of individualized suspicion' before concluding that a search is reasonable," but held that individualized suspicion need not be present in certain limited circumstances where sufficiently weighty interests of the government outweighed employees' privacy interests. Id.
In a companion case decided the same day, the Court upheld on similar grounds the "automatic" testing of applicants for transfer or promotion to certain customs positions. National Treasury Employees Union v. Von Raab, --- U.S. ----,
In the case before us, SEPTA presented extensive evidence of a severe drug abuse problem among its operating employees, which had been linked to accidents involving injuries to persons and which SEPTA's prior suspicion-based program had proved insufficient to curtail. See
The Union argues in its letter to this court that Skinner is distinguishable because the random testing involved here is not based on any suspicion of drug impairment and therefore unlike the situation posed by Skinner where "one or more members of a railroad operating crew involved in an accident have a reasonable chance of being impaired or a user." However, in Skinner, the Court made it "clear ... that a showing of individualized suspicion is not a constitutional floor, below which a search must be presumed unreasonable."
III.
We turn now to the Railway Labor Act issue presented by the remand pursuant to SEPTA's petition for certiorari. In Consolidated Rail, --- U.S. ----,
We hold that if an employer asserts a claim that the parties' agreement gives the employer the discretion to make a particular change in working conditions without prior negotiation, and if that claim is arguably justified by the terms of the parties' agreement (i.e., the claim is neither obviously insubstantial or frivolous, nor made in bad faith), the employer may make the change and the courts must defer to the arbitral jurisdiction of the Board.
Id. at 2484.
The Court found that in light of Conrail's previous urinalysis testing of employees for blood sugar and albumin and its introduction of new medical testing technologies over the years without consultation with the unions, Conrail's "interpretation of the range of its discretion as extending to drug testing is supported by the general breadth of its freedom of action in the past, and its practice of including drug testing within routine medical examinations in some circumstances." Id. at 2487-88. The Court also concluded, "[f]or the limited purpose of determining whether Conrail's claim of contractual right to change its medical testing procedures must be rejected as obviously insubstantial, that line cannot reasonably be drawn between testing for cause and testing without cause." Id. at 2488.
The Court noted that the difference between Conrail's past practice of testing for cause and its new proposal to test all employees might be significant to the merits of the dispute, however, and emphasized in conclusion that did not seek to "minimize any force in the Union's arguments" in arbitration, but was holding merely that "Conrail has met the light burden" of showing that its interpretation of its contractual rights was "arguably justified." Id. at 2489.
In this case, SEPTA previously implemented drug testing in post-accident, suspicion-based, and transfer and promotion contexts without serving section 6 notice on the unions. See
IV.
For the reasons stated above, we will affirm that portion of the district court's judgment upholding the constitutionality of SEPTA's random testing program; we will vacate the district court's injunction against implementation of such testing with respect to employees covered by the RLA and will remand this case to the district court with instructions to dismiss the unions' claims under the RLA for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Notes
SEPTA did not pursue our invalidation of its return-to-work testing before the Supreme Court, nor does it raise the issue before us now. Therefore, only the random testing program is now before us
