Unionsuit
Unionsuit
Unionsuit
:
:
Plaintiff,
:
v.
Defendant.
:
:
...o0o...
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF
PLAINTIFFS MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Table of Contents
I.
II.
III.
Facts ...............................................................................................................11
A. Constitution and Bylaws ................................................................................11
1. Fifteen-Day Notice.....................................................................................11
2. Good Standing Provisions..........................................................................11
B. The December 2, 2015 General Election .......................................................13
IV.
Argument .......................................................................................................15
A. The Local Failed to Send the Election Notice ..............................................15
Fifteen Days Before the Election
1. The Local Violated the LMRDA .................................................15
2. The Local Also Violated its Own Constitution and Bylaws ..................16
B. Local 689 Unreasonably Applied Its Alternative Officer Candidacy ............18
Requirements and Failed to Announce Them to the Membership
1. Blanket Waiver Of Good-Standing Rules for ..............................19
Arrearages Of Less Than Two Months
2. The Locals Secret Standards for Arrearages ..............................20
Greater Than Two Months
3. The Locals Non-Uniform Application of its ..............................24
Standards for Arrearages Greater Than Two Months
a. The October 9 Letter Constituted ..............................24
an Alternate Payment Plan
b. Payment Plans Were Not Uniformly .........................26
Applied to Nominees
C. The Violations Affected The Outcome of the Election .................................31
V.
Conclusion .....................................................................................................35
The plaintiff, the Secretary of Labor, has moved for summary judgment. For the reasons
that follow, the motion should be granted.
I.
Laws of the Amalgamated Transit Union (CGL). Each required that the Local mail its election
notice to members at least 15 days prior to the election. The Local, however, failed to comply,
mailing its Election Guides containing the notice of election to the membership on November 18,
2015, only fourteen days before the election.
Second, the ATU and the Local published rules and standards in the CGL and Bylaws
governing elections, including qualifications to run for office. The record establishes that instead
of following these rules and standards, the Local unreasonably applied a conflicting set of
unpublished, alternative standards which were not announced to the Locals membership. These
standards loosened the criteria by which members could qualify to run for office. A member of
the Local who relied on the CGL and Bylaws had no way of knowing about the existence of
these alternate standards. These alternate standards were spread, at best, by word of mouth.
Members who happened to learn of them could try to take advantage of them. Members
unaware of them could not.
Finally, looking to the manner by which the Local implemented even these alternative
procedures, the uncontradicted evidence demonstrates that the Local did not apply them
uniformly. Similarly situated members were treated differently. Members who, even under
these alternate procedures, were not qualified to run for office were allowed to run. Other
similarly situated members were not permitted to run for office, creating a situation where even
these alternate rules were enforced in a non-uniform manner.
II.
The LMRDA
Blowers, 389 U.S. at 469-471. Recognizing that free and fair elections were essential to union
self-government, Congress enacted the safeguards of Title I and Title IV of the LMRDA to
provide a fair election and guarantee membership participation. American Federation of
Musicians v. Wittstein, 379 U.S. 171, 182 (1964); Wirtz v. American Guild of Variety Artists,
267 F. Supp. 527, 544 (S.D.N.Y. 1967) (Congress intended unions to conduct democratic and
scrupulously fair elections).
The Supreme Court described the policies underpinning the LMRDA: the basic objective
of Title IV of the LMRDA is to guarantee free and democratic union elections modeled on
political elections in this country where the assumption is that voters will exercise common
sense and judgment in casting their ballots. Local 3489, United Steelworkers v. Usery, 429
U.S. 305, 309 (1977)(citing and quoting Hotel Employees, Local 6, 391 U.S. 492, 504 (1968)).
Title IV is not designed merely to protect the right of a union member to run for a particular
office in a particular election. Congress emphatically asserted a vital public interest in assuring
free and democratic union elections that transcends the narrower interest of the complaining
union member. Id. (citing and quoting Hotel Employees, Local 6, 391 U.S. at 475). Congress
sought to protect the rights of rank-and-file members to participate fully in the operation of their
union through processes of democratic self-government, and, through the election process, to
keep the union leadership responsive to the membership. Id.; Marshall v. Local Lodge 1784,
509 F. Supp. at 94.
Certain LMRDA provisions concerning pre-election union conduct, including section
401(c), are enforceable in suits brought by individual union members. Provisions concerning
the conduct of the election itself, however, may be enforced only according to post-election
procedures specified in section 402. 29 U.S.C. 482; Dunlop v. Bachowski, 421 U.S. 560, 566
(1975); Local Union No. 639, 543 F.2d at 373-374. Those post-election procedures are as
follows: a union member must first invoke his internal union remedies. If he is unable to obtain
a final resolution within three months of his invocation of remedies, he may file a complaint with
the Secretary. Osuchukwu v. Rouse, Civil No. CCB-10-1894, 2010 WL 4285008, at *3 (D. Md.
2010)(Blake, J.). If upon investigation the Secretary finds probable cause to believe a violation
of Title IV has occurred and has not been remedied, the statute requires the Secretary to bring
suit in district court, within sixty days of the complaint, to set aside the election. If the court
determines upon a preponderance of the evidence that the violation may have affected the
outcome of an election, it is directed to declare the election, if any, to be void and direct the
conduct of a new election under supervision of the Secretary and, so far as lawful and
practicable, in conformity with the union's constitution and bylaws. After the supervised
election is held, [t]he Secretary shall promptly certify to the court the names of the persons
elected, and the court shall thereupon enter a decree declaring such persons to be the officers of
the labor organization. Local Union No. 639, 543 F.2d at 373-374; Osuchukwu v. Rouse, 2010
WL 4285008, at *3.
Section 401(e) provides that every member in good standing shall be eligible to be a
candidate and to hold office (subject to section 504 and to reasonable qualifications uniformly
imposed). The Secretarys interpretative regulation addresses reasonable candidacy
qualifications that are applied in an unreasonable manner:
Qualifications for office which may seem reasonable on their face may not be
proper if they are applied in an unreasonable manner or if they are not applied in a
uniform way. An essential element of reasonableness is adequate advance notice
to the membership of the precise terms of the requirement. A qualification which
is not part of the constitution and bylaws or other duly enacted rules of the
organization may not be the basis for denial of the right to run for office, unless
required by Federal or State law. Qualifications must be specific and objective.
They must contain specific standards of eligibility by which any member can
7
unreasonable burden on those using the alternative petition procedure); Donovan v. Local Union
No. 120, 683 F.2d 1095, 1104 (7th Cir.1982) (competency requirement was subjective and
incapable of uniform application); Wirtz v. National Maritime Union of America, 399 F.2d 544,
548 (2d Cir.1968) (only non-incumbents had to personally obtain forms to allow them to run).
Where, as in Masters, Mates and Pilots, the rules are uniformly applied, and adequate advance
notice of the rules is given to the membership, the action will be allowed.
B. Notice Requirements
As regards notice to the membership of elections, section 40l (e) of the Act requires that
[n]ot less than fifteen days prior to the election notice thereof shall be mailed to each member
at his last known home address. 29 U.S.C. 481(e). The requi r em ent to mail election
notices is a clear and unambiguous requirement under the statute, one not excused by the
otherwise apparent reasonableness of the unions conduct. Chao v. Local 54, Hotel Employees
& Rest. Employees Intl Union, 166 F. Supp. 2d 109, 114 (D.N.J. 2001) ([t]he language of
Section 401 supports a strict application of its notice provisions.); Brock v. Am. Postal Workers
Union South Jersey Area Local 526, 1986 WL 15272, at *3-4, (D.N.J. 1986) (granting summary
judgment because union failed to mail election notices and ballots to two members); Dole v.
Local 492, Bakery, Confectionery, and Tobacco Workers Intl Union, 1989 WL 126182, at *4
(E.D.Pa.1989); Marshall v. Office and Professional Employees Union Local 2, 505 F. Supp.
121, 123 (D.D.C.1981).
The legislative history of the Act confirms Congress intent that fifteen days serve as a
statutory threshold for notifying members of an election:
I am trying to make certain that every union member will receive a written notice
at least 15 days before an election is to be heldSo I think it is very little to
require that the a [sic] union mail a postal card notice 15 days before an election
of officers is to be held, to remind the membership and to notify the membership
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10
III.
Facts
Local 689 is the collective bargaining representative for about 13,535 active and retired
bus operators, train operators, station managers, maintenance employees, and clerical employees
of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority and three paratransit contractors.
Exhibit 26, answer to interrogatory 19 (Local 03393-03396). Approximately 570 members
reside outside the areas of Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Northern Virginia. Exhibit 26
answer to interrogatory 20 (Local 03399-03426). It is a labor organization subject to the union
officer election provisions contained in Title IV of the LMRDA, including section 401(e), 29
U.S.C. 481(e), which requires unions to mail proper election notices to all members at their last
known home address at least fifteen days prior to election. Exhibit 25, admissions 1 & 2.
A. Constitution and Bylaws
1. Fifteen-Day Notice
Consistent with the Departments regulations at 29 C.F.R. 452.99, the CGL requires that:
[a]t least 15 days notice of any election must be mailed to each [Local Union] member at the
members last known home address. This notice shall include a specification of the date, time
and place of the election and of the offices to be filled. Exhibit 1, 14.7, at 61. The Locals
Bylaws mirror section 401(e), providing, Not less than fifteen (15) days prior to any election,
notice thereof shall be mailed to each member at their last known address. Exhibit 2, 11(b)
(Local-03667).
2. Good-Standing Provisions
The CGL provides that in order to run for office, a member must be in continuous good
standing for the two years preceding the election.
Members to be eligible to run for office in an [Local Union] must have complied with the
provisions of this Constitution and the bylaws of the [Local Union]. A member to be
11
eligible to [sic] office must have been a member in continuous good standing of his or her
[Local Union] the two (2) years next preceding the day of the nomination meeting where
the [Local Union] has been in existence for that period or longer.
Exhibit 1, 14.2, at 55-56. The Bylaws of Local 689 are to the same effect:
Every member in good standing shall be eligible to be a candidate and to hold any office
or position described in Section 7 hereof, provided that they have been a member in
continuous good standing in Local Union 689 for a period of at least two (2) years next
preceding the day of the nomination meeting.
Exhibit 2, 8(a) (Local-03657).
According to the CGL, a member who fails to pay dues is no longer in good standing.
The CGL provides that all dues, fines and assessments are due and payable on the first (1st)
day of each month. Exhibit 1, 21.9, at 94. Dues, fines and assessments must be paid by the
fifteenth (15th) day of the month in order to continue the member in good standing. Id. Thus,
[m]embers in arrears for dues, fines and assessments after the fifteenth (15th) day of the month
are not in good standing . Id.
The CGL provides that where a members arrearage of dues, fines and assessments
(hereinafter dues) continues for two months, the member has suspended himself from the
Local. Where the member is in arrears for dues, fines and assessments, and such arrearage has
reached the last day of the second (2nd) month, the member shall be reported to the [Local Union]
as having suspended him or herself from membership by the non-payment of dues, fines and
assessments. Exhibit 1, 21.10, at 96. Members who have suspended themselves for nonpayment of dues and who desire reinstatement into the Union within 12 months after they
become in arrears may do so by paying the arrearage and paying a $1 per month fee for each
month of arrearage. Id. at 97. Members whose arrearages exceed 12 months cannot reinstate
themselves; they must be re-enrolled as a new member. Id. at 98.
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13
We also wish to confirm your eligibility to vote in the upcoming 2015 General Election.
Exhibit 7. The other version of the letter was similar:
This is a follow up correspondence to the October 9, 2015 letter regarding your
dues. We appreciate all who have assisted in this process. We especially want to thank
you and express our appreciation for your willingness to help us resolve issues with your
dues. You have paid in full and are in good standing with the Local.
We also wish to confirm your eligibility to vote in the upcoming 2015 General Election.
Exhibit 8.
Every member who received an October 9 letter received a version of the November
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IV.
Argument
A. The Local Failed to Send the Election Notice Fifteen Days Before the Election
The Local violated the bright-line requirement found in both the LMRDA and in its own
CGL and Bylaws to send an election notice to the membership 15 days before the election. The
Act, the CGL, and the Bylaws all require the Local to give adequate notice of the election -including the time, date, place and offices under consideration -- to members prior to an
election. The uncontradicted evidence is that the Local failed to give notice as required.
1. The Local violated the L M R D A
Section 401(e) of the Act expressly requires unions to mail election notices to each
member at least fifteen days preceding the election. The Departments interpretative
regulations explain that to calculate the fifteen-day period, the day on which the notices are
mailed is not counted whereas the day of the election is counted. 29 C.F.R. 452.99. Thus,
the election notices should have been mailed by November 17, 2015, to be timely for the
December 2, 2015 election. The uncontradicted evidence establishes, however, that the election
notice was mailed on November 18, 2015, only fourteen days before the election was held.
In its Answer to the Complaint before this Court, the Local claimed that the Secretary
did not provide a credible explanation as to how the Defendant caused a delay in mailing
election notices and cannot prove that Defendant is liable even if a delay can be demonstrated.
ECF 3 at 36. However, the Local does not dispute that Doyle Printing and Accumail acted as
its agents in fulfilling its obligation under the LMRDA to mail election notices. It is axiomatic
that the Local is responsible for the conduct of its agents. Marshall v. Local No. 2, Int'l Union
of Police & Prot. Employees-Indep. Watchman's Assn, No. 78 Civ. 3879-CSH, 1979 WL
1832, at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 5, 1979) (while a union can appoint an agent to handle these
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mailings, and perhaps even indicate all requests therefor be directed to that agent, the statutory
responsibilities remain with the union.); Wirtz v. American Guild of Variety Artists, 267 F.
Supp. 527, 541 (S.D.N.Y. 1967) (union cannot escape responsibility for a failure to comply
with its duties under the LMRDA when it retains another party to conduct the election). Both
29 C.F.R. 452.99 and the CGL require election notices to specify the polling date, time and
place, as well as the officer positions to be run. The Local 689 Election Guide was the only
notice mailed to the membership that included all of these pieces of information about the
election. Exhibit 4 at 180. Indeed, the Local admitted that it used a third party to mail the
Local 689 Election Guide to members and that it was mailed out only fourteen days before
the election. Exhibit 25 admissions 3 and 5.
The Act does not require any showing of bad faith or motive to impute liability to a labor
organization. As this court has recognized, [t]he violation of this statute does not hinge upon
motive of the violator. Solis v. Local 9477, United Steelworkers, 798 F. Supp. 2d 701, 704-705
(D. Md. 2011) (Bredar, J.) (granting summary judgment where union failed to meet its burden in
rebutting Secretarys prima facie case on effect on outcome). Given the uncontested facts
regarding mailing of the election notice, summary judgment in favor of the Secretary is
warranted on this basis alone.
2. The Local Also Violated its Own Constitution and Bylaws
Section 401(e) of the Act requires that a union conduct its elections in accordance with
the constitution and bylaws of such organization. Moreover, the Secretarys regulations
reiterate the requirement that unions conduct elections according to their constitution and
bylaws. See 29 C.F.R. 452.2, 452.109. Courts have also recognized that unions must follow
their constitution and bylaws when conducting their elections under a variety of circumstances.
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Hodgson v. Electrical Workers, Local 485, 503 F.2d 219, 222 (2d Cir. 1974) (overturning
election where individuals ineligible for candidacy under union constitution were permitted to
run for union office); Marshall v. Postal Workers, 486 F. Supp. 79, 82 (D.D.C. 1980); Brennan
v. Local 300, Laborers, 85 L.R.R.M 2648, 2651 (C.D. Cal. 1974) (finding violation where
union failed to follow candidate qualification procedure and voting procedure as provided in its
constitution). If a local labor organization fails to conduct its elections in accordance with the
constitution and bylaws of the international labor organization to which it is subordinate, the
court should overturn the election and order a new supervised election to be held in accordance
with the international constitution. Dole v. Local 212, Int'l Bhd. of Elec. Workers, No. C-1-871042, 1990 WL 102795, at *10-11 (S.D. Ohio Mar. 30, 1990) ( supervised election ordered
where local union failed to follow international bylaw on voter eligibility); Hodgson v. Internl
Union of Elec., Radio and Mach. Workers, Local 485, 503 F.2d 219, 223 (2d Cir. 1974); Vestal
v. Hoffa, 451 F.2d 706 (6th Cir.1971), cert. denied, 406 U.S. 934 (1972).
The Locals tardiness in mailing the election notice violated section 401(e) of the Act
because it contravened the CGLs and Bylaws requirements for mailing local election notices.
Section 11(b) of the Bylaws provides, Not less than fifteen (15) days prior to any election,
notice thereof shall be mailed to each member at their last known address. Exhibit 2 at 24.
Section 14.7 of the CGL agrees that: [a]t least 15 days notice of any election must be mailed
to each [Local Union] member at the members last known home address. This notice shall
include a specification of the date, time and place of the election and of the offices to be filled.
Exhibit 1 at 61.
The Local cannot reasonably argue that either the CGL or the Bylaws can be interpreted
to calculate fifteen days differently than DOLs regulations. 29 C.F.R. 452.99. The day of
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mailing cannot be counted in the fifteen-day notice period because standard postal mail does
not deliver on the same day. There is no other feasible interpretation of a fifteen-day notice
period that would make the Locals November 18, 2015 mailing timely for the election on
December 2. Therefore, just as the court should enforce the fifteen-day minimum set forth in
the statute and regulations, it should overturn the election based on the Unions failure to
conduct the election in accordance with the constitution and bylaws.
B. Local 689 Unreasonably Applied its Alternative Officer
Candidacy Requirements and Failed to Announce Them to the Membership
Local 689 failed to provide members a reasonable opportunity to run for office because it
did not uniformly apply its good standing requirements for candidacy. The CGL and the Bylaws
articulated a set of standards about who could run for office. To run for office, members must
have been in continuous good standing for the past two years. Exhibit 1, 14.2, at 55-56; exhibit
2, 8(a); see supra at 11-12. To be in good standing, a member had to be current in his dues.
Dues were owed on the first of the month and a member who failed to pay dues by the fifteenth
of the month was not in good standing. Exhibit 1, 21.9, at 94. If the dues arrearage continued
for two months, the member was considered suspended and could reinstate himself only upon
payment of the arrearage plus a reinstatement fee. Exhibit 1, 21.10, at 96-97. If the dues
arrearage continued for over one year, the member could no longer reinstate himself, but had to
be re-enrolled as a new member. Exhibit 1, 21.10, at 98.
Members reading the CGL and Bylaws could reasonably understand these requirements
for office. The CGL and Bylaws on their face articulated a clear and understandable regime.
Such was the regime with which the President of the Local, Jackie Jeter, expected members to be
familiar:
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19
would know he was not in good standing and would have no reason to participate in the
nomination process, either as a nominee or candidate.
2. The Locals Secret Standards for Arrearages Greater
Than Two Months
The waiver of specific candidacy requirements without notice to all members is
equivalent to the imposition of a different set of qualifications that were not part of the
constitution and bylaws and may not be the basis for denial of the right to run for office. See
29 C.F.R. 452.53. The CGL provided that all dues, fines and assessments of the members of
this [International Union] are due and payable on the first (1st) day of each month for that month
. Exhibit 1, 21.9, at 94. According to the CGL, a member who failed to pay dues for over
two months has suspended himself. To come back into good standing, the CGL required that
member to pay the arrearage plus a reinstatement fee. No exception to this requirement appears
in either the CGL, the Bylaws, or any other document governing elections for this Local.
Nothing in the CGL or Bylaws state that members may continue good standing by paying less
than all dues, fines and assessments they owe to the Local. However, the Local permitted a few
members who were actually able to contact the Local successfully after receiving the October 9
letter to continue in good standing without having to pay their arrearages in full. While the
October 9 letter said nothing about options to paying full arrearages prior to nominations, to
those members who serendipitously succeeded in speaking with him, FST Bilger offered the
opportunity to waive the CGLs pay-in-full requirement by entering into a payment plan, an
option found nowhere in the CGL or Bylaws and announced at no time to the membership.
Payment plans that FST Bilger entered into with these few discrete members who
managed to contact him were documented on a new form that he devised and that the Local used
for the first time in this election cycle. Exhibit 28. The payment plan was, in effect, a promise
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by the member to make periodic payments. As FST Bilger explained, what mattered for the
Local was not that the member actually paid, it was that the member at the moment in time that
the payment plan was implemented, had a payment plan. At that snapshot in time, the member
was considered in good standing, irrespective of whether the member later complied with the
plan or not. Exhibit 4 at 131-136. No uniform set of standards applied to the payment plan
terms. The Local did not require minimum payment amounts or specify the date by which
payments must satisfy the arrearage. A review of these payment plans shows that each was
unique. Exhibit 29. Indeed, the uncontradicted evidence is that many such payment plans were
either fulfilled only months after the election or not fulfilled at all. Exhibit 4 at 109-113 (FST
Bilger discussing examples); exhibit 29.
Nowhere did the Local articulate to the membership that a member in arrears could return
to good standing without having to pay in full. Nowhere did the Local tell its members that they
could avoid the pay-in-full requirement of the CGL by entering into a payment plan. No
publication by the Local advised members who received a letter telling them that they were in
arrears and not in good standing that a procedure existed by which they could come into good
standing by making only a partial payment along with a promise to pay instead of full payment.
Exhibit 4 at 29-31. None of the Locals periodic newsletters contained this information. For all
that recipients of the October 9 letters understood, the Local would require them to pay the
arrearage in full in order to come into good standing.
Brent Loughry, a member who often worked for the Local by helping with the Locals
computerized dues records systems and who was personally involved in the preparation of the
October 9 letter, testified that he was not aware of the existence of alternate payment plans:
Q. For the October 9 letter, were you involved in you told us how you did the
merging?
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witness involved in preparing the October 9 letters, testified, nothing prevented the Local from
including the form with that letter. Exhibit 24 at 125.
As to the reinstatement fee for suspended members, the Local never collected it. Exhibit
4 at 100; exhibit 6 at 66-67. As President Jeter testified, the amount of the fee -- $1 per month
for the term of the suspension -- was significant for union members and, as a matter of policy,
the Local made it a practice to spare its members from this financial hardship. Exhibit 6 at 67-68.
As with the waiver of the pay-in-full requirement, the Local did not tell the membership that it
would not collect the fee. On this record, the evidence establishes that members believed the
Local would collect the fee. Mr. Loughry, the rank-and-file member of the Local who also
worked for the Local on dues issues, testified that he had heard that members had to pay this fee
to get back into good standing. Exhibit 24 at 109-110.
The Union also waived the $75 initiation fee for members who should have been required
to re-enroll as new members. Exhibit 4 at 192-194. Nowhere did the Local tell the members
this. In a regime where a $1 per month suspension fee was significant, $75 was probably even
more so. The Local, however, kept this practice secret along with so many others.
The record establishes that the Local had the means to announce the existence of these
alternate procedures to its members. One version of the November 18 letter -- a version
distributed only to members who had paid their arrearages in full or had made payment
arrangements already -- specifically referenced the alternate payment plan procedure, albeit in
passing. However, in contravention to the adequate advance notice requirement of 29 C.F.R.
452.53, the letter was sent after the nomination meetings when it was too late for members to
be able to determine whether they were qualified for candidacy. FST Bilger admitted that he did
nothing to spread the word to the membership that the payment arrangement option was
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available except to tell the Locals Board members. Exhibit 4 at 29. In short, news of these
procedures spread, if at all, by word of mouth.
3. The Locals Non-Uniform Application of its Standards for Arrearages
Greater Than Two Months
As demonstrated above, the Local permitted members who contacted FST Bilger to avoid
certain candidate eligibility rules in the CGL and Bylaws. In effect, the Local established an
alternative and secret set of practices. The record, however, establishes that even as to these
alternative and secret practices, the Local did not apply them uniformly, with the result that
similarly situated members who sought to run for office were treated differently and not
permitted to run for office.
a. The October 9 Letter Constituted An Alternate Payment Plan
The October 9 dues deduction letter was a payment plan. That payment plan was good
enough to bring members back into good standing for the purpose of voting. Inconsistently, the
Local did not consider it good enough to bring the member back into good standing as a
nominee. Accordingly, the Local did not uniformly apply this aspect of its unwritten alternate
payment plan procedures.
Based on dues checkoff agreements, the Local had the authority to cause the employer to
deduct dues arrearages from members wages. Exhibit 4 at 101-102. The October 9, 2015 letter
invoked that authority, advising members that additional dues deductions would occur. As FST
Bilger testified, this in itself constituted an alternate payment plan. Exhibit 4 at 32-34. The dues
deduction payment plan put into place by the October 9 letter should have been sufficient to
bring members into good standing to be nominated for office. The Union sent the October 9
letter to members who had a dues arrearage large enough to be considered suspended. If that
24
member took no action, he automatically received the version of the November 18 letter
indicating that the dues deduction was going into effect and that as a result the member was
eligible to vote. Exhibit 24 at 145-151. Asked at deposition why the member automatically
received both letters, Mr. Loughry, the Locals computer expert, testified: Because they either
paid or they didnt. Exhibit 24 at 151. Although the Local viewed the dues deduction payment
plan articulated in the October 9 letter as satisfying of its own accord the requirement to bring a
member into good standing to vote, it inconsistently did not deem the plan as adequate to
reinstate good standing to run for office. As FST Bilger testified, that member had to take
additional action: contact the Local and pay in full or enter into the alternate payment plan.
Exhibit 4 at 24, 34-35.
The treatment of the effectiveness of the automatic dues deduction announced in the
October 9 letter -- acceptable as good standing for voting but not as a nominee -- illustrates the
inconsistency of the Locals practices. The CGL and Bylaws do not articulate a different test for
what constitutes good standing for voting as distinguished from good standing for running
for office other than to require that the nominee have been in that status for two years
continuously. The manner of coming into good standing is the same in the CGL and the Bylaws.
A member who received an October 9 letter would have had no way of knowing that to run for
office, he had to contact FST Bilger and either pay in full or agree to yet another alternate
payment plan by executing a form contract that was not even included or referenced in the letter.
Failing to announce that the October 9 letter dues deduction payment plan was sufficient to
reinstate good standing for voting but not for officer candidacy constitutes the kind of
unreasonable and ad hoc policy that Courts have voided. Local 689s non-uniform application of
these dues deduction arrangements precluded members from ascertaining whether they were
25
Arrearage
Alternate
Payment Plan
Elected
David Allen
$236.50
Yes
Yes
John Gaines
$617.50
Yes
Yes
Tracy Smith
$450.45
Yes
Yes
Terry Bradley
$169.35
Yes
No
Roxie Jefferson
$161.05
Yes
No
Antonio Ross
$396.75
Yes
Yes
Andre Long
$122.80
No
No
Richard Copeland
$122.00
No
No
Donnell Morina
$75.05
No
No
Wilbur Lucas
$482.70
No
Yes
Luis Chevalier
$867.90
Yes
No
See exhibits 9-12 & 14-20. None of these members satisfied the two-year continuous good
standing requirement as delineated in the candidate eligibility bylaws.
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The first inconsistency: nominees with arrearages of greater than two months were
allowed to run without a payment plan. FST Bilger testified that the Local required nominees
with arrearages in excess of two months to have either executed a payment plan or to have paid
in full. The uncontradicted evidence is that two members were permitted to run without doing
either. Wilbur Lucas owed several months of dues, but there is no evidence indicating that he
made a payment arrangement or otherwise paid his arrearages. Lucas won the position of Station
Manager Division Shop Steward #2. Exhibit 21 at 1.
So too for Andre Long, who was also permitted to run for office even though his amount
in arrears resulted in his being suspended under the CGL. Exhibit 4 at 143, 160-162; Exhibit 16.
Q. So, if I am looking at people who were allowed to people who were in
arrears, Long, Copeland and Morina Long was 122 owed $122.80?
A. Right.
Q. That makes him greater than two months in arrears?
A. Correct.
Q. He did not have a payment plan?
A. He did not.
Q. And he was he remained in arrears of $122.80 as of the time of the election,
correct?
A. Correct.
Q. And $122.80, you told us, was the point at which you are over the two month
limit?
A. It is.
Q. And you told us that others, like Terry Bradley?
A. Uh-huh. (affirmative)
Q. Who was over the two month limit at $169.35 had to have a payment plan in
order to run?
A. Yes. [Bradley] paid down below the two months. Andre Long Andre
Longs was in good standings up until the two months prior to the election. We did not
have the dues records from W.M.A.T.A. at the time. So it appeared that Andre Long was
in good standing at the time.
27
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Jarrett learned of the requirement to enter into a payment plan and attempted to comply
before nominations. Unable to reach Bilger in advance, Jarretts payment plan occurred after the
nominations. The Local rejected it for this reason. Interestingly, and further illustrating the
shape-shifting set of rules in this secretive universe, the Local would have accepted Jarretts
payment plan had he gotten it to them before the nominations. Exhibit 4 at 67. When the issue
came to the International, however, by telephone inquiry from FST Bilger to the International
President, the International overruled the Local. The International told the Local that, even if
Jarrett had executed a payment plan before nominations, because the amount of Jarretts
arrearage was in excess of 12 months, he could not simply reinstate himself; he had to renew his
membership by rejoining as a new member. Exhibit 4 at 76-77. The International President
followed this telephone advice up in a post-election letter. Citing no authority, the International
said that because Jarrett and Johnson were more than one year in arrears of dues, they could not
use the payment plan option. Id.; see also id. at 69-70.
The third inconsistency: the explanation that the International imposed on the Local and
the resulting exclusion of Johnson and Jarrett as nominees was inconsistent with the manner in
which a third nominee with a similar arrearage was treated. Like Johnson and Jarrett, Luis
Chevalier owed more than one years worth of dues. He received an October 9 letter; it indicated
that his arrearage was $867.90. Exhibit 20. Chevalier executed a payment plan in October and
made payments of $422.90 and $145.00. Exhibit 20. These two payments reduced his arrearage
to $300.00. The Local permitted Chevalier to run for office. He was unsuccessful in his race for
System Maintenance Shop Steward #2. Exhibit 21 at 2. Chevalier came in third with 99 votes,
enough to have enabled the second place candidate -- Robert Loman -- to have overtaken the
certified winner, Alfred Williams. Exhibit 21 at 2.
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The fourth inconsistency: the Internationals secret rule was inconsistent with practice.
The explanation that the International imposed on the Local and the resulting exclusion of
Johnson and Jarrett as nominees bore no relationship to the manner by which records were kept
at this Local, a difference that had real-world practical results. While the CGL envisioned a
regime in which the Local would report to the International the names of members whose
arrearages exceeded 12 months so that their names could be stricken from the rolls, in fact this
did not usually if ever occur. The Local did not have a coding system in place whereby it could
identify these people and report them to the International. The Locals database was not
compliant with the CGLs requirements because it did not ensure that a member in arrears for
more than one year was reported to the International as terminated. As FST Bilger explained, a
member over a year in arrears might yet be counted as an active member on the Locals and
Internationals rolls. Exhibit 4 at 184-188. For a member with such an arrearage who was still
coded as an active member on the Locals membership rolls, the Local had no code to de-enroll
and re-enroll him. Exhibit 4 at 191-192. The Local would therefore consider the member as
having suspended himself, the same as a member whose arrearage was less than one year in
amount. Exhibit 4 at 190-191. Thus, members with arrearages of greater than one year were
maintained on the Locals rolls as suspended in the same fashion as members whose arrearages
were less than one year, and not reported to the International. For all practical purposes, they
were in the same position as members with arrearages of less than one year, who had simply
suspended themselves, according to the CGL. Yet the member with the greater arrearage -according only to the International, in a view forced on the Local -- could not take advantage of
the payment plan option to come into good standing to run for office.
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As with the other waivers of good-standing rules in this ever uncertain environment, the
Local gave no notice to the membership about the distinction between a member in arrears for
more than one year and those members who owed less. Even FST Bilger, who had served as
Financial Secretary-Treasurer since 2007, did not know about this supposed distinction until he
called the International for advice regarding the 2015 election. Exhibit 4 at 71. No member
reading the CGL or Bylaws, even if he had somehow gleaned that a payment plan was available,
would have any reason to suspect that the International would hold that members with arrearages
in excess of 12 months could not do a payment plan to come into good standing to run for office.
How could they, when the Local itself had not been aware of the distinction?
The sum and substance is simply this: the Local did not play by the rules. It ignored the
rules published in the CGL. It waived rules articulated in the Bylaws. It did not publish these
changes to the membership. It compounded the problem by not uniformly applying the secret,
new rules. Indeed, the Unions ad hoc practices not only rendered the two years continuous
good standing requirement meaningless, but also prevented potential candidates from even
realizing their own eligibility. Because the Local unreasonably applied these inconsistent and
unannounced rules, the Secretary is entitled to a Court order that the Local re-run the election
under supervision by the Secretary.
C. The Violations Affected The Outcome of the Election
Section 402(c) of the Act requires a court to void a contested election and order a new
supervised election if a violation of section 401 may have affected the outcome of the
election. See 29 U.S.C. 482(c); Solis v. Local 9477, 798 F. Supp. 2d at 705. The legislative
history shows that Congress rejected a showing of actual effect because the difficulty of
proving such an actuality would be so great as to render the statutory remedy practically
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worthless. Hotel Employees, Local 6, 391 U.S. at 506 (quoting 105 Cong. Rec. 19765)
(finding that Department need only establish a prima facie showing of possible effect on
outcome).
First, the failure of the Local to comply with the statutory and constitutional fifteen-day
notice requirement serves as an independent basis upon which the Court should order a new
election. Having established this notice violation, the Secretary may then invoke a presumption
that the violation affected the outcome of the election that shifts the burden to the union to rebut
the presumption. Dole v. Mail Handlers, Local Union 317, 711 F. Supp. 577, 580 (M.D. Ala.
1989) (citing Hotel Employees, Local 6, 391 U.S. at 580). The Secretary can invoke a
presumption that the delay affected the outcome by the maximum theoretical possibility. See
Dunlop v. Bachowski, 421 U.S. 560, 580 (1975) (calculating effect with the presumption that the
entire membership would have voted but for the violation); Marshall v. Am. Postal Workers
Union, 486 F. Supp. 79, 82 (D.D.C. 1980), decision supplemented, No. 79-1440, 1980 WL 2063
(D.D.C. Mar. 11, 1980) (although the theory of the maximum theoretical possibility is
imperfect, because it assumes that all those who could have voted would have voted and that
those who would have voted would have voted unanimously, the application of the theory is
called for by the liberal may have affected standard) (citing Wirtz v. Local Union No. 125,
Intl Hod Carriers, 270 F. Supp. 12, 20 (N.D. Ohio 1966); Wirtz v. Local Union 169, Intl Hod
Carriers, 246 F. Supp. 741, 754 (D. Nev. 1965))).
Thus, the notice violation can be presumed to have affected every eligible member who
did not vote, approximately 8,067 members. Local 689 has about 13,535 members. Exhibit 26,
Answer to Interrog. 19 (Local 03393-03396). According to the ballot count of the presidents
race, at least 5,468 members voted. Exhibit 27. Therefore, approximately 8,067 members did
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not vote in the election. This presumption is bolstered by the fact that during the course of the
investigation, the Secretary encountered at least twelve members who stated that they did not
receive an election notice, a number greater than the smallest margin of victory in any of the
races held on December 2, 2015: eleven votes for Bladensburg Division Executive Board. See
id.; exhibit 27 at 1; see also Wirtz v. Local Union 169, 246 F. Supp. at 754 (An election
conducted with violations of the Act which may have affected the outcome as to one office is
void as a whole.).
Because the Local had no absentee voting procedures, the delay may also have prevented
the approximately 570 members residing outside of the Washington D.C. area, particularly
retirees who do not travel regularly to the Union Hall or the worksites were the polling occurred,
from voting if they were unable to make travel arrangements within fourteen days. Exhibit 26
answer to interrogatory 20 (Local 03399-03426).
Once a prima facie case for a section 401 violation has been established, the burden shifts
to the union to prove that the violation did not affect the election results. Hotel Employees,
Local 6, 391 U.S. at 506-507; Solis v. Local 9477, 798 F. Supp. 2d 701 at 705. The unions
burden o f p r o o f is substantial in that it must rebut with tangible evidence against the
reasonable possibility that the violation may have affected the outcome of the election. Hotel
Employees, Local 6, 391 U.S. at 508; Marshall v. Local 1010, United Steelworkers, 664 F.2d
144, 148 (7th Cir. 1981); Donovan v. Local Union 70, Intl Brhd. of Teamsters, 661 F.2d
1199, 1202 (9th Cir. 1981) (affirming lower courts order of new supervised election where
union failed to provide tangible evidence to rebut presumption of effect on outcome); Marshall
v. Local 12447, United Steelworkers, 591 F.2d 199, 205-06 (3d Cir. 1978) (union failed to meet
its burden to provide evidence that violation did not affect outcome of election).
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Here, the Local cannot offer any tangible evidence to rebut the presumption that the
violation may have affected the outcome of the election because courts, in considering the
acceptable forms of evidence, will not engage in speculation as to the members decisionmaking processes in voting. Usery v. International Organization of Masters, Mates and Pilots,
422 F. Supp. 1221, 1230 (S.D. N.Y. 1976) (granting summary judgment upon finding there to
be no conceivable way in which the union could confront and overcome the imponderables
inherent in analyzing the decisions made by each elector where union engaged in improper
campaigning in a union newsletter mailed to each union member), affd and modified on other
grounds, 538 F.2d 946 (2d Cir. 1976); Dole v. Drywall Tapers and Finishers Local Union
1976, 733 F. Supp. 864, 867 (D.N.J. 1990) (where margin of victory was 16 votes out of 364,
violation may have affected the outcome of the election [ b]ecause of the close election
marginany proof relating to the outcome would, necessarily, be speculative). Thus, the
court may assume that the 8,067 members who did not vote would have voted for a different
candidate than the winning candidate in any of the races, eclipsing the largest winning margin
of a race at 930 votes.
Separate and apart from the effect of the violation of the 15-day rule, the Locals failure
to announce officer qualification standards different from its CGL and Bylaws and to uniformly
apply them also affected the outcome of the election. See supra at 18-31. Local 689s failure to
uniformly apply the reasonable candidate qualification bylaws affected all races because
members may have declined to run for any of the races based on the existing Bylaws. Members
who actually read the CGL and Bylaws and expected the Local would follow them, and who
knew they had an arrearage, would have no reason to think they could cure the arrearage by
paying less than the full arrearage. Additionally, the evidence documents that more than one
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race was affected when the Local departed from the CGL and Bylaws without notice to the
membership to allow some members with arrearages to run for office but not others. Therefore,
in order to remedy this violation, new nominations and a new election should occur, subject to
reasonable and uniform application of the unions candidacy qualification rules.
V.
Conclusion
The Court should grant the Secretarys motion for summary judgment and order that a
new election occur under the Secretarys supervision.
Respectfully submitted,
Rod J. Rosenstein
United States Attorney
By:_______/s/_________________
Allen F. Loucks
Assistant United States Attorney
36 South Charles Street, 4th Floor
Baltimore, Maryland 21201
(410) 209-4800
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