RODOWSKY, J.
In 2002, the voters of Anne Arundel County adopted an amendment to the County Charter relating to the resolution by binding arbitration of collective bargaining impasses with the County's law enforcement employees and uniformed firefighters. In 2003, the County Council adopted an ordinance implementing that Charter provision. In 2011, the County Council amended the 2003 ordinance to provide, inter alia, that binding arbitration did not require the Council "to appropriate funds or enact legislation necessary to implement a final written award" in arbitration. An uncodified section of the 2011 Council bill also provided that, if any part of the 2011 ordinance were held invalid, the entire County Code section enacted by the 2003 ordinance, as amended through the 2011 ordinance, would be "deemed repealed by operation of law," with the result that impasses would be addressed by a Code section that did not authorize binding arbitration.
The Petitioners are certain aggrieved members of the bargaining units that are affected by the 2011 ordinance and those members' unions.
The Respondent is Anne Arundel County, Maryland (the County), a charter county with an executive budget system. The County contends that the 2002 Charter amendment, properly construed to avoid constitutional issues, requires the County Executive to propose funding in the budget to comply with a binding award, but that the County Council may reduce or eliminate that proposed appropriation. If the 2011 ordinance violates the Charter, the County seeks, by counterclaim, a declaratory judgment that the 2002 Charter amendment is unconstitutional under Maryland Constitution, Article XI-A (the Home Rule Amendment), § 3 because the Charter amendment is not "charter material," under Cheeks v. Cedlair Corp., 287 Md. 595, 415 A.2d 255 (1980), and its progeny. Alternatively, if the binding arbitration provision in the Charter is valid, but the revised implementing provisions in the 2011 amendments to the County Code are invalid, the County seeks a declaration that the 2003 and 2011 Code provisions dealing with binding arbitration destruct under uncodified § 3 of the 2011 ordinance.
The Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County held that the 2002 Charter amendment violated the Maryland Constitution. We granted Petitioners' application for certiorari and the County's Conditional Cross-Petition for certiorari prior to consideration of the case by the Court of Special Appeals. Atkinson v. Anne Arundel County, 424 Md. 291, 35 A.3d 488 (2012).
For the reasons that follow, we shall hold that the 2002 Charter amendment binds the County Council, and that portions of the 2011 ordinance, as well as its uncodified Section 3, violate the Charter and are invalid.
The tension between public employee unions and local governments, particularly those bound by an executive budget system, has surfaced in Maryland appellate cases since at least Mugford v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore, 185 Md. 266, 44 A.2d 745 (1945). Review of these cases, and of the legal background of the Charter and ordinances of the County, is necessary to an understanding of the parties' arguments in the case before us.
Mugford involved an agreement between a Teamsters' local union and the Department of Public Works of Baltimore City, purportedly acting on behalf of the City. In a taxpayers' action challenging the agreement, the trial court held it to be void, and no appeal was taken from that ruling. The trial court, however, concluded that the Central Payroll Bureau could collect union dues by payroll deduction from any employee who voluntarily agreed. This Court agreed, but it also observed:
Id. at 271, 44 A.2d at 747.
The first case to reach this Court questioning binding arbitration between a local government and its employees was Maryland Classified Employees Ass'n. v. Anderson, 281 Md. 496, 380 A.2d 1032 (1977). Harford County had, by ordinance, provided for binding arbitration, pursuant to which an award was made in May 1975. Harford County did not fully implement the award, and certain employees sued to enforce it. This Court decided "that compensation of employees of a charter county may not be committed to binding arbitration unless so authorized by a public general law of Maryland or the organic law of that county." Id. at 497, 380 A.2d at 1032. Applying the rationale of Mugford, we said that the Harford County "ordinance in question plainly attempted to bind the County in the exercise of legislative discretion over compensation of its public employees." Id. at 511, 380 A.2d at 1040. This could not be done "without being authorized to do so by public general law or by the County Charter." Id. at 513, 380 A.2d at 1041.
In Griffith v. Wakefield, 298 Md. 381, 470 A.2d 345 (1984), firefighters employed by Baltimore County, inspired by Anderson, initiated, by voter petition, an amendment to the Baltimore County Charter that spelled out a system of binding arbitration. Taxpayers challenged the Charter amendment in an action that was decided after the voters had adopted the amendment. The challenge asserted that the amendment violated Maryland Constitution, Article XI-A, § 3, under the principles articulated in Cheeks v. Cedlair Corp., 287 Md. 595, 415 A.2d 255, to which we now turn.
In Cheeks, proponents of rent control for Baltimore City residential properties had initiated, by voter petition, an amendment to the City Charter that created a complete program for adopting and enforcing rent controls. The Charter amendment, as reproduced in Appendix A to the opinion in Cheeks, covers seventeen pages. Id., 415 A.2d at 265-73. Article XI-A, § 3, however, provides that "every charter [formed under that article] shall provide for an elective legislative body in which shall be vested the law-making power of said City or County." Upon the adoption of a charter by a county, its County Council,
Id. at 607-08, 415 A.2d at 261-62 (citation omitted).
Returning to Griffith v. Wakefield, 298 Md. 381, 470 A.2d 345, the Baltimore County firefighters case, this Court applied Cheeks to invalidate the binding arbitration amendment to the Baltimore County Charter. The parties to the case now before us find support in different portions of the opinion in Griffith. The Petitioners refer us to the following passage:
Id. at 386, 470 A.2d at 348. The Griffith opinion then presented a two-page synopsis of the detail of the Baltimore County binding arbitration amendment.
Anne Arundel County, on the other hand, emphasizes the passage set forth below:
Id. at 389-90, 470 A.2d at 350.
Also bearing mention are two additional decisions of this Court that preceded the adoption in 2002 of the Anne Arundel County Charter amendment that is at issue here. Anne Arundel County v. Fraternal Order of Anne Arundel County Det. Officers & Pers., 313 Md. 98, 543 A.2d 841 (1988) ("the Correctional Officers Case"), involved a County ordinance providing for arbitration of certain issues arising out of collective bargaining. The County had established a new position, carrying the rank of lieutenant, for the Detention Center, but the County and the collective bargaining representatives were unable to agree whether the position was management or part of the bargaining unit. When the County refused to arbitrate the issue, the bargaining representatives sought to compel arbitration. That case held that "the determination of whether positions should be included in or excluded from the representation unit is not so determinative of employee compensation as to be an inappropriate subject for arbitration in the absence of authority granted by the Charter or General Assembly." Id. at 116, 543 A.2d at 850. In discussing the issue, this Court held that the ordinance was sufficient authorization for the County to enter collective bargaining agreements and engage in arbitration, and that a charter provision or public general law was not needed. Id. at 113-14, 543 A.2d at 849. On the other hand, "authorization by public general law or charter provision consistent with Art. XI-A of the Maryland Constitution" is required for a charter county to "delegate to an arbitrator a discretionary governmental power or function which the charter vests in the county executive and county council." Id. at 111, 543 A.2d at 848.
Freeman v. Local 1802, Am. Fed'n of State, County & Mun. Employees Council 67, 318 Md. 684, 569 A.2d 1244 (1990), was a mandamus action against the County Executive of Harford County seeking to compel him to sign a collective bargaining agreement that had been negotiated pursuant to a Harford County ordinance. The Executive contended that a charter provision or public general law was required for Harford County to bargain collectively. We held that that contention was incorrect. Id. at 691, 569 A.2d at 1247. With respect to the issue now before us, we pointed out that the Correctional Officers Case had "reaffirmed the holdings in our prior cases that, absent authorization from the county charter or State public general law, the local ordinance
In 1988, § 811 was added to the Anne Arundel County Charter to provide that
The Anne Arundel County Charter, in § 1203, also provides for the appointment by the County Council of a Charter Revision Commission after the publication of each decennial census. In its report of May 20, 2002, the 2000 census Charter Revision Commission (CRC) recommended that a new provision be added to Art. VIII in the Charter. The report stated:
The County Council agreed with the CRC majority. At the Council meeting of August 5, 2002, the agenda included two resolutions proposing Charter amendments. Resolution No. 44-02 was described in the Minutes as follows:
One council member stated that it was "important for our Law Enforcement Employees to be granted the opportunity for binding arbitration." Another council member stated that "binding arbitration is a fair way to resolve the differences that may occur during labor negotiations." The seven members of the Council unanimously adopted Resolution 44-02.
A companion Resolution, 45-02, providing for a Charter amendment for "Binding Arbitration for Uniformed Firefighters," was also unanimously adopted, with two members having recused themselves.
As proposed by Resolution 44-02, the voters adopted the 2002 Charter Amendment that is set forth below:
(Emphasis added). Charter § 812(b) makes the same provision for uniformed firefighters.
To implement Charter § 812, the County Council adopted Bill 1-03, which became § 6-4-111 of the Anne Arundel County Code (2004) consisting of subsections (a) through (r). Under Bill 1-03, if an impasse exists on March 15 of any fiscal year, the parties may agree to a non-binding, confidential mediation but must commence arranging for binding arbitration as well. Provision is made for selecting an arbitrator and an alternative arbitrator. The powers and duties of the neutral arbitrator are set forth, time limits are established, and a "baseball" type of award is to be rendered. Subsection (m) provides, in relevant part, as follows:
Either party may move to vacate the award by an action in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County.
On February 1, 2010, the Court of Special Appeals decided Wicomico County Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 111 v. Wicomico County, 190 Md.App. 291, 988 A.2d 555 (2010). By a voter initiative, pursuant to Maryland Constitution, Article XI-A, § 5, the voters had amended the Wicomico County Charter at the November 2006 election to provide as follows:
Id. at 295, 988 A.2d at 557.
Thereafter, the Wicomico County Council passed an ordinance which provided that the Executive was bound by an arbitrator's award, but that the County Council was not. Id. at 296, 988 A.2d at 557. Aggrieved employees sought a judgment declaring that the Charter amendment was binding on Wicomico County and that the ordinance did not comply with the Charter. Wicomico County counterclaimed for a declaration that the Charter amendment was unconstitutional. The circuit court and the Court of Special Appeals agreed with Wicomico County. The intermediate appellate court concluded that the amendment
The infighting next moved to the General Assembly. Senate Bill 1123 of the 2010 session, as introduced, would have provided that a county or municipal corporation may adopt a local law or ordinance that allows for binding arbitration. The bill was amended in the course of passage to result in an uncodified, retroactive, emergency, public general law, enacted as Chapter 651 of the Acts of 2010. Section 1 of Chapter 651 in relevant part provides that "a county or municipal corporation that has adopted a local law or ordinance that allows for binding arbitration ... is retroactively authorized to adopt a local law or ordinance that allows for binding arbitration...." Section 2 of Chapter 651 directs that it be construed to apply "only retroactively and may not be applied or interpreted to have any effect on or application to any local law or ordinance that allows for binding arbitration enacted after the effective date of this Act."
The 2011 ordinance that is the object of the Petitioners' complaint in the instant matter was enacted by Council Bill 4-11. It amended, inter alia, Anne Arundel County Code, § 6-4-111, subsection (m) to provide in relevant part:
Other features of Council Bill 4-11 to which Petitioners object are subsections (u) and (v). They read:
Bill 4-11 also contains an uncodified Sec. 3 that in relevant part reads as follows:
In this case, the County asserts that Sec. 3 was necessary because of Chapter 651 of the Acts of 2010. If Bill 4-11 were held invalid, the concern of the County Council was that Bill 1-03, the prior form of Code § 6-4-111, would be reinstated and enjoy the retroactive authorization of Chapter 651 of the Acts of 2010.
We distill from the questions presented in the briefs of the parties three principal questions.
There are no facts in dispute in this case. The standard of review is whether the declaratory judgment was correct as a matter of law. See Catalyst Health Solutions, Inc. v. Magill, 414 Md. 457, 471-72, 995 A.2d 960, 968 (2010). As applied to Council Bill 4-11, the County submits that we must determine whether the County Council, in enacting Bill 4-11, was acting within the "legal boundary" of Charter § 812. However phrased, the legal issue is the proper construction of Charter § 812.
The parties disagree on the effect of Charter § 812 on the respective roles of the County Executive and County Council in the budget process. Under Charter § 706, the County Executive is required to submit to the County Council, not later than seventy-five days prior to the end of the fiscal year, the proposed County budget for the ensuing fiscal year. Section 706(a) provides in relevant part that
Under Charter § 709, "the County Council may decrease or delete any items in the budget," with certain exceptions not relevant here.
Petitioners submit that the County Executive must include in the budget, and the County Council must approve, appropriations necessary to comply with a binding arbitration award. With respect to the County Executive, Bill 4-11 provides that, if a final award is based on the final offer of the employees' representative, and if the County Council so requests, the County Executive is to submit to the County Council recommendations for amending the budget in order to fund that final written award. Code § 6-4-111(s)(4) (2011). Under Bill 4-11, the County Council may or may not choose to fund the final award.
The County contends that Bill 4-11 simply construed Charter § 812 to retain the Council's power to reduce or delete appropriations and that that construction is necessary to avoid rendering Charter § 812 unconstitutional. We do not agree.
Charter § 812 requires the County Council to "provide by ordinance for binding arbitration," and to provide for "the appointment of a neutral arbitrator ... who shall issue a binding decision to be implemented as part of the following year's budget process[.]" In the context of municipal government employee labor relations, the terms quoted from Charter § 812 have a plain meaning.
The Harford County ordinance involved in Anderson spelled out a final step in dispute resolution, in relevant part, reading:
Anderson, 281 Md. at 507-08, 380 A.2d at 1038. Referring to this language, we said that "[t]he County ordinance in question
The Anne Arundel County Charter provision before us is even more clear than that in the Anderson case. As demonstrated above, the County Council is an integral part of the budget process, and § 812 requires that the neutral arbitrator's "binding decision be implemented as part of the following year's budget process."
In addition to relying on Charter § 709, the County points to Charter § 801 that provides, in relevant part, for
The County says that charter provisions like §§ 709 and 801 cannot be amended by implication. But, "if two statutes contain an irreconcilable conflict, the statute whose relevant substantive provisions were enacted most recently may impliedly repeal any conflicting provision of the earlier statute." State v. Harris, 327 Md. 32, 39, 607 A.2d 552, 555 (1992). The County Council is part of the government of Anne Arundel County, Maryland. An award in arbitration cannot be binding and not binding on the County at the same time and in the same respect. There is an irreconcilable conflict between the plain language of Charter § 812 and provisions in Sec. 2 of Bill No. 4-11 under which the County Council asserts a power to modify or abrogate a binding award.
In State v. Ghajari, 346 Md. 101, 695 A.2d 143 (1997), this Court stated:
Id. at 116, 695 A.2d at 150. Thus, if an impasse in bargaining with County employees covered by Charter § 812 were to result in binding arbitration, and the neutral arbitrator chose the employees' final offer, and § 812 were still in effect, the final award would be binding on the County, which includes the County Council.
We are referred by the County to the Baltimore County Charter and Code. There, § 801 of the Charter provides that "[t]he county council is further authorized to, and shall by law, provide for a system of binding arbitration by a neutral arbitrator to resolve disputes" arising out of collective bargaining with certain public safety employees. The Baltimore County Code, § 4-5-505, "BINDING ARBITRATION," subsection (i) provides that "[t]he County Council is not bound by any decision made under this section and may act upon the submitted legislation to implement the memorandum of understanding under this section in accordance with the provision of the Charter." The Baltimore County Charter, of course, is not before us, and we need not construe "a system of binding arbitration" as the quoted terms appear in the Baltimore County Charter § 801. It is sufficient to note for present purposes that the Baltimore County Charter does not require the "binding decision to be implemented as part of the following year's budget process."
In addressing this issue, we assume, arguendo, that a charter amendment recommended by a Charter Revision Commission and proposed by the legislative body is subject to the requirement that the amendment be charter material to the same extent as if the amendment had been initiated by a petition of the voters.
We consider it to be settled that binding arbitration is an appropriate subject matter for inclusion in a county charter. That is the teaching of Anderson, 281 Md. 496, 380 A.2d 1032, the Correctional Officers Case, 313 Md. at 111, 543 A.2d at 847-48, and Freeman, 318 Md. at 691, 569 A.2d at 1247. The whole point in placing Charter § 812 before the voters was to obtain authorization for including provision for binding arbitration in the County's "constitution." Further, § 812 does not run afoul of Constitution, Article XI-A, by including what amounts to an entire statute in the Charter and, thus, § 812 avoids the defect in the Baltimore City Rent Control Charter initiative struck down in Cheeks, 287 Md. 595, 415 A.2d 255, and in the Baltimore County Firefighters Charter initiative struck down in Griffith, 298 Md. 381, 470 A.2d 345.
The County submits, however, that the law on "charter material" has been clarified by Save Our Streets v. Mitchell, 357 Md. 237, 743 A.2d 748 (2000), involving two cases decided in one opinion. One case, Mitchell, involved a voter initiative for an amendment to the Montgomery County Charter that would prospectively prohibit speed bumps and allow the County one year within which to remove previously installed speed bumps. Holding that the proposed amendment violated Maryland Constitution, Article XI-A, the circuit court prohibited placing the measure on the ballot, and this Court agreed.
In analyzing these initiatives, this Court said:
Id. at 253, 743 A.2d at 757. The amendments in the two cases "would as completely remove any meaningful exercise of discretion from the County Council as would have the amendments in Cheeks and Griffith." Id.
In Save Our Streets, this Court quoted from Griffith, 298 Md. at 389-90, 470 A.2d at 350, as follows:
Save Our Streets, 357 Md. at 254, 743 A.2d at 757-58.
The quoted language from Griffith employs a technique used in writing judicial opinions when the operative standard is a question of degree, in this case, the extent to which discretion of the legislative body is precluded by the proposed Charter amendment. Griffith illustrated a proper recognition of the Council's constitutional law-making power, Const., Art. XI-A, § 3, by hypothesizing a Charter amendment providing that the Council may adopt binding arbitration and leaving to the Council the policy question of whether, and if so, how, binding arbitration should operate. On the other hand, the proposed Charter amendment that was before the Court in Griffith did not authorize binding arbitration because it did not authorize any decisions by the legislative body. Rather, the Charter amendment contained all of the law on the subject.
The question presented in the case before us falls somewhere between the two Griffith examples. The County Charter directs the County Council to adopt a binding arbitration ordinance that would be implemented in the budget process. The Charter leaves fleshing out of the directive to the County Council. Authorization for binding arbitration can only be achieved by a public general law or by a Charter provision. Whether some portion of the County Council's role in the budget process is to be transferred to a neutral arbitrator, in the event of an impasse in
The voters' directive in County Charter § 812, for the Council to implement, in some fashion, binding arbitration in the budget process, does not implicate, on analysis, the law-making power of the Council under Const., Art. XI-A, § 3. ("Every charter ... shall provide for an elective legislative body in which shall be vested the law-making power of said ... County."). The power of the County Council, under the County Charter, to reduce or delete appropriations in the Executive's budget, is impliedly derived from Const., Art. XI-A, § 1, setting forth the process for preparing and adopting a Charter.
Annapolis v. Anne Arundel County, 347 Md. 1, 698 A.2d 523 (1997), explains the distinction. Chapter 1041 of the Acts of 1945 had directed the County to pay to Annapolis one-seventh of the amount remitted by the State to the County from any new sources of revenue. In 1958, a new tax on cigarettes was imposed. The County adopted its Charter in 1964. Eventually payments by the County to Annapolis ceased. In the resulting litigation, this Court held that the adoption of a Charter had impliedly repealed Chapter 1041, a public local law.
Chapter 1041 was a law dealing with appropriations. Article XI-A, § 3 authorizes a Council to repeal local laws on matters covered by the Express Powers Act, Maryland Code (1957, 2011 Repl.Vol.), Article 25A, § 5, but the express powers do not include appropriations. Nevertheless, "§ 1 of Article XI-A authorizes charter provisions concerning the organization and structure of the county government including the method or system for making governmental decisions." Annapolis, 347 Md. at 15, 698 A.2d at 529 (citing Ritchmount Partnership v. Board of Supervisors of Elections for Anne Arundel County, 283 Md. 48, 388 A.2d 523 (1978) (holding that Art. XI-A authorized the County's Charter to provide for a referendum on Council ordinances)).
Pertinent to the question of decision-making on matters of appropriations, this Court in Annapolis further said:
Id. at 15, 698 A.2d at 530.
Once the voters, acting under Const. Art. XI-A, § 1, made the policy decision, Charter § 812 left all of the detail of implementation to the Council for the exercise of its Art. XI-A, § 3 law-making power in Bill 1-03. It covered possible mediation, each step in the selection of the neutral arbitrator, timing, the powers of the arbitrator, receipt of final offers of each party, ten factors to be considered by the arbitrator after receiving evidence, the final, binding award, possible revision thereof by agreement, post-hearing motion or court action, and implementation of the award as part of the budget process. We hold that Charter § 812 did not unconstitutionally preclude the exercise of the County Council's law-making discretion.
Because Wicomico County Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 111 v. Wicomico County, 190 Md.App. 291, 988 A.2d 555 (2010), is substantially at odds with the views expressed herein, that opinion is disapproved.
Section 3 of Bill 4-11, in substance, provides:
Inasmuch as we have held that Charter § 812 is valid and that Sec. 2 of Bill 4-11, at least in part, is invalid, the County asks that this case be remanded to the circuit court so that the declaratory judgment may be modified to state "that § 6-4-111 of the County Code as enacted by Bill No. 1-03 and amended by Bill No. 88-10 shall be deemed repealed in its entirety as provided in § 3 of Bill No. 4-11."
Section 3 of Bill 4-11 does more than invert the ordinary presumption that legislation is intended to be severable in the event of partial invalidity. Total invalidity of Sec. 2 of Bill 4-11, as per the nonseverability provision, ordinarily would result in the reinstatement of § 6-4-111, as enacted by Bill 1-03 and amended by Bill 88-10. See Howard County Metropolitan Commission v. Westphal, 232 Md. 334, 343, 193 A.2d 56, 61-62 (1963), where we said:
Section 3 of Bill 4-11, however, goes further. Because Sec. 2 falls, due to partial invalidity in conjunction with the nonseverability clause, Sec. 3 undertakes to repeal the statute, Code § 6-4-111, that otherwise would have been reinstated as a result of the failure of Sec. 2.
Our research has disclosed but one illustration in Maryland jurisprudence of this type of legislation. It involves the checkered history of the waiver of sovereign immunity by Prince George's County.
The history is traced in Prince George's County v. Surratt, 80 Md.App. 415, 564 A.2d 95 (1989), rev'd, 320 Md. 439, 578 A.2d 745 (1990). Section 1013 of the Prince George's County Charter, adopted in 1970, "provided that the County waived its governmental immunity and could be sued in tort in the same manner and to the same extent as any private person." Id. at 419, 564 A.2d at 97. Bradshaw v. Prince George's County, 284 Md. 294, 301, 396 A.2d 255, 260 (1979), so held, but excluded from the waiver of immunity cases in which the county's agent enjoyed public official immunity. By Chapter 825 of the Acts of 1976, the General Assembly enacted Maryland Code (1957, 1981 Repl.Vol.), Art. 25A, § 5(CC), conferring on charter counties the power, in relevant part, to
James v. Prince George's County, 288 Md. 315, 321, 418 A.2d 1173, 1177 (1980), held that the 1976 amendment to § 1013 of the Prince George's County Charter fully waived the County's immunity, including cases in which the agent enjoyed public official immunity.
In 1982, Prince George's County Charter § 1013 was amended again to provide in pertinent part: "`The County may be sued in actions sounding in tort for which its officers, agents, and employees may be liable....'" Surratt, 80 Md.App. at 420, 564 A.2d at 98. The 1982 version of Prince George's County Charter § 1013 was before
We then addressed the severability issue and recognized the ordinary rule reinstating the prior provision in the event of invalidity of the later provision. We said:
Id. at 395, 519 A.2d at 1290.
While Fitzhugh was pending, Prince George's County, in 1986, again amended Charter § 1013, limiting its waiver to cases in which its officers, agents or employees did not enjoy public official immunity. The provision was clearly invalid under Fitzhugh. The 1986 amendment, however, also provided:
Surratt, 80 Md.App. at 421, 564 A.2d at 98 (emphasis removed from original). The Court of Special Appeals in Surratt held that the only reason for including the above-quoted provision was "to emphasize the desire to expunge § 1013 completely from the Charter if a portion is deemed invalid." Id. at 423, 564 A.2d at 100. The same conclusion was reached by Judge Young in two cases in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland. See Walker v. Prince George's County, 667 F.Supp. 1103, 1105 (D.Md. 1987), and Scinto v. Kollman, 667 F.Supp. 1106, 1109 (D.Md.1987).
In Surratt v. Prince George's County, 320 Md. 439, 578 A.2d 745 (1990), this Court reversed the Court of Special Appeals on the ground that the wording of the ballot question did not convey with reasonable clarity the scope and effect of the 1986 Charter amendment. Id. at 450-51, 578 A.2d at 751. We observed, however, that "[w]ere the 1986 amendment to the charter valid, [the] holding [by the Court of Special Appeals] might well be correct." Id. at 445, 578 A.2d at 748.
The case before us is distinguishable from the Surratt decisions, Walker, and Scinto. Provisions in the Prince George's County Charter for the waiver of sovereign immunity were governed by the Express Powers Act. Fitzhugh explained:
Fitzhugh, 308 Md. at 394, 519 A.2d at 1290.
The provisions of Anne Arundel County ordinances dealing with binding arbitration are controlled by County Charter § 812.
For all of the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County and remand this case to that court for the entry of a declaratory judgment in accordance with this opinion.
BATTAGLIA, J., Dissents.
Dissenting Opinion by BATTAGLIA, J.
Although the majority appropriately determines that Section 812 of the Anne Arundel County Charter applies to both the County Executive and the County Council, such that Section 2 of Bill 4-11, attempting to eviscerate Section 812, is void as violative of the Charter, its second conclusion — that Section 812 does not violate the Maryland Constitution — is clearly erroneous. Specifically, Article XI-A of our Constitution states, with respect to local law-making power, that, "[e]very charter so formed shall provide for an elected legislative body in which shall be vested the law-making power of said City or County." Maryland Constitution Article XI-A, Section 3.
Section 812 of the Anne Arundel County Charter purports to direct the Anne Arundel County Council to implement, by ordinance, a system of binding arbitration for labor disputes with law enforcement personnel and firefighters. The Section, in pertinent part, requires the County Council to include in the yearly budget any award that has been made by the arbitrator, without any discretion in the County Council to modify the award in any way.
In so doing, Section 812 violates the Maryland Constitution by delegating the power to appropriate County revenue, an essential aspect of local law-making power,
The appropriate test to determine whether a limitation on the County Council's power is permissible is, "the degree to which the county council retains discretion and control regarding an area under its authority pursuant to Article XI-A of the Maryland Constitution," as articulated by Judge John C. Eldridge in Save Our Streets v. Mitchell, 357 Md. 237, 253, 743 A.2d 748, 757 (2000). The majority states that Section 812 does not violate our State Constitution because, "[o]nce the voters, acting under Const. Art. XI-A, [Section] 1, made the policy decision, Charter [Section] 812 left all of the detail of the implementation to the Council for the exercise of its Art. XI-A, [Section] 3 law-making power in Bill 1-03." Maj. Op. at 749-50, 53 A.3d at 1200. This assertion is without merit, however, because Section 812 does not leave any discretion in the County Council with regard to whether it will fund any award made by an arbitrator, or when and how. Thus, the County Council does not retain control or discretion over its budget, which is an important aspect of its lawmaking power. See City of Annapolis v. Anne Arundel County, 347 Md. 1, 14, 698 A.2d 523, 529 (1997) ("[T]he authority to budget and appropriate revenue is implicit in Article XI-A and is an inherent power of all Maryland counties.").
The abrogation of the County Council's law-making power by delegation to the arbitrator of the ability to impugn the budget is the gravamen of this case and renders Section 812 unconstitutional. In Anne Arundel County v. Fraternal Order, 313 Md. 98, 543 A.2d 841 (1988), we distinguished between charter amendments that leave sufficient discretion to the County Council to survive Constitutional scrutiny and those that do not. At issue in that case was whether a newly created lieutenant position of the Anne Arundel County Detention Center should have been included in a collective bargaining unit. The charter amendment we scrutinized imposed binding arbitration on the County and the law enforcement union with respect to whether the position would be included in the bargaining unit, but left to the County Council the discretion to determine the pay for the position. We held that the amendment was constitutional because, "the County Council and the County Executive still retain the ultimate decisionmaking authority with respect to employee compensation" Id. at 117, 543 A.2d at 851.
Our brethren on the Court of Special Appeals, in Wicomico County FOP, Lodge 111 v. Wicomico County, 190 Md.App. 291, 988 A.2d 555 (2010), also have implemented our jurisprudential distinction. In that case, a charter amendment that purported to require that the Wicomico County Council adopt binding arbitration and include any award in its budget, much like the Charter provision at issue here, was determined to be unconstitutional. The amendment at issue required the County Council to adopt legislation that would provide a framework for the arbitration process. In holding that the amendment was not constitutional, our brethren in the intermediate appellate court relied on our decisions in Cheeks v. Cedlair Corp., 287 Md. 595, 415 A.2d 255 (1980) and Griffith v. Wakefield, 298 Md. 381, 470 A.2d 345 (1984) to conclude that, because the
In differentiating Wicomico County and its jurisprudential origins in Cheeks and Griffith, the majority adheres to the tenets of the dissent in Griffith. In Griffith, we were faced with a proposed Baltimore County charter amendment that purported to set forth a system for binding arbitration to resolve collective bargaining disputes involving County-employed firefighters. The proposed amendment "set[ ] forth, in minute detail, the composition, function, and powers" of the arbitration board that was to resolve any disputes between the County and the firefighters. Griffith, 298 Md. at 386, 470 A.2d at 348. The proposed amendment also stated that any award by the arbitration board would be binding on the County Council and County Executive, that the County Executive was required to include any funds necessary to carry out the arbitration board's awards, and that the County Council could not decrease or remove such funds when it approved the budget submitted by the County Executive, just as in the instant case.
We held that the amendment was not appropriate "charter material" because it "is not intended to, nor does it, alter the `form or structure' of the Baltimore County government." Id. at 388, 470 A.2d at 349. Instead, we recognized that the proposed amendment divested the County Council of any discretion related to compensation of Baltimore County firefighters. We were careful, however, to note that a system of binding arbitration could be implemented, but only if done in two steps; first, the charter would have to be amended to permit the County Council to enact legislation regarding binding arbitration, then the County Council would have to enact such legislation:
Id. at 389-390, 470 A.2d at 350.
The dissent in Griffith, authored by the author of the instant opinion, would have upheld the charter amendment because the author did not agree with the principle that the citizens of a county may authorize the County Council to adopt binding arbitration but are not permitted to control the details of the scheme. Under his view, the citizens of a county, consistent with our State Constitution, could completely divest the County Council of its legislative power in favor of an arbitrator. The dissent did not agree that the power of the citizens of a county was limited to mere authorization; rather he believed that citizens have the right to set forth whatever system of local government they wish, including one in which all legislative discretion has been removed to a private actor. This rationale, which was rejected by the majority in that case, is precisely what the majority now embraces, thereby sub silentio overruling Griffith and Cheeks and explicitly rejecting Wicomico County. Not only does the majority confuse our jurisprudence, but it practically permits an arbitrator to enfeeble the finances of the County
Finally, the majority makes much of the fact that Section 812 was approved by the voters and that, "[t]o say that the voters of a county, exercising their power to amend the Charter, cannot direct that their policy decision be implemented by the County Council would be to hold that only the County Council ultimately can decided whether binding arbitration is County policy." Maj. Op. at 748, 53 A.3d at 1199. This statement, however, completely misconstrues the amendment at issue. There is no question that the citizens of a county can authorize the County Council to enact binding arbitration, manifesting the policy of the County. What the citizenry cannot do, however, is take over the role of the County Council by assigning its power to set the County budget to a private actor.
The majority has uprooted three decades of our jurisprudence regarding the constitutionality of charter amendments. The legal landscape that results from today's decision is one in which the citizens of a county could divest the legislative body of budgetary authority without constitutional violation. I disagree and thus dissent.
281 Md. at 505-06, 380 A.2d at 1037.
Code § 6-4-110 establishes an impasse procedure that does not include binding arbitration.
The questions presented in the County's brief are:
Question E has not been presented by any argument of the Petitioners in this Court.
Dissent Op. at 756-58, 53 A.3d at 1203-04. If Constitution, Art. XI-A, requires that the legislative body must have discretion to refuse to fund a binding arbitration award, then there can never be binding arbitration.
Contrary to the dissent's contention, we are not dealing with the law-making power of a county council under Const. Art. XI-A § 3, but with a "method or system for budgeting and appropriating revenues set forth in a county's charter," under Const. Art. XI-A, § 1. See City of Annapolis, 347 Md. at 15, 698 A.2d at 530.