PETER J. MESSITTE, District Judge.
This action concerns the validity of an arbitration award issued by a three-person Board of Arbitration (the "Board") convened for the purpose of arbitrating a collective bargaining dispute between the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority ("WMATA") and Local 689 of the Amalgamated Transit Union (the "Union"). On February 17, 2011, the Court issued an Opinion and Order, Wash. Metro. Area Transit Auth. v. Local 689, Amalgamated Transit Union, ___ F.Supp.2d ___, 2011 WL 691589 (D.Md.2011), that discussed in detail the manner in which the federal National Capital Area Interest Arbitration Standards Act ("Standards Act" or "Act"), 40 U.S.C. §§ 18301-18304, relates to the law of arbitration as it applies to certain labor disputes involving interstate compact agencies operating in the national capital area. In that Opinion and Order the Court: (1) denied the parties' then-pending cross-motions for summary judgment without prejudice; (2) directed the Board and its Neutral Chairman, Richard R. Kasher, to render a Second Supplemental Opinion demonstrating the extent to which the Board had complied with the requirements of the Standards Act as interpreted and applied by the Court; (3) ordered the parties to submit to the Court the entire record previously submitted to the Board; and (4) directed the parties, upon review of the Board's Second Supplemental Opinion, to file renewed motions for summary judgment stating their respective positions in light of the Court's construction of the Standards Act and the Board's response thereto.
The Board has submitted its Second Supplemental Opinion, and the parties have renewed their motions for summary judgment. For the following reasons, WMATA's Second Renewed Motion for Summary Judgment and to Disqualify Board Members Kasher and Roth [Paper No. 57] is
The facts and procedural background of this case were set out in detail in the Court's Opinion of February 17, 2011. That factual recitation remains operative; for present purposes, it suffices to recount only the following:
The most recent collective bargaining agreement ("CBA") between WMATA
On November 4, 2009, after 15 days of hearings, extensive briefing, and the submission of some 500 exhibits, the Board issued a 15-page Interest Arbitration Opinion and Award ("Award") that defined key terms and conditions of a new CBA covering the period from July 1, 2008 through June 30, 2012. Of particular relevance to the present proceeding, the Award granted Union members the following general wage adjustments: a 2 percent lump-sum payment effective July 1, 2008; and annual 3 percent general wage increases effective on July 1 for each of the years 2009, 2010, and 2011. The Award declined to "increas[e] pension formulas or chang[e] the character of the [employee pension plan] from a defined benefit plan to a plan requiring employee contributions...."
Messrs. Roth and Clark, the two partisan members of the Board, issued partially dissenting opinions. Most relevant for present purposes, WMATA Representative Clark argued that the Board's decision failed to comply with the Standards Act, 40
On November 5, 2009, the day after the Board handed down its Award, WMATA announced its intention to appeal the Board's decision. A few days later, on November 9, 2009, the Union filed its own suit in this Court, seeking to obtain confirmation and enforcement of the Award. Then, on November 13, 2009, WMATA followed with its suit in this Court, asking the Court to vacate the wage increase and pension benefits provisions of the Award. By Order dated January 27, 2010, the Court consolidated the two actions.
On April 1, 2010, following oral argument on the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment, the Court issued an Order confirming the Award except as to the provisions addressing general wage adjustments and pension benefits. Concluding that the disputed provisions of the Award did not demonstrate the requisite compliance with the Standards Act, the Court remanded the case to the Board "to render a supplemental opinion within 90 days regarding the General Wage Adjustments and Pension sections that complies with the [Standards Act], specifically 40 U.S.C. § 18303(d)." The Court retained jurisdiction to review the supplemental opinion and to issue a final ruling on the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment.
On June 22, 2010, the Board, through Neutral Chairman Kasher, issued an eight-page Supplemental Opinion. Although the Supplemental Opinion contained a brief additional discussion of the various statutory factors outlined in the Standards Act, like its predecessor it contained no detailed analysis of those factors, nor did it provide a roadmap that might have guided the Court to the specific evidence the Board had considered and weighed in reaching its decision.
In response to the Supplemental Opinion, the parties again filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and on August 10, 2010 the Court again heard oral argument. This time the Court deferred its final ruling to allow for consideration of three additional issues, which the parties were asked to address in supplemental briefing: (1) the historical background of interest arbitrations in labor disputes; (2) the nature of interest arbitration cases involving mass transit systems; and (3) the legislative history of the Standards Act.
After the parties submitted their supplemental briefing, the Court issued its Opinion and Order of February 17, 2011. In its Opinion, the Court articulated in considerable detail its interpretation of the Standards Act and—after determining that the
The Board has submitted its Second Supplemental Opinion, and the parties have filed their renewed motions for summary judgment. The Court now issues its final ruling.
By way of background, the Court briefly revisits the Standards Act.
Ordinarily a court's review of an arbitration award is quite narrow. It may only overturn such an award under extraordinary circumstances, such as where "an award fails to draw its essence from the contract, or the award evidences a manifest disregard of the law." MCI Constructors, LLC v. City of Greensboro, 610 F.3d 849, 857 (4th Cir.2010) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). Indeed, "the scope of judicial review for an arbitrator's decision is among the narrowest known at law because to allow full scrutiny of such awards would frustrate the purpose of having arbitration at all— the quick resolution of disputes and the avoidance of the expense and delay associated with litigation." Id. (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
In the present case, however, the Court is confronted with the unique language of the Standards Act, which not only imposes specific duties on "arbitrators resolving disputes involving interstate compact agencies operating in the national capital area," see 40 U.S.C. § 18301(b), but also imposes a specific standard for courts reviewing final awards issued by such arbitrators, see 40 U.S.C. § 18304(c). Specifically, the Act requires the Court to vacate an award, or any part thereof, if, among other things, "the decision by the arbitrator is arbitrary or capricious," 40 U.S.C. § 18304(c)(3), or if "the arbitrator did not comply with the provisions of section 18303" of the Act, 40 U.S.C. § 18304(c)(7), which in turn requires that the arbitrator consider several precise statutory factors and demonstrate that his conclusions regarding the "public welfare" are supported by "substantial evidence," see 40 U.S.C. § 18303.
Earlier in this case, WMATA argued that the Standards Act requires the Court to "apply the criteria developed by the courts for review of decisions under the Administrative Procedure Act (`APA')," 5 U.S.C. § 500 et seq. This was so, WMATA said, because "although the arbitration panel is not a federal agency, the text of the [Standards Act]"—particularly its invocation of administrative law standards such as "substantial evidence" and "arbitrary or capricious"—"clearly indicates that Congress intended that judicial review follow the basic APA principles courts utilize to analyze agency compliance with a federal statute." The Union, in contrast, argued that, although the factors articulated by the Standards Act should not be "ignored," the Act could not be read to "supersede the law regarding judicial review of arbitration awards involving WMATA" because to do so would render such awards "not final and binding as existing arbitration statutes and law provide." The Union
Ultimately, after reviewing the language of the Standards Act and its extremely scant legislative history, the Court, in its Opinion of February 17, 2011, concluded that the Act imposes a complex "hybrid" of the standard of judicial review that ordinarily applies when a court reviews the decision of an arbitration panel and that which ordinarily applies to a court's review of the decision of an administrative agency.
The Court found the basic structure of the Standards Act to be as follows:
Section 18301 of the Act sets forth the "findings and purposes" justifying its enactment. Congress makes seven distinct findings, all of which relate to the economic challenges posed by increasing labor costs incurred in providing public transit in the national capital area. See 40 U.S.C. § 18301(a). In addition, § 18301 states that the purpose of the Act "is to adopt standards governing arbitration that must be applied by arbitrators resolving disputes involving interstate compact agencies operating in the national capital area in order to lower operating costs for public transportation in the Washington metropolitan area." 40 U.S.C. § 18301(b) (emphasis added). Thus, from the outset, the Standards Act makes pellucidly clear that it intends to compel arbitrators resolving labor disputes pursuant to the Compact both to consider and to apply the factors designed to meet the express goal of lowering public transportation costs in the Washington, D.C. area.
The Standards Act also establishes that an arbitrator rendering an award involving the employees of an interstate compact agency operating in the national capital area must consider seven specific statutory factors, see 40 U.S.C. § 18303(b), namely:
40 U.S.C. § 18303(b). This section further provides that the arbitrator "may not ... provide for salaries and other benefits that exceed the ability of the interstate compact agency, or of any governmental jurisdiction that provides subsidy payments or budgetary assistance to the interstate compact agency, to obtain the necessary financial resources to pay for wage and benefit increases for employees of the interstate compact agency." 40 U.S.C. § 18303(c).
Certain other requirements pertain to the issuance of the arbitrator's final award. Section 18303(d)(1) provides that the arbitrator "shall issue a written award that demonstrates that all the factors set forth in [40 U.S.C. § 18303(b)-(c)] have been considered and applied." 40 U.S.C. § 18303(d)(1) (emphasis added). Section 18303(d)(2) indicates that the arbitrator may grant an increase in pay or benefits "only if the arbitrator concludes that any costs to the agency do not adversely affect the public welfare." 40 U.S.C. § 18303(d)(2). Section 18303(d)(3) states that the "arbitrator's conclusion regarding the public welfare must be supported by substantial evidence." 40 U.S.C. § 18303(d)(3) (emphasis added).
Finally, the Act establishes specific requirements for judicial review of these particular arbitration awards, namely that:
40 U.S.C. § 18304(c) (emphasis added).
The Court understands the standard of review, in cases such as this, to be as follows:
Although the court may not substitute its own views for those of the Compact arbitration panel, see, e.g., Mastro v. Apfel, 270 F.3d 171, 176 (4th Cir.2001), it nonetheless remains obliged to determine whether the panel's decision is supported by "such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion," see id. (quoting Richardson v. Perales, 402 U.S. 389, 401, 91 S.Ct. 1420, 28 L.Ed.2d 842 (1971)). Further, while the standard of judicial review remains highly deferential, the court will not uphold a Compact arbitration panel's decision if the panel failed to consider all relevant evidence and/or failed to set forth an adequate explanation for its conclusions. See, e.g., Ohio Valley Envtl. Coalition v. Aracoma Coal Co., 556 F.3d 177, 192 (4th Cir. 2009) (quoting Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43, 103 S.Ct. 2856, 77 L.Ed.2d 443 (1983)). Indeed, when the court concludes that the Compact arbitration panel's decision has failed to satisfy this standard, the court "shall vacate the award or any part of the award, after notice and a hearing...." 40 U.S.C. § 18304(c).
Because the Standards Act requires a Compact arbitration panel to consider explicit statutory factors, see 40 U.S.C. § 18303(b)-(c), it follows that the panel's written decision must do more than merely state that those factors have been considered. See, e.g., Getty v. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ins. Corp., 805 F.2d 1050, 1055 (D.C.Cir.1986). Merely indicating in summary boilerplate fashion that the requisite statutory factors have been considered falls well short of demonstrating that the panel's decision is supported by substantial evidence. See, e.g., Dickson v. Sec'y of Defense, 68 F.3d 1396, 1405 (D.C.Cir.1995). The panel's decision must include the "critical step [of] connecting the facts to the conclusion." See id.
Compliance with the Standards Act requires that the panel issue a reasonably detailed written explanation of its decision that: (1) discusses each of the statutory factors; (2) applies each of the factors to the dispute at issue; (3) points to evidence in the record—making reference to specific exhibits—relevant to each and every statutory factor; (4) weighs the applicable evidence pro and con; (5) states the panel's ultimate conclusions; and (6) provides a clear explanation of the reasoning behind the panel's ultimate conclusions. If the panel's written decision fails to perform each of these six tasks, the court would be obliged to conclude, whatever may be the underlying merits of the panel's decision,
On March 25, 2011, Neutral Chairman Kasher, writing on behalf of a majority of the Board,
With respect to the first statutory factor—the "existing terms and conditions of employment of the employees in the bargaining unit," 40 U.S.C. § 18303(b)(1)—the Opinion demonstrates that the Board majority considered WMATA's position that the challenging economic environment, along with surging pension and health insurance costs, necessitated significant structural changes to the terms and conditions of the employment relationship between the parties. It also considered the Union's argument that the existing terms and conditions of employment, including wage increases and health benefits, were the product of numerous bargained-for agreements over many years,
Ultimately, the Board concluded that, in light of rapidly rising health care costs, some structural changes to the employment relationship were appropriate. As the Opinion notes, such changes included modified "eligibility requirements for retiree health insurance and the elimination of retiree coverage for new hires."
As for the second of the Act's statutory factors to be considered—"[a]ll available financial resources of the interstate compact agency," 40 U.S.C. § 18303(b)(2)—the Opinion discusses WMATA's "ability to pay" for certain proposed increases in wages and benefits. Referring to various exhibits in the record, the Opinion states that: (1) WMATA had projected an initial budget shortfall of $73 million for fiscal year 2010; (2) unlike other major transit agencies, WMATA has no dedicated source of funding; (3) for fiscal year 2009, WMATA had budgeted for the equivalent of a 3 percent "general wage increase" for Union members;
The third statutory factor is "[t]he annual increase or decrease in consumer prices for goods and services as reflected in the most recent consumer price index for the Washington metropolitan area, published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics," 40 U.S.C. § 18303(b)(3). Here the Opinion observes that, for the twelve months ending in May 2009, the consumer price index for the "Washington-Baltimore area" had declined by 0.6 percent.
As for the fourth statutory factor— "[t]he wages, benefits, and terms and conditions of the employment of other employees who perform, in other jurisdictions in the Washington standard metropolitan statistical area, services similar to those in the bargaining unit," 40 U.S.C. § 18303(b)(4)—the Opinion dedicates more than four pages to a discussion of how the Union members' wages and benefits compare to those of other transit workers in the Washington metropolitan area. The Board majority's discussion begins with a summary of several factual assertions and arguments advanced by WMATA—namely, that the hourly wages of WMATA's bus operators are as much as 26.5 percent higher than those of bus drivers working for other transit agencies in the area; that, in general, the wages of Union members are anywhere from 13 percent to 80 percent higher than those of employees of other transit agencies in the area; and that, given these wage premiums and the poor fiscal conditions of the Compact jurisdictions, significant annual wage increases for Union employees could not be justified.
Ultimately, the Opinion concludes that the wage differential between WMATA employees and other public transit workers in the area is justified. In reaching this conclusion, the Board majority found that: (1) the wage data offered by WMATA did not provide reliable comparisons with other transit workers in the area, since WMATA's data were both over-inclusive (insofar as they included wage data for employees outside of the "Washington standard metropolitan statistical area") and under-inclusive (insofar as the labor classifications WMATA used covered only a fraction of the Union's members); (2) the other transit agencies in the Washington area are much smaller in scale and complexity as compared to WMATA;
The fifth of the Act's statutory factors addresses "[t]he special nature of the work performed by the employees in the bargaining unit, including any hazards or the relative ease of employment, physical requirements, educational qualifications, job training and skills, shift assignments, and the demands placed upon the employees as compared to other employees of the interstate compact agency," 40 U.S.C. § 18303(b)(5). While the Opinion contains relatively little discussion directly addressing this factor, much of the discussion pertaining to the fourth and sixth statutory factors—which includes comparisons between Union employees and other employees inside and outside of WMATA— also applies to this factor. Additionally, citing several Union exhibits,
The sixth statutory factor concerns "[t]he interests and welfare of the employees in the bargaining unit, including ... the overall compensation presently received by the employees ...; all benefits received by the employees ...; and the continuity and stability of employment," 40 U.S.C. § 18303(b)(6). Addressing this factor, the Opinion first summarizes WMATA's position, which was essentially that the wages, pension benefits, and health benefits enjoyed by Union members are superior to those received by employees of the other transit agencies in the Washington area,
The Opinion then summarizes the Union's position, which was essentially that the wages and benefits offered to Union members are lower than those of other union-represented and non-union WMATA employees. In support of this assertion, the Union cited a compensation analysis stating, among other things, that fiscal year 2008 average total compensation for Union employees was $82,076, whereas other union-represented WMATA employees and other nonunion WMATA employees earned, on average, $99,109 and $105,991, respectively.
Ultimately, after weighing the arguments of the parties, the Opinion concludes that "some reduction in WMATA's health and welfare obligations was justified." These reductions, the Opinion states, were outlined in detail in the original Award.
Pursuant to the seventh, and last, of the Act's statutory factors, the Board was required to consider "[t]he public welfare,"
The Opinion wraps up with a discussion of the WMATA employees' pension plan. Here, the Board majority states that it "gave similar consideration and weight to each of the factors/criteria listed in the [Act] as it did in determining the appropriate level of wages." The Opinion also states that, with respect to the pension plan, the Board concluded that maintenance of the status quo—i.e., its decision not to increase pension formulas or change the character of the plan from a defined benefit plan to a plan requiring employee contributions—was appropriate for several reasons: (1) the plan's current underfunded status was largely the result of WMATA's decision—apparently made against the recommendation of its chief financial officer
While the foregoing reflects the rationale of a majority of the Board, the positions of Messrs. Roth and Kasher, respectively in concurrence and dissent, must be noted. In a brief concurrence, Union Representative Roth states that he "join[s] the Chairman in both the Award and majority opinion on the wage and pension issues." He indicates that, in reaching his decision
In a much lengthier dissent, WMATA Representative Clark takes issue with several aspects of the majority Opinion. He argues that it: (1) ignores the Standards Act's stated purpose of "lower[ing] operating costs for public transportation in the Washington metropolitan area," see 40 U.S.C. § 18301(b); (2) never clearly states or concludes that the provisions of the Award will not adversely affect the public welfare; (3) fails to show that any conclusions regarding the public welfare are supported by substantial evidence; (4) makes conclusory statements that are supported by little more than summaries of the parties' arguments; and (5) consistently ignores relevant evidence.
The parties have renewed their motions for summary judgment in light of the Court's construction of the Standards Act and the Second Supplemental Opinion. WMATA, reiterating the position of Board member Clark, urges that the wage increase and pension benefits provisions of the Award be vacated because the Opinion fails to show that the Board, in reaching its conclusions, complied with the Standards Act as interpreted by the Court. As expected, the Union argues that the most recent Opinion demonstrates full compliance with the Act, and that the wage increase and pension benefits provisions of the Award must therefore be confirmed. Along the way, the parties cross swords with respect to certain private communications Neutral Chairman Kasher and Union Representative Roth apparently had during the drafting of the Opinion.
In the 44-page brief it filed in support of its Second Renewed Motion for Summary Judgment and to Disqualify Board Members Kasher and Roth, WMATA argues that the Opinion does not demonstrate compliance with the Standards Act, and that the Court must therefore vacate the unconfirmed provisions of the Award. Although lengthy, WMATA's arguments boil down to the following:
The Union argues that the Opinion complies fully with the strictures of the Standards Act because it: contains substantive discussion of each of the seven statutory factors; explains the reasoning behind the Board's decisions; and specifically ties the Board's reasoning to record evidence. All of this, the Union maintains, demonstrates that the Board's decisions were in no way arbitrary or capricious, and that its conclusions regarding the public welfare were adequately supported by substantial evidence.
The Union also submits that WMATA's position cuts far too deeply. In effect, according to the Union, WMATA is maintaining that the Standards Act operates as a flat prohibition against any increases in wages or benefits. Given the difficult economic climate, no increases can be justified since they necessarily lie beyond the ability of the Compact jurisdictions, taxpayers, and patrons to pay. But this standard, says the Union, renders the statutory factors entirely superfluous, since no amount of consideration of particular factors could
Finally, the Union argues that WMATA unfairly ignores the fact that the wage increase and pension benefits
As to the parties' clash over the effect of certain private communications between Neutral Chairman Kasher and Union Representative Roth during the drafting of the Opinion, the record shows that:
On March 2, 2011, responding to the Court's Opinion and Order of February 17, 2011, Kasher sent a letter to Roth and Clark, indicating that he "interpret[ed] the Court's Order as seeking a collaborative effort by the Board members." He thus invited Roth and Clark to submit, by March 12, 2011, "proposed language consistent with the Court's Order," which he would then consider in drafting the Second Supplemental Opinion.
Sometime after he received Kasher's letter of March 2, 2011, Roth telephoned Kasher—without Clark's consent or knowledge—and requested that he be permitted to submit his comments in private, i.e., without sharing them with Clark.
On March 11, 2011, Clark, apparently unaware of the telephone conversation between Roth and Kasher, sent his comments in accordance with Kasher's request, along with a copy to Roth. In his letter, Clark opined that the wage increase and pension benefits provisions of the Award could not be squared with the Standards Act, and that, absent the Board's willingness to reconsider those provisions, he (Clark) was "unable to join [Kasher] in drafting a Second Supplemental Opinion...."
A few days later, on March 15, 2011, Clark realized that he had not yet received a copy of Roth's comments and e-mailed Roth to request a copy. Roth responded that same day, informing Clark that he had asked Kasher if he could submit his comments in private, and that Kasher had agreed. Roth also wrote to Clark:
E-mail Message from Thomas R. Roth to R. Theodore Clark, Jr. (Mar. 15, 2011) [Paper No. 57, Ex. D].
Clark subsequently sent two letters to Kasher, in which he requested a copy of Roth's comments. Kasher never responded to those letters. On March 25, 2011, Kasher issued the Board's Opinion. Five days later, on March 30, 2011, Roth and Clark issued concurring and dissenting opinions respectively.
In WMATA's view, the communications between Roth and Kasher deprived it of due process with the result that the unconfirmed provisions of the Award must be vacated. The Union takes the position that Roth's exchanges with Kasher were analogous to the private exchanges that often take place between two judges on a three-judge appellate panel, especially where those two judges comprise the majority against a third dissenting judge.
To be clear, WMATA does not allege that any member of the Board engaged in improper communications with a person who was not a member of the three-person Board. It maintains only that two members of the arbitration panel (Roth and Kasher) engaged in certain private communications without sharing the contents of those communications with the third panel member (Clark).
After careful review of the Second Supplemental Opinion, the record evidence, and the arguments presented in the parties' renewed motions for summary judgment, the Court concludes that the Opinion demonstrates—albeit not by a particularly wide margin—the requisite compliance with the Standards Act, and that, accordingly, those provisions of the Award not previously confirmed by the Court should be confirmed. The Court also concludes that the private communications between Neutral Chairman Kasher and Union Representative Roth were neither improper nor did they prejudice WMATA in a way that might call for vacatur of the Award and/or the disqualification of Kasher or Roth.
To repeat, in its Opinion and Order of February 17, 2011, the Court held that, when evaluating the validity of an employment-related arbitration award issued pursuant to the Compact, a court must determine: (1) whether the award is arbitrary or capricious; (2) whether the arbitration panel properly considered and applied, in writing, the Standards Act's various statutory factors; and (3) whether the arbitrator's conclusions regarding the public welfare are supported by substantial evidence. See 40 U.S.C. §§ 18303, 18304(c). The Court also held that compliance with the Standards Act ordinarily requires that the arbitration panel issue a detailed written explanation of its decision that, at a minimum: (1) discusses each of the statutory factors in some detail; (2) applies each of the factors to the dispute at issue; (3) points to specific evidence in the record—by making reference to exhibits—relevant to each and every statutory factor; (4) weighs the applicable evidence pro and con; (5) states the panel's ultimate conclusions; and (6) provides a clear explanation of the reasoning behind the panel's ultimate conclusions.
Notwithstanding these requirements, the Court's review of a Compact arbitration panel's award remains highly deferential. Again, the standard that the Court articulated in its Opinion and Order of February 17, 2011 is of a "hybrid" nature—it incorporates elements of both the exceptionally narrow standard that ordinarily applies when a court reviews the decision of an arbitration panel and the somewhat broader—but still highly deferential—standard that ordinarily applies to a court's review of the decision of an administrative agency. The Court's task is not to "re-weigh conflicting evidence, make credibility determinations, or substitute its [own] judgment" for that of the arbitration panel, see Mastro, 270 F.3d at 176, but rather to determine whether there is a mere "rational connection between the facts found and the choice made," see Dickson, 68 F.3d at 1404. An arbitration panel's decision is presumed valid, see Ohio Valley Envtl. Coalition, 556 F.3d at 192, and need not be "a model of analytic precision to survive a challenge," see Dickson, 68 F.3d at 1404.
The Board's Opinion, even if not "a model of analytic precision," Dickson, 68 F.3d at 1404, satisfies the Court that the Board's conclusions were rational based on the evidence in the record. The Opinion discusses each of the seven statutory factors in some detail, links those factors to the employment dispute between the parties, points to evidence in the record, considers evidence in support of the parties' respective positions, states its conclusions (if not as explicitly as the Court might have, still explicitly enough), and provides explanations for the conclusions it reaches.
Even the Board's most disputed conclusions—e.g., that the wage increases awarded
WMATA's brief in support of its Second Renewed Motion for Summary Judgment effectively invites the Court to consider the record de novo and reach its own conclusions in place of those made by the Board. But what WMATA's brief does not satisfactorily explain is why a "reasonable mind" could not have arrived at the conclusions the Board reached. WMATA appears to misapprehend the task that faces the Court, namely to determine only: (1) whether the Standards Act's requirements for a written award have been met; and (2) if those requirements have been met, whether the written award is supported by evidence that a reasonable person might accept in support of the conclusions reached. The Court may not substitute its own opinion—or that of WMATA, for that matter—for the Opinion of the Board.
That said, the Court is given pause by the Opinion's rather casual reference to fare increases as a possible source of funding for the awarded wage increases, since an express purpose of the Standards Act is "to lower operating costs for public transportation in the Washington metropolitan area," 40 U.S.C. § 18301(b), and, in turn, to control "the prices charged for mass transit services," see 40 U.S.C. § 18301(a)(2). The Act also states that "higher operating costs incurred for public transit in the national capital area cannot be offset by increasing costs to patrons, since this often discourages ridership and thus undermines the public interest in promoting the use of public transit." 40 U.S.C. § 18301(a)(4). The question, however, is whether the Board majority's casual reference to the possibility of fare increases is enough to sink the entire Opinion. The Court thinks not.
The Court regards the Opinion's references to fare increases as much like obiter dicta—they appear in the Opinion, to be sure, but they are not really central to its conclusions. All projected funding sources cited by the Board must to a considerable extent be speculative, since it can never be posited with certainty in advance precisely how much each of the Compact jurisdictions will contribute to WMATA's budget. Those contributions will always be a function of what level of services the jurisdictions (and their constituents) demand, and what they are prepared to pay for. The Court, after its overall review, is satisfied that the projected funding sources for the Board's wage Award—other than fare increases—are just as likely to be sufficient to cover the Award as they would be with the inclusion of fare increases. That is enough, in the Court's view, to neutralize any suggestion that fare increases would in fact be necessary.
There remains, in this regard, the parties' dispute over the private communications between Neutral Chairman Kasher and Union Representative Roth.
As WMATA has pointed out, courts have vacated arbitration awards after concluding that ex parte communications between an arbitrator and a witness or party so infected the proceedings as to prejudice the rights of a party. See Star Boxing, Inc. v. Daimlerchrysler Motors Corp., 40 A.D.3d 1106, 840 N.Y.S.2d 357, 358 (2007) (holding that ex parte communications between an arbitrator and a party's representative violated a statute and therefore necessitated vacatur of an arbitration award); Rosenthal-Collins Group, L.P. v. Reiff, 321 Ill.App.3d 683, 254 Ill.Dec. 783, 748 N.E.2d 229, 235 (2001) (affirming a trial court's decision to vacate an arbitration award tainted by ex parte communications between a party and a member of a panel of arbitrators). In addition, the Standards Act requires vacatur of a Compact arbitration award where "there was partiality or misconduct by the arbitrator prejudicing the rights of a party." 40 U.S.C. § 18304(c)(5). Citing these and other authorities, WMATA argues that the private communications between Kasher and Roth deprived it of due process such that the Court must vacate the unconfirmed provisions of the Award. The Court disagrees.
Given the limited purpose of the remand, and given WMATA Representative Clark's declared unwillingness to participate in the drafting of the Opinion, the Court is unable to see how the outcome might have been different had the private communications between Kasher and Roth not occurred. Clearly, from the beginning Kasher and Roth have taken the position that they properly considered and applied the factors that the Act required them to consider. Equally clearly, from the beginning Clark has taken the position that the Board did not properly consider those factors. To a virtual certainty, then, the outcome would have been the same with or without the private communications; there would have been a majority Opinion authored by Kasher and Roth, and a vigorous dissent by Clark.
The Court concludes that the private communications in this case had no impact on the outcome and did not prejudice WMATA. See 40 U.S.C. § 18304(c)(5) (requiring vacatur of a Compact arbitration award where "there was partiality or misconduct by the arbitrator prejudicing the rights of a party") (emphasis added). Since the private communications between Kasher and Roth do not alter the Court's ultimate conclusion that the Award, as clarified in the Second Supplemental Opinion, meets the requirements of the Standards Act, the Award must now be confirmed in its entirety.
Summing up, WMATA's Second Renewed Motion for Summary Judgment and to Disqualify Board Members Kasher and Roth [Paper No. 57] is
A separate Order will
40 U.S.C. § 18303(a).
40 U.S.C. § 18303(a).
Letter from R. Theodore Clark, Jr. to Richard R. Kasher (Mar. 11, 2011) [Paper No. 57, Ex. E] (emphasis added). Clark's written statement to Kasher strongly implies that he had little or nothing to contribute to the Opinion.