Unite Here International Union v. Sky Chefs, Inc.
Filing
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FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW FOLLOWING HEARING ON PERMANENT INJUNCTION signed by Judge Percy Anderson. The Court will issue a Judgment and Permanent Injunction consistent with these Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. (See document for further details). (aco)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
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UNITE HERE INTERNATIONAL
UNION,
Plaintiff,
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v.
No. CV 22-1938 PA (PVCx)
FINDINGS OF FACT AND
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW FOLLOWING
HEARING ON PERMANENT
INJUNCTION
SKY CHEFS, INC.,
Defendant.
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On March 24, 2022, plaintiff Unite Here International Union (“Unite Here” or
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“Union”) filed its Complaint seeking an injunction under the Railway Labor Act (“RLA”),
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45 U.S.C. 151-188, against defendant Sky Chefs, Inc. (“Sky Chefs” or “Employer”). Unite
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Here and Sky Chefs are parties to a Master National Agreement (“MNA”) that, among other
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employees, covers Sky Chefs employees working at Los Angeles International Airport
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(“LAX”). Unite Here filed an Ex Parte Application for Temporary Restraining Order at the
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same time it filed its Complaint. Concluding that Unite Here had not satisfied the
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requirements of Local Rule 7-19, the Court denied the Ex Parte Application without
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prejudice to Unite Here filing a properly noticed Motion for Preliminary Injunction.
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Sky Chefs filed a Motion to Dismiss the action because, in its view, Unite Here’s
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effort to prevent Sky Chefs from modifying the health plan offered to its LAX employees
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constituted a minor dispute over which the Court would lack jurisdiction under the RLA
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rather than a major dispute over which it could exercise jurisdiction. See 45 U.S.C.
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151a; Consol. Rail Corp. v. Ry. Labor Execs. Ass’n (“Conrail”), 491 U.S. 299, 302, 109 S.
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Ct. 2477, 105 L. Ed. 2d 250 (1989). On May 26, 2022, the Court granted Sky Chefs Motion
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to Dismiss. Unite Here appealed and the Ninth Circuit, in a December 18, 2023
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Memorandum Disposition, concluded that the parties disagreement constituted a major
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dispute over which the Court has jurisdiction, reversed this Courts dismissal of the action,
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and remanded with instructions for this Court to address complex remedial issues that need
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to be resolved prior to the issuance of any status quo injunction.
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Following issuance of the Ninth Circuits Mandate, the Court set a briefing schedule
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for a hearing on Unite Here’s Motion for Permanent Injunction. After continuances to
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accommodate the parties and the schedules of their witnesses, the Court, on August 19,
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2024, conducted an evidentiary hearing pursuant to the Norris-LaGuardia Act (“NLGA”), 29
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U.S.C. 107. Having reviewed the declarations and evidence provided by the parties, hearing
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the testimony of witnesses in open court, and providing opportunity for cross-examination,
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the Court now makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:
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1.
The MNA between Unite Here and Sky Chefs went into effect on April 7,
2016, and became amendable on December 31, 2018.
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The MNA governs healthcare plan premium splits between Sky Chefs and its
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employees. Prior to 2022, Sky Chefs offered employees the option of enrolling in a
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Consumer-Driven Health Plan (“CDHP”) or a Copay Healthcare Plan. The premiums for
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the CDHP were split between employees and Sky Chefs, so employees would pay 35% of
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the premium and Sky Chefs would pay the remaining 65%. The Copay Healthcare Plan was
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split between Sky Chefs and employees so individual employees pay less than 35%, and
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employees with children, a spouse, or family (i.e., spouse and child(ren)) pay 35% of the
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premium and Sky Chefs pays 65%.
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3.
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changes in the MNA pursuant to Section 6 of the RLA in view of the MNAs approaching
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amendable date of December 31, 2018. One area where Unite Here proposed to bargain for
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changes was to the healthcare benefit. The Union proposed that, instead of the plans set out
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in the MNA, the Employer should join a joint-trusteed labor management fund that would
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provide individual and family benefits to all members of the bargaining unit at no cost or
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low cost. The parties have been engaged in negotiations about this and other matters since
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the MNA became amendable, but have yet to reach agreement. Since February of 2019,
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they have been aided by a mediator from the National Mediation Board (“NMB”).
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On October 2, 2018, Unite Here gave Sky Chefs notice of its intent to negotiate
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As of January 20, 2018, Sky Chefs’ operations at LAX are subject to the City
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of Los Angeles Living Wage Ordinance (“LWO”). See Los Angeles Administrative Code
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Ch. 1, Art. 11, Div. 10, §§ 10.37-10.37.16. Under the LWO, Sky Chefs is required to
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compensate employees earning a set minimum base pay for any difference between a set
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hourly health benefit payment and the hourly value of the healthcare with which they are
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actually provided. See id. § 10.37.2(a)(3). The minimum wage rate plus the health benefit
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rate is referred to as the “full cash wage” rate in the City’s publications. If an employee
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chooses to decline employer-provided healthcare coverage, the employee must seek a waiver
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through the City. See id. § 10.37.15(e).
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5.
At the time this lawsuit was initiated on March 24, 2022, the LWO’s base
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wage rate was $17.00 per hour and the health benefit rate was $5.67 per hour, yielding a full
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cash wage rate of $22.67 per hour. As of July 1, 2022, the base wage rate was $18.04 per
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hour and the health benefit rate was $5.77 per hour, yielding a full cash wage rate of $23.81
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per hour. As of July 1, 2023, the lower tier is $18.78 per hour and the health benefit rate is
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$5.95 per hour, yielding a full cash wage rate of $24.73 per hour. The LWO provides that a
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collective bargaining agreement that becomes open for negotiation after the LWO’s
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effective date may supersede the ordinance’s requirements, but only if the collective
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bargaining agreement provides a total hourly economic package that is no less than the full
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cash wage rate required by the LWO. See id. § 10.37.12.
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6.
Since coming under coverage of the LWO on December 31, 2018, and until on
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or about April 1, 2022, Sky Chefs met its obligation to provide health benefits or wages in
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lieu of health benefits by paying employees a supplemental wage that it described as a
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“market rate adjustment.” To calculate the market rate adjustment, Sky Chefs subtracted
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from the LWO’s full cash wage rate the hourly wage rate that Sky Chefs paid the employee,
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and then subtracted from that amount the cost to Sky Chefs of any benefit option that the
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employee had selected. For example, if as of July 1, 2021 (when the full cash wage rate was
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$22.67 per hour), an employee earned $19.00 per hour in wages and purchased healthcare
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benefits that cost Sky Chefs $2.00 per hour, Sky Chefs would pay the employee $1.67 per
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hour as the market rate adjustment ($22.67–$19.00–$2.00=$1.67). To take another example,
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if on the same date an employee earned the base rate of $17.00 per hour and elected no
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healthcare benefits, then Sky Chefs would pay the employee $5.67 per hour as market rate
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adjustment ($22.67–$17.00–$0.00=$5.77). Sky Chefs’ payment of the market rate
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adjustment ensured that employees earned the full cash wage rate required by the LWO,
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taking into account their actual wage rate together with the cost to Sky Chefs of their
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voluntarily elected benefit choices.
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7.
On or about October 22, 2021, Sky Chefs provided the Union with its annual
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benefits letter and notified the Union of the 2022 open enrollment period. The benefits letter
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stated: “In locations LAX and JFK a new Cigna Co-pay plan will replace the current Cigna
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plans offered. The rates for these plans will be consistent with the 2022 co-pay plan rates
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offered in the other [customer service centers (“CSC”)].” Unite Here’s chief negotiator
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stated that the benefits letter did not provide him with notice that Sky Chefs intended to
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force its employees at LAX to participate in a company-sponsored “no cost” plan and end
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the LWO market rate adjustment. The open enrollment period began on November 1, 2021,
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and ended on November 19, 2021, for a plan year beginning January 1, 2022.
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8.
Although Sky Chefs appears to have made references to its intention to adopt a
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company-sponsored no cost plan for LAX during the parties discussions about a variety of
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issues in October, November, and February, there is no evidence that Sky Chefs provided
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Unite Here with any concrete proposal, details, or cost data about such a plan, or that Sky
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Chefs intended to eliminate the market rate adjustment until February 28, 2022. On that day,
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Roger Twigg (“Twigg”), Sky Chefs Head of Labor Relations for North America, sent to
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Unite Here’s Chuck Hendricks (“Hendricks”) an email stating:
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As you are aware, the LA Living Wage ordinance requires the
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Company to pay Sky Chefs employees a minimum hourly wage
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plus a supplemental health insurance benefit amount. After
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much internal discussion and in response to requirements of the
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ordinance, the Company has made the decision to offer free
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healthcare to all LAX employees who are covered under the
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ordinance. Employees will have the opportunity to opt out of the
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coverage provided they show proof of other coverage and apply
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through an exemption through the city.
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Hendricks responded to Twigg the same day requesting information about the
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new healthcare plan: its eligibility requirements, cost to the company, its plan design, and an
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explanation of what would happen if the value of the plan were less than the amount
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required by the law.
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On March 4, 2022, Twigg forwarded to Hendricks information showing that
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the total monthly cost to employees for employee-only coverage under what was called the
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“LAX Copay Plan” would be zero. Sky Chefs stated that the total monthly cost for the
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employer would be $982.76 per month, which works out to $5.67 per hour over a year
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consisting of 2080 work hours ($982.76 x 12 2080 = $5.67). The $5.67 hourly rate equaled
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the health benefit rate under the LWO at the time, meaning that Sky Chefs would no longer
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pay any market rate adjustment.
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On March 11, 2022 Hendricks and Twigg held a telephone conference about
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the matter. Hendricks made clear to Twigg the Unite Heres position that Sky Chefs could
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not unilaterally implement the healthcare and wage changes it was planning at LAX. Twigg
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responded that he believed that Sky Chefs could act unilaterally, but that he would discuss it
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further internally.
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On March 15, 2022, Hendricks wrote to inquire as to the status of the matter.
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Twigg responded that he had met the day before with senior leadership, and confirmed Sky
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Chefs decision to implement the changes unilaterally. Sky Chefs implemented its LAX
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Copay Plan and ceased paying the market rate adjustment on April 1, 2022.
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13.
The LWO has enforcement mechanisms allowing covered employees to seek
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the differential between the wage required by the LWO without health benefits and the wage
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with health benefits. See LWO, § 10.37.6. The LWO also authorizes the City of Los
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Angeles to audit employers to verify compliance and order the payment of restitution to
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employees. See id. Through those enforcement mechanisms, the City of Los Angeles has
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ordered Sky Chefs to pay to the employees $225,390.65 in restitution for 2022. (See
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Declaration of Eric Myers, ¶¶ 2-5 & Exhs. A & B, Docket No. 56.) The City of Los Angeles
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has initiated a similar audit for 2023. (See id.)
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14.
During the evidentiary hearing, Hendricks testified that one of the reasons
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Unite Here hoped to convince Sky Chefs to participate in a joint-trusteed labor management
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fund that would provide individual and family benefits to all members of the bargaining unit
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at no cost or low cost was Unite Here’s concern that once the employees began receiving the
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market rate adjustment as an addition to the minimum hourly rate, it would be next to
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impossible to redirect those funds to healthcare because the employees would start living off
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the additional cash as part of their wage.
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15.
The NLGA evidences congressional intent to limit federal courts from
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becoming overly involved in labor disputes and issuing injunctive relief unnecessarily.
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“Even when a violation of a specific mandate of the RLA is shown,” courts should
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“hesitate” to grant an injunction “unless that remedy alone can effectively guard the
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plaintiff’s right.” Aircraft Serv. Int’l Inc. v. Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters Local 117, 779 F.3d
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1069, 1074 (9th Cir. 2015) (en banc) (quoting Int’l Ass’n of Machinists v. S.B. Street, 367
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U.S. 740, 772-73, 81 S. Ct. 1784, 1802, 6 L. Ed. 2d 1141 (1961)).
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16.
The NLGA provides that prior to issuing an injunction, a court must find that
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(1) unlawful acts have been threatened and will be committed unless restrained,
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(2) substantial and irreparable harm will occur to the plaintiff, (3) the injury inflicted upon
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the plaintiff by denial of the injunction will be greater than the injury inflicted upon the
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defendant by granting the injunction, and (4) there is no adequate remedy at law. See 29
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U.S.C. § 107(a)–(d). As the Ninth Circuit explained in its Memorandum Disposition in this
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case, “a showing of irreparable harm is not needed before an injunction to maintain the
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status quo may be entered. ‘[D]istrict courts have subject-matter jurisdiction to enjoin a
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violation of the status quo pending completion of the required procedures, without the
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customary showing of irreparable injury.’” Unite Here Int’l Union v. Sky Chefs, Inc., Case
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No. 22-55608, 2023 WL 8715639, at *2 (9th Cir. Dec. 18, 2023) (quoting Conrail, 491 U.S.
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at 303, 109 S. Ct. at 2480, 105 L. Ed. 2d 250).
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An employer subject to the RLA has an obligation under § 6 to maintain the
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status quo with respect to terms and conditions of employment if such changes would give
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rise to a major dispute unless and until it has exhausted the RLA’s dispute resolution
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procedures.
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The Ninth Circuit has held “that a party seeking an injunction under the RLA
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is not relieved of its obligation to comply with the provisions of Section 8 of the NLGA.”
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Aircraft Serv. Int’l, 779 F.3d at 1077. Section 8 of the NLGA provides:
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No restraining order or injunctive relief shall be granted to any
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complainant who has failed to comply with any obligation
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imposed by law which is involved in the labor dispute in
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question, or who has failed to make every reasonable effort to
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settle such dispute either by negotiation or with the aid of any
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available governmental machinery of mediation or voluntary
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arbitration.
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29 U.S.C. § 108.
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19.
The Court concludes that § 8 of the NLGA does not prevent the Court from
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issuing an injunction in this case. Specifically, the Court concludes that in light of Sky
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Chefs’ determination to act unilaterally to establish its LAX Copay Plan and cease paying
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the market rate adjustment, and the speed with which Sky Chefs acted after first providing
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details of its plan on February 28, 2022, and implementing the plan on April 1, 2022, Unite
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Here did make “every reasonable effort” under the circumstances to settle the dispute as
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required by § 8.
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The Court further concludes that the remaining applicable factors support the
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issuance of a permanent injunction. In the present case, the status quo that existed prior to
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the changes that Sky Chefs made on or about April 1, 2022 was as follows: 1) Sky Chefs
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offered employees the Copay Plan and CDHP options; 2) Sky Chefs allowed employees to
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choose for themselves whether and to what extent to participate in either healthcare option
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(as well as vision and dental coverage options), and 3) Sky Chefs met its requirement under
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the LWO by paying employees as a supplemental wage payment a sum (the “market rate
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adjustment”) that was calculated by subtracting from the full cash hourly wage rate required
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by the LWO the actual hourly wage rate that Sky Chefs paid the employee, and from that
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amount the cost to Sky Chefs of any healthcare option that the employee had voluntarily
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selected.
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21.
In fashioning injunctive relief in this instance, the Court will require Sky
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Chefs to offer its employees at LAX the Copay Plan and CDHP that are substantially
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identical to those it offered prior to April 1, 2022, and to pay to the market rate adjustment to
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those employees who choose either no health plan or a health plan with an employer share
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that when combined with the hourly rate of pay falls below the LWO’s “full cash wage.”
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The Court is, however, reluctant to eliminate the LAX Copay Plan adopted by Sky Chefs on
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April 1, 2022, for any employees who wish to continue their participation in that plan. Sky
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Chefs may therefore continue to offer the LAX Copay Plan, but may not make participation
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in the plan mandatory. During the evidentiary hearing, Sky Chef’s Tobi Junker testified that
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Sky Chefs could restore this “status quo” in time for the upcoming open enrollment period in
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November 2024 and that any changes could be effective as of January 1, 2025. This
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injunction will remain in effect unless and until the parties negotiate and approve an
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alternative resolution or Sky Chefs has exhausted the dispute resolution procedures set forth
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in the RLA.
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22.
Unite Here also seeks an award of “back pay” as part of a status quo injunction
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“‘to restore the situation, as nearly as possible, to that which would have occurred but for the
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violation.’” NLRB v. Ampersand Publ’g, LLC, 43 F. 4th 1233, 1237 (9th Cir. 2022)
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(quoting Kallman v. NLRB, 640 F.2d 1094, 1103 (9th Cir. 1981)). Although the Court
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recognizes its discretion to impose a back pay remedy, the Court concludes, in an exercise of
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the Court’s equitable discretion, that a back pay award is not warranted for several reasons.
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A.
First, one of the purposes of the LWO is to provide health insurance
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coverage for covered employees. Sky Chefs acted consistently with that, even if its
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unilateral decision to do so in a particular manner constituted a “major dispute” under the
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RLA.
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B.
Second, although the modification constitutes a “major dispute,” Sky
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Chefs made similar modifications at other facilities covered by living wage ordinances
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without objection from Unite Here, so there is no evidence of bad faith or a willful violation
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of the RLA.
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C.
Third, although the details may have been different, Unite Here had
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proposed, and continues to advocate for, a joint-trusteed labor management fund that would
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provide individual and family benefits to all members of the bargaining unit at no cost or
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low cost. Had Sky Chefs agreed to Unite Here’s proposal, Unite Here’s members would
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have experienced the same termination of the market rate adjustment that they experienced
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when Sky Chefs unilaterally imposed its LAX Copay Plan in April 2022. That is, Unite
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Here was and remains willing to end the market rate adjustment in exchange for a healthcare
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plan. To award back pay in this situation, where Sky Chefs provided health insurance,
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would be inequitable.
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D.
Fourth, the employees did receive health insurance during the period
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beginning on April 1, 2022. That health insurance has some value, and to ignore that value
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and require payment of the market rate adjustment for the period beginning on April 1, 2022,
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would be inequitable.
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E.
Fifth, as Unite Here admitted during the evidentiary hearing,
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determining the amount of back pay would require additional discovery, necessitate review
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of voluminous records and demand complex accounting, require the Court to make
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assumptions about which options employees would have selected during subsequent open
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enrollment periods, and involve sophisticated actuarial analysis concerning the value of the
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LAX Copay Plan. The Court’s involvement in a back pay award would also potentially
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supplant an ongoing process through which the City of Los Angeles has already ordered Sky
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Chefs to pay restitution based on the value that those the LWO tasks with enforcing the
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LWO have already rendered concerning the value of the healthcare benefits provided by Sky
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Chefs. The Court is reluctant to interject itself in that process, interfere with those who have
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the actuarial expertise to make such judgments, and waste the parties’ resources by
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duplicating the LWO’s enforcement mechanisms. Indeed, it appears that the LWO’s
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enforcement mechanisms could more quickly determine and provide an appropriate amount
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of restitution than could the Court.
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For all of these reasons, the Court concludes that the equities do not support an
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award of back pay in these circumstances and, in the exercise of the Court’s discretion, the
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Court declines to include a back pay award as part of its status quo injunction.
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The Court will issue a Judgment and Permanent Injunction consistent with these
Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.
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IT IS SO ORDERED.
DATED: August 29, 2024
_________________________________
District Judge
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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