Opinion
No. 88-2692.
August 16, 1991.
Appeal from the Public Employees Relations Commission.
Ronald G. Meyer and Ruthann Robson, Tallahassee, for appellants.
James J. Parry, Director and Scot A. Silzer, Counsel, Office of Human Resources, Bd. of Regents, Tallahassee, for appellees.
This is an appeal by the United Faculty of Florida (UFF) and its president, Robert Hogner, from an order of the Public Employees Relations Commission, finding that UFF engaged in an unfair labor practice in violation of section 447.501(2)(f), Florida Statutes (1987), by publishing an open letter to students in the Florida International University (FIU) student newspaper soliciting their support in connection with an ongoing labor dispute. The issues presented are whether the letter was protected free speech pursuant to section 447.501(3) and whether section 447.501(2)(f) is unconstitutional.
The Commission has notified the court that it chooses not to participate in this appeal. The Board of Regents has filed an answer brief.
The cited section provides:
(2) A public employee organization or anyone acting in its behalf or its officers, representatives, agents, or members are prohibited from:
* * * * * *
(f) Instigating or advocating support, in any positive manner, for an employee organization's activities from high school or grade school students or students in institutions of higher learning.
That section provides in pertinent part:
Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections (1) and (2), the parties's rights of free speech shall not be infringed, and the expression of any arguments or opinions shall not constitute, or be evidence of, an unfair employment practice or any other violation of this part, if such expression contains no promise of benefits or threat of reprisal or force.
This proceeding commenced when the Board of Regents (BOR) filed the unfair labor practice charge against UFF after the charge was determined sufficient by the Commission's General Counsel. UFF filed an answer that admitted the operative allegations of the charge and asserted as affirmative defenses that the subject letter constituted "free speech" protected by section 447.501(3) and that section 447.501(2)(f) is unconstitutional. The BOR subsequently moved to amend the petition based on a second letter published by UFF to FIU students, and the Commission allowed the amendment. UFF answered the amended charges, relying on the defenses previously stated.
The hearing officer determined that the pleadings raised no disputed issues of material fact and called on the parties to submit the case on briefs and argument without an evidentiary hearing. He then issued a recommended order which concluded that the letters were free speech protected by section 447.501(3) and did not constitute an unfair labor practice in violation of section 447.501(2)(f). Accordingly, the hearing officer recommended that the charges be dismissed.
The BOR filed exceptions to the recommended order with a supporting brief and requested oral argument. After the matter was heard, the Commission issued a final order essentially adopting the undisputed facts set forth in the recommended order, which were summarized by the Commission as follows:
In early 1988, UFF was engaged in collective negotiations with the BOR. On January 11, 1988, UFF submitted a proposal relating to supplemental summer teaching appointments at Florida International University (FIU). On February 2, UFF published in the FIU student newspaper, the FIU Sunblazer, an item entitled an "Open Letter to FIU Students." It was signed by Robert H. Hogner, President of the FIU Chapter of UFF. The letter set forth UFF's concerns about the shortage of class offerings at FIU during the Summer term and proposed as a solution the gradual reallocation of funds to provide a full academic program in the Summer. It asked students for support in an effort to improve the Summer offerings, stating:
We are asking your help and support in this effort to improve summer offerings. We urge you to clip out the petition form supplied here and to distribute it to your classmates and friends at FIU, then return it to us at the address shown. If you have any other ideas about how we can work together to convince the Administration that inadequate Summer offerings are a serious problem that must be addressed immediately, please phone me (ext. 2571) as soon as possible.
We believe that this is a problem with a solution in which everyone can win — students, faculty, and the University as a whole.
Along with the "open letter" was a "petition," which stated:
We, the undersigned students of Florida International University, do herein (1) express support for a plan to provide a full academic program in the summer, and (2) petition the University to seriously discuss with the United Faculty of Florida the development and adoption of such a plan.
At the bottom of the petition, spaces were provided for signatures, with instructions to "CLIP AND RETURN TO FIU-UFF, UPC AS SOON AS POSSIBLE!"
After the BOR filed the present charge, on March 15, UFF published a second "open letter" to FIU students in the FIU Sunblazer. This letter reflected that two events had occurred since "the receipt by FIU-UFF of your petitions": (1) the allocation of funds for Summer classes had been raised; and (2) the BOR had filed the unfair labor practice charge.
The Commission ruled that the second letter only disseminated information to the students at FIU and did not constitute an unfair labor practice within the meaning of section 447.501(2)(f) because it "merely recites the status of negotiations and contains no express or implicit request for student support or assistance." The Commission cited Clay County Education Association v. School Board of Clay County, 8 FPER Para. 13365, 637-38 (1982), aff'd, 431 So.2d 992 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983), for the proposition that section 447.501(2)(f) only prohibits affirmative acts of calling students to action.
The Commission differed with the hearing officer's recommendation as to the first letter to FIU students, however, and ruled that this letter constituted an unfair labor practice in violation of section 447.501(2)(f). The Commission determined that "the letter instigates and advocates support" by the students of FIU "in a positive manner" for UFF because it requested FIU students "to clip out the petition supplied in the letter, execute it, distribute it to classmates, and return it to UFF" and it called on the students to "support a full summer academic program, which was a bargaining proposal advanced by the UFF at that time."
Addressing UFF's contention and the hearing officer's conclusion that the letter was "free speech" protected by section 447.501(3), the Commission ruled that in the letter "UFF did not simply express its arguments or opinions, but specifically requested students to become involved in negotiations" and that under these circumstances "the generalized terms of Section 447.501(3), must yield to specific prescription [sic] in Section 447.501(2)(f)," citing IBEW, Local 501 v. NLRB, 341 U.S. 694 at 701-02, 71 S.Ct. 954 at 958-60 [95 L.Ed. 1299] (1951). In rejecting the hearing officer's conclusion that the letter constituted free speech under section 447.501(3), the Commission reasoned that although the Commission "must bear in mind constitutional ramifications when considering various interpretations of a statute," citing Hotel, Motel, Restaurant Employees and Bartenders Union, Local 737 v. Escambia County School Board, 7 FPER Para. 12395 (1981), aff'd 426 So.2d 1017 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983), "it would exceed our statutory authority to ignore a statute's plain meaning and construe unambiguous and clear language in a strained fashion to avoid potential constitutional infirmities. E.g., Gulf Pines Memorial Park, Inc. v. Oakland [Oaklawn] Memorial Park, 361 So.2d 695, 699 (Fla. 1978)." The Commission further pointed out that an unambiguous statute "should not be interpreted in any way which would extend, modify, or limit its express terms" and that clear statutory language susceptible of only one interpretation must be effectuated in accordance with the legislative intent so manifested, citing several Florida cases supporting these propositions.
Applying these principles, the Commission concluded that section 447.501(2)(f) applies to UFF's letter, and that the proscription in that subsection prevails over the general language of section 447.501(3) because the latter section simply recognizes that the parties have a first amendment right to communicate. The Commission expressed disagreement with the hearing officer's conclusion that the reference to free speech in 447.501(3) authorizes the commission "to limit Section 447.501(2)(f) to instances of actual or potential exploitation of students" since that section expressly prohibits "instigating or advocating [student] support, in any positive manner." Further, the Commission rejected the hearing officer's conclusion there was no implicit coercive effect on the FIU students as they were in an institution of higher learning because that is exactly what section 447.501(2)(f) prohibits. While agreeing with the hearing officer that 447.501(2)(f) is intended to prevent exploitation of students by their teachers, citing UFF v. Board of Regents, 3 FPER 304 (1977), the Commission explained that such is not its only purpose, for the Commission has also recognized "other objectives in prohibiting solicitation of student support, such as keeping labor disputes out of the classroom and avoiding disruption. Clay Counter Education Association v. The School Board of Clay County, Florida, 8 FPER para. 13365 at 367 (1982), aff'd per curiam, 431 So.2d 992 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983)." The Commission rejected "the hearing officer's suggestion that, notwithstanding the plain meaning of Section 447.501(2)(f), a union can solicit student support for its activities, so long as it is done in a noncoercive fashion." To the extent that section 447.501(2)(f) may invalidly circumscribe a party's First Amendment right to free speech, the Commission said, that is an issue on which the Commission must defer to the judiciary.
UFF urges three points on this appeal from that order: (1) PERC's interpretation of sections 447.501(2)(f) and 447.501(3) was clearly erroneous as a matter of law; (2) section 447.501(2)(f) is violative of Article I, section 4 of the Florida Constitution and the First Amendment of the United States Constitution as interpreted by Florida courts; and (3) section 447.501(2)(f) violates the First Amendment because it cannot survive the strict scrutiny required by applicable court decisions, as it does not advance any compelling state interest to be served by the least restrictive means available.
Because we find section 447.501(2)(f) to be facially unconstitutional, we do not discuss the first two points. We agree with the decision and rationale expressed in the order of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida in United Faculty of Florida v. Sloan, Case Number TCA 88-40070-MMP, filed July 12, 1991, holding that this section unconstitutionally abridges appellants' First Amendment right to free speech and enjoining the defendants from enforcing that section (See copy of that decision attached as an appendix to this opinion).
There is no question that section 447.501(2)(f) is both a content-based and viewpoint-based restriction on speech, and regulates speech based on the identity of the speaker. It applies to speech by a public employee organization in any forum, whether public, limited public, or nonpublic, without any restriction as to time. Thus, the statute can be upheld only if these restrictions on speech serve a compelling state interest and the statute is narrowly drawn to achieve that end. Perry Educ. Ass'n v. Perry Local Educators' Ass'n, 460 U.S. 37, 103 S.Ct. 948, 74 L.Ed.2d 794 (1983). While the stated purposes of the statute prohibiting union solicitation of student support, i.e., exploitation of students, keeping labor disputes out of the classroom, and avoiding disruption of school activities, may well qualify as compelling state interests, section 447.501(2)(f) is not narrowly tailored to achieve those interests. As Judge Paul stated in his order in United Faculty of Florida v. Sloan, supra:
Section 447.501(2)(f) "imposes a selective restriction on expressive conduct far `greater than is essential to the furtherance of . . . [the compelling state] interest[s].'" See Police Dep't of Chicago v. Mosley, 408 U.S. 92, 102, 92 S.Ct. 2286, 2293-94 [33 L.Ed.2d 212 (1972)]. Section 447.501(2)(f) is overbroad because it prohibits any speech which advocates support for an employee organization's activities: it is not limited to speech of an exploitative nature, to speech that is coercive, to speech that injects labor disputes into the classroom [5. The qualifier "during classroom time" was deleted from the statute. Ch. 74-100, 1974 Fla. Laws 134, 148.], or to speech that causes disruption. Moreover, it is overbroad because it makes no distinction as to the type of protection from exploitation needed for elementary school children from that of university students who would certainly need less, if any, protection from such exploitation.
(Order at p. 8-9.) As that order points out, less drastic and less restrictive means of preventing exploitation of students, injecting labor disputes into the classroom, or causing disruption are available to the state through enforcement of rules regulating teachers' conduct as licensees of the state. Furthermore, section 447.509(1)(c) prohibits employee organizations or their representatives from "instigating or advocating support, in any positive manner, for an employee organization's activities from high school or grade school students during classroom time." In short, the statute is too broad to meet constitutional requirements.
Because the unfair labor practice charge found in this case is premised on a violation of section 447.501(2)(f), our conclusion that this section is unconstitutional mandates reversal of the appealed order and remand with directions to dismiss the charges against appellants.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
ERVIN and ZEHMER, JJ., and WENTWORTH, Senior Judge, concur.