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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. State of Alaska, et al. v. Alaska State Employees Association/American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 52, AFL-CIO (5/26/2023) sp-7657

State of Alaska, et al. v. Alaska State Employees Association/American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 52, AFL-CIO (5/26/2023) sp-7657

           Notice:   This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the Pacific Reporter.                                                               

           Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,                                                             

            303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264                                         -0608, fax (907) 264              -0878, email   

            corrections@akcourts.gov.   

  

  

                           THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA   

  



STATE OF ALASKA; GOVERNOR                                                             )       

MICHAEL J. DUNLEAVY, in an                                                            )     Supreme Court No. S-18172   

official capacity; ATTORNEY                                                           )       

GENERAL TREG R. TAYLOR, in an                                                         )     Superior Court  No. 3AN- 19-09971 CI   

official capacity; DEPARTMENT OF                                                      )       

ADMINISTRATION  and                                                                   )     O P I N I O  N   

COMMISSIONER  PAULA VRANA,                                                            )       

in an  official capacity,                                                             )     No. 7657  -  May 26, 2023   

                                                                                      )  

                                         Appellants,                                  )  

                                                                                      )  

              v.                                                                     )  

                                                                                      )  

ALASKA STATE EMPLOYEES                                                                )  

ASSOCIATION/AMERICAN                                                                  )  

FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY                                                           )  

and MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES                                                               )  

LOCAL 52, AFL-CIO,                                                                    )  

                                                                                      )   

                                         Appellee.                                    )   

                                                                                      )   

                           

                         Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third                                                                 

                         Judicial District, Anchorage, Gregory A.                                             Miller, Judge.   

  

                         Appearances:      Jessica  M.  Alloway,  Assistant  Attorney   

                         General, Anchorage, and Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General,                                                                    

                         Juneau, for Appellants.  Molly C. Brown, Dillon & Findley,                                                                   

                         P.C.,   Anchorage,   and   Scott   A.  Kronland   and   Matthew  J.   

                         Murray, Altshuler Berzon LLP, San Francisco, for Appellee.                                                                    

  

                         Before:     Winfree,  Chief   Justice,  Maassen,  Carney,  and   

                                                                                                                                                   *  

                         Henderson,                   Justices,             and         Eastaugh,                Senior             Justice.    

                          [Borghesan, Justice, not participating.]   


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

                     

                   WINFREE, Chief Justice.   

  



         INTRODUCTION   



                   Alaska  State  Employees  Association   (ASEA)   is  a  public  sector   union   



representing  thousands of  State employees, including  union  members and  nonmembers.    



Prior  to  2019, and pursuant  to  a collective bargaining  agreement with ASEA, the State   



deducted union members'  dues from their  paychecks and deducted from nonmembers'   



paychecks   a  mandatory   "agency   fee"  -   a   percentage of   full   union   dues  to   support   



bargaining efforts on  behalf of all employees -  and transmitted the funds to  ASEA.   



                   In June 2018  the United States Supreme Court held in  Janus v. American   



Federation  of  State,  County,  &  Municipal  Employees,  Council  31  (Janus)  that  charging   



union   agency   fees to   nonmember   public employees violated   their   First Amendment   



rights by  "compelling  them  to  subsidize  private speech  on  matters of  substantial  public   



              1  

concern."     The  State  and   ASEA   modified  their   collective  bargaining   agreement   to   



comply with  Janus ,  and the State halted collecting agency fees from nonmembers.   



                   In 2019, after a change in executive branch administrations following the   



November 2018  election, the State took  the position  that  Janus  also  required  the State   



to  take steps  to  protect  union  member employees'  First  Amendment rights.  The State   



contended  that  Janus  required  it  to  obtain  union  members'  clear  and  affirmative consent   



to  union  dues deductions, or  else they too  -  like nonmember employees -  might  be  



compelled  to   fund   objectionable speech   on   issues   of   substantial  public concern.   The  



governor   issued   an administrative order   directing  the State to  bypass ASEA   and   deal   



directly  with   individual  union  members to   determine whether they  wanted their   dues   



deductions to  continue and  to  immediately  cease collecting  dues upon  request.   Some   



                                                                                                                          



         *  

                   Sitting   by   assignment   made  under  article  IV,  section   16   of   the  Alaska  

Constitution.   



         1  

                   138  S. Ct. 2448, 2460  (2018).   



                                                          -2-                                                    7657 
  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

union   members  expressed   a  desire  to   leave  the  union   and   requested  to   stop   dues   



deductions; the State ceased collecting their  union dues.    



                   The  State  then  sued   ASEA,  seeking   declaratory   judgment  that   Janus   



compelled the State's actions.  ASEA  responded and  brought  counterclaims and  third- 



party   claims, seeking  to   enjoin  the State's actions and  recover   damages for  breach   of   



the collective bargaining   agreement and   violations of   several   statutes.    The superior   



court   ruled   in   favor   of   ASEA, entering   declaratory  judgment   that   the State's actions   



were wrongful, enjoining those actions, and  awarding  damages to  ASEA.   



                   The State appeals.  We affirm  the superior  court's declaratory  judgment   



in  favor of  ASEA  because neither Janus  nor  the First Amendment required  the State to   



alter the union   member dues deduction   practices set   out   in   the   collective bargaining   



agreement.  And  because the State's actions  were not  compelled by  Janus  or  the First   



Amendment, we affirm  the superior  court's rulings  that  the State breached  the collective   



bargaining   agreement   and   violated   relevant   statutes.    We further   affirm   the superior   



court's permanent   injunction  prohibiting   the State from  unilaterally   implementing   its   



wrongful actions.   



          CONSTITUTIONAL BACKDROP -  ABOOD  AND  JANUS   



                   In   the  late  1970s  the   United  States  Supreme  Court   decided   Abood   v.   



                                         2  

Detroit   Board   of   Education .    In   that   case the Court   held   that   public sector   unions'   



collective bargaining  agreements could  require nonmember  employees to  pay  a portion   



of  what  union  members paid  as union  dues to  support  the unions'  collective-bargaining   



activities on  behalf   of   all   employees, so   long   as those fees were used   for   "collective- 



                                                                                                            3  

bargaining,  contract   administration,  and   grievance-adjustment  purposes."     But   the   



Court  concluded  that  such  arrangements were unconstitutional  if  the agency  fees were   



                                                                                                                             



          2  

                   431  U.S. 209  (1977), overruled by Janus,   138  S. Ct. at 2460.   



          3  

                   Id.  at 232.   



  



                                                            -3-                                                       7657   


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

used  "to  contribute to  political candidates and to express political views unrelated to [a                                                                         



                                                                                                            4  

union's]  duties as exclusive bargaining  representative."   



                          In   2018   the   Supreme   Court   overruled  Abood   in   Janus ,  declaring   that   



Abood  was poorly reasoned and that its constitutional dividing line                                                               was unworkable in   



                 5  

practice.       The   Court    noted    that    during    collective   bargaining    activities   unions   



sometimes engage in  speech  on  "sensitive political  topics" such  as "climate change,  the   



                                                                                                                                        6  

Confederacy, sexual  orientation  and  gender identity, [and]  evolution."   The Court said                                                                                



that   such  speech   "occupies  the  highest   rung   of   the  hierarchy   of   First  Amendment   



                                                                                    7  

values,"  and  "merits 'special  protection.'  "   The Court identified compelled speech as                                                                                



                                                                                                                      8  

the threat necessitating special First Amendment protections,                                                            stating  that it raises First     



Amendment   concerns   similar   to    those   about   "a    law   commanding    'involuntary   



                                                                       9  

affirmation'   of   objected-to   beliefs."    The Court reasoned that requiring nonmember                                                                                 



employees to pay agency fees could result in unions using those fees to fund                                                                         collective   



                                                                                                                                                                       10  

bargaining speech advancing opinions with which nonmember employees disagreed.                                                                                              



 Stating  that  such  "compelled subsidization  of  private speech  seriously  impinges on  First   



                                                                                                                                                                           



              4  

                          Abood , 431  U.S. at 234. 
  



              5  

                          Janus , 138  S. Ct. at  2460. 
  



              6  

                          Id. at 2476. 
  



              7  

                          Id.  (quoting  Snyder v.  Phelps, 562 U.S. 443, 452  (2011)). 
  



              8  

                          See id.  at 2464 ("When speech is compelled .  .  . individuals are coerced
   

into  betraying their convictions.  Forcing free and independent individuals to endorse  

ideas they find objectionable is always demeaning .  .  .  .").   



              9  

                          Id.   (quoting   W.  Va.  State  Bd.  of   Educ.   v.  Barnette,  319   U.S.  624,   633   

(1943)).   



             10  

                          Id.  at 2463-65, 2467.   



  



                                                                                  -4-                                                                          7657 
  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

                              11                                                    12  

Amendment rights,"               the Court   applied exacting   scrutiny                to  "public-sector   agency- 

shop   arrangements"13  

                                 and held   that   charging   mandatory   agency   fees to   nonmembers   



"violate[s]  the First Amendment" by  "compelling  them  to  subsidize  private speech  on   



                                                       14  

matters of  substantial  public concern."                  Janus thus made it  unconstitutional  to  require   



mandatory union agency fees for  nonmember employees.   



          FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS   



          A.       Facts   



                   1.        Background labor practices   



                   The State has approximately   15,000  employees represented by   11  public   



sector   unions.    Roughly   8,000   employees   belong   to   a   bargaining   unit   exclusively   



                                                                                            15  

represented  by  ASEA,  the largest  public sector  union  in  Alaska.                           Union  membership   



is not   a condition   of   employment, but   about   7,000   employees represented   by   ASEA   



chose to  become union members.   



                   ASEA   engages  in   collective  bargaining   with   the  State  on   topics  like   



wages,   benefits, employee   discipline,   and   employment   terms.   Every   three   years the   



State and   ASEA   execute a new collective bargaining   agreement (CBA)   that   must  be   



                                       16  

approved  by  the legislature.              CBAs may be  modified during  their  three-year  life spans.    



                                                                                                                              



          11  

                   Id.  at 2464.   



          12  

                   Id . at  2464-65  (considering  level of  scrutiny  to  apply  to  compelled speech;   

declining  to   apply  rational  basis and   strict   scrutiny   and  holding  that   exacting   scrutiny   

applies).   



          13  

                   Id. at 2477-78.   



          14  

                   Id.  at 2460, 2478.   



          15  

                   See   AS  23.40.100   (authorizing   bargaining   units  to   democratically   elect   

union as exclusive representative in collective bargaining).   



          16  

                   AS 23.40.215   (explaining   that   monetary   terms of   CBAs are "subject   to   

legislative funding").   



  



                                                            -5-                                                      7657 
  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

                                             The two CBAs relevant to this appeal were in effect from July 2016 to                                                                                                                                                                                      



June 2019 and then from July 2019 to June 2022, respectively.                                                                                                                                                      Pursuant to statute, both                                                            



CBAs required the State to deduct union                                                                                                  dues from  ASEA  union  members'  paychecks,   



upon  members'  written authorizations provided  by  ASEA, and  to  transmit  the money   



                                 17  

to ASEA.                                 And, also pursuant  to  statute,  both  CBAs required  the State to  "not  in  any   



manner, directly or indirectly, attempt to inte                                                                                                       rfere between any bargaining unit member                                                                           



                                                 18  

and   [ASEA]."                                           The 2016-2019 CBA also required the State to deduct agency fees                                                                                                                                                                                



from  nonmembers'  paychecks and  transmit  the money to  ASEA.  ASEA  and  the State   



later modified that CBA to comply with                                                                                                  Janus and eliminat                                               ed the required agency fees                                                   



deductions  from   nonmembers'   paychecks.     The  2019-2022   CBA   did   not   contain   a   



requirement for agency fees deductions from nonmembers' paychecks.   



                                             An employee who voluntarily chooses to join ASEA signs a written union                                                                                                                                                                                     



membership a                                     greement and a written dues deduction authorization form authored by                                                                                                                                                                                   



ASEA.    Since   2017   the  dues  deduction   form   has   included   a  one-year   commitment  



automatically renewing if the member does not revoke the dues deduction authorization                                                                                                                                                                                                                   



                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        



                       17  

                                             See   AS   23.40.220   ("Upon   written  authorization   of   a  public  employee   

within a bargaining unit, the public employer shall deduct from the payroll of the public                                                                                                                                                                          

employee the monthly amount of dues, fees, and other employee benefits as certified                                                                                                                                                                                                                     

by  the [bargaining  unit] and shall deliver it to the [bargaining  unit].").   



                       18  

                                             See  AS 23.40.080  ("Public employees may self-organize and form, join,                                                                                                                                            

or assist [a union] to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing,                                                                                                                                                                                                              

and   engage  in   concerted  activities  for   the  purpose  of   collective  bargaining   or   other   

mutual  aid  or  protection.");  AS 23.40.110(a)(1)-(5) (prohibiting public employer from                                                                                                                                                                                                               

interfering   with   public employee's rights under AS 23.40.080;   dominating   union   or   

interfering   with   union's  formation,  existence   or   administration;   discriminating   with   

regard to employment to encourage or discourage union membership; discharging an                                                                                                                                                                                                                        

employee for exercising rights under AS 23.24.070                                                                                                                           -.260; and failing to bargain in good                                                                                       

faith with union).   



  



                                                                                                                                              -6-                                                                                                                                   7657 
  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

                                                                                                           19  

during an annual ten                                                -day  period.                                 In 2020 ASEA changed its procedures so that when                                                                                                                               



a member submitted a resignation outside the revocation window, ASEA would hold                                                                                                                                                                                                                  



the request until the resignation period and then ask the State to stop dues deductions.                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                            ASEA's union   dues authorization   forms emphasized   that   employees do   



not have to pay union dues, and forms used since 2018 emphasized that joining the                                                                                                                                                                                                 



union  is optional.  For  example,  the version revised  in  September 2019, reads:    "Yes, I   



choose  to   be  a  Union   member   .  .  .  .  I   understand   my   membership   supports  the   



organization advocating for my interests .                                                                                                  .  . and paying union dues is not a condition                                                                                                        



of employment."    



                                            2.                    The State's interpretation and application of  Janus   



                                            Soon   after  the  Supreme  Court's  2018   Janus  decision,  then-Attorney   



General   Jahna  Lindemuth   (under   Governor   Bill   Walker's  administration)   issued   a   



memorandum to executive branch employees explaining that while                                                                                                                                                                     Janus   invalidated   



charging mandatory agency fees to nonmembe                                                                                                                    r employees, it had no effect on other                                                                                             



aspects of Alaska labor law and did not allow the State to disregard existing union                                                                                                                                                                                                              



membership    dues   authorizations.      But    in    August    2019,   then-Attorney   General   



Kevin  G.  Clarkson   (under  Governor   Michael   J.  Dunleavy's  administration)   issued   a   



legal opinion to Governor Dunleavy asserting that                                                                                                                       Janus 's holding  necessitated much   



more than   eliminating  agency   fees and  instead  "require[d]  a significant  change to  the   



 State's current practice in order to  protect state employees' First Amendment rights."    



                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 



                      19  

                                            The form  version  used  when  this controversy  arose read:    "This voluntary   

authorization and assignment shall be irrevocable, regardless of whether I am or remain                                                                                                                                                                                                          

a member of ASEA, for a period of one year from the date of execution or until the                                                                                                                                                                                                 

termination date                                        of the collective bargaining agreement .                                                                                               .  . whichever occurs sooner,   

and for year to year thereafter unless I give [the State] and [ASEA] written notice of                                                                                                                                                                                                           

revocation not less than ten (10) days and not more than twenty (20) days before the                                                                                                                                                                                                             

end of any ye                                arly  period."   



                                                                                                                                          -7-                                                                                                                                 7657 
  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

                             Attorney General Clarkson wrote that, after                                                       Janus , "a   public employer   



 such   as the State cannot   deduct   from   an employee's wages 'any   .  .  . payment to the                                                                                             



union'  unless it  has 'clear  and  compelling  evidence'  that  an employee  has 'freely  given'   



his or  her consent  to   subsidize  the union's speech."    He asserted  that  before the State   



 could   constitutionally   deduct   union   dues  from   public  employees'   paychecks,  those   



 employees  needed   to   knowingly,  intelligently,  and   voluntarily   waive  their    First   



Amendment  rights.    He  contended   that,  because  unions   design   payroll   deduction   



 authorization   forms  and   control   the  environment  in   which   employees  are  asked   to   



 authorize  payroll  deductions, the State would  have "no  way  to  ensure that  its employees   



 are  being told exactly what their First Amendment rights are before being asked to                                                                                                        



waive  them."     He  expressed   concern   that   employees  were  being   coerced   to   sign   



 authorization  forms when  the  process  was "essentially  a  black  box  the State cannot  peer   



 inside of."   He concluded that the only way to ensure that employees had knowingly,                                                                                                       



 intelligently, and voluntarily waived their First Amendment rights when agreeing to                                                                                                        



join   a  union   and   pay   dues  would   be   for   those  employees  to   "provide  that   consent   



 directly to the Stat                   e"  using  State-authored dues authorization forms submitted through                                                                                



 a State-created and managed online portal.   



                             Attorney General Clarkson also asserted that                                                      Janus  required the State to                                 



 do   even   more to   protect   public employees'   First Amendment rights.    Drawing upon                                                                                                



 criminal law, he noted courts have held that waivers of                                                                Miranda  rights can grow stale                                      



with   the  passage  of   time,   "requiring   the  government  to   re-advise  suspects  of   their   



                20  

rights."                Applying   this  logic  to   union   dues  payroll   deduction   authorizations,   he   



                                                                                                                                                                                            



               20  

                             In   Miranda   v.   Arizona   the  Supreme  Court   held   that,  under   the  Fourth   

Amendment,  testimonial   statements  made   during   a   custodial   interrogation   are  not   

 admissible in evidence unless the government adequately informed the interrogee of                                                                                                         

 certain r  ights.  384  U.S. 436, 476  (1966).  The Court's holding  was designed  to  address   

the inherently   coercive "pressures which   work   to   undermine the individual's will   to   

resist" divulging information in the context of a custodial interrogation.  Id . at 467.   



                                                                                          -8-                                                                                  7657 
  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

concluded that union members must have regular opportunities to agree or disagree with                                                                                                                                                                                                             



continued payroll deductions lest their initial waivers of First Amendment rights grow                                                                                                                                                                                                             



stale.    



                                            The  parties  in   this  case  later  stipulated  that   when   Attorney   General   



Clarkson   wrote  his  opinion   he  was  aware  that   other  state  attorney   generals  had   



interpreted  Janus  differently and that other courts had issued decisions contrary to the                                                                                                                                                                                                         



opinion.  The parties also stipulated that Attorney General Clarkson did not consult wi                                                                                                                                                                                                   th   



ASEA or offer it the opportunity to provide its views before releasing his opinion, but                                                                                                                                                                                                            



that   State  officials   had  consulted  with   certain   Outside  policy  think   tanks  when   the   



opinion was crafted.                                                 



                                             On   the  same  day   Attorney   General   Clarkson gave                                                                                                                        his  legal   opinion   to   



Governor Dunleavy, then                                                             -Department of Administration Commissioner Kelly Tshibaka                                                                                                                     



emailed  all   State   employees,  including   ASEA   members,  with   links  to   the  Janus   



decision, Attorney General  Clarkson's legal opinion, and  a Frequently  Asked  Questions   



(FAQ)   document.    Commissioner   Tshibaka  advised   State  employees  that   Attorney   



General Clarkson had concluded the State currently was not in compliance with                                                                                                                                                                                            Janus .    



The FAQ document informed employees that the State soon would be requiring union                                                                                                                                                                                                                   



members to sub                                       mit new dues consent forms before the State would deduct union dues                                                                                                                                                                           



from their paychecks.                                                        The parties in this case later stipulated that the State did not                                                                                                                                                      



consult with ASEA or give ASEA advance notice before Commissioner Tshibaka sent                                                                                                                                                                                                                    



the email.  ASEA subsequently objected to these intended actions.   



                                            The next month the State sued ASEA, seeking declaratory judgment that                                                                                                                                                                                  



                                                                                                                                                                                                           21  

the  intended  actions  were   lawful   and   mandated  by   Janus .      The   day   after  ASEA   



                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   



                      21  

                                            See  Lowell v. Hayes                                                  , 117 P.3d 745, 755 (Alaska 2005) (explaining that                                                                                                                               

"declaratory   judgments  are  rendered   to   clarify   and   settle  legal   relations,  and   to   

 'terminate and  afford  relief  from  the uncertainty, insecurity, and  controversy  giving  rise   

to   the  proceeding'  "  (quoting   Jefferson   v.   Asplund ,  458   P.2d   995,  997-98   (Alaska   

 1969))).   



                                                                                                                                           -9-                                                                                                                                 7657 
  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

responded with its court filings, Governor Dunleavy issued A                                                                                                                                                                                            dministrative Order 312                                                                            



and a timeline for steps the State would take to comply with its new view of                                                                                                                                                                                                                             Janus .  The   



Order   required   the  State  to   develop   a  new   union   dues  authorization   form   telling   



employees that by signing the document they were waiving their                                                                                                                                                                                                             "First   Amendment   



right   not   to  pay union   dues and   fees,"  were   "freely   associating" themselves  with   the   



union's   speech,  and   could   "revoke  [their]   consent   to   future  union   dues  or   fees   



withdrawal  at  any  time and  for  any  reason."    The Order  also  instructed State officials  



to develop an online portal for employees to submit the updated form directly to the                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       



 State.     The Order   also   stated:   "Once  the new  procedures and   forms are implemented   



 .  .  .  all   dues  and   fees  deductions  made  under  prior   procedures  will   be  immediately   



discontinued, pre-existing employee authorizations will be deemed void, and any new                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        



dues  deductions"  must   follow   the   new   process.    And   the  Order  stated   that   union   



members could  opt  out  of  union  dues payroll  deductions "any  time after this Order is   



implemented" by submitting an "opt-out form."    



                                                     Governor  Dunleavy's office  published  a press release about  his Order and   



he held a press conference to discuss it the same day.                                                                                                                                                                    Commissioner Tshibaka sent a                                                                                            



copy of the press release to all State employees i                                                                                                                                                     n an email.                                      The parties in this case   



later stipulated that the State did not notify ASEA of the Order before releasing it, but                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  



that the State had consulted with the same Outside policy think tanks it had consulted                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     



prior to releasing Attorney General Clark                                                                                                                            son's legal opinion.   



                                                     The State created   a "Cease Union  Dues Deduction" form  and   emailed it   



to twelve ASEA members who had contacted the State in response to Commissioner                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             



Tshibaka's emails.  Some of  them, union  members who  had paid  dues to  ASEA  through   



payroll deductions and had signed dues authorization forms that included the one                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    -year   



commitment and the ten-day revocation period, requested that the State stop deducting                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      



union dues from their paychecks.                                                                                                         The State stopped collecting their dues and did not                                                                                                                                                               



inform ASEA of its direct contact with the members or the cessation of dues deductions                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     



until after it stopped collecting the dues.                                                                                                                     The parties in this case later stipulated that, as                                                                                                                                         



                                                                                                                                                                    -10-                                                                                                                                                            7657 
  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

a result  of  the State's actions, ASEA   suffered  about  $186,000  in  damages comprising   



staff  time diverted  to  responding  to  the State's emails and  the Order, lost  dues,  and  lost   



memberships.   



                B.              Proceedings   



                                ASEA  responded  to  the State's lawsuit  by   opposing  the  requested  relief   



and   filing   a  third-party   complaint   against   Governor   Dunleavy,   Attorney   General   



                                                                                                                                                         22  

Clarkson, and Commissioner Tshibaka (collectively the State).                                                                                                   ASEA alleged that                                



the  State  had  violated   the  CBA,  resulting   in   a  breach  of   contract;   violated  various   



                                                                                                                                                                          23  

provisions  of   Alaska's  Public  Employment  Relations  Act   (PERA);                                                                                                         violated  the   



separation of powers inherent in the Alaska Constitution (by infringing on legislative                                                                                                                           



functions);                    and           violated                Alaska's                  Administrative                           Procedure                     Act           (APA)                by   



                                                                                                                                                                                    24  

implementing regulatory procedures without a lawful rulemaking process.                                                                                                                   Because   



the  State  already   had   begun   unilaterally   implementing   elements  of   its  new   labor   



relations scheme, ASEA requested a temporary restraining order enjoining the State                                                                                                                               



from   taking   any   action   to   implement Attorney   General   Clarkson's legal   opinion   and   



Governor Dunleavy's Order.   



                                Resolving  ASEA's request  for  a temporary  restraining  order, the superior   



court   ruled  that   "Janus  does  not   support   the  State's  position"  and   that   the  State  



"provide[d]   no   colorable explanation   for   why   the existing   dues authorization   form's   



annual opt-out  period is not  sufficient."    The  court noted that  "[m]ost  contracts are not   



revocable at  will" and  saw no  reason  to  treat  a union  member's agreement to  pay annual   



dues  any    differently    from    other    contracts,  including    employer-sponsored    health   



                                                                                                                                                                                                                 



                22  

                                Under Alaska Appellate Rule 517(b), when public officials who have been                                                                                                          

sued in their official capacity leave office, their successors are automatically substituted                                                                                                                     

as parties to an appeal.  This is reflected in the caption for this appeal.   



                23  

                                AS 23.40.070-.260.   



                24  

                                AS 44.62.010-.950.   



                                                                                                   -11-                                                                                            7657 
  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

insurance  plans with  defined opt-in  and  opt-out  periods.  The  court  granted  a temporary   



restraining  order  directing  the State to  stop  implementing  Attorney  General  Clarkson's   



legal opinion and Governor Dunleavy's Order, and the next month the court converted   



it  to  a preliminary  injunction  pending  resolution  of  the lawsuit.  When later resolving   



the merits of  the parties' competing  claims based  on  the parties' extensive stipulation   



of   facts,  the  court   denied  the  State's  request   for   declaratory  judgment,  permanen tly   



enjoined  the State from  implementing  Attorney   General  Clarkson's legal  opinion   and   



Governor Dunleavy's Order, and awarded ASEA about $186,000 in damages.    



                  The State appeals.   



         STANDARD OF REVIEW   



                  We review  a grant of  summary  judgment de novo, viewing  the facts in  the   



                                                                   25  

light   most   favorable  to   the   non-moving   party,               and   we  may   affirm   on   any   basis   



                                    26  

appearing   in   the  record.             We  use  our   independent   judgment   when   reviewing   



                                 27                                   28  

constitutional questions            and interpreting statutes.             



         DISCUSSION 
  



         A.       We Decline To  Apply  Issue Preclusion, And  We Consider The Merits   

                  Of The State's Appeal.   



                  ASEA  invites us to  hold  that  the State's argument about  Janus 's reach  is   



precluded by  two  federal  court decisions, Creed v.  ASEA  and   Woods v.  ASEA , in  which   



the Ninth   Circuit   Court   of  Appeals affirmed   the District   Court   of  Alaska's decisions   



                                                                                                                         



         25  

                  Peterson v. State, Dep't of Nat. Res. , 236 P.3d 355, 361 (Alaska 2010).   



         26  

                  Parson   v.   State,   Dep't   of   Revenue,  Alaska   Hous.  Fin.  Corp. ,  189   P.3d   

1032, 1036 (Alaska 2008).   



         27  

                  Forrer v. State, 471  P.3d  569, 583 (Alaska 2020).   



         28  

                  Jerrel v. State,  Dep't  of Nat. Res., 999 P.2d 138, 141  (Alaska 2000).   



  



                                                         -12-                                                   7657 
  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

                                                                                                                                                                           29  

that   Janus  does  not   extend   a  First  Amendment  right   to   avoid   paying   union   dues.                                                                            



Although  ASEA's preclusion  argument is not  necessarily  without  merit, we decline to   



apply   preclusion   because  of   the  State's  third-party-defendant  status  and   relatively   



                                                                                  30  

limited participation in the federal cases.                                            The superior court evaluated the merits of                                              



the State's arguments, and  we will do so as well.   



              B.	          Janus  Did Not Compel The Sta                                       te's Unilateral   Changes To   Alaska's   

                           Labor Relations System.   



                           The  State  seeks  to   give  Janus  broad   effect,  arguing   that   it   "placed   



prohibitions on public employers generally, and they apply to [union] members and                                                                                              



nonmembers alike."  According  to  the State,  Janus  prohibits it from collecting union                                                                                       



dues from its member                         -employees unless it has clear and compelling evidence that the                                                                   



union  members waived  their  First  Amendment rights.  But  the State's interpretation  of   



Janus has three  major flaws.                              



                           First,   Janus  expressly   dealt   only   with   charging   union   agency   fees  to   



                                                                 31  

nonmember   public   employees.                                          The  labor    practice    challenged    and    ultimately   



                                                                                                                                                                               



              29  

                           Creed v. Alaska State Emps. Ass'n/AFSCME Loc. 52                                                       , 472 F. Supp. 3d 518,                       

530-31 (D. Alaska 2020),                             aff'd,  No. 20-35743, 2021 WL 3674742 (9th Cir. Aug. 16,                                                                  

2021),  cert.  denied,  142   S.  Ct.  1110   (2022)   (mem.);  Woods  v.   Alaska   State  Emps.   

Ass'n/AFSCME Loc. 52                             , 496 F. Supp. 3d 1365,                             1374-75 (D. Alaska 2020) (quoting                                         

Belgau v. Inslee, 975 F.3d 940, 951 (9th Cir. 2020)).                                                      



              30  

                           See  McAlpine  v.  Pacarro,  262 P.3d 622, 627 (Alaska 2011) (listing four                                                                          

elements of   collateral   estoppel   and  noting   that   "existence of those elements provides                            

only   the underlying   basis  for   the  trial   court's  exercise  of   discretion   to   apply   or   not   

apply  collateral  estoppel,  and   that   'this  discretion   must   be  tempered   by   principles   

of  fairness  in  light  of  the circumstances of  each  particular case'  "  (quoting  Misyura  v.   

Misyura ,  242    P.3d    1037,    1040    (Alaska   2010))).     Issue  preclusion    may  not    be   

appropriate  if   the  parties  were not   previously   afforded   an   opportunity   to   "fully   and   

fairly" litigate the issue.    Id .;  Edna  K.  v.  Jeb  S., 467 P.3d 1046, 1051 (Alaska 2020).                                                                           



              31  

                           See Janus, 138 S. Ct. 2448, 2460, 2478 (2018) (holding that agency                                                                     -shop   

arrangements "violate[]  the free   speech  rights of  nonmembers by   compelling  them  to   

  



                                                                                  -13- 	                                                                           7657 
  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

prohibited by              Janus was that of charging compulsory agency fees to nonmember public                                                                



employees,  as  a   condition   of   employment,  to   support   union   collective  bargaining   



                   32  

activities.             Janus did not address how union dues are collected from public employees                                                                              



who  voluntarily  join public sector unions and agree to pay union dues.                                                                    In fact, in         Janus   



the Supreme Court said:                           "States can keep  their labor                          -relations systems exactly as they                                   



                                                                                                                                                             33  

are -   only they cannot force nonmembers to subsidize public                                                                 -sector  unions."                     The   



State thus misunderstands when and to whom the Janus  waiver requirement applies.   



                           Second,  the  State's  reading   of   Janus  imagines  compulsion   when   none   



exists.  The State is correct that, under                                     Janus, nonmember  "state employees cannot  be  



compelled to   subsidize the speech of   a union  with  which  they disagree."     But  by  the   



time the State began unilaterally changing union member dues de                                                                     duction procedures,                       



the compulsion that concerned the Supreme Court in                                                      Janus , charging union agency fees                                    



to nonmember public employees, already had been eliminated from the CBA.                                                                                  After the   



elimination   of   agency   fees,  no   public  employee   had   to   choose  between   a  job   or   



unwillingly   subsidizing   union   speech.    We   agree   with   the  Fourth   Circuit   Court   of   



Appeals that  when  "the employee  has a choice  of  union  membership  and  the employee   



                                                                                                                           34  

chooses to join, the union membership money is not coerced."                                                                     



                           Third, the State conflates waiving First Amendment rights with exercising                                                                          



                                                                                                                                                                          35  

them.  Waiver is the "intentional  relinquishment or  abandonment  of  a known  right."                                                                                       



                                                                                                                                                                              



subsidize   private speech on   matters of   substantial   public concern" and   that   "public- 

sector agency-shop arrangements violate the First Amendment").   



             32  

                          Id.  at 2460.   



             33  

                          Id . at 2485 n.27.   



             34  

                          Kidwell  v.  Transp. Commc'ns Int'l   Union, 946  F.2d  283, 292-93  (4th  Cir.   

 1991).   



             35  

                           United   States   v.   Olano, 507   U.S. 725, 733   (1993)   (quoting   Johnson   v.   

Zerbst,  304  U.S. 458, 464  (1938)).   



  



                                                                                  -14-                                                                            7657 
  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

 It   may  be  that   a  public  employee   waives  First  Amendment  free  speech  rights  by   



voluntarily joining a union and agree                                                                     ing to pay dues; but, if so, that action itself is clear                                                                                          



                                                                                                                                                                                                           36  

 and compelling evidence that the employee has waived those rights.                                                                                                                                                Yet a public                             



 employee   also   exercises  a  First Amendment                                                                                      right of free                         association by voluntarily                                                      



                                                                                                                                                 37  

 choosing to become a dues                                                    -paying u   nion member.                                                  The State's assertion that it  needs   



 additional clear and compelling evidence of waiver before it can lawfully deduct union                                                                                                                                                                     



 dues from  union   employees'  paychecks pretends to  value one First  Amendment right   



while actually impinging upon another                                                                           .   



                                       The State's interpretation  of  Janus  is incorrect.  We join courts across the                                                                                                                                      



                                                                                                                                 38  

 country that have rejected similar arguments                                                                                          and hold that                           Janus  did not compel the                                                    



 State's actions set   in   motion  by  Attorney   General   Clarkson   and   Governor   Dunleavy.    



Janus  addressed   the  threat   of   compelled  speech,  and   the  Supreme  Court   held   that   



requiring nonunion public employees to pay agency fees as a condition of employment                                                                                                                                                                         



violated the First Amendment because those employees could be forced to fund union                                                                                                                                                                          



                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            



                    36  

                                       See Ramon Baro v. Lake Cnty. Fed'n of Tchrs. Loc. 504                                                                                                                  , 57 F.4th 582,                               

 586 (7th Cir. 2023)                                        ("The voluntary   signing   of   a union   membership   contract   is clear   

 and   compelling   evidence  that   an employee  has waived  her right  not  to  join   a union."   

 (emphasis in original)).                                              



                    37  

                                      AFSCME  v.   Woodward ,  406   F.2d   137,  139   (8th   Cir.  1969)   ("Union   

membership   is  protected  by   the  right   of   association   under  the  First   and   Fourteenth   

Amendments.").   



                    38  

                                       See, e.g., Ramon Baro                                             , 57 F.4th at 586;                                 Belgau v. Inslee                                 ,   975 F.3d 940,                              

 950 (9th Cir. 2020);                                        Bennett v. Council 31 of the Am. Fed'n of State, Cnty. & Mun.                                                                                                                

Emps.,  991   F.3d   724,  731   (7th   Cir.  2021),  cert.  denied,  142   S.  Ct.  424   (mem.);   

Hendrickson v. AFSCME Council 18                                                                           , 992 F.3d 950, 961 (10th Cir. 2021),                                                                      cert. denied,  

 142 S. Ct.  423 (mem.);  Fischer v. Governor of New Jersey, 842 F. App'x 741, 752-53,   

 753 n.18 (3d Cir. 2021),                                               cert. denied, 142 S. Ct. 426 (mem.);                                                                    Hoekman v. Educ. Minn.                                                  ,  

41 F.4th 969, 976 (8th Cir. 2022),                                                                    reh'g & reh'g en banc denied                                                           , 2022 WL 3754006;                                             

Allen v. Ohio                          Civil Serv. Emps. Ass'n AFSCME, Local 11                                                                                      , No. 2:19-cv-3709, 2020 WL                                                            

 1322051, at *12 (S.D. Ohio Mar. 20, 2020).   



  



                                                                                                                       -15-                                                                                                                7657 
  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

                                                                                                                         39  

speech   repugnant   to   their   own   opinions  and   beliefs  to   keep   their   jobs.                                      But   by   



November 2018 the State and ASEA had addressed that threat of compelled speech by   



eliminating mandatory agency fees from the CBA and ceasing charging agency fees to   



nonunion employees.  Complying with  Janus required nothing further.   



           C. 	       Broader  First  Amendment   Principles  Do   Not   Justify   The   State's   

                      Unilateral Actions.   



                      The State argues that even if                 Janus 's holding  is not  as far-reaching as the                         



State contends, "[t]he First Amendment controls" and  necessitated the State's actions.    



The State is mistaken.   



                      The  First   Amendment  "constrains  governmental   actors  and   protects   



                          40                                                                                                             41  

private  actors."               Unless  the  United  States  government  or   a   state  government                                          



unreasonably curtails a private actor's right to speak  or associate, no First Amendment   



                           42                                                                                43  

violation occurs.               This is known  as the "state action" requirement.                                 The question at            



the heart of the state action inquiry is whether the government is responsible for an                                                        



                                                                                                                                             



           39  

                     Janus , 138  S. Ct. 2448, 2464, 2478  (2018).   



           40  

                     Manhattan Cmty. Access Corp. v. Halleck , 139  S. Ct. 1921, 1926 (2019).   



           41  

                      The      Fourteenth          Amendment              makes         First     Amendment              protections   

applicable against  the   States.   U.S. Const. amend. XIV, §   1   ("No   State shall  make or   

enforce   any   law which   shall   abridge  the privileges  or   immunities  of   citizens  of   the   

United  States;  nor  shall  any  State deprive any  person  of  life,  liberty, or  property,  without   

due process of law .  .  .  .").   



           42  

                     See  Manhattan   Cmty.  Access Corp. , 139   S.   Ct. at   1928   ("The text   and   

original   meaning   of   [the First   and   Fourteenth   Amendments], as well   as this Court's   

longstanding    precedents,   establish    that    the   Free    Speech    Clause   prohibits   only   

governmental  abridgment of  speech.  The Free Speech Clause does not  prohibit  private   

abridgment of speech." (emphasis in  original)).   



           43  

                     See, e.g.,  id. at   1926;  Belgau v. Inslee, 975  F.3d 940, 946 (9th Cir. 2020).   



  



                                                                  -16- 	                                                           7657 
  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

                                                          44  

alleged constitutional deprivation.                            That  "deprivation must be caused by the exercise                                      



                                                                                 45  

of  some right or  privilege created  by  the State."                                 The government's  "[m]ere approval   



of  or  acquiescence" to  a private party's decision  is not  enough  to  hold  the government   



                     46  

responsible.             To determine whether state act                       ion has occurred, courts consider whether                               



                                                                                                                 47  

the government played a significant or coercive role in the activity                                                 and whether there                



is a "symbiotic relationship"  of  mutual  benefit  between  the  government and  the private   



          48  

party.         



                       The  State  argues  that   it   engaged   in   state   action   when   "compelling   



subsidies to   unions" by   deducting   dues from   members'  paychecks.    This framing   of   



state action   is unpersuasive.     The State's acquiescent  role facilitating   interaction   and   



agreements between two private parties, the union                                         member employee and the union,                              



does  not   amount   to   state  action.    The  dues  deduction   is  authorized   by   a  private   



agreement;   it   is  not   a  right   or   privilege  created  by   the  State  even  though   a  statute   



                                                                                     49  

requires the State to honor that private agreement.                                       And the State plays no significant                          



                                                                                                                                                      



            44  

                       Ohno  v.   Yasuma, 723  F.3d   984, 994   (9th   Cir. 2013);  see also  Am.  Mfrs.   

Mut. Ins. Co. v.  Sullivan, 526  U.S. 40, 50   (1999);  Lugar v.  Edmondson   Oil   Co., 457   

U.S. 922, 937 (1982).   



            45  

                       Lugar , 457 U.S. at 937.   



            46  

                       See Blum v. Yaretsky, 457  U.S. 991, 1004  (1982).   



            47  

                       See Belgau, 975 F.3d  at 947.   



            48  

                       Id.  at   948   (quoting   Sawyer  v.   Johansen ,  103   F.3d   140,  140   (9th   Cir.  

 1996)).   



            49  

                       See   AS   23.40.220   ("Upon   written  authorization   of   a  public  employee   

within  a bargaining  unit, the public employer  shall  deduct  from  the payroll  of  the public  

employee  the monthly   amount   of  dues, fees, and   other employee  benefits as certified   

by the [bargaining  unit] and shall deliver it to the [bargaining  unit].").   



  



                                                                       -17-                                                                7657 
  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

                                                                                                                                                                        50  

or   coercive  role  in   the  relationship   between  the  union   and   its   members.                                                                                       State   



employees freely choose whether to join a union; membership is not a condition of                                                                                                            



employment.   Only those employees who join ASEA and sign forms a                                                                                            uthorizing the                  



 State to deduct their union dues from their paychecks will pay anything to ASEA.                                                                                                 The   



 State   does  not   become   responsible   for    its   employees'    decisions   "by    requiring   



                                                  51                                                                                               52  

completion  of  a form,"                              or  through  the "additional  paper  shuffling"                                                  it perfor         ms in its           



                                             53                                                                                                                                     54  

accountant-like role.                             Rather the State permits the private choice of private actors.                                                                          



                             There also is no "symbiotic relationship" between the State and  ASEA or   



                                                                                                            55  

a substantial degree of cooperation between them.                                                                The State receives no benefit fr                                    om   



transmitting collected union dues to ASEA.                                                     Rather than acting in concert, the State and                                                  



                                                                                                                                                                                             



                50  

                             See   Belgau,  975   F.3d   at   947;   cf.  AS  23.40.110(a)(1)-(5)   (prohibiting   

public   employer   from  interfering  with  public employee's rights under AS 23.40.080;   

dominating   union   or   interfering   with   union's formation, existence   or   administration;   

discriminating    with    regard    to    employment    to    encourage    or    discourage   union   

membership; discharg                            ing an employee for exercising rights under AS 23.40.070                                                                       -.260;   

and failing to bargain in good faith with union).                                                        



                51  

                             Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sullivan                                       , 526 U.S. 40, 55 (1999) (quoting                                      Blum,  

457 U.S. at 1007).                         



                52  

                             Id.  (internal quotation marks omitted).                                             



                53  

                             See Belgau, 975   F.3d   at   948   (explaining   that   "ministerial   processing   of   

payroll   deductions  pursuant   to   [union   agreement]"  was  not   state  action   because   

"providing   a 'machinery' for   implementing   the private agreement   by   performing   an   

administrative task" does not establish state responsibility (quoting                                                                            Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins.  

 Co., 526 U.S. at 54)).                          



                54  

                             Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. , 526 U.S. at 55;                                               see also, e.g.              ,  Hoekman v. Educ.                         

Minn. ,  41   F.4th   969, 977   (8th   Cir. 2022)   ("The unions  are private  actors,  and   their   

conduct m              ay be deemed state action   only   if  that   conduct   is 'fairly   attributable to   the  

 State.'  " (quoting  Rendell-Baker v. Kohn, 457 U.S. 830, 838 (1982))).   



                55  

                             Belgau, 975 F.3d                      at 948 (quoting                    Sawyer v. Johansen                         , 103 F.3d 140, 140                         

(9th Cir. 1996)).    



  



                                                                                         -18-                                                                                    7657 
  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

ASEA oppose one another at the collective bargaining table every few years, and as this                                                                                             



case demonstrates, they also oppose each other in court.                                                                         Put simply, there                         is no state   



action  giving rise to a First Amendment violation when a public employee joins a union                                                                                                            



and  directs the State to  collect  the employee's union  dues from  paychecks and  transmit   



                                        56  

them to the union.                            The constitutional deprivation that the State cla                                                         ims it is seeking to                       



prevent is illusory.   



                              The State also   contends that   the CBA's provisions for   collecting   union   



dues   from    state   employees   are   unenforceable   because   they    violate   the   First   



Amendment.    We disagree.    The CBA's method   for   collecting   union   dues does not   



involve state action, and  "[t]he First  Amendment does not" give the State the right  to   



"renege  on  [its]  promise" to  collect  dues on  behalf  of  public employees who  opt  to  join   



                        57  

the  union.                    The  State   and   ASEA   voluntarily   entered   into   the  CBA's   contractual   



relationship.   "When   'legal obligations .  .  . are self-imposed,'   state law, not   the First   



                                                                          58  

Amendment, normally  governs."                                                 The  First  Amendment does not  "provide  a right  to   



                                                                                                                                                                     59  

 'disregard  promises that  would  otherwise be  enforced  under state law.'  "                                                                                           The CBA   



                                                                                                                                                                                                   



                 56  

                              Hoekman,  41   F.4th   at   978   ("[I]t   is  the  terms  of   the  employee's   union   

membership, not  any  state action, that  create the employee's obligation  to  pay  and  the   

union's right to collect.").   



                 57  

                              Belgau, 975 F.3d                       at 950.   



                 58  

                              Id.   (quoting   Cohen   v.  Cowles  Media   Co.,   501   U.S.  663,  671   (1991)   

(omission in original));                             see also Ramon Baro v. Lake Cnty. Fed'n of Tchrs. Loc. 504                                                                                 ,  

57 F.4th 582, 586                       -87 (7th Cir. 2023);                         Bennett v. Council 31 of the Am. Fed'n of State,                                                              

Cnty. & Mun. Emps.                             , 991 F.3d 724, 731 (7th Cir. 2021),                                                cert. denied, 142 S. Ct. 424                                    

(2021) (mem.).   



                 59  

                              Belgau, 975 F.3d at 950                              (quoting  Cohen, 501 U.S. at 671).                                           As the Seventh   

Circuit  aptly  put  it:     "[T]he First Amendment  protects our  right  to   speak.   It  does not   

create an independent right to void obligations when we ar                                                                      e unhappy with what we have                                        

said."    Ramon Baro, 57 F.4th at 587.   



  



                                                                                            -19-                                                                                      7657 
  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

and  union  members'  dues collection  authorizations do  not  violate the First Amendment,  



and the State is bound to its bargained                    -for promises in the CBA.   



          D. 	       Because  Janus  Did  Not   Necessitate  The   State's  Unilateral   Actions,   

                     The State Violated The CBA.   



                     The State conceded at oral argument before us that if we disagree with its                                         



interpretation   of   Janus ,  we  should   affirm   the  superior   court's  ruling   that   the  State   



breached   the  CBA   because  the  State  has  no   justification   for   its  unilateral   actions   



contrary to t      he CBA other than its reading of                     Janus .   Because we hold that                 Janus  did   



not  require the State to  take the actions it  did, we affirm  the superior  court's ruling  that   



                                                   60               61  

the State breached Sections 3.01                      and 3.04         of the CBA and the implied covenant of                           



                                             62  

good   faith   and   fair   dealing.                We  accordingly   affirm   the  award   of   compensatory   



damages to ASEA.   



           E.	       Because Janus Did Not  Mandate The State's Unilateral  Actions, The   

                     State Violated PERA.   



                     PERA aims "to  promote harmonious and   cooperative relations between   



                                                    63  

government  and   its  employees."                         In   line  with   this  goal,  the  Act   protects  public   



                                                                                                                                        



           60	  

                     Section   3.01   of   the CBA   prohibited the State from   interfering   between   

ASEA and its members "in any manner."    



           61	  

                     Section  3.04  of  the CBA  required  the State to  deduct  dues from  member's   

wages and forward those dues to  ASEA.   



           62  

                     The covenant  of  good  faith  and  fair  dealing  is implied in  all  contracts in   

Alaska.   Lockwood  v.  Geico Gen. Ins. Co., 323  P.3d  691, 697  (Alaska 2014);  see also   

Jones v.  Jones , 505  P.3d  224, 233  n.31  (Alaska 2022)  ("The covenant, which is included   

in every contract, concerns parties' duty  not to act in a  way 'which will injure the right   

of the other to receive the benefits of the agreement,' .  .  . and is intended to require the   

parties  'to   do   everything   that   the   contract   presupposes  will   be  done  in   order  to   

accomplish  the  purpose of  the  contract  .  .  .  .' "(first  quoting  Guin  v.  Ha ,  591  P.2d   1281,   

 1291  (Alaska 1979);  then  quoting  Arizona  v. Tohono   O'odham  Nation , 818  F.3d  549,   

562  (9th Cir. 2016)).   



           63  

                     AS 23.40.070.   



  



                                                                -20- 	                                                        7657 
  


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employees'   rights  to   collectively   bargain,  imposes  requirements   on   how   the  State  



interacts with organized labor, and prohibits the State from engaging in a number of                                                                                                                                                  



                                                           64  

unfair   labor   practices.                                         The  superior   court   granted   summary   judgment  in   favor  of   



ASEA   on   its  claim  that   the  State  violated PERA,                                                                                 but   did   not   specify   which  PERA   



                                                                              65  

provisions the State violated.                                                        We therefore   affirm   the superior   court's ruling   as it   



applies to three particular sections of PERA, as explained below.   



                                   When the State stopped collecting dues on behalf of some union members,                                                                                                                            



it  ran afoul  of  AS 23.40.220, which  states that  "[u]pon  written authorization  of  a public   



employee within a bargaining unit, the public employer                                                                                                shall deduct from the payroll                                                   



of the public employee the monthly amount of dues .                                                                                            .  . and shall deliver it to the .                                             .  .  



exclusive bargaining  representative."  No elaboration is necessary to see how the State   



deviated from  the statute's command.  Janus did  not call for the State to cease honoring                                                                                                                                            



union  members'  dues authorization  forms, to  tell  union  members they  could  stop  dues   



deductions at  any  time,  or  to  stop  forwarding  union  members'  dues to  ASEA.  The State   



had no justification for reneging on this st                                                                   atutory  duty.  We hold, based  on  the parties'   



stipulated facts, that the State violated AS 23.40.220.   



                                   ASEA argues that the State interfered with its operations in violation of                                                                                                                          



AS 23.40.110(a)(2), which  provides that  a public employer  "may  not   .  .  . dominate or   



interfere with  the formation, existence, or  administration  of" a union  organization.  The   



State counters that an anti                                          -union animus is required to violate AS 23.40.110(a)(2) and                                                                                                      



                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      



                  64  

                                   AS 23.40.080 (providing that public employees may organize to bargain                                                                                                                              

collectively);    AS   23.40.110    (prohibiting    public   employer    from    interfering    with   

organization under AS 23.40.080).   



                  65  

                                   The temporary restraining order cites various PERA provisions but does                                                                                                                             

not make clear which claims ASEA was most likely to prevail upon.                                                                                                                       The preliminary                               

injunction   similarly  does  not   specify   which   sections  of   PERA  the  State  may  have   

violated.   



  



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there is no such evidence in the record.                                               But neither the statute nor o                              ur previous holdings                            



contain    anything    resembling    an    intent   or    scienter   requirement   for    subsection   



                        66  

 .110(a)(2),                  and   it   is  difficult   to   imagine   how   a  public  employer   could   attempt   to   



dominate a union or interfere with the formation, existence or administrati                                                                                        on of a union                  



without having an anti                            -union animus.                     Moreover, as discussed below, there is evidence                                                              



in  the record   of  the State's anti-union animus underlying its unilateral changes to the                                                                                                       



labor  relations  framework.     The  State,    a    public  employer,  interfered    with   the  



administration of ASEA, a union organization, when it unilaterally told ASEA members                                                                                                              



they  could   stop   deducting   dues,   and   actually   ceased   collecting   dues  from   some  



members, in  violation of  the members' dues authorization  agreements with ASEA  and   



the State's collective bargaining   agreement  with   ASEA.   We conclude,  based   on   the   



parties' stipulated facts, that the State violated AS  23.40.110(a)(2).   



                              Alaska             Statute   23.40.110(a)(3)                                  prohibits               a   public   employer                            from   



"discriminat[ing]  in  regard  to  hire or  tenure of employment or a term or condition of                                                                                                        



employment to   encourage or  discourage membership  in   an organization."    According   



to   the  National   Labor   Relations  Board,  under  Section   8(a)   of   the  National   Labor   



Relations  Act   (NLRA),  the  federal   analog   to   PERA,  when   "an   employer  ceases  to   



deduct and remit dues in derogation of an existing contract, it is in effect unilaterally                                                                                                         



                                                                                                                                                             67  

changing  the terms and   conditions of   employment of   its employees."                                                                                          The superior   



                                                                                                                                                                                                  



               66  

                              The   State                 argues   that                 we   previously                       held          that        any    violation                    of   

AS  23.40.110(a) requires an anti-union motive, citing                                                                    Univ.  of  Alaska  v.  Alaska  Cmty.   

 Colls.'  Fed'n  of  Tchrs.,  Loc.  2404, 64 P.3d 823, 826 n.9 (Alaska 2003)                                                                              .  But the relevant                     

footnote merely summarized                                       another case,  Alaska   Cmty.   Colls.'  Fed'n  of   Tchrs.,  Loc.   

No.  2404  v.   Univ.  of  Alaska,  669 P.2d 1299 (Alaska 1983)                                                                    ,  when  we  held  only  that  an   

anti-union   motive   was   required   under   AS   23.40.110(a)(1)   and   (3);   that   case   did   not   

discuss  subsection  .110(a)(2).   Id .  at   1307-08.   

                   

               67  

                              Shen-Mar Food Prods., Inc.                                      , 221 N.L.R.B. 1329, 1329 (1976);                                              see also   

Am. Needle & Novelty Co.                                   , 206 N.L.R.B. 534, 544                              -45 (1973) (affirming administrative                                              

law judge's finding that company's failure to remit dues violated §  8(a)(5) of NLRA).                                                                                                            



                                                                                            -22-                                                                                     7657 
  


----------------------- Page 23-----------------------

court  found  "merit" to  ASEA's argument that  "State control [of] the authorization forms                                                                                                                                           



for  union  dues seems likely  to  discourage union  membership."    The  court  described  the   



language the State proposed for its new dues authorization forms warning employees                                                                                                                                                    



that they were waiving their First Amendment rights                                                                                             as "not  neutral" and   capable of   



"directly   violat[ing]   PERA."     The  court   stated:    "[T]he  State  could   describe   union   



membership   in   a  hostile  way  on   authorization   forms  it   drafts,"   and   "[t]here  is  no   



guarantee .    .  . that  the State's method  and/or  language would not discourage employees                                                                                                                                         



from  joining  unions."    Based on  this analysis, it   appears that  the court concluded, on   



the  parties'  stipulated  facts,  that   the  State  acted  with   an   anti-union   motive  and   



discriminated with regard to a term of employment in a mann                                                                                                              er discouraging union                                        



membership among state employees in violation of AS                                                                                              23.40.110(a)(3).   



                                   The State nonetheless argues that there is no evidence in the record that it                                                                                                                       



acted with an anti                             -union motive.                           But we see abundant evidence of anti                                                                -union animus:                             



The State espoused its sweeping interpretation of                                                                               Janus and began unilaterally changing                                                                 



dues deduction procedures only after a change in administration; the new administration                                                                                                                                               



consulted with Outside special interest groups but did not consult or negotiate                                                                                                                                         with   



ASEA,  with   which   it   had  a  collective  bargaining   agreement;   the  State  emailed  all   



employees  represented   by   ASEA   to   inform   them   (incorrectly)   about   their   First   



Amendment rights and   about   union   members'   (fictitious)   rights to   immediately   stop   



payroll due                   s deductions, again without first consulting ASEA; the State made changes                                                                                                                               



only to union dues deduction procedures, not to other union                                                                                                     -related employee payroll                                             



deductions; and the State actually stopped collecting dues from ASEA members outside                                                                                                                                                  



their contractual revocation windows and did not inform ASEA.                                                                                                              



                                   There is evidence  in  the record, particularly  in  the parties' stipulated  facts,  



supporting   the superior   court's conclusion  that  the State's actions were "not  neutral"   



but  rather  were "hostile"  to  ASEA, and  we therefore reject  the State's argument  to  the  



contrary.   We conclude that the State violated AS 23.40.110(a)(3) by interfering with                                                                                                                                                



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----------------------- Page 24-----------------------

the  statutory   and   contractual   dues  deduction   process  in   a  way   that   singled   out   and   



discouraged union membership.   



        F. 	    We Decline To  Address The Parties'  Arguments About Constitutional   

                Separation Of Powers And The Administrative Procedure Act.   



                The superior   court   ruled in   favor of   ASEA   on   its claims that   the State  



violated  the constitutional  separation  of  powers doctrine and  the  Alaska Administrative   



Procedure Act  when  it  unilaterally  made changes to  the union  dues authorization   and   



collection  process.  We decline to  reach  these issues because  our  other holdings provide   



an adequate basis for  affirming all forms of relief granted to ASEA.   



        CONCLUSION 
  



                We AFFIRM  the superior   court's rulings that  neither  the  Janus  decision   



nor   the  First   Amendment  required   the  State  to   unilaterally   alter  the  union   dues   



deduction  practices in   place under   PERA   and   the CBA  prior   to   August   27, 2019, to   



unilaterally  take the steps   set  forth  in  Attorney General  Clarkson's  August  2019  legal   



opinion,  and   to   unilaterally   implement  the   steps   set   forth   in   Governor   Dunleavy's   



Administrative  Order   312.    We  AFFIRM   the  superior   court's  rulings  that   the  State  



breached   the CBA   and   violated provisions of   PERA, as well   as the superior   court's   



damages award.  And  we AFFIRM  the superior   court's permanent   injunction  barring   



the State from  implementing  Attorney General  Clarkson's legal opinion  and  Governor   



Dunleavy's Administrative Order  or  otherwise unilaterally  changing  the CBA's union   



dues deduction  practices.    



                                                  -24- 	                                           7657 
  

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