10.b. City Charter Public Participation •
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INCORPORATED 7Z
it JULY 10, 1911
C'4 FORN'
MEMORANDUM
TO: CITY COUNCIL
FROM: STEVEN ADAMS, CITY MANAGER 6t
SUBJECT: CONSIDERATION OF CITY CHARTER PUBLIC PARTICIPATION
PROCESS
DATE: JULY 10, 2012
RECOMMENDATION:
It is recommended the City Council approve the proposed City Charter public
participation process, Charter Committee membership, and schedule.
IMPACT ON FINANCIAL AND PERSONNEL RESOURCES:
No fiscal impact to the FY 2012-13 budget is recommended at this time. When the
FY 2013-14 budget is prepared, it is recommended that $25,000 to $40,000 be
budgeted at that time for consultant services to assist with public education if funding
is available. In addition, the cost of placing the measure on the ballot is estimated to
be approximately $5,000, which would not occur until the FY 2014-15 budget. If
successful, it is estimated that the measure could result in savings of $50,000 to
$300,000 annually.
It is estimated that there would be over 100 hours of staff time involved in public
participation, public education, and election processes. However, efficiency
measures are one of the priorities in the Critical Needs Action Plan. The proposal is
also aimed at increasing funding for improvements to streets, sidewalks and the
Brisco Interchange project, which are top priorities in the Critical Needs Action Plan.
BACKGROUND:
At the January 24th meeting, staff presented recommendations to address the
projected budget shortfall. One of the strategies was to place on the November 6th
ballot a measure that would establish a city charter. The City Council directed staff to
prepare a draft charter for City Council review and consideration.
Three public hearings are required to place a city charter measure on the ballot. The
first draft was presented to the City Council at the initial public hearing at the April
24th meeting. At Council's direction, changes were incorporated and presented at the
June 12th public hearing. A copy of the most recent draft is attached. At that time,
CITY COUNCIL
CONSIDERATION OF CITY CHARTER BALLOT PUBLIC PARTICIPATION
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JULY 10, 2012
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the City Council decided to postpone placing the measure on the ballot and directed
staff to present recommendations for a more thorough public participation process at
the July 10th meeting rather than hold the final public hearing.
In California, there are two types of cities — general law cities and charter cities. The
authority of a general law city is derived from the powers granted to it by the general
laws adopted by the State Legislature and from the police power granted to it by the
State Constitution. A charter city derives its powers directly from the State
Constitution, subject to enactments of the legislature on matters of statewide
concern. Charter cities maintain authority over matters determined to be municipal
affairs.
A charter is a set of bylaws, which acts as a local constitution for the city. A charter
may only be adopted, amended or repealed by a majority vote of the City's residents.
The City of Arroyo Grande is currently a general law city. There are over 120 charter
cities in California, which amounts to more than 25%.
ANALYSIS OF ISSUES:
Prevailing Wage
One of the primary reasons cities pursue becoming a charter city is to have the
option foregoing State prevailing wage requirements when projects are funded
entirely through local revenues. This can result in significant cost savings. At the
time the drafts of the proposed charter were considered, the California Supreme
Court was considering a case involving whether State prevailing wage requirements
should be considered a municipal affair or an issue of statewide concern. If
determined to be an issue of statewide concern, prevailing wage requirements would
then apply to charter cities.
The decision on State Building and Construction Trades Council of California, AFL-
CIO vs. the City of Vista was issued on July 2nd. A copy of the ruling is attached.
The California Supreme Court upheld the Appellate Court decision that exempts
charter cities from prevailing wage requirements.
Public Participation Process
The following steps in obtaining public input and participation are recommended:
• Appoint a community Charter Committee: The Committee would: 1) establish
goals for the Charter; 2) review information from other communities, charters
and organizations; 3) seek information and feedback from the community on
specific issues; 4) review the draft Charter; and 5) provide recommendations to
the City Council on the final Charter document for consideration. The public
would be invited to attend Charter Committee meetings.
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• Public Education on Charter Process: Public education to inform and involve the
public in the process or drafting the Charter would be provided through the City
newsletter, web site, cable television government channel, press releases,
Times Press Recorder City Manager article, Facebook and Twitter regarding the
charter process, issues and goals.
• Public Opinion Analysis: Staff would work with the Charter Committee to identify
targeted questions and areas where community feedback is needed. Questions
would be posed through the City's Facebook account. If funding is available, it
is recommended to contract with a consultant to conduct a professional survey.
If funding is not available, it is recommended to discuss and consider
distributing a written survey through the utility bills. If a professional consultant
is not used, it is important to seek general feedback only because responses will
not be scientifically valid and should not be used to base decisions on.
• Public Education on Proposed City Charter: Public education on the Charter
proposal would be provided through presentations to civic groups by the City
Manager and Council Members, direct mailers, City newsletter, web site, cable
television government channel, press releases, Times Press Recorder City
Manager article, Facebook and Twitter regarding the recommended Charter. If
funding is available, it is recommended to contract with a professional
consultant to assist the City in developing a public education program and
materials.
Charter Committee Membership
Feedback staff has received from other jurisdictions indicates that it is important for
staff to provide support to the committee, but it should operate independently so it
represents a true community recommendation. The following recommended makeup
of the Committee is presented for Council consideration:
• Five citizen representatives, one recommended by each Council Member;
• One representative recommended by the Chamber of Commerce;
• One representative recommended by Arroyo Grande in Bloom;
• One representative recommended by the South County Historical Society; and
• One agricultural property owner representative recommended by staff.
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The intent of this recommendation is to provide a broad base representation of the
community at-large. Therefore, staff identified groups that have a community-wide
focus rather than those representing a particular area or interest. The Council can
make other suggestions on how best to accomplish that and/or alternate goals for the
makeup of the Committee.
If approved, it is recommended the City advertise the openings for the Committee
positions. Anyone expressing an interest or being considered would be asked to
complete an Application for Board, Committee or Commission. A "List of Citizens to
Serve" would be created as is done for other boards, committees and commissions.
Schedule
It is recommended that the process start at the beginning of the new calendar year.
At that time, the election will be completed; labor negotiations will hopefully be
completed, which will finalize any remaining budget issues; and the priority of the
effort can be coordinated and considered with other goals and staffing priorities that
exist for the year. Appointments can be made as part of the action to appoint other
commission, committee and board members. The following tentative schedule is
recommended:
• Formation of Charter Committee February 2013
• Initiation of Charter Committee meetings March 2013
• Charter Process Public Education February 2013 —September 2013
• Public Opinion Analysis July 2013
• Charter Committee Recommendations September 2013
• Council Consideration of Draft Charter October 2013
• Charter Public Education Process November 2013— March 2014
• Charter Measure First Public Hearing April 8, 2014
• Charter Measure Second Public Hearing May 13, 2014
• Approval of Charter Measure for Ballot June 24, 2014
• Election November 4, 2014
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JULY 10, 2012
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ALTERNATIVES:
The following alternatives are provided for City Council consideration
1. Approve the recommended City Charter public participation process, Charter
Committee membership, and schedule;
2. Modify the process and approve;
3. Modify the makeup of the proposed Committee and approve;
4. Postpone until January 2013 and reconsider at that time;
5. Do not proceed with the charter process; or
6. Provide staff other direction.
ADVANTAGES:
The proposed process will:
• Increase the likelihood of success of a proposed measure;
• Reduce potential opposition;
• Generate a final proposed Charter that will best reflect the goals and needs of
the community;
• Provide an opportunity to discuss and address concerns; and
• Better educate the community about the reasons for, and benefits of, the
proposed Charter.
The following advantages of pursuing a City Charter have been previously identified:
• The City would no longer be subject to State prevailing wage requirements,
which could result in significant savings to capital project costs and maintenance
contracts, including street sweeping and landscaping services. As we have
seen recently, this could be instrumental in helping to fully fund street and other
improvements. This will also encourage local contractors to submit bids on
these contracts.
• It better enables the City to adopt policies that provide preferences for local
vendors and contractors.
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CONSIDERATION OF CITY CHARTER BALLOT PUBLIC PARTICIPATION
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• Volunteer organizations could utilize local contractors offering to provide work at
reduced costs on community projects on City property.
• When cost effective, more work could be performed by City staff. The Public
Contracts Code currently limits the work that can be performed by City staff. As
a result, to reduce costs, a project could be built by City staff and supplemented
with contract work for specialized tasks.
• The City would have more authority to reject bidders on public works projects
due to lack of experience or poor performance records.
• With the elimination of redevelopment, it may make possible new opportunities
to create incentives for economic development that are not currently available.
DISADVANTAGES:
The following are disadvantages of the proposed process:
• The process will be labor intensive and potentially involve increased costs.
• At the conclusion of the process, some of the same key issues may still exist,
which could result in opposition and failure of the measure despite the effort and
costs invested.
ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW:
No environmental review is required for this item.
PUBLIC NOTIFICATION AND COMMENTS:
The agenda was posted in front of City Hall on Thursday, July 5, 2012 and on the
City's website on Friday, July 6, 2012.
Attachments:
1. Draft City Charter
2. California Supreme Court Decision in Vista Case
Attachment 1
CHARTER OF,THE CITY OF ARROYO GRANDE
ARTICLE I. MUNICIPAL AFFAIRS
ARTICLE II. FORM OF GOVERNMENT
ARTICLE III. CONTRACTS, PUBLIC FINANCING AND FRANCHISES
ARTICLE IV. REVENUE RETENTION
ARTICLE V. GENERAL LAWS
ARTICLE VI. INTERPRETATION
PREAMBLE
WE THE PEOPLE of the City of Arroyo Grande declare our intent to restore our
community to the historic principles of self-governance inherent in the doctrine of home-
rule. Sincerely committed to the belief that local government has the closest affinity to
the people governed, and firm in the conviction that the economic and fiscal
independence of our local government will promote the health, safety and welfare of all
the citizens of this City, we do hereby exercise the express right granted by the
Constitution of the State of California to enact and adopt this Charter for the City of
Arroyo Grande.
ARTICLE I. MUNICIPAL AFFAIRS
Section 100. Municipal Affairs. The City shall have full power and authority to adopt,
make, exercise and enforce all legislation, laws, and regulations and to take all actions
relating to municipal affairs, without limitation, which may be lawfully adopted, made,
exercised, taken or enforced under the Constitution of the State of California. Without
limiting in any manner the foregoing power and authority, each of the powers, rights,
and responsibilities described in this Charter is hereby declared to be a municipal affair,
the performance of which is unique to the benefit and welfare of the citizens of the City
of Arroyo Grande.
Section 101. Incorporation and Succession. The City of Arroyo Grande, in the
County of San Luis Obispo, State of California, shall continue to be a municipal
corporation under its present name City of Arroyo Grande. The boundaries of the City of
Arroyo Grande shall continue as now established until changed in the manner
authorized by law. The City of Arroyo Grande shall remain vested with and shall
continue to own, have, possess, control and enjoy all property, rights of property and
rights of action of every nature and description owned, had, possessed, controlled or
enjoyed by it at the time this Charter takes effect, and is hereby declared to be the
successor of same. It shall be subject to all debts, obligations and liabilities, which exist
against the municipality at the time this Charter takes effect. All lawful ordinances,
1
Attachment 1
resolutions, rules and regulations, or portions thereof, in force at the time this Charter
takes effect and not in conflict with or inconsistent herewith, are hereby continued in
force until the same have been duly repealed, amended, changed or superseded by
proper authority.
Section 102. No Increased Power to Tax. This Charter shall not be interpreted as
giving the City greater authority to raise the level of taxes or to create new taxes beyond
the powers granted to general law cities nor to exempt the City from any procedures for
raising the level of taxes or for creating new taxes required by the law applicable to
general law cities.
Section 103. Zoning and General Plan Consistency. Zoning shall continue to be to
be consistent with the City's General Plan, pursuant to requirements of the State law
applicable to general law cities.
Section 104. Powers Established by Ordinance. The City Council may not establish
by Ordinance any powers, rights, and responsibilities that are not either expressly
described in this Charter or allowed by State law applicable to general law cities.
ARTICLE II. FORM OF GOVERNMENT
Section 200. Form of Government. The City shall continue to be governed under this
Charter by a "Council-Manager" form of government. The City Council will establish the
policy of the City and the City Manager will carry out that policy.
Section 201. Elected Officials. The elective officers of the City of Arroyo Grande shall
be a Mayor and four Council members each of whom, including the Mayor, shall have
the right to vote on all questions coming before the Council. The minimum qualifications
for these offices shall be as provided by law for general law cities and any vacancy in
office shall be filled in the manner provided by that law. The Mayor shall be elected at
the general municipal election from the City at large. The Council members shall be
elected at the general municipal election from the City at large, two being selected
biennially. The term of the Mayor shall be two years and the terms of the Council
members shall be four years.
Section 203. Mayor. Powers and Duties. The Mayor shall preside at all meetings of the
City Council. As presiding officer of the Council the Mayor will faithfully communicate
the will of the Council'majority to the administrative officers in matters of policy. The
Mayor shall be recognized as the official head of the City for all ceremonial purposes.
Section 204. Council Member Compensation. The salary of the Mayor and Council
Members shall continue to be set pursuant to the State law applicable to general law
cities.
Section 205. Elections. The City Council may approve by ordinance use of a mail-in
ballot for special elections. All elections shall be held in accordance with all other
2
Attachment 1
provisions of the law applicable to general law cities.
OR
Section 205. Elections.
All elections shall be held in accordance with the provisions of the law applicable to
general law cities.
ARTICLE III. CONTRACTS, PUBLIC FINANCING AND FRANCHISES
Section 300. Economic and Community Development. The City shall encourage,
support, and promote economic and community development and preserve and
enhance the small-town and historic character of Arroyo Grande.
Section 301. Public Works Contracts. Except as provided by ordinance or by
agreement approved by the City Council, the City of Arroyo Grande, as a Charter City,
is exempt from the provisions of the California Public Contract Code. The City shall
have the power to establish standards, procedures, rules or regulations to regulate all
aspects of the bidding, award and performance of any public works contract, including,
but not limited to, the compensation rates to be paid for the performance of such work.
The City shall have the power to accept gifts and donations, including donations of
material and labor, in the construction of any public works project. The City shall have
the power to perform any work of improvement by use of its own forces and is not
required to contract for the construction of works of public improvement. The City may
also contract with other public agencies for the construction of works of public .
improvement.
Section 302. Prevailing Wage.
No City contract shall require payment of the prevailing wage schedule unless:
(i) the prevailing wage is legally required, and constitutionally permitted, to be
imposed; _
(ii) required by Federal or State grants pursuant to Federal or State law;
(iii) the City Council does not consider the project to be a municipal affair; or
(iv) payment of the prevailing wage schedule is authorized by resolution of the
City Council.
Section 303. Purchasing. The City shall have the power to establish standards,
procedures, rules or regulations related to the purchasing of goods, property, or
services, including, but not limited to, the establishment of local preferences.
Section 304. Public Financing. The City shall have the power to establish standards,
procedures, rules or regulations related to any public financing.
Section 305. Utility Franchises. The City shall have the power to adopt any ordinance
providing for the acquisition, development, or operation by the City of any utility, or to
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Attachment 1
adopt any ordinance providing for the granting of a franchise to any utility not owned by
the City which proposes to use or is using City streets, highways or other rights-of-way.
Section 306. Supporting Volunteers in Arroyo Grande
The City seeks to support volunteers in creating a higher quality of life for Arroyo
Grande citizens and declares itself exempt from any State laws or regulations that
would make it more difficult or expensive for volunteers in any community project,
whether funded with City revenues or not.
ARTICLE IV. REVENUE RETENTION
Section 400. Reductions Prohibited. Any revenues raised and collected by the City
shall not be subject to subtraction, retention, attachment, withdrawal or any other form
of involuntary reduction by any other level of government.
Section 401. Mandates Limited. No person, whether elected or appointed, acting on
behalf of the City, shall be required to perform any function which is mandated by any
other level of government, unless and until funds sufficient for the performance of such
function are provided by said mandating authority.
ARTICLE V. GENERAL LAWS
Section 500. General Law Powers. In addition to the power and authority granted by
the terms of this Charter and the Constitution of the State of California, the City shall
have the power and authority to adopt, make, exercise and enforce all legislation, laws
and regulations and to take all actions and to exercise any and all rights, powers, and
privileges heretofore or hereafter established, granted or prescribed by any law of the
State of California or by any other lawful authority. In the event of any conflict between
the provisions of this Charter and the provisions of the general laws of the State of
California, the provisions of this Charter shall control.
ARTICLE VI. INTERPRETATION
Section 600. Construction and Interpretation. The language contained in this Charter
is intended to be permissive rather than conclusive or limiting and shall be liberally and
broadly construed in favor of the exercise by the City of its power to govern with respect
to any matter which is a municipal affair.
Section 601. Severability. If any provision of this Charter should be held by a court of
competent jurisdiction to be invalid, void or otherwise unenforceable, the remaining
provisions shall remain enforceable to the fullest extent permitted by law.
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Attachment 1
Authentication
And
Certification
Authenticated and certified to be a true copy by Mayor and City Clerk .
Date of Municipal Election: ATTEST:
Mayor City Clerk
5
Attachment 2
Filed 7/2/12
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
STATE BUILDING AND )
CONSTRUCTION TRADES COUNCIL )
OF CALIFORNIA, AFL-CIO, )
)
Plaintiff and Appellant, ) S 173586
v. ) Ct.App. 4/1 D052181
)
CITY OF VISTA et al., ) San Diego County
) Super. Ct. No. 37-2007-
Defendants and Respondents. ) 00054316-CU-WM-NC
)
A charter city entered into certain contracts for the construction of public
buildings. A federation of labor unions then petitioned the superior court for a
peremptory writ of mandate, asserting that the city must comply with California's
prevailing wage law notwithstanding local ordinances stating otherwise. The
prevailing wage law requires that certain minimum wage levels be paid to contract
workers constructing public works.
Under the state Constitution,the ordinances of charter cities supersede state
law with respect to "municipal affairs" (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 5),but state law is
supreme with respect to matters of"statewide concern" (California Fed. Savings
&Loan Assn.v. City of Los Angeles (1991) 54 Ca1.3d 1, 17 (California Fed.
Savings)). Here, petitioner contends that the subject matter of the state's
prevailing wage law is a"statewide concern" over which the state has primary
1
legislative authority. (Ibid.) The city responds that the matter is a municipal affair
and therefore governed by its local ordinances. We agree with the city.
I. FACTS
In 2006, the voters of the City of Vista in San Diego County approved a .5
percent sales tax to fund the construction and renovation of several public
buildings. The proposed projects involved the seismic retrofit of an existing fire
station and the construction of two new fire stations, a new civic center, a new
sports park, and a new stagehouse for the city's Moonlight Amphitheatre. At that
time, Vista was a general law city.1 In February 2007, the Vista City Attorney
submitted a report to the city council recommending that Vista take steps to
become a charter city. The report asserted that the conversion would give the city
the option of not paying prevailing wages on its planned public works projects,
"result[ing] in millions of dollars of savings over the next few years and beyond."
The Vista City Council then authorized a special election for residents of
the city to vote on a ballot measure that would change Vista from a general law
city into a charter city. In the voter information pamphlet,the "City Attorney
Impartial Analysis" told the voters that, as a charter city,Vista's city council
"replaces the state legislature with regard to the municipal affairs of the
City[, which] . . . include bidding and contracting procedures . . . ." (City of Vista
Sample Ballot &Voter Information Pamp., Special Municipal Elec., June 5, 2007,
1 " `The Government Code classifies cities as either"general law cities"
(cities organized under the general law of California) or"chartered cities" (cities
organized under a charter). [Citations.] . . . [A] general law city. . . must comply
with state statutes that specify requirements for entering into contracts.
[Citations.]' " (City of Orange v. San Diego County Employees Retirement Assn.
(2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 45, 52.)
2
analysis of Prop. C,p. 003.) That same point was made in the ballot argument in
favor of the proposal, signed by the mayor and members of the city council, which
also noted that the conversion would allow the city to "choose when and if it pays
`prevailing wages.' " (Id., argument in favor of Prop. C, p. 004.) There was no
opposing ballot argument.
The ballot measure passed with approximately 67 percent of the votes cast.
Shortly thereafter, Vista amended a city ordinance to prohibit any city contract
from requiring payment of prevailing wages unless (a) such payment is compelled
by the terms of a state or a federal grant, (b) the contract does not involve a
municipal affair, or(c) payment of the prevailing wage is separately authorized by
the city council.
In October 2007, Vista's city council adopted a resolution approving
contracts to design and build two fire stations and authorizing the mayor to
execute the contracts. The contracts did not require compliance with the state's
prevailing wage law. A court action by plaintiff followed.
Plaintiff State Building and Construction Trades Council of California,
AFL-CIO (the Union) is a labor federation composed of 131 local unions, 16
district labor councils, and 22 local building trades councils that collectively
represent more than 300,000 men and women working in the construction industry
in California. The Union petitioned the San Diego County Superior Court for a
peremptory writ of mandate to direct Vista and its officeholders to comply with
the state's prevailing wage law. Vista countered that prevailing wage issues are
not a statewide concern, and that"charter cities have the legal right to determine
whether or not to require `prevailing wages' in local public works contracts that
involve locally funded, `municipal affairs' under the California Constitution and
the laws governing charter cities." The Union moved for issuance of a peremptory
writ of mandate. The Union argued that the prevailing wage law"addresses
3
important statewide concerns" and therefore it applies to charter cities "just as it
applies to other cities." In support of its petition, the Union submitted a
declaration of its president, Robert L. Balgenorth, asserting the regional nature of
the construction industry and describing apprenticeship training in that industry.
Vista opposed the motion, arguing that as a matter of law"Charter Cities have
fiscal control over local `municipal affairs' and these Cities can determine whether
to include `prevailing wage' requirements in local public works contracts."
The trial court denied the Union's petition, citing Vial v. City of San Diego
(1981) 122 Cal.App.3d 346. Vial concerned a city council resolution adopted by
San Diego (a charter city) that barred payment of prevailing wages except in
specified circumstances. The state sought to compel the city to comply with the
state's prevailing wage law. (Id. at p. 347.) The Court of Appeal in Vial upheld
the city's resolution, stating that the expenditure of city funds on public works
projects and the rates of pay of workers hired for such projects are municipal
affairs of a charter city over which the state has no legislative authority. (Id. at
p. 348.)
The Union here appealed. In a two-to-one decision, the Court of Appeal
affirmed the trial court. After observing that both the legislative record and the
trial court record were inadequate to establish that application of the prevailing
wage law to charter cities is necessary to protect regional labor markets,the Court
of Appeal concluded that the Union had failed to prove the existence of a
statewide concern. In the dissent's view, however, the wage levels of contract
workers constructing public works can have a depressive effect on regional wages,
and therefore they are a statewide concern.
We granted the Union's petition for review to decide whether the state's
prevailing wage law applies to charter cities.
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II. DISCUSSION
A. California's Prevailing Wage Law
In 1931, the California Legislature enacted the state's prevailing wage law.2
That law,which was then entitled the Public Wage Rate Act, required contractors
on"public works" projects to pay"the general prevailing rate of per diem wages
for work of a similar character in the locality in which the work is performed."
(Stats. 1931, ch. 397, § 1, p. 910.) The term"public works" was defined as work
done for public agencies and work paid for with public funds. (Id., § 4, pp. 911-
912.) The law expressly referred to charter cities in a provision requiring such
cities to pay prevailing wages in contracts for street or sewer improvement work.
(Ibid.)
Earlier the same year, Congress had enacted the Davis-Bacon Act (Pub. L.
71-798 (Mar. 3, 1931) 46 Stat. 1494, codified at 40 U.S.C. §§ 3141-3148); the
goals of the federal and the state legislation were similar. (See, e.g., California
Div. of Labor Standards Enforcement v. Dillingham Constr., N.A., Inc. (1997) 519
U.S. 316, 319.) Simply put, "[p]revailing wage laws are based on the . . . premise
that government contractors should not be allowed to circumvent locally
prevailing labor market conditions by importing cheap labor from other areas."
(Independent Roofing Contractors v. Department of Industrial Relations (1994) 23
Cal.App.4th 345, 356.) Many states have adopted some form of a prevailing wage
law for public construction projects. (See, e.g., 820 Ill. Comp. Stat. 130/1 to
130/12;N.Y. Labor Law § 220(3)(a); 43 Pa. Cons. Stat. §§ 165-1 to 165-17; Tex.
Gov. Code Ann. §§ 2258.001 to 2258.058.)
2 The prevailing wage law replaced a law from the late 19th century that
required payment of at least $2.00 per day for labor on public works. (Stats. 1897,
ch. 88, § 1,p. 90.)
5
When the California Legislature established the Labor Code in 1937, it
replaced the 1931 Public Wage Rate Act with a revised, but substantively
unchanged, version of the same law. (Stats. 1937, ch. 90, § 1720 et seq.,pp. 241-
246.) The 1937 law, like the 1931 law, directed the "body awarding any contract"
to "ascertain the general prevailing rate of per diem wages in the locality . . . for
each craft or type of workman needed to execute the contract." (Stats. 1937, ch.
90, § 1773, p. 243; see also Stats. 1931, ch. 397, § 2, p. 910.) As a result of a 1976
amendment, the prevailing wage law now requires that local wage rates be
determined by the Director of California's Department of Industrial Relations
rather than by the body awarding the contract (Stats. 1976, ch. 281, § 2,p. 587),
but the prevailing wage law's general purpose and scope remain largely
unchanged.
Here,Vista contends that it need not comply with the prevailing wage law
because the law invades Vista's constitutionally guaranteed autonomy as a charter
city. In resolving the issue, we begin with a brief overview of the home rule
doctrine set forth in the California Constitution.
B. California's Home Rule Doctrine
Charter cities are specifically authorized by our state Constitution to govern
themselves, free of state legislative intrusion, as to those matters deemed
municipal affairs. Article XI, section 5, subdivision (a) of the California
Constitution provides: "It shall be competent in any city charter to provide that
the city governed thereunder may make and enforce all ordinances and regulations
in respect to municipal affairs, subject only to restrictions and limitations provided
in their several charters and in respect to other matters they shall be subject to
general laws. City charters adopted pursuant to this Constitution shall supersede
any existing charter, and with respect to municipal affairs shall supersede all laws
6
inconsistent therewith." (Italics added.) The roots of this provision trace back
more than 100 years. (See generally Johnson v. Bradley (1992) 4 Ca1.4th 389,
' 394-398.) It was originally"enacted upon the principle that the municipality itself
knew better what it wanted and needed than the state at large, and to give that
municipality the exclusive privilege and right to enact direct legislation which
would carry out and satisfy its wants and needs." (Fragley v. Phelan (1899) 126
Cal. 383, 387 (lead opn. by Garoutte, J.).) The provision represents an
"affirmative constitutional grant to charter cities of`all powers appropriate for a
municipality to possess . . .' and [includes] the important corollary that `so far as
"municipal affairs" are concerned,' charter cities are `supreme and beyond the
reach of legislative enactment.' " (California Fed. Savings, supra, 54 Ca1.3d at
p. 12, quoting Ex Parte Braun (1903) 141 Cal. 204, 207.)
In California Fed. Savings,supra, 54 Ca1.3d 1,we set forth an analytical
framework for resolving whether or not a matter falls within the home rule
authority of charter cities. First, a court must determine whether the city
ordinance at issue regulates an activity that can be characterized as a"municipal
affair." (Id. at p. 16.) Second, the court"must satisfy itself that the case presents
an actual conflict between [local and state law]." (Ibid.) Third, the court must
decide whether the state law addresses a matter of"statewide concern." (Id. at
p. 17.) Finally, the court must determine whether the law is "reasonably related
to . . . resolution" of that concern (ibid.) and"narrowly tailored" to avoid
unnecessary interference in local governance (id. at p. 24). "If. . . the court is
persuaded that the subject of the state statute is one of statewide concern and that
the statute is reasonably related to its resolution [and not unduly broad in its
sweep], then the conflicting charter city measure ceases to be a `municipal affair'
pro tanto and the Legislature is not prohibited by article XI, section 5(a), from
addressing the statewide dimension by its own tailored enactments." (Id. at p. 17.)
7
Here, we reaffirm our view—first expressed 80 years ago (see City of
Pasadena v. Charleville (1932) 215 Cal. 384, 389 (Charleville))—that the wage
levels of contract workers constructing locally funded public works are a
municipal affair(that is, exempt from state regulation), and that these wage levels
are not a statewide concern(that is, subject to state legislative control). Our
reasons are set forth in the course of the analysis given below.
C. Applicability of California's Home Rule Doctrine Is a Question of
Law
The Court of Appeal treated the dispute in this case as a factual one, and it
characterized its decision against the Union in terms of a failure of proof. For
example, the court observed: "[T]he question we face is whether either the
Legislature or the [Union] ha[s] demonstrated a fact-bound justification for
application of the [prevailing wage law] to charter cities. As we explain more
fully, we do not find any such justification on the record presented." Later in its
opinion, the Court of Appeal said: "[T]he Legislature has not articulated any
rationale which would support the conclusion that complete preemption of
municipal public works contracting is needed to protect regional labor markets."
With regard to the evidentiary record made by the Union, the court said:
"Plainly . . . [various parts of the trial court record] establish that the labor markets
in the construction trades are regional rather than local. . . . [However,] the factual
record presented by the [Union] offers no evidence which suggests the contracting
activity of municipalities materially impacts regional labor markets."
Thus,the Court of Appeal here did not hold that the wage levels of contract
workers constructing a locally funded public work are categorically a municipal
affair and not a statewide concern. Rather, the Court of Appeal held that the
legislative record was inadequate to establish a statewide concern and that the
Union had failed to prove its case in the trial court.
8
The Court of Appeal's approach raises the question whether the
determination of a statewide concern presents predominantly a legal or a factual
question. Fundamentally, the question is one of constitutional interpretation; the
controlling inquiry is how the state Constitution allocates governmental authority
between charter cities and the state. The answer to that constitutional question
does not necessarily depend on whether the municipal activity in question has
some regional or statewide effect. For example, we have said that the salaries of
charter city employees are a municipal affair and not a statewide concern
regardless of any possible economic effect those salaries might have beyond the
borders of the city. (Sonoma County Organization of Public Employees v. County
of Sonoma (1979) 23 Ca1.3d 296, 316-317 (Sonoma County).)
Of course, the inquiry is not wholly removed from historical, and hence
factual, realities. In California Fed. Savings,supra, 54 Ca1.3d at pages 17 to 18,
for example, we said: "[C]ourts should avoid the error of`compartmentalization,'
that is, of cordoning off an entire area of governmental activity as either a
`municipal affair' or one of statewide concern. Beginning with the observation in
Pac. Tel. & Tel. Co. v. City and County of S.F. [(1959)] 51 Ca1.2d [766,] 771,that
`the constitutional concept of municipal affairs is not a fixed or static quantity. . .
[but one that] changes with the changing conditions upon which it is to operate,'
our cases display a growing recognition that `home rule' is a means of adjusting
the political relationship between state and local governments in discrete areas of
conflict. When a court invalidates a charter city measure in favor of a conflicting
state statute, the result does not necessarily rest on the conclusion that the subject
matter of the former is not appropriate for municipal regulation. It means,rather,
that under the historical circumstances presented, the state has a more substantial
interest in the subject than the charter city." (Italics added.)
9
Nevertheless, the question whether in a particular case the home rule
provisions of the California Constitution bar the application of state law to charter
cities turns ultimately on the meaning and scope of the state law in question and
the relevant state constitutional provisions. Interpreting that law and those
provisions presents a legal question, not a factual one. (County of Riverside v.
Superior Court(2003) 30 Ca1.4th 278, 286-287 (County of Riverside); Sonoma
County, supra, 23 Ca1.3d at p. 316;Bishop v. City of San Jose (1969) 1 Ca1.3d 56,
63 (Bishop).) Courts accord great weight to the factual record that the Legislature
has compiled (California Fed. Savings, supra, 54 Ca1.3d at pp. 20-25;Baggett v.
Gates (1982) 32 Ca1.3d 128, 136-137), and also to any relevant facts established in
trial court proceedings. (California Fed. Savings, at p. 20, fn. 16.) Factual
findings by the Legislature or the trial court,however, are not controlling.
(Bishop, at p. 63.) The decision as to what areas of governance are municipal
concerns and what are statewide concerns is ultimately a legal one.
Therefore, the Court of Appeal here gave too much weight to the Union's
asserted failure to prove its case, implying that the issue before the court was one
of sufficiency of the evidence. The answer to whether the prevailing wage law
can be applied constitutionally to charter cities is not conclusively determined
solely by the evidentiary record in the trial court or by the legislative record. The
question remains one of state constitutional interpretation. (County of Riverside,
supra, 30 Ca1.4th at pp. 286-287; Sonoma County,supra, 23 Ca1.3d at p. 316;
Bishop, supra, 1 Ca1.3d at p. 63.)
D. Application of California Fed. Savings's Four-Part Test
We now apply the four-part test of this court's 1991 decision in California
Fed. Savings,supra, 54 Ca1.3d at pages 16 to 17,which we summarized at page 7,
ante.
10
1. Whether the wages of contract workers constructing locally funded
public works are a municipal affair
The wage levels of contract workers constructing locally funded public
works are certainly a"municipal affair." We said so explicitly in our 1932
decision in Charleville, supra, 215 Cal. at page 389, which was the test case we
took immediately after the Legislature's 1931 enactment of the prevailing wage
law to decide whether that law applied to charter cities. Charleville was a
mandate action brought to compel a charter city's manager to sign a contract for
the construction of a fence around a city-owned reservoir. (Id. at p. 387.) The city
manager refused to sign the contract, contending (among other things) that the
contract did not comply with the state's newly enacted prevailing wage law.
(Ibid.) The petition for a writ of mandate asserted that the prevailing wage law did
not apply to charter cities, and this court agreed.
We there held that the issue of wage levels of contract workers improving a
city-owned reservoir was, as a matter of law, a"municipal affair." (Charleville,
supra, 215 Cal. at p. 389.) We said: "The sole purpose of the contract is the
construction of a wire fence around a reservoir which is a part of the city's
municipal water system. The supplying of water by a city to its inhabitants is a
municipal affair. [Citation.] The building of a dam to be used for impounding
water for a municipal water system is a municipal affair. [Citation.] The
construction of a reservoir as a part of a municipal water system is a municipal
affair. [Citation.] The money to be expended for the cost of the improvement
belongs to the city and the control of its expenditure is a municipal affair.
[Citation.] The hiring of employees generally by the city to perform labor and
services in connection with its municipal affairs and the payment of the city's
funds for services rendered to the city by its employees in the administration of its
11
municipal affairs is not subject to or controlled by general laws. [Citations.]"
(Ibid.)
It is apparent from our analysis in Charleville, supra, 215 Cal. at page 389,
that the construction of a city-operated facility for the benefit of a city's
inhabitants is quintessentially a municipal affair, as is the control over the
expenditure of a city's own funds. Here,the two fire stations in the City of Vista,
like the municipal water system in Charleville, supra, 215 Cal. 384, are facilities
operated by the city for the benefit of the city's inhabitants, and they are financed
from the city's own funds. We conclude therefore that the matter at issue here
involves a"municipal affair."
2. Existence of an "actual conflict" between state law and charter city
law
This court's 1991 decision in California Fed. Savings,supra, 54 Ca1.3d at
pages 16-17, emphasized the importance of determining, as a matter of statutory
construction,that state law actually conflicts with local law before proceeding to
the difficult state constitutional question of which law governs a particular matter.
Here, no party contends that California's prevailing wage law exempts charter
cities from its scope. Indeed,the prevailing wage law makes express reference to
charter cities, defining " `public works' " to include "[s]treet, sewer, or other
improvement work . . . of any political subdivision or district [of the state],
whether the political subdivision or district operates under a freeholder's charter
or not." (Lab. Code, § 1720, subd. (a)(3), italics added; see also id., subd. (a)(1)
[applying the law to any construction work"done under contract and paid for . . .
out of public funds"].) Because the state's prevailing wage law does not exempt
charter cities, and because Vista's ordinance prohibits compliance with that law
(except in circumstances not relevant here), we conclude that an actual conflict
exists between state law and Vista's ordinance.
12
3. Whether the wage levels of contract workers constructing locally
funded public works is a statewide concern
When, as here, state law and the ordinances of a charter city actually
conflict and we must decide which controls, "the hinge of the decision is the
identification of a convincing basis for legislative action originating in
extramunicipal concerns, one justifying legislative supersession based on sensible,
pragmatic considerations." (California Fed. Savings, supra, 54 Ca1.3d at p. 18.)
In other words, for state law to control there must be something more than an
abstract state interest, as it is always possible to articulate some state interest in
even the most local of matters. Rather, there must be "a convincing basis" for the
state's action—a basis that"justif[ies]" the state's interference in what would
otherwise be a merely local affair. (Ibid.) Here, that convincing justification is
not present.
We reached essentially the same conclusion when we addressed the
question in our 1932 decision in Charleville, supra, 215 Cal. 384. We there held
that the wage levels of contract workers improving a city-owned reservoir were
not a matter of"general state concern." (Id. at p. 393.) Likewise, the wage levels
of contract workers designing and constructing two city-operated fire houses do
not appear to be a matter of"general state concern." The Union, however, argues
that circumstances have changed since our 1932 Charleville decision, and that
what was not a statewide concern then has since become a statewide concern. The
Union quotes a statement by this court in Pac. Tel. & Tel. Co. v. City & County of
S.F., supra, 51 Cal.2d 766, at page 771: "[T]he constitutional concept of
municipal affairs is not a fixed or static quantity. It changes with the changing
conditions upon which it is to operate. What may at one time have been a matter
of local concern may at a later time become a matter of state concern controlled
by the general laws of the state." (Italics added.)
13
The Union points out that as a result of a 1976 amendment to the state's
prevailing wage law (Stats. 1976, ch. 281, § 2, p. 587), the wage levels mandated
by that law are no longer set by the local body awarding the contract but by the
Director of the Department of Industrial Relations, and under the amended law,
these mandatory wage levels reflect regional rather than simply local interests
(Lab. Code, §§ 1770, 1773, 1773.1, 1773.9). In light of these statutory changes,
the Union argues,the wage levels of contract workers constructing locally funded
public works have become a matter of statewide concern.
In a related argument, the Union contends that the economy of the state has
become more integrated during the 80 years since this court's 1932 decision in
Charleville, supra, 215 Cal. 384, and wage levels in a local area are now more
likely to have an effect regionally and statewide. The construction industry in
particular, according to the Union, has followed this trend toward economic
regionalization, with workers often driving long distances to a job site and multi-
employer collective bargaining agreements governing the terms of employment on
a regional basis. Because of these economic changes, the Union asserts, the
refusal of charter cities to pay prevailing wages has a depressive impact on
regional labor standards that was not present in 1932 when Charleville was
decided. Therefore, the Union argues, the expenditure of city funds on a local
public work is no longer a purely local concern;rather, in light of our modern
integrated economy, it has become a statewide concern.
The Union further notes that the state's prevailing wage law now requires
contractors on public works projects to hire apprentices from state-approved
apprenticeship programs, thereby ensuring the proper training of the next
generation of skilled construction workers. (Lab. Code, § 1777.5.) The Union
contends that this requirement of the prevailing wage law is essential to
California's long-term economic health. If the prevailing wage law did not
14
include this requirement, the Union argues, then construction contractors bidding
competitively on public works projects would refuse to hire apprentices, in an
effort to reduce costs; apprentices then might not be able to obtain enough work to
support themselves and to complete their on-the-job training requirement. The
Union asserts that the training of the next generation of skilled construction
workers is a statewide concern, not merely a local concern, and the prevailing
wage law has become an integral part of the state's scheme for training these
workers.
These arguments by the Union underscore the importance of identifying
correctly the question at issue. Certainly regional labor standards and the proper
training of construction workers are statewide concerns when considered in the
abstract. But the question presented here is not whether the state government has
an abstract interest in labor conditions and vocational training. Rather, the
question presented is whether the state can require a charter city to exercise its
purchasing power in the construction market in a way that supports regional wages
and subsidizes vocational training, while increasing the charter city's costs. No
one would doubt that the state could use its own resources to support wages and
vocational training in the state's construction industry, but can the state achieve
these ends by interfering in the fiscal policies of charter cities? Autonomy with
regard to the expenditure of public funds lies at the heart of what it means to be an
independent governmental entity. " `[W]e can think of nothing that is of greater
municipal concern than how a city's tax dollars will be spent; nor anything which
could be of less interest to taxpayers of other jurisdictions.' " (Johnson v. Bradley,
supra, 4 Ca1.4th at p. 407.) Therefore, the Union here cannot justify state
regulation of the spending practices of charter cities merely by identifying some
indirect effect on the regional and state economies. (See County of Riverside,
supra, 30 Cal.4th at p. 296 ["No doubt almost anything a county does . . . can have
15
consequences beyond its borders. But this circumstance does not mean this court
may eviscerate clear constitutional provisions, or the Legislature may do what the
Constitution expressly prohibits it from doing."].)
The Union's arguments also conflict with our previous decisions. In
Sonoma County,supra, 23 Ca1.3d at page 297, we held that the wages paid by a
charter city or county to its own employees are a municipal affair and therefore are
not subject to regulation by the state Legislature. In that case, the state offered to
distribute surplus state funds to local governments to mitigate the impact of
Proposition 13.3 The Legislature, however, then enacted a special provision
prohibiting the distribution of surplus state funds to any local agency that granted
to its employees a cost-of-living wage or salary increase that exceeded the cost-of-
living increase provided to state employees. At issue was whether the latter
provision violated the home rule doctrine of the California Constitution. (Sonoma
County, at pp. 314-318.) We emphasized in Sonoma County that the
determination of what constitutes a municipal affair (over which the state has no
legislative authority) and what constitutes a statewide concern (as to which state
law is controlling) is a matter for the courts, not the Legislature, to decide. (Id. at
p. 316, citing Bishop, supra, 1 Ca1.3d 56.) Moreover, that the Legislature chose to
deal with a problem on a statewide basis, Sonoma County said, does not in itself
make the problem a statewide concern. (Sonoma County, at p. 316.) Put
differently, the concept of statewide concern is not coextensive with the state's
police power. Citing numerous cases and an explicit provision of the state
Constitution,Sonoma County concluded that the salaries of local employees of a
3 Proposition 13, an initiative measure that the California electorate passed
on June 6, 1978, added article XIII A to the California Constitution,placing
significant limits on the taxing power of local and state governments.
16
charter city are a municipal affair not subject to the state's general laws. (Id. at
pp. 316-317.)
Similarly, in San Francisco Labor Council v. Regents of University of
California (1980) 26 Ca1.3d 785 (S.F. Labor Council), we rejected an effort by the
state Legislature to compel the Regents of the University of California to pay
prevailing wages to university employees. Under article IX, section 9 of the
California Constitution, the University of California enjoys an autonomy like that
of charter cities under article XI, section 5. Specifically, article IX, section 9
provides that the University of California shall have "full powers of organization
and government," subject only to a few narrow exceptions. Significantly, one of
the exceptions pertains to state legislation that"regulates matters of statewide
concern not involving internal university affairs." (S.F. Labor Council, at p. 789,
italics added.) Relying on Sonoma County, supra, 23 Ca1.3d 296, we concluded
that the state's prevailing wage requirement was "not a matter of statewide
concern." (S.F. Labor Council, at p. 790.) We observed that"while the statute
purports to establish a minimum wage, it in effect determines the wage." (Ibid.)
We then stated: "Although the Legislature has declared that the matter is one of
statewide concern [citation], the declaration is not controlling . . . ." (Id. at
pp. 790-791.)
As discussed above,Sonoma County,supra, 23 Ca1.3d 296, involved the
autonomy rights of charter cities and counties, and S.F. Labor Council, supra, 26
Ca1.3d 785, applied Sonoma County's holding to a case involving a state
prevailing wage law analogous to the one at issue here. Read together,Sonoma
County and S.F. Labor Council indicate our continued adherence to the holding in
Charleville, supra, 215 Cal. 384, that charter cities are not subject to the state's
prevailing wage law.
17
More recently, in County of Riverside,supra, 30 Ca1.4th 278,we reaffirmed
that compensation of public employees is not a statewide concern justifying state
law interference in the autonomy of independent governmental entities. We there
concluded that state law could not force a county into binding arbitration over the
compensation paid to county employees. Our decision applied two state
constitutional provisions: one giving all counties authority to "provide f o r the . . .
compensation . . . of[their] employees" (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 1, subd. (b)), the
other prohibiting the Legislature from"delegat[ing] to a private person or body
power to . . . interfere with county or municipal corporation . . . money" (id., § 11,
subd. (a)). In the course of our analysis, we considered whether the state law at
issue might be enforceable because it governed a matter of statewide concern.
(County of Riverside, at pp. 286, 291.) We rejected the Legislature's assertion that
the matter involved a statewide concern. (Id. at pp. 286-287.) Instead, we
concluded that the state law in question impinged too much on local rights,
"depriving the county entirely of its authority to set employee salaries." (Id. at
p. 288; see also id. at p. 293.) We also drew an important distinction between state
procedural laws governing the affairs of local governmental entities (which by
their nature impinge less on local affairs) and state laws dictating the substance of
a public employee labor issue (which impinge much more on local affairs). (Id. at
p. 289.)
Although the three cases just cited—Sonoma County, supra, 23 Ca1.3d
296, S.F. Labor Council,supra, 26 Ca1.3d 785, and County of Riverside, supra, 30
Ca1.4th 278 —deal with the wages of public employees rather than, as here, the
wages of private employees constructing local public works projects, the
distinction is irrelevant. The Union's arguments here do not depend on whether
the workers constructing the public work are public or private employees. If, as
the Union contends,the prevailing wage law's shift from a purely local focus to a
18
regional focus has made the wage levels of workers constructing locally funded
public works a matter of statewide concern, then that would be true whether the
case involved public employees or private employees. Similarly, if, as the Union
asserts,the state's economic integration during the 80 years since our 1932
decision in Charleville, supra, 215 Cal. 384, has made the wages of workers
constructing local public works a matter of statewide concern, then that would be
true for both public employees and private employees.
Significantly, this case is not like others in which we found a statewide
concern to justify the application of a state law to charter cities. For example, our
cases have suggested that a state law of broad general application is more likely to
address a statewide concern than one that is narrow and particularized in its
application. (S.F. Labor Council, supra, 26 Ca1.3d at pp. 789-790; Charleville,
supra, 215 Cal. at p. 390.) We applied this principle in People ex rel. Seal Beach
Police Officers Assn. v. City of Seal Beach (1984) 36 Ca1.3d 591, 600, and
Professional Fire Fighters, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles (1963) 60 Ca1.2d 276, 294-
295. In the latter two cases,we also noted that the state laws at issue set forth
generally applicable procedural standards, and consequently impinged less on
local autonomy than if they had imposed substantive obligations. In Seal Beach,
for example, we said: "[T]here is a clear distinction between the substance of a
public employee labor issue and the procedure by which it is resolved. Thus there
is no question that `salaries of local employees of a charter city constitute
municipal affairs and are not subject to general laws.' ([Sonoma County],supra,
23 Ca1.3d at p. 317.) Nevertheless, the process by which salaries are fixed is
obviously a matter of statewide concern and none could, at this late stage, argue
that a charter city need not meet and confer concerning its salary structure." (Seal
Beach, at pp. 600-601, fn. 11; see also County of Riverside, supra, 30 Ca1.4th at
p. 289.)
19
Here, the state law at issue is not a minimum wage law of broad general
application; rather, the law at issue here has a far narrower application, as it
pertains only to the public works projects of public agencies. In addition, it
imposes substantive obligations on charter cities, not merely generally applicable
procedural standards. These distinctions further undermine the Union's assertion
that the matter here presents a statewide concern and therefore requires Vista, a
charter city, to comply with the state's prevailing wage law on the city's locally
funded public works projects.
We are aware that the Legislature has recently stated that the wage levels of
contract workers constructing locally funded public works are a matter of
statewide concern. The Legislature's view is expressed in two amendments to the
prevailing wage law, one in 2002 and the other in 2003, each addressing a
relatively narrow category of public works. Uncodified sections of both
amendments state: "It is a matter of statewide concern that every public agency in
California pay the prevailing rate of per diem wages to workers employed on
public works projects undertaken by those public agencies." (Stats. 2003, ch. 851,
§ 1, p. 6247, italics added; Stats. 2002, ch. 892, § 1,p. 5541, italics added; see also
Stats. 2002, ch. 868, § 1,p. 5455.) Likewise, a 2003 concurrent resolution of the
Legislature stated in relevant part: "[T]he Legislature reaffirms its intent for the
state prevailing wage law to apply broadly to all projects subsidized with public
funds, including the projects of chartered cities, as the law addresses important
statewide concerns . . . ." (Sen. Conc. Res. No. 49, Stats. 2003 (2003-2004 Reg.
Sess.) res. ch. 135, p. 6834.)
But as we noted earlier(see pt. II.C., ante), the Legislature's view as to
what constitutes a statewide concern is not determinative in resolving the
constitutional question before us. This court considered similar legislative
findings in regard to the statute requiring the Regents of the University of
20
California to pay prevailing wages, and the court concluded that those findings
were not controlling. (S.F. Labor Council, supra, 26 Ca1.3d at pp. 790-791; see
also County of Riverside, supra, 30 Ca1.4th at pp. 286-287.) Although we give
such statements by the Legislature great weight (Baggett v. Gates, supra, 32
Ca1.3d at p. 136), the resolution of constitutional challenges to state laws falls
within the judicial power, not the legislative power. (County of Riverside, at
pp. 286-287; Sonoma County,supra, 23 Ca1.3d at p. 316;Bishop, supra, 1 Ca1.3d
at p. 63.) " `It is, emphatically, the province and duty of the judicial department,
to say what the law is.' " (McClung v. Employment Development Dept. (2004) 34
Ca1.4th 467, 469, quoting Marbury v. Madison (1803) 5 U.S. 137, 177; see also
Lockyer v. City and County of San Francisco (2004) 33 Ca1.4th 1055, 1068.)
Moreover, we are"especially" hesitant to abdicate to the Legislature's view of the
issue "when [as here] the issue involves the division of power between local
government and that same Legislature." (County of Riverside, at p. 286.)
In this case, we conclude that no statewide concern has been presented
justifying the state's regulation of the wages that charter cities require their
contractors to pay to workers hired to construct locally funded public works. In
light of our conclusion that there is no statewide concern here, we need not
determine whether the state's prevailing wage law is "reasonably related to . . .
resolution" of that concern(California Fed. Savings, supra, 54 Ca1.3d at p. 17)
and is "narrowly tailored" to avoid unnecessary interference in local governance
(id. at p. 24). The trial court here was correct to deny plaintiff Union's petition for
a writ of mandate, and the Court of Appeal properly affirmed the trial court's
judgment.
21
J'
DISPOSITION
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal,which in turn affirmed the
trial court's judgment denying the Union's petition for a writ of mandate.
KENNARD, J.
WE CONCUR:
CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
BAXTER, J.
CHIN, J.
CORRIGAN, J.
22