United States Court of
Appeals
FOR
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Argued December 4, 2001
Decided February 12, 2002
No. 00-1415
University of Great Falls,
Petitioner
v.
National Labor Relations
Board,
Respondent
Montana Federation of Teachers,
Intervenor
On Petition for Review and Cross-Application for
Enforcement of an Order
of the National
Labor Relations Board
Nicholas Trott Long argued the cause and filed the briefs
for
petitioner.
Gene C.
Schaerr argued the cause for amici curiae Associ-
ation of Southern
Baptist Colleges and Schools, et al., in
support of petitioner. With him on the
brief were James D.
Jordan and Nicholas P. Miller.
David A. Seid, Attorney, National Labor
Relations Board,
argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were
Arthur F.
Rosenfeld, General Counsel, John H. Ferguson,
Associate General Counsel,
Aileen A. Armstrong, Deputy
Associate General Counsel, and David
Habenstreit, Supervi-
sory Attorney.
J.C. Weingartner and David J. Strom were on the brief for
intervenor.
Before: Sentelle and Rogers,
Circuit Judges, and
Williams, Senior Circuit Judge.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit
Judge Sentelle.
Sentelle, Circuit Judge: The
University of Great Falls
("University") petitions this Court
for review of a National
Labor Relations Board's ("NLRB" or
"Board") Decision and
Order in an unfair labor practice
proceeding against the
University.
University of Great Falls, 331 N.L.R.B. No. 188
(Aug. 31, 2000)
("Great Falls"). The
University argues that it
is exempt from NLRB jurisdiction under the
doctrine of
NLRB v. Catholic Bishop of Chicago, 440 U.S. 490 (1979), and
the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, 42 U.S.C. ss 2000bb
et seq.
(1994). The Board, however, concluded
that the
University did not "have a 'substantial religious
character,' "
and asserted jurisdiction. Great Falls, 331 N.L.R.B. No. 188,
at 4. Because we agree with petitioner that it is
exempt from
NLRB jurisdiction under Catholic Bishop, we grant the
petition
for review, vacate the decision and order, and deny
the Board's
cross-petition for enforcement. Because
we de-
termine that the NLRB lacks jurisdiction over the University,
we do not reach the University's alternative claim that the
Board
erred in its determination that the collective bargain-
ing unit included
faculty, but not deans, as non-managerial
employees.
I. Background
On October 16, 1995, the Montana
Federation of Teachers,
AFT, AFL-CIO ("the Union") petitioned
the NLRB to recog-
nize the Union as the collective bargaining agent
for the
faculty of the University of Great Falls. The University
declined to recognize
the Union. The NLRB's Regional
Director
ordered a hearing. In that hearing and
in all
subsequent administrative proceedings, the University raised
and preserved two principal objections to Board jurisdiction
over
it under the National Labor Relations Act ("NLRA" or
"Act"). First, the University argued, the Board
lacks juris-
diction over the University of Great Falls because it is a
religiously operated institution not subject to the NLRA
pursuant
to the Supreme Court's decision in NLRB v. Catho-
lic Bishop of Chicago,
440 U.S. 490 (1979). Second, the
University
argued, even if it were subject to the jurisdiction
of the Board, the
Board could not order it to engage in
collective bargaining with the
Union because to do so would
violate the Religious Freedom Restoration
Act, 42 U.S.C.
ss 2000bb et seq. (1994) ("RFRA"), by
substantially burden-
ing the religious freedom of the University and its
owners-
Sisters of Providence, a Roman Catholic religious order-in
the
absence of a compelling governmental interest.
While
the University also preserved its objection to the
bargaining
unit, it is the religious/jurisdictional issues that are
dispositive
of the present litigation.
After the hearing, the NLRB Regional
Director issued a
decision extensively exploring the evidence of
religious faith,
practice and mission at the University and ultimately
conclud-
ed that Catholic Bishop did not preclude Board jurisdiction
over the University because "the propagation of a religious
faith
is not a primary purpose of UGF.
Rather, the purpose
and function of the institution are primarily
secular." Deci-
sion and
Direction of Election, University of Great Falls,
Case 19-RC-13114, slip
op. at 11 (NLRB Region 19, Feb. 20,
1996). As to the RFRA argument, the Director concluded
that a
collective bargaining order would not substantially
burden the
institution's free exercise of religion and that
RFRA does not preclude
the NLRB's assertion of jurisdiction
over the employer. The Regional Director ordered the rep-
resentation
election by mail ballot of a defined faculty bar-
gaining unit. The election occurred between March 8 and
March 26, 1996, but the ballots were impounded pending an
administrative
review of the Director's decision. In
the ad-
ministrative review, the Board considered only the Religious
Freedom Restoration Act issue and the bargaining unit objec-
tion. In November of 1997 it affirmed the Regional
Director
as to the bargaining unit, and ruled that the Religious
Free-
dom Restoration Act argument was moot by reason of the
Supreme
Court's decision in City of Boerne v. Flores, 521
U.S. 507 (1997), which
it construed as declaring the RFRA
unconstitutional. See University of Great Falls, 325
N.L.R.B.
83, 83 n.2. (1997).
Following affirmance, the Regional Director issued a sup-
plemental
order in January 1998 certifying the Union as the
exclusive collective
bargaining representative of the faculty
bargaining unit. Thereafter, the Union requested that the
University bargain collectively.
The University refused.
The
Board's Acting General Counsel issued an unfair labor
practice
("ULP") against the University for its refusal to
bargain
collectively. The Board heard the case
on cross-
motions for summary judgment.
After receiving the briefs of
the parties on the RFRA issue, and
reviewing the evidence
received by the Regional Director in the
representation and
election proceedings, the Board granted the summary
judg-
ment motion of the general counsel, denied the motion of the
University,
and held that the University had committed an
unfair labor practice by
its refusal to bargain with the Union
as the exclusive representative of
the bargaining unit under
sections 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. Great Falls, 331 N.L.R.B.
No. 188, at
4.
Unlike the earlier
proceedings, the Board did not dispense
with RFRA on the basis of its
unconstitutionality under City
of Boerne v. Flores. The Board recognized that City of
Boerne
addressed only the constitutionality of the Act as
applied to state and
local law; that two circuits, the
Eighth in
Christians v. Crystal Evangelical Free Church, 141 F.3d 854
(8th Cir.), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 811 (1998), and the Ninth in
Sutton
v. Provident St. Joseph Medical Center, 192 F.3d 826
(9th Cir. 1999), had
held explicitly that the Supreme Court's
decision did not invalidate RFRA
as applied to federal law;
and that two others, including this one, had issued decisions
assuming
without deciding that RFRA is constitutional as
applied to federal law. See Adams v. Commissioner of
Internal
Revenue, 170 F.3d 173 (3d Cir. 1999);
Alamo v.
Clay, 137 F.3d 1366 (D.C. Cir. 1998). The Board further
"recognized
that it is beyond its authority, as an administra-
tive agency, to
adjudicate the constitutionality of congression-
al enactments ... a
matter left to the courts." Great
Falls,
331 N.L.R.B. No. 188, at 1.
Therefore, the Board proceeded
on the assumption that RFRA is
constitutional as a limitation
on federal statutory interpretation. The Board, however,
ultimately
determined that RFRA is not implicated in this
case because, in the
Board's view, the protection afforded the
free exercise of religion under
RFRA is less stringent than
that provided to religious institutions under
Catholic Bishop,
and that therefore, if the Board's jurisdiction was not
divest-
ed by Catholic Bishop, it plainly would survive the test of
RFRA. The Board ruled that it did have
jurisdiction under
the Catholic Bishop test. The Board proceeded, then, to
track the reasoning of the
Regional Director, reviewing in
detail the evidence of the religiosity of
the University, and
ultimately agreeing with the Regional Director that
"the
[University] is not involved with a religious institution in
such
a way that the Board's exercise of jurisdiction would even
create
a significant risk that First Amendment rights will be
infringed." Id. at 4 (emphasis in original).
The Board therefore concluded that the
Union continued as
the exclusive representative of the bargaining unit
under
section 9(a) of the Act;
that the refusal of the University to
bargain was in violation of
sections 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act;
and that the University had therefore engaged in unfair labor
practices. The University filed
the present petition for re-
view.
II. Analysis
"Since Catholic Bishop, the Board
has decided on a case-
by-case basis whether a religion-affiliated school
has a 'sub-
stantial religious character' " and whether it is subject
to the
NLRB's jurisdiction and to the requirements of the National
Labor Relations Act. Great Falls, 331
N.L.R.B. No. 188, at
2. "The
Board has not relied solely on the employer's
affiliation with a
religious organization, but rather has evalu-
ated the purpose of the
employer's operations, the role of the
unit employees in effectuating
that purpose, and the potential
effects if the Board exercised
jurisdiction." Id. at 2-3
(em-
phasis added). In making this
evaluation the "Board consid-
ers such factors as the involvement of
the religious institution
in the daily operation of the school, the
degree to which the
school has a religious mission and curriculum, and
whether
religious criteria are used for the appointment and evaluation
of faculty." Id. at 3 (emphasis added). The NLRB "will
consider, on a case-by-case basis, all
aspects of a religious
school's organization and function that [it deems]
relevant."
Trustee of St.
Joseph's College, 282 N.L.R.B. 65, 68 n.10
(1986).
In this case, the Regional Director
rested his conclusion
that the Board had jurisdiction on the proposition
that "prop-
agation of a religious faith is not the primary purpose
of the
[University], but rather that the University's purpose and
function
are primarily secular." Great
Falls, 331 N.L.R.B.
No. 188, at 3-4.
In reaching the same conclusion on the
unfair labor practice
proceeding, the Board expressly ap-
proved the Regional Director's
reasoning, noting that the
finding
relied, among other things, on the following: (1) the
curriculum does not require the Catholic faith to be
emphasized, nor is there in fact a
particular emphasis on
Catholicism; (2) the
Respondent's board of trustees is
not required to establish policies consistent with the
Catholic religion; (3) the University's president and
oth-
er administrators are lay
persons who need not be
members of the Catholic faith;
(4) faculty members are
not required to be Catholics, to teach Church doctrine, or
to support the Church or its
teachings; (5) students may
come from any religious background, and
no preference
is given to
applicants of the Catholic faith; of
approxi-
mately 1450 students,
only about 32 percent are Catholic;
and (6) although undergraduate
students are required to
take
one course in religious studies, the course does not
have to be one involving
Catholicism.
Id. at
4. After reciting these express
findings, the Board
declared that "the Regional Director had ample
grounds for
his conclusion that the [University] does not have a
'substan-
tial religious character' as did the schools involved in
Catholic
Bishop." Id. Therefore, the Board again expressed its
adoption of the Regional Director's conclusion.
The University, supported by religious
institutions which
also claim exemptions from NLRB jurisdiction under
Catholic
Bishop,1 contends that the very inquiry by the NLRB into the
University's religious character, and the resulting determina-
tions
that the University "does not have a religious mission"
and
that "the propagation of a religious faith is not a primary
purpose"
of the University, University of Great Falls, Case
19-RC-13114, slip. op.
at 10-11 (NLRB Region 19, Feb. 20,
1996), are in violation of the
principles of the Supreme Court's
decision in Catholic Bishop. We agree.
The Board reached the wrong conclusion
because it applied
the wrong test. As Catholic Bishop was decided on
grounds of
constitutional avoidance, we give no deference to the NLRB's
application of this exemption to the National Labor Relations
Act. Although we normally defer to an agency's
interpreta-
tion of ambiguous statutory language under Chevron U.S.A.
Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S.
837,
843-44 (1984), "here another even more important princi-
ple of
judicial restraint weighs upon us," which is that "Fed-
eral
courts traditionally have sought to avoid constitutional
questions if at
all possible." Meredith Corp. v.
FCC, 809 F.2d
__________
1 The following entities filed a single Amicus Curiae brief in
support
of the University: The Association of
Southern Baptist
Colleges and Schools, The Association of Christian
Schools Interna-
tional, Loma Linda University & Medical Center,
Brigham Young
University, Catholic University, University of the
Incarnate Word,
Pacific Union College, La Sierra University, Baylor
University,
Saint Leo University, The Seventh-Day Adventist Church-State
Council, and Adventist Health.
863, 872 (D.C. Cir. 1987) (citing Ashwander v. Tennessee
Valley
Authority, 297 U.S. 288, 345-48 (1936) (Brandeis, J.,
concurring)). In other words, the constitutional avoidance
canon of statutory interpretation trumps Chevron deference.
See, e.g., Edward J. DeBartolo Corp.
v. Florida Gulf Coast
Bldg. & Constr. Trades Council, 485 U.S. 568,
574-75 (1988);
Chamber of
Commerce of United States v. FEC, 69 F.3d 600,
605 (D.C. Cir. 1995); Bell Atlantic Telephone Cos. v. FCC, 24
F.3d 1441, 1445 (D.C. Cir. 1994).
The Supreme Court, in
Catholic Bishop, construed the NLRA so as to
avoid deciding
whether jurisdiction "was constitutionally
permissible under
the Religion Clauses of the First Amendment."
Catholic
Bishop, 440 U.S. at 499.
It did so in the absence of " 'the
affirmative intention of
the Congress clearly expressed' " to
impose Board "jurisdiction
over teachers in church-operated
schools." Id. at 500-01. The
application of Catholic Bishop
to the facts of this case is thus an
interpretation of precedent,
rather than a statute, and for the court an
occasion calling for
the exercise of constitutional avoidance. "We are not obligat-
ed to defer
to an agency's interpretation of Supreme Court
precedent under Chevron or
any other principle." Akins v.
FEC, 101 F.3d 731, 740 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (en banc), vacated on
other
grounds, 524 U.S. 11 (1998).
"There is therefore no
reason for courts--the supposed
experts in analyzing judicial
decisions--to defer to agency
interpretations of the Court's
opinions." Id. This is especially
true where, as here, the
Supreme Court precedent, and subsequent
interpretation, is
based on constitutional concerns, an area of presumed
judi-
cial, rather than administrative, competence. Id.
In short,
Chevron deference is not required. We therefore are gov-
erned by the
Supreme Court's decision in Catholic Bishop, as
we read it, not as it is
read by the Board.
In
Catholic Bishop the Court feared that NLRB jurisdic-
tion over
church-operated schools "will necessarily involve
inquiry into the
good faith of the position asserted by the
clergy-administrators and its
relationship to the schools' reli-
gious mission." Catholic Bishop, 440 U.S. at 502 (emphasis
added). As the Court stated,
"[i]t is not only the conclusions
that may be reached by the Board
which may impinge on
rights guaranteed by the Religion Clauses, but also the very
process of
inquiry leading to findings and conclusions." Id.
(emphasis added).
The Court predicted that if the NLRA
conferred jurisdiction, the
Board could not "avoid entangle-
ment with the religious mission of
the school in the setting of
mandatory collective bargaining." Id.
Here the Board has
engaged in the sort of intrusive inquiry that
Catholic Bishop
sought to avoid.
As the Court feared, the Board has gone
"beyond resolving
factual issues" and engaged in inquiry into
the "religious
mission" of the University.
Id. Here the
"very
process of inquiry leading to findings and conclusions"
by the
Board, as well as the Board's conclusions have impli-
cated the First
Amendment concerns at issue in Catholic
Bishop. See id. at 502. The
NLRB's "substantial religious
character" test with its
multifaceted analysis not only creates
the same constitutional concerns
that led to the Supreme
Court's decision in Catholic Bishop, it is so
similar in princi-
ple to the approach rejected in Catholic Bishop that it
is
inevitable that we must reject this "new" approach.
Moreover, since Catholic Bishop, at least
a plurality of the
Supreme Court itself has rejected "inquiry into
... religious
views" as "not only unnecessary but also
offensive," Mitchell
v. Helms, 530 U.S. 793, 828 (2000) (plurality
opinion), declar-
ing that "[i]t is well established, in numerous
other contexts,
that courts should refrain from trolling through a
person's or
institution's religious beliefs." Id.;
see also Employment
Div., Dep't of Human Res. of Ore. v. Smith,
494 U.S. 872, 887
(1990); Serbian
Eastern Orthodox Diocese v. Milivojevich,
426 U.S. 696, 718 (1976). The prohibition on such intrusive
inquiries
into religious beliefs underlay the decision in Presid-
ing Bishop v.
Amos, 483 U.S. 327 (1987), in which the
Supreme Court upheld an exemption
in Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act as applied to the firing of a
janitor by a church-
owned gymnasium.
There the Court noted the difficulty of
judicially deciding which
activities of a religious organization
were religious and which were
secular. "The line is hardly a
bright one," the Court observed, "and an organization might
understandably be concerned that a judge would not under-
stand its
religious tenets and sense of mission."
Id. at 336.
For this reason, even those Justices who filed separate con-
currences in
the judgment, expressed a belief that a non-
profit institution owned or
operated by a church should be
exempted from "a case-by-case
determination whether its
nature is religious or secular" under
Title VII. Id. at 340,
345.
Similar concerns were raised in
Universidad Central de
Bayamon v. NLRB, 793 F.2d 383 (1st Cir. 1986) (en
banc), a
case with facts remarkably close to those before us. Bayam-
on involved a "
'Catholic-oriented' institution of higher learn-
ing founded by the
Dominican Order of the Roman Catholic
Church," which "holds
itself out to students, faculty and
community as a Catholic
school." 793 F.2d at 399-400.
Writing for half of an equally-divided
en banc court, then-
Judge Breyer concluded that the analysis in Catholic
Bishop
applies equally well, not only to institutions that are "
'perva-
sively sectarian,' " but also to a "college that seeks
primarily
to provide its students with a secular education, but which
also maintains a subsidiary religious mission." Bayamon, 793
F.2d at 398-99. This conclusion is unsurprising; an exemp-
tion solely for
"pervasively sectarian" schools would itself
raise First
Amendment concerns-discriminating between
kinds of religious
schools. See Larson v. Valente, 456
U.S.
228, 244 (1982) ("The clearest command of the Establishment
Clause is that one religious denomination cannot be officially
preferred
over another"). Judge Breyer
reasoned that "to
fail to apply Catholic Bishop here is to undercut
that opin-
ion's basic rationale and purpose." Bayamon, 793 F.2d at
402. He found that Board jurisdiction posed just
as great a
risk of the "kind of 'entanglement'--arising out of the
inquiry
process itself," as the Supreme Court feared in Catholic
Bishop. Id. at 401. He concluded the NLRB's "ad hoc
efforts,
the application of which will themselves involve signif-
icant
entanglement, are precisely what the Supreme Court in
Catholic Bishop
sought to avoid." Id. at
402-03. For the
Board to exercise
jurisdiction over an educational institution
where "the inculcation
of religious values is at least one
purpose of the institution" and
"to promise that courts in the
future will control the Board's
efforts to examine religious
matters, is to tread the path that Catholic Bishop forecloses."
Id. at 402 (emphasis in
original).
Here too we
have the NLRB trolling through the beliefs of
the University, making
determinations about its religious
mission, and that mission's centrality
to the "primary pur-
pose" of the University. Smith teaches that "[i]t is no more
appropriate for judges to determine the 'centrality' of reli-
gious
beliefs before applying a 'compelling interest' test in the
free exercise
field, than it would be for them to determine the
'importance' of ideas
before applying the 'compelling interest'
test in the free speech
field." Smith, 494 U.S. at
886-87. It
cannot be any more
appropriate for a Regional Director or
the full Board to engage in such a
determination. Indeed,
"[j]udging the centrality of different
religious practices is akin
to the unacceptable 'business of evaluating
the relative merits
of differing religious claims,' " but that is
what the Board has
set about doing.
Id. at 887. The Supreme Court
"[r]e-
peatedly and in many different contexts [has] warned that
courts must not presume to determine the place of a particu-
lar
belief in a religion or the plausibility of a religious claim,"
id.,
and that admonition is equally applicable to the agencies
whose actions
we review.
Despite its
protestations to the contrary, the nature of the
Board's inquiry boils
down to "is it sufficiently religious?"
The Regional Director's opinion approved by the Board and
the NLRB's brief before this Court present a dissection of
life and
beliefs at the University. Before the
NLRB's Hear-
ing Officer, the University president was questioned about
the nature of the University's religious beliefs and how the
University's
religious mission was implemented:
"So what
you are saying is that the first part of your
Mission State-
ment here, to implement the Gospel values and the teaching
of Jesus within the Catholic tradition, may very well be
sometimes
contrary, which oftentimes it is, to other religious
beliefs?" Transcript of Proceedings, University of
Great
Falls, Case 19-RC-13114, at 84, Dec. 12, 1994. The presi-
dent was asked how to
"jibe" the acceptance of other beliefs
at the University with
its teaching mission: "If we are
teaching a course, we have a class here in witchcraft, and how
do we meld that into the teaching of beliefs that Jesus and
the strong
Catholic tradition? They are contrary,
aren't
they?" Id. Further, the president was required to
justify
the method in which the University teaches gospel values,
and
to respond to doubts that it was legitimately "Catholic."
He
was asked, "What good is a Catholic institution unless we
espouse
the values and the teachings and the traditions of the
Catholic
Church?" Id at 85. This is the exact kind of
questioning
into religious matters which Catholic Bishop
specifically sought to
avoid. Catholic Bishop, 440 U.S. at 502
n.10 & 507-08.
Catholic Bishop, along with the Court's subsequent deci-
sions in
Presiding Bishop v. Amos, Smith, and Mitchell,
requires a different
approach. Amici Curiae suggest a useful
approach to applying Catholic
Bishop that avoids the pitfalls
encountered by the Board. This approach, drawn partially
from
Judge Breyer's controlling opinion in Bayamon, would
exempt an
institution if it (a) "holds itself out to students,
faculty and
community" as providing a religious educational
environment
(Bayamon, 793 F.2d at 400); (b) is
organized as
a "nonprofit"(Bayamon, 793 F.2d at 403; Catholic Bishop,
440 U.S. at
497); and (c) is affiliated with, or
owned, operat-
ed, or controlled, directly or indirectly, by a recognized
religious organization, or with an entity, membership of which
is
determined, at least in part, with reference to religion
(Bayamon, 793 F.2d
at 399-400; Catholic Bishop, 440 U.S.
at
494). We find this
Bayamon-based test to be such a useful
and accurate method of applying
Catholic Bishop that we
adopt the same fully as to the first two steps,
although we
need not determine whether we reach the full expanse of the
third step here. It is undisputed
that the University is
"affiliated with ... a recognized religious
organization," that
is, the Catholic Order of the Sisters of
Providence, St. Ignati-
us Province.
Therefore, we need not decide whether it would
be sufficient that
the school be, for example, indirectly con-
trolled by an entity the
membership of which was determined
in part with reference to
religion.
Our approach
avoids the constitutional infirmities of the
NLRB's "substantial
religious character" test. It does
not
intrude upon the free exercise of religion nor subject the
institution to
questioning about its motives or beliefs.
It does
not ask about the centrality of beliefs or how important
the
religious mission is to the institution. Nor should it.
"[R]eli-
gious beliefs need not be acceptable, logical,
consistent, or
comprehensible to others to merit First Amendment
protec-
tion," Thomas v. Review Bd., 450 U.S. 707, 714 (1981), and to
require an explanation of beliefs and how they are compatible
with
other aspects of life at the University is to tread upon
that which the
First Amendment protects. Further, this
three-part approach avoids asking how effective the institu-
tion is
at inculcating its beliefs, an irrelevant inquiry that
permeates the NLRB
proceedings below.
At
the same time, however, it is a test that provides the
Board and the
courts with some assurance that the institu-
tions availing themselves of
the Catholic Bishop exemption
are bona fide religious institutions. The first prong of the
test, requiring
an institution to show that it holds itself out as
providing a religious
educational environment, even if its
principal academic focus is on
"secular" subjects, Bayamon,
793 F.2d at 400, will help to
ensure that the exemption is not
given to wholly secular institutions
that attempt to invoke it
solely to avoid Board jurisdiction. Where a school, college, or
university
holds itself out publicly as a religious institution,
"[w]e cannot
doubt that [it] sincerely holds this view." Boy
Scouts of America v. Dale, 530 U.S. 640, 653
(2000). Indeed,
whether an
institution holds itself out to the public as reli-
gious may be a far
more useful inquiry than any undertaken
by the Board in this case. For such public representations
serve
as a market check. While public
religious identification
will no doubt attract some students and faculty
to the institu-
tion, it will dissuade others. In other words, it comes at a
cost. Such market responses will act as a check on
institu-
tions falsely identify themselves as religious merely to obtain
exemption from the NLRA. Thus,
the requirement of public
identification helps to ensure that only bona
fide religious
institutions are exempted.
The second element of the test, that the
educational institu-
tion be organized as a non-profit entity, is
consistent with the
emphasis in Catholic Bishop and Amos on the distinction
between
non-profit institutions and profit-making businesses
that may be owned by
or affiliated with religious institutions.
As the Amos Court noted, it is hard to draw a line between
the
secular and religious activities of a religious organization.
See Amos, 483 U.S. at 336. However, it is relatively straight-
forward
to distinguish between a non-profit and a for-profit
entity. It is also consistent with the history of
the Board's
interpretation of the NLRA:
"As the Supreme Court ob-
served in [Catholic Bishop], the
Board's assertion of jurisdic-
tion over nonprofit educational
institutions is a relatively
recent phenomenon." Bayamon, 793 F.2d at 403. Accord-
ingly, non-profit institutions
have a more compelling claim to
a Catholic Bishop exemption than
for-profit businesses.
Finally, as we observed above, the third element, at least in
its
simplest form, is directly analogous to Catholic Bishop.
The school, college, or university
must be "religiously affiliat-
ed." Catholic Bishop, 440 U.S. at 495.
This bright-line test will allow the
Board to determine
whether it has jurisdiction without delving into
matters of
religious doctrine or motive, and without coercing an
edu-
cational institution into altering its religious mission to meet
regulatory demands. At the same
time, this approach pro-
vides reasonable assurance that the Catholic
Bishop exemp-
tion will not be abused.
The University of Great Falls easily
satisfies this test. In
its course catalogue, mission statement, student
bulletin, and
other public documents, it unquestionably holds itself out
to
students, faculty, and the broader community as providing an
education
that, although primarily secular, is presented in an
overtly religious,
Catholic environment. The University
pres-
ents itself as a "private, independent Catholic university
sponsored by the Sisters of Providence within the jurisdiction
of
the Catholic Bishop of Great Falls-Billings." University of
Great Falls Catalogue, 1995-96, at 4. The University's mis-
sion statement
does not just speak of general morality, but
rather of "offer[ing]
students a foundation for actively imple-
menting Gospel values and the
teachings of Jesus within the
Catholic tradition." University of
Great Falls Mission State-
ment.
The mission statement further explains that the Uni-
versity
"provides students with the opportunity to obtain a
liberal
education for living and making a living," "[a]s an
expression
of the teaching mission of Jesus Christ."
Id. To
that end, the
University "offers students a foundation for
actively implementing
Gospel values and the teachings of
Jesus within the Catholic
tradition." Id. It fills its campus,
indeed, every
classroom and office with Catholic icons, not
merely as art, but it
claims as an expression of faith. Even
the
NLRB's Regional Director conceded that the University
"refers to
itself as a Catholic institution. It is
listed in the
Catholic Directory, a compilation of all institutions in
the
country recognized by the Church as being Catholic institu-
tions." Decision and Direction of Election,
University of
Great Falls, Case 19-RC-13114, slip op. at 6 (NLRB Region
19, Feb. 20, 1996). It is a
not-for-profit educational institu-
tion.
Finally, it is sponsored by, its campus is owned by, and
control
is ultimately reserved to, a recognized religious orga-
nization--the
Sisters of Providence, a religious order of nuns.
To probe further into the University's beliefs is to
needlessly
engage in the "trolling" that Amos, Smith, Mitchell,
and
Catholic Bishop itself sought to avoid.
One danger of the NLRB's
"substantial religious charac-
ter" approach, is that when the
Board seeks to assert juris-
diction, it may minimize the legitimacy of
the beliefs ex-
pressed by a religious entity. It may have done so here.
By
emphasizing that only one-third of the student body is
Catho-
lic; that the University
has retained an open admission policy
and is available to all regardless
of race color, gender, age,
religion, marital status, sexual orientation,
and national ori-
gin; that the
faculty need not be Catholic; that mass
is not
required; and that other
views, including other religious
views are tolerated, even respected, on
campus, the Board
would minimize the religious nature of the
University. After
making much of
what is consistent with open-mindedness, the
Regional Director, and
subsequently the Board, concludes
that "the purpose and function of
the institution are primarily
secular." Decision and Direction of Election, University of
Great Falls, Case 19-RC-13114, slip op. at 11 (NLRB Region
19, Feb. 20,
1996). Thus the Board contends that the
Univer-
sity is not entitled to the Catholic Bishop exemption. Howev-
er, "there is something
impossibly artificial about limiting the
right in question to
associations that formally and consistently
disparage people of the type
that those associations seek to
exclude." Laurence H. Tribe, Disentangling Symmetries:
Speech, Association, Parenthood, 28
Pepp. L. Rev. 641, 650
(2001) (referring to freedom of association). Just as "freedom
[of association]
must surely include the right to express one's
philosophy in implicit
rather than explicit ways, to prefer
inculcating one's beliefs with a
velvet glove rather than an
iron fist, and to opt for articulating one's
views positively
rather than negatively, focusing on the part of the
glass that
is 'half full' rather than on the part that is 'half empty,'
" id.
at 648-49, so too must free exercise of religion-the freedom
that Catholic Bishop sought to preserve.
If the University is
ecumenical and open-minded, that does not
make it any less
religious, nor NLRB interference any less a potential
in-
fringement of religious liberty.
To limit the Catholic Bishop
exemption to religious institutions
with hard-nosed proselytiz-
ing, that limit their enrollment to members of
their religion,
and have no academic freedom, as essentially proposed by
the
Board in its brief, is an unnecessarily stunted view of the law,
and perhaps even itself a violation of the most basic command
of
the Establishment Clause-not to prefer some religions
(and thereby some
approaches to indoctrinating religion) to
others. See Larson v. Valente, 456 U.S. 228, 244
(1982).
The Board
argues, no doubt correctly, that wholly secular
institutions can and do
teach "character, competence, and
community," as well as other
caring values and virtues. But
that
says nothing about the religious nature of the University.
Neither does the University's
employment of non-Catholic
faculty and admission of non-Catholic students
disqualify it
from its claimed religious character. Religion may have as
much to do with
why one takes an action as it does with what
action one takes. That a secular university might share some
goals and practices with a Catholic or other religious institu-
tion
cannot render the actions of the latter any less religious.
The University of Great Falls in its mission statement defines
its
mission "as an expression of the teaching mission of Jesus
Christ." In its expression of its philosophy and
purpose, it
calls upon its faculty and staff to join with the students in
developing "character ... competence ... [and] commit-
ment." But it goes further than that. It defines character in
terms of recognition
and acceptance of personal accountability
by the students "to
themselves, to society, and to God."
Likewise, the Board's analysis of the governing structure of
the University is similarly inadequate to undermine the Uni-
versity's
claim to religious exemption from Board jurisdiction.
The Board stresses the role of the "secular"
board of trustees
in the control of the University. But, under the University's
charter,
the Sisters of Providence retain the ultimate authori-
ty to "adopt or
change the mission, philosophy, and values," of
the University, to
"appoint and remove, with or without
cause, the President of the
University," to remove Trustees,
to "approve the annual
operating and capital budgets," and to
"approve an annual or longer
term strategic plan" for the
University. Amended Bylaws of University of Great Falls
(1995), at
2-3. That they choose not to exercise
these powers
may only demonstrate that they are satisfied that the
Univer-
sity is fulfilling its religious mission. The president testified
that he meets
with the Sisters once a quarter, which is as
frequently as the
"secular" Board of Trustees convenes. The
corporate structure is similar to that found in Trustee
of St.
Joseph's College, 282 N.L.R.B. 65 (1986), in which the Board
allowed exemption. The NLRB's
attempt to distinguish that
case is unpersuasive. Both schools teach secular subjects,
both
offer mass but do not require it, both have non-Catholic
faculty, both
espouse belief in academic freedom.
Both are
religious schools trying to find their place a
twenty-first
century world without giving up what makes them
religious.
Under the
Board's "substantial religious character" ap-
proach, it is hard
to see what school or university that does
not require attendance at
religious services, or require stu-
dents and faculty to be of a
particular faith, would qualify for
the Catholic Bishop exemption. Fortunately, as we have
explained,
Catholic Bishop does not require such a rigid
approach, which would raise altogether different First
Amendment
concerns. Instead, in determining
whether an
institution is exempt from the NLRA under Catholic Bishop,
the Board should consider whether the institution (a) holds
itself
out to the public as a religious institution;
(b) is non-
profit; and (c)
is religiously affiliated.2 If so, then
the Board
must decline to exercise jurisdiction. Because we find the
University of
Great Falls to be such an institution, we grant
the petition for
review.
III. Other Claims
As the University is entitled to the
Catholic Bishop exemp-
tion, we need not reach the University's claim that
Board
jurisdiction would violate the Religious Freedom Restoration
Act,
except to note the following: Contrary
to the Board's
view that "RFRA does not require the Board to alter
the
analysis that it has consistently undertaken under Catholic
Bishop,"
Great Falls, 331 N.L.R.B. No. 188, at 3, RFRA
presents a separate inquiry
from Catholic Bishop. Under
Catholic
Bishop, the NLRB must determine whether an
entity is altogether exempt
from the NLRA. We have laid
forth a bright-line test for the Board to use
in making this
determination.
However, a ruling that an entity is not ex-
empt from Board
jurisdiction under Catholic Bishop may not
foreclose a claim that
requiring that entity to engage in
collective bargaining would
"substantially burden" its "exer-
cise of
religion." 42 U.S.C. s
2000bb-1(a). Moreover, even if
the
act of collective bargaining would not be a "substantial
burden,"
RFRA might still be applicable if remedying a
particular NLRA violation
would be a "substantial burden."
As none of these questions are properly before us, we need
not
explore them further. Also, because we
have concluded
that the University is not within the jurisdiction of the
Board
under the NLRA, we need not consider the University's
alternative
claim that the Board's determination of the bar-
gaining unit was
erroneous.
__________
2 We need not and do not decide whether other indicia of religious
character might replace "affiliation" in other cases.
IV.
Conclusion
The National
Labor Relations Board's approach to deter-
mining jurisdiction under
Catholic Bishop is flawed. The
"substantial
religious character" inquiry raises the same con-
stitutional
concerns that animated the Supreme Court's deci-
sion in Catholic
Bishop. In applying the Supreme Court's
jurisprudence, we inquire whether the institution (a) holds
itself
out to the public as a religious institution;
(b) is non-
profit; and (c)
is religiously affiliated. Because we
find that
the University of Great Falls meets these criteria, and
there-
fore is exempt from NLRB jurisdiction under Catholic Bish-
op,
we grant the petition for review, vacate the decision and
order of the
NLRB, and deny the Board's cross-petition for
enforcement. It is
So
ordered.