IUOE Local 542 v. DE River Joint Toll ( 2002 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2002 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    11-19-2002
    IUOE Local 542 v. DE River Joint Toll
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 02-1210
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    Recommended Citation
    "IUOE Local 542 v. DE River Joint Toll" (2002). 2002 Decisions. Paper 750.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2002/750
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    Filed November 19, 2002
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 02-1210
    INTERNATIONAL UNION OF
    OPERATING ENGINEERS, LOCAL 542,
    Appellant
    v.
    DELAWARE RIVER JOINT TOLL BRIDGE
    COMMISSION
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D.C. Civil No. 01-cv-04089)
    District Judge: Honorable Garrett E. Brown, Jr.
    Argued August 1, 2002
    Before: ROTH, RENDELL and AMBRO, Circuit Judge s
    (Filed: November 19, 2002)
    Regina C. Hertzig, Esq. [ARGUED]
    William T. Josem, Esq.
    Cassie R. Ehrenberg, Esq.
    CLEARY & JOSEM
    1420 Walnut Street, Suite 300
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    Counsel for Appellant
    Warren B. Kasdan, Esq. [ARGUED]
    SCHWARTZ, TOBIA, STANZIALE,
    ROSENSWEIG & SEDITA
    22 Crestmont Road
    Montclair, NJ 07042
    Counsel for Appellee
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    RENDELL, Circuit Judge.
    At issue is whether state law applies to a bi-state agency.
    The International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 542,
    petitioned for a court order compelling the Delaware River
    Joint Toll Bridge Commission to comply with New Jersey
    collective bargaining laws. In granting summary judgment
    to the Commission, the District Court held that neither New
    Jersey nor Pennsylvania collective bargaining laws apply
    because the state legislatures have not expressed a clear
    intent to impose their labor laws upon the Commission. We
    will affirm.
    I. Background
    Under the Compact Clause, Article I, Section 10, Clause
    3 of the United States Constitution, states may enter into
    agreements regarding matters of common concern provided
    they obtain the consent of Congress.1 In 1934, the
    legislatures of New Jersey and Pennsylvania created the
    Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission (the
    "Commission") to operate certain bridges spanning the
    Delaware River. N.J. Stat. Ann. S 32:8-1 (West 2002); Pa.
    Stat. Ann. tit. 36 S 3401 (West 2002). The Commission was
    consented to by act of Congress the following year. 
    49 Stat. 1051
    , 1058 (1935). The Compact has since been amended
    by the states, which amendments have been approved by
    Congress. The most current version is dated March 1986.
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. The Compact Clause states, "No State shall, without the Consent of
    Congress enter into any Agreement or Compact with another State." U.S.
    Const. art. I, S 10, cl.3.
    2
    The Commission’s powers and duties are framed entirely by
    the Compact. The Compact has been carefully crafted to
    provide for joint governance by commissioners from both
    states, requiring a majority of the commissioners from
    Pennsylvania and a majority of the commissioners from
    New Jersey to agree to any action. N.J. Stat. Ann.S 32:8-1,
    Art. I; Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 36 S 3401, Art. I. The
    commissioners are charged with administering, operating,
    and maintaining numerous bridges and port facilities,
    acquiring and constructing additional facilities, fixing tolls
    and issuing bonds to raise funds, and procuring the
    consent of Congress whenever necessary. 
    Id.
     Most pertinent
    to our purposes, under Article II of the Compact, the
    Commission’s powers include the authority:
    "(f) To appoint such other officers, agents and
    employees as it may require for the performance of
    its duties.
    (g) To determine the qualifications and duties of its
    appointees, and to fix their compensation.
    (h)   To enter into contracts." 
    Id.
    The Compact is entirely silent regarding the rights of
    Commission employees to collectively bargain and the duty
    of the Commission to collectively bargain with unions. The
    Compact also contains no provision regarding procedures
    for its amendment, or, especially relevant here, enabling the
    states to modify it by passing legislation that is"concurred
    in" by the other state.
    In June 2001, the International Union of Operating
    Engineers, Local 542, ("Local 542") advised the Commission
    that a majority of the full-time and regular part-time toll
    collectors, maintenance employees, bridge officers, and
    tellers employed by the Commission had selected Local 542
    as their exclusive representative for collective bargaining
    purposes. The Commission refused to recognize Local 542
    as the employees’ representative, explaining that the
    Compact does not confer upon Commission employees the
    right to organize. Local 542 then petitioned a New Jersey
    state court to order a union election pursuant to the New
    Jersey Employer-Employee Relations Act, N.J. Stat. Ann.
    S 34:13A-1 et seq. (West 2002), and the Pennsylvania Public
    3
    Employee Relations Act, Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 43 S 1101.101 et
    seq. (West 2002).2 (JA6a). Both acts provide for an election
    among public employees to determine whether they wish to
    be represented by a labor union and require public
    employers to bargain collectively with the selected union.3
    
    Id.
     Neither act specifically states that it applies to the
    Commission or is intended to amend the Compact.
    The Commission removed the case to the U.S. District
    Court for the District of New Jersey. Both parties moved for
    summary judgment. Local 542 argued that New Jersey and
    Pennsylvania’s "complementary and parallel" employee
    relations acts effectively amended the Compact and
    therefore require the Commission to engage in collective
    bargaining. The Commission countered that a bi-state
    compact cannot be modified unless both state legislatures
    expressly state an intention to alter the compact. In an oral
    opinion, the District Court granted summary judgment in
    favor of the Commission. Local 542 appeals.
    II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
    The construction of a bi-state compact that has been
    consented to by Congress pursuant to the Compact Clause
    presents a federal question. Cuyler v. Adams, 
    449 U.S. 433
    ,
    438 (1981). When Congress sanctions a compact between
    two states, it turns the agreement into a "law of the Union,"
    Pennsylvania v. Wheeling & Belmont Bridge Co., 54 U.S. (13
    How.) 518, 566 (1852), the interpretation of which"involves
    a federal ‘title, right, privilege, or immunity." Del. River Joint
    Toll Bridge Comm’n v. Colburn, 
    310 U.S. 419
    , 427 (1940)
    (quoting 28 U.S.C. S 344 (now 28 U.S.C. S 1257(a) (2002)).
    Because the compact here presents a federal question, the
    _________________________________________________________________
    2. Ordinarily, when a New Jersey union wants to organize a public
    employer, it is required to file a petition with the New Jersey Public
    Employment Relations Commission ("PERC"). N.J. Stat. Ann. S 34:13A-
    5.4e (West 2002). However, the New Jersey Supreme Court has ruled
    that PERC does not have jurisdiction over a bi-state entity. Int’l Union of
    Operating Eng’rs, Local 68 v. Del. River & Bay Auth. , 
    688 A.2d 569
    , 574
    (N.J. 1997).
    3. Neither party argues that the Commission should be deemed a "public
    employer" under either states’ laws, nor do we think that it is.
    4
    District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.S 1331, and
    we exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. S 1291.
    Summary judgment is appropriate where "there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party
    is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P.
    56(c). The District Court’s grant of summary judgment is
    subject to plenary review. Bailey v. United Airlines, 
    279 F.3d 194
    , 198 (3d Cir. 2002); Gritzer v. CBS, Inc., 
    275 F.3d 291
    , 296 (3d Cir. 2002).
    III. Discussion
    In creating the Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge
    Commission, New Jersey and Pennsylvania agreed to"the
    power sharing, coordination, and unified action that typify
    Compact Clause creations." Hess v. Port Auth. Trans-
    Hudson Corp., 
    513 U.S. 30
    , 41 (1994). Bi-state entities like
    the Commission are intended to address "interests and
    problems that do not coincide nicely . . . with State lines."
    
    Id. at 40
     (quoting V. Thursby, Interstate Cooperation: A
    Study of the Interstate Compact 5 (1983)). They are to be
    regarded not as extensions of each compacting state’s
    authority, but rather as "independently functioning parts of
    a regional polity and of a national union." 
    Id.
     (quoting Grad,
    Federal-State Compact: A New Experiment in Cooperative
    Federalism, 
    63 Colum. L. Rev. 825
    , 854-55 (1963)). By
    compacting together to form the Commission, New Jersey
    and Pennsylvania have each surrendered a portion of their
    sovereignty over certain Delaware River bridge operations in
    order to better serve the regional interest. Such a surrender
    of state sovereignty should be treated with great care, and
    the Supreme Court has stated that courts should not find
    a surrender unless it has been "expressed in terms too
    plain to be mistaken." Jefferson Branch Bank v. Skelly, 
    66 U.S. 436
    , 446 (1861).
    Our role in interpreting the Compact is, therefore, to
    effectuate the clear intent of both sovereign states, not to
    rewrite their agreement or order relief inconsistent with its
    express terms. Texas v. New Mexico, 
    462 U.S. 554
    , 564-65
    (1983) (declining to alter the voting structure of the Pecos
    River Commission to break an impasse); see also New
    5
    Jersey v. New York, 
    523 U.S. 767
    , 811 (1998) (declining to
    redraw the boundary between New Jersey and New York for
    reasons of practicality and convenience). Although we
    understand the desire to bring the Commission under the
    auspices of New Jersey and Pennsylvania’s employee
    relations acts, we conclude that to do so would be an act of
    legislation, rather than interpretation or enforcement. We
    can find no legislative intent to subject the Compact to the
    collective bargaining schemes of New Jersey or
    Pennsylvania. We will therefore affirm the District Court’s
    grant of summary judgment.
    A. The Legal Landscape
    Local 542 urges that states may amend a bi-state
    compact by passing legislation that is substantially similar,
    without an express statement, either in the legislation or
    otherwise, that they intend to apply that law to the bi-state
    entity. This issue has been treated differently by different
    courts. In nearly every one of these cases, courts have been
    presented with a compact that addresses the issue of
    modification by including language enabling one state to
    modify the compact through legislation "concurred in" by
    the other. See, e.g., Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 36S 3503, Art. IV(e)
    (West 2002) (Delaware River Port Authority); N.Y. Unconsol.
    Law S 6408, Art. VII (West 2002) (Port Authority of New
    York and New Jersey). Here, the Compact contains no
    "concurred in" language. Nonetheless, an overview of the
    relevant case law in this area assists in understanding the
    issue before us.
    The most notable difference of opinion regarding the
    interpretation of "concurred in" language is between the
    courts of New York and those of New Jersey. New York
    courts have interpreted the "concurred in" language in a
    compact to permit application of states’ laws to the compact
    if the states’ legislation contains an express statement that
    they intend to amend the compact. New Jersey courts have
    held that this language will be effective to apply the states’
    laws that are "complementary or parallel" even where there
    is no stated intent to amend the compact. Federal courts,
    including those in our circuit, have at various times
    adopted both approaches.
    6
    i. New York View
    The New York standard was most clearly articulated by
    the Court of Appeals of New York in Malverty v. Waterfront
    Commission of New York Harbor, 
    524 N.E.2d 421
    , 422 (N.Y.
    1988). In Malverty, the petitioner sought to apply New York
    Corrections Law to the Waterfront Commission of New York
    Harbor, a bi-state agency established by New York and New
    Jersey and approved by Congress. Id. at 421. The compact
    creating the Waterfront Commission included authorization
    "to amend and supplement the Interstate Compact, to
    implement the purposes thereof, by legislative action of
    either State concurred in by legislative action of the other
    State." Id. at 422. The Malverty court found "the absence
    from the text and legislative history of [the Corrections Law]
    of any reference to the Waterfront Commission, coupled
    with the absence of an express statement that the
    Legislature was amending or supplementing the provisions
    of the ‘Compact’ and that [the Corrections Law] would take
    effect upon the enactment by New Jersey of legislation of
    identical effect," to indicate that the New York legislature
    had never intended the Corrections Law to apply to the
    Waterfront Commission. Id. The court noted,"That the two
    States have evinced the same, or similar, public policy
    regarding employment opportunities for former inmates by
    enacting similar ‘antidiscrimination’ laws is not sufficient
    under the express terms of the ‘Compact’ to render it
    properly amended or supplemented such that the
    Commission would be subject to the provisions of[New
    York’s Corrections Law]." Id. (citations omitted). It thus
    viewed the "concurred in" language to require an express
    statement to that effect.
    ii. New Jersey View
    New Jersey courts have taken a different tack, finding the
    passage of similar legislation by compacting states to
    satisfy the "concurred in" test and be sufficient to imply an
    intent on the part of both states to apply the legislation to
    a bi-state entity. Bunk v. Port Auth. of New York & New
    Jersey, 
    676 A.2d 118
    , 122 (N.J. 1996). In Bunk, the court
    applied New Jersey’s workers’ compensation laws to the
    Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, a bi-state
    7
    entity whose compact contains "concurred in" language,
    without examining whether either state had expressly
    intended its workers’ compensation laws to apply. The
    court reasoned that the "corollary of the proposition that
    neither state may unilaterally impose its legislative will on
    the bi-state agency is that the agency may be subject to
    complementary or parallel legislation." 
    Id.
     (citing Eastern
    Paralyzed Veterans Ass’n v. Camden, 
    545 A.2d 127
     (1988)).
    The court then examined New York and New Jersey’s
    workers’ compensation laws and found them "somewhat
    similar." 
    Id.
     According to the New Jersey view, then, a state
    may meet the requirements of "concurring in" the other’s
    legislation merely by passing a somewhat similar statute of
    its own.
    iii. Federal Courts
    Federal courts have followed both lines of reasoning when
    interpreting compacts containing "concurred in" language.
    Courts in the Second Circuit have uniformly adopted the
    express intent standard, finding the New York view"more
    in line with the language" of the compacts before them.
    Baron v. Port Auth. of New York & New Jersey, 
    968 F. Supp. 924
    , 929 (S.D.N.Y. 1997) (declining to unilaterally
    impose New York’s human rights laws on the New York and
    New Jersey Port Authority where there was no evidence
    that either state intended its anti-discrimination laws to
    apply). See also Dezaio v. Port Auth. of New York & New
    Jersey, 
    205 F.3d 62
    , 65 (2d Cir. 2000) (same); Rose v. Port
    Auth. of New York & New Jersey, 
    12 F. Supp. 2d 516
    , 523
    (S.D.N.Y. 1998) (stating that the same or similar public
    policy of two states is not sufficient to impose law of either
    state on the agency unless legislation "expressly mentions
    the bi-state entity"); Settecase v. Port Auth. of New York &
    New Jersey, 
    13 F. Supp. 2d 530
    , 535-36 (S.D.N.Y. 1998)
    ("[I]f New York and New Jersey intend their own . . . laws
    to apply to the Port Authority, they have the means to do
    so clearly and expressly, as they have done for other
    laws.").
    Within our circuit, however, the district courts have
    espoused both views. The District Court for the District of
    New Jersey has applied the New Jersey complementary or
    8
    parallel standard. Moore v. Del. River Port Auth., 
    80 F. Supp. 2d 264
    , 268 (D.N.J. 1999) (citing Int’l Union of
    Operating Eng’rs, Local 68 v. Del. River & Bay Auth. , 
    688 A.2d 569
     (N.J. 1997)). In Moore, the court refused to apply
    New Jersey common law regarding wrongful discharge and
    breach of contract to the Delaware River Port Authority, a
    bi-state entity whose compact includes "concurred in"
    language. Id. at 271. In arriving at that result, however, the
    court analyzed whether the common law of New Jersey was
    substantially similar to the common law of Pennsylvania,
    bypassing any discussion as to what was required in order
    for a law of one state to be "concurred in" by the other.
    In contrast, in Delaware River Port Authority v. Fraternal
    Order of Police, Penn-Jersey Lodge 30, 
    135 F.Supp.2d 596
    ,
    609 (E.D.Pa. 2001), rev’d on other grounds, Delaware River
    Port Authority v. Fraternal Order of Police, Penn-Jersey
    Lodge 30, 
    290 F.3d 567
     (3d Cir. 2002), Judge Robreno in
    the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    recently noted that "as a general rule of statutory
    interpretation, surrenders of sovereignty are to be strictly
    construed in terms of their scope," 
    Id. at 603
    , concluding
    that "the ambiguous term ‘concurred in’ of[the Delaware
    River Port Authority compact should] be interpreted to
    require the express consent of both legislatures before
    additional duties are imposed" upon the bi-state entity. 
    Id. at 604
    . The court further noted that the weight of authority
    supported the express intent standard, and that the New
    Jersey complementary or parallel standard was based on a
    misreading of the law of compacts. 
    Id. at 604-05
    . The court
    went on to hold that because neither New Jersey nor
    Pennsylvania had expressly stated that they intended to
    impose their collective bargaining laws on the Delaware
    River Port Authority, they had not "concurred in" the
    application of those laws. 
    Id. at 609
    .
    On appeal, we did not reach the merits of Judge
    Robreno’s ruling, or of either the New York express intent
    or the New Jersey complementary or parallel views, but
    reversed on different grounds, concluding that the parties’
    litigation involved an attack on a New Jersey judgment
    entitled to preclusive effect. Lodge 30, 
    290 F.3d at 572
    (discussing Fraternal Order of Police, Penn-Jersey Lodge 30
    9
    v. Del. River Port Auth., 
    733 A.2d 545
     (N.J. Super. Ct.
    1999)). The parties to the Lodge 30 litigation were in privity
    with the parties in a case resolved in the New Jersey
    courts; we were therefore required to give preclusive effect
    to the New Jersey court’s ruling regarding the
    complementary or parallel test.4Id. at 577. In dicta,
    however, we noted, "Were we sitting on the New Jersey
    courts, we might have interpreted the respective statutes
    and the DRPA’s obligations to its patrol officers differently.
    But we may not reconsider the New Jersey judgment."5 
    Id.
    iv. Bridge Commission Compact Before Us
    The cases discussed above all address the interpretation
    of bi-state compacts that expressly authorize the
    compacting states to amend the compact through
    legislation "concurred in" by the other. As we have noted,
    the Compact before us contains no such language, nor did
    the relevant laws of each state evince an intent to apply to
    the Compact as such. The only case to address a bi-state
    compact in a similar setting is International Union of
    Operating Engineers, Local 68 v. Delaware River & Bay
    Authority, 
    688 A.2d 569
     (N.J. 1997). In Local 68, the New
    Jersey Supreme Court held that New Jersey and Delaware’s
    collective bargaining laws were complementary and parallel
    with regard to collective negotiations for public employees
    and therefore applied to the Delaware River and Bay
    Authority. Id. at 576. The court so held in spite of the fact
    _________________________________________________________________
    4. The fact that Lodge 30 involved the interpretation of a bi-state
    compact, a question of federal law, by a state court made no difference
    to our preclusion analysis. As Judge Scirica explained:
    "State courts may answer federal questions. The unions and the
    DRPA agreed to litigate this issue of federal law in New Jersey
    courts. If those courts answered federal questions erroneously, it
    remained for state appellate courts, and ultimately for the United
    States Supreme Court, to correct any mistakes." Lodge 30, 
    290 F.3d at 576
    .
    5. Recently, the New Jersey Supreme Court characterized our ruling in
    Lodge 30 as having endorsed New Jersey’s view that express statements
    are not required to modify bi-state compacts. Ballinger v. Del. River Port
    Auth., 
    800 A.2d 97
    , 102 (N.J. 2002). We do not read our ruling as having
    reached the merits issue.
    10
    that the compact did not clearly authorize modification
    through legislation "concurred in" by both states, and
    neither New Jersey nor Delaware had expressed any intent
    to amend the compact or apply state labor laws to the
    Authority.6 The court found that because both states had a
    public policy endorsing collective bargaining, the
    legislatures had "in effect . . . modified the Compact." 
    Id.
    Here, Local 542 urged before the District Court that Local
    68 was controlling and persuasive, but the Court rejected
    its reasoning. The District Court reviewed the New York and
    New Jersey views and the federal case law, and found that
    the New Jersey view has not been accepted as a matter of
    federal law. The District Court also considered Local 542’s
    argument that the lack of "concurred in" language in the
    Compact provides a basis to distinguish it from, and
    therefore a basis to reject, the New York and Second Circuit
    approaches. But the District Court concluded that"rather
    than distinguishing those, it substantially weakens[Local
    542]’s position, because absent concurred in, there would
    be no basis, whatsoever, to look to any parallel legislation."
    Since there had been "no showing that either the New
    Jersey or the Pennsylvania statutes were intended, by the
    legislatures, to be applicable to this particular commission,"
    the court awarded summary judgment to the Commission.
    Having reviewed the state of the law on this issue, we
    agree with the District Court that, given the facts of this
    case and the unique nature of this Compact, New Jersey
    and Pennsylvania have not exhibited any express intent to
    amend the Compact or apply their collective bargaining
    laws to the Commission’s employees. We are persuaded,
    first, by the fact that the Compact does not contain any
    provision enabling either state to modify it through
    legislation "concurred in" by the other, and second, by the
    _________________________________________________________________
    6. Curiously, earlier in the same opinion, the New Jersey Supreme Court
    held that the New Jersey PERC does not have jurisdiction over the
    Delaware River and Bay Authority because "[s]uch jurisdiction ‘must be
    expressly given to the [PERC] by the Legislatures of New Jersey and
    Delaware, and not inferred by the courts.’ " Local 68, 688 A.2d at 574.
    This view does not appear consistent with the court’s later holding
    applying New Jersey and Delaware labor laws to the Authority when no
    expression of intent was present.
    11
    logic of the reasoning underpinning the New York express
    intent standard, which the District Court here found to be
    persuasive.
    First, we can find no language in the Compact
    authorizing New Jersey and Pennsylvania to permit
    amendment of the terms of their agreement simply by each
    states’ passing similar legislation. Judicial restraint dictates
    that we not divine a way for them to do so. Our"first and
    last order of business is interpreting the compact," Texas,
    
    462 U.S. at 567-68
    ; we may not read into it language or
    intent that is simply not there. Principles of statutory
    interpretation also require us to strictly construe
    surrenders of sovereignty. As noted above, a party wishing
    to make a claim of right or entitlement against a state must
    prove that the state has expressly relinquished that
    measure of sovereignty "in terms too plain to be mistaken."
    Skelly, 66 U.S. at 446.
    Neither New Jersey nor Pennsylvania has expressed any
    intent to allow the modification of this Compact through
    the passage of legislation concurred in by the other, let
    alone legislation of one state that bears a resemblance to
    the other. We cannot subscribe to the view espoused by the
    New Jersey Supreme Court in Local 68 that the mere
    existence of similar public policies set forth in each state’s
    collective bargaining laws is enough to imply an intent on
    the part of both states to amend the Compact and apply
    those laws to the Commission. Nor do we agree with Local
    542 that the absence of a provision enabling the states to
    modify the Compact through legislation "concurred in" by
    the other means that no express intent is required. Rather,
    we agree with the District Court that the absence of
    "concurred in" language actually weakens Local 542’s
    argument. This is because the "concurred in" provision
    introduces the issue of, and mechanism for, modification,
    without which there is absolutely no authority for, let alone
    specific means of accomplishing, a modification of the
    Compact by passing similar laws.7 Thus the absence of the
    _________________________________________________________________
    7. We do not need to reach the issue of whether the presence of
    "concurred in" language would be a sufficient demonstration of intent
    nor whether Congress would also have to consent to any modifications.
    Judge Roth is of the opinion that in the case of a bi-state compact that
    contains no provision for amendment, Congressional consent to any
    modification would be required.
    12
    "concurred in" language is fatal. We find that in this case
    New Jersey and Pennsylvania have not expressed any
    intent to amend the Compact. We will not amend it for
    them.
    We find further support for our decision in the
    observation made by Judge Robreno in his Lodge 30
    opinion, that the New Jersey complementary or parallel
    standard appears to be based on a misinterpretation of
    compact law. The New Jersey Supreme Court based the
    complementary or parallel test articulated in Local 68 and
    Bunk on Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association, Inc. v.
    Camden, 
    545 A.2d 127
     (N.J. 1988) and Nardi v. Delaware
    River Port Authority, 
    490 A.2d 949
     (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1985).
    See Local 68, 688 A.2d at 575; Bunk, 676 A.2d at 122. A
    closer reading of these two cases, however, reveals that
    neither stands for the proposition that express legislative
    intent is unnecessary.8 Rather, both cases lend further
    support to the New York express intent test governing the
    application of the "concurred in" language, asking first
    whether the two states have passed legislation that
    expressly applies to the bi-state entity, and then whether
    that legislation is substantially similar. See Malverty, 524
    N.E.2d at 422.
    In Nardi, the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court
    examined Pennsylvania and New Jersey’s employee benefits
    laws, both of which expressly stated that they applied to
    the Delaware River Port Authority (the bi-state agency at
    issue), to determine whether they were substantially
    similar. Nardi, 490 at 950-51. The court found that the
    laws were not identical and refused to apply either one. Id.
    at 952. Similarly, in Eastern Paralyzed, the court refused to
    unilaterally impose New Jersey’s Uniform Construction
    Code on the Delaware River Port Authority -- even though
    the code expressly stated that it applied to all bi-state
    agencies -- without "some showing of agreement by both
    states to the enforcement of the [Code]." Eastern Paralyzed,
    
    545 A.2d at 133-34
    .
    _________________________________________________________________
    8. New Jersey Supreme Court Justice Garibaldi expressed similar
    concerns in her strongly worded dissent in Local 68. See Local 68, 688
    A.2d at 576-77 (finding the majority’s result "an unwarranted expansion
    of the dicta in Eastern Paralyzed") (citation omitted).
    13
    Principles of federalism further caution against inferring
    an intent to amend in this case. A bi-state entity, created
    by compact, is "not subject to the unilateral control of any
    one of the States that compose the federal system." Hess,
    
    513 U.S. at 42
    . Also, although Pennsylvania courts have
    not spoken on this specific issue, they have noted
    reluctance to equate the state’s individual action with
    action on behalf of, or that binds, a bi-state agency. See,
    e.g., Aveline v. Penn. Bd. of Probation & Parole, 
    729 A.2d 1254
    , 1257 n.10 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1999) (a compact"takes
    precedence over the subsequent statutes of signatory states
    and, as such, a state may not unilaterally nullify, revoke or
    amend one of its compacts if the compact does not so
    provide") (citing Jill E. Hasday, Interstate Compacts in a
    Democratic Society: The Problem of Permanence, 
    49 Fla. L. Rev. 1
     (1997)); Nardi, 490 A.2d at 950 ("neither creator
    state can unilaterally impose additional duties, powers, or
    responsibilities upon [a bi-state agency]").
    Looking to the relevant statutes and the plain language of
    the Compact, we find no intent on the part of either state
    legislature to amend the Compact and impose collective
    bargaining laws upon the Commission. The Compact grants
    the Commission the authority to appoint employees,
    determine their qualifications and duties, and fix their
    salaries. N.J. Stat. Ann. S 32:8-1, Art. II (f)-(h); Pa. Stat.
    Ann. tit. 36 S 3401, Art. II (f)-(h). The Compact neither gives
    Commission employees the right to bargain collectively nor
    imposes any requirement on the Commission to bargain
    collectively with employee unions. Neither New Jersey nor
    Pennsylvania’s collective bargaining laws mention the
    Commission or state that the legislation is intended to
    apply to bi-state agencies. To read into the Compact any
    collective bargaining requirements would be to rewrite the
    agreement between the two states without any express
    authorization to do so. That is simply not our role.
    IV. Judgment
    For the reasons given, we will affirm the District Court’s
    grant of summary judgment to the Commission. We leave it
    to the legislatures of New Jersey and Pennsylvania to
    14
    amend the Compact and apply their collective bargaining
    laws to the Commission, should they choose to do so.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    15