Service Employees International Union, Local 509 v. Department of Mental Health , 469 Mass. 323 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  • NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal
    revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound
    volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical
    error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of
    Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1
    Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557-
    1030; SJCReportersjc.state.ma.us
    SJC-11544
    SERVICE EMPLOYEES INTERNATIONAL UNION, LOCAL 509    vs.
    DEPARTMENT OF MENTAL HEALTH.
    Suffolk.     April 7, 2014. - August 15, 2014.
    Present:    Ireland, C.J., Spina, Cordy, Botsford, Gants, Duffly,
    & Lenk, JJ.1
    Privatization Act. Commissioner of Mental Health. Auditor.
    Declaratory Relief. Practice, Civil, Declaratory
    proceeding, Standing, Parties, Failure to join party.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    February 15, 2012.
    The case was heard by Merita A. Hopkins, J., on a motion
    for judgment on the pleadings.
    The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for
    direct appellate review.
    Alfred Gordon O'Connell for the plaintiff.
    Jo Ann Shotwell Kaplan, Assistant Attorney General, for the
    defendant.
    Donald J. Siegel & James A.W. Shaw, for Massachusetts AFL-
    CIO, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
    Gerald A. McDonough, for the Auditor of the Commonwealth,
    amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
    1
    Chief Justice Ireland participated in the deliberation on
    this case prior to his retirement.
    2
    LENK, J.   The plaintiff, Service Employees International
    Union, Local 509 (union), appeals from an order of a Superior
    Court judge dismissing its complaint for declaratory judgment
    pursuant to G. L. c. 231A, §§ 1, 2, and 5. In that complaint,
    the union alleged that the Department of Mental Health (DMH)
    violated the Massachusetts privatization statute, G. L. c. 7,
    §§ 52-55 (Pacheco Law), by entering into contracts with private
    entities to obtain services substantially similar to those
    performed by members of the union, but failing to comply with
    relevant statutory obligations.     DMH filed an answer as well as
    a motion for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Mass. R. Civ.
    P. 12 (c), 
    365 Mass. 754
     (1974).    After a hearing, the judge
    granted DMH's motion, which she treated as a motion to dismiss
    for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Mass. R. Civ. P.
    12 (b) (1), 
    365 Mass. 754
     (1974).    The judge determined that the
    union lacked both direct and associational standing to seek
    declaratory relief and, additionally, that the union's failure
    to join necessary parties constituted a separate jurisdictional
    bar requiring dismissal.   The judge did not err in declining to
    consider the union's complaint on the basis of its failure to
    name all necessary parties.   However, because we conclude that
    the union has direct standing to seek a declaratory judgment
    under G. L. c. 231A that would invalidate the contracts at
    3
    issue, we remand the case to the Superior Court for the limited
    purpose of allowing the union to seek leave to amend its
    complaint by adding all necessary parties.    An order of
    dismissal shall enter if the union does not take such action
    within thirty days of the issuance of the rescript in this case.
    1.   Background.   The following facts are taken from the
    union's complaint.   For over a decade, DMH, which provides
    mental health services to clients throughout the Commonwealth,
    has employed case managers who are members of the union. Case
    managers are responsible for conducting initial need
    assessments, developing individualized service plans, and
    maintaining ongoing client contact and advocacy.    In late 2008
    or early 2009, DMH entered into contracts with private entities
    to initiate a new program, Community Based Flexible Supports
    (CBFS).   CBFS services, which were intended to facilitate more
    personalized client assistance, overlapped in certain respects
    with services previously provided by DMH case managers.2
    2
    The Department of Mental Health (DMH) has described
    Community Based Flexible Supports (CBFS) services as including
    "interventions and supports that manage psychiatric symptoms in
    the community, restore or maintain daily living skills, promote
    wellness and the management of medical conditions and assist
    clients to restore or maintain and use their strengths and
    skills to undertake employment. . . . CBFS contractors are
    responsible for: client screenings and enrollment; assessments
    and integrated treatment planning; quality and utilization
    management; data collection and reporting; service documentation
    and discharge planning."
    4
    DMH concluded that the contracts into which it sought to
    enter did not constitute "privatization contracts" within the
    meaning of G. L. c. 7, § 53,3 and that it was therefore not
    subject to the terms of the Pacheco Law.   For this reason,
    throughout the contracting process, DMH did not comply with any
    of the requirements enumerated in G. L. c. 7, §§ 52-55,
    discussed in more detail below, nor did it notify the union or
    the Auditor of the Commonwealth that it had entered into such
    contracts.   During fiscal year 2009, approximately one hundred
    case managers, all members of the union, were laid off.   The
    union alleges that these layoffs resulted from implementation of
    DMH's CBFS contracts because the services provided by private
    3
    General Laws c. 7, § 53, defines a "privatization
    contract" as "an agreement or combination or series of
    agreements by which a non-governmental person or entity agrees
    with an agency to provide services, valued at $500,000 . . .
    which are substantially similar to and in lieu of, services
    theretofore provided, in whole or in part, by regular employees
    of an agency." The statute further provides that the value of
    applicable contracts will increase as of January 1 each year in
    order to reflect the consumer price index. Id. As of January
    1, 2014, only contracts valued at $543,442 or more were subject
    to the requirements of the Pacheco Law, G. L. c. 7, §§ 52-55.
    See http://www.mass.gov/auditor/information-and-resources/for-
    public-agencies/the-commonwealths-privatization-law-.html (last
    viewed Aug. 12, 2014). While the record does not reflect the
    value of the contracts at issue in the present case, DMH has
    maintained that the Pacheco Law was inapplicable only because
    CBFS services, in its view, were distinct from those offered by
    case managers, not because the contract price was below the
    established minimum amount.
    5
    entities were substantially similar to those previously offered
    by the case managers.4
    In early 2009, the union notified the Auditor, who is
    endowed by G. L. c. 7, § 55, with a "broad grant of power" to
    review all privatization contracts for compliance with the
    Pacheco Law, Massachusetts Bay Transp. Auth. v. Auditor of the
    Commonwealth, 
    430 Mass. 783
    , 791 (2000) (MBTA), that DMH had
    declined to follow the terms of the Pacheco Law despite having
    contracted with private entities in order to implement the CBFS
    program.   On September 15, 2010, after soliciting information
    from DMH about the contracts at issue, the general counsel for
    the Auditor issued a memorandum to both parties in which he
    concluded that the contracts in question constituted
    privatization contracts under the Pacheco Law and that,
    accordingly, DMH had erred in declining to comply with the
    Pacheco Law's requirements.5   Counsel forwarded this memorandum
    to the office of the Attorney General "to take whatever
    4
    In its complaint, Service Employees International Union,
    Local 509 (union) alleged that case managers lost their jobs as
    a direct result of DMH's contractual activities. We take no
    view as to whether the layoffs in fact resulted from the
    contracts into which DMH entered, or, indeed, whether those
    contracts constituted "privatization contracts" within the
    meaning of G. L. c. 7, § 53.
    5
    The memorandum states that "the facts in general and the
    statistics in particular indicate that at least a portion of
    public services was moved from state employees to private
    contractors without following the provisions set forth in G. L.
    c. 7, section 52-57."
    6
    steps . . . are appropriate."    The Attorney General took no
    action as a result of the Auditor's findings.     Following the
    issuance of the Auditor's report, DMH has not taken steps to
    comply with the terms of the Pacheco Law in connection with its
    implementation of the CBFS program, and has not reinstated the
    case managers who lost their jobs.
    On February 15, 2012, the union filed a complaint in the
    Superior Court seeking a declaratory judgment pursuant to G. L.
    c. 231A, §§ 1, 2, and 5.   The complaint alleged that DMH had
    violated the Pacheco Law by entering into contracts with private
    entities without adhering to the requirements set forth in G. L.
    c. 7, §§ 52-55, and requested a declaration that the contracts
    at issue are invalid, as well as equitable relief including
    monetary damages and reinstatement of the case managers who were
    laid off.   In its answer, DMH averred that there was no
    violation because the provisions of the Pacheco Law were not
    applicable to the CBFS contracts.
    After a hearing, the judge allowed DMH's motion for
    judgment on the pleadings, which consisted only of the union's
    complaint and DMH's answer.     She determined that the union
    lacked both direct and associational standing to pursue its
    claim, concluding that, where an agency "believes that the law
    is not applicable in a particular situation," it owes no duty to
    an employee organization or its members.     The judge also
    7
    concluded that the Superior Court lacked jurisdiction because
    the union had failed to join necessary parties to the action
    pursuant to G. L. c. 231A, § 8, and Mass. R. Civ. P. 19, 
    365 Mass. 765
     (1974).   We granted the union's petition for direct
    appellate review.
    2.   Discussion.   We are asked to determine whether the
    union has standing to seek declaratory relief where DMH did not
    comply with the provisions of the Pacheco Law, given its
    unilateral determination that the law was inapplicable to its
    proposed contracts with outside vendors.    According to the
    union, DMH breached its statutory duties when it opted not to
    follow the procedures set forth in the Pacheco Law, thereby
    preventing the union from protecting the interests and
    employment rights of its membership.    This inability to fulfill
    its core mission, the union argues, constituted a legally
    cognizable injury sufficient to confer direct standing for the
    purposes of G. L. c. 231A.
    DMH maintains that the Pacheco Law provides no benefits to
    the union itself, as distinct from its members, and that the
    union's rights under the Pacheco Law exist solely to assist
    State employees.    Therefore, DMH contends, it owes no duty to
    the union under the Pacheco Law, and the union has no standing
    to seek declaratory relief.   In a related vein, DMH argues that
    the union has suffered no legally cognizable injury that could
    8
    serve as a predicate for direct standing.     Because, on this
    view, any statutory obligations DMH might owe the union inure
    only to the benefit of DMH employees, any injuries occasioned by
    a violation of those obligations would harm only the union's
    members and not the union itself.   In any event, such injuries
    would lie outside the Pacheco Law's zone of interest.
    As an initial matter and before turning to the merits of
    this dispute, it seems plain that the Pacheco Law as written
    does not contemplate the situation presented here.     The Pacheco
    Law establishes "[p]rocedures that agencies must follow when
    beginning the bidding process for and entering into a
    privatization contract."   MBTA, supra at 786.   While G. L. c. 7,
    § 53, defines which contracts are subject to those enumerated
    procedures, the Pacheco Law provides no means by which to
    resolve questions as to whether a particular proposed contract
    with a private entity constitutes a "privatization contract"
    within the meaning of G. L. c. 7, § 53.     Otherwise put, there is
    no statutory provision addressing the procedures to follow when
    an agency makes a unilateral decision that it need not comply
    with the requirements of the Pacheco Law.
    Nor did our previous analysis of the Pacheco Law anticipate
    such a situation.   See MBTA, supra.   In that case, a public
    agency sought to privatize certain services and presented its
    proposed contract to the Auditor.   The Auditor objected,
    9
    concluding that the agency had not sufficiently complied with
    the terms of the Pacheco Law and that its contracts therefore
    were invalid.   Id. at 784-785.    The agency sought review
    pursuant to G. L. c. 249, § 4, based on asserted errors in the
    Auditor's determination.    MBTA, supra at 790.   Importantly,
    neither party disputed the applicability of the Pacheco Law.
    The agency submitted a draft contract as contemplated by G. L.
    c. 7, § 54, and the Auditor reviewed that draft in accordance
    with G. L. c. 7, § 55.     MBTA, supra at 784-785.   In our review,
    we asked only whether the Auditor had erred in executing his
    statutory duties.6   Id. at 791.   Here, on the other hand, we must
    determine the proper means by which parties may resolve the
    preliminary question, not expressly contemplated by the
    Legislature, whether the Pacheco Law applies to certain
    contracts such that an agency must satisfy its requirements.
    With these considerations in mind, we first address whether
    the union has standing to contest DMH's determination that its
    proposed contracts fell outside the ambit of the Pacheco Law by
    6
    Although G. L. c. 7, §§ 52-55, does not explicitly provide
    for the judicial review of a determination made by the Auditor,
    in Massachusetts Bay Transp. Auth. v. Auditor of the
    Commonwealth, 
    430 Mass. 783
    , 791 (2000) (MBTA), we considered
    whether the Auditor "substantially erred in a way that
    materially affected the rights of the parties." See G. L.
    c. 249, § 4; Carney v. Springfield, 
    403 Mass. 604
    , 605 (1988),
    citing Murray v. Second Dist. Court of E. Middlesex, 
    389 Mass. 508
    , 511 (1983). Here, however, we are not asked to assess the
    substantive merits of a decision made by the Auditor, and need
    not further consider the scope of such review.
    10
    seeking declaratory relief.      We then turn to the union's alleged
    failure to join all necessary parties to its complaint.
    a.    Standing.    The declaratory judgment statute, G. L.
    c. 231A, "may be used in the superior court to enjoin and to
    obtain a declaration of the legality of the administrative
    practices and procedures of any municipal, county, or state
    agency . . . ."     G. L. c. 231A, § 2.   A party has standing
    pursuant to G. L. c. 231A where the defendant has "violated some
    duty owed to the plaintiff[s]," Enos v. Secretary of Envtl.
    Affairs, 
    432 Mass. 132
    , 135 (2000) (Enos), quoting Penal Insts.
    Comm'r for Suffolk County v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    382 Mass. 527
    , 532 (1981), and where the plaintiffs "can allege an
    injury within the area of concern of the statute or regulatory
    scheme."   Enos, supra, quoting Massachusetts Ass'n of Indep.
    Ins. Agents & Brokers, Inc. v. Commissioner of Ins., 
    373 Mass. 290
    , 293 (1977).7      In assessing whether a party may seek
    declaratory relief, we have considered the text and purpose of
    the relevant statute and the nature of the administrative scheme
    it sets forth, the availability of other remedies for the
    plaintiffs, and any adverse consequences that might follow
    should standing be recognized.      Enos, supra at 135-136.
    7
    General Laws c. 231A does not provide an independent basis
    for standing. See Enos v. Secretary of Envtl. Affairs, 
    432 Mass. 132
    , 135 (2000), citing Pratt v. Boston, 
    396 Mass. 37
    , 42-
    43 (1985).
    11
    The notion of standing is an "elastic concept[]" whose
    meaning depends on the particular parties at issue, 
    id. at 135
    ,
    and "standing requirements should be liberally construed" in
    declaratory judgment proceedings, Home Bldrs. Ass'n of Cape Cod,
    Inc. v. Cape Cod Comm'n, 
    441 Mass. 724
    , 733 (2004).     We take as
    true all facts alleged in the union's complaint.     See Warth v.
    Seldin, 
    422 U.S. 490
    , 501 (1975) (when considering motion to
    dismiss for lack of standing, reviewing court must accept as
    true all material allegations in complaint); Iannacchino v. Ford
    Motor Co., 
    451 Mass. 623
    , 636 (2008); Barbara F. v. Bristol Div.
    of the Juvenile Court Dept., 
    432 Mass. 1024
    , 1025 (2000) (court
    construed all allegations as true in determining whether
    plaintiff had standing).
    i.   Text and purpose of the Pacheco Law and its
    administrative scheme.     General Laws c. 7, §§ 52-55, was enacted
    in 1993, over the veto of Governor William Weld, based on the
    Legislature's findings that "using private contractors to
    provide public services formerly provided by state employees
    does not always promote the public interest."     G. L. c. 7, § 52.
    See MBTA, supra at 787, quoting Senate Committee on Ways and
    Means, Fiscal Year 1994 Budget Recommendations 2-21 (June 1993)
    (noting that "some privatization has indeed come at the
    citizens' expense").     Accordingly, "[t]o ensure that citizens of
    the commonwealth receive high quality public services at low
    12
    cost, with due regard for the taxpayers of the commonwealth and
    the needs of public and private workers," the Pacheco Law
    permits State agencies to enter into privatization contracts
    only after satisfying certain prerequisites.    See MBTA, supra at
    785, quoting G. L. c. 7, § 52.
    General Laws c. 7, § 54, sets forth the procedures an
    agency is obliged to follow when it seeks to enter into a
    "privatization contract" as defined in G. L. c. 7, § 53.    The
    agency must, among other things, (1) prepare a written statement
    of the services to be performed by private entities; (2) prepare
    a written estimate of the cost of those services as performed by
    State employees in the most cost-efficient manner; (3) allow
    "any relevant employee organization" the opportunity to propose
    amendments to collective bargaining agreements to lower the
    estimated cost of State employees performing the services; and
    (4) consult with any such organization and provide information
    designed to assist State employees in proposing a bid to keep
    the services in house.   G. L. c. 7, § 54.8   These requirements
    8
    General Laws c. 7, § 54, provides, in relevant part:
    "No agency shall make any privatization contract and
    no contract shall be valid unless the agency . . . first
    complies with each of the following requirements: -- (1)
    The agency shall prepare a specific written statement of
    the services proposed to be the subject of the
    privatization contract, including the specific quantity and
    standard of quality of the subject services. . . . (4) The
    agency shall prepare a comprehensive written estimate of
    13
    ensure that privatization contracts are permissible only if a
    State agency can demonstrate cost savings that do not result
    from lowered employment standards.   "[N]o [privatization]
    contract shall be valid" unless and until the agency submits a
    written certification that it has complied with the above
    requirements and all others enumerated by the statute.    Id.
    In order to enforce these requirements, the Auditor may
    adopt regulations and prescribe forms that an agency must use
    when formulating its proposal.   G. L. c. 7, § 55 (c).   The
    Auditor may object to any proposed privatization contract within
    thirty days of receiving the agency's certificate of compliance.
    G. L. c. 7, § 55 (a).   Such an objection is final and binding on
    the agency.   Id.
    ii.   Duty and injury.   DMH contends that the provisions of
    the Pacheco Law serve only State employees and not the unions to
    which they belong, and that, accordingly, it owes no duty to the
    the costs of regular agency employees' providing the
    subject services in the most cost-efficient manner. . . .
    For the purpose of this estimate, any employee organization
    may . . . propose amendments to any relevant collective
    bargaining agreement to which it is a party. . . . (5)
    After consulting any relevant employee organization, the
    agency shall provide adequate resources for the purpose of
    encouraging and assisting present agency employees to
    organize and submit a bid to provide the subject
    services. . . . (7) The head of the agency and the
    commissioner of administration shall each certify in
    writing to the state auditor, that: (i) he has complied
    with all provisions of this section and of all other
    applicable laws . . . ."
    14
    union.   This argument finds little support in the statutory
    language.   The Pacheco Law confers two specific, substantive
    rights on employee organizations that benefit those
    organizations in and of themselves.   First, G. L. c. 7,
    § 54 (4), provides that "any employee organization may . . .
    propose amendments to any relevant collective bargaining
    agreement to which it is a party" in order to reduce the
    estimated cost of allowing the services in question to continue
    to be provided by State employees.    Second, G. L. c. 7,
    § 54 (5), requires that the agency shall consult with "any
    relevant employee organization" before providing resources that
    will encourage agency employees to prepare a bid for the
    services in question.   No privatization contract "shall be
    valid" if a public agency fails to comply with these substantive
    requirements, G. L. c. 7, § 54, which recognize and promote the
    essential role unions play in "assist[ing their] members to
    improve their wages, hours, and conditions of employment."
    G. L. c. 150E, § 1.
    Under the plain language of the Pacheco Law, then, a public
    agency owes certain duties to a collective bargaining
    organization.   When such an agency seeks to privatize duties
    previously performed by State employees, it is incumbent upon
    that agency to allow the union to amend its collective
    bargaining agreement and benefit from a consultation about
    15
    materials relevant to the preparation of a competitive bid.     An
    agency that does not afford a union these opportunities is not
    in compliance with the Pacheco Law and cannot be said to have
    fulfilled its obligations.   Here, accepting all facts alleged in
    the union's complaint, DMH declined to submit its proposed
    contracts to the Auditor for review even though the contracts
    constituted "privatization contracts" within the meaning of
    G. L. c. 7, § 53.   In thus preventing the union from advocating
    on behalf of its members in the manner specifically permitted by
    the Pacheco Law, DMH committed a breach of the duty it owes the
    union pursuant to that statute.
    The union has alleged in its complaint a "reasonably
    definite" injury stemming from this breach, Professional Fire
    Fighters of Mass. v. Commonwealth, 
    72 Mass. App. Ct. 66
    , 75
    (2008), that is neither "speculative, remote, [nor] indirect,"
    Ginther v. Commissioner of Ins., 
    427 Mass. 319
    , 323 (1998).
    Because DMH did not follow the procedural steps set forth in
    G. L. c. 7, § 54, the union had no opportunity, pursuant to
    G. L. c. 7, § 54 (4), to amend the terms of its collective
    bargaining agreements with a public agency in an effort to lower
    the costs of providing the relevant services by union members.
    Nor was it able to consult with DMH pursuant to G. L. c. 7,
    § 54 (5), to assist in compiling information for use by agency
    employees.   As a result of DMH's unilateral determination that
    16
    the Pacheco Law did not apply to its proposed contracts,
    therefore, the union was precluded from exercising its explicit
    statutory rights and from intervening, in service of its
    membership, when confronted with the prospect of privatization.
    These consequences are not "inchoate and
    nonparticularized," Ten Persons of the Commonwealth v. Fellsway
    Dev. LLC, 
    460 Mass. 366
    , 381 (2011) (citation omitted); they
    bear directly on the union's core mission of protecting the
    long-term interests of all of its members.   See G. L. c. 150E,
    § 5 ("The exclusive representative . . . shall be responsible
    for representing the interests of all . . . employees without
    discrimination").   In essence, the union's complaint alleges
    that, because of DMH's failure to submit its contracts to the
    Auditor and to comply with the terms of the Pacheco Law, one
    hundred case managers lost their jobs; the union could neither
    exercise its statutory rights to bargain on their behalf nor
    continue to represent those managers once they were no longer
    State employees.    Taken as true, these deprivations constitute
    cognizable injury for purposes of the declaratory judgment
    statute.
    What is more, such injuries fall within the zone of
    interest of the Pacheco Law.   See Massachusetts Ass'n of Indep.
    Ins. Agents & Brokers, Inc. v. Commissioner of Ins., 
    supra at 294
     (injury must be "within the parameters of the statutory
    17
    concern").   The Pacheco Law was enacted "with due regard
    for . . . the needs of public and private workers,"    G. L. c. 7,
    § 52,9 and, accordingly, allows the union to amend collective
    bargaining agreements and consult with a public agency about the
    resources necessary to prepare competitive bids.   The
    administrative scheme set forth by the Pacheco Law, therefore,
    fairly can be seen as promoting the role of employee
    organizations in representing the interests of State employees.
    When the union was foreclosed from assisting its members in the
    ways enumerated by the Legislature, the resulting injury fell
    squarely within the statute's area of concern.   See
    Massachusetts Ass'n of Indep. Ins. Agents & Brokers, Inc. v.
    Commissioner of Ins., 
    supra at 295-296
    .
    In contending that it owes no duty to the union and that
    the union has suffered no cognizable injury to itself, DMH
    misapprehends the nature of employee organizations as defined in
    G. L. c. 150E.   A union is the exclusive representative of all
    employee members, see G. L. c. 150E, § 4, and it "shall have the
    9
    Indeed, Governor Weld understood the Pacheco Law, as first
    proposed by the Legislature, to be a "State Employee
    Preservation Act." Governor William F. Weld, Testimony before
    the Joint Committee on State Administration, in Executive Office
    for Administration and Finance, Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
    Privatization in Massachusetts: Getting Results 49 (Draft Nov.
    1, 1993). See Rosse v. Commissioner of Revenue, 
    430 Mass. 431
    ,
    438 n.6 (1999), quoting Kartell v. Blue Shield of Mass., Inc.,
    
    384 Mass. 409
    , 421 (1981) (This court "may turn to unofficial
    sources in order to gain a 'contemporary understanding of the
    underlying purposes' of the legislation").
    18
    right to act for and negotiate agreements covering all employees
    in the unit."   G. L. c. 150E, § 5.    It is not the case,
    moreover, that the interests of a union are always coextensive
    with those of its members.    See Anderson v. Commonwealth
    Employment Relations Bd., 
    73 Mass. App. Ct. 908
    , 911 (2009)
    (union "did act reasonably in negotiating the [collective
    bargaining agreement] for all its members" even where it did not
    cater to each individual member's demands).     A union may take
    action in service of the long-term interests of its members,
    even where certain employees disagree or are displeased with the
    immediate result.     See Ford Motor Co. v. Huffman, 
    345 U.S. 330
    ,
    338 (1953) ("The complete satisfaction of all who are
    represented [by a union] is hardly to be expected").
    The Pacheco Law preserves this distinction between a union
    and its membership.     For instance, only a union may, pursuant to
    the Pacheco Law, amend collective bargaining agreements in order
    to lower the costs of having its members perform the services at
    issue.    An individual employee has no statutory authority to
    take such action.10    See Miller v. Board of Regents of Higher
    Educ., 
    405 Mass. 475
    , 480 (1989); DiLuzio v. United Elec., Radio
    10
    This is in keeping with the requirements of G. L.
    c. 150E, § 6, pursuant to which public employers may negotiate
    in good faith only with a union. They are prohibited from
    dealing directly with individual employee members. See G. L.
    c. 150E, § 6; Service Employees Int'l Union, AFL-CIO, Local 509
    v. Labor Relations Comm'n, 
    431 Mass. 710
    , 714-715 (2000).
    19
    & Mach. Workers of Am., Local 274, 
    386 Mass. 314
    , 314 (1982),
    S.C., 
    391 Mass. 211
     (1984) (labor unions are legal entities for
    purposes of suing or being sued).   Furthermore, the Pacheco Law
    distinguishes between rights that belong to a union and rights
    that belong to a union's members.   As discussed, under the
    Pacheco Law, the union is empowered to consult with an agency
    prior to the agency's dissemination of information relevant to
    competitive bids.   Pursuant to G. L. c. 7, § 54 (5), however,
    the individual members are the parties actually permitted to
    submit such bids.
    These provisions reflect the Legislature's understanding
    that a union may have rights and interests separate from those
    of the employees it represents.   Although DMH's asserted failure
    to notify the union of its intent to contract may also have run
    counter to the interests of the case managers, who were State
    employees, such conduct caused independent harm to the union
    itself, which was barred thereby not only from exercising its
    statutory privileges, but also from engaging in actions
    indispensable to its essential function.   See Massachusetts
    Ass'n of Indep. Ins. Agents & Brokers, Inc. v. Commissioner of
    Ins., 
    supra at 296
     (plaintiffs had standing where opposite
    ruling would have had "the potential of lessening the role and
    vitality of such persons" within administrative scheme).
    20
    While the injuries a union suffers also may affect the
    well-being and rights of its members, rather than being a bar to
    union standing, such concurrent injury simply reflects the very
    nature of the relationship between a collective bargaining
    association and the employees it represents.   A union may have
    standing in its own right even where its members suffer injury,
    so long as the union, too, is injured in its capacity as an
    organization.   See Babbitt v. United Farm Workers Nat'l Union,
    
    442 U.S. 289
    , 299 n.11 (1979), overruled on other grounds by 
    442 U.S. 936
     (1979) (union had direct standing to seek declaratory
    judgment invalidating provision of farm labor statute that
    inhibited members' constitutional right to freedom of
    association).   Contrast Massachusetts Elec. Co. v. Massachusetts
    Comm'n Against Discrimination, 
    375 Mass. 160
    , 177-178 (1978)
    (union lacked standing pursuant to G. L. c. 151B, § 1, where
    "union as a union did not sustain any direct injury as a result
    of the company's alleged [sex-based] discriminatory practices,"
    which only affected rights of its pregnant members).
    iii.   Availability of other remedies and possible adverse
    consequences.   To deny standing in these circumstances would
    leave the union no recourse whenever an agency decides that the
    requirements of the Pacheco Law are inapplicable and, therefore,
    that it need not comply with those requirements.   See Villages
    Dev. Co. v. Secretary of the Executive Office of Envtl. Affairs,
    21
    
    410 Mass. 100
    , 107 (1991) (plaintiff had standing to seek
    declaratory relief where no other remedy available).   Contrast
    Enos, supra at 141-143 (plaintiffs who had an alternative
    statutory remedy lacked standing to file claim under G. L.
    c. 231A).   Issuance of a writ of mandamus would be inappropriate
    against DMH, the Auditor, or the Attorney General, where none of
    those parties has failed "to perform a clear cut duty" pursuant
    to the statute.11   See Montefusco v. Commonwealth, 
    452 Mass. 1015
    , 1015 (2008), quoting Simmons v. Clerk-Magistrate of the
    Boston Div. of the Housing Court Dep't, 
    448 Mass. 57
    , 59-60
    (2006).   Where a State agency seeks to enter into contracts that
    constitute "privatization contracts" under G. L. c. 7, § 54,
    that agency, as discussed above, owes certain specific duties to
    a union pursuant to the Pacheco Law.   Here, however, the parties
    dispute whether the law applies to the proposed contracts in
    question and thus whether DMH, in fact, owed any duties at all
    to the union.   Indeed, the union sought declaratory judgment in
    order to resolve precisely this question.   Accordingly, absent a
    11
    Moreover, the extraordinary remedy of mandamus is
    appropriate only to prevent a failure of justice in instances
    where no other relief is available and "nothing else would
    work." Doe v. District Attorney for the Plymouth Dist., 
    29 Mass. App. Ct. 671
    , 674 (1991). The Coach & Six Restaurant,
    Inc. v. Public Works Comm'n, 
    363 Mass. 643
    , 644 (1973). See
    Trust Ins. Co. v. Commissioner of Ins., 
    48 Mass. App. Ct. 617
    ,
    622 (2000) (where petitioner had filed petition for declaratory
    judgment, mandamus was inappropriate given petitioner's "more
    general request for relief").
    22
    binding declaration that DMH's efforts at privatization did,
    indeed, fall within the terms of the Pacheco Law, DMH would
    maintain it has no "clear cut" obligations to the union that
    might render mandamus an apt mechanism for relief.
    It would be equally unsuitable for the union to seek
    mandamus against the Auditor, who neither shirked his statutory
    obligation or otherwise violated the terms of the Pacheco Law.
    As noted, the Legislature did not establish any means by which
    the Auditor may contest an agency's assertion that the Pacheco
    Law is inapplicable.   Here, the Auditor nevertheless issued a
    memorandum advising DMH that its proposed contracts were subject
    to the terms of the Pacheco Law, but subsequently, DMH has taken
    no steps towards compliance.   There is therefore no other action
    on the part of the Auditor that the union properly could request
    in a petition for a writ of mandamus.   Finally, as for the
    Attorney General, the Pacheco Law provides only that she may
    file an action pursuant to G. L. c. 7, § 54 (2), in order to
    enforce the minimum wage to be paid to those employed under a
    privatization contract.   It makes no express provision for her
    to intervene when an agency, as here, declines at the outset to
    submit its contracts to the Auditor.
    Nor does the Pacheco Law contain a private right of action
    that might provide some other avenue for relief.     Although DMH
    points to this absence as evidence that permitting an employee
    23
    organization to seek declaratory relief against a public agency
    would contravene the intention of the Legislature, we draw the
    opposite conclusion.   A plaintiff may seek the equitable remedy
    of declaratory relief, Grady v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    83 Mass. App. Ct. 126
    , 137 n.9 (2013), even if the relevant statute
    does not provide a private right of action.   See, e.g., Ten
    Persons of the Commonwealth v. Fellsway Dev. LLC, 
    460 Mass. 366
    ,
    380 (2011), quoting Enos, supra at 134-135 ("to invoke the
    court's general equity jurisdiction under c. 231A, '[t]he
    dispositive question is whether the plaintiffs have demonstrated
    that they have standing to maintain their action . . .'").     Cf.
    Sullivan v. Chief Justice for Admin. & Mgt. of the Trial Court,
    
    448 Mass. 15
    , 24, 38 (2006) (plaintiff employees could seek
    declaratory relief against trial court for exposure to asbestos
    despite absence of private right of action in applicable
    environmental statutes).
    To be sure, a party may not seek declaratory relief to
    effect an "end run" around the absence of a private right of
    action where the Legislature intended to foreclose certain
    remedies.   See Boston Med. Ctr. Corp. v. Secretary of the
    Executive Office of Health & Human Servs., 
    463 Mass. 447
    , 471
    (2012), citing Green v. Mansour, 
    474 U.S. 64
    , 73 (1985)
    (plaintiff medical provider could not seek declaratory judgment
    as to reasonableness of rate determinations absent private right
    24
    of action).   But that rationale has little weight where the
    absence of declaratory relief would prevent the Pacheco Law from
    being administered properly and thus contravene the
    Legislature's intent.    Here, the union suffered a cognizable
    injury but cannot directly enforce the terms of the statute or
    otherwise vindicate its rights.    No other party is entitled to
    challenge the alleged violation.    In such specific
    circumstances, declaratory judgment is an appropriate vehicle
    for relief to ensure that agencies may not evade the
    requirements of the Pacheco Law with impunity.
    In short, it cannot be that there is no recourse where an
    agency, believing the Pacheco Law is inapplicable in a
    particular situation, simply opts not to comply with its terms.
    The Pacheco Law could not function as the Legislature intended
    if an agency could decide, unilaterally and without input from
    the Auditor or the union, that its proposed contracts did not
    fall within the provisions of     G. L. c. 7, § 53.    Indeed, a
    public agency would have little incentive to adhere to the
    Pacheco Law's requirements were its decision to evade those
    requirements immune from any review.    DMH's belief that the
    Pacheco Law does not apply to its proposed contracts cannot be
    understood to inoculate it against efforts to demonstrate
    otherwise.    Such an approach would render the statute toothless,
    25
    confounding the Legislature's efforts to ensure that
    privatization does not occur at the expense of public welfare.
    Allowing the union to contest an agency's otherwise
    unreviewable pronouncement that it need not comply with the
    Pacheco Law will not, as DMH contends, transform the declaratory
    judgment statute into a "roving entitlement for allegedly
    aggrieved plaintiffs."    Enos, supra at 141 (no standing where
    public agency did not owe plaintiff property owners duty under
    Massachusetts Environmental Protection Act).    To confer standing
    on an employee organization in this circumstance does no more
    than allow it to challenge the view of a public agency that its
    proposed contracts do not fall within the terms of the Pacheco
    Law.12    Indeed, such challenges are critical to the functioning
    12
    Our decision that declaratory judgment is an appropriate
    remedy here should be understood as limited to the circumstances
    presented, where an agency takes the position that the Pacheco
    Law does not apply to certain contracts with private entities
    and accordingly does not comply with relevant statutory
    obligations including notification of the Auditor as to such
    contracts. See G. L. c. 7, §§ 52-55. In contrast, an action in
    the nature of certiorari pursuant to G. L. c. 249, § 4, is the
    proper vehicle for relief when challenging a decision made by
    the Auditor. See MBTA, supra at 790-791.
    Further, the Pacheco Law, consistent with its purpose,
    provides a streamlined and time-sensitive process for agencies
    seeking to enter into privatization contracts. Such contracts
    affect the interests of many parties and the concomitant need
    for expedition in settling questions as to their validity is
    evident. Given this, and notwithstanding the three-year statute
    of limitations for declaratory judgment actions, a union failing
    to take prompt action against the agency in these circumstances
    26
    of the statute, and also may provide clarity to parties in
    related situations concerning whether they properly are subject
    to the requirements of the Law.
    We express no opinion as to the merits of the Auditor's
    determination that the CBFS contracts at issue constitute
    "privatization contracts" such that the Pacheco Law does, in
    fact, apply.    See note 4, supra.   Contrast MBTA, supra at 791-
    792.    We conclude only that there must be a way to resolve any
    disputes over the parameters of the Pacheco Law in the first
    instance, and that the union's complaint alleged a cognizable
    injury sufficient to support standing.     Because the union is the
    party best situated to challenge an agency's decision not to
    submit proposed contracts to the Auditor, because seeking a
    declaratory judgment is the only viable mechanism by which it
    may do so, and because the Legislature could not have intended
    that the Pacheco Law effectively be unenforceable, the union has
    direct standing to pursue declaratory relief under G. L.
    c. 231A.13
    runs the serious risk of exposure to the affirmative defense of
    laches.
    13
    The union also alleges that it has associational
    standing, on behalf of its members, to file a petition for
    declaratory relief. Given our conclusion that direct standing
    does lie, we do not reach this claim.
    27
    b.    Joinder of necessary parties.   We turn to the union's
    asserted failure to join necessary parties pursuant to G. L.
    c. 231A, § 8, and Mass. R. Civ. P. 19, which, DMH maintains,
    independently should bar consideration of the union's complaint.
    The declaratory judgment statute provides that "all persons
    shall be made parties who have or claim any interest which would
    be affected by the declaration."   G. L. c. 231A, § 8.   Rule 19,
    although not limited to the context of declaratory relief, is to
    similar effect.14   The failure to name necessary parties may be
    jurisdictional in a declaratory judgment action, thereby
    precluding the court's consideration of the issue.    See, e.g.,
    Villages Dev. Co. v. Secretary of the Executive Office of Envtl.
    Affairs, 
    410 Mass. 100
    , 105-106 (1991).
    In its complaint, the union did not name as defendants the
    private vendors with whom DMH entered into contracts under the
    CBFS program.   These vendors, however, are plainly necessary
    parties.   As beneficiaries of the disputed contracts, the
    14
    Rule 19 (a) of the Massachusetts Rules of Civil
    Procedure, 
    365 Mass. 765
     (1974), provides that a
    "person who is subject to service of process shall be
    joined in the action if . . . (2) he claims an interest
    relating to the subject of the action and is so situated
    that the disposition of the action in his absence may (i)
    as a practical matter impair or impede his ability to
    protect that interest or (ii) leave any of the persons
    already parties subject to a substantial risk of incurring
    double, multiple, or otherwise inconsistent obligations by
    reason of his claimed interest."
    28
    vendors have an interest in the resolution of the union's claim,
    and, like DMH, a right to contest whether the contracts are
    subject to the terms of the Pacheco Law.    Unless and until the
    vendors are joined as parties, therefore, "any declaration of
    rights would be merely academic as to persons not parties to the
    proceedings."   J.R. Nolan & B.R. Henry, Civil Practice § 48.11,
    at 411 (3d ed. 2004) ("fundamental purpose" of declaratory
    judgment "cannot be effectuated" where necessary parties are
    missing from suit).    Accordingly, the judge did not err in
    concluding that the union's failure to name all necessary
    parties rendered its complaint legally insufficient, and that
    she therefore lacked jurisdiction to entertain that complaint.
    3.   Conclusion.    While there was no error in the judge's
    decision to dismiss the complaint on the ground of the failure
    to name all necessary parties, in light of our conclusion as to
    direct standing, the judgment of dismissal is vacated and set
    aside, and the case is remanded to the Superior Court for the
    limited purpose of allowing the union to file a motion seeking
    leave to amend the complaint to add all necessary parties.     If
    the union does not file such a motion within thirty days of the
    issuance of the rescript in this case, an order shall enter
    dismissing the complaint.
    So ordered.