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Full Opinion
Robert MALABED, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
NORTH SLOPE BOROUGH, Defendant-Appellant.
Morris David Welch, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
North Slope Borough, Defendant-Appellant.
Charles Michael Emerson, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
North Slope Borough, Defendant-Appellant.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
*417 William B. Schendel, Schendel & Callahan, Fairbanks, and Kenneth L. Covell, Law Offices of Kenneth L. Covell, Fairbanks, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
David C. Crosby, David C. Crosby, P.C., Juneau, for Defendant-Appellant.
Robert A. Royce, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Bruce M. Botelho, Attorney General, Juneau, for Amicus Curiae Alaska State Commission for Human Rights.
*418 David S. Case, Landye Bennett Blumstein, LLP, Anchorage, for Amicus Curiae Alaska Federation of Natives.
Before: FABE, Chief Justice, MATTHEWS, EASTAUGH, BRYNER, and CARPENETI, Justices.
OPINION
BRYNER, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit certified a question to this court, asking whether a North Slope Borough ordinance enacting a hiring preference in favor of Native Americans violates state or local law. Article I, section 1, of the Alaska Constitution provides that "all persons are equal and entitled to equal rights, opportunities, and protection under the law." This provision binds local units of Alaska government, including boroughs, to govern equally and in the interest of all Alaskans. We hold that the borough lacks a legitimate governmental interest to enact a hiring preference favoring one class of citizens at the expense of others; its ordinance therefore violates the Alaska Constitution's guarantee of equal protection.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In 1997 the North Slope Borough enacted an ordinance that creates a mandatory preference for hiring, promoting, transferring, and reinstating Native Americans in borough government employment. The current version of the preference extends to all Native American applicants who are minimally qualified or meet most minimum job requirements and can meet the remaining requirements during their probationary period of employment; for purposes of the preference, "Native American" is defined to include any person belonging to an Indian tribe under federal law. The ordinance provides:
The granting of employment preference to Native Americans. The preference shall apply to hirings, promotions, transfers, and reinstatements. A Native American applicant who meets the minimum qualifications for a position shall be selected, and where there is more than one Native American applicant who meets the minimum qualifications for a position, the best qualified among these shall be selected. In instances where a Native American applicant meets most of the minimum qualifications for the position and can, during the probationary period, meet the minimum qualifications, that person will be given employment preference. If, at the end of the probationary period, all the minimum qualifications have not been met, the individual may be granted a three-month extension of the probationary period, on a one time basis, by the supervisor. If the person given employment preference is not able to meet the minimum qualifications at the end of the probationary period, he or she will be dismissed from employment and the position will be re-posted. A Native American is a person belonging to an Indian tribe as defined in 25 U.S.C. Section 3703(10).[1]
The borough enacted this preference after a study of economic conditions showed that the Native American population within the borough, specifically the resident Inupiat Eskimos, was both underemployed and earning substantially less money per capita than borough residents of other races. As the area's largest local employer, the borough consulted with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to determine whether the borough might qualify for an exemption from federal equal employment opportunity laws. Specifically, the borough asked about an exemption under section 703(i) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (the 703(i) exception),[2] which excludes hiring preferences favoring Native Americans working on or near Indian reservations from the strictures *419 of Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.[3] The 703(i) exception states:
Nothing contained in this subchapter [subchapter e of 42 U.S.C. § 2000] shall apply to any business or enterprise on or near an Indian reservation with respect to any publicly announced employment practice of such business or enterprise under which a preferential treatment is given to any individual because he is an Indian living on or near a reservation.[4]
The commission responded that, in its view, the 703(i) exception's reference to "any business or enterprise" extended to the borough, allowing it to adopt a hiring preference in favor of Native Americans without violating Title VII's equal employment opportunity provisions, assuming that the borough met the exception's other requirements. After receiving this response, the borough assembly enacted the hiring preference by an ordinance passed in February 1997; the borough implemented the preference later that year.
Robert Malabed, Morris David Welch, and Charles Emerson (collectively Malabed) individually filed suit against the borough in federal district court, asserting that they were non-Native applicants for borough employment and had been passed over for jobs in favor of lower-ranked Native American applicants. The suits claimed that the borough's Native American hiring preference violates state and federal constitutional guarantees of equal protection, the Alaska Human Rights Act, federal civil rights laws, and the borough's charter. The district court granted summary judgment to Malabed, declaring that the preference violated the borough's charter and federal equal protection. The borough appealed to the Ninth Circuit, which has certified the following question:[5]
Is North Slope Borough Code § 2.20.150(A)(27), granting employment preferences to Native Americans in borough hiring, impermissible under local law, state statutory law, or the Alaska Constitution?
III. DISCUSSION
A. Overview of State Constitutional Issues
As already mentioned, Article I, section 1, of the Alaska Constitution guarantees equal protection, providing that "all persons are equal and entitled to equal rights, opportunities, and protection under the law." In addition, Article I, section 3, of the Alaska Constitution categorically prohibits discrimination based on race or national origin: "No person is to be denied the enjoyment of any civil or political right because of race, color, creed, sex, or national origin." The legislature implemented these provisions in part by enacting the Alaska Human Rights Act,[6] which prohibits employment discrimination based on race or national origin,[7] and AS 29.20.630, which specifically prohibits Alaska's municipalities—including home rule municipalities like the North Slope Borough— from engaging in racial and national origin discrimination.[8] In recognition of these requirements, *420 the borough's charter itself prohibits these forms of discrimination: "No person may be discriminated against in any borough employment because of race, age, color, political or religious affiliation, or [national] origin."[9]
Relying on these provisions, Malabed argues that the borough's hiring preference adopts a racial classification or, alternatively, a classification based on national origin, in violation of the Alaska Constitution. The borough responds by denying that its preference uses a race-conscious classification; instead, the borough insists, the preference adopts a well-accepted and constitutionally permissible political classification based on membership in federally recognized tribes. In advancing this argument, the borough relies chiefly on Morton v. Mancari.[10]
In Mancari the Supreme Court upheld a Bureau of Indian Affairs employment preference for hiring and promoting Native Americans within the BIA.[11] Several non-Native American employees challenged the preference, arguing that the 1972 Equal Employment Opportunity Act had repealed the BIA's statutory authority to grant hiring preferences to Native Americans and that the preference amounted to invidious racial discrimination in violation of their Fifth Amendment due process rights.[12] But the Court found that Congress had not repealed the BIA's authority to prefer Native Americans in hiring.[13] And after analyzing the unique historical relationship between the federal government and Native Americans, the Court concluded that the preference was not only not invidious racial discrimination but was not based on race at all.[14]
The Court pointed out that the disputed BIA preference applied only to members of federally recognized tribes and thus excluded many individuals who were racially Native American.[15] Noting the "unique legal status of Indian tribes under federal law" and the BIA's special interest in furthering Native American self-government, the Court held that the hiring preference was "reasonably and directly related to a legitimate, nonracially based goal."[16]
Assuming for present purposes that the borough's ordinance reflects this kind of political classification and does not discriminate on the basis of race, the ordinance might avoid problems with the Alaska Constitution's bar against racial discrimination. But the political nature of the classification would not necessarily insulate the ordinance from Malabed's equal protection challenge. For the borough, unlike the BIA in Mancari, has no obvious governmental interest, as a borough, in furthering Native American self-government; and Native Americans have no explicitly established "unique legal status" under borough law, as Mancari found them to have under federal law. Given these disparities between federal and local law, the legitimacy of the borough's hiring preference as a political classification is less apparent than the legitimacy of the BIA's hiring preference in Mancari. We must therefore consider whether the ordinance's ostensibly political lines discriminate in a way that offends the Alaska Constitution's guarantee of equal protection.
B. Alaska's Three-Step Equal Protection Standard
We have long recognized that the Alaska Constitution's equal protection clause affords greater protection to individual rights than the United States Constitution's Fourteenth Amendment.[17] To implement Alaska's more stringent equal protection standard, we have adopted a three-step, sliding-scale test that places a progressively greater *421 or lesser burden on the state, depending on the importance of the individual right affected by the disputed classification and the nature of the governmental interests at stake: first, we determine the weight of the individual interest impaired by the classification; second, we examine the importance of the purposes underlying the government's action; and third, we evaluate the means employed to further those goals to determine the closeness of the means-to-end fit.[18]
1. Step 1: individual interests affected by the preference
To determine how the borough's hiring preference fares under this standard, we begin by considering the importance of the individual interests implicated by the preference. Here, the borough's hiring preference impairs Malabed's right to seek and obtain employment in his profession. Under similar circumstances, we have declared the right to employment to be an important right. In State, Departments of Transportation & Labor v. Enserch Alaska Construction, Inc., we reviewed an equal protection challenge to an Alaska statute that provided hiring preferences to residents of economically distressed zones for employment on public works projects.[19] A contractor building a road for the state challenged the preference as a violation of Alaska equal protection. Addressing the first step of Alaska's three-step analysis,[20] we held that the "right to engage in an economic endeavor within a particular industry is an `important' right for state equal protection purposes."[21]
Here, because the individual interest affected is almost identical to the one we considered in Enserch—the right to seek and obtain employment in one's profession—the interest is important for equal protection purposes; its impairment therefore requires us to give close scrutiny to the borough's hiring preference:
Close scrutiny of enactments impairing the important right to engage in economic endeavor requires that the state's interest underlying the enactment be not only legitimate, but important, and that the nexus between the enactment and the important interest it serves be close.[22]
2. Step 2: importance and legitimacy of borough's interests in the preference
a. The borough's interest in the preference is not legitimate under Enserch.
In the second part of the equal protection analysis we consider the borough's interests, asking whether it had important and legitimate reasons to adopt the hiring preference. The borough offers several reasons supporting its ordinance: reducing unemployment of the largest group of unemployed borough residents—Inupiat Eskimos; strengthening the borough's economy; and training its workforce. But we found comparable governmental interests insufficient in Enserch. There the state tried to establish an important and legitimate governmental interest by arguing that the challenged hiring preference reduced unemployment, remedied social harms resulting from chronic unemployment, and assisted economically disadvantaged residents.[23] Though acknowledging these interests as important, we found them to be illegitimate because they favored one class of Alaskans over another:
While these goals are important, they conceal the underlying objective of economically assisting one class over another. We have held that this objective is illegitimate. In Lynden Transport, Inc. v. State, 532 P.2d 700, 710 (Alaska 1975), we ruled that "discrimination between residents and nonresidents based solely on the object of assisting the one class over the other economically *422 cannot be upheld under ... the... equal protection clause[ ]." While that case involved discrimination between state residents and nonresidents, the principle is equally applicable to discrimination among state residents. We conclude that the disparate treatment of unemployed workers in one region in order to confer an economic benefit on similarly-situated workers in another region is not a legitimate legislative goal.[24]
Here, as in Enserch, it might seem that "[t]his conclusion essentially ends our inquiry."[25] But the borough nevertheless claims a special interest in preferring to hire Native Americans (an interest not present in Enserch). It theorizes that this interest flows from a specific congressional mandate—the Civil Rights Act's 703(i) exception—or from a more general duty to comply with federal policies adopted for the benefit of Native Americans. Alternatively, the borough asks us to find an implied grant of power in the Alaska Constitution giving it a trust-like interest in legislating for the benefit of Alaska Natives. But as we explain below, these alleged sources do not give the borough the legitimate interest it claims.
b. The Alaska Constitution does not give the borough a legitimate interest in adopting the preference.
We reject at the outset the notion that the Alaska Constitution radiates implied guardianship powers allowing the state or its boroughs to treat Alaska Natives as if they were wards. To be sure, the United States Supreme Court has recognized implied powers in the United States Constitution that allow Congress broad latitude to legislate on behalf of Native Americans.[26] The borough reasons that the Alaska Constitution must implicitly grant parallel powers to state and municipal governments. But the federal government's implied powers spring directly from the express powers granted to Congress in the United States Constitution's Indian Commerce and Treaty clauses:
The plenary power of Congress to deal with the special problems of Indians is drawn both explicitly and implicitly from the Constitution itself. Article I, § 8, cl. 3, provides Congress with the power to "regulate Commerce ... with the Indian Tribes," and thus, to this extent, singles Indians out as a proper subject for separate legislation. Article II, § 2, cl. 2, gives the President the power, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make treaties. This has often been the source of the Government's power to deal with the Indian tribes.[27]
In contrast to the federal constitution's provisions dealing with Indian tribes, the Alaska Constitution includes no provisions authorizing state action regarding Alaska Natives and so grants no express powers from which implied powers could arise. Indeed, the only provision of the Alaska Constitution that addresses the state's relations with Alaska Natives is article XII, section 12, which effectively disavows any state authority comparable to the federal government's protective powers. Thus, article XII, section 12, expressly disclaims all "right or title in or to any property, including fishing rights, the right or title to which may be held by or for any Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut, or community thereof," and further specifies "that, unless otherwise provided by Congress, the property, as described in this section, shall remain subject to the absolute disposition of the United States."[28] To the extent that the Alaska Constitution implies anything concerning the state's relations with Alaska Natives, then, it mirrors the constitutional drafters' well-recognized desire to treat Alaska Natives like all other Alaska citizens.[29] The *423 Alaska Constitution thus implies nothing that would give the borough a legitimate interest in enacting the disputed preference.
c. The 703(i) exception does not give the borough a legitimate interest in adopting the preference.
The borough next contends that the Civil Rights Act's 703(i) exception gives it a legitimate interest in enacting the challenged preference. We agree in theory that Congress can create specific mandates or interests empowering states or units of local government to legislate on behalf of Native Americans without creating suspect classifications. Yet such mandates or interests have been found to arise in two relatively narrow situations: in the first, the state acts under a particularized, state-specific congressional delegation of jurisdiction;[30] in the second, the state acts to accommodate federal supremacy in the field by enforcing congressionally created federal obligations toward Indian tribes that the federal government would otherwise enforce on its own.[31] The borough's reliance on the Civil Rights Act's 703(i) exception presents little in common with these situations.
Preliminarily, we note that the disputed ordinance itself raises serious questions concerning its compliance with the federal exception's purpose. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission interprets the 703(i) exception to sanction preferences only to Native Americans generally, not to Native Americans of a particular tribe.[32] The body of the borough's ordinance nominally conforms to the 703(i) exception, extending the hiring preference to all "Native Americans," a term that the ordinance defines to include all persons belonging to Indian tribes as defined under federal law.[33] But the ordinance's *424 prefatory, "Whereas," clauses repeatedly and unequivocally declare that its actual purpose is to benefit the North Slope Borough's "Inupiat Eskimos," who comprise the majority of the borough's citizens.
Unlike the term "Native American," "Inupiat Eskimo" does not appear to be defined anywhere as requiring tribal membership or any other arguably political status; indeed, it does not appear to describe any particular Indian tribe. And because the class defined by the statement of purposes extends only to Inupiat Eskimos residing in the North Slope Borough, the class that the ordinance intends to prefer is far narrower than the one defined in the 703(i) exception—members of all federally recognized Indian tribes. Because the ordinance expressly professes an intent to benefit a class defined by borough residency and race, its nominally political preference in favor of all Native Americans could be construed as a proxy for an illegitimate race-conscious purpose.[34]
However, we need not decide the case on this basis.[35] For even assuming that the ordinance was properly enacted for its nominal purpose and thus satisfies the 703(i) exception's letter and spirit, we conclude that the borough fails to pinpoint any legitimate governmental interest in enacting a hiring preference in reliance on that exception. The borough's position that the 703(i) exception is its legitimate interest strains too hard to extract an affirmative mandate from a law that simply creates an exception.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 bars discrimination in employment practices, including racially discriminatory hiring practices.[36] The 703(i) exception appears in a section entitled "unlawful employment practices."[37] The exception's primary effect is to exclude employers located on or near a reservation from various equal employment requirements of the Civil Rights Act that govern "otherwise-unlawful preferential treatment given to Native Americans in certain employment[.]"[38] The exception does not create a hiring program; it does not mandate that any preferences be granted; it does not require any particular action or specify negative consequences for any inaction; and it does not purport to endorse—nor does it imply endorsement of—any particular preference by any particular employer in any particular location. Hence, although the 703(i) exception undoubtedly reflects Congress's strong desire to encourage preferences under the exception's specified circumstances, its mechanism is fundamentally passive: instead of actively creating employer interests, it presupposes that those interests already exist or will be offered elsewhere.[39]
*425 Though similar to the present case in certain respects, the Tenth Circuit's decision in Livingston v. Ewing does not support the proposition that the 703(i) exception creates a broad enough interest to allow state and local government action.[40] There, the Tenth Circuit allowed the City of Sante Fe to restrict vendors of handcrafted jewelry within the grounds of the Museum of New Mexico and the Palace of the Governors to members of Native American tribes,[41] declaring that the 703(i) exception was sufficiently broad to sustain the preference.[42] In so doing, the court read Morton v. Mancari as holding that an employment preference is "not to be considered racial discrimination of the type generally proscribed" when it turns on "the unique legal status of Indians under federal law ... and the assumption of guardian-ward status to legislate specially on behalf of Indian tribes."[43] Applying this interpretation, the court found Mancari to be a "very strong precedent for upholding the grant of the exclusive right to the Indians in the present case based on the employment statute in § 2000e-2(i) [the 703(i) exception]."[44]
The Tenth Circuit's ruling is distinguishable from this case for important reasons. The plaintiffs in Livingston did not challenge the city's actions under state constitutional law—they based their challenge strictly on the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal constitution.[45] Unsurprisingly, then, the claim in Livingston gave the Tenth Circuit no reason to look beyond the "unique legal status of Indians under federal law"[46]—a status that exists and creates strong federal interests independently of the 703(i) exception. Moreover, the state interest furthered by the preference in Livingston was a strong and specific interest in preserving New Mexico's historical and cultural traditions: the preference only extended to established Indian uses of Santa Fe's historic Palace of Governors, reportedly the oldest public building in the United States; Indian use of the site dated back to the 1680s, and the particular activities covered by the preference had been performed almost exclusively by Indians since the early 1900s.[47] The court viewed these facts as establishing a compelling state interest in "acquiring, preserving and exhibiting historical, archeological and ethnological interests in fine arts."[48]Livingston thus stands in sharp contrast to the borough's case. Nothing in the Tenth Circuit's ruling in Livingston indicates that the court viewed the 703(i) exception alone as creating affirmative interests sufficient to sustain a municipal hiring preference in favor of Native Americans. And unlike the City of Santa Fe in Livingston, the borough here advances no independently viable state interest in economically preferring one group of workers over others; the economic interests it asserts are indistinguishable from those that we *426 found illegitimate in Enserch.[49]
We by no means suggest that boroughs are categorically barred from adopting hiring preferences.[50] Nor do we suggest that all state or local legislation pertaining to Alaska Natives or tribal governments should be assumed to establish suspect classifications presumptively barred by equal protection.[51] Our focus is considerably narrower: we simply hold, in keeping with Enserch, that the borough has no legitimate basis to claim a general governmental interest in enacting hiring preferences favoring one class of citizens over others;[52] and we find that the borough has failed to identify any source of a legitimate, case-specific governmental interest in the preference it actually adopted—a hiring preference favoring Native Americans.[53] Because the borough is a political *427 subdivision of Alaska, its legitimate sphere of municipal interest lies in governing for all of its people; preferring the economic interests of one class of its citizens at the expense of others is not a legitimate municipal interest, regardless of whether we view its ordinance as drawing distinctions founded on political status or race.
3. Step 3: means-to-end fit
The last step of equal protection analysis under the Alaska Constitution examines the nexus between the state's asserted interests and the means selected to implement those interests. As previously mentioned, even when the state acts for important and legitimate reasons, its action must bear a close connection to those interests to justify impairing an important individual right.[54] Here, of course, because we have found no legitimate borough interest supporting the challenged preference, we need not dwell on the closeness of its means-to-end fit. But a brief comment on the issue is nevertheless important to establish an alternative basis for our equal protection ruling.
For even assuming that the borough had legitimate and important interests in enacting a hiring preference favoring Native Americans, its preference is not closely related to attaining those interests. Addressing a similar situation in Enserch, we found a hiring preference in favor of residents of economically distressed areas unconstitutional under Alaska's equal protection guarantee in part because the fit between the preference and its objective was not sufficiently close.[55] We noted that the preference failed to "prioritize relief for those areas most affected by nonresident employment"[56] and that it set no meaningful limits on the state's power to declare any part of Alaska economically distressed at any time.[57]
Here, the nexus between the borough's preference and its stated goals is insufficiently close for comparable reasons. The primary interest asserted by the borough lies in reducing Native American unemployment.[58] But when viewed in light of this purpose, the borough's hiring preference is stunningly broad: it extends borough-wide and to all aspects of borough employment; is potentially limitless in duration; covers not only hiring but also promotions, transfers, and reinstatements; and applies absolutely—even to the extent of requiring Native American applicants without minimum qualifications to be hired over qualified non-Native applicants. Because the borough advances no particular reasons to justify these sweeping provisions, it fails to establish a close fit between its goals and its actions.
IV. CONCLUSION
We conclude that the borough's hiring preference violates the Alaska Constitution's *428 guarantee of equal protection because the borough lacks a legitimate governmental interest to enact a hiring preference favoring one class of citizens at the expense of others and because the preference it enacted is not closely tailored to meet its goals.
MATTHEWS, Justice, concurring.
MATTHEWS, Justice, concurring.
I agree with the opinion of the court that the borough hiring preference violates the equal rights clause of the Alaska Constitution and with much of the court's reasoning. But I prefer to address directly the question whether the ordinance discriminates on the basis of race.[1] I believe that it does, for the reasons that follow.
Inupiat Eskimos are a racial rather than a tribal group.[2] The ordinance frankly acknowledges that its goal is to benefit them. In a prefatory clause the ordinance states "that its purpose in establishing an employment preference for Native Americans is to employ and train its Inupiat Eskimo residents in permanent, full-time positions...." Another clause sounds the same theme: "Whereas, to increase the employment of Inupiat Eskimos, the North Slope Borough would like to give an employment preference to Native Americans...." Similarly, the implementation plan for the ordinance expressly states that its purpose is to employ Inupiat Eskimo residents. Further, at oral argument counsel for the borough explained that one reason the term "Native American" was defined in terms of tribal membership was that it served to distinguish eligible Native Americans from others who are not eligible for benefits under the preference ordinance even though they may have some Native American ancestors. Tribal membership was thus used as a convenient mechanism to describe bona fide Native Americans.
Based on the above we can say with confidence that the purpose of the ordinance was to discriminate on the basis of race. Because by the express terms of the civil rights clause of the Alaska Constitution race is a suspect category, the ordinance must be subjected to strict scrutiny in order to determine whether it is permissible under the equal rights and civil rights clauses.[3] But even if there were no clear indicators of an intent to discriminate on the basis of race, I believe that strict scrutiny would still be required because tribal membership is not only a political category but a racial one.[4]
I reach the conclusion that state or municipal laws that grant individual benefits differentially based on tribal membership should be subject to strict scrutiny for a number of reasons. As noted, this is how we treat all race-based classifications. Further, strict scrutiny is well designed to ensure that laws remain race-neutral, as contemplated by the *429 framers of the Alaska Constitution.[5] This case illustrates that tribal membership readily lends itself to use as a proxy for a racial classification and as a pretext for racial discrimination. An effective tool is necessary to prevent these abuses.[6] In addition, strict scrutiny is the approach taken by some federal courts in tribal classification cases when construing the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal constitution.[7] Since the federal constitution contains provisions authorizing legislation on behalf of Native Americans, while the Alaska Constitution presumptively prohibits such legislation,[8] it follows that stronger reasons exist for using the strict scrutiny method for state constitutional questions than for those arising under the federal constitution.
Although strict scrutiny review presents a high barrier, it is a barrier that may be overcome in deserving cases. It is impossible to categorize the kinds of cases that might pass strict scrutiny review. But a federal law calling on the state to give preferential treatment to tribal members[9] would almost certainly present a compelling justification for state legislation. On balance, I believe that strict scrutiny properly accommodates the state's strong interest in preventing discrimination on the basis of race and its relatively rare and limited need to act adjunctively with the federal government in programs that favor tribal members over other state citizens.
The present ordinance does not survive strict scrutiny review. As the opinion of the court establishes, the borough had no legitimate interest, much less a compelling one, in adopting the preference.[10] I believe therefore that the ordinance is prohibited by article I, sections 1 and 3 of the Alaska Constitution.
NOTES
[1] North Slope Borough Code (NSBC) § 2.20.150(A)(27) (1998). The original version of the hiring preference, NSB Ord. 80-26-12 (1997), did not include the extension of the preference to Native American applicants who failed to meet some of the minimum qualifications. NSB Ordinance 80-26-13 (March 3, 1998) (amending NSBC § 2.20.150(A)(27)).
[2] Section 703(i) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 is codified as 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(i) (1994).
[3] Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 is codified as subchapter e of 42 U.S.C. § 2000 (1994). Subchapter e broadly proscribes various forms of discriminatory employment practices.
[4] 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(i) (1994).
[5] Alaska Appellate Rule 407 authorizes the supreme court to answer questions of state law certified to it by certain federal courts, including courts of appeals.
[6] The Alaska Human Rights Act, AS 18.80.010-18.80.300, was originally enacted in 1963. Ch. 15, SLA 1963. The legislature extended the protections of the Act to bar unlawful employment discrimination by the state or its political subdivisions in 1966. Ch. 79, § 1, SLA 1966 (enacting AS 18.80.255). AS 18.80.255 provides in relevant part: "It is unlawful for the state or any of its political subdivisions ... to refuse, withhold from, or deny to a person any local, state, or federal funds, services, goods, facilities, advantages, or privileges because of race, religion, sex, color, or national origin[.]"
[7] AS 18.80.220(a)(1).
[8] AS 29.20.630 provides in relevant part:
(a) A person may not be appointed to or removed from municipal office or in any way favored or discriminated against with respect to a municipal position or municipal employment because of the person's race, color, sex, creed, national origin or, unless otherwise contrary to law, because of the person's political opinions or affiliations.
....
(c) This section applies to home rule and general law municipalities.
[9] NSB Charter § 16.020.
[10] 417 U.S. 535, 94 S.Ct. 2474, 41 L.Ed.2d 290 (1974).
[11] See id. at 538, 551, 554, 94 S.Ct. 2474.
[12] See id. at 539, 551, 94 S.Ct. 2474.
[13] See id. at 545-51, 94 S.Ct. 2474.
[14] See id. at 553 & n. 24, 94 S.Ct. 2474.
[15] See id. at 553 n. 24, 94 S.Ct. 2474.
[16] Id. at 554, 94 S.Ct. 2474.
[17] See, e.g., State, Dep'ts of Transp. & Labor v. Enserch Alaska Constr., Inc., 787 P.2d 624, 631 & n. 11 (Alaska 1989).
[18] Alaska Pac. Assurance Co. v. Brown, 687 P.2d 264, 269-70 (Alaska 1984).
[19] 787 P.2d at 625.
[20] See id. at 631-32 (applying test from Brown, 687 P.2d at 269-70).
[21] Id. at 632 (citing Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm'n v. Apokedak, 606 P.2d 1255, 1266 (Alaska 1980)).
[22] Id. at 633 (citing Apokedak ).
[23] See id. at 634.
[24] Id. (alterations in original) (footnote omitted).
[25] Id.
[26] Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.S. 535, 551-52, 94 S.Ct. 2474, 41 L.Ed.2d 290 (1974).
[27] Id.
[28] Alaska Const. art. XII, § 12.
[29] See 4 Proceedings of Alaska Constitutional Convention 2525, 2527-91 (Jan. 18, 1956). As Delegate Davis said:
[W]e consider the Eskimo and the Indian a citizen just the same as all the rest of us. We don't consider that he is any better than we are, and we don't consider that he is any worse. He is a man just like we are; and he is entitled to all the rights and privileges and all the duties of citizenship, just as we are; and he is covered by the bill of rights that we are adopting here, just as we are.
Id. at 2536-37. See also Atkinson v. Haldane, 569 P.2d 151, 155 (Alaska 1977) (approvingly quoting Justice Frankfurter's opinion in Metlakatla Indian Cmty. v. Egan, 369 U.S. 45, 50-51, 82 S.Ct. 552, 7 L.Ed.2d 562 (1962)).
[30] See, e.g., Washington v. Confederated Bands & Tribes of Yakima Indian Nation, 439 U.S. 463, 501, 99 S.Ct. 740, 58 L.Ed.2d 740 (1979) (a state law relating to Native Americans does not create a "suspect" class for purposes of equal protection when enacted in direct response to congressional authorization specifically aimed at the state).
[31] See, e.g., Puget Sound Gillnetters Ass'n v. Moos, 92 Wash.2d 939, 603 P.2d 819, 824 (1979) (holding that the special status of Native Americans under federal law created a "permissible class" for purposes of state equal protection allowing Washington to protect treaty-guaranteed Native American access to fisheries in Washington after Supreme Court indicated in Washington v. Washington State Commercial Passenger Fishing Vessel Ass'n, 443 U.S. 658, 695-96, 99 S.Ct. 3055, 61 L.Ed.2d 823 (1979), that Supremacy Clause would grant federal courts power to enforce those rights directly).
[32] See Policy Statement on Indian Preference Under Title VII, N-915.027, 8 Lab. Rel. Rep. (BNA) (Fair Emp. Prac. Manual) 405:6647 (May 16, 1988). This interpretation accords with Mancari's view of the exception as a provision enacted in recognition "of the unique legal status of tribal and reservation-based activities." Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.S. 535, 545-46, 94 S.Ct. 2474, 41 L.Ed.2d 290 (1974) (discussing 703(i) exception); see also Dawavendewa v. Salt River Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist., 154 F.3d 1117, 1118, 1124 (9th Cir.1998) (holding that hiring preference for Navajos discriminates against Hopis and other Native Americans on basis of national origin).
[33] See NSBC § 2.20.150(A)(27) (1998) ("A Native American is a person belonging to an Indian tribe as defined in 25 U