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 Title AFL-CIO v. Chao

 Argued December 8, 2004             Decided May 31, 2005

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   United States Court of Appeals

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

Argued December 8, 2004                            Decided May 31, 2005

                              No. 04-5057

      AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR AND CONGRESS OF

                    INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATIONS,

                               APPELLANT

                                      v.

    ELAINE L. CHAO, UNITED STATES SECRETARY OF LABOR,

                                APPELLEE

            Appeal from the United States District Court

                      for the District of Columbia

                            (No. 03cv02464)

     Leon Dayan argued the cause for appellant.  With him on

the briefs were Robert M. Weinberg, Laurence Gold, Jonathan

P. Hiatt, Deborah Greenfield, and James B. Coppess.

     Jeffrey Clair, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, argued

the cause for appellee.  With him on the brief were Peter D.

Keisler, Assistant Attorney General, Kenneth L. Wainstein, U.S.

Attorney,  Michael  J.  Singer,  Attorney,  Nathaniel  I.  Spiller,


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Acting Associate Solicitor, U.S. Department of Labor, Andrew

D. Auerbach, Counsel, and William J. Stone, Senior Attorney.

      Raymond J. LaJeunesse, Jr. and Nathan Paul Mehrens were

on  the  brief  for  amici  curiae  National  Right  to Work Legal

Defense Foundation, Inc., et al. in support of appellee.

      Before: EDWARDS, ROGERS and ROBERTS, Circuit Judges.

      Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.

 

      Opinion  concurring  in  part  and  dissenting  in  part  filed  by

Circuit Judge ROBERTS.

      ROGERS, Circuit Judge:  The American Federation of Labor

and  Congress  of  Industrial  Organizations ("AFL-CIO")

challenges  the  Secretary  of  Labor's  interpretation of her

authority  under  sections  201(b)  and  208  of  the  Labor

Management  Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959

("LMRDA"), 29 U.S.C. §§ 431(b), 438 (2000), in promulgating

the Labor Organization Annual Financial Reports ("final rule"),

68 Fed. Reg. 58,374 (Oct. 9, 2003) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R.

pts.  403,  408).  Appealing the judgment of the district court

upholding  the  final  rule,  the  AFL-CIO contends that the

Secretary  exceeded  her  delegated  authority  in  two  respects:

First,  by  requiring  labor  organizations  to  include  item-by-item

listings of ordinary receipts and disbursements in revised Form

LM-2,  the  Secretary  ignored  a  limitation on her authority in

section 201(b).  Second, by imposing a general trust reporting

requirement  in  new  Form  T-1 that is unrelated to preventing

circumvention  or  evasion  of  reporting requirements under

LMRDA  Title  II,  the  Secretary  ignored a limitation on her

authority in section 208.

      Neither the plain language of section 201(b), its legislative


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history, nor prior administrative interpretation resolves the

ambiguity in section 201(b) regarding the level of detail that the

Secretary  may  require  labor  organizations  to  include in their

annual financial reports.  In light of the Secretary's explanation

for the changes to Form LM-2 in order to fulfill the purpose of

section  201(b),  we  hold  that  the  Secretary's  promulgation of

revised Form LM-2 is a reasonable application of her authority

under section 201(b).  We further hold that while the Secretary

has authority under section 208 to require labor organizations to

file  reports  on  certain  trusts  where necessary to prevent

circumvention or evasion of reporting requirements under

LMRDA Title II, the Secretary's promulgation of new Form T-1

has exceeded her authority by requiring general trust reporting.

Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court in part,

reverse in part, and we vacate the provisions of the final rule

relating to Form T-1.

                                     I.

      Title II of the LMRDA, entitled "Reporting By Labor

Organizations, Officers and Employees of Labor Organizations,

and  Employers,"  requires  labor  organizations to report on a

number of activities.  Section 201(b) of Title II requires each

covered  labor  organization  ("union")  to  file  with  the  Secretary

an annual financial report "in such detail as may be necessary

accurately to disclose its financial condition and operations for

its  preceding  fiscal  year"  ­  "all  in  such  categories  as  the

Secretary may prescribe."1  29 U.S.C. § 431(b).  Subparts (1),

1  Section 201(b) provides:

           Every  labor  organization  shall  file  annually  with  the

      Secretary  a  financial  report  signed  by  its  president and

      treasurer or corresponding principal officers containing the

      following information in such detail as may be necessary

      accurately to disclose its financial condition and operations


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(2),  and  (6)  require  reports  of  (1)  "assets  and liabilities," (2)

"receipts"  and  their  "sources,"  and  (6)  "other  disbursements"

and their "purposes."  Id. § 431(b)(1), (2), (6).  Subparts (3), (4),

and (5) require more detailed reporting, subject to threshold

dollar  amounts, of specific types of disbursements ­ including

salary  and  related  payments  to  union  officers  and employees,

loans to union insiders, and loans to business enterprises.  Id. §

431(b)(3)-(5).       The financial report, upon filing with the

Secretary, becomes public information.  Id. § 435.  Section 208

of Title II authorizes the Secretary to prescribe the "form and

     for its preceding fiscal year­

           (1) assets and liabilities at the beginning and end of the

     fiscal year;

           (2) receipts of any kind and the sources thereof;

           (3)  salary,  allowances, and other direct or indirect

     disbursements  (including  reimbursed  expenses)  to  each

     officer and also to each employee who, during such fiscal

     year, received more than $10,000 in the aggregate from such

     labor  organization  and any other labor organization

     affiliated with it or with which it is affiliated, or which is

     affiliated  with  the  same  national or international labor

     organization;

           (4)  direct  and  indirect  loans  made  to  any  officer,

     employee, or member, which aggregated more than $250

     during  the  fiscal  year,  together  with  a  statement  of  the

     purpose, security, if any, and arrangements for repayment;

           (5) direct and indirect loans to any business enterprise,

     together with a statement of the purpose, security, if any,

     and arrangements for repayment; and

           (6)  other  disbursements  made  by  it including the

     purposes thereof;

     all in such categories as the Secretary may prescribe.

29 U.S.C. § 431(b).  


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publication" of the various reports required under Title II.2  Id.

§ 438.  

     In  promulgating  the  implementing  regulations for section

201(b)  in  1960,  the  Secretary  of  Labor required unions with

gross annual receipts equal to or greater than a certain dollar

threshold  to  file  an  annual  financial  report  on  Department of

Labor Form LM-2.  See 25 Fed. Reg. 433 (Jan. 20, 1960)

(codified at 29 C.F.R. pt. 403).  Unions with lower receipts filed

reports on simplified Forms LM-3 or LM-4.  Id. at 433-34.

Form  LM-2  called  for reporting of assets and liabilities and

receipts and general disbursements in aggregate amounts.  Form

LM-2 required unions to itemize their disbursements only with

respect to the transactions specified in subparts (3), (4), and (5)

of  section  201(b).     The 1960 regulations required unions to

retain,  for  a  five-year  period,  vouchers, receipts, and other

underlying  documentation  in  sufficient  detail  to  permit  these

reports to be "verified, explained or clarified, and checked for

accuracy and completeness."  Id. at 434; see also 29 U.S.C. §

436.  With the exception of the dollar filing threshold, these

reporting  requirements  remained  substantially unchanged for

more than four decades.  See 57 Fed. Reg. 14,244 (Apr. 17,

1992).  The Secretary periodically increased the filing threshold

for the Form LM-2 report so that, by 1994, only unions with

2  Section 208 provides that:

          The Secretary shall have authority to issue . . . rules and

      regulations prescribing the form and publication of reports

      required to be filed under this subchapter and such other

      reasonable  rules  and  regulations  .  . . as he may find

      necessary to prevent the circumvention or evasion of such

      reporting requirements.

29 U.S.C. § 438.


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annual receipts of $200,000 or more were required to complete

this longer form.  See 67 Fed. Reg. 79,280, 79,293 (Dec. 27,

2002).

      On October 9, 2003, the Secretary promulgated the final

rule  now  challenged,  calling  for  several  significant  changes  to

the financial reporting requirements under section 201(b).  The

final  rule  amended  Form  LM-2  to  require  unions  to  itemize

their  general  receipts  and  disbursements.  Unions  must  identify,

in six supporting schedules, individual receipts and (non-salary)

disbursements  made  to support a particular union function of

$5,000 or more, and specify the name, address, purpose, date,

and amount associated with each transaction.  68 Fed. Reg. at

58,429-30.  In addition to reporting such "major" transactions,

see id.  at  58,388-89,  each  union  officer  and  employee  must

provide a functional accounting, estimating the portion of work

time  spent  on  the  corresponding activities.       Id.  at  58,429.

Unions  also  must identify the vendors and other entities that

received  union  receipts  and  disbursements  of  $5,000  or  more

during  the  fiscal  year. Id.      Unions must further itemize all

accounts receivable and payable of $5,000 or more at the end of

the  fiscal  year  and  include  an "aging" schedule for each item

showing the amount of money owed to or by the union that is

either 90 to 180 days or more than 180 days past due.  Id. at

58,429, 58,452-53, 58,485, 58,491.  The final rule raised the

filing threshold to $250,000.  Id. at 58,383.  Each union filing a

Form LM-2 report must also file a separate Form T-1 report on

significant trusts in which the labor organization is interested, id.

at 58,477, disclosing the trust's assets, liabilities, receipts, and

disbursements,  as  well  as  certain  asset acquisitions or

dispositions,  liability  liquidations,  and  loans  extended  below

market rate or written off.  Id. at 58,518, 58,531.

      The AFL-CIO sued the Secretary, seeking injunctive and

declaratory  relief  that  the  final  rule  is  unlawful  under  the


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Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(C) (2000).  In

relevant  part,  the  complaint alleged that both the itemization

requirement in the revised Form LM-2 and the trust reporting

requirement  in  Form  T-1  were  in  excess of the Secretary's

authority under the LMRDA. Because the final rule would

become  effective in a matter of weeks, the complaint also

alleged that its effective date was unworkable.  The district court

denied  the  AFL-CIO  relief,  except  with respect to the

implementation  date,  which the court stayed until the later of

July 1, 2004, or ninety days after the Secretary makes available

a  fully  tested  electronic  reporting  software.      The AFL-CIO

appeals,  and  our  review  of  the  judgment denying relief is  de

novo.  Gas Appliance Mfrs. Ass'n v. Dep't of Energy, 998 F.2d

1041, 1045 (D.C. Cir. 1993).

                                  II.

      The AFL-CIO does not contest that Congress has delegated

authority to the Secretary to promulgate rules to enforce section

201(b).  Rather it challenges the Secretary's interpretation of her

authority to require itemization in the revised Form LM-2 under

section  201(b)  for  subparts  (1)  "assets  and  liabilities,"  (2)

"receipts," and (6) "other disbursements."  We therefore proceed

under the familiar two-step approach of Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v.

Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984),

to determine whether the Secretary's interpretation is entitled to

deference.       " E mploying traditional tools of statutory

construction" the court must determine whether "Congress has

an  intention  on  the  precise  question  at  issue,"  and if so "that

intention is the law and must be given effect." Id. at 843 n. 9

("Step 1").  If Congress has not directly spoken to the issue, the

court must defer to the Secretary's interpretation of the statute

if it is reasonable and not "manifestly contrary to the statute."

Id. at 844-45 ("Step 2").  

      The AFL-CIO contends that the issue of itemization is


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resolved under Chevron Step 1 because the accounting terms

"financial condition" and "operations" in section 201(b) have a

generally  understood  meaning  in the accounting field, signaling

Congress's intent to require an annual financial report similar to

those filed by corporations and nonprofits generally, and thus to

limit  the Secretary's authority to requiring aggregated financial

information in informative categories relevant to the unions that

are  required  to  report  the information.  While acknowledging

that the  operative statutory language of section 201(b) requires

a financial report containing information about assets, liabilities,

receipts, and disbursements "in such detail as may be necessary

accurately to disclose a union's  financial condition and

operations,"  the  AFL-CIO contends that the statute sets "a

concrete standard," and, contrary to the Secretary's view, does

not provide that the report shall be "at a minimum, in such detail

as  may  be  necessary" or "at  least  in  such  detail  as  may  be

necessary" to disclose financial condition and operations.  Br. of

Appellant at 20.  In the AFL-CIO's view, section 201(b) vests

a limited authority in the Secretary to develop an annual report

modeled on a corporate balance sheet and income statement, and

to  prescribe  categories  relevant  to  labor organizations for

reporting that information.

      The Secretary, in response, maintains that the AFL-CIO's

textual  argument  reads  the  statutory  terms  "financial  condition"

and "operations" in section 201(b) too narrowly in light of the

broader purposes of the LMRDA disclosure provisions.  If the

term "financial condition" referred only to a statement of assets

and liabilities, and "operations" to a statement of disbursements

and receipts, the Secretary maintains there would have been no

need for Congress to have included the phrase "in such detail as

may  be  necessary  accurately  to  disclose"  this  information or

subparts 201(b)(1), (2), and (6) regarding "assets and liabilities,"

"receipts," and "other disbursements."   The Secretary interprets

her rulemaking authority under section 208 to provide simplified


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reporting  requirements  as  necessarily presupposing general

authority to prescribe reporting detail in the first instance and

thus  vesting  "a  broad  legislative  authority  to  determine  the

appropriate form and the content of a required financial report."

Br. of Appellee at 28-29.

      While the AFL-CIO may be correct that the terms "financial

condition"  and  "operations"  have  a  generally  understood

meaning, in enacting section 201(b) Congress did not adopt the

precise  terms  of  art  ­  "statement  of  financial  condition" and

"statement  of  operations" that connote the typical corporate

income  statement  and  balance  sheet,  see  American  Institute  of

Certified Public Accountants, Accounting Trends & Techniques

in Published Corporate Annual Reports 6-7 (11th ed. 1957) ­

nor  did  it  expressly  provide,  for  example,  that  unions'  reports

should  be  made  "in  accordance  with  generally  accepted

accounting principles," cf. 12 U.S.C. §  1441a(k)(4)(B)(i) (2004).

These  terms  of art do not appear in the statutory text of the

LMRDA, and while there are references to "statements" in the

legislative  history,  specifically  to  "a  statement  of  assets  and

liabilities and a statement of receipts and expenditures,"  S. Rep.

No.  86-187,  at  8-9  (emphasis  added),  the  word  "statements"

itself does not define the required level of detail nor necessarily

preclude itemized reporting.

      The AFL-CIO also purports to find support for its Chevron

Step  1  position  in  legislative  history  regarding  the  relationship

between the reporting requirements of the LMRDA and reporting

requirements  of  its  predecessor,  the  Labor  Management

Relations Act of 1947 ("Taft-Hartley Act"), ch. 120, § 9(f), 61

Stat. 136, 145 (1947).          It maintains that section 201(b)'s

reporting requirements were intended to mirror the requirements

of  section  9(f)  of  the  Taft-Hartley Act, with three additional

requirements, in which specific detail was required, set forth in

subparts (3), (4) and (5).  It points to legislative history which


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states, "The information required to be filed by unions under this

title  is  similar to that required by section 9(f) of the Taft-

Hartley  Act."  S. Rep. No. 86-187, at 8 (1959), reprinted in

1959 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2318, 2325; see H.R. Rep. No. 86-1147

(Conference), at 7, 31-32 (1959),  reprinted  in  1959

U.S.C.C.A.N. 2503, 2504.  Section 9(f) of the Taft-Hartley Act

required a union that wished to use the facilities of the National

Labor Relations Board to file two reports, one addressing subject

matters similar to those listed in LMRDA section 201(a), and the

other  reporting  all  receipts and their sources, total assets and

liabilities, and disbursements and their purposes.  61 Stat. at 145.

The  LMRDA  Senate  Report  stated,  "The  information  to  be

reported  under  the committee bill comprehends all the

information  required  to be reported under present law. The

committee bill, in addition, requires certain information to be

reported  that  does  not  have  to  be  specifically  detailed  under

present law," referencing the information required under the new

provisions, sections 201(b)(3), (4), (5), and 201(a).  S. Rep. No.

86-187, at 36.  The House Report called for repeal of section 9(f)

of  the  Taft-Hartley  Act,  in  order  to  eliminate  the  filing  of

duplicate  reports,  stating that its "bill will require labor

organizations  to  file  substantially  the same information with the

Secretary  of  Labor,"  H.R.  Rep.  No.  86-741,  at  33  (1959),

reprinted in 1959 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2424, 2456.

      From  this  legislative  history the AFL-CIO draws the

conclusion that the "present law" reference includes not only the

text of section 9(f) but also the implementing regulations

promulgated by the Secretary of Labor in 1948, which did not

require  itemization  and called only for aggregated reporting of

receipts and their sources, assets and liabilities, and

disbursements.  See Registration Form for Labor Organizations,

22 Labor Relations Reference Manual 3002 (1948).  For  further

support  of  its  position  that  in  enacting the LMRDA Congress

intended  unions  to  file  reports  similar  to  the  aggregate income


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statement/balance sheet reporting then required, the AFL-CIO

points to several statements in the legislative history of the Taft-

Hartley  Act  indicating  that  Congress contemplated a particular

kind of financial reporting by unions: (1) statements by Senator

Taft, a principal sponsor of the Taft-Hartley  Act, that "financial

reports . . . are made in many unions today," and explaining that

under  the  Taft-Hartley  bill  "the  union  must  file statements as

corporations  have  had  to  file  them,"  see  2  National Labor

Relations Board, Legislative History of the Labor Management

Relations Act 1000, 1014, 1654  (1947); and (2) a statement in

the  Taft-Hartley minority report by three Senators that

" v irtually  all  of  the  international  unions  of  both  the  CIO and

the  A.F.  of  L.  already  furnish  regular  financial  reports and

accounts of their activities," 1 National Labor Relations Board,

Legislative History of the Labor Management Relations Act 484

(1947).

      Whatever persuasive force this legislative history of the

Taft-Hartley  Act  may  have  in  devining  congressional  intent  in

enacting the LMRDA, the AFL-CIO's  "present law" contention

fails because the revised 1957 Taft-Hartley regulations in effect

when  Congress enacted the LMRDA required more detailed

reporting  by  unions,  including  certain itemized disclosures of

receipts and disbursements.  See 22 Fed. Reg. 4,158, 4,158-60

(June 13, 1957).  The 1957 regulations included several itemized

reporting  schedules: Schedule A instructed unions to " i temize

any receipts from sale of assets," and other schedules addressing

receipts  from  other  sources  and other disbursements required

unions to " s eparately identify each individual item representing

one or more transactions during the year with an individual or

organization if the total amount of such individual item is in

excess of 25 percent of the schedule total." Id. at 4,160.  The

isolated  statements in the legislative history relied on by the

AFL-CIO do not contradict this reality.


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     Likewise,  the  AFL-CIO's  structural arguments do not

demonstrate  a  clear  congressional  intent.  First, the AFL-CIO

would  contrast  the  language  in  subparts  (3),  (4), and (5) of

section 201(b), in which Congress required specific details, with

that in subparts (1), (2), and (6), in which Congress did not, to

suggest that Congress intended that unions would report assets,

liabilities,  receipts,  and  other disbursements only in aggregate

categories.  However, the general provision providing that the

reports must contain "the following information in such detail as

may  be  necessary  accurately  to  disclose"  reasonably  may  be

interpreted to apply equally to the six specific subparts, including

assets  and  liabilities,  receipts,  and  other  disbursements. That

Congress required greater detail in subparts (3), (4), and (5) does

not necessarily mean that it intended to limit detail in reporting

under subparts (1), (2), and (6), particularly when it also granted

the  Secretary  discretionary  authority  to  prescribe  the  required

"form"  and "categories" for reporting.  29 U.S.C. §§ 431(c).

Section  208,  in  turn,  by  limiting the Secretary's regulatory

authority  to  rules  "necessary  to prevent the circumvention or

evasion" of reporting requirements under LMRDA Title II, also

leaves undefined the level of detail that may be required.  Id. §

438.

     Second,  the  AFL-CIO  contends that the Secretary's

interpretation  of  subsection 201(b) puts that provision in an

irreconcilable tension with subsection 201(c).  Subsection 201(c)

provides that any union member "for just cause" may examine

any books, records, and accounts necessary to verify the union's

annual financial report.  29 U.S.C. § 431(c).  In the AFL-CIO's

view, requiring unions to reveal to the general public individual

item-by-item disbursement and receipt information that Congress

permitted unions to protect even from union members through

subsection 201(c)'s "just cause" provision renders that protection

meaningless.  However, as the Secretary points out, there is no

necessary inconsistency between the itemization required by the


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Form LM-2 under the final rule and subsection 201(c) because

subsection 201(c) simply requires disclosure of data underlying

subsection 201(b) reports, and additional detail in the subsection

201(b) reports would facilitate a union member's right to probe

further pursuant to subsection 201(c).

     Given the ambiguity in the statutory text and structure, and

the  lack  of  clear  intent  in  the  legislative history regarding the

level  of  public  financial  reporting  detail  that  the  Secretary  may

require, we agree with the Secretary that our inquiry should

proceed under Chevron Step 2.  Under Chevron Step 2, courts

owe  deference  to an agency's interpretation of a statute it is

entrusted to administer.  Chevron, 467 U.S. at 844.  At the same

time, when statutory language is ambiguous it is not a foregone

conclusion that an agency's interpretation is a reasonable one to

which  the  court  must  defer.  See  Whitman  v.  Am.  Trucking

Ass'ns, 531 U.S. 457, 480 (2001); Associated Gas Distribs. v.

FERC, 899 F.2d 1250, 1253 (D.C. Cir. 1990).  Under Chevron

Step 2, "the question for the court is whether the agency's

interpretation  is  based  on  a  permissible  construction  of  the

statute,"  Chevron,  467  U.S.  at  843,  in  light  of  its  "language,

structure, and purpose," Int'l Alliance of Theatrical & Stage

Employees v. NLRB,  334 F.3d 27, 34 n.3 (D.C. Cir. 2003)

(citations omitted).

     The Secretary contends that deference principles apply with

greater force here because Congress has empowered her to act to

prevent  circumvention  or  evasion of the LMRDA. Citing

Mourning v. Family Publications Service, Inc., 411 U.S. 356

(1973), the Secretary maintains that absent an abuse of discretion

or  an  express statutory limitation on the broad delegation of

authority  to  the  Secretary by Congress, the AFL-CIO cannot

show  that  the  Secretary acted beyond her authority in

promulgating the final rule.  However, the court is obligated not

only to construe the statute as a whole but to give meaning to


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each  word of the statute.              See  Alaska  Dep't  of  Envtl.

Conservation v. EPA, 540 U.S. 461, 489 n.13 (2004); Asiana

Airlines v. FAA,  134 F.3d 393, 398 (D.C. Cir. 1998).  The

language of the LMRDA is more limited than that addressed in

Mourning.  Sections 201(b) and 208 authorize the Secretary to

prescribe  detail  "necessary  accurately  to  disclose   a  union's

financial condition and operations" and "necessary to prevent the

circumvention  or  evasion  of  such  reporting  requirements,"

respectively, rather than more generally to act as is "necessary to

carry out the purposes" or "provisions" of a statute, as discussed

in Mourning.  Cf. Mourning, 411 U.S. at 369-70.  Therefore,

under Chevron Step 2, the court's deference to the Secretary is

still  limited  by  the  particular  language  of  sections  201(b)  and

208.  Even when Congress has stated that the agency may do

what is "necessary," see AT & T Corp. v. Iowa Utils. Bd., 525

U.S. 366, 387-92 (1999); GTE Serv. Corp. v. FCC, 205 F.3d 416,

422-23 (D.C. Cir. 2000), whatever ambiguity may exist cannot

render nugatory restrictions that Congress has imposed.  Cf. Am.

Trucking Ass'ns, 531 U.S. at 484.  

       In  promulgating  the  final  rule  the  Secretary  justified the

revised Form LM-2 reporting requirements as follows:

            The  forms  no  longer  serve  their  underlying  purpose

            because  they  fail  to  provide  union  members with

            sufficient  information  to  reasonably  disclose  to them

            `the financial condition and operation s '  of  labor

            organizations . . . . I t is impossible for union members

            to  evaluate  in  any  meaningful  way  the  operations  or

            management  of  their  unions  when  the financial

            disclosure  reports  filed  .  .  .  simply  report large

            expenditures for broad, general categories.  The large

            dollar  amount and vague description of such entries

            make it essentially impossible for anyone to determine

            with  any  degree  of  specificity what union operations


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             their dues are spent on, without which the purposes of

             the LMRDA are not met.  

68  Fed.  Reg.  at  58,420  (emphasis  added).         Responding to

arguments that she lacked authority to require itemization, the

Secretary  stated  that  the  financial  reporting  requirements  under

section  201(b)  only  set  minimum  standards  because  she  may

require unions "to report every receipt and disbursement in any

amount."  Id. at 58,376.  But, as the quotation from the preamble

indicates, the Secretary recognizes the limitation on her authority

to require greater detail only as "necessary accurately to disclose

a  union's   financial  condition and operations."  29 U.S.C. §

431(b).  The final rule limits the disclosures on Form LM-2 to

major transactions.  To the extent the Secretary asserts she has

discretion  over  the  "content"  of  a  financial report, Br. of

Appellee at 29, this would be true only to the extent that she

means the authority to determine categories of data and level of

detail  because,  as  the  AFL-CIO  points out, Congress

intentionally deleted the word "content" from an earlier version

of section 208.  Compare 1 National Labor Relations Board,

Legislative History of the Labor-Management Reporting and

Disclosure Act 44 (1959) (text of S. 505), with 29 U.S.C. §

431(b).

      In promulgating the revised Form LM-2, the Secretary

explained that the final rule promotes the two purposes of union

reporting:  "to  fully  inform  union  members"  about their union's

"financial condition and operations" and "to deter union officials

and  employees"  from  misusing union funds.  68 Fed. Reg. at

58,377.   The Secretary reasoned that under current reporting

requirements,  " t he  large  dollar  amount  and  vague  description

of  .  .  .  entries make it essentially impossible for members to

determine  whether  or  not  their  dues  were  spent  appropriately,

which is precisely the reason that the statute requires reporting."

67  Fed.  Reg.  at  79,281-82.  More detailed reporting would


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                                  16


"provid e  union members with useful data that will enable them

to  be  responsible and effective participants in the democratic

governance of their unions."  Id.  at 79,280-81.  The AFL-CIO

has pointed to nothing in the contemporary understanding of the

LMRDA  or  its  legislative  history  to  suggest  that  the  aggregate

reporting in the Form LM-2 required by the Secretaries, albeit

for four decades, represented the full exercise of the Secretary's

authority.  See 68 Fed. Reg. at 58,376-77.  Rather, the "present

law"  analysis,  which  the  AFL-CIO contends informed

Congress's intent with regard to the level of detail to be required

under  section 201(b),  supports the Secretary's view that the

Taft-Hartley  Act  afforded  the  Secretary  authority that

encompasses requiring itemized accounting of major

transactions.    Although Congress intended to carry out its

prophylactic  purposes  through  a multi-pronged approach,

including  reporting,  investigatory,  and  criminal  provisions,  see

29 U.S.C. §§ 432, 433, 453, 436, 439, 521; see United States v.

Budzanoski, 462 F.2d 443, 449-50, 452 (3d Cir. 1972); Int'l Bhd.

of Teamsters v. Wirtz, 346 F.2d 827, 831 (D.C. Cir. 1965); see

also Mallick v. Int'l Bhd. of Elec. Workers, 749 F.2d 771, 780

(D.C. Cir. 1984) (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 86-741, at 7), it

declined  to  specify  what  the  balance  should  be  among  these

approaches, see Chevron, 467 U.S. at 865, and the Secretary

could reasonably conclude that " p roviding additional detail on

Form LM-2 . . . is necessary to give union members an accurate

picture  of  their  labor  organization's  financial condition and

operations," 68 Fed. Reg. at 58,420.

    In sum, section 201(b) authorizes the Secretary to require

certain  information  "in  such  detail" "in such categories," but

only for the purpose of "accurately . . . disclos ing   a union's

financial conditions and operations."  29 U.S.C. § 431(b).  The

Secretary's promulgation of revised Form LM-2 is a reasonable

application  of  this  authority.   Accordingly, we hold that the

Secretary's  revision  of  Form  LM-2  is  permissible  and not


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"manifestly contrary to the statute."  Chevron, 467 U.S. at 844-

45.

                                   III.  

     The  final  rule  also  requires  unions with annual receipts of

$250,000 or more to file a report on Department of Labor Form

T-1  regarding  any  "significant trust" "in which the labor

organization  is  interested."     68 Fed. Reg. at 58,477.        The

LMRDA  defines a "trust in which the labor organization is

interested" as one that (1) was either "created or established by

a labor organization, or where  one or more of the trustees or .

. . members of the governing body . . . is selected or appointed by

a labor organization," and (2) "a primary purpose of which is to

provide benefits for the members of such labor organizations or

their beneficiaries."  29 U.S.C. § 402(l).  The final rule defines

a "significant trust" as one having annual receipts of $250,000 or

more during its most recent fiscal year, and for which the union's

financial  contribution  to  the  trust,  or  the contribution made on

behalf of the union or as a result of a negotiated agreement to

which the union is a party, is $10,000 or more annually.  68 Fed.

Reg.  at  58,478.  Form T-1 requires a report on the financial

condition  and  operations  of  such  union-related  trusts, including

"the  total value of all the trust assets," "liabilities," "receipts,"

and "disbursements," and it requires itemization of receipts and

disbursements of $10,000 or more, similar to the revised Form

LM-2 requirement.  See 68 Fed. Reg. at 58,531-32.  A union is

excused from filing Form T-1 where the trust has made a similar

financial  disclosure  under  other  laws,  such  as the Internal

Revenue Code or the Employment Retirement Income Security

Act  of  1974  ("ERISA"),  29  U.S.C.  §§  1023,  1024(a),  1030

(2000), or in an independent audit, 68 Fed. Reg. at 58,478.

     There is no serious dispute over whether Congress delegated

authority to the Secretary to promulgate rules to enforce section

208.  Indeed, section 208 provides that " t he Secretary  shall


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have  authority  to issue, amend, and rescind . . . such . . .

reasonable  rules  and  regulations (including rules prescribing

reports concerning trusts in which a union  is interested) as s he

may find necessary to prevent the circumvention or evasion of

Title II's  reporting requirements." 29 U.S.C. § 438 (emphasis

added).     Thus, the question presented by the AFL-CIO's

contention  that  the  Secretary  lacks  authority  to  require  general

trust reporting is whether Form T-1 comports with the statutory

requirements  that  the  Secretary  "find   the  rule   necessary  to

prevent" evasion of LMRDA Title II reporting requirements.  Id.

As  the Secretary suggests, this question is properly resolved

under Chevron Step 2.

     Under section 208, the Secretary may require reporting of

union-related trusts where a two-part nexus is met: A union must

have an interest in the trust as defined in 29 U.S.C. § 402(l), and

the required reporting must be "necessary" only for the purpose

of  "prevent ing   the circumvention or evasion of union

reporting  requirements"  under  LMRDA  Title II,  id.  §  438.

Given  the  ambiguity  inherent  in  the  word  "necessary," the

question remains whether, under Chevron Step 2, the Secretary's

interpretation of what is "necessary," as embodied in Form T-1,

is limited to preventing such circumvention or evasion, and thus

is  a  reasonable  application  of  her  authority,  and  therefore is

permissible and entitled to deference.  See Chevron, 467 U.S. at

844-45.       The AFL-CIO contends that the Secretary's

interpretation  is  not  permitted,  contrasting  the  more  restrictive

language in section 208 with broader rulemaking authority, such

as section 30 of the Securities and Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C.§

78dd (2000), and in Mourning, discussed supra Part II.  Under

section  208, the AFL-CIO maintains, the Secretary must

determine  that  certain  transactions are being rendered

unreportable by reason of the fact they are being carried out by

a trust in which a union is interested, and for those trusts the

Secretary is empowered to prescribe reports concerning such


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                                    19


trusts  that  disclose  affected  transactions.   We conclude that

although the Secretary has identified circumstances where union

reporting  requirements  under  Title  II  may  be  circumvented or

evaded, Form T-1 goes further to require general trust reporting,

and thus it is not a reasonable interpretation of her authority

under section 208.  

     The  Secretary  correctly  points  out that the statutory

definition of "trusts in which a union has an interest," 29 U.S.C.

§ 402(l), is sufficiently broad to encompass trusts that are neither

financed nor controlled by unions.  Its terms do not dictate a

narrow conception of union financial operations, such that, as the

AFL-CIO maintains, Taft-Hartley employee benefit plans funded

by employer rather than union contributions to an entity legally

separate from the union, whose funds are ordinarily disbursed to

third parties, would be beyond the reach of section 208.  For such

trusts, the union has used its bargaining power to establish the

trust, to define the purposes for which funds may be used, to

appoint union representatives to the governing board in a number

equal  to  management  representatives,  and  to  obligate  the

employer to direct funds to the trust's account.  See id. § 186 (c)

(5) (A) & (B).  As the Secretary explained in proposing the final

rule:

          Since  the  money  an  employer  contributes  to such a

          "trust" for union members' benefit might otherwise

          have been paid directly to the workers in the form of

          increased wages and benefits, the members on whose

          behalf  the  financial  transaction  was negotiated have a

          right  to  know  what  funds were contributed, how the

          money is managed and how it is being spent.

67 Fed. Reg. at 79,283.  

     In  "find ing  necessary" the Form T-1 requirements, the


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Secretary identified the types of union transactions rendered

unreportable by reason of the fact that a union has made a direct

or indirect contribution to a trust in which a union is interested.

In promulgating proposed Form T-1, the Secretary illustrated the

need for additional reporting on organizations that are not wholly

owned  by  unions  by  pointing  to  examples in which union

members  could  not  obtain  "detailed,  reliable  information  on

significant trusts' financial operations."  67 Fed Reg. at 79,283.

The first example involved the use of joint training funds to host

extravagant parties for trustees and to pay union officials

supplementary salaries.  Id.  In a second example, twenty-nine

local unions made monthly contributions of $62,000 each to a

statewide  strike  fund  that  went  unreported  because  no single

union  wholly  owned  the  fund.       Id.   The  third  example also

illustrated unreported union financial activity that involved a

building  fund  established by local union officials and financed

in  part  by  union  members'  pension funds.         Id.  Lastly, the

Secretary pointed to the example of a credit union that was 97%

financed by a local union and which made large loans to union

officials, employees, and their family members.  Id.

     The  Secretary  explained  that  such  "separate  organizations

pose the same transparency challenges as `off-the-books'

accounting  procedures  in  the  corporate  setting:  large-scale

potentially  unattractive  financial  transactions  can  be  shielded

from  public  disclosure  and  accountability  through  artificial

structures,  classifications,  and  organizations."  67 Fed. Reg. at

79,282.  She  concluded that reporting on such organizations that

meet the statutory definition of union-related trusts is necessary

to  give  union  members  an  accurate  picture of their union's

financial  condition  and  operations and to prevent the

circumvention or evasion of union reporting requirements on

their financial condition and operations.  68 Fed. Reg. at 58,420.

The examples illustrate that certain union transactions are being

rendered unreportable by reason of the fact they are being carried


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                                   21


out by organizations that are not wholly owned by the related

union.  

     The AFL-CIO concedes, as it must, that the Secretary is

empowered to prescribe reports concerning trusts that disclose

payments of salaries, compensation, other valuable perquisite to

a union officer or employee.  Contrary to the AFL-CIO's view,

however,  neither  the  statutory  definition  of  "trusts  in  which  a

union  is  interested"  nor  section  208's  requirement that such

reporting  be  "necessary to prevent" limit the Secretary to

requiring  reporting  only  after  union  members'  funds  have  been

misused  where  the  trust  has  not  been  established  or  is  not

controlled by a single union.  Cf. Mourning, 411 U.S. at 373-74.

As  the  Secretary  responds,  the  AFL-CIO's  "rigidly  formalistic

interpretation"  is  inconsistent  with  section  208's  express

authorization  of  the  Secretary  "to  require  reporting  on  union-

related trusts whenever the Secretary determines such reporting

is  necessary to effectuate the statute's basic disclosure

obligation."  Br. of Appellee at 53.  Section 208's focus is not on

the independent legal status of the trust but on its control over

funds provided for the benefit of union members, even if those

funds are provided to a separately administered account rather

than directly to the union.  67 Fed. Reg. at 79,282.  The trusts

that the Secretary has identified in her examples are established

by  one  or  more unions or through collective bargaining

agreements calling for employer contributions, and the union has

retained a controlling management role in the organization.  See

id. at 79,283.  Their primary purpose is to benefit union members

or their beneficiaries.  See id.  They are financed by a union,

multiple  unions,  or  employer  contributions  as  a  result of

collective  bargaining  agreements.       See  id.     The  Secretary

determined that previous reporting requirements allowed the

related union to circumvent or evade reporting on these trusts'

financial  activities  because  the  related  union  had  not  itself

established or did not alone control the trust.  Id. at 79,282-83.


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Form T-1 captures such trusts where the trust involves at least

$10,000 of union members' funds and requires reporting on

those trusts' use of the union members' funds.  Section 208 does

not  limit  the  Secretary  to  requiring  reporting  only in order to

disclose  transactions  involving  the  misuse  of  union  members'

funds because leaving the decision about disclosure to such trusts

illustrated by the Secretary's examples would allow unions to

circumvent  or  evade  reporting  on  the  use of members' funds

diverted to the trust.

     However,  the  AFL-CIO  contends that LMRDA Title II

reporting  requirements, with which section 208 is solely

concerned, embodies Congress's categorical legislative judgment

that it is in the public interest to require unions to file financial

reports disclosing union  financial  condition  and  operations  and

to  require  union  officers  and  employees to file more narrowly

focused financial reports.  See 29 U.S.C. §§ 432(a), 433(a).  The

AFL-CIO maintains that the Secretary, in promulgating Form T-

1,  justified  its  requirements  by  reference  to  her  determination

that  it  was  in  the  public  interest  to  enable  union members to

"determine whether trust  funds are being spent in ways that

benefit the members for whom they were created," 67 Fed. Reg.

at 79,283, rather than by reference to whether the requirements

were "necessary to prevent" union circumvention or evasion of

Title  II  reporting  requirements.  In its view, the Secretary has

effectively established a new reporting requirement under section

201(b) for some trusts in which a union has an interest without

reference to the limitation in the "necessary to prevent" clause of

section 208.  

     There can be little doubt that some of the trust reporting the

Secretary has required on Form T-1 is tied to a union's financial

reporting  requirements  under  LMRDA  Title  II.            Form T-1

includes  reporting  on  trusts  illustrated by the Secretary's

examples: trusts  funded by union members' funds from one or


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more  unions  and  employers,  and,  although unions retain a

controlling  management  role,  no individual union wholly owns

or dominates the trust, and therefore the use of the funds is not

reported by the related union under Title II.  See 68 Fed. Reg. at

58,374.  This includes trusts established by one or more unions

with  union  members' funds because such establishment is a

reasonable indicium of union control of that trust.  The AFL-CIO

does not dispute that Title II would otherwise require a union to

report its uses of such members' funds.  Rather, the AFL-CIO

contends  that  the  actual  requirements of the final rule are far

broader  than  suggested  by  the Secretary's examples, and the

Secretary's conclusion that additional reporting on significant

trusts was "necessary to prevent" was based merely on the fact

that  the  organizations met the statutory definition of "trusts in

which a union  has an interest," and not on the realization that,

as the examples illustrated, a union could circumvent or evade

Title  II's  financial  reporting  requirements  by directing union

members' funds to such trusts.

     Form  T-1  requires  reporting  of  all  trust  assets,  liabilities,

disbursements, and receipts, and itemization of all major

disbursements  and  receipts.         Where a union has directed

members'  funds  to  the  trusts identified in the Secretary's

examples, a union's report on such trust's use of the funds has no

less a direct nexus to the union's reporting obligation under Title

II than the salary, compensation, and other valuable perquisite to

a union official or employee that the AFL-CIO concedes has a

direct nexus.  The Form T-1 requirements, however, are not

limited  to  addressing  only  the  types  of  union  transactions  the

Secretary  offers  to  illustrate  that  additional trust reporting was

required  to  prevent  circumvention  or  evasion  of  union  Title II

reporting requirements.  Form T-1 reaches information unrelated

to union reporting requirements and mandates reporting on trusts

even where there is no appearance that the union's contribution

of funds to an independent organization could circumvent or


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evade  union  reporting  requirements  by,  for  example,  permitting

the  union  to  maintain  control  of  the  funds.  This is the salient

point  our  dissenting  colleague  misses,  for  the  plain  text  of

section 208 itself limits the Secretary's authority with respect to

trust reporting.  See dissenting op. at 4-5. For example, where the

union's management role is limited to selecting a single member

of  a  trust's  governing  board,  see  29  U.S.C.  §  402(l)(1),  and

neither the related union's financial contribution nor that of other

unions  to  the  trust  dominates  the  trust's  revenues,  Form  T-1

nonetheless  requires  the  union  to  report  on  the  trust's other

receipts  over  $10,000.      Yet, absent circumstances involving

dominant union control over the trust's use of union members'

funds or union members' funds constituting the trust's

predominant revenues, a  report on the trust's financial condition

and operations would not reflect on the related union's financial

condition  and  operations,  or  at  least  the  Secretary  has  not  so

found, much less made a determination that such a report would

be  necessary  to  prevent  circumvention  or  evasion  of  union

reporting requirements.  Our dissenting colleague acknowledges

the Secretary  must make such findings.  See dissenting op. at 4,

8.

     At no point, for example, has the Secretary suggested that a

union's role in selecting one member of the governing board of

an  independent  organization  qualifying  as  a  union-related trust

to  which  at  least  $10,000  in  union  members'  funds  was

contributed  ­  which,  under  the  Form  T-1  formulation, could

comprise  infinitely  less  than  4%  of  the  trust's total revenues,

depending  on  how large the union's total revenues are ­

demonstrated  sufficient  union  influence  over  those  members'

funds,  or  any  other  connection  that  could  give  rise  to

circumvention or evasion of a union's Title II reporting

requirements.  Form T-1, however, would require full financial

reporting  by  such  organization.  The Secretary's determination

that union members would benefit from "more information about


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                                   25


the  financial activities of a `fund in which a union  has an

interest,'" 67 Fed. Reg. at 79,283, obviously is not the same as

the determination required by section 208 that reporting on such

a fund is necessary to prevent union circumvention or evasion of

Title II reporting requirements.       Similarly, the Secretary also

misconstrued her authority under section 208 when she explained

that she was attempting to remedy a problem of existing

reporting requirements, namely that "if a union transfers funds

to  another  organization,  but  does  not  disclose  disbursements

made by that organization, union members may have no way to

determine whether the funds in question were actually spent for

the benefit of members."  Id. at  79,282.  While that may be true,

section 208 limits the Secretary's authority to require reporting

on  trusts  to  instances  where  necessary  to  avoid a union's

circumvention  or  evasion  of  its  Title  II  reporting requirements;

the statute does not provide general authority to require trusts to

demonstrate  that  they  operate  in  a  manner  beneficial  to  union

members.  Thus, although the Secretary's examples illustrate the

type of transactions that pertain to the circumvention or evasion

of  union  Title  II  reporting requirements and therefore

permissibly could be included in Form T-1, the flaw in Form T-1

is  that  it also reaches information unconnected to the

circumvention or evasion of union Title II reporting

requirements.

     That Form T-1 reaches information unrelated to a union's

Title II reporting requirements is underscored by contrasting the

bright line $10,000 test with an alternative test explored by the

Secretary.       In proposing Form T-1, the Secretary initially

considered use of a "single entity" test ­ defined in the notice of

proposed  rulemaking  as  "an  entity  that  is  `dominated  or

controlled by the labor organization to such a degree that assets,

liabilities,  receipts,  and  disbursements  of  the  entity  effectively

are those of the union itself.'"  68 Fed. Reg. at 58,415 (quoting

67 Fed. Reg. at 79,285).  The Secretary ultimately rejected this


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                                   26


test because it was "less effective than other criteria" inasmuch

as  a  union  could  conceal  its  relationship  with  the  related

organization, and the test "might be difficult to apply" in some

cases.  Id. at 58,415.  Whatever may be the merits of the single

entity  test,   in opting for the bright line test for its ease of

application, the Secretary overstepped the limits of section 208.

While unambiguous and easy to apply, the $10,000 threshold in

Form T-1 is not tied, as the single entity test was, to a union's

Title  II  reporting requirements, and it therefore is manifestly

contrary  to  the  statute.  Under Form T-1, the bright line test

reaches trusts in which a union has neither management control

nor  financial  domination nor any other characteristic found by

the Secretary that might give rise to circumvention or evasion of

reporting requirements.  Where a union has minimal control over

trust fund spending and a union's contribution is so small a part

of the trust's revenues, and the trust is not otherwise controlled

by  unions  or  dominated  by  union members' funds,  the trust

lacks the characteristics of the unreported union transactions in

the Secretary's examples on which the Secretary based the final

rule,  and  the  Secretary  has  made  no  other  findings that union

contribution to such trusts could give rise to the circumvention

or evasion of union reporting requirements.  

     Because  section  208  limits  the  Secretary's  authority  to

promulgate rules requiring financial reporting to what she

determines  is  "necessary  to  prevent"  circumvention or evasion

of a union's Title II reporting requirements, we hold that to the

extent  the  Form  T-1  requirements apply to union transactions

unteathered  to  that  limitation,  the  promulgation of Form T-1

exceeds the Secretary's authority by requiring general trust

reporting.

     Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court in

part and reverse in part, and we vacate the provisions of the final

rule relating to Form T-1.


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     ROBERTS, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting

in part:  I concur in Parts I and II of the court's opinion.  I must

dissent, however, from the conclusion in Part III that the Secre-

tary's interpretation of her trust reporting authority was unrea-

sonable under step two of Chevron.

     I begin with the statutory language.  The source of the

Secretary's authority for requiring reporting by union-affiliated

trusts is section 208:

     The Secretary shall have authority to issue, amend, and

     rescind rules and regulations prescribing the form and

     publication of reports required to be filed under this

     subchapter and such other reasonable rules and regulations

     (including rules prescribing reports concerning trusts in

     which a labor organization is interested) as he may find

     necessary to prevent the circumvention or evasion of such

     reporting requirements.

LMRDA § 208, 29 U.S.C. § 438 (emphasis added).

     We need not guess at what constitutes a "trust in which a

labor organization is interested," for section 3(l) provides a

definition:

     "Trust in which a labor organization is interested" means a

     trust or other fund or organization (1) which was created or

     established by a labor organization, or one or more of the

     trustees or one or more members of the governing body of

     which is selected or appointed by a labor organization, and

     (2) a primary purpose of which is to provide benefits for the

     members of such labor organization or their beneficiaries.

29 U.S.C. § 402(l).

     The Secretary's rule requires unions that meet the criteria

for LM-2 reporting to file an additional report for "any trust in

which the labor organization is interested, if the trust has

$250,000 or more in annual receipts and the labor organization

contributed $10,000 or more to the trust during the reporting

year, or that amount was contributed on the labor organization's


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                                2


behalf."  Labor Organization Annual Financial Reports; Final

Rule, 68 Fed. Reg. 58,374 (Oct. 9, 2003).  The Secretary

considered other approaches to defining which trusts posed a

risk of being used to circumvent or evade required union

reporting, but rejected them "in favor of the statutory definition

of a trust in which a labor organization is interested," adding

dollar thresholds "so that an undue reporting burden is not

imposed on unions with limited finances."  Id. at 58,413, 58,415.

     The Secretary explained why such related entities pose a

danger of allowing unions to circumvent their reporting obliga-

tions.  The Secretary's proposed rulemaking notes that "labor

organizations have become more multifaceted and have created

hybrid structures for their various activities."  Labor Organiza-

tion Annual Financial Reports; Proposed Rule, 67 Fed. Reg.

79,280 (Dec. 27, 2002).  Trusts in which unions have an interest

"pose the same transparency challenges as `off-the-books'

accounting procedures in the corporate setting: large-scale,

potentially unattractive financial transactions can be shielded

from public disclosure and accountability through artificial

structures, classification and organizations."  Id. at 79,282.

Under the earlier rules, union members may have had "no way

to determine whether the funds in question were actually spent

for their  benefit."  Id.

     The Secretary pointed to several cases in which union

members could not obtain information about a particular trust

because no union was required to file a report on its behalf.  In

one instance, a credit union with 97 percent of deposits attribut-

able to one union local doled out more than half its loans to four

loan officers, three of whom were union officials.  Id. at 79,283.

In another, transactions involving a strike fund to which 29

unions contributed went completely unreported because "no

single union wholly owned the fund."  Id.  The Secretary

reasoned that trust reporting would "properly ensure union

democracy, fiscal integrity and transparency in a manner


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                                 3


consistent with the intent of Congress in enacting the LMRDA."

Id.;  see S. Rep. No. 86-187, at 41 (1959) ("The committee

expects that, in exercising his rulemaking power under the

Senate version of LMRDA § 208 , the Secretary of Labor will

be vigilant in making sure that all types of special funds shall be

reported.").  As the district court concluded, "the rulemaking

record shows clearly that the Secretary explained, in great detail,

her determination that the Form T-1 trust reporting  is neces-

sary to prevent the circumvention of the LMRDA reporting

requirements."  AFL-CIO v. Chao, 298 F. Supp. 2d 104, 118

(D.D.C. 2004).

      Under step two of Chevron, that determination is not to be

disturbed unless "arbitrary or capricious in substance, or

manifestly contrary to the statute."  Household Credit Servs.,

Inc. v. Pfennig, 124 S. Ct. 1741, 1748 (2004) (internal quotation

marks omitted).  "We accord deference to agencies under

Chevron . . . because of a presumption that Congress, when it

left ambiguity in a statute meant for implementation by an

agency, understood that the ambiguity would be resolved, first

and foremost, by the agency, and desired the agency (rather than

the courts) to possess whatever degree of discretion the ambigu-

ity allows."  Smiley v. Citibank (South Dakota), N.A., 517 U.S.

735, 740-41 (1996).  The usual deference is heightened in this

case, however, for several reasons:

      First, the statute speaks in terms of what is "necessary" to

prevent circumvention or evasion of the reporting required under

the statute.  This is an inherently discretionary standard that

clearly invites further definition by the Secretary.           See

McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 413­15

(1819); see also Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Boston & Maine

Corp., 503 U.S. 407, 419 (1992) (ICC interpretation of "re-

quired" to mean "useful and appropriate" was reasonable in

context of statute).  Determining what is "necessary" unavoid-


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                                  4


ably calls for the exercise of the Secretary's judgment and

expertise.

     Second, Congress did not merely delegate to the Secretary

the authority to require such trust reporting as may be necessary

to prevent circumvention or evasion, but instead such reporting

"as s he may find" necessary to that end.  29 U.S.C. § 438

(emphasis added).  We have noted in the past the "distinction

between the objective existence of certain conditions and the

Secretary's determination that such conditions are present,"

stressing that a statute phrased in the latter terms " `fairly exudes

deference' to the Secretary."  Kreis v. Sec'y of the Air Force,

866 F.2d 1508, 1513 (D.C. Cir. 1989).  While not foreclosing

review altogether, but cf. Drake v. FAA, 291 F.3d 59, 72 (D.C.

Cir. 2002) ("What may be thought necessary may not in fact be

necessary, but a court may pass judgment only on the latter, not

the former."), section 208 by its terms "substantially restrict s

the authority of the reviewing court to upset the Secretary's

determination," Kreis, 866 F.2d at 1514.

     Third, the delegation at issue here is to the Secretary to

promulgate rules she finds necessary "to prevent" a future

contingency -- circumvention or evasion of required reporting.

29 U.S.C. § 438.  The delegation necessitates a predictive

judgment about risk, and "an agency's predictive judgment

regarding a matter within its sphere of expertise is entitled to

`particularly deferential' review."  Fresno Mobile Radio, Inc. v.

FCC, 165 F.3d 965, 971 (D.C. Cir. 1999).  The trust reporting

rule represents the Secretary's best judgment as to when union-

affiliated trusts are likely to pose a risk of being used to circum-

vent the reporting requirements.   It is a prophylactic rule and,

as such, need not be crafted with "exacting precision."  Biloxi

Reg'l Med. Ctr. v. Bowen, 835 F.2d 345, 350 (D.C. Cir. 1987).

      In the face of a statutory delegation freighted with defer-

ence, the majority applies the very antithesis of deferential

review.  My colleagues fault the Secretary's rule because they


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                                  5


believe that the level of trust reporting specified by the Secretary

would only be necessary to prevent evasion of the LMRDA

requirements in "circumstances involving dominant union

control over the trust's use of union members' funds or union

members' funds constituting the trust's predominant revenues,"

Op. at 24, and that the Secretary's examples do not demonstrate

a risk of evasion where such circumstances are not present.  But

nothing in either the LMRDA or the usual standards governing

review of agency action under Chevron step two demands that

the Secretary recite examples to support every possible applica-

tion of the rule.  Rather, we require only that she provide a

reasoned explanation for her judgment that reporting is "neces-

sary to prevent . . . circumvention or evasion."  29 U.S.C. § 438.

She has clearly done so here.  See supra pp. 2­3.

     The majority's main objection is that the Secretary's rule

"mandates reporting on trusts even where there is no appearance

that the union's contribution of funds to an independent organi-

zation could circumvent or evade union reporting requirements

by, for example, permitting the union to maintain control of the

funds."  Op. at 23 (emphasis added).  What the majority calls an

"independent organization" is, of course, defined in the statute

as a " t rust in which a labor organization is interested," because

it "was created or established by a labor organization, or one or

more of the trustees or one or more members of its  governing

body . . . is selected or appointed by a labor organization," and

because "a primary purpose of the organization  is to provide

benefits for the members of such labor organization or their

beneficiaries."  29 U.S.C. § 402(l).  The majority may be

perfectly comfortable that there is no risk that such an organiza-

tion may be used by a union to circumvent or evade reporting

requirements, but it is surely reasonable for the Secretary -- to

whom the responsibility has been delegated -- to reach a

different conclusion.


<-----------Page_Break----------->

                                 6


     The majority's reading, far from defining the "bounds of the

permissible" under Chevron step two, Barnhart v. Walton, 535

U.S. 212, 218 (2002), is itself rather implausible.  First, it

renders largely superfluous the judgment made by Congress

when it specifically defined a "trust in which a labor organiza-

tion is interested."  If "circumvention or evasion" carries within

it an implicit requirement of union dominance or control beyond

the definition in section 3(l), there is no need for that definition

at all.  The majority's approach is akin to a court, presented with

a statute permitting the regulation of trucks weighing over ten

tons where "necessary to prevent damage to highways,"

nevertheless exempting trucks under twenty tons on the ground

that they present no such risk -- as though Congress had made

no judgment on the matter.  See Fed. Elec'n Comm'n v. Nat'l

Right to Work Comm., 459 U.S. 197, 210 (1982) (Court will not

"second-guess a legislative determination as to the need for

prophylactic measures where corruption is the evil feared").

     Second, the majority takes an exceedingly narrow view of

the purpose of the reporting requirements.  It dismisses as

somehow irrelevant the Secretary's concern that in the absence

of trust disclosure, "union members may have no way to

determine whether union funds transferred to trusts  were

actually spent for the benefit of members."  67 Fed. Reg. at

79,282; see Op. at 25.  Yet, in making the definition of a "trust

in which a labor organization is interested" turn on whether one

of the primary purposes of the trust is "to provide benefits for

union  members . . . or their beneficiaries," Congress plainly

evinced the very same concern.  See LMRDA § 3(l).  Indeed, the

whole point of the LMRDA is to ensure, through broad financial

disclosure, that members' funds are not being misappropriated

by those to whom the funds have been entrusted.  See H.R. Rep.

No. 86-741, at 7 (1959) (" t he members of a labor organization

are the real owners of the money and property of such organiza-

tion and are entitled to a full accounting of all transactions


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                                  7


involving such money").         The statute does not prescribe

reporting merely for reporting's sake.

     It is a final strike against the plausibility of the majority's

reading that it takes no account of the Secretary's need for a

bright-line rule in managing what is, fundamentally, a reporting

and disclosure scheme.  Unlike the express statutory criteria of

section 3(l) and the Secretary's dollar threshold, the majority's

"circumstances involving dominant union control" test, Op. at

24, "would be hard to apply, jettisoning relative predictability

for the open-ended rough-and-tumble of factors," Jerome B.

Grubart, Inc. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co., 513  U.S. 527,

547 (1995).  The circumstances of union control will come in

many varieties.  Presumably, one union-appointed trustee will

normally not be enough; but if there are only three trustees, or

if one of the other trustees is affiliated with another union, it

might be.  In deciding to incorporate the statutory definition into

her rule, the Secretary explained the difficulties of an alternative

approach along the lines endorsed by the majority.   See Op. at

25­26.  She specifically noted that looking to the degree of

union ownership and control "does not appear to be a workable

or appropriate approach.  Union ownership and control in the

context of a union's participation in a trust that provides benefits

to the union membership are very difficult concepts to quantify."

68 Fed. Reg. at 58,415.  The difficulties of such an approach,

with the likelihood of attendant litigation, are precisely why the

"single entity" test received zero favorable comments during

rulemaking and ultimately was rejected by the Secretary in favor

of the statute's bright-line rule.  See id. at 58,416.

     Perhaps the Secretary was wrong in her assessment about

what degree of union involvement in the affairs of a trust poses

a danger of the trust being used to circumvent or evade reporting

requirements, but see Time Warner Entertainment Co. v. FCC,

240 F.3d 1126, 1141 (D.C. Cir. 2001) (FCC's attribution of

influence based on control of 5% of company's voting shares


<-----------Page_Break----------->

                                8


was reasonable), and wrong in her judgment that a multi-factor

domination or control test would prove unworkable, and perhaps

the majority's approach is right.  That is not the question before

the court.  The statute plainly delegates the authority to make

such policy-laden judgments to the Secretary -- the question is

what " s he may find necessary to prevent the circumvention or

evasion of . . . reporting requirements," 29 U.S.C. § 438

(emphasis added) -- and the Secretary has reasonably exercised

that authority.  I therefore respectfully dissent from Part III of

the court's opinion.


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