Katherine Miller v. Jay Inslee , 916 F.3d 783 ( 2019 )


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  •                 FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    CYNTHIA MENTELE,                      No. 16-35939
    Plaintiff,
    D.C. No.
    and                   3:15-cv-05134-RBL
    KATHERINE MILLER,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,         OPINION
    v.
    JAY INSLEE, in His Official
    Capacity as Governor of the
    State of Washington; KEVIN W.
    QUIGLEY, in His Official
    Capacity as Director of the
    Washington State Office of
    Financial Management; DAVID
    SCHUMACHER, in His Official
    Capacity as Director of the
    Washington State Office of
    Financial Management; SERVICE
    EMPLOYEES INTERNATIONAL
    UNION, LOCAL 925, a labor
    organization,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    2                         MILLER V. INSLEE
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Washington
    Ronald B. Leighton, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted December 3, 2018
    Seattle, Washington
    Filed February 26, 2019
    Before: Susan P. Graber, M. Margaret McKeown,
    and Morgan Christen, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Christen;
    Concurrence by Judge Graber
    SUMMARY*
    Civil Rights
    The panel affirmed the district court’s summary judgment
    for the State of Washington in an action brought pursuant to
    42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that Washington’s authorization
    for the Service Employees International Union Local 925
    (SEIU) to act as the exclusive collective bargaining
    representative for Washington’s publicly subsidized childcare
    providers violated plaintiff’s First Amendment rights.
    Plaintiff, a Washington State childcare provider, alleged
    that Washington’s arrangement with SEIU violated her rights
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    MILLER V. INSLEE                        3
    of free speech and association. Applying Minnesota State
    Board for Community Colleges v. Knight, 
    465 U.S. 271
    (1984), the panel held that Washington’s authorization of an
    exclusive bargaining representative did not infringe plaintiff’s
    First Amendment rights. The panel further held that even
    assuming that Knight no longer governed the question
    presented in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Janus
    v. American Federation of State, County, & Municipal
    Employees, Council 31, 
    138 S. Ct. 2448
    (2018), the panel
    would still conclude that Washington’s exclusive bargaining
    arrangement with SEIU was constitutionally permissible.
    The panel noted that the childcare providers were partial state
    employees for whom SEIU’s scope of representation was
    relatively circumscribed and that the State’s exclusive
    bargaining arrangement with SEIU served the compelling—
    and enduring—state interest of labor peace.
    Concurring, Judge Graber wrote separately to state her
    view that, with respect to plaintiff’s associational rights, she
    would follow the Eighth Circuit’s analysis in Bierman v.
    Dayton, 
    900 F.3d 570
    , 574 (8th Cir. 2018), and hold that
    there was no “meaningful distinction” between this case and
    the Supreme Court’s decision in Minnesota State Board for
    Community Colleges v. Knight, 
    465 U.S. 271
    (1984).
    COUNSEL
    Milton L. Chappell (argued), National Right to Work Legal
    Foundation, Inc., Springfield, Virginia; James G. Abernathy
    and David M.S. Dewhirst, Freedom Foundation, Olympia,
    Washington; for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    4                    MILLER V. INSLEE
    Callie A. Castillo (argued), Deputy Solicitor General; Gina L.
    Comeau and Alicia O. Young, Assistant Attorneys General;
    Robert W. Ferguson, Attorney General; Attorney General’s
    Office, Olympia, Washington; for Defendants-Appellees Jay
    Inslee, Kevin W. Quigley, and David Schumacher.
    Scott A. Kronland (argued), Altshuler Berzon LLP, San
    Francisco, California; Schwerin Campbell Barnard and
    Robert H. Lavitt, Iglitzin & Lavitt LLP, Seattle, Washington;
    for Defendant-Appellee Service Employees International
    Union Local 925.
    OPINION
    CHRISTEN, Circuit Judge:
    The State of Washington authorized the Service
    Employees International Union Local 925 (SEIU) to act as
    the exclusive collective bargaining representative for
    Washington’s publicly subsidized childcare providers.
    Katherine Miller, a Washington childcare provider,
    challenges that arrangement as an infringement of her First
    Amendment rights of free speech and association. We have
    jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm the
    district court’s order granting summary judgment to SEIU
    and Washington State.
    I.
    Washington provides financial assistance to qualifying
    families for childcare costs. Under the terms of this program,
    families choose independent childcare providers and pay
    MILLER V. INSLEE                       5
    them on a scale commensurate with the families’ income
    levels. The State covers the remaining cost.
    Before 2006, Washington unilaterally determined subsidy
    levels and other policies governing its childcare assistance
    programs, through legislation and regulations. But in 2006,
    Washington re-categorized the providers as “public
    employees” for purposes of the State’s collective bargaining
    legislation and authorized the providers to elect an exclusive
    collective bargaining representative to negotiate with the
    State on their behalf. Wash. Rev. Code § 41.56.028. Because
    the childcare providers are state employees only for purposes
    of collective bargaining, they are considered “partial” state
    employees, rather than full-fledged state employees, and
    Washington law limits the scope of their collective
    bargaining agent’s representation. For example, families
    continue to be the providers’ primary employers, 
    id. § 41.56.028(4)(a);
    the providers are not allowed to strike, 
    id. § 41.56.028(2)(e);
    and the bargaining agent cannot negotiate
    about certain issues, 
    id. § 41.56.028(2)(c)
    (“[r]etirement
    benefits shall not be subject to collective bargaining”).
    The childcare providers elected SEIU as their exclusive
    bargaining representative, and SEIU negotiated a number of
    terms and conditions for them as part of a state-wide
    collective bargaining agreement. Childcare providers are not
    required to join SEIU, but SEIU is nonetheless “required to
    represent[] all the public employees within the unit without
    regard to membership.” 
    Id. § 41.56.080.
    SEIU members pay
    union dues to support SEIU. Non-union members previously
    paid “agency fees” to support SEIU’s collective bargaining
    efforts, but SEIU and the State eliminated the agency fees
    provision from their collective bargaining agreement after the
    Supreme Court’s decision in Harris v. Quinn, 
    134 S. Ct. 2618
    6                         MILLER V. INSLEE
    (2014) (holding that states may not compel partial state
    employees to pay agency fees for union representation).1
    Katherine Miller and Cynthia Mentele, two Washington
    state childcare providers, filed suit in March of 2015 against
    State officials and SEIU. Miller is a former SEIU member;
    the record is unclear about whether Mentele was a member.
    Both plaintiffs alleged that their First Amendment right to
    expressive association was violated when Washington
    recognized SEIU as the exclusive bargaining representative
    for all childcare providers because SEIU necessarily spoke
    and negotiated on their behalf. Miller and Mentele sought
    declaratory and injunctive relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
    § 1983. The complaint did not clearly define the nature of the
    relief Miller and Mentele sought, but the briefing filed with
    our court clarified that they sought neither the opportunity to
    negotiate with the union themselves nor the complete
    elimination of a collective bargaining representative.
    The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
    The district court granted the motion filed by the State and
    SEIU, while denying the motion filed by Miller and Mentele.
    The parties stipulated to the dismissal of Mentele’s additional
    claim that sought reimbursement of past union dues.
    Miller alone appeals the district court’s judgment. We
    review de novo the district court’s order granting summary
    judgment. Stanford Univ. Hosp. v. Fed. Ins. Co., 
    174 F.3d 1077
    , 1082 (9th Cir. 1999).
    1
    Agency fees are reduced union dues paid by non-union member
    employees to support the union’s collective bargaining efforts. See, e.g.,
    Janus v. Am. Fed’n of State, Cty., & Mun. Emps., Council 31, 
    138 S. Ct. 2448
    , 2460–61 (2018).
    MILLER V. INSLEE                       7
    II.
    A.
    Our analysis relies largely on two Supreme Court cases
    that discuss the propriety of exclusive bargaining
    representation for public employees: the Supreme Court’s
    decision in Minnesota State Board for Community Colleges
    v. Knight, 
    465 U.S. 271
    (1984); and its recent decision in
    Janus v. American Federation of State, County, & Municipal
    Employees, Council 31, 
    138 S. Ct. 2448
    (2018). Two other
    cases provide important context for our decision: Abood v.
    Detroit Board of Education, 
    431 U.S. 209
    (1977), and Harris,
    
    134 S. Ct. 2618
    . SEIU and the State argue that Knight
    controls the outcome of this appeal; Miller argues that we are
    bound by Janus.
    Knight involved a challenge by community college
    professors to two statutory provisions under Minnesota law:
    (1) a “meet and negotiate” provision, which required the State
    to meet and negotiate with the faculty’s exclusive bargaining
    representative (e.g., the faculty’s union) concerning the terms
    and conditions of employment; and (2) a “meet and confer”
    provision, which required the State to meet and confer with
    the exclusive representative regarding “policy questions
    relating to employment but outside the scope of mandatory
    bargaining.” 
    Knight, 465 U.S. at 273
    –75, 279. The Court
    summarily affirmed the “meet and negotiate” requirement, 
    id. at 279,
    and separately concluded that the exclusion of non-
    union members from the State’s “meet and confer” provision
    did not infringe the non-union members’ First Amendment
    rights:
    8                     MILLER V. INSLEE
    Appellees’ speech and associational rights,
    however, have not been infringed by
    Minnesota’s restriction of participation in
    “meet and confer” sessions to the faculty’s
    exclusive representative. The state has in no
    way restrained appellees’ freedom to speak on
    any education-related issue or their freedom
    to associate or not to associate with whom
    they please, including the exclusive
    representative.
    
    Id. at 288.
    The Court explained that the non-union members
    had not been denied access to a public forum, 
    id. at 280–83,
    that state employees had no right to be heard by, or negotiate
    individually with, a public body, 
    id. at 283–85,
    and that the
    non-union members were free to form advocacy groups or
    otherwise make their views known to the State and associate
    with whomever they wished to associate, 
    id. at 288–90.
    The
    Court concluded that the non-union members’ rights to free
    speech and association were not abridged by the meet and
    confer provision.
    Significant for the present appeal, Knight was decided a
    few years after the Court’s decision in Abood v. Detroit
    Board of Education. In Abood, the Court concluded that,
    although compulsory agency fees impinge employees’ First
    Amendment rights to some extent, the mandatory fees were
    nevertheless justified by the State’s compelling interest in
    “labor peace”; i.e., the logistical and managerial benefits that
    accrue when an employer negotiates only with one exclusive
    
    representative. 431 U.S. at 232
    –37. Though it followed
    Abood by a few years, Knight never mentioned labor peace
    and instead upheld Minnesota’s meet and confer provision by
    concluding that it did not infringe the non-union members’
    MILLER V. INSLEE                       9
    First Amendment associational rights at all. In this way,
    Knight expressly cabined Abood, explaining that the First
    Amendment infringement in Abood was the result of the
    “compulsory collection of dues” from non-union members,
    and observing that Abood did not address whether exclusive
    representation infringed the non-union members’
    associational rights. See 
    Knight, 465 U.S. at 291
    n.13
    (emphasis added).
    Following Knight, every circuit court to address the
    constitutionality of exclusive bargaining arrangements (as
    distinct from the constitutionality of compelling financial
    support for such bargaining arrangements) has concluded that
    these provisions do not violate the First Amendment.
    D’Agostino v. Baker, 
    812 F.3d 240
    , 242–44 (1st Cir. 2016)
    (Souter, J., by designation); Hill v. Serv. Emps. Int’l Union,
    
    850 F.3d 861
    , 864–65 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    138 S. Ct. 446
    (2017); Bierman v. Dayton, 
    900 F.3d 570
    , 574 (8th Cir.
    2018), petition for cert. filed, ___U.S.L.W. ___ (U.S.
    Dec. 13, 2018) (No. 18-766); Jarvis v. Cuomo, 660 F. App’x
    72, 74–75 (2d Cir. 2016) (order) (unpublished).
    In 2014, thirty years after it decided Knight, the Court
    addressed the constitutionality of compelling agency fees
    from non-union members who are partial state employees like
    the childcare providers here. Harris, 
    134 S. Ct. 2618
    . Harris
    acknowledged Abood’s “labor peace” justification for
    compelling agency fees to support exclusive bargaining
    representation, but it did not extend Abood’s rationale to
    union representation of partial state employees. 
    Id. at 2640.
    In fact, contrary to Abood’s rationale, in Harris the Court
    decided that compelled fees are not necessary to ensure labor
    peace because public sector unions can effectively operate
    with the support of the dues paid by union members alone.
    10                    MILLER V. INSLEE
    
    Id. at 2640–41.
    In any event, Harris reasoned, there are
    minimal labor peace benefits to be gained when partial
    employees are represented because the scope of their unions’
    representation is limited. 
    Id. at 2640.
    The Court decided Janus in 2018. Janus alluded to the
    propriety of exclusive representation arrangements, but it
    primarily considered the constitutionality of compelling full-
    fledged, non-union member state employees to pay agency
    
    fees. 138 S. Ct. at 2459
    –60. Janus reaffirmed that labor
    peace is a compelling state interest, but it overruled Abood’s
    holding that labor peace justifies requiring non-union
    members to pay agency fees. 
    Id. at 2465–66.
    Janus then
    went on to observe:
    It is also not disputed that the State may
    require that a union serve as exclusive
    bargaining agent for its employees—itself a
    significant impingement on associational
    freedoms that would not be tolerated in other
    contexts. We simply draw the line at allowing
    the government to go further still and require
    all employees to support the union
    irrespective of whether they share its views.
    
    Id. at 2478.
    In this passage, Janus suggested that exclusive
    bargaining representation does significantly impinge on
    associational freedoms, but in the same breath the Court
    stated that this degree of impingement is justified or
    “tolerated” in the context of collective bargaining agents. 
    Id. Janus explained
    that “States can keep their labor-relation
    systems exactly as they are”; they just “cannot force
    nonmembers to subsidize public-sector unions,” 
    id. at 2485
    n.27 (emphasis added). Also in Janus, the Supreme Court
    MILLER V. INSLEE                    11
    expressly distinguished between compelling non-union
    members to pay agency fees (constitutionally impermissible)
    and mandating that any union representation be exclusive,
    which the Court suggested is a tolerated impingement of non-
    union members’ First Amendment rights.
    Miller contends that we are bound by Janus’s observation
    that exclusive union representation of non-union members
    impinges First Amendment rights. Appellees contend that
    Knight controls because Janus’s reference to exclusive
    representation is dictum unnecessary to Janus’s primary
    holding.
    B.
    We conclude that the Supreme Court’s holding in Knight
    is the most appropriate guide. The salient rationale from
    Knight merits repeating:
    [T]he First Amendment guarantees the right
    both to speak and to associate. Appellees’
    speech and associational rights, however,
    have not been infringed by Minnesota’s
    restriction of participation in “meet and
    confer” sessions to the faculty’s exclusive
    representative. The state has in no way
    restrained appellees’ freedom to speak on
    any education-related issue or their freedom
    to associate or not to associate with whom
    they please, including the exclusive
    representative. . . .
    ....
    12                       MILLER V. INSLEE
    . . . [A]ppellees’ associational freedom has
    not been impaired. Appellees are free to form
    whatever advocacy groups they like. They are
    not required to become members of [the
    union], and they do not challenge the
    monetary contribution they are required to
    make to support [the union’s] representation
    activities.
    
    Knight, 465 U.S. at 288
    –89. The Court further summarized
    in a footnote that the appellees’ “speech and associational
    freedom have been wholly unimpaired” by the meet and
    confer provision. 
    Id. at 290
    n.12 (emphasis added). Given
    the importance of that analysis to the Court’s opinion, we do
    not view those statements as dictum.
    Miller insists that Knight is not precisely on point. We
    acknowledge that Knight’s recognition that a state cannot be
    forced to negotiate or meet with individual employees2 is
    arguably distinct from Miller’s contention that employees’
    associational rights are implicated when a state recognizes an
    exclusive bargaining representative with which non-union
    employees disagree. For Miller, the fact that she is free to
    communicate her opinions or associate with whomever she
    chooses does not alleviate her concern that a union she
    dislikes is speaking for her. Miller is not complaining about
    an inability to speak herself; she just wants to be “left alone
    to make her own decisions regarding associations and her
    speech.”
    2
    
    See 465 U.S. at 283
    –84 (citing Bi-Metallic Inv. Co. v. State Bd. of
    Equalization, 
    239 U.S. 441
    (1915)).
    MILLER V. INSLEE                      13
    Despite these differences, Knight is a closer fit than
    Janus. See Agostini v. Felton, 
    521 U.S. 203
    , 237 (1997)
    (explaining “the Court of Appeals should follow” the
    precedent that has “direct application”). Knight addressed the
    First Amendment rights of non-union members who were
    excluded from union meetings with the State, and Miller
    claims that her First Amendment rights are infringed when
    SEIU purports to speak on her behalf even though she abhors
    the union. Knight acknowledged that exclusive bargaining
    required the State to treat the union representatives as
    expressing “the faculty’s official collective position” even
    though “not every instructor agrees with the official faculty
    view on every policy 
    question.” 465 U.S. at 276
    . In this
    way, Knight addresses Miller’s objection because
    Minnesota’s exclusion of non-union faculty members from
    meet and confer sessions necessarily meant that union
    representatives expressed the faculty’s “official collective
    position” on behalf of even dissenting non-union members.
    Knight expressly concluded that such a system “in no way
    restrained appellees’ . . . freedom to associate or not to
    associate with whom they please, including the exclusive
    representative,” 
    id. at 288
    (emphasis added), and it approved
    the requirement that bound non-union dissenters to exclusive
    union representation.
    Miller argues that Janus overruled Knight and that Janus
    controls the outcome of this case, but we are not persuaded.
    The cases presented different questions, as we have
    explained, and Janus never mentions Knight. To accept
    Miller’s argument, we would have to conclude that the brief
    passage Miller relies upon (two sentences at most), which
    addresses a question that was not presented or argued and
    which was unnecessary to the Court’s holding, was
    nevertheless intended to overrule the Court’s earlier decision
    14                   MILLER V. INSLEE
    in Knight sub-silentio. See 
    Bierman, 900 F.3d at 574
    (concluding that Janus did not overrule Knight). We are
    unwilling to make that leap. The same passage Miller
    identifies as evidence that Knight did not survive Janus goes
    on to expressly affirm the propriety of mandatory union
    representation, which is consistent with Knight. Janus is also
    clear that the degree of First Amendment infringement
    inherent in mandatory union representation is tolerated in the
    context of public sector labor 
    schemes. 138 S. Ct. at 2478
    (“We simply draw the line at allowing the government to go
    further still and require all employees to support the union
    irrespective of whether they share its views.”). Janus’s
    reference to infringement caused by exclusive union
    representation, even in the context of its broader discussion
    of Abood and the Court’s long history of relying on labor
    peace to justify certain provisions in collective bargaining
    agreements, is not an indication that the Court intended to
    revise the analytical underpinnings of Knight or otherwise
    reset the longstanding rules governing the permissibility of
    mandatory exclusive representation. The Supreme Court has
    directed that we should “leav[e] to [the Supreme] Court the
    prerogative of overruling its own decisions,” and follow
    “direct[ly] applica[ble]” precedent, even if subsequent
    decisions call into question some of that precedent’s
    rationale. 
    Agostini, 521 U.S. at 237
    ; see 
    Bierman, 900 F.3d at 574
    . Consistent with that directive, we apply Knight’s
    more directly applicable precedent, rather than relying on the
    passage Miller cites from Janus, and hold that Washington’s
    authorization of an exclusive bargaining representative does
    not infringe Miller’s First Amendment rights.
    MILLER V. INSLEE                      15
    The Eighth Circuit reached the same conclusion, for
    essentially the same reasons, in Bierman, the only circuit-
    court decision to have addressed this issue after the Supreme
    Court decided Janus. Bierman concerned Minnesota’s law
    authorizing in-home care providers to elect an exclusive
    representative to negotiate employment terms with the 
    State. 900 F.3d at 572
    . A group of providers challenged the law,
    arguing that it “unconstitutionally compels them to associate
    with the exclusive negotiating representative.” 
    Id. The Eighth
    Circuit concluded that Janus did not affect this
    analysis, followed the reasoning in Knight, and rejected the
    providers’ argument. 
    Id. at 574;
    accord Reisman v.
    Associated Faculties of Univ. of Me., No. 1:18-cv-00307-
    JDL, 
    2018 WL 6312996
    , at *2–5 (D. Me. Dec. 3, 2018)
    (order); Uradnik v. Inter Faculty Org., Civ. No. 18-1895
    (PAM/LIB), 
    2018 WL 4654751
    , at *2 (D. Minn. Sept. 27,
    2018) (unpublished).
    C.
    Even if we assume that Knight no longer governs the
    question presented by Miller’s appeal, we would reach the
    same result: SEIU’s authorized position as the childcare
    providers’ exclusive representative is constitutionally
    permissible.
    At least in the context of organized labor, the
    impingement of First Amendment rights must, at a minimum,
    satisfy “exacting scrutiny”; i.e., it must “serve a compelling
    state interest that cannot be achieved through means
    significantly less restrictive of associational freedoms.”
    
    Janus, 138 S. Ct. at 2465
    . (quoting Knox v. Serv. Emps. Int’l
    16                         MILLER V. INSLEE
    Union, Local 1000, 
    567 U.S. 298
    , 310 (2012)).3 “Exacting
    scrutiny encompasses a balancing test. In order for a
    government action to survive exacting scrutiny, the strength
    of the governmental interest must reflect the seriousness of
    the actual burden on First Amendment rights.” Ctr. for
    Competitive Politics v. Harris, 
    784 F.3d 1307
    , 1312 (9th Cir.
    2015) (internal quotation marks omitted). We therefore begin
    by assessing the seriousness of the burden on Miller’s
    associational rights.
    The childcare providers here are partial state employees
    for whom SEIU’s scope of representation is relatively
    circumscribed. See Wash. Rev. Code § 41.56.028 (describing
    limitations of representative’s bargaining power). The
    providers are not allowed to strike, SEIU cannot negotiate
    their retirement benefits, families retain the right to choose
    and terminate any provider, and the legislature retains the
    unilateral right to adopt personnel requirements and to make
    programmatic modifications. See 
    id. § 41.56.028(2)(c)
    , (2)(e)
    & (4)(a); see also 
    Harris, 134 S. Ct. at 2634
    –37 (describing
    similarly limited scope of the union’s bargaining authority).
    Because of SEIU’s limited role in representing partial
    3
    The Court in Janus applied “exacting scrutiny” to the question
    whether compelling agency fees from non-union members is permissible,
    as it had done in Harris and in 
    Knox. 138 S. Ct. at 2465
    . But the Court
    noted that strict scrutiny may be more appropriate due to the First
    Amendment rights at stake. 
    Id. The Court
    did not need to resolve that
    question in Janus because the statute at issue failed even exacting
    scrutiny, 
    id., but we
    note that the Court previously applied exacting
    scrutiny to challenges of free association rights. See, e.g., Roberts v. U.S.
    Jaycees, 
    468 U.S. 609
    , 623 (1984). If we concluded that Miller’s First
    Amendment rights were infringed by SEIU’s representation, we would be
    obliged to apply “exacting scrutiny” to decide whether the infringement
    is constitutionally permissible, because this was the test the Court applied
    in Roberts, Knox, Harris, and Janus. See 
    Agostini, 521 U.S. at 237
    .
    MILLER V. INSLEE                      17
    employees, any impingement of the employees’ speech and
    associational freedoms is correspondingly reduced.
    Against that backdrop, we conclude that the State’s
    exclusive bargaining arrangement with SEIU serves the
    compelling—and enduring—state interest of labor peace.
    Janus did not revisit the longstanding conclusion that labor
    peace is “a compelling state 
    interest,” 138 S. Ct. at 2465
    , and
    the Court has long recognized that exclusive representation is
    necessary to facilitate labor peace; without it, employers
    might face “inter-union rivalries” fostering “dissension within
    the work force,” “conflicting demands from different unions,”
    and confusion from multiple agreements or employment
    conditions, 
    id. (quoting Abood,
    431 U.S. at 220–21). For the
    following reasons, Washington’s continued compelling
    interest in labor peace justifies the minimal infringement
    associated with SEIU’s exclusive representation. Accord
    Uradnik, 
    2018 WL 4654751
    , at *3.
    First, Washington has an interest in negotiating with only
    one entity, at least for the sake of efficiency and managerial
    logistics, and that interest persists even if, per Harris,
    Washington’s interest in the payment of fees to support the
    union dwindles with the reduced union representation.
    Washington’s scheme calls for the negotiation of
    comparatively few conditions, but it does not eliminate the
    State’s interest in avoiding the competing demands of rival
    representatives, the potential confusion that would result from
    multiple agreements, and possible dissension among the
    providers. See 
    Janus, 138 S. Ct. at 2465
    –66.
    18                    MILLER V. INSLEE
    Second, Janus specifically acknowledged that exclusive
    representation is constitutionally permissible. 
    Id. at 2478.
    The Court reaffirmed that “[s]tates can keep their labor-
    relation systems exactly as they are—only they cannot force
    nonmembers to subsidize public-sector unions.” 
    Id. at 2485
    n.27. This statement is consistent with Harris, which
    concluded that compulsory agency fees are not justified for
    public sector unions representing partial employees, in part
    because of the union’s limited scope of representation, 
    see 134 S. Ct. at 2640
    ; and it follows from Janus’s own statement
    that exclusive bargaining systems are acceptable for public
    employees, even though compulsory agency fees are 
    not, 138 S. Ct. at 2478
    . These cases establish a bright line
    distinction between allowing exclusive representation and
    mandating the payment of agency fees.
    Finally, applying an exacting standard, we know of no
    alternative that is “significantly less restrictive of
    associational freedoms.” 
    Id. at 2465.
    Because SEIU’s
    limited representation already reduces the level of any
    infringement, it is difficult to imagine an alternative that is
    “significantly less restrictive” than the one Washington
    employs. 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Miller has not suggested an
    alternative way for the State to solicit meaningful input from
    childcare providers while simultaneously avoiding the chaos
    and inefficiency of having multiple bargaining
    representatives or negotiating with individual providers. See
    Wash. Rev. Code § 41.56.010 (declaration of purpose).
    Miller wants to be left alone, but it is unclear what sort of
    system Washington would or could implement to satisfy this
    demand, apart from unilaterally deciding the terms of
    employment for partial employees.
    MILLER V. INSLEE                      19
    Even assuming that Knight no longer governs the question
    presented, we would still conclude that Washington’s
    exclusive bargaining arrangement with SEIU is
    constitutionally permissible.
    AFFIRMED.
    GRABER, Circuit Judge, concurring:
    I concur in full in the opinion. I write separately only to
    state my view that the conclusion we reach in Part II-B is less
    tenuous than the opinion makes it sound. I agree entirely
    with the Eighth Circuit’s reasoning in Bierman v. Dayton,
    
    900 F.3d 570
    , 574 (8th Cir. 2018), a case similar to ours. I
    would follow the Eighth Circuit’s analysis and hold that, with
    respect to Plaintiffs’ associational rights, there is no
    “meaningful distinction” between this case and the Supreme
    Court’s decision in Minnesota State Board for Community
    Colleges v. Knight, 
    465 U.S. 271
    (1984). 
    Bierman, 900 F.3d at 574
    . Accordingly, we are bound by Knight. Agostini v.
    Felton, 
    521 U.S. 203
    , 237 (1997).