Hispanic Affairs Project v. Perez , 141 F. Supp. 3d 60 ( 2015 )


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  •                              UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    HISPANIC AFFAIRS PROJECT, et al.,
    Plaintiffs,
    Civil Action No. 15-cv-01562 (BAH)
    v.
    Judge Beryl A. Howell
    THOMAS E. PEREZ, in his official capacity
    as Secretary of U.S. Department of Labor, et
    al.,
    Defendants.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    The Court is confronted with a request for a preliminary injunction to halt a government
    visa program for temporary agricultural workers based on an administrative rule that has already
    been held invalid after extensive litigation, including an appeal, and is due for replacement in
    less than one month. The challenged rule is, consequently, operating on borrowed time. Yet,
    despite belatedly raising their particular objection to the challenged rule several years after the
    original litigation was begun and over one year after a remedial order was put in place, the
    plaintiffs nevertheless claim irreparable harm from its continued operation and, further, that
    imposition of an injunction, which would effectively result in an abrupt modification of the
    remedial order, would serve both equitable and the public interests.
    Specifically, on October 7, 2011, a group of Americans, who were formerly open-range
    agricultural workers, brought an action against the United States Secretary of Labor and United
    States Department of Labor (“DOL”), challenging the validity of two Training and Employment
    Guidance Letters (“TEGLs”) issued in 2011 for failing to comply with the notice-and-comment
    1
    requirements of the Administrative Procedural Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 553. 1 Mendoza v. Solis,
    
    924 F. Supp. 2d 307
    , 310 (D.D.C. 2013). These TEGLs provide special procedures for hiring
    foreign temporary workers on general agricultural H-2A visas to work as cattle, goat and sheep
    herders on the open range on terms intended to avoid adversely affecting the wages and working
    conditions of U.S. workers similarly employed. Almost three years later, the D.C. Circuit
    reversed this Court’s finding that the plaintiffs lacked standing and, on the merits, held that the
    2011 TEGLs were subject to the APA’s notice-and-comment requirements and, thus, were
    procedurally invalid. Mendoza v. Perez, 
    754 F.3d 1002
    , 1024 (D.C. Cir. 2014). On remand, this
    Court entered a remedial order, directing the government to promulgate a new rule according to
    notice-and comment procedures and, with the consent of all parties, required vacatur of the
    invalid 2011 TEGLS upon the effective date of the new rule. Mendoza v. Perez, 
    72 F. Supp. 3d 168
    , 175 (D.D.C. 2014) (“Remedial Order”).
    Nearly a year after entry of the Remedial Order, and less than three months shy of the
    effective date of the new rule, on August 18, 2015, the plaintiffs—an American former
    sheepherder, a foreign sheepherder currently employed on a temporary H-2A visa and a
    nonprofit membership organization for Hispanic immigrant workers, Compl. ¶¶ 3–5, ECF No.
    2—filed this lawsuit against the defendants United States Secretary of Labor, the Department of
    Labor, and the Assistant Secretary of Employment and Training Administration, Department of
    1
    The two 2011 TEGLs are: TEGL No. 15-06, Change 1, Special Procedures: Labor Certification Process for
    Occupations Involved in the Open Range Production of Livestock under the H-2A Program (“2011 Cattleherder
    TEGL”), 76 Fed. Reg. 47,243 (Aug. 4, 2011), which provided special regulations governing certification of the
    temporary employment of nonimmigrant cattleherders; and TEGL No. 32-10, Special Procedures: Labor
    Certification Process for Employers Engaged in Sheepherding and Goatherding Occupations Under the H-2A
    Program (“2011 Sheepherder TEGL”), 76 Fed. Reg. 47,256 (Aug. 4, 2011), which provided special regulations for
    the certification of the temporary employment of nonimmigrant goatherders and sheepherders.
    2
    Labor (collectively, “defendants”), 
    id. ¶¶ 6,
    8, challenging DOL’s application of one component
    of the soon-to-be-superseded 2011 Sheepherder TEGL. 2
    The challenged component of the 2011 Sheepherder TEGL outlines the methodology to
    be used by DOL in determining the minimum offered wage rate required for DOL’s certification
    of employer applications for H-2A visas for foreign sheep and goatherders. This methodology is
    entirely changed in a new rule, which was published on October 16, 2015, and becomes effective
    on November 16, 2015. See Temporary Agricultural Employment of H-2A Foreign Workers in
    the Herding or Production of Livestock on the Range in the United States (“2015 Rule”), 80 Fed.
    Reg. 62,958 (Oct. 16, 2015) (to be codified at 20 CFR pt 655). Under this new rule, the new
    monthly prevailing wage rate will be phased in over two years and will be determined by using
    the base federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, multiplied by 48 hours per week, multiplied
    by 4.333 weeks in a month, multiplied by 80% for the first year, resulting in a new monthly
    wage of $1206.31 as of the effective date. 2015 Rule, 80 Fed. Reg. at 63,014 n.62.
    The 2015 Rule, when it becomes effective, will replace and vacate both of the invalid
    2011 TEGLs. Remedial 
    Order, 72 F. Supp. 3d at 175
    . Now pending before the Court is the
    plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction (“Pls.’ Mem.”), ECF No. 1, to enjoin DOL from
    certifying any new H-2A applications at the current, challenged wage rate. Although DOL has
    conceded the deficiencies in the methodology provided in the 2011 Sheepherder TEGL and
    acknowledged that these procedures have resulted in stagnant wages for herders on the open
    range, see 2015 Rule, 80 Fed. Reg. 62,986, the plaintiffs have not carried their burden of
    2
    Concurrent with the initiation of this lawsuit, the plaintiffs filed an Ex Parte Motion for a Temporary
    Restraining Order, Pls.’ Mem. at 2, which the District Court for the District of Colorado denied without explanation
    on August 19, 2015. Order Denying Ex Parte Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order and Scheduling Briefing
    on Motion for Preliminary Injunction, ECF No. 7.
    3
    demonstrating that the extraordinary remedy of a preliminary injunction is warranted.
    Consequently, the plaintiffs’ request for preliminary injunctive relief is denied.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    Background relating to the operation of the H-2A visa program and the reasons for
    invalidation of the 2011 TEGLs are fully described by the D.C. Circuit in 
    Mendoza, 754 F.3d at 1007
    –1010, and, consequently, only briefly summarized here.
    A.      The H-2A Statutory Regime
    The Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) authorizes the grant of temporary work
    visas to any nonimmigrant alien “having a residence in a foreign country which he has no
    intention of abandoning who is coming temporarily to the United States to perform agricultural
    labor or services.” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a). In order to hire such foreign workers,
    American employers must first obtain certification from the Secretary of Labor, who may certify,
    or approve, the temporary work visas, called H-2A visas, when, inter alia, (1) “there are not
    sufficient workers who are able, willing and qualified, and who will be available at the time and
    place needed, to perform the labor or services involved in the petition,” and (2) “the employment
    of the alien in such labor or services will not adversely affect the wages and working conditions
    of workers in the United States similarly employed.” 
    Id. § 1188(a)(1).
    In order to ensure that the employment of H-2A workers does not “adversely affect the
    wages and working conditions” of domestic workers, DOL has adopted regulations setting
    minimum wages and working conditions provided to domestic and foreign workers. 
    Mendoza, 754 F.3d at 1008
    . In particular, DOL requires H-2A employers to pay their hourly workers the
    highest of what is known as an adverse effect wage rate (“AEWR”), “the prevailing wage or
    piece rate, the agreed-upon collective bargaining wage, or the Federal or State minimum wage.”
    4
    20 C.F.R. § 655.122(l). The AEWR, calculated using the Department of Agriculture’s Farm
    Labor Survey (“FLS”), is intended to “approximate[] what the prevailing wage would be if not
    for the hiring of foreign workers.” 
    Mendoza, 754 F.3d at 1008
    (citing Temporary Agricultural
    Employment of H-2A Aliens in the United States, 75 Fed Reg. 6884, 6891–93 (Feb. 12, 2010)).
    DOL does not apply the AEWR to open-range herders, such as cattleherders,
    sheepherders and goatherders, however, because of the “unique occupational characteristics of
    herding—including spending extended periods in isolated areas and being on call twenty-four
    hours a day, seven days a week to protect livestock.” 
    Mendoza, 754 F.3d at 1008
    –9 (internal
    citations omitted). Instead, the 2011 TEGLs provide special variances from the default AEWR
    and impose different methods of calculating the prevailing wage for each state, which is the
    minimum the employers are required to pay foreign H-2A open-range herders. 
    Id. at 1008.
    B.      The Mendoza Litigation and Remedial Order
    In October 2011, Americans who were formerly open-range herders filed a lawsuit in this
    Court against the Secretary of Labor and the Department of Labor, challenging the validity of the
    2011 TEGLs for lack of notice-and-comment procedures required under the APA. 
    Mendoza, 924 F. Supp. 2d at 314
    . The plaintiffs succeeded in their challenge, and, in June 2014, the D.C.
    Circuit remanded the case to “craft a remedy to the APA violation,” taking into consideration
    “various factors including whether vacating the TEGLs would have a disruptive effect on the
    herding industry and how quickly the Department of Labor might be able to promulgate,
    pursuant to the procedural requirements of the APA, new H-2A regulations for herding
    operations.” 
    Mendoza, 754 F.3d at 1025
    .
    Following ample briefing and consideration of multiple factors, including those expressly
    cited by the D.C. Circuit, in October 2014, this Court, with the consent of all parties and to
    5
    minimize disruptive effects on the industry, retained in effect the invalidated TEGLs until the
    effective date of the new rule, which was set “to be no later than 30 days after the rule’s
    publication or December 1, 2015, whichever is earlier.” Remedial 
    Order, 72 F. Supp. 3d at 175
    .
    In accordance with the time schedule set out by this Court, in April 2015, DOL published notice
    for comment of a proposed rule to replace the 2011 TEGLs. See Notice of Proposed Rule on
    Temporary Agricultural Employment of H-2A Foreign Workers in the Herding or Production of
    Livestock on the Open Range in the United States (“NPRM”) (Apr. 15, 2015), 80 Fed. Reg.
    20,300. Towards Justice, counsel to the plaintiffs in this case, along with fifty-three other groups
    and three individuals, commented on the NPRM, noting that the proposed rule “is a welcome
    change that begins to address the wage stagnation in the industry.” Comments of Farmworker
    Justice, et al. at 1, Docket No. ETA-2015-0004-0460 (June 1, 2015).
    C.      The Instant Case
    On August 18, 2015, four months after the publication of the NPRM, and less than three
    months before publication of the final new rule, the plaintiffs filed the instant action in the
    United States District Court for the District of Colorado. Compl. ¶ 37. The plaintiffs—Hispanic
    Affairs Project, an organization with members who are both former and current H-2A
    sheepherders, Pls.’ Mem. Ex. J (“HAP Director Decl.”) ¶¶ 4, 13, ECF No. 1-10; Rodolfo Llacua,
    a former sheepherder and U.S. citizen who avers that he cannot pursue his preferred profession
    of sheepherding because of the low wages set by DOL, Pls.’ Mem. Ex. K (“Llacua Decl.”) ¶ 12,
    ECF No. 1-11; and John Doe, a current H-2A sheepherder who avers that he is hardly making
    enough, at the challenged wage rate, to support himself and his family, Pls.’ Mem. Ex. L (“Doe
    Decl.”) ¶ 5, ECF No. 1-12—claim that the defendants did not follow the 2011 Sheepherder
    6
    TEGL when determining the prevailing wage rates at which it certifies H-2A sheepherder
    applications, and that they have been harmed by the illegally low wages. See Pls.’ Mem. at 1–2.
    After the United States Court for the District of Colorado denied the plaintiffs’ ex parte
    motion for a temporary restraining order and set a briefing schedule for the plaintiffs’ motion for
    a preliminary injunction, the parties filed, on September 21, 2015, a Joint Motion to Transfer
    Case to this Court, ECF No. 15. The case was subsequently transferred to this Court, see Order,
    dated September 25, 2015, ECF No. 19, where both parties provided notice that this case is
    related to the Mendoza litigation, see Pls.’ Notice of Related Case, dated September 29, 2015,
    ECF No. 23; Defs.’ Notice of Related Case, dated September 30, 2015, ECF No. 24, prompting
    reassignment of the case to the undersigned Judge, see Order, dated October 5, 2015, ECF No.
    5. 3
    The plaintiffs seek preliminary injunctive relief “enjoin[ing] DOL from certifying any
    additional H-2A Applications for Temporary Employment Certifications (“H-2A Applications”)
    for H-2A sheepherders at the illegal wage floor.” 4 Pls.’ Mem. at 2. For the reasons outlined
    below, the Court denies the plaintiffs’ motion.             5
    II.      LEGAL STANDARD
    A preliminary injunction is “an extraordinary and drastic remedy,” Mazurek v.
    Armstrong, 
    520 U.S. 968
    , 972 (1997) (quoting 11 AC. Wright, A. Miller, & M. Kane, FEDERAL
    3
    Upon reassignment, a hearing was promptly scheduled on the plaintiffs’ pending Motion for Preliminary
    Injunction. See Minute Order, dated October 6, 2015.
    4
    As part of their initial requested relief, the plaintiffs also sought an order directing “DOL to issue notice . . .
    to all current H-2A sheepherder employers, making them aware that the DOL will soon issue a new sheepherder
    wage floor rule and that employers will be liable for at least any difference between the amount paid to current H-
    2A sheepherders and the new minimum as of the date of the issuance of the notice.” Pls.’ Mem. at 2. During the
    hearing on the motion for a preliminary injunction, in response to a question from the Court, the plaintiffs withdrew
    their request for such a notice, choosing instead to “focus . . . on preventing any other certifications at that $750 a
    month rate.” Rough Transcript of Hearing (October 15, 2015) (“Hrg. Tr.”) at 40:2–8.
    5
    Also pending but not yet ripe is the plaintiffs’ Motion for Class Certification. See Pls.’ Motion to Certify
    Class Under FRCP 23(b)(2), ECF No. 27.
    7
    P RACTICE AND P ROCEDURE § 2948 (2d ed. 1995)), requiring the plaintiffs to show clearly (1) that
    they are “likely to succeed on the merits,” (2) that they are “likely to suffer irreparable harm in
    the absence of preliminary relief,” (3) “that the balance of equities tips in [their] favor,” and (4)
    “that an injunction is in the public interest,” Glossip v. Gross, 
    135 S. Ct. 2726
    , 2736–37 (2015)
    (quoting Winter v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 
    555 U.S. 7
    , 20 (2008)); see also
    Aamer v. Obama, 
    742 F.3d 1023
    , 1038 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (quoting Sherley v. Sebelius, 
    644 F.3d 388
    , 392 (D.C. Cir. 2011)). “‘When seeking a preliminary injunction, the movant has the burden
    to show that all four factors, taken together, weigh in favor of the injunction.’” Abdullah v.
    Obama, 
    753 F.3d 193
    , 197 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (quoting Davis v. Pension Benefit Guar. Corp., 
    571 F.3d 1288
    , 1292 (D.C. Cir. 2009)). The Supreme Court in 
    Winter, 555 U.S. at 22
    , made clear
    that a court may not issue “a preliminary injunction based only on a possibility of irreparable
    harm . . . [since] injunctive relief [i]s an extraordinary remedy that may only be awarded upon a
    clear showing that the plaintiff is entitled to such relief.”
    III.    DISCUSSION
    The plaintiffs argue that the current prevailing wage rates at which DOL certifies H-2A
    applications for visas for foreign sheepherders and goatherders are illegal because DOL did not
    apply the methodology authorized under the 2011 Sheepherder TEGL. Pls.’ Mem. at 1. The
    2011 Sheepherder TEGL directs DOL to annually determine the prevailing monthly wage for the
    sheepherding and goatherding industry in each state based on annual surveys of domestic herders
    conducted by each local State Workforce Agency (“SWA”). 2011 Sheepherder TEGL, 76 Fed.
    Reg. at 47,258. “[W]here a SWA is unable to produce a wage rate finding . . . due to an
    inadequate sample size or another valid reason,” DOL must either use “comparable survey data
    from an adjoining or proximate SWA,” or “aggregat[e] survey data for sheepherding and/or
    8
    goatherding activities across States to create regional prevailing wage rates.” 
    Id. According to
    the plaintiffs, DOL has not complied with the 2011 Sheepherder TEGL by (1) failing to
    determine the prevailing wage rates annually and, instead, last determining the wage rates in
    2013; (2) failing to rely on statistically significant SWA surveys and, instead, using surveys with
    “inadequate sample sizes” of six to nine workers; and (3) failing to utilize fresh SWA surveys
    and, instead, applying “past survey data” from 2009 to make 2013 prevailing wage
    determinations. Pls.’ Mem. at 5–8.
    The defendants do not dispute that DOL issued its last prevailing wage rates in 2013, and
    that, in making those determinations, it relied on SWA surveys with small sample sizes and
    sometimes on past SWA survey data. Defs.’ Opp’n at 13–14, ECF No. 14; NPRM, 80 Fed. Reg.
    at 20,307–08. DOL even admits that “for many years, the Department has been unable to
    determine a statistically valid prevailing wage rate each year in each State in which one is
    needed” and that wages “effectively have not increased since 1994” in states without higher
    mandatory minimum wages. 
    Id. at 20,307;
    see also Hrg. Tr. at 28:19–25 (government counsel
    stating that the 2011 Sheepherder TEGL “didn’t work” and that the “wage[s] stagnated” as a
    result).
    The plaintiffs have persuasively pointed out the deficiencies in the wage rates
    implemented under the authority of the 2011 Sheepherder TEGL. 6 Yet, even if the likelihood of
    6
    In connection with this prong of the preliminary injunctive relief standard requiring a showing of likelihood
    of success on the merits, the defendants contend that the motion should be denied for lack of standing, since the
    plaintiffs’ injuries are not redressable. Defs.’ Opp’n at 8. According to the defendants, “no new wage under any
    methodology Plaintiffs propose can be effectively calculated,” 
    id. at 9,
    and all of the plaintiffs’ suggested options
    “would cause a significant disruption to the program or a program hiatus,” 
    id. at 8.
    The plaintiffs’ final requested
    relief, however, only “[r]equire[s] the DOL to promptly issue a wage determination that accords with the regulatory
    framework of the 2011 [Sheepherder TEGL],” without dictating the specific methods by which the defendants may
    arrive at that wage determination. Compl. ¶ 61(c). The aforementioned options are merely the plaintiffs’
    suggestions. See Pls.’ Mem. at 18 (describing the three methods as “potential options”). The defendants would be
    free to craft a permitted methodology to make new wage determination should the Court “declar[e] the current wage
    floor rule employed by the DOL unlawful and in violation of the . . . APA, 5 U.S.C. § 706(1)-(2).” Compl. ¶ 61(b).
    9
    success on the merits factor is “the first and most important factor,” 
    Aamer, 753 F.3d at 1038
    ,
    where “especially good reasons for preserving the status quo by denying the petitioners’ request”
    exist, the injunctive relief should be denied, 
    id. at 1043.
    Indeed, the plaintiffs bear the burden to
    establish “that all four factors, taken together, weigh in favor of the injunction.” 
    Abdullah, 753 F.3d at 197
    ; see also Morgan Drexen, Inc. v. Consumer Fin. Prot. Bureau, 
    785 F.3d 684
    , 694
    (D.C. Cir. 2015) (“Failing to satisfy any factor is grounds for denying [injunctive] relief.”);
    Asher v. Laird, 
    475 F.2d 360
    , 362 (D.C. Cir. 1973) (per curiam) (affirming denial of preliminary
    injunction since “[e]ven had appellants demonstrated such a likelihood [of success], there has
    been no showing on the other three elements of the [injunction] test”).
    The defendants argue that the injunctive relief sought should be denied because the
    plaintiffs have failed to show irreparable harm or that “the balance of harms/public interest”
    favor imposition of the injunctive relief requested. Defs.’ Supp. Resp. to Questioning at Oral
    Argument at 2, ECF No. 32. As discussed in more detail below, the plaintiffs have failed to
    demonstrate that (1) they are likely to suffer irreparable harm absent the requested injunctive
    relief; (2) a remedy in equity is warranted upon consideration of the balance of hardships to the
    plaintiffs and other interested parties; and (3) the requested relief is in the public interest. These
    considerations are addressed seriatim below.
    A.       Irreparable Harm
    The practical concerns identified by the defendants in actually crafting a new wage rate under the 2011 Sheepherder
    TEGL, should the current rate be found invalid, may not be sufficient to deny standing but are certainly relevant to
    other prerequisites for injunctive relief, including the balance of harms and the public interest, as discussed infra.
    Similarly, the defendants also argue that plaintiff Llacua, specifically, lacks standing because “his alleged injury of
    being unable to secure a herding job at a desirable wage” cannot be redressed by an injunction enjoining the H-2A
    visa program. Whether the requested injunctive relief can redress plaintiff Llacua’s injuries, however, dovetails
    with consideration of the showing of irreparable harm, as discussed in more detail infra. See Mott Thoroughbred
    Stables, Inc. v. Rodriguez, 
    87 F. Supp. 3d 237
    , 247 (D.D.C. 2015) (analyzing under the irreparable harm factor
    whether requested injunctive relief would necessarily redress plaintiff’s alleged harm).
    10
    The D.C. Circuit “has set a high standard for irreparable injury” to warrant preliminary
    injunctions. Mexichem Specialty Resins, Inc. v. E.P.A., 
    787 F.3d 544
    , 555 (D.C. Cir. 2015)
    (quoting Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches v. England, 
    454 F.3d 290
    , 297 (D.C. Cir. 2006)).
    In order to be considered “irreparable,” the injury “must be ‘both certain and great,’ ‘actual and
    not theoretical,’ ‘beyond remediation,’ and ‘of such imminence that there is a clear and present
    need for equitable relief to prevent irreparable harm.’” 
    Id. (quoting Chaplaincy
    of Full Gospel
    
    Churches, 454 F.3d at 297
    ) (emphasis in original). Where the injuries alleged are purely
    economic, as in the instant case, the injuries are irreparable only if “no ‘adequate compensatory
    or other corrective relief will be available at a later date, in the ordinary course of litigation.” 
    Id. (quoting Wisconsin
    Gas Co. v. FERC, 
    758 F.2d 669
    , 674 (D.C. Cir. 1985)).
    At the outset, the Court agrees with the defendants that the timing of the plaintiffs’
    lawsuit undermines their argument that they are suffering irreparable harm. Hrg. Tr. at 24:13–
    25:4. The D.C. Circuit has found that a delay of even forty-four days before bringing action for
    injunctive relief was “inexcusable,” and “bolstered the conclusion that an injunction should not
    issue,” particularly where the party seeking an injunction had knowledge of the pending nature
    of the alleged irreparable harm. See Fund for Animals v. Frizzell, 
    530 F.2d 982
    , 987 (D.C. Cir.
    1975); see also Newdow v. Bush, 
    355 F. Supp. 2d 265
    , 292 (D.D.C. 2005) (“An unexcused delay
    in seeking extraordinary injunctive relief may be grounds for denial because such delay implies a
    lack of urgency and irreparable harm.”).
    Here, the plaintiffs have had ample notice that the challenged wage rates issued under the
    2011 Sheepherder TEGL were problematic but failed to bring a lawsuit until just a few months
    before that rule will be vacated. The validity of the 2011 TEGLs has been subject to scrutiny
    virtually since its promulgation, when the Mendoza lawsuit was filed in October 2011.
    11
    
    Mendoza, 924 F. Supp. 2d at 314
    . In June 2014, the D.C. Circuit held that the 2011 TEGLs were
    invalidly promulgated requiring remand, 
    Mendoza, 754 F.3d at 233
    , for issuance, in October
    2014, of a remedial order, during consideration of which all parties agreed that the 2011 TEGLs
    should be retained until the effective date of the replacement rule. Remedial Order, 
    72 F. Supp. 3d
    at 175. The NPRM published, in April 2015, expressly addressed the deficiency in the
    application of the 2011 Sheepherder TEGL because the prevailing wage rate relied on state-wide
    surveys that “lack[ed] . . . reportable data,” a factor that “likely contributed to the stagnation of
    wages over the last 20 years,” and “[a]s a result, the Department cannot continue to rely on these
    surveys under current conditions and fulfill its statutory mandate to prevent adverse effect to
    workers’ wages and working conditions.” NPRM, 80 Fed. Reg. at 20,309. The NPRM
    prompted over five hundred comments from interested parties, including a comment jointly
    submitted by the plaintiffs’ attorneys, Towards Justice, and other workers’ advocate groups.
    2015 Rule, 80 Fed. Reg. at 62,958, 62,961, n.5. The ongoing litigation over the validity of 2011
    Sheepherder TEGL, and this Court’s Remedial Order retaining the 2011 Sheepherder TEGL as a
    stopgap measure until replaced, cannot be ignored in evaluating the plaintiffs’ current claim of
    irreparable harm from the methods DOL uses to determine prevailing wage rates in the affected
    industry.
    The plaintiffs’ belated initiation of this lawsuit challenging the determination of the
    prevailing wages belies the plaintiffs’ contentions of urgency and immediacy now. The director
    of the plaintiff Hispanic Affairs Project avers that he was “informed that the low wages currently
    paid to H-2A sheepherders are illegal” only a week before he filed suit on August 18, 2015.
    HAP Director Decl. ¶ 9. Each of the two individual plaintiffs aver that they were only “recently
    informed that the way that the government was calculating the minimum wages for herders was
    12
    illegal.” Llacua Decl. ¶ 14; Doe Decl. ¶ 15. The amount of litigation and administrative activity
    regarding the 2011 TEGLs, not to mention the public attention garnered by these activities,
    significantly undermines these excuses, especially where over fifty workers’ rights groups
    submitted comments in response to the NPRM, including the plaintiffs’ own attorneys.
    Even if any delay in filing the instant lawsuit were discounted in evaluating the plaintiffs’
    claim of irreparable harm, the Court is not persuaded that the requested relief of halting issuance
    of new H-2A visas at the current wage rate would actually do anything to address the harms
    identified by the plaintiffs.
    For example, plaintiff Llacua, a former sheepherder, alleges that, absent the requested
    injunctive relief, he would suffer the irreparable harm of delaying his “return to a preferred job
    that offers a rationally calculated wage.” Pls.’ Mem. at 15. Yet, enjoining the issuance of new
    H-2A visas at the current wage rate would not guarantee this plaintiff any herding job offer, let
    alone a herding job offer at a sufficiently high wage to be acceptable or an acceptable offer in the
    short time frame before the new rule with a higher wage rate goes into effect on November 16,
    2015. Consequently, whether viewed through the prism of redressability or irreparable harm, the
    injunctive relief requested would not necessarily help this plaintiff. Moreover, the Court is
    cognizant that plaintiff Llacua is in the same position as the former sheepherder plaintiffs in
    Mendoza, and the Mendoza plaintiffs agreed to delaying the vacatur of the invalid 2011 TEGL
    until the effective date of the new rule, in recognition of potential disruption to the industry, even
    though they were ostensibly facing the same harm from delay as plaintiff Llacua here. 7
    7
    In fact, the plaintiffs seek to certify as a class “all current H-2A sheepherders and all persons who would be
    working as sheepherders in the United States but for the United States Department of Labor’s illegal implementation
    of its 2011 [Sheepherder TEGL],” Compl. ¶ 39, indicating that Llacua’s harms are the same as those faced by all
    other former sheepherders “who would be working as sheepherders” but for the current wage rate, including the
    Mendoza plaintiffs.
    13
    Remedial Order, 
    72 F. Supp. 3d
    at 174. These factors militate against a finding of irreparable
    harm as to plaintiff Llacua.
    Likewise, plaintiff Doe, a current H-2A sheepherder, as well as any similarly situated
    members of plaintiff HAP, also fail to demonstrate that they are likely to suffer irreparable harm
    absent the requested injunctive relief. Plaintiff Doe posits that he will suffer irreparable harm
    because he will “continue to receive illegally low wages and likely will be unable to obtain
    backpay according to a yet-to-be determined, rationally calculated wage floor.” Pls.’ Mem. at
    15. Since the plaintiff’s harm is purely economic, in order to show irreparable harm, he must
    demonstrate that his monetary loss would be irremediable at a later date. Mexichem Specialty
    Resins, 
    Inc., 787 F.3d at 555
    (quoting Wisconsin Gas 
    Co., 758 F.2d at 674
    ). To satisfy this
    standard, the plaintiffs reason that, absent a preliminary injunction, which includes a finding that
    application of the 2011 Sheepherder TEGL is illegal as to the current prevailing wage rate
    determination, plaintiff Doe would be unable to make a successful claim for backpay because
    employers would be able to “claim reasonable reliance” on this invalidated TEGL and that they
    are “merely complying with what the DOL authorizes.” Pls.’ Reply Supp. Mot. Prelim.
    Injunction (“Pls.’ Reply”) at 18, ECF No. 22 (citing Frederick County Fruit Growers Ass’n v.
    Martin, 
    968 F.2d 1265
    , 1274 (D.C. Cir. 1992) and Morrison v. Dep’t of Labor, 
    713 F. Supp. 664
    ,
    671 (S.D.N.Y. 1989)). In other words, the injunctive relief requested is intended merely to lay
    the strategic groundwork for a subsequent claim for backpay by providing an argument to defeat
    the employers’ anticipated defense of reasonable reliance on the soon-to-be-superseded 2011
    Sheepherder TEGL. See Pls.’ Reply at 17 (“Plaintiffs’ principal theory of remedies is against H-
    2A shepherd employers[.]”).
    14
    The Court is not persuaded that the issuance of the requested injunction would, in fact,
    have any effect, let alone bolster, the claim of plaintiff Doe, or similarly situated current herders,
    for backpay in some later suit against different parties not present here. See Hrg. Tr. at 20:20–22
    (plaintiffs’ counsel conceding that how the backpay analysis would apply is unclear but that “the
    main point here is we can have that battle later”). Since the real goal of the plaintiffs is to obtain
    backpay for some period of time prior to the increase in wages required under the new 2015
    Rule, the requested preliminary injunctive relief, standing alone, would be insufficient to redress
    their alleged irreparable harm; rather, as the plaintiffs concede, they must file a separate lawsuit
    against the employers to assert any claims for backpay.
    Additionally, neither of the cases relied upon by the plaintiffs support their contention
    that enjoining DOL from certifying any new H-2A applications at the current wage rate would
    entitle the plaintiffs to “backpay from employers at a correct rate of pay.” Pls.’ Reply at 17. The
    first case, Frederick County, involved workers’ challenges to a DOL interpretation of a 1978
    regulation and then a subsequent successor rule concerning wages for foreign fruit workers under
    the H-2A program when both the challenged interpretation and successor rule effectively
    depressed wages. Frederick 
    County, 968 F.2d at 1266
    . The challenged interpretation was
    judicially determined to be improper before the 1982 harvest, and was nonetheless codified in a
    new rule promulgated in 1983. 
    Id. at 1267.
    Within approximately one week of promulgation,
    the new 1983 rule was preliminarily enjoined by this Court, until the D.C. Circuit vacated the
    injunction “prior to the 1984 harvest.” 
    Id. The D.C.
    Circuit ultimately concluded, in 1985, that
    the 1983 rule was invalid on the merits, thereby “in effect reinstat[ing] the 1978 regulation”
    requiring a higher wage rate. 
    Id. As a
    consequence of these various judicial and agency actions,
    the higher wage rate required by the 1978 regulation was in effect for both the 1983 and 1985
    15
    harvests—due, respectively, to the district court’s finding that DOL’s interpretation was invalid
    when the growers completed their employment plans for the 1983 harvest, 
    id. at 1273,
    and the
    D.C. Circuit’s subsequent finding that the 1983 rule was invalid before the growers submitted
    their job clearance orders for the 1985 harvest, leaving in effect the 1978 regulation, 
    id. at 1267—while
    the depressed wage permitted by the 1983 rule was in effect for the 1984 harvest,
    due to the D.C. Circuit’s vacatur of the preliminary injunction. Despite the 1978 regulation
    being in effect for the 1983 and 1985 harvests, the growers nonetheless paid only the depressed
    wage rate, in violation of the district court’s court order that the higher wage rate required by the
    1978 regulation governed during the 1983 harvest and the D.C. Circuit’s ruling regarding the
    invalidity of the 1983 rule during the 1985 harvest. 
    Id. In 1989,
    “the district court granted the
    workers’ claim for the backpay for the 1983 harvest . . . and . . . the workers’ claim for the 1985
    harvest,” but not for the 1984 harvest, which backpay remedy was subsequently affirmed. 
    Id. at 1268.
      8
    The plaintiffs interpret the D.C. Circuit’s affirmance of the District Court’s backpay
    remedy for the 1983 harvest in Frederick County as demonstrating that “the existence of the
    injunction,” which rejected the validity of the challenged 1983 rule, “proved determinative in the
    D.C. Circuit’s decision that equity favored the workers, and the employers had to pay the higher
    rate” required in a new rule. Pls.’ Reply at 18. Based on this interpretation of the D.C. Circuit’s
    8
    After the D.C. Circuit dissolved the injunction and remanded the matter for the district court “to determine
    the propriety of DOL’s rulemaking procedure under the APA,” the district court approved the 1983 rule. Frederick
    Cty Fruit Growers Ass’n v. McLaughlin, 
    703 F. Supp. 1021
    , 1024 (D.D.C. 1989). While this ruling was on appeal,
    the 1983 rule’s depressed rate applied to the “growers’ 1984 job clearance orders,” despite the fact that the D.C.
    Circuit ultimately found this rule to be invalid and, “[a]s a result,” workers were paid a depressed wage for the 1984
    harvest “under an invalid rule.” 
    Id. Despite recognizing
    that the workers were paid a depressed wage under an
    invalid rule, the district court did not grant the workers’ claim for backpay for the 1984 harvest. 
    Id. at 1029.
    The
    workers, however, did not “cross-appeal the district court’s denial of their backpay claim for the 1984 harvest,” and
    the question of whether the workers may have been entitled to the higher wage rate under the 1978 regulation for the
    1984 harvest under a quasi-contract analysis was not before the D.C. Circuit. Frederick 
    County, 968 F.2d at 1268
    .
    16
    ruling, the “Plaintiffs seek to avail themselves of a similar equitable remedy against H-2A
    shepherd employers, but like the farmworkers in Frederick County, they need a finding from this
    Court that, contrary to the DOL’s position, the current shepherd wage-floor rule is an ‘invalid
    administrative edict.’” 
    Id. In short,
    the plaintiffs’ interpretation of the D.C. Circuit’s ruling in
    Frederick County is the “principal” reason for the injunctive relief sought here, 
    id. at 17,
    but that
    reasoning is flawed for at least three reasons.
    First, the injunctive relief granted in Frederick County directly addressed the irreparable
    injury of a lower wage rate claimed by the workers: the injunction barred enforcement of the new
    1983 rule that effectively depressed workers’ wage rates, so that the wage rate at issue
    automatically reverted to the higher rate set by the 1978 regulation. By contrast, here, the
    plaintiffs do not seek to enjoin the enforcement of the current wage rate as applied to all foreign
    H-2A sheepherders; instead, they seek only to “enjoin the DOL from certifying any additional
    H-2A applications . . . for H-2A sheepherders at the illegal wage floor.” Pls.’ Mem. at 2
    (emphasis added). Consequently, even if granted, the requested relief would have no impact on
    the wage rate of foreign sheepherders currently working on H-2A visas, unless and until DOL
    decides to make a new prevailing wage determination, which, notably, the requested relief does
    not require. Pls.’ Mem. at 18 (acknowledging that “immediately halting reliance on the [current]
    wage floor will not grind the DOL’s certification of H-2A Applications to a halt but will instead
    encourage the DOL to use one of a variety of alternative (and more rational) methodologies to
    calculate a wage floor.”).
    Second, the injunctive relief granted in Frederick County had a significantly different
    effect than the relief sought in this case. In that case, the injunction had the effect of triggering
    application of the higher wage rate under the 1978 regulation to the 1983 harvest, leaving no
    17
    vacuum requiring immediate rule-making as to the applicable rate for foreign workers in the H-
    2A visa program. By contrast, as the plaintiffs acknowledge, imposition of the requested
    injunctive relief here is intended only to prompt DOL to find an alternative methodology to
    determine the prevailing wage rate, and would require further rule-making and leave confusion
    as to the applicable rate in its wake. Pl.’s Mem. at 18; Pl.’s Reply at 24–25. This is precisely the
    confusion that the Remedial Order in the Mendoza litigation was intended to avoid. Remedial
    
    Order, 72 F. Supp. 3d at 175
    .
    Finally, by single-mindedly focusing on the preliminary injunctive relief granted in
    Frederick County as the silver bullet that defeated the growers’ reasonable reliance argument
    under an “equitable restitution” analysis, the plaintiffs miss another important aspect of the D.C.
    Circuit’s reasoning. Frederick 
    County, 968 F.2d at 1273
    –74. The D.C. Circuit made clear that
    the “equitable restitution” analysis was applied only because none of the parties challenged this
    framework. 
    Id. at 1272
    (“Because neither the workers nor the growers challenge the district
    court's analogy to a rate case, we analyze the parties' arguments within that rubric.”). In the
    Circuit’s view, a “more apt[]” approach to the remedial question would be to treat it as a
    “problem of quasi-contract: The wage term in the 1983 contract between the growers and the
    workers was unenforceable; therefore, the court must supply a reasonable wage term; in the
    context of this case the reasonable wage is the minimum wage established by the Secretary; and
    the growers should be ordered to pay that amount (less what they paid the workers voluntarily).”
    
    Id. In other
    words, if the regulation is invalid, the wage amount based on the regulation is also
    invalid and unenforceable, and the workers would be owed the reasonable wage that that should
    have been paid. Under the Circuit’s preferable methodology, the issuance of an injunction may
    be beside the point, since a critical issue for a backpay award is the ultimate validity of the
    18
    regulation. This undercuts the purported strategic reason the plaintiffs are seeking injunctive
    relief here. The parties in Frederick County, however, simply never made a quasi-contract
    argument. 
    Id. (“The workers
    do not make this argument, however, and so we do not consider
    it.”).
    In any event, in considering the workers’ entitlement to backpay for the 1983 harvest
    under an equitable restitution analysis, the Circuit considered and rejected multiple arguments of
    the growers, including finding that invalidation of a regulation on procedural, rather than
    substantive grounds, could nonetheless provide the basis for restitution since “[t]o do otherwise .
    . . would be to give legal effect to . . . [an] invalid order.” Frederick 
    County, 968 F.2d at 1273
    (internal citation and quotations omitted). More relevant here, the growers’ argument that they
    reasonably relied upon the 1983 rule in setting the wages for the 1983 harvest was also rejected,
    but the injunctive relief barring the 1983 rule’s enforcement was only part of the reason. The
    Court considered other factors as well, such as when the growers made plans for the harvest and
    filed their job clearance orders, the timing of promulgation and adoption of a new rule, and the
    timing of the injunctive relief, in evaluating whether the growers reasonably relied on the
    depressed rate provided in the invalid 1983 rule. 
    Id. at 1273–74.
    Even before the injunction had
    been issued, the Court found “at the least a significant possibility” that the 1983 harvest would
    be governed by another wage rate due to litigation over the validity of the regulation relied upon
    and that, by the time the injunction was issued, the employers knew the regulation “was, if not
    flatly invalid, of at least dubious validity” and could not reasonably rely upon it. 
    Id. at 1274.
    In
    other words, D.C. Circuit’s reason for upholding the backpay award for the 1983 harvest was not
    solely due to the injunction.
    19
    Likewise, the second case relied upon by the plaintiff, Morrison v. United States, also
    involved the wage rate for foreign fruit workers and did not turn on whether a preliminary
    injunction was entered. While acknowledging “the fact that no injunction was granted is
    influential,” the court expressly opined that it “does not agree with the counsel for the growers
    that there needs to be ‘an injunction in the air [in order] to reach the concept of equitable
    
    restitution.’” 713 F. Supp. at 671
    (quoting hearing transcript) (alteration in original). Instead, the
    “weightiest factor for the Court’s consideration is whether the growers relied on the approval by
    the DOL and whether such reliance was reasonable.” 
    Id. at 673.
    The Morrison court focused on
    “the timing of both the [DOL] approval and the institution of the lawsuit,” which put the growers
    on notice of the challenge to the wage rate, rather than the issuance of any preliminary
    injunction. The court reasoned that the growers reasonably relied upon DOL’s approval of job
    clearance orders they submitted “premised on the Farmer Memorandum . . . after what appeared
    to the growers to be a reasonable internal evaluation and analysis by the DOL” up until the filing
    of the plaintiffs’ suit, three months later. 
    Id. The court
    reasoned that the growers reasonably
    relied upon DOL’s approvals, even after the complaint was filed, because “at that point, on the
    eve of the harvest, their plans were irrevocably made” and “the approved wage rate played a
    central part in their economic planning for the harvest season.” 
    Id. Therefore, the
    key issue in
    Morrison was not whether a preliminary injunction was issued, but whether the growers had any
    “alternative but to go forward with the hiring of the H-2[A] workers at the rate approved in their
    job orders” after they were put on notice, by the complaint, that the regulation may be found
    invalid later. 
    Id. at 374.
    In sum, close review of the cases relied upon by the plaintiffs reveals significant
    questions about whether grant of the preliminary injunctive relief requested would, without
    20
    more, remedy the harm of lost backpay wages, which plaintiff Doe and similarly situated
    sheepherders may claim at some future date in some other litigation against parties not before the
    Court.
    B.     Balance of Equities
    The third factor for injunctive relief requires a showing that the balance of hardships
    warrants an equitable remedy. In making this assessment, the court may consider whether the
    requested injunctive relief would “substantially injure other interested parties.” Ark. Dairy Co-
    op Ass’n, Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 
    573 F.3d 815
    , 821 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (framing the balance of
    harms factor as an inquiry into whether “an injunction would substantially injure other interested
    parties”); see also Chaplaincy of Full Gospel 
    Churches, 454 F.3d at 297
    (same). As discussed
    above, the requested injunctive relief would do little to redress the plaintiffs’ alleged harms, and
    no irreparable harm is likely to inure to the plaintiffs in the absence of immediate injunctive
    relief. On the other hand, the preliminary injunction will bring the H-2A program to a halt,
    harming American employers “who rely on H-2A workers and the communities that rely on
    those industries, and participants in the larger market for goods and services derived from sheep
    and goats,” as well as foreign workers who seek work through the H-2A program. Defs.’ Opp’n
    at 17.
    The plaintiffs dismiss these harms as “speculative” and capable of “immediate[]
    ameliorat[ion].” Pl.’s Reply at 24–25. As the plaintiffs’ own evidence demonstrates, however,
    these harms to American employers and foreign workers who depend on the operation of the H-
    2A program are real. New and currently pending H-2A applications awaiting certification are
    being filed by employers. See Pls.’ Notice Regarding Exhibit M to Motion for a Temporary
    Restraining Order And/Or Preliminary Injunction at 2, ECF No. 13. Enjoining further
    21
    certifications at the current wage rate, as requested by the plaintiffs, would effectively result in a
    moratorium on the H-2A program, leaving in limbo the lives and businesses of those affected,
    albeit for the short period before the 2015 Rule goes into effect.
    The plaintiffs argue, even if the injunctive relief does pose harms to third-parties, the
    disruptive effect can be “immediately ameliorated” by DOL’s issuance of a “temporary
    emergency regulation.” Pl.’s Reply at 25 (citing Northern Mariana Islands v. U.S., 
    686 F. Supp. 2d
    7, 19–20 (D.D.C. 2009) for proposition that an agency may “promulgate a narrowly focused
    and temporary emergency regulation” to address any disruption to a regulatory scheme).
    Contrary to the plaintiffs’ suggestion that DOL can issue an emergency rule virtually overnight,
    Hrg. Tr. at 18:14–20 (“I think if you were to issue a ruling today . . . the Department of Labor . . .
    could issue an emergency rule tomorrow[.]”), DOL is required to take administrative steps that
    may, in fact, delay the effective date of any new rule. For example, to bypass notice-and-
    comment procedures, an agency must find “good cause” to do so and “incorporate the finding
    and a brief statement of reasons therefor in the rules issued.” 5 U.S.C. § 553(b)(B); see also
    Sorenson Communications Inc. v. F.C.C., 
    755 F.3d 702
    , 706–07 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (noting that an
    agency invoking “good cause” must present “something more than an unsupported assertion”).
    In fact, the defendants inform the Court that any invocation of good cause needs to first go
    “through the bureaucratic process, the office of information, [and] regulatory affairs,” potentially
    delaying the effective date of any emergency rule. Hrg. Tr. 22:7–18. 9
    9
    The defendants also indicate, without explanation, that to issue an emergency rule, DOL would first need to
    retract the already published new rule, pushing back the effective date of the new rule past the current deadline of
    November 16, 2015. Hrg. Tr. 22:9–18.
    22
    In light of the minimal benefits of the requested injunctive relief to the plaintiffs and the
    likelihood of substantial harms to interested third-parties, the Court finds that the balance of the
    equities weighs against issuing the plaintiffs’ requested injunction.
    3. The Public Interest
    Likewise, the requested injunction would also not be in the public interest. The Court has
    already found, after considering “whether vacating the TEGLs would have a disruptive effect on
    the herding industry,” 
    Mendoza, 754 F.3d at 1025
    , that the public interest is best served by
    retaining the 2011 TEGLs until the effective date of the 2105 Rule, which is fully informed by
    notice and public comment. Remedial Order, 
    72 F. Supp. 3d
    at 174–75. As noted, this portion
    of the Remedial Order was entered with the consent of all parties. 
    Id. Issuance of
    a preliminary
    injunction that imposes a moratorium on the certification of any new H-2A application would
    effectively, abruptly and belatedly, undo this portion of the Remedial Order, which has been in
    effect for over a year. Accordingly, the Court finds that the public interest does not support a
    preliminary injunction.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiffs’ Motion for a Preliminary Injunction is denied.
    An appropriate Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
    Date: October 31, 2015
    Digitally signed by Hon. Beryl A. Howell
    DN: cn=Hon. Beryl A. Howell, o=U.S.
    District Court for the District of Columbia,
    ou=United States District Court Judge,
    email=Howell_Chambers@dcd.uscourts.g
    ov, c=US
    __________________________
    Date: 2015.10.31 12:56:37 -04'00'
    BERYL A. HOWELL
    United States District Judge
    23