N.M. Corrections Dep't v. AFSCME ( 2017 )


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  •  1      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2 Opinion Number: ______________
    3 Filing Date: September 5, 2017
    4 NO. A-1-CA-34737
    5 NEW MEXICO CORRECTIONS DEPARTMENT,
    6        Appellant-Petitioner,
    7 v.
    8 AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE,
    9 COUNTY, AND MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES,
    10 COUNCIL 18, AFL-CIO,
    11        Appellee-Respondent.
    12 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY
    13 David K. Thomson, District Judge
    14   Paula E. Ganz
    15   Jennifer R. James
    16   Deputy General Counsel
    17   New Mexico Corrections Department
    18   Santa Fe, NM
    19 for Appellant
    1   Shane Youtz
    2   Stephen Curtice
    3   James A. Montalbano
    4   Youtz & Valdez, P.C.
    5   Albuquerque, NM
    6 for Appellee
    1                                      OPINION
    2 HANISEE, Judge.
    3   {1}   The State of New Mexico Corrections Department (the Department) appeals
    4 the district court’s denial of the Department’s motion for reconsideration following
    5 the district court’s on-record affirmance and adoption of the Public Employee Labor
    6 Relations Board’s (PELRB) September 2009 order and the PELRB hearing
    7 examiner’s July 2009 order, both of which found the Department to have committed
    8 a prohibited practice in violation of NMSA 1978, Section 10-7E-19(A) (2003) of the
    9 Public Employee Bargaining Act (PEBA). We affirm.
    10 BACKGROUND
    11   {2}   On February 10, 2009, Respondent filed a prohibited practices complaint (PPC)
    12 with the PELRB against the Department, alleging that the Department had violated
    13 Section 10-17E-19 by discriminating against two of the Department’s employees,
    14 Frank Blair and Gabe Molina. The basis of the PPC was that Blair and Molina, who
    15 are also union members and officials of the American Federation of State, County,
    16 and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 3422 (Corrections Officers), had
    17 requested and were denied use of a state vehicle to travel to and from a policy review
    18 meeting with Department management on January 26, 2009. Blair and Molina were
    19 attending the meeting in their capacity as state employee union officials (employee
    1 officials). Employee officials are union officials or stewards who are also state
    2 employees. Per the parties’ 2005 collective bargaining agreement (CBA), employee
    3 officials are “on paid status” when they attend “meetings agreed to by the parties for
    4 purposes of administration of [the CBA].” Other Department employees attending the
    5 same meeting in their capacity as management were allowed to use a state vehicle to
    6 travel to and from the meeting, the purpose of which was to discuss various labor-
    7 management issues. A hearing on the merits was held before PELRB Director Juan
    8 Montoya (the hearing examiner) on July 1, 2009, during which the following facts
    9 were elicited.
    10   {3}   The purpose of labor-management meetings is to provide the Department and
    11 the union an opportunity to resolve issues that arise in the workplace in order to
    12 promote a cooperative relationship between the parties and enhance the orderly
    13 operation and functioning of the Department’s facilities. Policy review meetings, such
    14 as the one held on January 26, 2009, are a type of labor-management meeting that is
    15 convened when the Department proposes policy changes affecting the CBA. Such
    16 meetings are typically convened by the Department’s Human Resources Bureau Chief
    17 Elona Cruz, who is the Department’s administrator of the CBA. When convened,
    18 representatives of both Department management and employee officials are required
    19 to attend per the CBA.
    2
    1   {4}   Cruz used a state vehicle to attend such meetings, including the meeting on
    2 January 26, 2009. On approximately a dozen occasions from 2005 through 2008,
    3 Cruz granted employee officials permission to do the same. In January 2009 Cruz
    4 issued a directive to the Department, disallowing use of state vehicles by employee
    5 officials. Cruz’s directive was in response to direction she received from the State
    6 Personnel Office (SPO), which had received a legal opinion (the opinion) in
    7 December 2008 from the General Services Department’s (GSD) general counsel that
    8 concluded that state law prohibits the use of state vehicles by union officials and
    9 stewards, including employee officials. The opinion responded to a general inquiry
    10 from SPO Director Sandra Perez regarding an issue that had arisen during
    11 negotiations between the state and different unions, including AFSCME, and did not
    12 address the specific factual scenario presented in this case.
    13   {5}   According to GSD Secretary Arturo Jaramillo, GSD is the only state agency
    14 with the authority to own, lease, and insure state vehicles. GSD is also the only state
    15 agency with the authority to establish rules and regulations for the use of state
    16 vehicles. Secretary Jaramillo explained that under the New Mexico Administrative
    17 Code, the general eligibility requirements for using a state vehicle are: (1) status as
    18 a state employee, (2) possession of a valid driver’s license, (3) completion of a
    19 defensive driving course, and (4) the use must be “in furtherance of official state
    3
    1 business.” He also testified that the term “official state business” is not defined by
    2 statute or regulation, and determinations of whether use of a vehicle is in furtherance
    3 of official state business are made on a case-by-case basis, taking into consideration
    4 “the whole complex” of facts, not just one particular fact. When asked whether, in
    5 general, there are instances where a union official’s use of a vehicle would be in
    6 furtherance of official state business, Secretary Jaramillo responded, “I could envision
    7 that, where the interests of the state and the union relat[e] to resolution of a matter of
    8 common interest, I would argue that is in furtherance of state business.” He offered
    9 grievance meetings as an example of a type of labor-management meeting that would
    10 qualify for use of state vehicles by employee officials because such meetings are “in
    11 furtherance of official state business because it would be in the state’s interests to
    12 resolve grievances.” As an example of what he would not consider an appropriate use
    13 of a state vehicle by an employee official, he stated that a meeting relating to a
    14 “matter of pure internal administration by the union” is not something he would
    15 consider to be in furtherance of official state business. Secretary Jaramillo
    16 emphasized that determinations must be made based on all of the facts—not any
    17 particular fact, such as how an employee’s time is coded—and that the ultimate
    18 question to answer in deciding whether use of a state vehicle is authorized is whether
    19 such use is in furtherance of official state business.
    4
    1   {6}   The hearing examiner concluded that “[a] state employee who is also a union
    2 official of a state bargaining unit is on official state business while attending labor-
    3 management relations meetings, grievance meetings[,] and other meetings necessary
    4 for the administration of the [CBA].” As such, he determined that the Department had
    5 committed a prohibited practice in violation of Section 10-7E-19(A) by treating Blair
    6 and Molina differently than management employees regarding the use of state
    7 vehicles to attend the January 2009 policy review meeting and ordered the
    8 Department to “cease and desist” from such practice. The PELRB affirmed the
    9 hearing examiner’s decision and order.
    10   {7}   The Department appealed the PELRB’s decision to district court, arguing that
    11 the decision was not in accordance with law. Specifically, the Department argued that
    12 the decision conflicts with myriad statutes—including Section 10-7E-19(A); NMSA
    13 1978, Section 10-7E-6 (2003); and New Mexico’s Transportation Services Act
    14 (TSA), NMSA 1978, §§ 15-8-1 to -11 (1994, as amended through 2013)—as well as
    15 the New Mexico Constitution’s Anti-Donation Clause, N.M. Const. art. IX, § 14. The
    16 district court affirmed the PELRB’s order and adopted the findings and conclusions
    17 of the hearing examiner. In its motion for reconsideration, the Department reiterated
    18 its previous arguments and also argued that the decision overlooked and is in conflict
    19 with various provisions of the New Mexico Tort Claims Act, NMSA 1978, §§ 41-4-1
    5
    1 to -30 (1976, as amended through 2015). The district court denied the Department’s
    2 motion, and the Department timely filed for a writ of certiorari under Rule 12-505
    3 NMRA, which this Court granted.
    4 DISCUSSION
    5   {8}   The ultimate question we must answer in this case is whether the PELRB erred
    6 in concluding that the Department committed a prohibited practice by not allowing
    7 employee officials to use a state vehicle to attend a policy review meeting called by
    8 the Department when management employees were allowed to use a state vehicle to
    9 attend the same meeting.
    10 Standard of Review
    11   {9}   “Upon a grant of a petition for writ of certiorari under Rule 12-505, this Court
    12 conducts the same review of an administrative order as the district court sitting in its
    13 appellate capacity, while at the same time determining whether the district court erred
    14 in the first appeal.” City of Albuquerque v. AFSCME Council 18 ex rel. Puccini,
    15 
    2011-NMCA-021
    , ¶ 8, 
    149 N.M. 379
    , 
    249 P.3d 510
     (alteration, internal quotation
    16 marks, and citation omitted). “In reviewing an administrative decision, we apply a
    17 whole-record standard of review.” Town & Country Food Stores, Inc. v. N.M. Reg.
    18 & Licensing Dep’t, 
    2012-NMCA-046
    , ¶ 8, 
    277 P.3d 490
     (internal quotation marks
    19 and citation omitted). “We independently review the entire record of the
    6
    1 administrative hearing to determine whether the [PELRB]’s decision was arbitrary
    2 and capricious, not supported by substantial evidence, or otherwise not in accordance
    3 with law.” Puccini, 
    2011-NMCA-021
    , ¶ 8 (internal quotation marks and citation
    4 omitted). “When reviewing an administrative agency’s conclusions of law, we review
    5 de novo.” 
    Id.
     We “apply a de novo standard of review to [administrative] rulings
    6 regarding statutory construction.” Albuquerque Bernalillo Cty. Water Util. Auth. v.
    7 N.M. Pub. Reg. Comm’n (ABCWUA), 
    2010-NMSC-013
    , ¶ 50, 
    148 N.M. 21
    , 
    229 P.3d 8
     494. We “will generally defer to an agency’s reasonable interpretation of its own
    9 ambiguous regulations, especially where the subject of the regulation implicates
    10 agency expertise[.]” Id. ¶ 51 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    11 However, we are “not bound by the agency’s interpretation,” and we may substitute
    12 our own “independent judgment for that of the agency if the agency’s interpretation
    13 is unreasonable or unlawful.” Id. (omission, internal quotation marks, and citation
    14 omitted).
    15 The PEBA: Intent and Prohibited Practices
    16   {10}   The Legislature declared the purpose of the PEBA as being “[(1)] to guarantee
    17 public employees the right to organize and bargain collectively with their
    18 employers[;] [(2)] to promote harmonious and cooperative relationships between
    19 public employers and public employees[;] and [(3)] to protect the public interest by
    7
    1 ensuring, at all times, the orderly operation and functioning of the state and its
    2 political subdivisions.” NMSA 1978, § 10-7E-2 (2003). Consistent with the second
    3 and third stated purposes, the Legislature provided that it shall be a prohibited
    4 practice for a public employer to “discriminate against a public employee with regard
    5 to terms and conditions of employment because of the employee’s membership in a
    6 labor organization[.]” Section 10-7E-19(A). Treating two similarly situated persons
    7 differently on the basis of an identifiable characteristic is the hallmark of
    8 discrimination. Cf. NMSA 1978, § 28-1-7 (2004) (describing an “unlawful
    9 discriminatory practice” under the New Mexico Human Rights Act as being where
    10 an employer takes an employment action “because of” a particular trait, such as race,
    11 age, religion, or sex); Griego v. Oliver, 
    2014-NMSC-003
    , ¶ 27, 
    316 P.3d 865
    12 (explaining that under equal protection analysis, the first question to ask in
    13 determining the constitutionality of a discriminatory state law is “whether the
    14 legislation creates a class of similarly situated individuals and treats them
    15 differently”); Burch v. Foy, 
    1957-NMSC-017
    , ¶ 10, 
    62 N.M. 219
    , 
    308 P.2d 199
    16 (discussing “the requirements of legal and constitutional classification, i.e., equal
    17 protection of the law[,]” explaining that in order to be legal, a classification “must be
    18 founded upon real differences of situation or condition, which bear a just and proper
    19 relation to the attempted classification, and reasonably justify a different rule[,]” and
    8
    1 concluding that “[i]f persons under the same circumstances and conditions are treated
    2 differently, there is arbitrary discrimination, and not classification”). Under Section
    3 10-7E-19(A), union membership is the identifiable characteristic that may not serve
    4 as the basis for treating an otherwise similarly situated public employee differently
    5 with respect to the terms and conditions of his or her employment.
    6   {11}   Here, the uncontroverted facts are that the Department treated state employees
    7 who were members of the union (Blair and Molina) differently than a state employee
    8 who was not (Cruz) by allowing the non-union employee to use a state vehicle to
    9 attend the same Department-called meeting for which the union employees’ request
    10 to use a state vehicle had been denied. The Department has never argued that it did
    11 not treat Blair and Molina differently based on their union status but instead offers
    12 a variety of possible reasons why its conduct does not violate Section 10-7E-19(A).
    13 We consider each proffered basis in turn.
    14 1.       Whether Anti-Union Animus Is Required to Establish Discriminatory
    15          Treatment Under Section 10-7E-19(A) of the PEBA
    16   {12}   The Department first argues that we should interpret Section 10-7E-19(A) in
    17 accordance with how federal cases interpret a similar—but not identical—provision
    18 of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 
    29 U.S.C. § 158
    (a)(3) (2015).
    19 According to the Department, this approach leads to the conclusion that there cannot
    20 be discriminatory treatment with regard to terms and conditions of employment
    9
    1 absent evidence of anti-union animus or a retaliatory motive for taking a particular
    2 action. AFSCME points out that the federal cases cited by the Department relate to
    3 a provision in the NLRA that tracks Section 10-7E-19(D) of the PEBA, not
    4 Subsection A, and that our Legislature adopted Subsection A as an additional
    5 protection against discrimination even where there is no evidence of anti-union
    6 animus or retaliation against employees who engage in union activities. We agree
    7 with AFSCME.
    8   {13}   By its plain language, Section 10-7E-19(A) requires only that the
    9 discriminatory treatment be “because of the employee’s membership in a labor
    10 organization” in order for such treatment to constitute a prohibited practice. We
    11 decline to read into the statute a requirement that there be evidence that anti-union
    12 animus was the underlying motivation for a public employer’s discriminatory
    13 treatment of a public employee in order to constitute a violation of Section 10-7E-
    14 19(A). See Starko, Inc. v. N.M. Human Servs. Dep’t, 
    2014-NMSC-033
    , ¶ 46, 
    333 P.3d 15
     947 (“New Mexico courts have long honored [the] statutory command [that the text
    16 of a statute or rule is the primary, essential source of its meaning] through application
    17 of the plain meaning rule, recognizing that when a statute contains language which
    18 is clear and unambiguous, we must give effect to that language and refrain from
    19 further statutory interpretation.” (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation
    10
    1 omitted)). The simple fact that the decision discriminates against an employee
    2 because of his or her union status is sufficient to constitute discrimination—and a
    3 prohibited practice—under Section 10-7E-19(A). See id.; Northern N.M. Fed. of
    4 Educ. Emps. v. Northern N.M. College, 
    2016-NMCA-036
    , ¶ 18, 
    369 P.3d 22
    5 (explaining that the question presented by the prohibited practices complaint was
    6 whether the employment-related decisions “were motivated by discriminatory or
    7 retaliatory reasons” (emphasis added)). Thus, AFSCME was not required to prove
    8 that the Department’s action was retaliatory or motivated by anti-union animus in
    9 order for the hearing examiner to conclude that the Department had engaged in a
    10 prohibited practice.
    11 2.       Whether the 2005 CBA’s Silence Regarding Use of a State Vehicle by
    12          Employee Officials Is Dispositive as to Whether Section 10-7E-19(A) Was
    13          Violated
    14   {14}   The Department also relies on the absence of a provision in the CBA
    15 establishing an express right of employee officials to use state vehicles to attend
    16 labor-management meetings to defend its actions. The Department argues that “[t]he
    17 use of state vehicles does not follow from the bargained-for right to be paid for
    18 certain [union] activities, precisely because the 2005 CBA does not also confer the
    19 right to use state vehicles.” But whether the CBA provides a right to use state
    20 vehicles is simply the beginning of the inquiry, not the end because while parties may
    11
    1 agree to supplement statutory rights under a contract, the public policy of freedom to
    2 contract yields when a contract’s terms contravene existing law. See Acacia Mut. Life
    3 Ins. Co. v. Am. Gen. Life Ins. Co., 
    1990-NMSC-107
    , ¶ 1, 
    111 N.M. 106
    , 
    802 P.2d 11
    4 (“The right to contract is jealously guarded by [New Mexico courts], but if a
    5 contractual clause clearly contravenes a positive rule of law, it cannot be
    6 enforced[.]”). In other words, the absence of a CBA provision allowing use of a state
    7 vehicle is merely evidence that the parties did not reach a bargained-for agreement
    8 to allow such use by right and establishes nothing more than the Department did not
    9 breach the terms of the CBA. It does not somehow either waive the general
    10 protections of the PEBA or establish that the Department did not violate its statutory
    11 obligations under Section 10-7E-19(A).
    12 3.       Whether Employee Officials Attending a Policy Review Meeting With the
    13          Department Are Acting In Furtherance of Official State Business
    14   {15}   The Department primarily defends its disparate treatment of Blair and Molina
    15 by arguing that their attendance at the policy review meeting was not “in furtherance
    16 of official state business” but was rather for the purpose of furthering the “union’s
    17 agenda” and “union business.” The Department relies on state statutory and
    18 regulatory law—specifically the TSA, and its companion regulations, 1.5.3 NMAC
    19 (10/28/1985, as amended through 7/30/2015)—to support its contention that it was
    20 prohibited from allowing Blair and Molina to use a state vehicle to attend the policy
    12
    1 review meeting. In effect, the Department’s argument, if correct, would establish that
    2 the Department treated Blair and Molina differently not “because of” their union
    3 status (a prohibited reason for discriminating against them) but because of their
    4 ineligibility to drive a state vehicle (a non-prohibited reason). We consider whether
    5 the TSA or 1.5.3.7 NMAC provides a sufficient basis justifying the Department’s
    6 actions.
    7 New Mexico Statutory and Regulatory Law Regarding Use of State Vehicles
    8   {16}   The TSA defines “state vehicle” as “an automobile, van, sport-utility truck,
    9 pickup truck or other vehicle . . . used by a state agency to transport passengers or
    10 property[.]” Section 15-8-3(G). With respect to use of state vehicles, the TSA
    11 provides that the Transportation Services Division of the GSD “shall adopt rules
    12 governing the use of vehicles used by state agencies or by other persons . . . ,
    13 including driver requirements and responsibilities, [and] under what circumstances
    14 someone can be assigned a state vehicle on a permanent or semipermanent basis.”
    15 Section 15-8-6(A). By GSD-promulgated regulation, in order to be an “authorized
    16 driver” of a state vehicle, one must meet four general criteria: (1) be a state employee,
    17 (2) hold a valid driver’s license, (3) have completed a defensive driving course, and
    18 (4) be using the vehicle “in furtherance of official state business[.]” 1.5.3.7(F)(1)
    19 NMAC.
    13
    1   {17}   Neither the TSA nor regulations promulgated thereunder defines or provides
    2 further guidance regarding what is meant by the phrase “in furtherance of official
    3 state business.” Secretary Jaramillo acknowledged that there is “no official
    4 definition” of what is considered “official state business” and explained that GSD
    5 considers whether a proposed use of a state vehicle is “in furtherance of official state
    6 business” on a case-by-case basis and that the determination is heavily fact-driven.
    7 He did not categorically reject the possibility of use of a state vehicle by employee
    8 officials, explaining that whether use of a vehicle is appropriate depends on the type
    9 of meeting and the facts of each case. Secretary Jaramillo did include meetings to
    10 discuss “matter[s] of common interest” among those that are “in furtherance of
    11 official state business” but did not affirmatively opine that the January 2009 policy
    12 review meeting was a qualifying meeting. The Department fails to argue how the
    13 phrase should be construed, instead summarily concluding—without explanation or
    14 citation to authority—that “union business” can never be “in furtherance of official
    15 state business” because “union business” and “state business” are inherently mutually
    16 exclusive. Because resolution of this case turns on whether Blair and Molina were
    17 eligible to use a state vehicle depending on whether they were acting “in furtherance
    18 of official state business,” we must first discern what is meant by that phrase. See
    19 Fitzhugh v. N.M. Dep’t of Labor, 
    1996-NMSC-044
    , ¶ 22, 
    122 N.M. 173
    , 
    922 P.2d 14
    1 555 (explaining that an appellate court “may always substitute its interpretation of the
    2 law for that of the agency’s because it is the function of the courts to interpret the
    3 law” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
    4   {18}   When a phrase in a regulation is ambiguous and not further defined, we “turn
    5 to the dictionary to ascertain its common and ordinary meaning.” ABCWUA, 2010-
    6 NMSC-013, ¶ 82. The term “furtherance” means “[t]he act or process of facilitating
    7 the progress of something or of making it more likely to occur; promotion or
    8 advancement.” Black’s Law Dictionary 790 (10th ed. 2014). The term “official”
    9 means “[a]uthorized or approved by a proper authority.” Id. 1259. The term
    10 “business” means “that with which one is principally and seriously concerned[.]” The
    11 Random House Dictionary of the English Language 201 (unabridged ed. 1971). Thus,
    12 one is acting “in furtherance of official state business” when one is facilitating the
    13 progress of or advancing a matter—authorized or approved by the state—with which
    14 the state is principally and seriously concerned. We emphasize that we examine the
    15 facts under this test on a case-by-case basis.
    16 Analysis
    17   {19}   The Department effectively concedes that the January 2009 policy review
    18 meeting involved “official state business” as evidenced by its decision to allow Cruz
    19 to drive a state vehicle to the meeting. It argues, however, that “[union]
    15
    1 representatives who attend a meeting on behalf of [the union] are not on state
    2 business in the same sense as [Department] employees who attend the meeting on
    3 behalf of [the Department] as the managerial employer.” The Department contends
    4 that employee officials “have different status and purposes in attending the meeting
    5 even if there is a shared desire to reach agreement.” According to the Department,
    6 employee officials’ purpose in attending labor-management meetings is to
    7 “advocat[e] for the union’s position.” We find the Department’s arguments unavailing
    8 for two reasons: first, the record contradicts the Department’s contentions that
    9 employee officials attend policy review meetings only “on behalf of the union” and
    10 are merely “advocating for the union’s position” at those meetings; and second, the
    11 Department’s summary conclusion that “[u]nion business is not state business, and
    12 vice versa” rests on a false dichotomy.
    13   {20}   The Department’s contention that corrections officer and AFSCME Local 3422
    14 statewide president Lee Ortega “testified that he attends [policy review] meetings on
    15 behalf of AFSCME[] on ‘union time’ ” is cherry-picked evidence that not only
    16 violates our appellate rules, see Rule 12-318(A)(3) NMRA (requiring that a party
    17 challenging the sufficiency of evidence “include[] the substance of the evidence
    18 bearing on the proposition”), but improperly characterizes Ortega’s testimony.
    19 Ortega, in fact, resisted adopting the Department’s conclusory labeling scheme that
    16
    1 attempted to pigeonhole the parties’ interests as evidenced by the following
    2 exchange:
    3       Q:    As state president [of Local 3422], when you are working with
    4             management is it not true that you’re wearing your AFSCME hat?
    5       A:    I’m wearing my—I’m trying to help other people. I mean, it’s not
    6             an ‘AFSCME’ thing, it’s not—. You know, if you can settle it
    7             with the Department before it gets to be an issue, it’s, you
    8             know—
    9       Q:    As president [of AFSCME Local 3422], are you not furthering the
    10             agenda of AFSCME?
    11       A:    I’m furthering the agenda of the corrections officers.
    12             ....
    13       Q:    You just testified that you’re representing the correctional
    14             officers. You’re representing them under the guise of AFSCME,
    15             though, correct?
    16       A:    Yeah, I guess, yeah.
    17             ....
    18       Q:    When you go to management meetings or policy reviews, isn’t it
    19             true you’re on union time?
    20       A:    Yes.
    21       Q:    You’re not on state time. You’re not on regular work hour time, you’re
    22             on union time, correct?
    23       A:    Well, we’re getting paid by the state, but they call it ‘union time’
    24             for tracking purposes.
    17
    1 The Department relies heavily on both this testimony and that of Cruz and Perez,
    2 which summarily concluded that employee officials who are on “union time” are
    3 “conducting union business” and, thus, cannot be furthering official state business.
    4 However, the Department fails to cite any authority to support its argument that any
    5 activity that is administratively coded as “union time” is categorically not “in
    6 furtherance of official state business.” See In re Adoption of Doe, 
    1984-NMSC-024
    ,
    7 ¶ 2, 
    100 N.M. 764
    , 
    676 P.2d 1329
     (explaining that where a party cites no authority
    8 to support an argument, the appellate courts may assume no such authority exists).
    9 Furthermore, the testimony and labels on which the Department relies fail to address
    10 the ultimate question in this case: whether Blair and Molina’s attendance at the
    11 meeting and participation in the discussion regarding proposed policy changes
    12 advanced or facilitated the progress (i.e., was in furtherance) of the Department
    13 implementing its proposed policy changes (official state business). It is to that
    14 question that we now turn.
    15   {21}   We begin by noting that the type of meeting for which state vehicle use was
    16 requested in this case was a policy review meeting that was held at a state facility,
    17 convened by management, and attended only by state employees. Cruz acknowledged
    18 that under the CBA, such meetings are required to be held when management
    19 proposes changes to policies affecting the Department’s facilities in order to “allow
    18
    1 the union the opportunity to comment on [the proposed changes].” Representatives
    2 of both management and the union are required to attend per the CBA. And because
    3 proposed changes affect the Department’s facilities around the state—in Santa Fe,
    4 Las Cruces, Los Lunas, Springer, Grants, and Roswell—an employee official from
    5 each facility is required to attend and provide input. Importantly, until such time that
    6 the parties either agree to the proposed policy changes or bargain to impasse, the
    7 Department cannot implement the proposed changes. Additionally, Ortega testified
    8 that policy review meetings promote cooperative relationships between labor and
    9 management, that the parties “g[e]t a lot of stuff settled” at such meetings, and that
    10 the meetings enhance the orderly operation and good functioning of the Department’s
    11 facilities. Thus, the record indicates that policy review meetings benefit the
    12 Department in that they, at the very least, allow the Department to comply with the
    13 requirements of the CBA in order to be able to implement proposed policy changes
    14 and, perhaps more significantly, promote the harmonious and cooperative relationship
    15 between employer and employees contemplated by the PEBA.
    16   {22}   Because a meeting between management and employee officials is a required
    17 step in the process of implementing operational changes at the Department’s
    18 facilities, and because the Department cannot implement its proposed changes
    19 without first conferring with employee officials, it follows that employee officials
    19
    1 who attend policy review meetings are integral in facilitating the progress of matters
    2 affecting and of principal concern to the State of New Mexico, i.e., they are acting in
    3 furtherance of official state business. Even assuming one of the outcomes of such
    4 meetings is that the parties agree to modify a proposed policy based on the input of
    5 employee officials and that the modification “benefits” the corrections officers that
    6 the employee officials are representing, that does not change the fact that the meeting
    7 has resulted in the furtherance of official state business. In essence, the Department’s
    8 position is that any discussion with employee officials involving matters that may
    9 promote the union’s “agenda” or that may result in a benefit to the union or its
    10 members can never be in furtherance of official state business. Such a position is
    11 simply at odds with Section 10-7E-2 of the PEBA, which expressly contemplates and
    12 encourages the promotion of “cooperative relationships between public employers
    13 and public employees,” i.e., relationships wherein there exists the possibility—even
    14 the preference—of mutual benefits to both parties. We conclude that the PELRB’s
    15 determination that Blair and Molina were acting in furtherance of official state
    16 business by attending the January 2009 policy review meeting is in accordance with
    17 law, supported by substantial evidence, and was not arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse
    18 of discretion. We further conclude that the PELRB’s concomitant conclusion that the
    20
    1 Department committed a prohibited practice in violation of Section 10-7E-19(A) is
    2 in accordance with law.
    3 CONCLUSION
    4   {23}   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s affirmance of the
    5 PELRB’s order.
    6   {24}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    7                                                _________________________________
    8                                                J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
    9 WE CONCUR:
    10 _________________________________
    11 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    12 _________________________________
    13 STEPHEN G. FRENCH, Judge
    21