[00:00:01] Speaker 04: Good morning. [00:00:02] Speaker 02: Good morning and may it please the court. [00:00:03] Speaker 02: Casey Raymond for Petitioners. [00:00:05] Speaker 02: I'd like to reserve three minutes for rebuttal. [00:00:08] Speaker 02: All right, you may proceed. [00:00:11] Speaker 02: The FMCSA comes before this court, claiming that it is safe enough for a bus driver to drive a busload of people for 10 hours without taking a break. [00:00:21] Speaker 02: And the California century-old mid-shift brake requirements are preempted, even though there is no comparable federal requirement for these bus drivers to have mid-shift brakes. [00:00:31] Speaker 02: The court should reject the FMCSA's argument and grant the petition for review because the FMCSA lacked the lawful authority to preempt California's mid-shift brakes as to bus drivers and because they acted in an arbitrary and capricious way. [00:00:45] Speaker 02: I want to start with a quick note about the Teamsters decision on truck drivers. [00:00:48] Speaker 04: Yeah, because you distinguish Teamsters by arguing that FMCSA has not imposed any mid-shift brake rules for bus drivers as opposed to for the truck drivers. [00:01:01] Speaker 04: But the federal HOS regulations do regulate off-duty periods for bus drivers, right? [00:01:07] Speaker 02: The federal regulations regulate off duty periods for the end of the day and the end of the week. [00:01:11] Speaker 02: However, your honor. [00:01:12] Speaker 04: So why isn't that close enough like horseshoes and hand grenades? [00:01:15] Speaker 02: So because yes, your honor, because the requirement for the same area should be narrowly read. [00:01:20] Speaker 02: And we know this from a couple of sources. [00:01:22] Speaker 02: And I want to focus today in particular on a May 1984 legislative report that it's cited by respondents no less than six times and cited by both the FMCSA and its truck driver preemption decision and in its bus driver preemption decision. [00:01:36] Speaker 02: And that report gives a very illuminating example about the size of the areas we're comparing. [00:01:42] Speaker 02: So in the report, they give the example that there's a federal regulation requiring somebody to be at least 21 years old to drive a CMV. [00:01:50] Speaker 02: A state, on the other hand, has three different regulations. [00:01:53] Speaker 02: It has one regulation that you have to be 18 years old to drive a CMV during the day, another that you have to be 25 year old to drive a CMV at night, and a third that you have to be 65 years old at all to be able to drive a CMV. [00:02:06] Speaker 02: And what this report tells us is that the 18 year old state law is less strict than the federal requirement. [00:02:13] Speaker 02: And so it would be preempted. [00:02:15] Speaker 02: The 25 year old is stricter than the federal requirement. [00:02:19] Speaker 02: So you'd go through an analysis similar to 31141 C4 here, but the 65 year old maximum age. [00:02:26] Speaker 02: that report says actually cannot be preempted at all because it's in a different area. [00:02:31] Speaker 02: So what does that tell us? [00:02:32] Speaker 02: Your Honor, to your question, it tells us that the area is read narrowly. [00:02:36] Speaker 02: It's not good enough to be horseshoes and hand grenades, as you put it. [00:02:39] Speaker 02: In the report, the broad area was what age can be used as a proxy for somebody to be responsibly driving a CMV. [00:02:46] Speaker 02: Here, the broad area the FMCSA wants you to do is off-duty periods or fatigue. [00:02:51] Speaker 02: But in that report, it was different areas for maximum age and minimum age. [00:02:56] Speaker 02: even though they seem to be dealing with the same type of issue. [00:02:59] Speaker 02: Here, it is different areas for mid-shift breaks versus end-of-day breaks or end-of-week breaks. [00:03:04] Speaker 04: But so, didn't the FMC assay specifically decline to impose a mail brake requirement for bus drivers, even though it decided to impose one for truck drivers? [00:03:17] Speaker 04: So how do you reconcile that fact? [00:03:19] Speaker 04: Doesn't that indicate that all of these break-related regulations are in the very same regulatory areas? [00:03:28] Speaker 04: So why should California be able to impose the precise regulation that the FMCSA specifically did not want to regulate? [00:03:39] Speaker 02: Well, first of all, Your Honor, I think under the preemption guidelines under 31141C1, the agency must regulate the area in order to be able to preempt. [00:03:47] Speaker 02: And in 2011, the agency did regulate mid-shift brakes for truck drivers. [00:03:53] Speaker 02: But just the fact that they didn't decide to impose it for bus drivers doesn't mean they were putting out a regulation that was saying, thou shalt not impose mid-shift brakes. [00:04:02] Speaker 02: What that does is in the scheme of the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984, if the federal government decided not to regulate for whatever reason, maybe they don't think they have enough data at the time, [00:04:10] Speaker 02: or for another reason, that leaves it to the states to regulate. [00:04:14] Speaker 02: And what we can see through that 1984 example, that legislative report, is that even when the federal government decides not to regulate light on maximum age, that actually the federal government and the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984 is OK with a level of disuniformity. [00:04:30] Speaker 02: Just imagine that you're a 66-year-old CMV driver in Alabama, and there's no state requirement, and you drive west into Mississippi, and they have a 65-year-old age limit. [00:04:40] Speaker 02: That legislative report is telling us again that's relied on by respondents no less than six times is that. [00:04:45] Speaker 02: there is a level of disuniformity when there is no federal regulation in the very same area. [00:04:51] Speaker 00: Here I'm struggling to understand why the timing of the break matters because both the state's regulation and the federal regulation, they both are dictating how long a driver can be on duty before there's a mandatory off-duty period. [00:05:06] Speaker 00: So to me, they seem like the same area. [00:05:09] Speaker 00: What's the significance of whether the breaks in the middle of the shift or the end of the shift? [00:05:14] Speaker 00: for purposes of determining whether it's preempted. [00:05:17] Speaker 02: Yes, Your Honor. [00:05:17] Speaker 02: So the California Manufacturers Association case that we cite talks about consumption and elimination being essential from humankind when it's talking about California's meal and rest breaks. [00:05:28] Speaker 02: But put it more colloquially, imagine you're on a long road trip and you're driving many hours. [00:05:34] Speaker 02: We all know that it's different when you are actually able to eat or rest during the middle of the day versus when you decide to stop during the night or if you're on a really long road trip when you're stopping overall. [00:05:45] Speaker 02: So they're covering different purposes. [00:05:47] Speaker 02: Again, if you don't, the other way I like to think of it is if I were a passenger in a bus or I were driving next to that bus. [00:05:54] Speaker 04: And then the bus driver gets up and says, I have to take my California meal break. [00:05:58] Speaker 04: You all stay on the bus. [00:05:59] Speaker 04: I'll be back when that's over. [00:06:01] Speaker 04: That would work really well, wouldn't it? [00:06:04] Speaker 02: Well, your honor, I think a couple of points to that, because I think that is an argument about flexibility and scheduling. [00:06:10] Speaker 02: First, we know from the FMCSA itself that there are generally places where they're able to stop. [00:06:17] Speaker 02: If you look at ER 7, that's one of their arguments to say, don't worry, this bus driver will not actually be driving 10 hours without a break, which I think would scare most people driving next to the bus driver or passengers on it. [00:06:27] Speaker 02: And again, that's what they're asking you to believe. [00:06:29] Speaker 02: So they say, don't worry. [00:06:30] Speaker 02: They have regular places where they stop. [00:06:33] Speaker 02: And so it's not that the bus driver is going to pull over to the side of the road. [00:06:36] Speaker 02: As the FMCSA tells us at ER 7, there are places they can stop. [00:06:40] Speaker 02: But what they don't tell you is, under their own preemption decision at ER 10 and 11, that even when the buses stop, those bus drivers are expected to keep working under the FMCSA's scheme. [00:06:52] Speaker 02: They, in fact, say that it's essential that they keep working for passenger needs. [00:06:55] Speaker 02: or that they're able to leave in order to make these strict deadlines. [00:06:58] Speaker 01: Mr. Raymond, I'm trying to figure out where we are in the statute in terms of this analysis. [00:07:02] Speaker 01: So I take it from your briefs. [00:07:04] Speaker 01: There's a footnote in your supplemental brief that the question of whether this is a regulation on commercial motor vehicle safety was settled by Teamsters. [00:07:14] Speaker 01: You preserve that for further proceedings, but that's not the question that you're asking us to decide now. [00:07:18] Speaker 01: That's been decided by Teamsters. [00:07:21] Speaker 01: And so then your arguments seem to sound either under C1C, is this additional or more stringent to such regulation, which is kind of the statutory argument. [00:07:36] Speaker 01: But some of it also seems to be then your kind of administrative argument about the agency's decision. [00:07:43] Speaker 01: to decide whether it's an unreasonable burden in terms of uniformity and things. [00:07:48] Speaker 01: If we're looking at it, and that's a tougher row for you to hoe, with respect to the first one, whether it's more stringent, which is where you started, I mean, this is just additional to such regulation and whether, as we recognized in Teamsters, we accepted that it was as applied, [00:08:07] Speaker 01: I know you point to the one line there that there was already a regulation on it, but this is additional to that regulation, California's laws. [00:08:17] Speaker 02: Well, Your Honor, I guess to answer your question about where we are in the statute and then you'll answer the question about additional. [00:08:23] Speaker 02: I am looking at 31141C1, which does talk about making sure that the FMCSA has promulgated in the same area. [00:08:31] Speaker 02: They require a comparison to something they have promulgated under 31136. [00:08:35] Speaker 02: I think from the 1984 report in the FMCSA's own decision, it does have to be something the same area. [00:08:41] Speaker 01: What words are doing that work in the statute? [00:08:43] Speaker 02: Well, when you look at 31141C1, big A, B, and C, if you look at A, it says that it is less stringent than something promulgated by the FMCSA under 31136. [00:08:56] Speaker 02: And then it uses the phrase such regulation and big B and big C. So that's doing the work. [00:09:01] Speaker 02: And we know from the 1984 report. [00:09:02] Speaker 01: But or is additional to such regulation? [00:09:06] Speaker 02: Your Honor, I think the additional to, let me give, I don't think it's doing the work that Your Honor is positing here. [00:09:12] Speaker 02: I think an additional to in the Teamsters case, for example, was that you had California's breaks, which the Teamsters court found were more stringent because they required it to be taken at specific times. [00:09:23] Speaker 02: And they were in addition to that they had to take it [00:09:26] Speaker 02: you know, they had to take more breaks. [00:09:27] Speaker 02: I don't think addition two, however, bears the weight that if the FMCSA has promulgated anything under 31136 on any safety topic, that means that it's in addition two. [00:09:37] Speaker 02: So I think trying to read in addition two to not be tethered to something in the same area is not what was intended here. [00:09:43] Speaker 01: And you can actually look at- And it's not the same area to talk about whether or not people have to break during a shift of transporting passengers. [00:09:52] Speaker 02: No, Your Honor, I think when you get off for the day or you get off for the week, it's fundamentally different than whether you can rest your body and eat a meal. [00:09:58] Speaker 02: Just imagine on a 10-hour road trip, is it really the same when you stop for the day versus being able to stop in the middle and eat something so that you have focus? [00:10:06] Speaker 02: Again, as the FMCSA talks about itself in its 2011 rulemaking when it granted truck drivers mid-shift breaks at ER 49, people often [00:10:18] Speaker 02: don't know their own level of fatigue when they're driving. [00:10:21] Speaker 02: And what these mid-shift brakes do, that the end-of-the-day brakes and end-of-the-week brakes don't do, is they actually provide you that ability to take a break. [00:10:29] Speaker 02: I do want to talk about, for a second, Your Honors, the factors in 311C1, 31141C4, regarding the unreasonable burden, because I think there's a marked difference here, again, from Teamsters. [00:10:43] Speaker 02: In Teamsters, there was the question about whether the marginal benefit [00:10:46] Speaker 02: of California's mid-shift brakes was worth the burden that those brakes imposed. [00:10:53] Speaker 02: Here it's a fundamentally different question, and that is, again, whether truck drivers can get a brake at all. [00:10:59] Speaker 02: And I want to look at both the benefits and the costs. [00:11:01] Speaker 02: So the benefits, at ER 49, the FMCSA told us in their 2011 regulations that mid-shift brakes do solve a problem of fatigue driving. [00:11:12] Speaker 02: They say that at ER 49. [00:11:14] Speaker 02: But they try to tell you here, don't worry, they don't actually need a break, but they're going to get it anyways. [00:11:18] Speaker 02: And they do this in a couple of ways. [00:11:20] Speaker 02: One that they repeatedly state is that under 49 CFR 392.3, there's a regulation that if a driver is so fatigued or so ill that they're able to take a break. [00:11:30] Speaker 02: So don't worry, they're going to get the break. [00:11:32] Speaker 02: But that actually doesn't add up. [00:11:34] Speaker 02: As I mentioned earlier in that same 2011 rulemaking, they stated at 76 FR 81134, [00:11:40] Speaker 02: The drivers don't know their own level of fatigue, so we can't rely on them to know when they need to take a break. [00:11:46] Speaker 04: Second, at your... Well, but okay, that's why there can be regulation, but you want to regulate differently than the... You think that the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration doesn't know as well as you do what truck drivers or what bus drivers need. [00:12:07] Speaker 02: I believe the FMCSA was arbitrary and capricious in their analysis. [00:12:12] Speaker 04: Your Honor, I've see a... Would you like to save your rebuttal time? [00:12:15] Speaker 02: Your Honor, would you like me to finish answering the question? [00:12:18] Speaker 04: Well, you can come back on that. [00:12:19] Speaker 04: That I'm just saying California knows better than the feds. [00:12:23] Speaker 04: That's the theme here, right? [00:12:26] Speaker 02: Well, Your Honor, we believe the feds didn't have the authority and acted in an arbitrary and capricious way. [00:12:30] Speaker 02: Okay. [00:12:30] Speaker 02: Thank you, Your Honor. [00:12:43] Speaker 05: Good morning, your honors. [00:12:44] Speaker 05: Jennifer Utrecht on behalf of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. [00:12:47] Speaker 04: Good morning. [00:12:48] Speaker 04: If you can keep your voice up, that would be great. [00:12:50] Speaker 05: I will try. [00:12:51] Speaker 05: Sorry. [00:12:51] Speaker 04: Or maybe move the mic a little bit. [00:12:53] Speaker 04: You're a little shorter. [00:12:54] Speaker 04: Is that better? [00:12:55] Speaker 04: Yes, that's better. [00:12:56] Speaker 04: Thank you. [00:12:57] Speaker 05: Your honor, in Teamsters, this court held that the agency had appropriately determined that California's meal and rest break laws were preemptive with respect to interstate truck drivers. [00:13:08] Speaker 05: The question here is whether that [00:13:09] Speaker 05: the agency similarly was reasonable when it made that same preemption determination with respect to bus drivers engaged in interstate commerce. [00:13:18] Speaker 05: Petitioners have argued here that Teamsters is distinct because they say the federal regulations do not require mid-shift breaks, and therefore the California laws are not actually additional to or more stringent than the federal regulations. [00:13:36] Speaker 05: That's wrong for a couple of reasons. [00:13:38] Speaker 05: Teamsters held that a, just to clarify, Teamsters held that a state law that governs more broadly. [00:13:45] Speaker 05: It's pre-Loper-Bright, right? [00:13:47] Speaker 05: It is pre-Loper-Bright, Your Honor, but it is, of course, still subject to stare decisis as Loper-Bright recognizes statutory interpretations that predate Loper-Bright decision still remain, the statutory holdings still remain the law of this court. [00:14:01] Speaker 05: I'd also note that [00:14:02] Speaker 05: The majority of the analysis in Teamsters, although framed in the Chevron language, discusses the text and the purposes and the structure of the act in the same way this court would now if it were engaged in statutory interpretation under the post-Lipperbright scheme. [00:14:18] Speaker 05: But what we know is that the Section 31141 allows FMCSA to review state laws on commercial motor vehicle safety, [00:14:27] Speaker 05: We know that teamsters held that a state law doesn't have to be directed to commercial motor vehicle safety. [00:14:32] Speaker 05: It can govern more broadly and nevertheless, as applied to an area where it's within FMCSA's regulatory authority and FMCSA has enacted regulations, nevertheless, be on commercial motor vehicle safety. [00:14:44] Speaker 05: And here we have federal regulations that govern how long someone can remain on duty and driving before they have to take a mandatory off-duty period. [00:14:51] Speaker 04: And Teamsters discussed repeatedly that the FMC essay revised its regulations to add a 30-minute mini-break period for truck drivers. [00:15:02] Speaker 04: That was undoubtedly an important fact to the Teamsters panel. [00:15:06] Speaker 04: How can we be sure that Teamsters would have come out the same way if it hadn't been for that fact? [00:15:13] Speaker 05: I think the answer to that question, Your Honor, is that we know from the statute that FMCSA can only review state laws for preemption if they are additional to or more stringent than federal regulations, which means we're always going to be presented with a situation where the state law does something that the federal regulation does not. [00:15:33] Speaker 05: And if you read that portion of Teamsters as narrowly as the petitioners urge you to, to say that [00:15:40] Speaker 05: Oh, well, we impose a mid shift break requirement and the federal government doesn't. [00:15:44] Speaker 05: Well, that's an additional requirement. [00:15:45] Speaker 05: It's an additional off duty period. [00:15:47] Speaker 05: The federal regulations don't require if you read it so narrowly as to say, well, that's completely out. [00:15:53] Speaker 05: Then you're essentially reading the additional two portion out of the statute. [00:15:56] Speaker 05: The second reason I would say for why petitioners are really reading what it means to be in the same area far too narrowly is that. [00:16:03] Speaker 05: This isn't a situation in which there's an entire gap in federal regulation. [00:16:07] Speaker 05: There are comprehensive fatigue management regulations that the federal government has enacted that govern how long bus drivers can drive. [00:16:16] Speaker 05: And this wasn't an oversight. [00:16:18] Speaker 05: This isn't a situation where the federal government just has not looked into this problem or just hasn't gotten around to regulating. [00:16:23] Speaker 05: Since 2011, when the 30-minute mid-shift brake requirement was imposed for truck drivers, [00:16:31] Speaker 05: The federal brake requirements and the hours of service regulations have been amended several times across several different administrations, and there has never been the same requirement imposed for bus drivers. [00:16:40] Speaker 05: And the reason for that, as explained by the FMCSA here and in response to comments in past rulemakings, is because the nature of bus operations is different than truck operations. [00:16:52] Speaker 05: With respect to long-haul truck drivers who are on the highway for long stretches of time, they often don't take breaks by the nature of their operation, whereas bus drivers, of course, [00:17:01] Speaker 05: Their passengers have transfers to different motor carriers. [00:17:06] Speaker 05: Their passengers also have rest brake needs. [00:17:09] Speaker 05: And so the economic reality is that these bus drivers are taking time off consistent with passenger needs. [00:17:16] Speaker 05: They're taking breaks with that. [00:17:17] Speaker 05: And FMCSA has determined that maintaining those flexibilities for bus drivers to be able to take those breaks with passenger needs [00:17:25] Speaker 05: is important and that there is no clear evidence that requiring mid-shift breaks at specific intervals, like California's laws require, actually advance the safety purposes. [00:17:36] Speaker 04: Well, California's wage and hour regulations are not focused on public safety. [00:17:40] Speaker 04: Teamsters, of course, indicates that the purpose of the state's regulation is not dispositive. [00:17:46] Speaker 04: But do we take that into consideration at all? [00:17:53] Speaker 04: Two points, Your Honor. [00:17:54] Speaker 04: First... I hear your friend on the other side basically talking about people, when they're hangry, that they don't realize how that influences safety, perhaps. [00:18:07] Speaker 05: So two responses, Your Honor. [00:18:08] Speaker 05: First, Teamsters does state the purposes that a law doesn't have to be specifically directed at safety in order to be a law on commercial motor vehicle safety. [00:18:18] Speaker 05: But it also says that these same California meal and rest break laws California has recognized are at least in part designed for safety. [00:18:26] Speaker 05: And Teamsters identified that as one of the bases for its statutory holding that California's laws were on commercial motor vehicle safety. [00:18:37] Speaker 05: So when this court is conducting the analysis, I mean, I think that aspect of Teamsters applies equally here. [00:18:42] Speaker 05: We have the same California meal and rest break rules, of course, at least part of the reason why these were enacted with safety. [00:18:47] Speaker 05: The fact that there are other [00:18:49] Speaker 05: broader goals behind the California laws does not change the fact that when we are looking at the overall scheme as Teamsters directs, the key question is, is California regulating in an area where the FMCSA has safety regulatory authority and in fact has [00:19:10] Speaker 05: enacted regulations in this area. [00:19:13] Speaker 01: The state law here, at least under which the orders were issued, pertains only to transportation as well. [00:19:18] Speaker 01: This isn't meal and rest break for desk jobs. [00:19:21] Speaker 05: That's correct, Your Honor. [00:19:23] Speaker 01: So I guess I'm trying to figure out your broader reading of Teamsters, just how much work that key passage that Judge Callahan had noted that there was already a regulation in that area. [00:19:39] Speaker 01: It struck me as somewhat important to us in, this is an extraordinary statutory scheme that involves not just preemption, [00:19:49] Speaker 01: And not just delegation, but delegated preemption. [00:19:52] Speaker 01: So it's kind of doubly we've been told to view those quite narrowly. [00:19:58] Speaker 01: And why isn't that the crucial limiting principle we set it is, right? [00:20:04] Speaker 01: That passage occurs where we said the concern is it would allow the agency's reading of on to preempt, not via Congress, but through delegated authority, to preempt [00:20:15] Speaker 01: all sorts of state regulations in the absence of a kind of conflicting or similar regulation at the same time. [00:20:25] Speaker 01: So I mean, is that really just dicta, or is that really doing the kind of the key work that would limit the agency to doing more delegated preemption than Congress even has allowed it? [00:20:36] Speaker 05: So two responses, Your Honor. [00:20:39] Speaker 05: I think it's important to understand that Teamsters came before this court in part [00:20:44] Speaker 05: The focus on the specific brake requirement in that case was because the agency had identified that as one of the reasons why it had changed its position from 2008. [00:20:52] Speaker 05: And of course, this court had to look at the reasons the agency gave for why it was changing position to determine whether that was a reasonable thing. [00:20:58] Speaker 05: And so I think that's part of why that discussion exists in Teamsters. [00:21:02] Speaker 05: I don't think that this court should read that discussion to hold that there always has to be a mid-shift brake requirement in order to find that the state law is on commercial motor vehicle safety. [00:21:13] Speaker 05: I do agree, Your Honor, I believe you cited the portion of Teamsters that talks about how there should be some limiting principle. [00:21:23] Speaker 05: But I read Teamsters, and this is I think on page 852, as saying that the agency's interpretation is actually pretty circumscribed. [00:21:31] Speaker 05: It has to be within FMCSA's specific regulatory domain, meaning that the FMCSA couldn't, for example, preempt state laws that aren't, that are laws that [00:21:43] Speaker 05: govern conduct FMCSA itself could not actually govern? [00:21:46] Speaker 01: Well, but this is, I mean, I think because we also recognize there that the agency can engage in as applied preemption of generally applicable state laws. [00:21:59] Speaker 01: I mean, so in other words, the preemption that it must be doing is within the agency's transportation safety concern for federal motor carriers, but [00:22:11] Speaker 01: It's as applied. [00:22:13] Speaker 01: So why can't it just get into any generally applicable state law by its say so that, well, this affects the uniformity of this is an unusual burden on interstate commerce? [00:22:25] Speaker 01: That's not a limiting principle if it's as applied. [00:22:28] Speaker 05: So I think if this court were presented with a situation, which you don't think is presented here, where there was truly a gap in the federal regulatory scheme, there was absolutely no federal regulation governing the same conduct at all. [00:22:42] Speaker 05: Then there would be questions about whether this was either truly on commercial motor vehicle safety or was truly additional to or more stringent that federal regulations, but we don't have that kind of gap here. [00:22:52] Speaker 05: And the reason for that is because, as I mentioned, there is a comprehensive scheme that governs. [00:22:57] Speaker 05: when drivers can be on duty and when they can't be. [00:23:00] Speaker 01: As I understand it, you frame this as fatigue related concerns. [00:23:08] Speaker 01: I take the state's view that meal and rest breaks. [00:23:14] Speaker 01: The rest in there doesn't refer so much to fatigue as to other bodily functions. [00:23:19] Speaker 01: And so are those really the same area? [00:23:22] Speaker 05: So I think the same area is what conduct is actually being [00:23:26] Speaker 05: required by the federal regulations and the California law, are they prescribing the same or preventing or requiring the same sorts of things to happen? [00:23:34] Speaker 05: So the federal regulations state when you have to stop driving and be relieved of duty. [00:23:39] Speaker 05: And the same thing is true for California's laws. [00:23:42] Speaker 05: They require that to happen more frequently and at more frequent intervals, which was exactly the same as in Teamsters. [00:23:46] Speaker 05: In fact, to move beyond the do we have authority to look at this at all into the [00:23:55] Speaker 05: specific preemption criteria that Congress set forth that are reviewed by this court under the arbitrary and capricious standard, the fact that FMCSA has concluded that requiring mid-shift brakes happen at a specific time rather than allowing drivers to attend to those needs when they are fatigued or when their passengers require those brakes, that is a flexibility that FMCSA determined is [00:24:22] Speaker 05: important to bake into the federal scheme and appropriately balances the safety benefits of any required break against those flexibilities and so in many respects the fact that FMCSA has made that determination and California's laws abrogate that flexibility that FMCSA has intentionally baked into the federal scheme shows that this is an unreasonable burden perhaps even more so than it was in Teamsters because [00:24:48] Speaker 05: your requiring breaks that FMCSA has determined should happen with respect to passenger schedules and the driver's own fatigue needs rather than a specific break happening at a specific period of time. [00:25:04] Speaker 03: If there are no further questions, we would ask that you affirm the agency's decision. [00:25:08] Speaker 03: Thank you. [00:25:09] Speaker 03: We don't appear to have any additional questions. [00:25:11] Speaker 03: Thank you for your argument. [00:25:27] Speaker 02: Thank you, Your Honors. [00:25:28] Speaker 02: I want to address two points that my colleague brought up. [00:25:32] Speaker 02: First, I want to emphasize that what the FMCSA has asked me to do is to really broaden the Teamsters decision. [00:25:38] Speaker 02: As Your Honors pointed out, in Teamsters there was a reliance time and again that there were federal mid-shift brake requirements applied by the FMCSA to truck drivers. [00:25:47] Speaker 02: As the court said in Teamsters, that was the basis for the FMCSA's preemption decision. [00:25:52] Speaker 02: So the abstraction to this idea that it's fatigue management and that all you need is that the federal government has done absolutely no federal regulation at all is not enough to get there. [00:26:02] Speaker 02: And I think the Teamsters court was clear on that. [00:26:04] Speaker 02: And Your Honor, I think you pointed to the fact that this is a very narrow preemption authority through multiple layers of delegation. [00:26:11] Speaker 02: And we see, even soon after the passage of the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984, [00:26:15] Speaker 02: with the Fourth Circuit and specialized carriers and the Sixth Circuit and interstate towing talking about how narrowly we need to read preemption under the Motor Carrier Safety Act. [00:26:25] Speaker 02: I think the Sixth Circuit said the goal of federal regulation is to supplant or to supplement, not supplant. [00:26:33] Speaker 02: I also want to stress, Your Honors, that the structure of 31141C [00:26:39] Speaker 02: and the committee report, the 1984 committee report, makes clear that to the degree the FMCSA would actually have the power to try and clear the field of all mid-shift breaks, it would also have to do that through an actual regulation, not just through a post hoc preemption decision. [00:26:53] Speaker 02: So the FMCSA is saying, well, we potentially consider this in 2011, [00:26:57] Speaker 02: we decided not to do it so we can wipe all mid-shift brakes off the tables, including California. [00:27:02] Speaker 02: If they really wanted to do that, Your Honor, which we don't think they have the authority to do, but at the very least, they would have to issue a regulation saying that states shall not enact mid-shift brake requirements because those are a danger to safety. [00:27:15] Speaker 02: And that's the argument they're making. [00:27:17] Speaker 02: Now, it's a counterintuitive one. [00:27:18] Speaker 02: I don't think many of us would believe that. [00:27:20] Speaker 02: But that's what they would have to do. [00:27:21] Speaker 02: And here, they're trying to stretch their authority even more. [00:27:23] Speaker 02: They haven't issued that kind of regulation. [00:27:26] Speaker 02: They had a couple offhand comments before the actual preemption decision. [00:27:29] Speaker 02: And they're trying to say, post hoc, well, we did a deep consideration of this issue for bus drivers and found it unsafe. [00:27:36] Speaker 02: For my last little bit, I do want to touch about on the flexibility that opposing counsel spoke to. [00:27:41] Speaker 02: Just to be clear, there's no flexibility for drivers here. [00:27:44] Speaker 02: their employer can force them to drive 10 hours without a break. [00:27:48] Speaker 02: And they posit that, don't worry, these bus drivers are getting breaks. [00:27:51] Speaker 02: But we actually see it ER 154 and the curbside motor coach carrier safety study that the federal investigators in that segment found that they were not, in fact, getting any breaks. [00:28:01] Speaker 02: So in conclusion, Your Honors, I think there is no flexibility here. [00:28:05] Speaker 02: The FMCSA asks that drivers do not get break over 10 hours. [00:28:09] Speaker 02: And I think that is both unlawful and not reasonable. [00:28:11] Speaker 02: Thank you, Your Honors, for your time. [00:28:13] Speaker 04: Thank you. [00:28:14] Speaker 04: This matter will stand submitted.