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In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Eleventh Circuit
____________________
No. 17-13595
____________________
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Interested Party-Appellant,
versus
SECRETARY FLORIDA AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE
ADMINISTRATION,
in her official capacity,
STATE SURGEON GENERAL,
in his official capacity as the State Surgeon General and Secretary
of the Florida Department of Health,
KRISTINA WIGGINS,
in her official capacity as Deputy Secretary of the Florida Depart-
ment of Health and Director of Children's Medical Services,
STATE SURGEON GENERAL JOHN ARMSTRONG, MD,
DEPUTY SECRETARY DR. CELESTE PHILIP, et al.,
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2 17-13595
Defendants-Appellees.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
D.C. Docket No. 0:12-cv-60460-WJZ
____________________
Before WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, WILSON, JORDAN, JILL PRYOR,
NEWSOM, BRANCH, GRANT, LUCK, LAGOA, and BRASHER, Circuit
Judges. ∗
BY THE COURT:
A petition for rehearing having been filed and a member of
this Court in active service having requested a poll on whether this
case should be reheard by the Court sitting en banc, and a majority
of the judges in active service on this Court having voted against
granting rehearing en banc, it is ORDERED that this case will not
be reheard en banc.
∗Judge Robin Rosenbaum recused herself and did not participate in the en
banc poll.
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 3
JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judge, respecting the denial of rehearing en
banc:
I was a member of the panel majority. We held that the At-
torney General of the United States may bring a lawsuit against the
State of Florida to enforce Title II of the Americans with Disabilities
Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12131–65. Judge Newsom dissents from
the denial of rehearing en banc because, in his view, nothing in the
ADA authorized the Attorney General to sue Florida in this case.
Judge Branch dissented from the panel majority opinion on one of
the two grounds Judge Newsom raises today. I write to respond to
my dissenting colleagues’ arguments that the panel erred in inter-
preting the statutory scheme.
***
The United States maintains that Florida administers its
Medicaid program in a way that forces children with severe medi-
cal conditions into nursing homes to receive medical services nec-
essary for their survival. As a result, these medically-fragile children
often are placed in institutions hours away from their families,
where they allegedly “spend most of their days languishing in bed
or in their wheelchairs, with no one interacting with them and
nothing to do.” 12-cv-60460 Doc. 509 at 3. 1
1When the Attorney General initially filed this action, it was assigned case
number 0:13-cv-61576. The case later was consolidated with a separate civil
action filed by several medically-fragile children, A.R. v. Dudek, and assigned
case number 0:12-cv-60460. I use “13-cv-61576 Doc.” to refer to the district
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4 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
The United States Attorney General filed this lawsuit against
the State of Florida under Title II of the ADA to vindicate the med-
ically-fragile children’s rights. The Attorney General claimed that
Florida discriminated based on the children’s disabilities because,
although it would be possible for the children to receive the ser-
vices they need while living with their families or guardians, Flor-
ida administered and funded its Medicaid program in such a way
that the children can receive the services only in institutionalized
settings. See Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring, 527 U.S. 581, 587
(1999) (holding that a state engages in disability discrimination if it
institutionalizes individuals with disabilities when community-
based placement could be reasonably accommodated, accounting
for the resources available to the state and the needs of others with
disabilities.).
The question in this appeal is whether Title II of the ADA
authorized the Attorney General to bring this lawsuit against the
State of Florida. Title II generally prohibits state governments and
agencies from discriminating based on disability. See 42 U.S.C.
§§ 12131(1), 12132. Its enforcement provision states that “the rem-
edies, procedures, and rights . . . provide[d] to any person alleging
discrimination on the basis of disability” under § 12132 shall be the
“remedies, procedures, and rights set forth in section 794a of Title
29.” Id. § 12133.
court’s docket entries in the original case and “12-cv-60460 Doc.” to refer to
the district court’s docket entries in the consolidated case.
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 5
Given the enforcement provision’s incorporation by refer-
ence, we can answer the central question of statutory interpreta-
tion here—whether the remedies, procedures, and rights available
to a person alleging discrimination include suit by the Attorney
General to vindicate the disabled person’s rights—only after iden-
tifying the remedies, procedures, and rights available under not
one, but, as it turns out, two earlier civil rights statutes. In its opin-
ion, the panel majority painstakingly followed this chain of statu-
tory references. After careful review of Title II’s text, the enforce-
ment schemes incorporated by reference, and the entire statutory
scheme in context, the panel majority concluded that suit by the
Attorney General was indeed a remedy, procedure, or right availa-
ble to a person alleging discrimination under Title II.
Title II’s enforcement provision incorporates by reference
the remedies, procedures, and rights available to a person alleging
discrimination under section 794a of Title 29, which is the Rehabil-
itation Act—an earlier civil rights statute that prohibits disability
discrimination in connection with “any program or activity receiv-
ing Federal financial assistance.” 29 U.S.C. § 794(a). But when we
look for the remedies, procedures, and rights available to a person
alleging discrimination under the Rehabilitation Act, we find a ref-
erence to another statute, this one incorporating the remedies, pro-
cedures, and rights available under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act
of 1964. See id. § 794a(a)(2). Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, an even
earlier civil rights statute, similarly prohibits discrimination by or
in “any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.”
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6 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
42 U.S.C. § 2000d. Under Title VI, though, the targeted discrimina-
tion is that based on race, color, or national origin. Id.
As the panel majority explained, the remedies, procedures,
and rights available to a person alleging discrimination under Title
VI of the Civil Rights Act include pursuing federal administrative
procedures that may culminate in a lawsuit by the Attorney Gen-
eral to vindicate the protected rights. The panel majority deter-
mined that the remedies, procedures, and rights available to a per-
son alleging discrimination under Title II likewise include a robust
administrative scheme that may culminate in suit by the Attorney
General on the person’s behalf. The panel majority thus held that
the Attorney General could sue Florida, on behalf of the medically-
fragile children, under Title II for disability discrimination. See
United States v. Florida, 938 F.3d 1221, 1250 (11th Cir. 2019).
In his dissental,2 Judge Newsom advances an interpretation
of Title II that would disallow suits by the Attorney General against
states or state agencies to enforce rights of people with disabilities,
despite the fact that such suits have long been used to enforce the
Rehabilitation Act, Title VI, and Title II itself. Judge Newsom ar-
gues that the panel majority’s holding was wrong because (1) the
Attorney General cannot sue because he is not a “person” for pur-
poses of the ADA and thus is afforded no remedies, procedures, or
2 I use
the term “dissental” to refer to Judge Newsom’s dissent from the denial
of rehearing en banc to distinguish it from Judge Branch’s dissent from the
panel majority’s opinion.
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 7
rights under Title II’s enforcement provision, and (2) the remedies,
procedures, and rights available to the medically-fragile children
under Title II do not include the Attorney General’s suing Florida
on their behalf because the Attorney General may sue a state or
state agency to enforce Title II only when the state or state agency
receives federal funding and agrees as a condition of the funding to
refrain from engaging in disability discrimination. By permitting
the Attorney General to sue states when Congress has not author-
ized such suits, he says, the panel opinion offends principles of fed-
eralism. As I explain below, none of these arguments is persuasive.
The dissental’s first argument—that the Attorney General
does not qualify as a “person” for purposes of the ADA—either
takes aim at a strawman or rests on a misunderstanding of the panel
opinion and the Attorney General’s role in this lawsuit. The panel
never suggested, much less held, that the Attorney General was the
“person” referred to in § 12133. Rather, the panel concluded that
the person referred to in § 12133 is the individual who claims to
have suffered discrimination. Under Title II and its supporting reg-
ulations, this individual is afforded a panoply of remedies, proce-
dures, and rights, including the right to file an administrative com-
plaint against any public entity that engages in discrimination—a
process that may culminate in suit by the Attorney General against
the public entity on the individual’s behalf. Because the Attorney
General brings this lawsuit on behalf of a person alleging discrimi-
nation, the dissental’s (and the dissent’s) arguments about why the
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Attorney General does not qualify as a “person” under § 12133 miss
the mark entirely.
The dissental’s second argument—that the remedies, proce-
dures, and rights available to a disabled person do not include en-
forcement via suit on her behalf by the Attorney General against a
public entity that receives no federal funding—warrants closer at-
tention. But this argument, too, is unavailing. The statutory text,
when read in context, permits the Attorney General to sue to en-
force Title II’s prohibition on disability discrimination by public en-
tities, regardless of whether the public entity receives federal fund-
ing and agrees as a condition of that funding not to engage in disa-
bility discrimination. Indeed, unlike its predecessor statutes, which
contained an express federal-funding limitation, Title II contains no
reference to federal funding, and, as Judge Newsom concedes, its
implied private right of action is not limited to federally-funded de-
fendants.
The dissental argues lastly that the panel opinion offends
principles of federalism. This argument rests entirely on the dis-
sental’s assumption that Congress did not authorize the Attorney
General to sue states or state agencies for discrimination when the
discrimination occurred in connection with a program or activity
that did not receive federal funding. Because Congress did in fact
authorize the Attorney General to sue any public entity for discrim-
ination in violation of Title II, there is no federalism problem here.
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 9
Before addressing the dissental’s arguments, I begin by
providing an overview of the ADA and Title II. I then respond to
the dissental’s arguments in turn.
I. Overview of Title II of the ADA
Congress enacted the ADA “after decades of deliberation
and investigation into the need for comprehensive legislation to
address discrimination against persons with disabilities.” Tennes-
see v. Lane, 541 U.S. 509, 516 (2004). Congress etched into the
ADA’s text the findings from its thorough investigation. See
42 U.S.C. § 12101(a).
The statutory text observes that “historically, society tended
to isolate and segregate individuals with disabilities.” Id.
§ 12101(a)(2). Despite the passage of legislation like the Rehabilita-
tion Act, which effected “some improvements” in the treatment of
individuals with disabilities, Congress found that disability discrim-
ination “continue[d] to be a serious and pervasive social problem.”
Id. Discrimination against individuals with disabilities “persist[ed]”
in “critical areas” including “housing . . . education, transportation,
communication, recreation, institutionalization, health services,
voting, and access to public services.” Id. § 12101(a)(3). Individuals
with disabilities were subjected not only to “outright intentional
exclusion” but also to “segregation” and “relegation to lesser ser-
vices, programs, activities, [and] benefits.” Id. § 12101(a)(5). Indi-
viduals with disabilities “often had no legal recourse to redress such
discrimination.” Id. § 12101(a)(4).
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After setting out these findings about the scope of the disa-
bility-discrimination problem, Congress expressed its intent in en-
acting the ADA: to combat the problem by establishing “a clear and
comprehensive national mandate for the elimination of discrimina-
tion against individuals with disabilities.” Id. § 12101(b)(1). The
ADA would prevent such discrimination by creating “clear, strong,
consistent, [and] enforceable standards” to “address the major ar-
eas of discrimination faced day-to-day by people with disabilities.”
Id. § 12101(b)(2), (4). Lest any doubt remain, the text spelled out
the ADA’s central purpose: “to ensure that the Federal Govern-
ment plays a central role in enforcing the standards established”
under the ADA “on behalf of individuals with disabilities.” Id.
§ 12101(b)(3) (emphasis added).
Consistent with its broad remedial purpose, the ADA’s three
titles bar different types of entities from engaging in disability dis-
crimination: Title I applies to employers, Title II applies to public
entities, and Title III applies to places of public accommodation. As
I explain below in section III-A below, although Congress author-
ized the Attorney General to bring a suit to enforce each title, it
structured each title’s enforcement provision—the provision that
authorizes the Attorney General to sue—in a different way. See id.
§§ 12117(a), 12133, 12188(b).
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I turn now to Title II, 3 as this case concerns alleged discrim-
ination by a public entity. Under Title II, “no qualified individual
with a disability shall, by reason of such disability, be excluded from
participation in or be denied the benefits of the services, programs,
or activities of a public entity, or be subjected to discrimination by
any such entity.” Id. § 12132. A “public entity” includes “any State
or local government” as well as “any department [or] agency . . . of
a State . . . or local government.” Id. § 12131(1)(A), (B).
Importantly, its passage of Title II was not the first time Con-
gress acted to prohibit public entities from engaging in disability
discrimination. The Rehabilitation Act already barred disability dis-
crimination by programs or activities operated by state or local
governments. See 29 U.S.C. § 794(a). But, by its express terms, the
Rehabilitation Act applies only to programs or activities that “re-
ceiv[e] [f]ederal financial assistance.” Id. By contrast, Title II of the
ADA extended the scope of protection afforded to individuals with
disabilities by prohibiting any program run by a public entity from
engaging in disability discrimination—it contains no reference to
federal financial assistance or funding. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 12131(a);
12132; see Shotz v. City of Plantation, 344 F.3d 1161, 1174 (11th
3 Title II is divided into two subchapters: subchapter A sets forth the general
provisions that prohibit discrimination by public entities, and subchapter B
pertains to discrimination in public transportation specifically. See ADA, Pub.
L. No. 101-336 § 1, 104 Stat. 327, 327–28 (1990). Because subchapter B is not at
issue in this case, I use “Title II” to refer to subchapter A.
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Cir. 2003) (“The ADA makes any public entity liable for prohibited
acts of discrimination, regardless of funding source.”).
Section 12133 lays out how Title II’s broad prohibition bar-
ring any public entity from engaging in disability discrimination is
enforced. As I explained above, § 12133 provides that the “reme-
dies, procedures, and rights” available to a person alleging disability
discrimination under Title II are the “remedies, procedures, and
rights” of the Rehabilitation Act, which in turn incorporates the
“remedies, procedures, and rights” set out in Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964. 42 U.S.C. § 12133; see 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(2).
Under the Rehabilitation Act and Title VI, when a state or local
public entity receiving federal funding engages in disability discrim-
ination or race discrimination, respectively, the federal govern-
ment may enforce compliance with the statute by terminating fed-
eral funding to the program or activity or taking “any other means
authorized by law.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000d-1; see 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(2).
There is no dispute that, under these statutes, the “other means
authorized by law” include the Attorney General’s filing of an en-
forcement lawsuit against the public entity.
In another noteworthy provision of Title II, Congress ad-
dressed the creation of a regulatory scheme to enforce the statute’s
mandate. Section 12134 directs the Attorney General to promul-
gate regulations to implement § 12132’s prohibition on discrimina-
tion by public entities. Id. § 12134(a). Congress instructed the At-
torney General to adopt regulations “consistent . . . with the coor-
dination regulations” under the Rehabilitation Act. Id. § 12134(b).
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With this provision, Congress directed the Attorney General
to create an administrative scheme through which individuals
could file with federal agencies complaints alleging that a state or
local public entity had engaged in discrimination, and the adminis-
trative proceedings could culminate in a lawsuit brought by the At-
torney General against the public entity. We know this by once
again following a series of references to enforcement schemes for
earlier civil rights statutes. Section 12134 expressly refers to the Re-
habilitation Act’s coordination regulations, which already existed
when Congress enacted the ADA. These regulations direct each
federal agency to establish “a system for the enforcement of [the
Rehabilitation Act’s prohibition on disability discrimination] . . .
with respect to the programs and activities to which it provides as-
sistance.” 28 C.F.R. § 41.5(a). According to the coordination regu-
lations, each agency’s enforcement system must incorporate the
administrative scheme used to enforce Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act, including “[t]he enforcement and hearing procedures.” Id.
§ 41.5(a)(1). Under Title VI’s administrative scheme, an individual
alleging discrimination by a recipient of federal financial assistance
files a complaint with a federal agency, which then investigates the
complaint. See id. § 42.107(b)–(c). If the investigation reveals that
discrimination occurred, the federal agency attempts to negotiate
a resolution with the recipient of the federal financial assistance. Id.
§ 42.107(d)(1). If the agency is unable to negotiate a resolution, the
Attorney General then may sue to enforce the prohibition on dis-
crimination. See id. § 42.108(a).
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Since Congress enacted the ADA more than 30 years ago,
the federal government has routinely enforced Title II’s prohibi-
tion on disability discrimination by state and local public entities.
Federal agencies have frequently investigated and attempted to re-
solve through informal means complaints that state and local gov-
ernments violated Title II. And the Attorney General has filed doz-
ens of lawsuits against public entities in federal court to vindicate
the rights of individuals with disabilities. 4
II. The Dissental’s Argument that the Attorney General Is
Not a “Person” Is Irrelevant to the Question Whether
the Attorney General Was Authorized to Sue Florida.
With this background about the relevant statutory scheme
in mind, we turn to Judge Newsom’s first argument. Echoing Judge
Branch’s panel dissent, Judge Newsom argues that the panel erred
in holding that the Attorney General could sue under § 12133 be-
cause the Attorney General does not qualify as a “person alleging
discrimination” under the ADA. 42 U.S.C. § 12133.
4 See, e.g., U.S. Dep’t of Justice, ADA Enforcement, Cases 2006-Present, Title
II, https://www.ada.gov/enforce_current.htm#TitleII (last visited Dec. 16,
2021); U.S. Dep’t of Justice, ADA Enforcement, Cases 1992-2005, Title II,
https://www.ada.gov/enforce_archive.htm#TitleII (last visited Dec. 16,
2021); U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Olmstead Enforcement,
https://www.ada.gov/olmstead/olmstead_enforcement.htm (last visited
Dec. 16, 2021). Together these websites list the instances when the Attorney
General has secured settlements from public entities or, when unable to nego-
tiate resolutions, brought enforcement actions against them.
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Judge Newsom’s position rests on the assumption that in
this case the Attorney General sued as a “person alleging discrimi-
nation” who is afforded remedies, procedures, and rights under Ti-
tle II of the ADA. But this assumption is mistaken. When the At-
torney General sues under Title II, the “person alleging discrimina-
tion” is the individual with a disability. One of the remedies, pro-
cedures, and rights afforded to this individual is that the Attorney
General may sue to vindicate the individual’s rights and to enforce
federal law.
The record in this case confirms that the persons alleging
discrimination were the medically-fragile children who allegedly
were unnecessarily forced into institutions to receive necessary
medical services. According to the complaint, the Attorney Gen-
eral brought the lawsuit “to enforce the rights of children” whom
Florida had “discriminate[d] against” by subjecting them to “pro-
longed and unnecessary institutionalization.” 13-cv-61576 Doc. 1 at
2. The remedies the Attorney General sought were to benefit the
children. To that end, the Attorney General requested injunctive
relief to end Florida’s alleged practice of unnecessarily institution-
alizing the children and monetary damages to compensate the chil-
dren for injuries they allegedly suffered because of Florida’s dis-
criminatory conduct.
Throughout this litigation, the Attorney General has con-
sistently maintained the position that the persons alleging discrim-
ination are the children, not himself. As far I can tell, he has never
taken the position in this case that he is the person alleging
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discrimination under § 12133. In fact, he has expressly disavowed
making such a claim. See Appellant’s Br. at 25 (explaining that
when the Attorney General files suit he is not the person alleging
discrimination); Response to Petition for Reh’g En Banc at 2 (stat-
ing that the Attorney General “explicitly disclaimed the position
that the Attorney General is a person alleging discrimination under
Title II’s enforcement provision” (emphasis in original) (internal
quotation marks omitted)). 5 The record is unambiguous: the Attor-
ney General sued under § 12133 on behalf of the medically-fragile
5The dissental asserts the Attorney General has in fact taken the position that
he is the person referred to in the statute. As support, the dissental cites to the
Attorney General’s reply brief stating that when the Attorney General “files a
Title II lawsuit, he proceeds on behalf of the United States—not as the attorney
for any individual complainant.” Reply Br. at 5. The dissental takes this state-
ment out of context.
In its appellee’s brief, the State of Florida argued that the Attorney General’s
filing of a lawsuit under the ADA is not a remedy, procedure, or right available
to a person alleging discrimination. Florida contended that an individual with
a disability had no “private right” to require the Attorney General to bring an
enforcement action on his behalf because a federal agency “cannot be com-
pelled to act on a complaint” filed by an individual. Appellee’s Br. at 23–24. In
reply, the Attorney General agreed that a victim of discrimination had “no
‘right’ to compel the Attorney General to file a lawsuit” on the victim’s behalf
because the Attorney General did not proceed “as the attorney for [the] indi-
vidual complainant.” Reply Br. at 4–5. Instead, the remedies, procedures, and
rights available to a person alleging discrimination “include[d] a longstanding
federal administrative enforcement scheme” that, at the discretion of the At-
torney General, may culminate in the filing of a lawsuit by the United States
government against a public entity to vindicate the individual complainant’s
rights. Id. at 5.
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children who were the victims of disability discrimination—the
persons alleging discrimination who may enforce Title II through
the relevant remedies, procedures, and rights. So, the question of
whether the Attorney General may qualify as a “person” under Ti-
tle II is simply not raised by this case.
Setting this fact aside, the dissental argues at length that the
Supreme Court’s decision in Return Mail, Inc. v. U.S. Postal Ser-
vice, 139 S. Ct. 1853 (2019), forecloses the idea that the Attorney
General can himself qualify as a “person” alleging discrimination.
Return Mail addressed whether the United States Postal Service
(“USPS”) may sue on its own behalf, to protect its own rights. No-
where did the case address when a government official, such as the
Attorney General, may sue on behalf of another person to enforce
a federal statute protecting that person’s rights.
In Return Mail, the Supreme Court confronted the question
whether USPS could challenge an issued patent before the U.S. Pa-
tent and Trademark Office. Id. at 1858–59. After Return Mail sued
USPS for infringing Return Mail’s patented mail-sorting system,
USPS filed a petition with the United States Patent and Trademark
Office for review and cancellation of Return Mail’s patent. Id. at
1861. In filing the application, USPS sought relief only for itself and
not for any other person or party.
The Supreme Court considered whether the relevant federal
statute, which permits a “person” to petition for review and can-
cellation of a patent, authorized USPS to bring a petition for review
and cancellation. See id. (quoting 35 U.S.C. § 311(a)). As an agency
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18 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
of the federal government, the Supreme Court held, USPS was not
a “person” under the statute and could not bring a petition for re-
view. Id. at 1867. The Court based its opinion on a long line of cases
establishing a presumption that the sovereign is not a person. See
id. at 1862–63.
Our panel majority opinion correctly concluded that Return
Mail was distinguishable. The opinion reasoned that Title II’s
“complex” enforcement provision “differ[ed] significantly” from
the simpler statutory scheme that the Court was addressing in Re-
turn Mail. See Florida, 938 F.3d at 1227 n.5. Unlike the statute in
Return Mail, which permitted only “a person” to petition for re-
view and cancellation of a patent, Title II’s enforcement provision
“provides” to “person[s] alleging discrimination” the “remedies,
procedures, and rights” of the Rehabilitation Act and Title VI.
42 U.S.C. § 12133. Under these incorporated predecessor statutes,
at least, it is clear that the Attorney General can sue on behalf of
the aggrieved person, rather than as the person. See Florida, 938
F.3d at 1226–38.
In this case, the persons alleging discrimination under Title
II and who are afforded “remedies, procedures, and rights” are the
children who have been subjected to prolonged and unnecessary
institutionalization. Because the Attorney General did not bring
this lawsuit on his own behalf as the “person” described in § 12133,
the panel majority opinion did not treat the Attorney General or
federal government as a “person,” and this case does not implicate
the presumption addressed in Return Mail.
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III. The Dissental’s Argument that the Attorney General
May Sue to Enforce Title II Only When a Public Entity
Receives Federal Funding Cannot Be Reconciled with
the Statutory Text and Conflicts with Supreme Court
Precedent.
The panel majority correctly concluded that under Title II
the Attorney General is authorized to sue any public entity, regard-
less of whether it receives federal funding. There is no dispute in
this case that Title II’s enforcement provision incorporates by ref-
erence the remedies, procedures, and rights available to a person
alleging discrimination under the Rehabilitation Act and Title VI of
the Civil Rights Act. There is also no dispute that the remedies,
procedures, and rights available under those earlier statutes include
that the victim of discrimination may file an administrative com-
plaint that may culminate in the filing of an enforcement action by
the Attorney General on the victim’s behalf. See, e.g., United States
v. Bd. of Trs. for Univ. of Ala., 908 F.2d 740, 742 (11th Cir. 1990)
(suit brought by United States against state university to enforce
Rehabilitation Act on behalf of individuals alleging discrimination
by the university); United States v. Marion Cnty. Sch. Dist., 625
F.2d 607, 608–09 (5th Cir. 1980) (suit brought by United States
against school district to enforce Title VI on behalf of individuals
alleging discrimination by the school district). Because the Attor-
ney General had the authority to enforce the Rehabilitation Act
and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act by bringing civil enforcement
actions, the panel majority correctly concluded that Title II’s
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20 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
enforcement provision similarly authorized the Attorney General
to bring civil suits to vindicate the rights that Title II protects—
freedom from disability discrimination by state or local public en-
tities. See Florida, 938 F.3d at 1250.
Judge Newsom argues that the Attorney General’s authority
to sue a public entity to enforce the Rehabilitation Act or Title VI
of the Civil Rights Act arises from the fact that the public entity
agreed as a condition of receiving federal funding not to engage in
discrimination. So, he says, the Attorney General’s authority to sue
to enforce Title II must be similarly limited. In Judge Newsom’s
view, the Attorney General can sue a public entity only when it
receives federal funding and expressly agrees as a condition of the
funding not to engage in disability discrimination.
This argument has some appeal. Ultimately, though, it too
is flawed. The dissental adopts an interpretation that reads Title II’s
enforcement provision in isolation instead of reading the statutory
text in context. Moreover, the dissental’s interpretation would lead
unavoidably to a result the Supreme Court has rejected: that an
individual would have an implied private right of action under Title
II to sue a public entity that receives no federal funding, yet the
federal government would have no corresponding enforcement
authority.
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A. The Dissental’s Interpretation Cannot Be Reconciled with
the Statutory Text When Read in Context.
Judge Newsom says his conclusion that the Attorney Gen-
eral may sue to enforce Title II only when a public entity agrees as
a condition of federal funding not to engage in disability discrimi-
nation is consistent with the relevant statutory text. But his inter-
pretation runs afoul of basic principles of statutory construction be-
cause it ignores statutory context.
The question of whether the Attorney General may sue to
enforce Title II is a question of statutory interpretation. When we
interpret a statute, we must begin “with the words of the statutory
provision.” Harris v. Garner, 216 F.3d 970, 972 (11th Cir. 2000) (en
banc). But “[s]tatutory language has meaning only in context.” Gra-
ham Cnty. Soil & Water Conservation Dist. v. United States ex rel.
Wilson, 545 U.S. 409, 415 (2005); see Wachovia Bank, N.A. v.
United States, 455 F.3d 1261, 1267 (11th Cir. 2006) (“[C]ontext is
king.”). In interpreting a statute, “we must not be guided by a single
sentence or member of a sentence, but look to the provisions of the
whole law.” Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman, 451 U.S.
1, 18 (1981) (internal quotation marks omitted); see Robinson v.
Shell Oil Co., 519 U.S. 337, 341 (1997) (“The plainness or ambiguity
of statutory language is determined by reference to the language
itself, the specific context in which that language is used, and the
broader context of the statute as a whole.”).
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22 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
Here, the statutory text, when read in context, reflects that
Congress intended to authorize the Attorney General to bring a
lawsuit to enforce Title II against any public entity, regardless of
whether it obtained federal funding. In Title II, by expressly im-
porting the remedies, procedures, and rights available under the
Rehabilitation Act and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, Congress
ratified and incorporated into Title II administrative procedures
that may culminate in an enforcement action by the Attorney Gen-
eral. Unlike the earlier statutes, which are expressly limited to ad-
dressing discrimination by public entities that receive federal fund-
ing, however, Title II regulates against all public entities, with no
mention of federal funding. Thus, none of Title II’s remedies, pro-
cedures and rights—of which suit by the United States government
is one—are so limited.
“Congress enacted Title II against a backdrop of pervasive
unequal treatment in the administration of state services and pro-
grams.” Lane, 541 U.S. at 524. This pattern of disability discrimina-
tion persisted despite Congress’s efforts to address it. See id. at 525–
26. The earlier legislative efforts included the Rehabilitation Act,
which prohibited disability discrimination by state and local gov-
ernments. But because Congress enacted the Rehabilitation Act
pursuant to its Spending Clause power, the Rehabilitation Act’s
prohibition was limited to state and local governments that oper-
ated a program or activity receiving federal financial assistance. See
29 U.S.C. § 794(a). The limited reach of the Rehabilitation Act’s
prohibition on discrimination by state and local government
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 23
rendered it “inadequate to address the pervasive problems of dis-
crimination that people with disabilities [were] facing.” Lane, 541
U.S. at 526 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Congress adopted Title II to remedy this inadequacy by ex-
tending the prohibition on disability discrimination to reach any
program or activity of a state or local government, not merely
those that receive federal funding. This is no novel insight by the
panel majority. Our court recognized nearly two decades ago that
“an integral purpose of [Title] II” was to make the Rehabilitation
Act’s prohibition on discrimination applicable to “all programs, ac-
tivities, and services provided or made available by state and local
governments . . . , regardless of whether or not such entities receive
Federal financial assistance.” Shotz, 344 F.3d at 1174 (emphasis
added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The text of Title II supports this understanding. It states that
“no qualified individual with a disability shall, by reason of such
disability, . . . be subjected to discrimination by any [public] entity.”
42 U.S.C. § 12132 (emphasis added). Title II broadly defines a public
entity to include “any State or local government,” with no require-
ment that the entity receive federal funding. Id. § 12131(1)(A) (em-
phasis added). Because of this broad language, Judge Newsom
must concede that Title II permits an individual to sue any public
entity for disability discrimination, regardless of whether it receives
federal financial assistance, yet his interpretation imposes an atex-
tual limitation on the other avenue of relief under the statute.
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24 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
Both textual and contextual clues reveal that Title II was
Congress’s response to the shortcomings of the Rehabilitation Act,
which prohibited public entities from engaging in disability dis-
crimination only to the extent they received federal funding. Title
II was meant to fill the gap by expanding the prohibition on disa-
bility discrimination to all state governmental entities, regardless
of whether the state program or activity said to be discriminatory
receives federal funding. The dissental’s interpretation of § 12133
fails because it carries forward into Title II the very limitations of
the Rehabilitation Act that Congress intended Title II to remedy.
The dissental magnifies its error by ignoring § 12134. Section
12134 of Title II instructs the Attorney General to promulgate reg-
ulations to create an administrative enforcement framework, di-
recting that the regulations must be “consistent” with the regula-
tions promulgated under the Rehabilitation Act (and, by incorpo-
ration, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act). Id. § 12134(b). As I ex-
plained above, the regulations promulgated under the Rehabilita-
tion Act and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act create a robust admin-
istrative process in which federal agencies investigate and attempt
to resolve, through informal means, claims alleging disability dis-
crimination by public entities and, if the investigating agency is un-
able to resolve the claim, the Attorney General may sue the public
entity. See 28 C.F.R. §§ 41.5(a)(1); 42.107(b)–(d); 42.108.
I cannot square the dissental’s interpretation, which leaves
the Attorney General without any authority to enforce Title II
against public entities that receive no federal funding, with
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 25
Congress’s direction in § 12134 that Title II’s prohibition on dis-
crimination should be enforced through a robust administrative
scheme. Under the dissental’s interpretation, upon receiving a
complaint that a non-federally-funded public entity has discrimi-
nated against a person with a disability, a federal agency pours re-
sources into investigating the complaint and attempting to reach
an informal settlement. But if that process ultimately proves unsuc-
cessful, the federal government must give up—because it may not
sue the public entity to enforce the law. Without any enforcement
teeth, such a regulatory process would be utterly ineffectual.
Lastly, the dissental’s narrow interpretation of the Attorney
General’s enforcement authority conflicts with Congress’s express
legislative findings about the ADA’s purpose. By leaving the federal
government with no enforcement power when unlawful disability
discrimination is perpetrated by a public entity that receives no fed-
eral funding, the dissental’s interpretation undermines Congress’s
intention for the ADA to serve as “comprehensive” legislation to
address the continuing problem of disability discrimination, which
persisted across all dimensions of a disabled person’s life, including
“access to public services.” 42 U.S.C. § 12101(a)(3), (b)(1). This in-
terpretation also undermines Congress’s expressed intent for the
ADA to set forth “consistent” standards prohibiting the disability
discrimination and to give the federal government “a central role”
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26 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
in enforcing the prohibition on disability discrimination. Id.
§ 12101(b)(2)–(3). 6
The dissental’s interpretation effectively treats the ADA, like
the earlier Rehabilitation Act, as a Spending Clause statute in which
Congress regulated state and local governments only where they
receive federal funding. As we previously explained in Shotz, this
interpretation makes little sense. The types of conduct that consti-
tute discrimination under the Rehabilitation Act and Title II are so
similar that if Congress had intended for Title II’s provisions to ap-
ply only to federal funds recipients, “it would have been far easier
to amend the Rehabilitation Act to account for the minor differ-
ences between it and [Title] II of the ADA than to insert an other-
wise unnecessary [title] in the ADA itself.” Shotz, 344 F.3d at 1174.
Rather, in enacting the ADA, Congress expressly “invoke[d] the
6 I pause to address my reliance on § 12101. Our court has warned against
adopting an interpretation of a statute that relies solely on a statement of leg-
islative purpose, saying “it is hornbook abuse of the whole-text canon to argue
that since the overall purpose of the statute is to achieve x, any interpretation
of the text that limits the achieving of x must be disfavored.” Regions Bank v.
Legal Outsource PA, 936 F.3d 1184, 1194–95 (11th Cir. 2019) (internal quota-
tion marks omitted). But my argument here is different. The text of Title II
itself tells us that Congress intended to extend the prohibition against disability
discrimination to all public entities by eliminating the distinction among pub-
lic entities based on their receipt of federal funding. I look to the statements of
purpose in § 12101 only for additional support. The Supreme Court has en-
dorsed this approach in the context of this very statutory scheme. See
Olmstead, 527 U.S. at 599–600 (looking to substantive provisions in Title II as
well as the findings in § 12101 when construing the term “discrimination” in §
12132).
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 27
sweep of [its] authority, including the power to enforce the four-
teenth amendment and to regulate commerce” so that it could “ad-
dress the major areas of discrimination faced day-to-day by people
with disabilities.” 42 U.S.C. § 12101(b)(4).
The dissental fails to grapple with these problems in its in-
terpretation. Instead, it attacks the panel majority’s reasoning by
pointing to differences between the enforcement provision in Title
II of the ADA and the enforcement provisions in Titles I and III. It
says that because Titles I and III expressly authorize the Attorney
General to sue, the absence of a similar provision in Title II must
mean that Congress did not intend for the Attorney General to be
able to sue under Title II. But the dissental overlooks an important
piece of the puzzle: with each title of the ADA, Congress was leg-
islating upon a different existing statutory framework. Thus, the
different language Congress used in the enforcement provisions of
each title merely reflects the different approaches that Congress
took to incorporate existing law; it does not reflect different reme-
dies. Judge Newsom never confronts this nuance.
I begin with Title I, which concerns employment claims. See
42 U.S.C. § 12112(a). Title I’s enforcement provision states, “[t]he
powers, remedies, and procedures set forth in sections 2000e-4,
2000e-5, 2000e-6, 2000e-8, and 2000e-9 of this title shall be the pow-
ers, remedies, and procedures this subchapter provides to the
[Equal Employment Opportunity] Commission, to the Attorney
General, or to any person alleging discrimination on the basis of
disability.” Id. § 12117(a). Although this provision bears some
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28 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
resemblance to Title II’s enforcement provision, there are two im-
portant differences. First, Title II’s enforcement provision speaks to
the “remedies, procedures, and rights” available, id. § 12133,
whereas Title I addresses “powers, remedies, and procedures,” id.
§ 12117(a). Second, the relevant actors are treated differently in the
two statutes. Title II’s enforcement provision incorporates the
parts of the Rehabilitation Act and Title VI that set forth the reme-
dies, procedures, and rights of a “person alleging discrimination,”
id. § 12133, whereas Title I’s enforcement provision incorporates
portions of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that set forth
the powers, remedies, and procedures provided to the EEOC, the
Attorney General, or a person alleging discrimination, id. §
12117(a).
These two differences indicate that sections 12133 and 12117
serve overlapping, but not identical, purposes. Although both pro-
visions incorporate other statutes setting out the remedies availa-
ble to a person alleging discrimination, § 12117 also incorporates
provisions from Title VII addressing how power to enforce Title
VII is shared between the EEOC and the Attorney General. As the
Attorney General explains, “[b]ecause the point of [§] 12117(a) was
to make clear that the same division of authority among the vari-
ous actors under the five different sections of Title VII [of the Civil
Rights Act] applies to Title I of the ADA, it was only natural that
Congress would avoid confusion by specifying the actors among
whom the authority is divided.” Appellant’s Br. at 28-29. No similar
reference to the Attorney General (or the EEOC) was needed in
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 29
Title II because the pre-existing statutes that Congress was incor-
porating there had simpler enforcement schemes that did not in-
volve the sharing of “powers,” 42 U.S.C. § 12117(a), between the
Attorney General and the EEOC.
Judge Newsom argues that the differences between Title I
and Title II support his position because Title I’s enforcement pro-
vision shows that Congress knew how to expressly reference the
Attorney General when necessary. He is correct, of course, that
“[w]here ‘Congress includes particular language in one section of a
statute but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is gener-
ally presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the
disparate inclusion or exclusion.’” Dissental at 46 (quoting Russello
v. United States, 464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983)). But the general presump-
tion is overcome here. The differences between the enforcement
provisions in Title I and Title II and, importantly, the earlier stat-
utes they each incorporate suffice to explain why Congress would
mention the Attorney General in Title I but not in Title II. “The
Russello presumption—that the presence of a phrase in one provi-
sion and its absence in another reveals Congress’[s] design—grows
weaker with each difference in the formulation of the provisions
under inspection.” Clay v. United States, 537 U.S. 522, 532 (2003)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
I now turn to Judge Newsom’s similar argument about Title
III. Title III prohibits discrimination against a person “on the basis
of disability in the full and equal enjoyment of . . . any place of pub-
lic accommodation.” 42 U.S.C. § 12182(a). Title III’s enforcement
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30 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
provision is structured differently than the enforcement provisions
in either Title I or Title II.
Title III’s enforcement provision is § 12188. Subsection (a) of
§ 12188 gives an individual who was subjected to discrimination a
private right of action to sue the operator of a place of public ac-
commodation. In § 12188(a), Congress established this private right
of action through an incorporation by reference: “The remedies
and procedures set forth in section 2000a-3(a) [Title II of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964] are the remedies and procedures this subchap-
ter provides to any person who is being subjected to discrimination
on the basis of disability.” Id. § 12188(a). In an action under §
12188(a), the aggrieved person may seek only “preventive relief,”
such as a permanent or temporary injunction or restraining order.
See id. § 2000a-3(a). 7 The aggrieved person may not recover dam-
ages.
In subsection (b) of § 12188, however—without incorporat-
ing remedies from any other statute—Congress expressly author-
ized “the Attorney General [to] commence a civil action.” Id.
§ 12188(b)(1)(B). In contrast to the private right of action under
subsection (a), in an action brought by the Attorney General under
subsection (b), the court may award, in addition to equitable relief
such as temporary, preliminary, or permanent injunctive relief,
prevailing party may recover its reasonable attorney’s fees. See
7 In addition, a
42 U.S.C. § 2000a-3(b)
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 31
damages to any “persons aggrieved” or may assess a civil penalty.
Id. § 12188(b)(2).
Section 12188(b) is unique among the ADA’s three titles be-
cause it is the only enforcement provision in which Congress ex-
pressly authorized the Attorney General to commence an action
instead of incorporating by reference an enforcement provision
from another statute. Why? Because in Title III Congress was cre-
ating a brand-new remedy, one which did not exist in earlier stat-
utes, available to the Attorney General to combat discrimination
by operators of places of public accommodation. Although Title II
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 allowed the Attorney General to sue
an operator of a place of public accommodation who engaged in
discrimination, the Attorney General could seek only injunctive re-
lief, not damages or a penalty. See, e.g., id. § 2000a-5(a) (permitting
Attorney General to bring civil actions seeking injunctive relief, not
damages). Because Title III of the ADA created a new, expanded
role for the Attorney General, it necessarily had to describe that
role rather than incorporating an earlier provision by reference. 8
8 Judge Newsom lists several other federal statutes where Congress expressly
authorized the Attorney General to commence an action to enforce the stat-
ute. But it is not the case, of course, (and Judge Newsom stops short of saying)
that Congress must include such express language to authorize the Attorney
General to sue. If Congress had to include such express language, then the
Attorney General would have no authority to enforce the Rehabilitation Act
(because its enforcement provision incorporates by reference the remedies,
procedures, and rights of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act) even against public
entities that receive federal funding. See 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(2).
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32 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
When viewed in context, the enforcement provisions in the
ADA demonstrate that Congress took two different approaches in
setting out the remedies available for a violation of the ADA, and
there were good reasons for taking those different approaches. As
one approach, Congress incorporated by reference the enforce-
ment provision of an existing civil rights statute to incorporate the
remedies available under the earlier statute, as it did in Titles I and
II. 9 For another approach, Congress included rights-creating lan-
guage to expressly authorize the Attorney General to sue, as it did
in Title III. Therefore, I cannot agree with the dissental that the
rights-creating language in § 12188(b), which expressly authorizes
the Attorney General to sue to enforce Title III, indicates that Con-
gress did not intend to authorize the Attorney General to sue under
Title II to enforce the rights of victims of discrimination. The dis-
sental’s interpretation flies in the face of Congress’s incorporation
by reference of the existing enforcement provisions in the Rehabil-
itation Act and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, both of which give
the Attorney General the right to sue on behalf of victims of dis-
crimination. The panel majority correctly interpreted the statutory
9 Although Titles I and II are similar in that Congress incorporated by refer-
ence the enforcement provisions of existing statutes, I explained above that
other differences in the relevant statutory schemes explain why Congress ex-
pressly mentioned the Attorney General in Title I but not in Title II. Unlike in
Title II, where Congress was simply extending the reach of existing remedies
to public entities regardless of whether they receive federal funding, in Title I
Congress was dealing with a complex statutory scheme with multiple actors
sharing enforcement roles.
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text as permitting the Attorney General to sue any public entity for
disability discrimination.
B. The Dissental’s Interpretation Conflicts with Supreme
Court Precedent.
Another glaring problem with the dissental’s interpretation
warrants mention: it creates a situation where an individual alleg-
ing disability discrimination has an implied private right of action
against a public entity that receives no federal funding under Title
II, but the federal government has no corresponding enforcement
authority. I have difficulty squaring this result with the Supreme
Court’s decision in NCAA v. Smith, where the Court explained that
when a civil rights statute, such as Title II of the ADA, creates an
implied right of action to sue, the implied private right of action is
no broader than the federal government’s authority to enforce that
statute. 525 U.S. 459, 467 n.5 (1999).
To put this explanation in context, we need to review what
happened in Smith. An athlete alleged that the NCAA discrimi-
nated against her on the basis of sex when it denied her permission
to play intercollegiate volleyball. Id. at 462. She sued the organiza-
tion under Title IX, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of
sex in “any education program or activity receiving Federal finan-
cial assistance.” Id. (quoting 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a)). The question be-
fore the Supreme Court was whether the NCAA received federal
funding. Although the NCAA itself received no direct federal fund-
ing, the athlete argued that she could sue the organization under
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34 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
Title IX because it received dues payments from its member uni-
versities, which did receive federal financial assistance. Id. at 464.
The Supreme Court rejected the athlete’s argument.
In concluding that the NCAA could not be sued under Title
IX, the Supreme Court relied on its earlier decision in U.S. Depart-
ment of Transportation v. Paralyzed Veterans of America. See id.
at 467 (citing 477 U.S 597, 603–12 (1986)). In Paralyzed Veterans,
the Court considered whether the Rehabilitation Act permitted a
federal agency to prohibit commercial airlines from discriminating
based on disability. See 477 U.S. at 604. The commercial airlines
received no funding directly from the federal government, but the
plaintiffs argued that the Act authorized the federal government to
regulate the airlines because they indirectly benefited from the fed-
eral funding airports received. Id. at 606. The Supreme Court disa-
greed, holding that the Rehabilitation Act permitted the federal
government to regulate only actual recipients of federal funds. Id.
at 606–07.
The athlete in Smith had tried to distinguish Paralyzed Vet-
erans on the ground that it “involved a Government enforcement
action,” whereas she had brought a “private suit.” Smith, 525 U.S.
at 467 n.5. The athlete’s argument hinged on the premise “that the
private right of action available under” Title IX was “potentially
broader than the Government’s enforcement authority” under Ti-
tle IX. Id.
The Court said no. It explained that there was “no express
authorization for private lawsuits in Title IX” and that Congress
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17-13595 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 35
had instead authorized an implied private right of action. Id. “[I]t
would be anomalous,” the Court said, “to assume that Congress
intended the implied right of action to proscribe conduct that Gov-
ernment enforcement may not check.” Id. Smith teaches that when
Congress creates an implied private right of action to sue for civil
rights violations, the private right of action and the federal govern-
ment’s enforcement authority are coextensive.
Judge Newsom’s position mirrors the argument the athlete
made, and the Court rejected, in Smith. He acknowledges that an
individual may file suit for discrimination prohibited by Title II
against any public entity but maintains that the government may
enforce Title II’s prohibition against only those public entities that
receive federal funding. Thus, under his interpretation of Title II,
an individual’s implied private right of action is broader than the
government’s enforcement authority. 10
But in Smith the Court rejected the idea that the private
right of action could be broader than this enforcement authority
when it said such a result would be “anomalous.” Id. Although the-
oretically it might be possible for Congress to enact a civil rights
statute giving individuals an implied private right of action to sue
10Although Smith involved a different civil rights statute, Title IX’s enforce-
ment provision—like Title II’s—was patterned on Title VI’s enforcement pro-
vision. Compare 20 U.S.C. § 1682, with 42 U.S.C. § 2000d-1. We have declared
Title IX case law to be “informative” in interpreting the Rehabilitation Act be-
cause both statutes were “modeled after Title VI.” Liese v. Indian River Cnty.
Hosp. Dist., 701 F.3d 334, 346 (11th Cir. 2012).
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36 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
but leaving the Attorney General without corresponding authority
to enforce against the prohibited conduct, Judge Newsom has iden-
tified no statute that has been interpreted this way. 11
11 Judge Newsom tries to ameliorate the impact of his reading of Title II by
suggesting that even if the Attorney General lacks the authority to sue Florida
under Title II, the United States could vindicate the children’s rights nonethe-
less by suing Florida under the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act
(“CRIPA”), a separate federal statute that authorizes the Attorney General to
sue a state when it “subject[s] persons residing in or confined to an institution
. . . to egregious or flagrant conditions” and “caus[es] such persons to suffer
grievous harm.” 42 U.S.C. § 1997a(a).
But as the panel majority carefully explained, the Attorney General could not
have sued Florida under CRIPA because the facilities where the children are
placed do not appear to meet CRIPA’s definition of “institution.” See Florida,
938 F.3d at 1246 n.23. Under CRIPA, a “skilled nursing, intermediate or long-
term care, or custodial or residential care” facility generally qualifies as an in-
stitution if it is “owned, operated, or managed by, or provides services on be-
half of any State or political subdivision of a State.” 42 U.S.C. § 1997(1), (B)(v).
A privately owned and operated facility does not qualify as an institution when
its “nexus” with the state is limited to state licensing of the facility and the
facility’s receipt of payments under Medicaid, Medicare, or Social Security. Id.
§ 1997(2). As the panel majority noted, a review of the record in this case indi-
cates that the facilities housing the medically-fragile children were privately
owned and operated and thus did not qualify as institutions under CRIPA.
Florida, 938 F.3d at 1246 n.23.
In any event, even if the Attorney General also could sue Florida under
CRIPA, “[t]here is nothing to suggest that CRIPA was intended to be the only
means of enforcing the rights of institutionalized persons.” Id. (emphasis omit-
ted). Congress enacted the ADA ten years after CRIPA. Despite CRIPA’s ex-
istence, Congress found that discrimination against individuals with disabili-
ties “persist[ed]” in “critical areas” including via their “institutionalization.”
See 42 U.S.C. § 12101(a)(3); Olmstead, 527 U.S. at 599–600.
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IV. Contrary to the Dissental’s Claim, the Panel Opinion
Does Not Conflict with Federalism Principles.
Before concluding, I must address one last criticism the dis-
sental levels against the panel majority’s opinion. The dissental says
that the opinion’s holding “comes at [a] real cost to core principles
of federalism.” Dissental at 61. This critique flows from the dis-
sental’s assumption that the ADA does not authorize the Attorney
General to sue a public entity when it receives no federal funding
and thus that the panel majority opinion “creates a nonexistent
cause of action.” Id. at 41, 64.
But if the panel majority was correct that Congress intended
to authorize the Attorney General to sue to enforce Title II’s pro-
hibition on discrimination against all public entities, regardless of
whether they receive federal funding, then the majority opinion
“creates” no cause of action and presents no federalism concerns.
If so, the dissental’s critique amounts to a policy argument about
why Congress should not have decided to authorize the Attorney
General to sue a state government to enforce federal law. Because
Congress acted and authorized the Attorney General to sue, how-
ever, adopting the dissental’s interpretation would violate princi-
ples of separation of powers by taking away from the Attorney
General power the considerable authority that Congress gave
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38 JILL PRYOR, J., respecting denial of reh’g en banc 17-13595
him.12 Norelus v. Denny’s, Inc., 628 F.3d 1270, 1300–01 (11th Cir.
2010) (“Courts may not rewrite the language of a statute in the
guise of interpreting it in order to further what they deem to be a
better policy than the one Congress wrote into the statute.”).
V. Conclusion
The panel majority got the law right. In Title II of the ADA,
Congress authorized the Attorney General to sue any public entity,
regardless of whether it receives federal funding, to enforce the
statute. Reading the broad statutory language in its proper context,
the panel correctly held that the Attorney General was authorized
in this case to sue the State of Florida, on behalf of the medically-
fragile children, for disability discrimination.
12Judge Newsom does not dispute that Congress has the authority under the
Constitution to authorize the Attorney General to enforce Title II against state
governments even when they receive no federal funding.
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 39
NEWSOM, Circuit Judge, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en
banc, in which BRANCH, Circuit Judge, joins:
I
This case involves the Americans with Disabilities Act. Con-
gress enacted the ADA “to provide a clear and comprehensive na-
tional mandate for the elimination of discrimination against indi-
viduals with disabilities.” Tennessee v. Lane, 541 U.S. 509, 516
(2004) (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 12101(b)(1)). The Act contains three
titles: Title I covers employment; Title II covers public services,
programs, and activities; and Title III covers public accommoda-
tions. See id. at 516–17. Our focus here is Title II—and, specifically,
the question whether the Attorney General of the United States can
sue to enforce it. As background—much more on this later—Title
II’s enforcement provision states in full:
The remedies, procedures, and rights set forth in sec-
tion 794a of Title 29 [i.e., § 505 of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973] shall be the remedies, procedures, and
rights this subchapter [i.e., Title II] provides to any
person alleging discrimination on the basis of disabil-
ity in violation of section 12132 of this title.
42 U.S.C. § 12133.
* * *
Briefly, the specifics of this case: The allegations here—that
the State of Florida has mistreated children with severe medical
conditions and disabilities—are extremely serious. In particular, in
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40 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
a Letter of Findings, the DOJ informed Florida that it was violating
Title II by “unnecessarily institutionalizing hundreds of children
with disabilities in nursing facilities.” United States v. Florida, 938
F.3d 1221, 1224 (11th Cir. 2019). The DOJ further alleged that Flor-
ida’s Medicaid policies put some children—those who are “medi-
cally fragile” or who have “medically complex” conditions—“at
risk of unnecessary institutionalization.” Id. at 1225. After failed
negotiations, the DOJ sued Florida, seeking declaratory and injunc-
tive relief under Title II. See id. The district court consolidated the
government’s case with a class action brought on behalf of children
alleging similar claims against the state. See id. Ultimately, that
court dismissed the government’s case, holding that the Attorney
General lacked standing to sue under Title II. C.V. v. Dudek, 209
F. Supp. 3d 1279, 1282 (S.D. Fla. 2016), rev’d and remanded sub
nom., United States v. Florida, 938 F.3d 1221.
In a split decision, a panel of this Court reversed. The panel
majority zeroed in on the “remedies, procedures, and rights” lan-
guage in Title II’s enforcement provision. Because Title II refer-
ences § 505 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which in turn refer-
ences Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the panel concluded
that Title VI is the “ultimate fount of the cascade of cross-refer-
ences”—and thus effectively “the enforcement mechanism for Ti-
tle II.” United States v. Florida, 938 F.3d at 1227, 1229. Section 602
of Title VI allows the government to “effect” compliance with that
statute by (1) terminating or refusing to grant funds; or (2) “by any
other means authorized by law.” Id. at 1227 (quoting 42 U.S.C.
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 41
§ 2000d-1). The phrase “any other means authorized by law,” the
panel held, encompassed lawsuits by the Attorney General. Id. at
1233. Because Title II’s “remedies, procedures, and rights” lan-
guage “adopt[ed] federal statutes” that contemplate enforcement
and suit by the Attorney General, the majority reasoned—having
spent dozens of pages untangling the cross-reference “cascade”—
that the Attorney General can likewise sue under Title II. Id. at
1229, 1250. For reasons I’ll explain, I disagree.
The panel’s opinion can plausibly be understood in either of
two ways—neither of which, I hope to show, withstands scrutiny.
First, one might read the opinion to hold that the Attorney General
is himself a “person alleging discrimination” within the meaning of
42 U.S.C. § 12133 and, accordingly, has standing to sue under Title
II. If that’s what the panel’s opinion means, then for many of the
reasons that Judge Branch identified in her dissent—and that I’ll
aim to underscore here—it seems to me flat wrong. See United
States v. Florida, 938 F.3d at 1251–54 (Branch, J., dissenting). Sec-
ond, and perhaps more charitably, the majority’s opinion might be
read to hold that the Attorney General has standing to sue on be-
half of other “person[s] alleging discrimination” under Title II.
While that reading avoids many of the more obvious pitfalls iden-
tified by Judge Branch, I contend that it fails just the same.
Because the panel’s decision creates a nonexistent cause of
action, vests the federal government with sweeping enforcement
authority that it’s not clear Congress intended to give, and, in the
doing, upends the delicate federal-state balance, this Court should
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42 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
have reheard it en banc. I respectfully dissent from its refusal to do
so.
II
I begin with the first possible reading of the panel opinion—
that the Attorney General has standing to sue to enforce Title II of
the ADA because he is, within the meaning of that statute’s reme-
dial provision, a “person alleging discrimination.” 42 U.S.C.
§ 12133. As Judge Branch explained in her dissent, the Supreme
Court’s recent decision in Return Mail, Inc. v. U.S. Postal Service,
139 S. Ct. 1853 (2019), all but forecloses that theory.
The question in Return Mail was “whether a federal agency
is a ‘person’ able to seek” administrative review and to challenge
the validity of a patent (post-issuance) under the Leahy-Smith
America Invents Act. 139 S. Ct. at 1858–59. In a 6–3 decision au-
thored by Justice Sotomayor, the Supreme Court held that the
agency was not a “person.” Id. at 1859. In arriving at that conclu-
sion, the Court began with the “longstanding interpretive pre-
sumption that ‘person’ does not include the sovereign.” Id. at
1861–62 (citing cases dating back nearly 150 years). The presump-
tion doesn’t just reflect “common usage,” the Court explained, but
“is also an express directive from Congress” because the Dictionary
Act, 1 U.S.C. § 1, supplies the definition of “person” that courts
should use in “determining the meaning of any Act of Congress,
unless the context indicates otherwise.” Id. at 1862 (quoting 1
U.S.C. § 1). “Notably absent from the list of ‘person[s]’” in the Dic-
tionary Act, the Court emphasized, “is the Federal Government.”
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 43
Id. (alteration in original) (citation omitted). The Court further
confirmed that the presumption applies even when it operates, in
effect, to “exclude the Federal Government or one of its agencies
from accessing a benefit or favorable procedural device.” Id. (citing
United States v. Cooper Corp., 312 U.S. 600, 604–05 (1941), which
held that the United States is not a “person” who can sue under the
Sherman Antitrust Act for treble damages).
The Return Mail Court explained that while the presump-
tion isn’t a “hard and fast rule of exclusion,” it can be “disregarded”
only if there is “some indication in the text or context of the statute
that affirmatively shows Congress intended to include the govern-
ment.” Id. at 1862–63 (citations and quotations omitted). So back
to our case, are there any presumption-defeating indicators in the
text or context of Title II’s enforcement provision—or the ADA
more generally—that affirmatively show that Congress intended to
include the Attorney General (in his capacity as representative of
the United States) within the meaning of the phrase “any person
alleging discrimination”? There are not. Quite the opposite, in
fact. Title II’s enforcement provision—particularly when under-
stood in the ADA’s larger context—confirms that the Attorney
General is not covered.
Notably, Congress explicitly gave the Attorney General
standing to sue under Titles I and III of the ADA. In full, Title I’s
enforcement provision, which addresses discrimination in employ-
ment, expressly authorizes the Attorney General to sue, and does
so separately from “any person alleging discrimination”:
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44 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
The powers, remedies, and procedures set forth
in . . . this title shall be the powers, remedies, and pro-
cedures this subchapter [i.e., Title I] provides to the
Commission, to the Attorney General, or to any per-
son alleging discrimination on the basis of disability in
violation of any provision of this chapter, or regula-
tions promulgated under section 12116 of this title,
concerning employment.
42 U.S.C. § 12117(a) (emphasis added).
Title III’s enforcement provision, which addresses discrimi-
nation in public accommodations, is structured a bit differently, but
it too clearly vests the Attorney General with authority to sue. It
initially provides “remedies and procedures . . . to any person who
is being subject to discrimination on the basis of disability in viola-
tion of [Title III].” Id. § 12188(a)(1) (emphasis added). It goes on,
though, to provide explicitly—and separately—for enforcement by
the Attorney General. In particular, it gives the Attorney General
a duty to “investigate alleged violations” of Title III and to “under-
take periodic reviews of compliance” with Title III, id.
§ 12188(b)(1)(A)(i), as well as permission to “certify that a State law
or local building code or similar ordinance that establishes accessi-
bility requirements meets or exceeds the minimum requirements
of” the ADA, id. § 12188(b)(1)(A)(ii). Most importantly here, it
gives the Attorney General an express right to sue to enforce Title
III:
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 45
If the Attorney General has reasonable cause to be-
lieve that—(i) any person or group of persons is en-
gaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination under
this subchapter [i.e., Title III]; or (ii) any person or
group of persons has been discriminated against un-
der this subchapter [i.e., Title III] and such discrimi-
nation raises an issue of general public importance,
the Attorney General may commence a civil action in
any appropriate United States district court.
Id. § 12188(b)(1)(B) (emphasis added).
The fact that Titles I and III reference the Attorney General
by name and, more to the point, expressly authorize him to sue,
tells us (at least) two things about the way Congress drafted the
ADA. First, the Attorney General is not included within the term
“person” under Titles I and III—otherwise why mention the “At-
torney General” in addition to and alongside the word “person”?
See, e.g., Republic of Sudan v. Harrison, 139 S. Ct. 1048, 1058
(2019) (explaining that courts should be “hesitant to adopt an inter-
pretation of a congressional enactment which renders superfluous
another portion of that same law” (quotation omitted)). And be-
cause courts have a “duty to construe statutes, not isolated provi-
sions,” and, therefore, should ordinarily follow the “normal rule of
statutory construction that identical words used in different parts
of the same act are intended to have the same meaning,” Gustafson
v. Alloyd Co., 513 U.S. 561, 568, 570 (1995), if the term “person”
doesn’t include the Attorney General in Titles I or III, then it
doesn’t include the Attorney General in Title II, either.
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46 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
Second, Titles I and III show that when Congress intended
the Attorney General to have enforcement power under the ADA,
it said so. This is consistent with the Supreme Court’s observation
that “the United States Code displays throughout that when an
agency in its governmental capacity is meant to have standing,
Congress says so.” Dir., Off. of Workers’ Comp. Programs, Dep’t
of Labor v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., 514 U.S.
122, 129 (1995). In Newport News, the Supreme Court considered
whether the Director of the Office of Workers’ Compensation Pro-
grams in the U.S. Department of Labor had standing to appeal de-
cisions of the Benefits Review Board under the Longshore and Har-
bor Workers’ Compensation Act, which allowed a “person ad-
versely affected or aggrieved” to appeal. Id. at 123, 126 (quoting 33
U.S.C. § 921(c)). The Court emphasized that the Act’s “silence re-
garding the Secretary’s ability to take an appeal is significant when
laid beside other provisions of law”—such as the Black Lung Bene-
fits Act, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974—that mentioned the
agency or agency head by name. Id. at 129–30. The inference that
follows from comparing the enforcement provision in Title II of
the ADA to those in Titles I and III is even stronger, as all three
provisions are located within the same statute. Where “Congress
includes particular language in one section of a statute but omits it
in another section of the same Act, it is generally presumed that
Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the disparate inclusion
or exclusion.” Russello v. United States, 464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983)
(quotation omitted).
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 47
Lastly, there are “good reasons” here—of the sort the Su-
preme Court deemed significant in Return Mail—why Congress
might have wanted the Attorney General to be able to sue under
Titles I and III, but not Title II. See 139 S. Ct. at 1866. Whereas
Titles I and III apply predominantly to private defendants—em-
ployers and providers of public accommodations, respectively—Ti-
tle II regulates every service, program, and activity administered
by every state in the country. Accordingly, as I’ll explain in greater
detail shortly, Title II enforcement could bring the federal and state
governments into broad-scale conflict in a way that suits under Ti-
tle I and III would not. And to be clear, a holding that the Attorney
General can’t sue under Title II wouldn’t mean that its provisions
would go unenforced or that its purposes would go unaccom-
plished. Congress clearly gave private parties the ability to sue un-
der Title II, and the Attorney General has long had explicit author-
ity to enforce the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act
against the states in this space. See 42 U.S.C. § 1997a(a).
The panel largely sidestepped both Return Mail and the pre-
sumption against treating the government as a statutory “person.”
Its lengthy opinion mentioned Return Mail only once—in a brief
footnote. There, the panel concluded that Return Mail wasn’t ap-
plicable because the statute at issue in that case “differ[ed] signifi-
cantly from the complex ‘remedies, procedures, and rights’ struc-
ture of the ADA.” United States v. Florida, 938 F.3d at 1227 n.5.
For my part, I don’t think Return Mail—or the more than 100 years
of Supreme Court precedent on which it rests—is so easily
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48 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
shrugged off. No matter how “complex” the “remedies, proce-
dures, and rights” provided for in Title II may be, they apply only
to a “person alleging discrimination.” It seems absolutely clear to
me that the Attorney General doesn’t fit that description, and to
the extent that the panel opinion is meant to hold otherwise, it is
plainly erroneous.
III
Which leads me to a second, and perhaps more charitable,
reading of the panel’s opinion—namely, that it means to hold not
that the Attorney General is himself a “person alleging discrimina-
tion” within the meaning of Title II’s enforcement provision but,
rather, that the Attorney General has standing to sue on behalf of
other “person[s] alleging discrimination.” It’s worth noting at the
outset that this interpretation is in pretty stark tension with the
government’s own briefing in the case, which emphasized that
“[w]hen the Attorney General files a Title II lawsuit, he proceeds
on behalf of the United States—not as the attorney for any individ-
ual complainant.” Reply Br. of United States at 5. But I’ll leave that
aside for present purposes. Even on its own terms, the contention
that Title II authorizes the Attorney General to sue to vindicate
others’ statutory rights comes up short.
Explaining why that’s so will require a bit of unpacking, but
here’s the short story: Title II’s remedial provision, to which I’ve
already alluded and whose terms I’ll revisit shortly, does not itself
create a cause of action authorizing the Attorney General, or the
federal government more generally, to sue. Rather, by virtue of its
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 49
incorporation of the remedies provided by the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973, which in turn incorporates the remedies provided by the
Civil Rights Act of 1964—more on the cross-references below—Ti-
tle II directs courts to look elsewhere for a cause of action that is
“authorized by law.” And yet no one—neither the government in
its briefs nor the panel in its opinion—has pointed to a valid source
of law that gives the federal government a cause of action to sue
for violations of Title II. Instead, so far as I can tell, the Rehabilita-
tion Act and Title VI precedents cited by the government and the
panel—which I’ll explore in detail—support only the much more
limited proposition that the federal government can sue federal-
funding recipients for breach of contract. While those precedents
seem to me correct as far as they go, they don’t go nearly far
enough. In particular, they don’t move the needle where, as here,
the government’s suit isn’t predicated on the violation of any con-
tractual funding condition embedded in a Spending Clause statute.
At the end of the day, there simply is no cause of action au-
thorizing the government’s non-contract suit here. And we aren’t
at liberty to conjure one, no matter how sympathetic the plaintiffs’
case. See, e.g., Alexander v. Sandoval, 532 U.S. 275, 286–87 (2001)
(explaining that without clear evidence of congressional intent, “a
cause of action does not exist and courts may not create one, no
matter how desirable that might be as a policy matter, or how com-
patible with the statute”).
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50 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
A
I start, as promised, with the text of the pertinent provisions.
Title II of the ADA gives to any “person alleging discrimination”—
which for present purposes I’ll assume is an individual on whose
behalf the Attorney General is suing—the remedies provided by
the Rehabilitation Act. In particular, Title II’s remedial provision
states that
[t]he remedies, procedures, and rights set forth in [the
Rehabilitation Act’s remedial provision] shall be the
remedies, procedures, and rights this subchapter pro-
vides to any person alleging discrimination on the ba-
sis of disability in violation of [Title II].
42 U.S.C. § 12133. The Rehabilitation Act, in turn, confers the rem-
edies provided by Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. In particular, the
Rehabilitation Act’s remedial provision states that
[t]he remedies, procedures, and rights set forth in title
VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 . . . shall be available
to any person aggrieved by any act or failure to act by
any recipient of Federal assistance or Federal provid-
ers of such assistance under . . . this title.
29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(2). And finally, Title VI’s remedial provision
states that
[c]ompliance with any requirement adopted pursuant
to this section may be effected (1) by the termination
of or refusal to grant or to continue assistance under
such program or activity to any recipient as to whom
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 51
there has been an express finding on the record, after
opportunity for hearing, of a failure to comply with
such requirement . . . or (2) by any other means au-
thorized by law.
42 U.S.C. § 2000d–1. Accordingly, by dint of Title II’s incorpora-
tion of the Rehabilitation Act’s incorporation of Title VI’s reme-
dies, there are two methods by which a plaintiff can seek to “ef-
fect[]” compliance with Title II: (1) “termination” (or refusal) of
federal funding; and (2) “any other means authorized by law.”
All here agree that this case has nothing to do with the ter-
mination of federal funding. The controlling question, therefore,
is whether the Attorney General’s suit here to enforce Title II con-
stitutes an “other means authorized by law.” Title VI’s reference
to funding termination, though, hints at the mismatch that plagues,
and ultimately defeats, the panel’s opinion—or, more particularly,
the alternative reading of it that I’m presently assessing. Title VI,
in which the funding-termination and “any other means authorized
by law” remedies originate, was enacted pursuant to Congress’s
Spending Clause power. See Barnes v. Gorman, 536 U.S. 181, 185
(2002). So was the Rehabilitation Act. See id. at 189 n.3. Problem-
atically for the panel opinion—for reasons I will explain in detail—
Title II of the ADA was not.
The statutory phrase “other means authorized by law”—in-
cluded in Title VI and incorporated by reference into Title II—
requires us to ask whether, in the absence of the statute, something
else would sanction the proposed “means.” This case, accordingly,
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52 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
turns on whether a government-brought action to remedy an al-
leged Title II violation is elsewhere “authorized by law.” It is not.
In our legal system, a lawsuit is “authorized by law”—green-
lighted, in essence—via a cause of action. Sometimes, a cause of
action arises from the common law—an action for tort, breach of
contract, etc. Just as often, a cause of action is created by a statute.
When Congress wants to “authorize[]” the Attorney General to
sue violators of a statute outside of the common law, it creates an
express cause of action empowering him to do so. And perhaps not
surprisingly, it does so pretty routinely. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 216(b)
(“The Attorney General may bring a civil action in the appropriate
United States district court against any person who engages in con-
duct constituting an offense under . . . this title and . . . such per-
son shall be subject to a civil penalty of [damages].”); 18 U.S.C.
§ 1345(a)(1)(C) (authorizing “the Attorney General” to “commence
a civil action in any Federal court to enjoin [a] violation”); 20 U.S.C.
§ 1706 (“The Attorney General of the United States . . . for or in the
name of the United States, may . . . institute . . . a civil action on be-
half of [an] individual [denied an equal educational opportunity].”).
Here, though, no such cause of action exists. No one has
directed our attention to a common-law or statutory cause of ac-
tion “authoriz[ing]” the federal government to sue for a violation
of Title II. Congress did not create a cause of action, for instance—
à la any of the statutes just cited—empowering the Attorney Gen-
eral to “institute a civil action on behalf of an individual who claims
to have been the victim of discrimination.”
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 53
B
Where, then, did the panel find the requisite “au-
thoriz[ation]”? Seemingly, in analogies to cases in which courts
have affirmed the federal government’s common-law cause of ac-
tion to sue under Title VI and the Rehabilitation Act—Title II’s
(step) sister statutes—for breach of contract. But therein lies the
problem, because the analogy doesn’t hold up.
It is well-settled that the common law authorizes the federal
government to sue funding recipients for violating conditions at-
tached to their receipt of federal funds. See, e.g., McGee v. Mathis,
71 U.S. (4 Wall.) 143, 155 (1866). The grant of funds from the
“United States to the State upon conditions, and the acceptance of
the grant by the State, constitute[s] a contract,” as it includes “com-
petent parties, proper subject-matter, sufficient consideration, and
consent of minds.” Id. Statutes that impose conditions on federal
funds—i.e., Spending Clause statutes—thereby create contractual
obligations, which means that the federal government can sue
when those obligations aren’t met. “When a federal-funds recipi-
ent violates conditions of Spending Clause legislation,” the Su-
preme Court has explained, “the wrong done is the failure to pro-
vide what the contractual obligation requires; and that wrong is
‘made good’ when the recipient compensates the Federal Govern-
ment . . . for the loss caused by that failure.” Barnes, 536 U.S. at
189. But because this widely recognized cause of action comes
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54 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
from the common law of contracts, it authorizes suit only for—and
upon—a breach of contract. See McGee, 71 U.S. at 155. 1
As already noted—but the point bears repeating—while Ti-
tle VI and the Rehabilitation Act are Spending Clause statutes, the
ADA is not. And, therefore, not surprisingly, the federal govern-
ment here does not allege that any sort of funding relationship ex-
isted between it and the State of Florida, nor does it allege that Flor-
ida violated any conditions attached to any federal funds. Instead,
the government alleges a bare violation of Title II—without any
contentions regarding a meeting of the minds, consideration, or
any other aspect of contract formation or performance.
1 The Supreme Court has acknowledged that the cause of action against fund-
ing recipients may not be governed by contract law in all respects—sometimes
saying, for instance, that contract law provides the governing “analogy.” See,
e.g., Sossamon v. Texas, 563 U.S. 277, 290 (2011) (“We have acknowledged
the contract-law analogy, but we have been clear not [to] imply . . . that suits
under Spending Clause legislation are suits in contract, or that contract-law
principles apply to all issues that they raise.”) (alterations in original) (quota-
tion marks omitted)). But the Court has made this point only to suggest that
the cause of action against funding recipients may be in some respects even
more limited in scope than contract law would indicate. See id. at 290 (noting
that past cases had invoked a contract analogy for the Spending Clause “only
as a potential limitation on liability”); Barnes, 536 U.S. at 186–87 (although not
“all contract-law rules apply to Spending Clause legislation,” contract law op-
erates to limit “the scope of conduct” giving rise to liability and the “scope of
damages remedies” available (emphasis omitted)). And as particularly rele-
vant here, the Court has clarified that “[w]e have not relied on the Spending
Clause contract analogy to expand liability beyond what would exist under
nonspending statutes.” Sossamon, 563 U.S. at 290 (emphasis added).
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 55
Accordingly, it seems clear beyond peradventure that the govern-
ment has no cause of action in this case based in contract-law prin-
ciples.
So far as I can tell, all of the binding precedent concerning
the trio of statutes that (either directly or by adoption) use the term
“other means authorized by law” demonstrates that the federal
government’s right to sue violators of those statutes is rooted in—
and limited by—contract principles. To begin, this Circuit has long
recognized that the government can sue federal-funding recipients
under the Rehabilitation Act—again, a Spending Clause statute—
given the “contractual relationship” that attaches to “conditions of
accepting federal monies disbursed under the spending power.”
United States v. Bd. of Trustees for Univ. of Ala., 908 F.2d 740, 750
(11th Cir. 1990). We have similarly held that the government’s
right to sue under Title VI—based on that statute’s status as a “con-
tractual spending power provision”—does not extend to programs
and activities not receiving federal funding. United States v. Ala-
bama, 828 F.2d 1532, 1547–51 (11th Cir. 1987) (quotation marks
omitted). In the same vein, our predecessor court held that the
federal government can sue funding recipients under Title VI be-
cause of its “right to sue to enforce its contracts.” United States v.
Marion Cnty. Sch. Dist., 625 F.2d 607, 611 (5th Cir. 1980). Notably,
the court in that case emphasized that the federal government’s
claims, which it allowed to proceed, “were not intended to be as-
serted as independent causes of action, only as subsidiary to the
contract claim,” id. at 609 n.3, and it made clear that it was not
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56 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
“pass[ing] on the question” of whether the United States had an
“implied right of action under Title VI,” id. at 616–17. 2 In just the
same way, decisions from other circuits seem to recognize only
causes of action that arise out of contractual relationships. 3
2Camenisch v. Univ. of Texas, 616 F.2d 127 (5th Cir. 1980), and Shotz v. City
of Plantation, Fla., 344 F.3d 1161 (11th Cir. 2003), both of which the panel
cited, are inapposite, as both concerned lawsuits initiated by private parties.
United States v. Fordice also concerned a lawsuit initiated by a private party,
and the federal government’s intervention into the case was justified by a con-
cern about federal funding. See 505 U.S. 717, 722 n.1, 723–24 (1992).
3 The Fifth Circuit decisions cited in the panel opinion held that the federal
government can sue federal-funding recipients under the Rehabilitation Act
for termination of funding, based on the funding recipient’s “contractual as-
surance that it would comply with Section 504.” United States v. Baylor Univ.
Med. Ctr., 736 F.2d 1039, 1041 (5th Cir. 1984); accord United States v. Harris
Methodist Fort Worth, 970 F.2d 94, 104 (5th Cir. 1992) (referring to enforce-
ment of Title VI against funding recipients). The Eighth Circuit decision cited
there concerned a suit brought by the federal government against a funding
recipient. See United States v. Lovett, 416 F.2d 386, 387 (8th Cir. 1969). So
too, the Second Circuit decision cited in the opinion concerned a suit brought
by the federal government against a funding recipient seeking the disclosure
of medical records. See United States v. Univ. Hosp., State Univ. of N.Y. at
Stony Brook, 729 F.2d 144, 148 (2d Cir. 1984). And the Sixth Circuit decision
cited there—a case under the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act’s anal-
ogous provision allowing “any other action authorized by law”—held that the
United States’ right to sue “in the absence of statutory authority” applies to
“Spending [C]lause legislation, when knowingly accepted by a fund recipient,”
and where the suit seeks to “enforce conditions imposed on the recipients of
federal grants.” United States v. Miami Univ., 294 F.3d 797, 808 (6th Cir. 2002).
The other six circuit-level decisions cited in the panel opinion—National Black
Police Ass’n, Inc. v. Velde, 712 F.2d 569 (D.C. Cir. 1983); Brown v. Califano,
627 F.2d 1221 (D.C. Cir. 1980); Miener v. Missouri, 673 F.2d 969 (8th Cir. 1982);
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 57
Accordingly, the relevant caselaw identifies and concerns a
cause of action that has no application under the circumstances of
this case. The cases instead follow the logic of the particular statu-
tory schemes that underlie them and support the conclusion that
the government’s cause of action is limited to suits authorized by
principles of contract. Because the ADA isn’t a Spending Clause
statute, their logic just doesn’t translate.
C
Briefly, a few words in response to Judge Jill Pryor’s thought-
ful opinion concurring in the denial of rehearing en banc.
First, Judge Pryor asserts that my reading of Title II contra-
dicts clues that we can discern from “the entire statutory scheme
Pushkin v. Regents of Univ. of Colo., 658 F.2d 1372 (10th Cir. 1981); Kling v.
County of Los Angeles, 633 F.2d 876 (9th Cir. 1980); and NAACP v. Med. Ctr.,
Inc., 599 F.2d 1247 (3d Cir. 1979)—all concerned suits brought by private plain-
tiffs.
So far as I can tell, only four courts ever—all district courts—have said
that either Title II, the Rehabilitation Act, or Title VI creates a freestanding
cause of action for the federal government without regard to whether a con-
tractual relationship existed. One did so in dicta, see United States v. Frazer,
297 F. Supp. 319, 322–23 (M.D. Ala. 1968), two said that such a suit could pro-
ceed only upon referral from a “funding agency,” see United States v. City &
Cty. of Denver, 927 F. Supp. 1396, 1400 (D. Colo. 1996); United States v. Vir-
ginia, No. 12-cv-00059, 2012 WL 13034148 at *2–3 (E.D. Va. June 5, 2012), and
the fourth thought the federal government’s freestanding cause of action fol-
lowed from “the plain language of [Title II] itself,” without any external “au-
thoriz[ation] by law,” see United States. v. Harris Cty., No. 16-cv-02331, 2017
WL 7692396 at *1 (S.D. Tex. Apr. 26, 2017). I’m not persuaded.
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58 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
in context.” Pryor Conc. Op. at 5, 8, 21–33. In particular, she says,
Title II was meant to “fill the gap” left by the Rehabilitation Act—
a Spending Clause statute—“by expanding the prohibition on disa-
bility discrimination to all state governmental entities, regardless
of whether the state program or activity said to be discriminatory
receives federal funding.” Id. at 24. In short, because Congress en-
acted Title II to “remedy th[e] inadequacy” of the Rehabilitation
Act’s limited application to funding recipients, it must have in-
tended Title II to have a broader reach. Id. at 23. And so, she con-
cludes—and this is where the rubber really meets the road—Title
II must be understood to authorize the Attorney General to bring
a lawsuit against any public entity, regardless of whether it receives
federal funding. Id. at 22. With respect, I just don’t think that Judge
Pryor’s conclusion follows from her premises.
I quite agree that Congress intended the ADA to have a
broader scope than the Rehabilitation Act. To that end, as Judge
Pryor repeatedly says, Congress “extended the scope of protection
afforded to individuals with disabilities by prohibiting any program
run by a public entity from engaging in disability discrimination,”
regardless of whether it receives federal funding. Id. at 11 (empha-
sis omitted); see also, e.g., id. at 22, 23, 24, 26 n.6. To be precise,
the ADA newly imposed substantive liability on “any State or local
government,” without regard to funding status. 42 U.S.C. § 12131.
It then carried over the “remedies” and “rights” available under Ti-
tle VI of the Civil Rights Act, which we all agree include a private
cause of action against non-funding-recipients. Id. § 12133; see also
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 59
Barnes, 536 U.S. at 185. It then went even further and newly im-
posed liability on employers and places of public accommodation.
See 42 U.S.C. § 12111–12117; id. § 12181–12189. So if Congress
intended to “extend[] the scope of protection” against disability dis-
crimination through the ADA, mission accomplished. But it
doesn’t follow from that “exten[sion]” that Congress gave the fed-
eral government the authority to sue. We might wish that Con-
gress had taken that last step, but it undoubtedly has the preroga-
tive to proceed moderately. “[N]o legislation pursues its purposes
at all costs.” Rodriguez v. United States, 480 U.S. 522, 525–26
(1987) (per curiam).
In any event, a statute’s perceived “context” can’t override
its plain text. By its express terms, Title II gives the federal govern-
ment no more enforcement authority than it has under Title VI—
namely, a contract-based cause of action applicable only to funding
recipients. It may be that Congress “just stubbed its toe” in the
drafting process and failed to confer on the federal government a
more general right to sue, but even if that’s the case, “it’s not our
place or prerogative to bandage the resulting wound.” CRI-Leslie,
LLC v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue, 882 F.3d 1026, 1033 (11th Cir.
2018).
Second, and separately, Judge Pryor contends that my read-
ing of Title II “conflicts with Supreme Court precedent.” Pryor
Conc. Op. at 33. In particular, she says, my interpretation can’t be
squared with NCAA v. Smith, 525 U.S. 459 (1999). In that case, a
private plaintiff sued the NCAA under Title IX, which prohibits
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60 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
discrimination by educational programs “receiving Federal finan-
cial assistance.” 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a). The Supreme Court consid-
ered “whether a private organization that does not receive federal
financial assistance”—i.e., the NCAA itself—“is subject to Title IX
because it receives payments from entities that do”—i.e., its con-
stituent schools. Id. at 465. The Court held that because the NCAA
didn’t receive federal financial assistance, it wasn’t subject to Title
IX. Id. at 468. In a footnote, it addressed the plaintiff’s alternative
argument that, because she was a private citizen, the words “re-
ceiving Federal financial assistance” in Title IX might be inter-
preted more loosely. Id. at 467 n.5. The Court quickly dispatched
that contention: “[I]t would be anomalous to assume that Con-
gress intended the implied private right of action to proscribe con-
duct that Government enforcement may not check.” Id.
I take the Court to have meant only that a private cause of
action can’t of its own force expand the scope of liability beyond
the plain terms of the statute, not—as Judge Pryor suggests—that
the existence of a private right of action necessitates a correspond-
ing government cause of action, regardless of whether the statute
authorizes it. See Pryor Conc. Op. at 35. Congress, of course, can
decide whether any given statutory right will be enforced by pri-
vate plaintiffs, the federal government, or both. See, e.g., Dir., Off.
of Workers' Comp., 514 U.S. at 129. And more fundamentally, our
law is now clear that “[r]aising up causes of action where a statute
has not created them may be a proper function for common-law
courts, but not for federal tribunals.” Alexander, 532 U.S. at 287.
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 61
IV
So it seems to me that on either reading of its opinion, the
panel’s decision is wrong. It also, I fear, comes at real cost to core
principles of federalism. The Supreme Court has recognized that
“our Constitution establishes a system of dual sovereignty between
the States and the Federal Government.” Gregory v. Ashcroft, 501
U.S. 452, 457 (1991); see also The Federalist No. 39, at 242 (James
Madison) (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961) (stating that states retain “a
residuary and inviolable sovereignty”). The incidents and benefits
of the federal system are well-rehearsed, and there’s no point in re-
rehearsing them here. Suffice it to say that while “[t]he actual
scope of the Federal Government’s authority with respect to the
States has changed over the years, . . . the constitutional structure
underlying and limiting that authority has not,” New York v.
United States, 505 U.S. 144, 159 (1992), and that the “separation of
the two spheres is one of the Constitution’s structural protections
of liberty.” Printz v. United States, 521 U.S. 898, 921 (1997); see
also Gregory, 501 U.S. at 458 (“[A] healthy balance of power be-
tween the States and the Federal Government will reduce the risk
of tyranny and abuse from either front.”).
The upshot of the panel’s holding is that the Attorney Gen-
eral can enforce Title II of the ADA by suing state governments.
That’s a big deal. To see why, one need look no further than Geor-
gia’s settlement agreement with the Department of Justice in a sim-
ilar case. See Joint Motion to Enter the Parties’ Settlement Agree-
ment (Ex. A), United States v. Georgia, No. 1:10-cv-00249-CAP
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62 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
(N.D. Ga. filed October 19, 2010) [hereinafter Georgia Settlement
Agreement]. Without admitting to any of the alleged wrongdoing,
Georgia agreed to numerous substantive policy changes governing
how it would serve those with developmental disabilities and men-
tal illness. See Georgia Settlement Agreement at 5–25. Georgia
also agreed to allow an independent reviewer to determine—at
state expense—its compliance with the settlement. See id. at 27,
30–31 (providing that the state must maintain a fund containing at
least $100,000 from which payments for the reviewer would be
withdrawn). Additionally, the agreement gave the United States
“full access” to any persons, records, or materials “necessary to as-
sess the State’s compliance.” Id. at 27.
Georgia’s settlement agreement demonstrates the result of
allowing the Attorney General to enforce Title II—namely, tilting
the federal balance decisively in favor of the federal government.
The panel’s opinion, by sanctioning the Attorney General’s en-
forcement of Title II, could force other public entities (like Georgia
and Florida) to make a choice either (1) to enter into settlement
agreements, which not only impose monetary and resource costs
but also lead to federal oversight of local policy decisions, or (2) to
risk thousands (possibly millions) of dollars in litigation costs by
disputing liability or terms of compliance.
None of this is to say, of course, that the DOJ’s goals in en-
forcing Title II aren’t laudable, or that Congress can’t regulate
states in seemingly local matters (or even provide for federal en-
forcement, through lawsuits or otherwise). See, e.g., Garcia v. San
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17-13595 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 63
Antonio Metro. Transit Auth., 469 U.S. 528, 555–56 (1985) (holding
that Congress could, through the Commerce Clause, prescribe
minimum wage and overtime rates under the Fair Labor Standards
Act for a local transit system). In the ever-delicate federal-state bal-
ance, the Supremacy Clause gives the federal government “a de-
cided advantage.” Gregory, 501 U.S. at 460 (citing U.S. Const., art.
VI, cl. 2). The point is simply that although the federal government
holds the upper hand, the wielding of its federal power against the
states cannot be taken lightly or casually inferred. See id. (stating
that the ability of Congress to “legislate in areas traditionally regu-
lated by the States . . . is an extraordinary power in a federalist sys-
tem . . . that we must assume Congress does not exercise lightly”);
id. at 464 (“[T]o give the state-displacing weight of federal law to
mere congressional ambiguity would evade the very procedure for
lawmaking on which Garcia relied to protect states’ interests.”
(quoting Laurence H. Tribe, American Constitutional Law § 6–25,
at 480 (2d ed. 1988))).
It’s up to the judicial branch to uphold our constitutional
structure by policing the limits of federal power. By reading Title
II’s enforcement provision to allow the Attorney General to subject
Florida to suit and thereby regulate its provision of services to its
residents, the panel’s decision sanctions DOJ encroachment on
Florida’s sovereign prerogatives—in the absence of any solid evi-
dence that Congress intended such a result. I don’t quibble with
the fact that Congress could regulate states in this regard if it
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64 NEWSOM, J., Dissenting 17-13595
wanted to. But we must presume that Congress wouldn’t do so
lightly—and certainly not impliedly.
* * *
The question here is not whether Title II of the ADA should
authorize the Attorney General to sue to enforce its terms but, ra-
ther, whether it does. And as I read the statute, it just doesn’t. In
concluding otherwise, the panel’s opinion either flouts Supreme
Court precedent, creates a nonexistent cause of action, or both—
and, in the doing, skews the federal-state balance. I remain of the
view that it is a mistake to allow the panel’s decision to stand with-
out reconsidering the important issues that it presents. Accord-
ingly, I respectfully dissent from the Court’s order denying en banc
rehearing.