This Title VII 1 class action attacks the disparity between three pension plans maintained by the City of Atlanta for its employees. Appellants represent those blaсk employees and recipients of retirement benefits to whom the general employee pension plan applies. The plans for police аnd for firefighters are more attractive. 2 Appellants complain of the different treatment on the ground that the City historically funneled black employees exсlusively or predominantly into the general employees cohort, thereby denying to them the subsequent enjoyment of police or firefighters’ pensions. The district court granted the City’s Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) motion to dis *558 miss for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. We affirm. 3
The touchstone of the amended complaint lies in pаragraph 12. 4 While it is not clear whether the past discriminatory hiring practices are alleged to have occurred prior to or subsequent to the date citiеs came within the purview of Title VII (March 1972), the complaint clearly fails to claim that the City currently engages in discriminatory hiring practices. It is appellants’ comрlaint that the present effect of maintaining the separate pension plans perpetuates the effects of past hiring discrimination.
The controlling Suprеme Court pronouncements on the perpetuation of prior discrimination are in
United Air Lines v. Evans,
The distinction between Evans and Teamsters is that in Teamsters the current employment choices were impactеd by seniority and the prior discriminatory hiring. There was a present violation in Teamsters because racial minorities were prevented from improving their employment prospects at the time suit was brought. The Court described the dilemma as follows:
For purposes of calculating benefits, such as vacations, pensions, and other fringe benefits, an employee’s seniority under this system runs from the date he joins the company, and takes into account his total service in all jobs and bargaining units. For competitive purposes, however, such as determining the order in which employees may bid for particular jobs, are laid off, or are recalled from layoff, it is bargaining-unit seniority that controls. Thus, a line driver’s seniority, for purposes of bidding for particular runs and protection against layoff, takes into account only the length of time he has been a line drivеr at a particular terminal. The practical effect is that a city driver or serviceman who transfers to a line-driver job must forfeit all the competitive seniоrity he has accumulated in his previous bargaining unit and start at the bottom of the line drivers’ “board.” The vice of this arrangement, as found by the District Court and the Court of Appeаls, was that it “locked” minority workers into inferior jobs and perpetuated pri- *559 or discrimination by discouraging transfers to jobs as line drivers. While the disincentive applied to аll workers, including whites, it was Negroes and Spanish-surnamed persons who, those courts found, suffered the most because many of them had been denied the equal opportunity to become line drivers when they were initially hired, whereas whites either had not sought or were refused line-driver positions for reasons unrelated to their race оr national origin, [footnotes omitted]
Two cases involving allegations of continuing violations have been deсided in this circuit since
Teamsters
and
Evans. James v. Stockham Valves & Fittings Co.,
Pettway v. American Cast Iron Pipe Co.,
The pension plans now under attack are neutral and rational. The applicability of the different provisions does not depend on race but upon the function in which the employee served. The risks and demands involved in police and firefighters’ work differentiates them from those in general employment and justifies earlier retirement prоvisions and more lucrative payments upon retirement.
See generally, Massachusetts Bd. of Retirement v. Murgia,
Appellants do not claim that the pension plans of the City of Atlanta presently discriminate on the basis оf race or that they prevent blacks from acquiring better jobs. They complain, instead, that the impact of former discrimination is still being felt today in terms of disparate pension treatment. That charge is insufficient under
Evans. Alston v. Allegheny Steel Corp.,
Because appellants fail to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, the dismissal was correct. The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. (1976).
. While all three plans call for a contribution of 6% of the employees’ gross earnings, the police and firefighters’ plans are alleged to permit retirement at an earlier age and to return more lucrative payments after retirement.
. We note that one item in the appellants’ prayer for relief seeks a complete equalization of all aspects of the pension plans for the three grouрs. Such a remedy would be inapposite even if plaintiffs had successfully stated a claim for other relief.
See Norman v. Missouri Pac. R. R.,
. Paragraph 12 follows:
The City of Atlanta has in the past engaged in racial discrimination whereby it would emрloy blacks only as General Employees and would not, because of its racial discrimination practices, employ blacks as policemen or firemеn. Plaintiffs and the class they represent are victims of said racial discrmination [sic] practices by defendant because they, as a result of defendant’s said racial discrimination, were hired and assigned by defendant City of Atlanta into the black General Employees group rather than the white policemen or firemen groups fоr which positions they were qualified absent racial discrimination by defendant City of Atlanta. The present employment practices of defendant City of Atlanta in continuing to maintain said separate benefít plans with said benefits disparity рerpetuate the effects of said past racial discrimination against plaintiffs and the class they represent and therefore violate Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, as amended, [emphasis supplied]
