Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
Concurring opinion filed by Senior Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
This case concerns the Treasury Department’s attempt to overcome the conceptual incompatibility of two statutes. Specifically at issue is Treasury’s selection of a “weighted national average” methodology to calculate locality pay increases under the Federal Law Enforcement Pay Reform Act of 1990 (“FLEPRA”), incorporated as Title IV of the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990, Pub. L. No. 101-509,104 Stat. 1389 (1990) (codified at 5 U.S.C. § 5304 (2000)), for retired Uniformed Division Secret Service agents who receive annuities under the District of Columbia Police and Firefighters Retirement and Disability Act (“DCRA”), D.C.Code Ann. § 5-701 et seq. (2001). The conceptual difficulty arises because locality pay increases are geographically fixed while the DCRA’s equalization provision is based on the salary of an agent in active service. Notwithstanding the fact that Secret Service agents have postings throughout the United States and overseas, Treasury has determined that locality pay applies to DCRA Secret Service retirees. Hence, no issue is before the court regarding the entitlement of those retirees to locality pay adjustments. Rather, when Treasury determined it would apply the “weighted national average” methodology, a number of DCRA Secret Service retirees filed suit, and the district court invalidated Treasury’s methodology. Brown v. Summers,
I.
In Floyd v. District of Columbia,
Each individual retired from active service and entitled to receive a pension relief allowance or retirement compensation under subchapter I of this chapter shall be entitled to receive, without making application therefor, with respect to each increase in salary, granted by any law which takes effect after the effective date of the District of Columbia Police and Firemen’s Salary Act Amendments of 1972, to which he would be entitled if he were in active service, an increase in his pension relief allowance or retirement compensation computed as follows: His pension relief allowance or retirement compensation shall be increased by an amount equal to the product of such allowance or compensation and the per centum increase made by such law in the scheduled rate of compensation to which he would be entitled if he were in active service on the effective date of such increase in salary.
D.C.Code Ann. § 5-745(c) (emphasis added).
Locality pay for Secret Service agents was first authorized by Congress when it enacted FLEPRA in 1990. Under FLEP-RA, federal law enforcement officials, including active members of the Secret Service, are paid a percentage of “basic pay” in addition to their rate of pay under the General Schedule to reflect the higher cost of living in specified geographic areas. Since 1994, employees in twenty-eight cities have received locality pay increases, which the Office of Personnel Management (“OPM”) adjusts annually. 5 U.S.C. § 5304 and note.
In May 1998, certain retired Secret Service agents, who were employed as criminal investigators at the time of their retirement and whose annuities are governed by the DCRA, filed suit against Treasury, the United States, and" the District of Columbia (collectively “the government”), claiming that locality adjustments awarded to active agents pursuant to FLEPRA were “increases in salary” subject to the DCRA’s equalization clause. The district court dismissed the case without prejudice in December 1998, subject to reopening within six months, when Treasury agreed to include locality pay increases in the retirees’ annuities. Letter of December 9, 1998, from Nancy Killefer, Assistant Secretary, Dep’t of Treasury, to Earl Cabbell, Interim Chief Financial Officer, District of Columbia (“the Killefer letter”), reprinted in Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) at 110-15. The case was reopened in July 1999, when the retirees had not received locality pay increases.
Treasury subsequently determined it would award each retiree locality pay increases based on a “weighted national average” of locality adjustments for active Secret Service agents since 1991. The calculation under this methodology was based on the locality pay increases paid to active Secret Service agents throughout the United States, weighted to reflect the number of agents actually serving in each locality receiving increases. Treasury then awarded lump sum back payments to
In May 2000, retirees who were disadvantaged by the “weighted national average” methodology appeared before the district court with new counsel, who filed an amended complaint claiming that the locality pay increases reflected in their DCRA retirement benefits should be computed on the basis of the locality pay in effect at their last post of duty. The district court denied the government’s motion to dismiss, and ruled, on cross-motions for summary judgment, that Treasury’s “weighted national average” methodology was not entitled to judicial deference under Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
II.
On appeal, the government contends, as it did in the district court, that Treasury’s “weighted national average” methodology deserves deference under Chevron,
Although a remand order does not usually signify a final decision for purposes of conferring jurisdiction on this court under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (2000), NAACP v. United States Sugar Corp.,
A.
In Floyd, the court left open the question of whether the United States or the District of Columbia is responsible for making substantive decisions about Secret Service annuity adjustments under the DCRA. Floyd,
The Killefer letter, relied on by the retirees, is not to the contrary. Indeed, the letter emphasizes the extent to which Treasury controls decisionmaking related to DCRA annuities for Secret Service retirees. Noting that “questions have been raised ... concerning annuities” under the DCRA, Treasury advised the District of Columbia of its conclusion that “locality pay ... is sufficiently akin to salary that it should be included in the calculation of retirees’ annuity increases.” The letter further requests that “the District [of Columbia] not alter any current practice with respect to implementation of this retirement system without prior discussions with [Treasury],” and explains that Treasury will “assist the District of Columbia in determining how best to' calculate increased annuities based on locality pay.” If the District of Columbia were making substantive decisions about Secret Service annuities under the DCRA, as the retirees contend; it would be illogical for the District of Columbia to require Treasury’s authorization before changing its practices with regard to annuity payments. The Killefer letter thus substantiates that Treasury - as opposed to the District of Columbia - makes substantive decisions about Secret Service annuity adjustments under the DCRA.
While there may be joint actions by the United States and the District of Columbia to ensure that DCRA Secret Service retirees receive their benefits, and this is likely to entail cooperative arrangements, the financial control and the substantive determination, based on an interpretation of a separate federal law such as FLEPRA, rests with the United States - in this case Treasury - not the District of Columbia.
B.
This court is not presented with the question of whether, pursuant to the DCRA’s equalization clause, federal DCRA annuitants are entitled to FLEPRA locality adjustments. In Lanier v. District of Columbia,
The conceptual difficulty underlying Treasury’s contention that the court should defer to its selection of a payment methodology underscores, however, that DCRA’s equalization provision hardly appears to have been designed with locality pay in mind. Congress enacted the DCRA in 1916, and amended it in 1957 to allow participation by retired Secret Service agents. See Pub. L. No. 85-157 § 12(b), 71 Stat. 391, 392 (1957). Neither enactment indicates that Congress anticipated the adoption of FLEPRA in 1990 or the incorporation of locality pay increases into the DCRA. Nor did this change with enactment of the District of Columbia Retirement Protection Act of 1997, which provided a cost-of-living adjustment for retired D.C. Metropolitan Department police officers and D.C. firefighters under the DCRA, but expressly declined to amend the DCRA as it applied to Secret Services retirees. Compare Pub.L. No. 105-33, 111 Stat. 251, § 11013 (1997), with id. at § 11084(c).
The district court in Lanier aptly stated that there is a “clash of two worthwhile principles,” one to ensure retirees are treated fairly in their retirement and one to provide locality pay incentives to ensure adequate public protection.
Given the strange gap in the DCRA, a gap that Congress may not have intended to leave but one the court must address in light of Treasury’s determination to award locality pay increases to DCRA Secret Service retirees, the court is unable to conclude that the DCRA’s plain language prohibits Treasury’s “weighted national average” methodology, much less that it requires only “individual determinations,” as the district court ruled. Any sense that the DCRA was intended to include locality adjustments is betrayed by the fact that, because of the movement of Secret Service agents’ duty assignments to over one hundred offices throughout the United States and overseas, no methodology can provide every retiree with the exact locality adjustment he would have received as an active agent. Indeed, to the extent the district court ruled that individualized locality adjustments were required, the government points out that:
there is no way to ascertain the locality increase that the agent would actually receive if currently employed. Thus, all methods of adjustment are inherently flawed in terms of the “individualized” determination envisioned by the district court. And no method of approximation, no matter its merits, will be equally advantageous to all retirees.
Appellant’s Br. at 14. Further, there is no merit to the retirees’ attempt to distinguish between “room for application” and “ambiguity” arising from the confluence of the two statutes so far as the extension of deference to Treasury’s methodology. In either circumstance, the DCRA must be construed to permit the exercise of reasonable judgment in closing the gap or resolving the ambiguity.
C.
The question remains whether Treasury’s “weighted national average” methodology is entitled to judicial deference. The government challenges the district court’s ruling that Chevron deference is unavailable where, as here, Treasury’s methodology was promulgated informally during the course of litigation, without notice-and-comment rulemaking. Brown,
Under Skidmore, the court grants an agency’s interpretation only as much deference as its persuasiveness warrants. Id. In making its determination, the court must examine “the thoroughness evident in [the agency’s] consideration, the validity of its reasoning, its consistency with earlier and later pronouncements, and all those factors which give it power to persuade, if lacking power to control.” Id. at 140,
The record demonstrates that Treasury examined five different methods for calculating locality pay increases before choos
Moreover, Treasury’s choice of the “weighted national average” method reflects its reasoned attempts to choose a calculation that mirrors the actual career experiences of agents moving from one locality to another. Although the government concedes that the use of averaging reduces the administrative burden associated with other methods, the affidavits from various Treasury officials, including the Supervisory Personnel Management Specialist and the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Resources, demonstrate that the principal reason for choosing that technique is that it is the “most equitable approach because all annuitants would receive some increase each year, regardless of where they might happen to have last worked or where they presently live.” Treasury further explained that it “did not consider using more than one method of calculating locality pay increases for annuitants .... [because it] believes that the equalization provision and basic fairness require that a single method be applied to all annuitants.” Moreover, Treasury noted, the use of a single annual percentage increase across the board is similar to across-the-board increases under many other retirement systems.
Finally, Treasury has “specialized experience” in calculating annuities, particularly those under the administratively complex DCRA. United States v. Mead Corp.,
In light of the fact that no locality adjustment can give the retirees exactly what they would be paid as active agents, Treasury’s “weighted national average” methodology is a persuasive solution to an unforeseen problem, and for all of the above reasons, it is entitled to Skidmore deference.
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court invalidating Treasury’s methodology.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I think Judge Rogers has ably analyzed the case before us, and I concur in the court’s opinion. I write separately because I would go a step further and conclude the statute does not even cover locality pay. As such, the only possible challenge appellees could make under the APA to the Treasury’s determination that locality pay should be averaged for these Secret Service retirees is that the Treasury was arbitrary and capricious. They did not do so, and I do not see how such a challenge could have been successful.
I agree with the majority that it is certainly not open to us to hold that locality pay is not available to Secret Service Agents who chose to receive annuities under the DCRA. The Treasury Depart
Still, we are not obliged, for purposes of this case, to accept the Lanier district court construction of the locality pay statute. It seems rather obvious to me, as the majority suggests, that the very fact that no one can even propose a persuasive methodology, including the district judge below, by which locality pay would apply to appellees demonstrates that Congress never intended locality pay to cover them. That is why the statute is silent on the issue.
