Daniel Duncan worked for almost two years as a youth counselor at the Ethan Allen School, a correctional facility for young males operated by the Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services (DHFS). His job came to an end, however, two months after an incident in which one of his young charges complained that he had been verbally abusive. The incident itself prompted Ethan Allen officials to order Duncan to submit to various psychological tests at the state’s expense. He completed some, but not all, of the program the psychiatrist recommended for him. After he missed several meetings with counselors and Ethan Allen officials, he was fired. He responded with this lawsuit, which alleged violations of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and various deprivations of constitutional rights cognizable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Through a combination of rulings on summary judgment and a judgment as a matter of law at trial, the district court ruled in the defendants’ favor on all points. Finding no error in its conclusions, we affirm.
I
Duncan began working at Ethan Allen in April 1993. Working with boys and young men who had been found to be youth offenders, he was required to enforce the facility’s rules. It was also expected that he would serve as a role model, and Duncan tried to do so. His task was particularly difficult because he was assigned to Unit 6, which housed the most violent, temperamental wards. Apart from some minor problems with absenteeism and tardiness, Duncan’s work record up until March 1995 was a good one.
On March 5,1995, all that changed when a youth named Erick Eaves complained to Pat Smith, Duncan’s supervisor, that Duncan had been verbally abusive to him that day. One witness testified that Duncan had “really lost it,” threatened to “kick ass,” and called Eaves “punk ass bitch.” Duncan took issue with that description and claimed that he just called Eaves a “punk.” Smith decided to investigate the matter, and, following standard procedure, she transferred Duncan from Unit 6 to Draper Hall, effective March 6, pending the outcome of her investigation. Duncan was very angry both about the investigation and about the transfer. Draper Hall was known as a gang-dominated unit, and at the time of Duncan’s assignment there, it was under a lock-down. Duncan again lost his temper before beginning his shift at Draper. He worked there most of the day on March 6, but he left early.
Duncan had the day off on both March 7 and March 8, and when he reported for duty on March 9, he learned that the Eaves investigation was slowly moving forward. Another supervisor, Jim Bell, reported that when Duncan read the notice scheduling an interview for the next day, Duncan became furious, throwing papers on the floor, glaring balefully at others, and perhaps kicking a chair or a locker. Duncan concedes that he was upset and that he told Bell that the complaint against him was “bullshit.”
*933 Troubled by Duncan’s angry reaction to the Eaves investigation, Ethan Allen officials suspended him with pay on March 10 after an ex parte meeting with Smith. On March 22, Duncan received a letter from them that ordered him to submit to psychological.and alcohol abuse testing at the state’s expense the following week. Duncan reluctantly complied, even though he showed up for his meeting with the psychiatrist late and left early, which necessitated a second session. On April 10, the psychiatrist issued his report on Duncan, in which he concluded that Duncan did not have a psychological disability, nor did he pose a threat to himself or others. On the other hand, the psychiatrist went on, Duncan was subject to episodic “temper outbursts” that posed “serious limitations” on his ability to be a youth counsel- or. The psychiatrist recommended that Duncan learn “anger control skills” before returning to work. Duncan requested and received a copy of this report in early May, and on May 2, he met with Smith for an “investigatory interview.” She chastised him for using inappropriate language with Eaves and advised him not to let the wards “press his buttons and get under his skin.”
Duncan thought that this verbal warning closed the incident, but he was wrong. He remained on leave with pay as of Friday, May 12. On that date, Duncan and a union representative met with Ethan Allen officials to find out when he could return to work. Management informed him that he could not return until he successfully completed the recommended treatment for “anger management” and alcohol use. Until then, his suspension would be changed to one without pay. They also told him that he would have to agree to allow Ethan Allen to communicate freely with his treatment providers to verify his progress and satisfactory participation. Last, they told him that even though the “goal was to return him to work,” he would be terminated if he stopped treatment without their consent.
Duncan found all of this profoundly offensive. He especially objected to the requirement that he see a certain alcohol counselor. The Ethan Allen officials agreed to meet after the weekend, on May 15, to discuss finding another alcohol counselor and to have Duncan sign the medical information releases. They remained firm in their decision to require him to submit to treatment.
Duncan never showed up on Monday, May 15, to sign the medical releases. Ethan Allen rescheduled, but Duncan again refused to show up, to sign the medical releases, or to undergo the recommended counseling. On May 23, Ethan Allen sent Duncan a letter with a final opportunity to sign the releases. Duncan asked for and received an extension to June 1, but the communication granting his request also warned him that this was his last chance. He would be fired, it said, if he were late, if he left early, or if he refused to sign the documents at that meeting. Pushing his luck, Duncan nonetheless missed the June 1 meeting, and on June 20, Ethan Allen notified him in writing of a pre-discharge hearing. Duncan does not contest the fact that he received notice of this hearing, but he testified that he could not recall what happened there or whether he was represented by counsel. On July 18, Ethan Allen notified Duncan that he had been finally terminated for insubordination, based on his refusal to undertake the required course of treatment and his history of absenteeism and tardiness.
II
Duncan’s suit named as defendants DHFS itself; Jean J. Schneider, the Superintendent of Ethan Allen School; Byron Barton, the School’s Assistant Superintendent; several Ethan Allen employees (including Pat Smith, his supervisor); Muriel Harper, the Employee Assistance Director of DHFS; Richard Lorang, Acting Secretary and then Deputy Secretary of DHFS; and Michael Sullivan, the Secretary of the Wisconsin Department of Corrections. The defendants collectively filed a motion to dismiss, claiming that the Eleventh Amendment barred the suit against DHFS and against the state officials acting in their official capacity, and that the state officials were entitled to qualified immunity for the individual capacity claims. They made the same arguments in a contemporaneous motion for summary judgment.
In an order dated March 12, 1997, the district court denied the defendants’ motion *934 to dismiss, granted their motion for summary judgment with respect to Duncan’s claim that they had, acting in their individual capacity, violated his liberty interest in avoiding psychological treatment and his privacy interest in preventing release of his psychological records, and denied their motion for summary judgment with respect to Duncan’s statutory claims under the ADA and the Rehabilitation Act and his constitutional claim of a deprivation of his property interest in employment without due process. The court also concluded that because Duncan seemed to not be pursuing § 1983 claims against DHFS or such claims against DHFS officials in their official capacity for retrospective monetary relief, the Eleventh Amendment was somewhat beside the point and did not require dismissal. The case then went to trial on two issues: (1) whether DHFS violated either the Rehabilitation Act or the ADA when it discharged Duncan; and (2) whether any of the individual defendants unconstitutionally deprived him of a property interest without due process when they discharged him. The trial was cut short, however, after Duncan rested his case during the liability phase. At that point, the defendants moved for judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50, and the district court granted their motion and dismissed the action, rejecting Duncan’s Rule 59 motion for a new tidal along the way. This appeal followed.
Ill
We begin with a brief word about the scope of this appeal. Duncan’s notice of appeal indicates that he was appealing both from the district court’s denial of his Rule 59 motion and from the court’s April 3, 1997, entry of final judgment “on all of plaintiffs claims.” As far as it goes, this language easily suffices to bring before this court not only the district court’s rulings on the Rule 50 and Rule 59 trial motions, but also the earlier summary judgment rulings. See,
e.g., Kunik v. Racine County, Wis.,
Although Duncan’s brief contains some discussion of the merits of the latter two issues, it never so much as cites
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
A. ADA and Rehabilitation Act
As the district court noted, there is no material difference between the scope of the ADA and that of the Rehabilitation Act for present purposes. Like that court, we will therefore discuss the two theories together, referring interchangeably to precedents under both statutes. The ADA prohibits discrimination against “a qualified individual with a disability because of the disability ....” 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a). The first hurdle a plaintiff must pass, and the one that is insurmountable for Duncan, is the requirement that the plaintiff must be “disabled.” Under the ADA, a plaintiff may prove disability by showing one of three things: (1) “a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of the major life activities” of the individual, (2) “a record of such impairment,” or (3) “being regarded as having such an impairment.” 42 U.S.C. § 12101(2). Duncan concedes that he does not fit the first two categories; he has put all his eggs in the “regarded as” basket. He claims that the record at trial contained evidence that the Ethan Allen officials perceived him as mentally disabled, and thus it was error to grant judgment as a matter of law against him on his statutory claims.
As we have often had occasion to remark, not every disability — actual or perceived — triggers statutory protection. Instead, as the law specifies, the disability must be one that substantially limits” a major life activity. 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2);
Baulos v. Roadway Express, Inc.,
*936 B. Procedural Due Process
Everyone agrees that Duncan had a protected property interest in his position at DHFS, under the applicable Wisconsin statutes.
Fittshur v. Village of Menomonee Falls,
Three Supreme Court decisions provide the starting point for our analysis of Duncan’s procedural due process argument:
Mathews v. Eldridge,
First, the private interest that will be affected by the official action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.
Id.
at 335,
In
Loudermill,
the Court applied the
Eldridge
framework to the specific question of what kind of pretermination process the due process clause guarantees to a public employee who can be discharged only for cause.
Insofar as Duncan has focused his complaint on his discharge, the Loudermill criteria govern and demonstrate that Duncan received all the process he was due. He was given both oral and written notice of the charges against him; representatives of the employer explained their concerns to him on several occasions; and he had repeated chances to give his side of the story (some of which he used). The record indicates that he even had a formal pre-discharge hearing on June 26, 1995. Wisconsin also makes avail *937 able to discharged public employees a full-blown post-discharge proceeding, under Wis. Stat. Ann. § 230.44(l)(c). Under Louder-null, this is easily enough.
To the extent Duncan may also be complaining about his two suspensions, the undisputed facts do not hint at a procedural due process failing. On March 10, he was suspended with pay, after he had been informed that the Ethan Allen officials were concerned about the March 5 incident and wanted time to investigate it. A suspension
with
pay does not result in a deprivation of property sufficient to trigger due process protections. Wis. Stat. Ann. § 230.34(l)(a) (cause required only for a suspension without pay). As of May 12, however, the suspension was converted into one
without
pay — a situation addressed by the Supreme Court in
Gilbert,
and by this court in
Ibarra v. Martin,
We have considered the other arguments Duncan has made as well, and they do not persuade us that his rights under either the Constitution or federal law have been violated. We therefore Affirm the judgment of the district court.
