David Carroll petitions for review of the Secretary’s final order dismissing his complaint filed under the whistleblower provisions of the Energy Reorganization Act, 42 U.S.C. § 5851 (1988) (ERA). We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
David Carroll was hired by Bechtel Corporation in July of 1989 as a mechanical engineer. Carroll worked on a variety of Bechtel projects throughout the United States until July of 1990 when he was transferred to Bechtel’s Engineering Support Team (EST) in Russelville, Arkansas. The EST had been established in 1987 to supply Arkansas Power & Light Company (AP & L) and its agent, Entergy Operations, Inc. (Entergy), with engineering support services for AP & L’s nuclear power plant, Arkansas Nuclear One (ANO). Hugh Nugent was the Bechtel EST *355 Project Engineer who supervised James Drasler, who in turn supervised Carroll and the other engineers on the EST team.
In July of 1990, Bechtel contracted with Entergy to establish the Backlog Elimination Project (BEP). The purpose of the BEP was to review and respond to a backlog of outstanding engineering action requests (EARS) and plant engineering action requests (PEARS). This backlog consisted of over 2,000 internal engineering requests that had been previously screened by ANO personnel and determined not to present safety concerns. Entergy’s BEP project manager then screened the backlog a second time and prioritized those EARS and PEARS that presented potential safety issues before sending the remainder to the BEP project. William Watson was the project manager for all Bechtel work performed for ANO, and in charge of both the EST and the BEP.
In late 1990, Entergy informed Bechtel that it would have to reduce its EST staff. Consistent with Bechtel’s policy of retaining its most qualified engineers on ongoing projects, Bechtel “released” Carroll and Jon Rourke as well as eleven other engineers from the EST in December of 1990. 1 Because of attrition in the BEP, Carroll and Rourke were reassigned to that unit in January of 1991. Dale Crow, the Bechtel BEP project engineer, supervised David Christian-sen, who in turn supervised Carroll on the BEP.
On April 5, 1991, Entergy ordered Watson to reduce the remaining EST mechanical engineering staff from three to one. Pursuant to Watson’s directive “to look at all the people being released and retain those individuals with the highest skill level within the department,” Nugent and Crow agreed to transfer mechanical engineers John Antle and Joel Guzman from the EST to the BEP and release Carroll and Rourke. Carroll’s regional chief engineer, George Showers, notified him that he was being released from the BEP on April 10. Efforts to reassign Carroll were unsuccessful, and Showers told Carroll that he would be terminated effective May 10,1991.
On the day he was terminated, Carroll filed a complaint with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Three days later, Carroll filed a complaint with the United States Department of Labor claiming that he had been released from the BEP and subsequently terminated in retaliation for voicing safety-related complaints to his supervisors. A hearing was held before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), who issued a decision on September 21,1992, recommending dismissal of Carroll’s claim. On February 15, 1995, the Secretary issued a final order dismissing Carroll’s complaint. Although the Secretary’s order disagreed with several aspects of the ALJ’s decision, it adopted the ALJ’s ultimate conclusion: that Carroll failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he was retaliated against by Bechtel for engaging in activity protected by the ERA’s whistleblower provision. Carroll now seeks review in this Court pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 5851(e).
II. DISCUSSION
The Energy Reorganization Act of 1974 protects “whistleblowers” employed in the nuclear power industry by providing that “[n]o employer ... may discharge any employee ... because the employee ... commenced, caused to be commenced, or is about to commence or cause to be commenced a proceeding under this chapter or the Atomic Energy Act.” 42 U.S.C. § 5851(a)(1). Carroll attacks the Secretary’s final order on two fronts: first, he argues that the Secretary failed to apply the proper legal standards to his complaint; second, he argues that the Secretary’s conclusion that he failed to prove retaliatory discharge is unsupported by substantial evidence. Under the Administrative Procedure Act, we will set aside the Secretary’s order only if it is unsupported by *356 substantial evidence or is arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law. 5 U.S.C. § 706 (1994).
A. ERRORS OF LAW
Carroll first argues that the Secretary’s order dismissing his complaint is arbitrary and capricious because it failed to apply the rules of law articulated in
Couty v. Dole,
1. Couty v. Dole:
Couty v. Dole
sets forth a burden-shifting framework similar to that adopted in the Title VII context in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
But once the employer meets this burden of production, “the presumption raised by the prima facie case is rebutted, and the factual inquiry proceeds to a new level of specificity.”
Texas Dept. of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
Assuming Carroll established a prima facie case under
Couty,
Bechtel met its burden of production by articulating a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for releasing and subsequently terminating Carroll: a general decline in available work for which Carroll was qualified coupled with a policy of retaining more highly-qualified engineers. At that point, the issue of whether or not Carroll had previously established a prima facie case under
Couty
became irrelevant. “The presumption [of retaliatory discharge created under the
Couty
factors], having fulfilled its role of forcing the defendant to come forward with some response, simply drops out of the picture.”
Hicks,
*357 2. Mt. Healthy:
We are similarly unable to fault the Secretary’s order for failing to rely on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Mt Healthy.
Whereas
Couty
and
McDonnell Douglas
provide the legal framework in pretext cases,
Mt. Healthy
and
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
Even if
Mt. Healthy
were applicable to the facts before us, this case has moved well past the issue of the adequacy of a party’s prima facie showing under the
Mt. Healthy /Price Waterhouse
or the
Gouty /McDonnell Douglas
analyses. As previously observed in our discussion of the
Couty /McDonnell Douglas
framework, the Secretary’s analysis, with the hindsight benefit of a full hearing before the ALJ, properly focused on the ultimate issue: whether, based on the record as a whole, Carroll proved by a preponderance of the evidence that Bechtel had retaliated against him for engaging in protected conduct.
See Finley v. Empiregas, Inc.,
B. SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE
The Secretary’s final order concluded that Carroll had failed to prove that Bechtel retaliated against him for engaging in protected activity.
3
Carroll contends that the factual findings underlying the Secretary’s conclusion are unsupported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole. In considering this issue, we consider the whole record before us, “including the ALJ’s recommendation and any evidence that is contrary to the agency’s determination.”
Simon v. Simmons Foods, Inc.,
The Secretary found that Bechtel released Carroll from the BEP for a combination of valid business reasons. This finding is supported by substantial evidence. It is uncontroverted that Entergy dictated Bechtel’s staff levels for Entergy projects. It is also uncontroverted that Entergy ordered Bechtel to cut the number of engineers employed on the EST from three to one. It is further uneontroverted that, consonant with Bechtel’s established policy of retaining its most highly-skilled engineers on ongoing projects, Carroll’s superiors agreed to transfer Antle and Guzman from EST to the BEP to replace Carroll and Rourke. There is also *358 substantial evidence that Carroll’s replacement, Antle, was a more highly-qualified engineer. Unlike Carroll, Antle was a licensed nuclear reactor operator who possessed a bachelor of science degree in nuclear engineering and had worked in the nuclear field since 1969. James Drasler, Antle and Carroll’s former EST supervisor, testified that Antle’s qualifications, experience, and evaluations were deemed superior to those of Carroll, who was rated in the lowest quarter of all grade 25 engineers. Drasler’s testimony is buttressed by the undisputed fact that in the face of prior mandatory personnel reductions, Carroll and Rourke were released from the EST and transferred to the BEP prior to Antle or Guzman, who were the last EST engineers to be released. This fact, coupled with Bechtel’s policy of retaining its most highly-qualified engineers on ongoing projects, is compelling evidence that Bechtel did indeed consider Antle and Guzman more highly-qualified than Carroll or Rourke.
The Secretary also found that Carroll’s subsequent termination was due to a lack of alternative job options despite Bechtel’s substantial efforts to relocate him. This finding is likewise supported by substantial evidence. George Showers, Carroll’s regional chief project engineer, James Drasler, Carroll’s former EST supervisor, and Dale Crow, Carroll’s BEP supervisor, all testified that they had made considerable efforts to match Carroll with an available position for which he was qualified. These efforts were confirmed by testimony from Bechtel employees from other regional offices. Showers, Drasler, and Crow all testified that they were unable to find a position for which Carroll was qualified due to overstaffing and a decline in the amount of contracts. This testimony was similarly confirmed by testimony from other Bechtel employees from other regional offices and various Bechtel jobsites around the United States.
The Secretary additionally found that Bechtel did not retaliate against Carroll by terminating him instead of offering him the option of going on “holding” status. This finding is also supported by substantial evidence. Although Bechtel’s written policy gives a chief regional engineer the option of placing a released employee on non-paid or “holding” status for up to three months, both Drasler and Robert Hobbs, a Bechtel senior designer, testified that this policy is purely discretionary. Showers offered uncontroverted testimony that he had never placed an employee on holding status, that he did not offer holding status to three other mechanical engineers terminated around the same time as Carroll, and that as a matter of policy he would not offer holding status to engineers, such as Carroll, ranked in the lower third of their grade.
Carroll argues that the Secretary’s order is not supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole, citing
Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB,
As such, the issue here is whether substantial evidence supports the Secretary’s conclusion, not whether substantial evidence exists to support Carroll’s alternative view.
Arkansas v. Oklahoma,
III. CONCLUSION
For the aforementioned reasons, we affirm the Secretary’s final order dismissing Car-rolls case.
Notes
. “Release” is a term of art at Bechtel. Individual engineers are assigned to a regional home office for administrative purposes. When an engineer is released from a project, his home office is notified and the regional chief engineer for that regional office is responsible for reassignment of that engineer at other Bechtel worksites if such positions are available and if that engineer meets the relevant job qualifications. Carroll was assigned to the Houston, Texas regional home office, and George Showers was the chief project engineer for that office.
. In a related argument, Carroll asserts that he has so thoroughly discredited Bechtel's proffered nondiscriminatory reason for releasing and subsequently terminating him that the record can support nothing but a decision in his favor. This argument has nothing to do with whether he has established a prima facie case under Couty, but raises the question of whether the Secretary’s conclusion that Carroll failed to carry his ultimate burden of persuasion is supported by sub *357 stantial evidence on the record as a whole. We address this issue in the next section.
. The Secretary's final order did not determine whether Carroll had in fact proved that he had engaged in any protected activity. As such, we express no opinion on this issue.
