ORDER
Dеborah L. Haines petitions for review of the Merit Systems Protection Board’s failure to reopen her appeal and reconsider its final decision in her case. Because the letter from the Clerk of the Board informing Ms. Haines that the Board did not plan to reopen her appeal is not a “final order or decision” of the Board, the only kind of Board action over which we may exercise appellate subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295 (1988), our organic statute, we dismiss.
BACKGROUND
Ms. Haines worked as a contract administrator in the Defense Logistics Agency. The instant petition grows out of an appeal Haines filed with the Board in 1990, alleging that she was forced to resign from her position with the Agency in 1988 due to harassment by her supervisors. In an initial decision issued on February 8,1991, the administrative judge in the case dismissed her appeal on the ground that she had failed to show that her resignation was involuntary. On June 11, 1991, the Board denied Haines’ petition for review, reopened the case on its own motion, and affirmed thе initial decision as modified.
Haines v. Defense Logistics Agency,
After her petition for the writ of certiorari was denied, Haines filed “Petitiоns to Reopen” with the Board on three separate occasions, by letters dated June 1, 1993, July 20, 1993, and August 20,1993. The Clerk of the Board responded to each of Haines’ letters in the same way, indicating that (1) the decision in her case had become final,.(2) the Board’s regulations did not provide for a party other than the OPM to file a petition for reconsideration of a final decision, and (3) while the Board could reopen an appeal on its own motion at any time, it had no plans to do so in her case. After receipt of the third such letter from the Clerk of the Board, dated October 8, 1993, Haines timely filed her petition for review in this court.
Discussion
We have inherent jurisdiction to determine the scope of our jurisdiction,
C.R. Bard, Inc. v. Schwartz,
The Civil Service Reform Act (CSRA) “comprehensively overhaulеd the civil service system.”
Lindahl v. OPM,
Section 1201.113, styled “Finality of decision,” provides, in relevant part, as follows:
The initial decision of the judge will becomе final 35 days after issuance. Initial decisions are not precedential.
(a) Exceptions. The initial decision will not become final if, within 35 days after issuance of thе decision, any party files a petition for review, or if the Board reopens the case on its own motion.
(b) Petition for review denied. If the Board denies all petitiоns for review, the initial decision will become final when the Board issues its last decision denying a petition for review.
(c) Petition for review granted or case reopened. If the Board grants a petition fоr review or a cross petition for review, or reopens or dismisses a ease, the decision of the Board is final if it disposes of the entire action.
5 C.F.R. § 1201.113 (1993). Upon comparing this section’s provisions to the Clerk’s letter to Haines, it is clear that the letter was neither an administrative judge’s initiаl decision, a denial of a petition for review by the Board, nor a Board decision disposing of an entire action. This is not surprising, for Haines can point to no statute or regulation entitling her either to have her case reopened or to a decision from the Board adjudiсating her informal request that the Board reopen her case. Cf. 5 C.F.R. § 1201.117 (1993) (“The Board may reopen an appeal and reconsider a decision of a judge on its own motion at any time, regardless of any other provisions of this part.”); 5 C.F.R. § 1201.118(a) (1993) (“Under 5 U.S.C. § 7703(d), the Director of the Office of Personnel Management may file a petition for reconsideration of a Board final order_”). Because no statute or regulation entitles Haines to file a “Petition to Reopen,” she can hardly have received a final decision addressing the merits of such a petition, as she argues she did.
In short, the Clerk’s letter to Haines is not a final order or final decision for purposes of section 1201.113 and, by extension, section 1295(a)(9). Instead, the letter was merely an administrative response by the Clerk to Haines’ third informal letter request that the Board reopen her appeal and reconsider its final decision on its own motion. The Clerk had been delegated the authority to make such responses by the Board and was performing only a ministerial function in this regard. It may well be that the Board has a policy generally not to reopen any appeal from a Board decision that has been affirmed by us, for the Clerk cited our affirmance in his letter. We see nothing unlawful in any such policy, although it may not be required by lаw.
Haines has previously received our review of the final order of the Board disposing of *1001 her appeal on June 11, 1991. While no authority prohibits her from repeatedly, indeed ad infinitum, requesting the Board to reopen her case despite our affirmance of the Board’s final ordеr, neither does any authority allow her to create another final Board order in the same appeal to support a second review by making such informal and unauthorized requests. If she could, there would be no limit to the number of appeals we could receive and would bе required to decide in a single ease. Having lost once and finally, including upon review'by us, a disappointed petitioner could repeаtedly generate further appeals to us, one for each “denial” of successive petitions to the Board for it to reopen. If thе Board’s declination to reopen were a final decision, an appeal to us therefrom would he provided it were timely filed. To рroceed down this road would fly in the face of the regulations, the premise of the Act, and judicial economy. We decline petitionеr’s invitation to do so.
Conclusion
As there is no final order or final decision to review in this case, we are without subject matter jurisdiction over Haines’ petition.
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
The petition must be and is dismissed.
