This appeal arises out of an action filed in 2000 by two prisoners confined at the Supermax Correctional Institution in Bos-
*543
cobel, Wisconsin (this facility was recently renamed the Wisconsin Secure Program Faсility, but for the sake of continuity, we will refer to the prison as “Supermax”). In their conditions of confinement suit, the plaintiffs asserted that they were subjected to extreme temperatures in violation of the Eighth Amendmеnt, in addition to other claims. After a plaintiff class was certified, the district court granted a preliminary injunction requiring, in part, that certain inmates particularly susceptible to elevated temperatures be immediately removed from Supermax.
Jones’El v. Berge,
Then, on October 10, 2003, the plaintiffs moved to enforce various provisions of the consent decree, including thе term requiring the DOC to implement a means of cooling the cells. During the November 24, 2003 hearing on this motion, the defendants admitted that the only practical way to cool the cells was to install air conditioning. Cоnsequently, the district court ordered the defendants to take immediate steps to air condition the cells at Super-max (“November order” or “enforcement order”). The defendants have appealed that award of relief by the district court, and, as of March 11, 2004, the November order has been stayed pending the disposition of this appeal. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court’s enforсement order.
I. Analysis
First, we must address whether jurisdiction lies to consider this appeal. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we have jurisdiction over appeals from all final decisions of the district courts. The consent decree itself was a final decision for purposes of § 1291, even though, as a complex equitable decree, it lacks the trappings of a readily-identifiable-as-final money judgment. As a result, the .district court’s enforcement order, the subject of this appeal, is properly conceived of as a postjudgment order. We treat a post-judgment proceeding as if it were a freestanding lawsuit and attempt to identify the final dеcision in that proceeding.
See Alliance to End Repression v. City of Chicago,
Under § 1292(a)(1), we have jurisdiction over appeals from interlocutory
*544
orders of the district courts granting injunctions. An order — including a post-judgment order — is properly characterized as an “injunction” when it substantially and obviously alters the parties’ pre-exist-ing legal relationship.
Gautreaux,
Applying this standard to the November order, we conclude that it is an appealable grant of a “fresh” injunction, and not simply an interpretation of the consent decree. The November order required the DOC to immediately take steps to air condition the сells at Supermax and set a deadline for completion of the air conditioning project: the first heat of 2004. 1 Assuming arguen-do that the order is in error, without an immediate appeal, the defendants would have to сomply with the order, and incur substantial costs, and would therefore suffer serious irreparable harm.
Moreover, it is impossible to conceive that, absent the enforcement order, the plaintiffs could have successfully pursued a motion for contempt of the decree based upon the defendants’ failure to air condition the cells at Supermax. The decree included no provision guarantеeing air conditioning, it only stated that the defendants would implement a means of cooling the cells during summer heat waves. The plaintiffs assert that because the defendants admitted at the pre-order hearing that the only practical means of cooling the cells is air conditioning, the consent decree ipso facto required air conditioning and the enforcement order should properly be construed as an intеrpretation of the decree and not as an injunction. This circular logic is unavailing. It is still the case that, absent the November order, it would not be possible to hold the DOC in contempt of the original consеnt decree for failing to install air conditioning. 2
The enforcement order substantially and obviously changed the legal relationship of the parties by specifically requiring the installation of air conditioning, еvidenced by the irreparable harm the defendants could suffer absent the availability of an immediate appeal. Therefore, we have jurisdiction under § 1292(a)(1).
*545
Next, we briefly address the defendants’ assertions that the district court’s enforcement order is invalid. All these arguments allege that the November order fails to comply with the requirements for prospective relief under the PLRA. Specifically, 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1) mandatеs that prospective relief must be narrowly drawn, extend no further than necessary to correct the violation of the federal right, and must be the least intrusive means necessary to correct the violation. Problematically, the defendants failed to make any of their highly fact-bound arguments as to why the order would violate the PLRA in their briefing to the district court or at the November 24, 2003 hearing on the issue. This failure not only dеprived the plaintiffs of a meaningful opportunity to respond (and concomitantly waived these arguments for the purposes of appeal,
see, e.g., United States v. Berkowitz,
The enforcement of a valid consent decree is not the kind of “prospectivе relief’ considered by § 3626(a).
See, e.g., Hallett v. Morgan,
Befоre concluding, we must mention a few items regarding the defendants’ arguments as to the “practicality” of installing air conditioning. First, the defendants will be hard-pressed to demonstrate that they should not be held to their admissiоn at the November 24, 2003 hearing that air conditioning is the only practical way to cool the cells at Supermax. See,
e.g., Burgin v. Broglin,
II. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the November 25, 2003 enforcement order оf the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. In fact, the district court denied the defendants’ motion to stay the enforcement order on December 23, 2003. The defendants were able to discontinue the air conditioning project оnly because this court on March 11, 2004 granted their motion to stay the order pending disposition of the appeal. The record reveals that approximately one-third of the project has been completed (although much to our vexation, the defendants were not able to identify at oral argument what exact improvements or construction have thus far been completed), at a cоst of about $250,000.
. Following the defendants' admission at the November 24, 2003 hearing, the plaintiffs certainly could have abandoned their motion to compel enforcement with respect to the air conditioning аnd instead filed a contempt action against the state for violating the decree based upon that admission. But this never came to pass. The plaintiffs continued to press their enforcement motion and obtained the desired — and, despite their protestations to the contrary, appealable — enforcement order.
