Order. Dissent by Judge O’SCANNLAIN.
ORDER
The panel has voted to deny and reject the suggestion for rehearing en banc.
The full court was advised of the suggestion for rehearing en banc. A judge requested a vote on whether to rehear the matter en banc. The matter failed to receive a majority of the votes of the nonre-cused active judges in favor of en banc consideration. Fed. R.App. P. 35.
The suggestion for rehearing en banc is denied.
join, dissenting from the denial of rehering en banc:
By failing to rehear
Douglas v. Cal. Dep’t of Youth Auth.,
I
Courts which must decide whether a State retains its sovereign immunity after accepting conditioned federal funds are caught between two competing lines of jurisprudence. Under the Supreme Court’s approach to the Spending Clause of Article I,
1
Congress has great leeway to place conditions on the funding it gives to the States.
See South Dakota v. Dole,
Douglas,
following our precedent
Clark v. California,
II
The California Department of Youth Authority (“CYA”) denied Mr. Dossey Douglas employment as a group supervisor because he is color-blind. Mr. Douglas brought a discrimination suit against CYA, claiming that the color vision test violated the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., and § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794. The district court granted summary judgment to CYA on the grounds that Douglas failed to exhaust his administrative remedies and that his § 504 claim was filed after the statute of limitations expired.
Before addressing the timeliness of Mr. Douglas’s claims, however, our court held that California, by accepting federal funds, waived its sovereign immunity from suits by individuals under § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act.
Douglas,
The same analysis would apply to § 504 as well.
See Kilcullen v. N.Y. State Dep’t of Labor,
Douglas
reaffirmed
Clark,
which, in an alternative holding spanning only three paragraphs of analysis,
2
held that by accepting federal funds a State waives its immunity from suit in federal court.
Clark
stated that since the Rehabilitation Act “manifests a clear intent to condition a state’s participation on its consent to waive its Eleventh Amendment immunity” — and California had accepted federal funds — the State had waived its immunity.
Id.
at 1271.
Douglas,
without recognizing the competing commands of the constitutional provisions at issue, simply “adhere[d] to our decision
Clark."
Ill
I respectfully suggest that
Douglas
did not give adequate consideration to the question of whether California waived its sovereign immunity. To establish waiver, Congress must first make it clear that amenability to suit in federal court is a condition of a State accepting federal funds, and, second, the State must make a “clear declaration” that it intends to waive its immunity.
College Sav. Bank v. Fla. Prepaid Postsecondary Educ. Expense
*1228
Bd.,
Whether Congress clearly required that a State waive its immunity before accepting federal funds (the first inquiry) is not the same thing, however, as whether the State clearly declared its knowing waiver (the second inquiry). Clark and Douglas fail adequately to address the second requirement, which is a key component of ensuring proper respect for a State’s constitutional rights.
A
A State may waive its sovereign immunity by making a “ ‘clear declaration’ that it intends to submit itself’ to federal court jurisdiction.
College Sav.,
College Savings
overruled the doctrine of “constructive waiver” found in
Parden v. Terminal Ry.,
There is a fundamental difference between a State’s expressing unequivocally that it waives its immunity and Congress’s expressing unequivocally its intention that if the State takes certain action it shall be deemed to have waived that immunity. In the latter situation, the most that can be said with certainty is that the State has been put on notice that Congress intends to subject it to suits brought by individuals. That is very far from concluding that the State made an “altogether voluntary” decision to waive its immunity.
Id.
at 680-81,
Having set forth the standards that guide one portion of the analysis — waiver of sovereign immunity — let us turn to the competing standards that govern the other — the Spending Clause.
B
When exercising its Article I spending power, Congress may condition its grant of
*1229
funds to the States, even by requiring States to take actions that Congress could not directly require them to take, such as waiving their sovereign immunity.
College Sav.,
Douglas
held that by the mere acceptance of Rehabilitation Act funds, California agreed to subject itself to the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Indeed, “acceptance of the funds entails an agreement to - the actions [that Congress could not otherwise force the States to take].”
College Sav.
As I explain below, at the time California allegedly engaged in discriminatory hiring practices and also accepted Rehabilitation Act funds, it did not know it possessed the right to resist federal court jurisdiction. Without this knowledge, gleaned only after the Supreme Court decided Garrett, California’s acceptance of funds simply could not constitute an unequivocal or intentional abandonment of its Eleventh Amendment rights.
V
What makes this case interesting, and what
Douglas
and cases in other circuits (except one) overlook, is the interplay of a § 504
waiver
with the ADA’s
abrogation
of States’s sovereign immunity. Until the Supreme Court decided
Garrett
in February 2001, California- operated under the reasonable assumption that Title I of the ADA, which provides essentially the same protections for people with disabilities as § 504,
3
effectively
abrogated
its immunity from suits by individuals claiming disability discrimination in state employment.
4
*1230
Indeed, in this Circuit, we have repeatedly held that Title II of the ADA was a permissible exercise of Congress’s Fourteenth Amendment enforcement power.
5
See Hason v. Med. Bd.,
Other circuits,
pre-Garrett,
found Title I of the ADA to constitute a valid abrogation.
See, e.g., Cisneros v. Wilson
Were this just a question of whether Congress may condition delivery of federal funds upon the waiver of sovereign immunity, there might not be sufficient compulsion to invalidate § 504 as an impermissible exercise of the Spending Clause.
See Bell Atlantic Maryland, Inc. v. MCI Worldcom, Inc.,
Indeed, if it does not like the strings attached, a State need not accept Congress’s funds. Even where there is no showing of compulsion, there still remains *1231 the requirement that a State unequivocally abandon a known right. Until Garrett was decided, however, California could not have known that its sovereign right to resist federal court jurisdiction still existed. How could a State waive that which has already been abrogated by Congress? V
Recently, the Second Circuit in
Garcia
spotted this problem and dealt with it, as we should have, consistent with the post-
Garrett
legal landscape. Noting that the proscriptions of the ADA and § 504 are virtually identical, it held that “a state accepting conditioned federal funds could not have understood that in doing so it was actually abandoning its sovereign immunity from private damages suits, since by all reasonable appearances state sovereign immunity had already been lost.”
Unlike Garcia, other circuits’ decisions, cited above, do not reconcile the tension between Spending Clause and sovereign immunity jurisprudence. Garcia’s approach is faithful to both constitutional provisions and recognizes that Congress may condition delivery of funds upon a waiver of sovereign immunity, yet respects the Supreme Court’s teachings, recently articulated in College Savings, that a waiver of a constitutional right must be intentional and knowing.
Unfortunately, Douglas did not cite Garcia and failed to recognize that what might noiu be a known right did not exist in any meaningful sense until quite recently. Blind adherence to our 1997 decision in Clark is misguided. Douglas’s failure to give proper weight to the requirement that a waiver of a constitutional right be intentional and knowing, renders the decision incomplete, incorrect, and in need of reconsideration en banc.
VI
This issue — in the cross-hairs of two constitutional provisions and squarely presented in Douglas — deserved close and careful reconsideration in light of recent Supreme Court precedent. I respectfully dissent from this unfortunate order denying rehearing en banc.
Notes
. The Spending Clause empowers Congress to "lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts, and Excises, to pay the Debts, and to provide for a common Defense and general welfare of the United States.” U.S. CONST, art. I, § 8, cl. 1.
.
Clark’s
main holding was that Congress validly abrogated States’s sovereign immunity when it passed § 504 pursuant to its Fourteenth Amendment enforcement powers.
Ki-mel
and
Garrett
call this holding into serious doubt.
Clark
went on to "note” that by accepting federal funds a State waives its sovereign immunity.
. The ADA has no federal funding requirement, but it is otherwise similar in substance to the Rehabilitation Act, and "cases interpreting either are applicable and interchangeable.”
Allison v. Dep’t of Corrections,
. The ADA explicitly provided that "[a] State shall not be immune under the eleventh amendment ... from an action in [a] Federal or State court of competent jurisdiction for a violation.” 42 U.S.C. § 12202.
. Title I prohibits employment discrimination against qualified individuals on the basis of their disability, 42 U.S.C. § 12112, and Title II prohibits discrimination in the provision of public services and programs, 42 U.S.C. § 12132.
.
Garrett’s
reasoning undoubtedly undercuts the Rehabilitation Act's attempt to abrogate sovereign immunity.
See Reickenbacker,
