The County of Los Angeles (the County) appeals from the district court’s judgment finding the County in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., (ADEA). The central issue is whether the district court properly found that age under 35 is not a Bona Fide Occupational Qualification (BFOQ) for entry level еmployment of deputy sheriffs and fire department helicopter pilots.
There is no dispute that the policy and practice of the County is to reject applications of persons 35 years and above who seek positions as deputy sheriff or fire helicopter pilots, and that they are rejected solely on the basis of age. 1
At trial and on appeal the main factual dispute concerned the effectiveness of available testing in identifying individuals who have asymptomatic cardiovascular disease. The County emphasized the increase in cardiovascular disease in the 40-50 age group and the difficulty of identifying employees at risk. EEOC emphasized that the real issue was the present physical condition of the applicants and emphasized the accurаcy of certain tests, when considered with individual risk factors such as smoking, weight, family history, etc.
The district court found that readily available tests were 99% accurate as a
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“short term predictor of the likelihood of cardiac difficulty.”
I.
Legal Contentions
A. The County argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in
National League of Cities v. Usery,
This contention was rejected by the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
E.E.O.C. v.
Wyoming,-U.S.-,
B. The County also argues that because the ADEA applies to federal as well as state employment, any age-related restrictions tolerated in federal occupations should apply equally to similar state and local occupations.
Congressional authorization of the use of maximum hiring ages in federal law enforcement occupations, 5 U.S.C. § 3307(d), was recently upheld against ADEA attack in
Stewart v. Smith,
The EEOC responds that the same Congress that enacted the federal maximum-hiring statute, 5 U.S.C. § 3307(d), extended the ADEA to state and loсal government employment. EEOC argues that because Congress failed to provide a per se exemption for state and local government hiring, none should .be read into the ADEA. EEOC argues further that Stewart, relied on so heavily by the County, is not applicable to this case because Stewart involved the interpretation of the ADEA and 5 U.S.C. § 3307(d) which only applies to federal employees.
The
Stewart
court was faced with “reconciling” 5 U.S.C. § 3307(d) with the ADEA.
The Court in
E.E.O.C. v. Wyoming,
however, apparently considered and rejected
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the argument raised here by the County. In discussing the “well-defined federal interest in the [ADEA] legislation,” the Court noted “incidentally, that the strength of the federal interest underlying the Act is not negated by the fact that the federal government happens to impose mandatory retirement on a small class of its own workers.”
C. The County further argues that the district court’s decision is against the great weight of authority recognizing age as a BFOQ in public safety occupations. The County argues that because it made the same factual record here as in other cases that have upheld age as a BFOQ, age as a BFOQ should have been recognized here. We held in
EEOC
v.
County of Santa Barbara,
II.
Application of Proper BFOQ Standards
A. The County argues that the district court improperly rejected economic considerations of the County in rejecting the County’s BFOQ defense. The district court summarized the County’s argument as follows:
Defendant next contends that older persons will beсome unfit for these positions in a shorter time than younger persons .... This it is argued, will result in defendant receiving a less than optimal return on the initial training it provides its deputy sheriffs and helicopter pilots.
B. The County argues that the district court applied an unduly strict construction of the BFOQ standard for public safety occupations, citing
Usery v. Tamiami Trail Tours, Inc.,
In applying the test, the district court found that the County had met its burden in establishing that strength, agility, good reflexes and ability to run appreciable distances and lift heavy objects were reasonably necessary to the jobs.
The County’s real concern, however, is its inability to assure itself that persons hired are not suffering from undetected heart disease.
The district court found that “all or substantially all persons above the age of forty years are not unable to meet defendant’s health standards due to heart diseаse.” Id. at 1140. The district court continued:
considering that only an extremely small percentage of all persons currently barred by defendant’s age restrictions are likely to have heart disease and go undetected by the available medical tests, the court concludes that in this regard it is not imprаctical for defendant to differentiate the qualified from the unqualified applicants. Thus on the second prong of the Tamiami test, defendant’s age limit policy again fails to pass muster.
Nor is this conclusion altered by the fact that a very small number of persons may conceivably go undetected. In the court’s view, Tamiami requires only a practical reliable differentiation of the unqualified from the qualified applicant,531 F.2d at 236 , not a perfect differentiation.
Id.
The district court applied the BFOQ standard fairly. There was no error here.
C. The County argues that the district court placed too much emphasis on the fact that there are persons over age 40 working in the positions involved. The County emphasizes that this is a case involving maximum age for initial hiring, and not for the job itself. The challenged statement of the district court follows:
Indeed, defendant currently employs numerous deputy sheriffs over forty years of age. Also, two of the nine helicopter pilots currently employed by the defendant are over forty. Given these considerations, the court finds it inexplicable that defendant refuses to consider for employment persons over thirty five years of age who are satisfactorily employed in similar jobs by other government agencies.
D. The County argues that the following finding of the District Court is clearly erroneous and alone warrants reversal:
Thus the simple electrocardiogram or car-diokymograph tests will detect 52% of all asymptomatic sufferers. Additionally, the evidence indicates that the Bruce protocol, a stress electrocardiogram test оn an inclined treadmill, coupled with an analysis of the individual’s risk factors (such as weight, smoking habits, family history, etc.) is 99% accurate as a short-term predictor of the likelihood of cardiac difficulty.
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First, we must point out that the district court’s ultimate conclusion was that “only an extremely small percentage of all persons over the age of thirty-five years applying for the jobs in question are likely to have asymptomatic heart disease and go undetectеd.”
This was based on the figure (undisputed on appeal) that approximately 3% of 35 year olds suffer asymptomatic heart disease — heart disease whose symptoms are not readily apparent. It is also undisputed that 52% of this 3% can be detected by a combinatiоn of the stress EKG/CKG, tests that are neither difficult nor prohibitively expensive to administer.
The area of disagreement between the County and the EEOC is with the remaining 48% of the 3% of 35 year olds who suffer asymptomatic heart disease — in other words, the disagreement is over the fewer than lVfe% of 35 year olds whose asymptomatic heart disease cannot be detected by administration of the EKG/CKG.
The district court clearly credited the testimony of Dr. Mohler, one of the many expert witnesses who testified. Dr. Moh-ler’s testimony did not precisely address whether 99% of all persons with asymptomatic heart disease can be detected; neither does the district court’s reference to Mohler’s testimony imply that it did. Rather, Dr. Mohler testified that the “studies by Dr. Bruce of Seattle, Washington ... have shown clearly by taking the various risk factors plus an exercise test response, one can predict with greater than 99 percent probability that within the next twelve months that an individual will not have a cardiac event.” RT 774 (emphasis added). This is not the same as saying that 99% of all asymptomatic sufferers will be detected. Therе is no evidence that the district court was confused, and we decline to reverse on this point.
The district court’s conclusion that the County failed to establish a BFOQ is based on findings that are not clearly erroneous.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The ADEA protects only persons between the ages of 40 and 70. 29 U.S.C. § 631(a). The district court found this to be of no consequence at trial, finding “no meaningful difference in the evidence as to an age limit of forty as opposed to thirty five.”
E.E.O.C. v. County of Los Angeles,
