Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
Claiming a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, appellants challenge an employee benefit plan that provides twenty-four months of long-term disability benefits for persons suffering from mental or psychological disabilities but a longer period of benefits for those with physical disabilities. Because the employer adopted the plan prior to the ADA’s enactment and because circuit precedent holds that such plans are protected by the statute’s “safe harbor” provision, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary -judgment for the-employer and plan administrator. . .
I
Appellant Rebecca Fennell worked as a food service manager for appellee Ara-mark Corporation for ten years until-mental illness prevented her from performing her duties. Following Fennell’s extended leave of absence due to depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, Aramark terminated her employment on February 15,1996. She received Social Security disability benefits and long-term disability payments under Aramark’s employee benefit plan, administered by appellee Aetna Life Insurance Company. The plan provides income replacement amounting to two-thirds of base monthly salary for employees unable to work due to long-term disability resulting from illness, injury, or disease. Funded by contributions, from Aramark and participating employees, the plan limits disability payments to twenty-four months if the disability is caused by a mental condition but continues payments until at least age sixty-five if the disability is physical. In accordance with the plan’s terms, Aetna notified Fennell that because she had no physical impairment, her benefit payments would be discontinued effective April 16, 1997, two years after she began receiving them.
Alleging that the plan’s different benefit terms for mental and physical disabilities amount to discrimination prohibited by the Americans with Disabilities Act, Fennell filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and then filed suit against Aramark and Aetna in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. Three days later, EEOC also filed suit, and the two cases were consolidated. Fennell claimed that the cutoff in benefit payments violates Title III of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12181-89, which prohibits discrimination “on the basis of disability in the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, ¡or accommodations of any place of public accommodation....” Id. § 12182(a). EEOC -argued that the two-year limit violates Title I of the ADA, Id. §. 12111-17, which prohibits a covered employer from discriminating “against a qualified individual with a disability because of the disability of such individual in regard to [the] terms, conditions, and privileges of employment.” Id. § 12112(a).
The district court granted summary judgment for Aramark and Aetna.
See Fennell v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
EEOC and Fennell appeal. EEOC argues that the district court erred by construing Title I narrowly to prevent former employees no longer able to perform the essential functions of their previous jobs from ever suing under the ADA. According to EEOC, the district court’s ruling would prevent a totally disabled former employee from suing for discrimination in post-employment benefits, even if those benefits had been earned when she was a “qualified individual with a disability.” Fennell argues that public accommodation refers not just to physical locations, as the district court held, but also to all available products and services including benefit plans. Our review is de novo.
See Cones v. Shalala,
II
Our sister circuits are divided on both issues that formed the basis of the district court’s grant of summary judgment for Aramark and Aetna. The Seventh, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits have held (as did the district court) that Title I of the ADA provides no protection to a totally disabled former 'employee because that person is no longer a “qualified individual with a disability.”'
See Weyer v. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp.,
This circuit has expressed itself on neither of these disputed issues, nor need we do so now, for we have circuit precedent under which we may affirm the district court on a different ground — that the challenged plan is protected by the ADA’s safe harbor for bona fide employee benefit plans. Although the district court never addressed the safe harbor provision, the issue is fully briefed, and because we review the district court’s judgment, not its reasoning, we may affirm on any ground properly raised.
See, e.g., Doe v. Gates,
*269 The ADA’s safe harbor appears in section 501(c): “Subchapters I through III of this chapter and title IV of this Act shall not be construed to prohibit or restrict ... a person or organization covered by this chapter from establishing, sponsoring, observing or administering the terms of a bona fide benefit plan that is not subject to State laws that regulate insurance.” 42 U.S.C. § 12201(c)(3). This safe harbor “shall not be used as a subterfuge to evade the purposes” of Title I or Title III of the ADA. Id. § 12201(c).
The parties agree that Aramark’s benefit plan “is bona fide in that it exists and pays benefits.”
Public Employees Retirement Sys. of Ohio v. Betts,
Moddemo
involved a challenge to a benefit plan’s lifetime limit on mental health treatment reimbursement. Although the case arose under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which prohibits disability discrimination in government employment, that Act incorporates the ADA’s safe harbor provision.
See
29 U.S.C. § 794(d). The appellant in
Moddemo
argued, as do Fennell and EEOC, that in order to escape the safe harbor’s subterfuge exception, the employer had to show that any differential treatment of disabled persons in a benefit plan is actuarially justified.
Moddemo
rejected this actuarial defense interpretation of subterfuge, finding it “ ‘at odds with the plain language of the statute itself.’ ”
Moddemo,
Of particular significance to this case,
Moddemo
went on to hold that the plan challenged in that case could not be a subterfuge because the employer had adopted it prior to the Rehabilitation Act amendment that incorporated the subterfuge provision. In support of this conclusion,
Moddemo
relied on two Supreme Court decisions interpreting a similar subterfuge provision in the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967:
United Air Lines, Inc. v. McMann,
Moddemo’s application of Betts and McMann. to section 501(c) of the ADA controls this case. It is undisputed that Aramark’s long-term disability benefit plan, including the twenty-four-month cap on mental disability benefits challenged here, has been in place since at least 1982, long before the ADA’s 1990 enactment. Under Moddemo, therefore, the twenty-four-month benefit limit cannot fall within *270 section 501(c)’s subterfuge exception to the safe harbor.
Appellants offer three arguments why
Moddemo
should not control this case, none of which is convincing. First, they claim that
Moddemo
was wrongly decided because it overlooked a difference between the language of section 501(c)’s subterfuge provision and the language of the similar provision in section 4(f)(2) of the ADEA interpreted by
Betts.
They point out that while the ADEA gave safe harbor to a benefit plan “which is not a subterfuge to evade the purposes of this chapter,” the ADA substitutes the phrase “shall not be
used as
a subterfuge to evade the purposes of subchapter[s] I and III of this chapter” 29 U.S.C. § 623(f)(2) (1990); 42 U.S.C. § 12201(c) (emphasis added). Even if a panel of this court could depart from settled precedent, which of course it cannot,
see, e.g., LaShawn v. Barry,
In enacting section 501(c) of the ADA, Congress repeated the phrase “a subterfuge to evade the purposes of ... this chapter” just one year after Betts had interpreted that precise phrase in section 4(f)(2) of the ADEA to exclude pre-Act benefit plan provisions. According to EEOC, Congress signaled its rejection of the Betts interpretation by changing the words preceding that phrase from “is not” in the ADEA to “shall not be used as” in the ADA. While a benefit plan cannot be a subterfuge to evade the purposes of a not-yet-enacted statute, EEOC argues, it “can be ‘used as a subterfuge’ regardless of when the plan was adopted.” EEOC contends that merely by including the words “used as” in section 501(c), Congress expanded the subterfuge exception to remove pre-ADA benefit plans from safe harbor protection. Instead of protecting all pre-Act plans, the safe harbor, as EEOC reads it, functions as an affirmative defense that allows employers, benefit plan administrators, and insurance underwriters to avoid liability for disability-based distinctions by showing on the basis of “sound actuarial principles” that the distinctions are risk- or cost-justified.
The language of the two safe harbor provisions actually differs more extensively than even EEOC points out. The ADEA provision examined in McMann and Betts reads in pertinent part:
It shall not be unlawful for an employer, employment agency, or labor organization ... to observe the terms of ... any bona fide employee benefit plan such as a retirement, pension, or insurance plan, which is not a subterfuge to evade the purposes of this chapter....
29 U.S.C. 623(f)(2) (1990). The ADA provision reads as follows:
Subchapters I through III of this chapter and title IV of this Act shall not be construed to prohibit or restrict—
(1) an insurer, hospital or medical service company, health maintenance organization, or any agent, or entity that administers benefit plans, or similar organizations from underwriting risks, classifying risks, or administering such risks that are based on or not inconsistent with State law; or
(2) a person or organization covered by this chapter from establishing, sponsoring, observing or administering the terms of a bona fide benefit plan that are based on underwriting risks, classifying risks, or administering such risks that are based on or not inconsistent with State law; or
(3) a person or organization covered by this chapter from establishing, sponsoring, observing or administering the terms of a bona fide benefit plan that is not subject to State laws that regulate insurance.
Paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) shall not be used as a subterfuge to evade the pur *271 poses of subchapter[s] I and III of this chapter.
42 U.S.C. § 12201(c). Under the ADEA, a benefit plan falls within the safe harbor only if the plan is both (1) bona fide and (2) not a subterfuge. In the ADA, by contrast, a benefit plan receives safe harbor protection if it is (1) bona fide and (2) either consistent with or exempt from state law, but the safe harbor provision “shall not be used as a subterfuge to evade the purposes of’ Titles I and III of the ADA. In other words, under the ADA, it is not the benefit plan, but the safe harbor itself, that shall not be used as a subterfuge.
We think these semantic distinctions, including the one on which appellants rely, do not undermine
Moddemo.
As
Modder-no
pointed out, the Supreme Court interpreted the phrase “subterfuge to evade” to require a specific intent to circumvent a statutory purpose, thus excluding from the subterfuge exception all pre-Act plans.
Congress’s addition of the words “used as” is simply too thin a reed on which to support appellants’ claim that Congress intended to overrule Betts, remove pre-Act plans from safe harbor protection, and give life to EEOC’s uniformly rejected actuarial justification theory. After all, Congress responded to Betts by totally deleting the subterfuge language from the ADEA, just before it included the similar subterfuge provision in section 501(c) of the ADA. See Older Workers Benefit Protection Act of 1990, Pub.L. No. 101-433, § 103(1) (codified at 29 U.S.C. § 623(f)(2)). Had Congress also intended to repudiate Betts for ADA purposes, it could have omitted the provision from that statute as well.
Appellants’ second argument is that Moddemo’s discussion of section 501(c) is dicta. As they read the case, the decision rested on the observation that the plan provision challenged there, a lifetime limit on reimbursement for mental health treatment, did not discriminate on the basis of disability. Given that “holding,” the Commission claims, the panel’s discussion of section 501(c) was merely “ruminations” “not necessary to its holding,” and therefore not binding on us. Not only did EEOC fail to raise this argument until its reply brief,
see, e.g., Presbyterian Med. Ctr. of the Univ. of Penn. Health Sys. v. Shalala,
Finally, EEOC argues that even assuming we follow Moddemo’s interpretation of section 501(c), this case differs from Mod-demo because Aramark modified the plan after the ADA’s enactment. Appellants rely on two specific changes in Aramark’s long-term disability benefit plan. First, the twenty-four-month limit on benefit payments previously applied to anyone whose disability is “a result of a mental or emotional illness,” but now applies to disabilities “caused to any extent by a mental condition (including conditions related to alcoholism or drug abuse) described in the most current edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, published by the American Psychiatric Association.” Second, for a mentally disabled participant confined to an inpatient psychiatric hospital at the time the twenty-four-month period ends, benefit payments under the prior plan would continue for the duration of hospitalization; under the revised plan, continuation of benefits is limited to ninety days beyond the twenty-four-month cutoff. According to EEOC, these two changes remove Aramark’s plan from automatic safe harbor protection. We disagree.
To begin with, whatever effect the plan amendments may have, appellants concede that they did not apply to Fennell, whose benefits would have terminated after twenty-four months even under the plan’s previous version. Neither appellant explains how the plan amendments could be a subterfuge to evade the ADA and discriminate against Fennell if they did not affect her.
*273 Asserting that its suit is not limited to seeking relief for Fennell, EEOC argues that the plan amendments affected others by “increas[ing] the number of people subject to the limitation.” Not only was this argument also raised for the first time in EEOC’s reply brief, but the Commission’s complaint alleges neither that Aramark amended the plan for the purpose of circumventing the ADA, ie., that the amendments were a subterfuge (its burden under Betts), nor that the amendments have ever been applied to terminate benefits to anyone not subject to the same cutoff under the previous plan.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
So ordered.
