Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge EDWARDS.
In this case, petitioner, Exportal Ltda. (“Exportal”), a Chilean fruit producer, challenges a decision of the Secretary of Agriculture (“Secretary”) declining to waive a bond requirement in connection with a reparation proceeding sought to be initiated by petitioner. Department of Agriculture (“DOA”) regulations provide that the bond requirement “shall be waived” if a foreign complainant can show that its nation does not require a United States complainant to file a bond in a proceeding against a citizen of that nation. 7 C.F.R. § 47.6(b) (1989). Exportal’s request for a waiver of the bond requirement was denied because, according to the Secretary, such waivers remain discretionary even when a foreign complainant makes the requisite showing pursuant to agency regulations. We find this decision to be flatly inconsistent with the plain terms of DOA’s regulations. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
As an initial matter, we hold that the Secretary’s decision is a “final order” reviewable under the Administrative Orders Review Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2342(2) (1982). Second, we hold that the petitioner’s challenge must be upheld because the Secretary’s decision is contrary to the plain language of the agency’s own regulations. Finally, we remand for further proceedings to allow the Secretary to address whether Exportal has shown that Chilean law satisfies the reciprocity requirement imposed by section 47.6(b).
I. Background
The Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act, 7 U.S.C. §§ 499a-499s (1988) (“PACA”), establishes a remedial scheme to protect agricultural producers from fraudulent practices by brokers.
See generally Harry Klein Produce v. Department of Agriculture,
The prevailing party in a reparation proceeding under PACA can recover its costs and attorney fees. See 7 C.F.R. § 47.19(d) (1989). To secure these expenses, as well as any damages awardable on a counterclaim, a foreign producer may be obliged to *47 furnish a bond equal to double the amount of its claim. See id. § 499f(e). However, pursuant to authority delegated to the Secretary by PACA, see id., DOA regulations state that the bond requirement is waived in the following circumstance:
[T]he furnishing of a bond shall be waived if the complainant is a resident of a country which permits filing of a complaint by a resident of the United States against a citizen of that country without the furnishing of a bond.
7 C.F.R. § 47.6(b). Under both PACA and DOA regulations, a foreign complainant must either file a bond or obtain a waiver before the DOA can take “any formal action ... on [the producer’s] complaint,” 7 U.S.C. § 499f(e), including service of the complaint on the broker and docketing of the case for adjudication. See 7 C.F.R. §§ 47.6(b), (c), 47.10 (1989). The decision whether to grant a waiver request is made by the Secretary or a designated DOA staff member.
In August 1988, Exportal filed a complaint with the Secretary alleging that its United States broker had unlawfully withheld $182,000 due Exportal. Advised of PACA’s foreign-producer bond requirement, Exportal petitioned the DOA for a waiver; in support of the petition, Exportal proffered an affidavit from a Chilean attorney attesting that Chile does not require United States citizens to furnish bonds before bringing civil actions against Chileans. In a one-page letter, the Chief of the PACA Branch of the DOA rejected Exportal’s request, stating:
the wording of [PACA] gives the Secretary ... discretion over whether to waive the bond requirement, even when the complainant’s national court system allows claims by extranationals without supplying a bond.
Appendix 3. As a basis for the exercise of the Secretary’s discretion in this case, the letter cited the need to secure a potential counterclaim by Exportal’s broker. See id.
Rather than file a $364,000 bond, Expor-tal petitioned this court for review. 1 Ex-portal maintains that under 7 C.F.R. § 47.6(b) the Secretary has no discretion to deny a waiver if the foreign producer shows that its nation’s legal system does not require United States citizens to furnish bonds. In addition to disputing this reading of the DOA’s regulations, the Secretary argues that we are without jurisdiction to entertain Exportal’s petition.
II. Analysis
A. Jurisdiction
By its terms, the Administrative Orders Review Act plainly extends to a decision denying a waiver pursuant to 7 U.S.C. § 499f(e):
the court of appeals ... has exclusive jurisdiction to enjoin, set aside, suspend (in whole or in part), or to determine the validity of—
(2) all final orders of the Secretary of Agriculture made under chapters 9 and 20A of title 7, except orders issued under sections 210(e), 217a, and 499g(a) of title 7....
28 U.S.C. § 2342 (emphasis added). 2 The Secretary nonetheless contests jurisdiction on the ground that a decision to deny a waiver is not a “final order.” Alternatively, the Secretary maintains that Exportal should have directed its petition to the district court, because that is the court with jurisdiction over appeals from the Secretary’s reparation orders. See 7 U.S.C. § 499g(c). We disagree.
We engage in a “pragmatic” inquiry to determine whether an agency decision is a “final order” for purposes of the Administrative Orders Review Act.
See New York Shipping Ass’n v. FMC,
There is no doubt that the process of administrative decisionmaking in this case has reached a stage where judicial review will not disrupt any adjudication under PACA. The Secretary contends that his waiver denial is not a final order because it is interlocutory in nature. However, this characterization ignores the special procedural mechanism by which the DOA decides a waiver request. Consistent with PACA,
see
7 U.S.C. § 499f(e), DOA regulations provide that a foreign producer must obtain a waiver
before
the agency invokes
any
component of the adjudicatory procedures — from service of the complaint, to discovery, to a formal hearing — designed to resolve PACA claims on the merits.
See
7 C.F.R. § 47.6(b). Whether a foreign producer is entitled to a waiver is determined not by an administrative law judge, but by the Secretary or designated DOA staff. In effect, DOA regulations establish a wholly independent proceeding to decide whether a foreign producer may prosecute a PACA reparation claim without filing a bond. Because DOA procedures make no provision for the re-examination of this decision, and because the waiver determination occurs completely outside the context of any PACA adjudication, judicial review of the Secretary’s decision “will not disrupt the orderly process of [any] adjudication” before the agency.
Port of Boston Marine Terminal Ass’n,
The denial of a waiver also has clear legal consequences for Exportal. If Expor-tal is unable or unwilling to pay the bond, it must forego its right to avail itself of the administrative remedy contemplated by PACA. If it does furnish the bond, it must forego its qualified right, recognized by PACA and DOA regulations, not to lose the use of $364,000 during the pendency of the reparation proceeding — a deprivation that cannot be meaningfully remedied on appeal from a reparations order. We therefore have no difficulty concluding that the Secretary’s decision to deny a waiver is a “final” order for purposes of judicial review. 3
We also reject the Secretary’s contention that the district court has initial appellate jurisdiction over the Secretary’s decision. The Secretary bases this argument on
Florida Light & Power Co. v. Lorion,
The problem with the Secretary’s analysis is that Congress has furnished “specific *49 evidence” of its intent that the court of appeals exercise jurisdiction over final orders disposing of “preliminary” issues in PACA reparation proceedings. The Administrative Orders Review Act expressly provides for direct (and exclusive) review in the court of appeals of every final order issued pursuant to PACA except for reparation orders. See 28 U.S.C. § 2342(2). 4
This division of appellate responsibility is perfectly understandable. An appeal from a reparation order is not a genuine “review” action but rather a trial
de novo, see
7 U.S.C. § 499g(c), a proceeding possible
only
in district court. The district court, however, has no special competence to review nonreparation orders for legal error. Direct review of these orders in the court of appeals reflects the Administrative Orders Review Act’s general objective to eliminate the “duplication of effort” attendant upon successive appeals in the district court and the court of appeals based on the same Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) standards of review.
Lorion,
B. The Denial of Exportal’s Waiver Request
1. The Secretary’s Claim of Discretion under Section 47.6(b)
DOA regulations speak in categorical terms:
the furnishing of a bond shall be waived if the complainant is a resident of a country which permits filing of a complaint by a resident of the United States against a citizen of that country without the furnishing of a bond.
7 C.F.R. § 47.6(b) (emphasis added). Despite these clear terms, the Secretary contends that he retains discretion under the regulations to deny a waiver even when a foreign producer can make the showing of reciprocity that section 47.6(b) requires. Noting that PACA provides merely that “the Secretary shall have the authority to waive the furnishing of a bond” upon the requisite showing of reciprocity, 7 U.S.C. § 499f(e) (emphasis added), the Secretary maintains that section 47.6(b) should be construed to restate this permissive grant of statutory authority. Once again, we are constrained to disagree with the Secretary’s analysis.
The scope of the waiver authority delegated to the Secretary by 7 U.S.C. § 499f(e) is largely beside the point. For, even assuming that the Secretary
could
adopt a rule preserving his discretion to deny a waiver to a foreign producer who shows that its nation does not impose a bond requirement, the fact remains that the Secretary has adopted
section 47.6(b),
under which the Secretary’s discretion has been strictly limited by the plain terms of the regulation. “It is axiomatic that an agency must adhere to its own regulations .... ”
Brock v. Cathedral Bluffs Shale Oil Co.,
This is a question of interpretation. It is well established that a reviewing court owes deference to an agency’s construction of its own regulations.
See, e.g., Udall v. Tallman,
Courts’ reliance on the “plain meaning” rule in this setting is not a product of some fetishistic attraction to legal “formalism.” In order to infuse a measure of public accountability into administrative practices, the APA mandates that agencies provide interested parties notice and an opportunity for comment before promulgating rules of general applicability.
See
5 U.S.C. § 553(b), (c) (1988).
See generally American Bus Ass’n v. United States,
In this case, the plain meaning of the DOA’s regulations is dispositive. Section 47.6(b) states that the bond requirement
“shall
be waived” if the foreign producer makes the requisite showing of reciprocity. “ ‘Shall’ is a term of legal significance, in that it is mandatory or imperative, not merely precatory.”
Conoco, Inc. v. Norwest Bank Mason City,
Conceding that his interpretation of section 47.6(b) is “anomalous,” the Secretary nonetheless resists the conclusion that his reading is foreclosed by the plain meaning rule. The Secretary notes that although the ordinary connotation of “shall” is “must,” courts construing statutes have sometimes discerned in the legislative history or structure of the statute an intention to depart from the plain meaning of this term.
See, e.g., Buckley v. Valeo,
We reject this contention. As we have mentioned, we can discern no evidence that the DOA actually
did
intend to use “shall” to mean “may” in section 47.6(b). But even more fundamentally, we disagree with the Secretary’s suggestion that we should read section 47.6(b)
as if it were a statute.
We might be willing, in extraordinary circumstances, to entertain the suggestion that a legislature intended something different from what a statute appears plainly to say.
See, e.g., Consolidated Rail Corp. v. United States,
In sum, section 47.6(b)’s directive that “the furnishing of a bond shall be waived ” unequivocally conveys that the Secretary must grant a waiver when the condition of reciprocity is met. Unless and until this language is amended, the DOA must abide by it.
2. Reciprocity Under Chilean Law
As an alternative ground for upholding the Secretary’s denial of Exportáis waiver request, counsel for the Secretary suggests that Exportal in fact failed to make the requisite showing of reciprocity demanded by section 47.6(b). According to counsel, a foreign producer must demonstrate not merely that its nation’s legal system does not require United States citizens to file bonds in legal proceedings, but also that the producer’s nation affords United States producers an administrative remedy analogous to PACA. Chile, the Secretary’s counsel maintains, provides no such remedy.
We cannot uphold the Secretary’s order on this basis. The DOA’s letter denying Exportáis waiver request offered only one ground for this decision: the Secretary’s alleged discretion to deny a waiver in all cases. The suggestion that Exportal failed to demonstrate reciprocity in Chilean law is merely “appellate counsels post hoc rationalization ] for agency action.”
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co.,
On the record before us, we are in no position to assess any claims on the state of Chilean law. Because the Secretary disposed of Exportal’s waiver request pursuant to an asserted exercise of discretion, the DOA had no occasion to address the merits of Exportal’s showing of reciprocity. And although we do not discern in either section 47.6(b) or 7 U.S.C. § 499f(e) a requirement that the nation of a foreign complainant have a remedial scheme that precisely mirrors PACA, we will leave it to the Secretary to address this question in the first instance. Consequently, subject to appropriate review by this court, the Secretary remains free on remand to determine whether Chilean law satisfies the reciprocity requirement.
III. Conclusion
We grant Exportal’s petition for review. The determination to deny waiver of a bond prior to initiation of a PACA reparation proceeding is a “final order” under the Administrative Orders Review Act. By directing that “the furnishing of a bond shall be waived” if the nation of a foreign producer does not require United States complainants to file a bond, section 47.6(b) leaves the Secretary with no discretion to deny a waiver when the requisite condition is met. The Secretary remains free on remand, however, to address whether Ex-portal has shown that Chilean law satisfies the reciprocity requirement imposed by section 47.6(b).
It is so ordered.
Notes
. When Exportal filed its petition, Peter Myers was Acting Secretary of Agriculture. Clayton Yeutter, the current Secretary of Agriculture, has been substituted pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(1).
. PACA comprises chapter 20A of title 7.
. The Secretary also suggests that its denial of Exportal’s waiver is not a final order because his ruling was not made after a hearing. However, the absence of a hearing is not an impediment to review under the Administrative Orders Review Act “when a hearing is not required by law and it appears from the pleadings and affidavits filed by the parties that no genuine issue of material fact is presented." 28 U.S.C. § 2347(b)(2) (1982). Such is the case here.
. Of course, not all "preliminary" determinations are “final orders" for purposes of the Administrative Orders Review Act. When they are, however, initial jurisdiction resides in the court of appeals.
. We also reject the Secretary’s suggestion that we should dismiss Exportal’s petition on grounds of ripeness or exhaustion of remedies. Exportáis challenge is ripe because the Secretary has applied section 47.6(b) to Exportal, and because no further agency action is necessary to make the Secretary's decision “fit” for judicial resolution.
See Abbott Labs. v. Gardner,
