Plaintiff Donna Marie Farris (“Farris”) challenges the district court’s order granting summary judgment for her former employer, the Department of Veterans Affairs (“VA”). Finding no valid reason to apply an equitable exception, the district court dismissed Farris’s disability discrimination complaint due to her concession that she failed to timely file a formal complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). We find that the district court did not abuse its discretion by declining to toll the limitations period and therefore affirm.
I. Background
We recount the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, Farris.
See Franceschi v. U.S. Dept. of Veterans Affairs,
Farris was hired by the VA as a Primary Care and Emergency Department Clinical Social Worker and POW Coordinator at its medical center in Togus, Maine on November 13, 2007. 1 Within eight months, the VA formally recognized Farris for her excellent job performance — once for an “Above and Beyond Attitude and Excellence in Customer Service” and once for providing extra assistance during a staffing shortage.
On September 22, 2008, Farris suffered a work-related injury to her neck and right shoulder that resulted in a one-month absence from work. During her absence, Farris was ordered by her supervisor, James Hammond (“Hammond”), and Togus Human Resources Manager, Terry Gagne (“Gagne”), to see Bonnie Ayotte (“Ayotte”), an occupational nurse for the VA. While examining Farris, Ayotte inquired about her medical history. In addition to a pre-existing back injury, Farris informed Ayotte that she suffered from myasthenia gravis — a potentially life threatening autoimmune disorder — and scleroderma — a chronic connective tissue disease. Periodically, the latter two afflictions caused Farris to suffer from “difficulty eating, swallowing, chewing, gagging, choking, spitting up blood, and weight loss; numbness and burning in [her] feet and calves ... tearing in [her] left eye ... and blood in [her] stomach.” Nonetheless, these symptoms did not prevent Farris from performing her job satisfactorily.
Less than a month after the injury, around October 6, 2008, Farris contacted Gagne about returning to work. During this conversation, Farris informed Gagne that she was feeling better, yet he began to inquire about Farris’s myasthenia gravis. Before their conversation was over, Gagne had requested the results of a Magnetic Resonance Imaging test that had been performed on Farris’s throat in relation to the disorder.
Approximately two weeks after their phone conversation, Gagne requested that Farris come to the VA to fill out paperwork related to a mileage reimbursement. Farris reported to work that day and, to her surprise, was directed to attend a *561 meeting with Gagne and Jeff Saren (“Saren”), a private investigator, among others. At the meeting, Saren confronted Farris with a surveillance video showing Farris, who alleged she suffered a work-related neck and shoulder injury, lifting her son’s hockey bag. Saren immediately accused Farris of committing fraud. At Hammond’s urging and with her physician’s permission, Farris returned to work on October 22, 2008 — two days later.
On October 31, 2008, approximately one week after Farris returned to work, the VA placed her on administrative leave and notified her that her employment would terminate on November 12, 2008. According to the VA, the reason for the termination was that the “circumstances surrounding [Farris’s] recent absence from work” caused the VA “to lose confidence in [her] ability to satisfactorily perform the duties of [her] position,” because she had been “less than candid concerning [her] medical condition.”
Soon thereafter, Farris filed an informal complaint of disability discrimination with the VA’s Equal Employment Opportunity (“EEO”) counselor. She also sought redress through various other agencies. 2 Subsequently, Farris and the VA agreed to participate in mediation, but this effort proved unsuccessful. By a letter dated December 17, 2008, the VA’s Office of Resolution Management (“ORM”) notified Farris that it was unable to resolve her complaint and explicitly advised her that she had fifteen days from the letter’s receipt to file a formal complaint with the EEOC. 3 Farris received the letter on December 18, 2008, making the fifteen-day deadline January 2, 2009. She immediately forwarded the letter to her attorney, Stephanie Mills (“Attorney Mills”), who received it on December 19, 2008. Farris also made a phone call to Attorney Mills and received an e-mail response assuring her that the complaint would be timely filed. Farris followed up with Attorney Mills on December 26, 2008 and according to Farris, was assured by a legal secretary that “Ms. Mills was aware of the need to timely file the formal complaint and was working on it.”
Attorney Mills was well aware of the fifteen-day timeline; nevertheless, she failed to file Farris’s formal EEOC complaint until January 13, 2009 — eleven days late. Accompanying the complaint was a letter from Attorney Mills acknowledging *562 the tardiness of the complaint and offering an explanation. She expressed her mistaken belief that she had in fact filed the formal complaint on January 2, 2009, stated that her office had been closed for the holidays for eight days during the fifteen-day filing period, and admitted that the complaint must have been “overlooked” in the midst of the “holiday rush.”
On February 18, 2009, the EEOC advised Farris that it had denied the complaint as untimely. Attorney Mills received the denial letter on February 23, 2009 and appealed it the same day. On June 22, 2009, an EEO Regional Officer rejected the appeal. Farris sought reconsideration on July 20, 2009, but was again denied.
Thereafter, Farris filed a complaint in district court alleging disability discrimination. Her complaint alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., and the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 701 et seq. The VA 4 moved to dismiss the complaint or, in the alternative, for summary judgment because Farris had failed to timely file her EEOC formal complaint. Farris opposed the motion, arguing that her belated filing should be equitably excused. The district court granted the VA’s motion for summary judgment on January 11, 2011. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
As a general matter, we review an order granting summary judgment
de novo. See Franceschi,
B. The Legal Principle of Exhaustion
The ADA prohibits discrimination against an otherwise qualified individual based on disability. 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a);
Calero-Cerezo v. U.S. Dept. of Justice,
*563
Because administrative exhaustion “is a condition to the waiver of sovereign immunity,” it “must be strictly construed.”
Irwin v. Dept. of Veterans Affairs,
C. Equitable Tolling
Before delving too far, we note that both Farris and the VA make much to do, unnecessarily, over the distinction between the equitable doctrines of estoppel and tolling. Our review of the record makes clear that Farris’s argument on appeal is one of tolling. Similarly, though the district court may have mistakenly referred to “estoppel” on a few occasions within its order, it is more than obvious that the court was analyzing Farris’s claim based on principles of tolling. With this minor quibble addressed, we turn now to the law.
The Supreme Court has held that Title VII time limits are not jurisdictional and may be subject to equitable tolling just like private suits.
Irwin,
In
Baldwin County Welcome Center v. Brown,
the Supreme Court set out four circumstances in which equitable tolling may grant a Title VII (and, by extension, an ADA) plaintiff relief: (1) the plaintiff “received inadequate notice” of the statute of limitations; (2) “a motion for appointment of counsel is pending and equity would justify tolling the statutory period until the motion is acted upon;” (3) “the court [has] led the plaintiff to believe that she has done everything required of her,” or (4) “affirmative misconduct on the part of a defendant lulled the plaintiff into inaction.”
In this circuit, when a plaintiff asserts that
Baldwin County
or Irwin-like factors excuse her tardy filing and justify tolling the statute of limitations, we generally apply a five-factor analysis and consider the following: “(1) lack of actual notice of the filing requirement; (2) lack of constructive knowledge of the filing requirement; (3) diligence in pursuing one’s rights; (4) absence of prejudice to the defendant; and (5) a plaintiffs reasonableness in remaining ignorant of the filing requirement.”
Mercado v. Ritz-Carlton San Juan Hotel, Spa & Casino,
Farris concedes that she failed to timely file a formal complaint with the EEOC. Nonetheless, it is her contention that the district court erred when it refused to toll the fifteen-day limitations period to save her belated filing. We disagree.
First, we must address Farris’s misplaced reliance on
Perry v. Wolaver,
As the district court properly stated, none of the circumstances set out in Baldwin County that could provide an independent basis for tolling are present in Farris’s case. To the contrary, Farris and her attorney both received adequate notice of the fifteen-day limitation period; no motion for appointment of counsel was pending; the court did not lead Farris to believe she had done everything required; and no affirmative misconduct by the VA had lulled Farris into inaction. Similarly, the facts here fail to fit within the Irwin framework: Farris did not file a defective pleading during the fifteen-day time frame. Lastly, under this court’s five-factor analysis, Farris had both actual and constructive notice, and she was not reasonably ignorant. Refusing to throw in the towel, Farris persists with the following arguments: (1) “the filing of a formal complaint with the OSC, which defers to the EEOC, placed the VA on notice of her claim,” (2) *565 “the mistake was her lawyer’s,” (3) “dismissal with prejudice is an extreme sanction,” and (4) the “holiday rush” justified her late filing. 6
It is axiomatic that “equitable tolling do[es] not extend to what is at best a garden variety claim of excusable neglect,”
Irwin,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the district court did not abuse its discretion by refusing to equitably toll the fifteen-day filing deadline in order to save Farris’s tardy EEOC filing. Because Farris concedes that her complaint was filed late and time-barred absent tolling, the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the VA was proper. We affirm.
Notes
. Though the district court states that Farris began her employment in September 2008, both parties agree that Farris commenced her employment with the VA on or about November 13, 2007.
. These agencies include the Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Resolution Management ("ORM”), the Office of Special Counsel ("OSC"), the Office of Special Appeals ("OSA"), the Merit Systems Protection Board ("MSPB”), and the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs ("OWCP”).
. The letter stated in relevant part:
• "If you decide to file a formal complaint, you have 15 calendar days from receipt of this notice in which to do so.”
• "If you decide to file a formal complaint, you must do so WITHIN FIFTEEN CALENDAR DAYS OF RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE.”
• “Please note that the 15-calendar day time frame will not be extended due to your need to seek my assistance in completing this form.”
• “WHEN TO FILE: Your formal complaint must be filed within 15 calendar days of the date you received the ‘Notice of Right to File a Discrimination Complaint ’ (NRTF) from your EEO Counselor. If you do not meet this time limit, you must explain why you waited more than 15 calendar days to file. These time limits may be extended under certain circumstances; however, they will NOT be waived and your complaint will NOT be investigated unless you explain your untimeliness and the explanation is acceptable in accordance with EEOC, CFR § 1614(c)., [sic]. Use an additional sheet of paper, if necessary. If you have evidence which supports your explanation, please attach it to this complaint.” (emphasis in original.)
. The named defendant in this case is Eric K. Shinseki in his official capacity as Secretary for the Department of Veterans Affairs. Throughout the opinion, when referencing the defendant, we simply refer to the VA.
. Farris’s complaint also alleges a violation of the Rehabilitation Act. While our precedent states that a claim brought under the Act does not require exhaustion,
see Prescott v. Higgins,
. Farris presents seven different arguments, but because three of them are based on her reliance on Perry, we will not discuss them. Those arguments are as follows: (1) she was diligent in her pursuit of multiple avenues of relief and had complied with all other deadlines, (2) she had complied with the standards set forth in Perry, and (3) the VA was not prejudiced due to the belated filing.
