Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GRIFFITH.
Appellant Martin Gillan, IV was discharged from the United States Naval Reserve because he was twice passed over for promotion while classified as an active reservist. Gillan has challenged his discharge on the ground that the Navy should not even have considered him for a promotion and only did so because it had improperly failed to transfer him to an inactive status. He brought his claim first to the Navy’s Board for Correction of Naval Records (“BCNR”), where he lost. He next sought review of the Navy’s decision in federal district court, which granted summary judgment against him. We affirm the district court’s judgment because we find that 10 U.S.C. § 12642, the statute that governs how the Navy classifies and evaluates reservists, does not provide a specific time frame in which the Navy must transfer qualified reservists to inactive status.
I.
A Naval Reservist’s pay, benefits, and eligibility for promotion turn on both his status as either an active or inactive reservist and the category of service in which he is classified. Reservists in an active status can be paid, are eligible to train, earn retirement points, and be considered for promotion. BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL INSTRUCTION 1001.39A § 102(1) (1992). Inactive reservists cannot be paid, participate in training, earn retirement points, or be considered for promotion.
Id.
§ 102(2). There are three categories of service for reservists: Ready Reserve, Standby Reserve, and Retired Reserve.
Id.
§ 101. The Ready Reserve is further divided into the Selected Reserve and the Individual Ready Reserve, both of which are active status.
Id.
§ 102(1). There are two subcategories of Standby Reservists: Standby Reserve Active and Standby Reserve Inactive.
Id.
§ 103(2). As the names indicate, the former is an active status category, the latter
Congress has directed the Navy to prescribe “equitable procedures for the periodic determination” of whether reservists meet the standards and qualifications for their status. 10 U.S.C. § 12641; see also 10 U.S.C. § 10149 (directing the military to provide a “system of continuous screening of units and members of the Ready Reserve”). Department of Defense and Navy regulations require that the Navy conduct an annual screening to make this determination. See 32 C.F.R. § 44.5(c)(1) (“Screen, at least annually, all Ready Reservists under their jurisdiction to ensure their immediate availability for active duty [ ] and to ensure compliance with 10 U.S.C. 10149.”); BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL INSTRUCTION 1001.39A § 2102 (1992) (requiring that “[a]ll members of the Ready Reserve who are not on active duty will be screened at least annually”). If a reserve commissioned officer fails to meet the requirements of active status, the Navy “shall”: (1) transfer him to the Retired Reserve if qualified; (2) transfer him to inactive status if qualified; or (3) discharge him from his reserve appointment. 10 U.S.C. § 12642. Notably, although Congress requires the transfer of delinquent active reservists, the statute says nothing about when that must happen.
Gillan was commissioned as a Coast Guard officer in 1978 and served on active duty as an aviator until he was honorably discharged in 1985 at the rank of Lieutenant. He served in the Coast Guard Individual Ready Reserve from May 1985 until October 1987. Gillan then transferred to the Naval Reserve in late 1987 as a member of the Ready Reserve and was promoted to Lieutenant Commander in 1990. In December 1990, Gillan was activated for service in Operation Desert Storm. After hostilities ceased and effective May 31, 1991, he transferred to the Individual Ready Reserve in an active status. At the time of this transfer, the Navy told Gillan that,
If you desire a category of lesser participation in the Naval Reserve, you may wish to request a transfer to the Standby Reserve, Inactive. In that category, you will not be allowed to participate except in time of war and would not be eligible for promotion until one year after your return to the Ready Reserve.
Letter from Commanding Officer, Naval Air Reserve San Diego, to Martin J. Gillan (June 12,1991). Gillan never responded to this invitation. He failed to seek a transfer to the Standby Reserve Inactive. In fact, Gillan had no communication with and did not participate in the Naval Reserves in any capacity for the next six years because of “pressing family reasons” and his “civilian employment as a junior airline pilot.” Appellant’s Br. at 5.
As a member of the Individual Ready Reserve, Gillan was required, through participation and training, to earn “27 points ... each anniversary year” to remain in an active status. BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL INSTRUCTION 1001.39A § 104(1) (1992). His complete failure to fulfill any of his reserve duties from the time of his transfer to the Individual Ready Reserve on March 31, 1991, made him subject to review by an entity called the Mobilization Disposition Board (“MDB”). The MDB determines whether a reservist will be transferred pursuant to
While Gillan was still in an active status as a member of the Ready Reserve from May 1991 until the August 1995 MDB decision, he was eligible for promotion. BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL INSTRUCTION 1001.39A § 102(1) (1992). Naval Reserve Line Commander Selection Boards reviewed Gillan’s file in April 1994 and April 1995 but failed to promote him to Commander, a not surprising decision given his non-involvement with the Reserves. In 1997, two years after his transfer to an inactive status, Gillan tried to renew his activity in the Naval Reserve by participating in training drills. After Gil-lan participated in drills for five months, the Navy notified him in March 1998 that he could no longer participate in reserve activities because a Lieutenant Commander who twice fails selection for Commander must be discharged after twenty years of commissioned service. See id. § 105(3)(b). Another MDB considered Gillan’s record in March 2001, and he was honorably discharged from the Naval Reserve on August 1, 2001.
In addition to challenging his discharge, Gillan has also requested that the Navy revise upward one grade on his 1990 fitness report, an annual performance review. He rélies on a 1998 letter written by his former commanding officer. Gillan’s commanding officer originally gave Gillan a grade of “B” for “Desirability [for] Command.” Eight years later, he asked that this grade be changed to an “A.” His stated justification for this change was, “Information received after report was written justifies a higher grade: specifically volunteered for Desert Storm. Outstanding command of his Maintenance Division.” Letter from Captain Jorgensen, S.A., USNR, to Naval Personnel Command (Dec. 1, 1998). On a number of occasions, Gillan sought to have the Navy make this change to his 1990 fitness report and to vacate its decisions not to promote him, which would allow his continued service. He first petitioned the Navy in 1998. The BCNR considered and then rejected this request on June 24, 1999. Two subsequent petitions for rehearing were denied in 2001 and 2002 because Gillan failed to present new or material evidence that had
II.
We review an agency’s interpretation of a statute it administers under the two-step process of
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Although we have jurisdiction to review the decisions of the Correction Board, we do so under an “unusually deferential application of the ‘arbitrary or capricious’ standard” of the Administrative Procedure Act. Kreis v. Secretary of the Air Force,866 F.2d 1508 , 1514 (D.C.Cir.1989); see Kidwell v. Department of the Army,56 F.3d 279 , 286 (D.C.Cir.1995).
Cone v. Caldera,
Gillan first argues that 10 U.S.C. § 12642(b) requires that the Navy conduct an annual screening of all reservists followed by an immediate transfer to inactive status of those who failed to qualify for active status. Under Gillan’s view of the statute, the Navy should have transferred him from the Ready Reserves to an inactive status earlier than it did and, in what is crucial for his argument, he would then not have been considered for and passed over for promotions in 1994 and 1995. Without these failed promotions, which only came about because he was mistakenly classified in an active status at a time when he was qualified for an inactive status, Navy regulations would have allowed Gillan to continue his Reserve service. In effect, Gillan argues that the Navy should interpret § 12642(b) to protect him from his own inactivity and his failure to request a transfer to inactive status. We read 10 U.S.C. § 12642(b) differently. Turning first to the text of the statute:
(b) Subject to section 12645 of this title, a reserve commissioned officer who fails to attain the number of points, or to conform to the standards and qualifications, prescribed in subsection (a) shall—
(1) be transferred to the Retired Reserve if he is qualified and applies therefor;
(2) if he is not qualified or does not apply for transfer to the Retired Reserve, be transferred to an inactive status, if he is qualified therefor; or
(3) if he is not transferred to the Retired Reserve or an inactive status, be discharged from his reserve appointment.
10 U.S.C. § 12642(b). Gillan is correct that the word “shall” limits the Secretary’s discretion and in fact requires the Navy to transfer to an inactive status or the Retired Reserves a Ready Reservist who fails to fulfill the obligations of that category. But nowhere does the statute impose a time requirement for such a transfer. Gillan argues, however, that § 12642(b) must be read together with 10 U.S.C. § 10149, which requires the Navy to implement a system of “continuous screening,” and other Navy and Department of Defense regulations that speak of an annual “screening,” see BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL INSTRUCTION 1001.39A § 2102 (1992); 32 C.F.R. § 44.5(c)(1). When so read, they create, according to Gillan, a process in which the Navy conducts an annual screening of reservists’ status, followed by a mandatory immediate transfer to inactive status for those who have failed to maintain the requirements of an active reservist. But Gillan’s argument conflates the requirements of an annual “screening,” called for by Navy and Department of Defense regulations, with the obligation to “transfer” reservists who no longer qualify for active status, called for in 10 U.S.C. § 12642(b). Screening is certainly an understandable prerequisite to transfer. One would expect the Navy to identify those reservists who are eligible for transfer from active status or discharge from the Reserves. But it does not follow that the Navy’s “screening” process should be read into the “transfer” statute to require the Navy to transfer reservists immediately after screening. 1
Congress has determined that the Navy’s decision to transfer a reservist to an inactive status cannot be based solely on an individual’s performance. The Navy must consider the needs of the service as well. For example, 10 U.S.C. § 10149 directs the Secretary to provide a system of screening the Reserves so as to ensure that, among other things, there is a “proper balance of military skills,” 10 U.S.C. § 10149(a)(2), and “[tjhat except for those with military skills for which there is an overriding requirement, members having critical' civilian skills are not retained in
Gillan also asserts that the Navy erred when it failed to permit him to correct one grade on his 1990 fitness report based on his former commanding officer’s 1998 letter. The BCNR denied Gillan’s request because, “The reporting senior’s letter, some eight years after the fact, does not persuade the BCNR that a change was warranted. The Board notes that the Petitioner may ask the NPC [Naval Personnel Command] to file the letter in his record with the report to which it relates.” BCNR Decision at 4. Although the Navy could have undoubtedly offered a more detailed denial, “[a] reviewing court will uphold a decision of less than ideal clarity if the agency’s path may reasonably be discerned.”
Frizelle,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s grant of summary judgment is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
. The district court found that the Navy violated its own screening regulations because it could not explain the failure of the 1994 MDB to screen Gillan and therefore failed to "annually” screen Gillan.
Gillan,
