Opinion for the Court by Circuit Judge TATEL.
Graceba Total Communications, Inc., petitions for review of a Federal Communications Commission order rejecting, among other claims, the company’s constitutional challenge to a minority and gender preference rule employed in a license auction. Finding that the Commission erred in determining that Graeeba’s challenge to the rule was untimely, we remand the constitutional claim for further consideration.
I
In July 1994, the Federal Communications Commission conducted a live, open-outcry auction of licenses to provide interactive video data service (IVDS) in local telecommunications markets. Permitting two-way data transmission over the radio spectrum, IVDS technology supports such commercial applications as home banking and shopping. Under rules promulgated in May 1994, businesses owned by members of racial minorities or by women received a 25 percent “bidding credit” at the auction. In re Implementation of Section S09(j) of the Communication Act — Competitive Bidding, Fourth Report and Order, 9 F.C.C. Red. 2330, 2836-39 (1994); 47 C.F.R. § 95.816(d)(1) (1996). Although Graceba won the two licenses for which it competed, it did not qualify for a bidding credit because it was neither minority- nor woman-owned.
After the Commission announced the auction results and the recipients of bidding credits in August 1994, Graceba petitioned for reconsideration, arguing that various auction practices had artificially inflated license prices. In February 1995, the Commission granted Graceba its two licenses. While Graceba’s petition challenging the auction was still pending in June 1995, the Supreme Court decided
Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena,
In December 1995, the Commission denied both of Graceba’s petitions, along with those filed by other IVDS auction bidders. In re Interactive Video & Data Service (IVDS) Licenses —Various Requests by Auction Winners, 11 F.C.C. Red. 1282 (1995). With respect to the constitutional claim that Graceba raised in its Emergency Petition, the Commission explained:
To the extent Graceba now challenges the Commission’s [bidding credit] rule ..., we find that Graeeba’s challenge is an untimely petition for reconsideration. Petitions for reconsideration must be filed no later than 30 days after public notice of a Commission action. Public notice of the Commission’s adoption of the rule in question commenced on May 13, 1994. Thus, Graceba’s challenge should have been filed by June 13,1994. Graceba’s challenge was not filed until July 11, 1995. In addition, Graceba’s petition does not demonstrate why it requires financial assistance under our 25 percent bidding credit rule. For example, its petition contains no evidence that it has faced discriminatory financial barriers to entry into the telecommunications industry.
Id. at 1285 (footnote and citations omitted).
Renewing the arguments made in each of its petitions, Graceba now petitions this Court for review of the Commission’s order. Community Teleplay, Inc., and the Ad Hoe IVDS Coalition, representing a group of IVDS auction participants, intervened in support of Graceba’s constitutional challenge to the bidding credit rule. Because Community Teleplay and members of the Coalition have a petition still pending before the Commission raising an identical claim, however, they must await the conclusion of those proceedings before bringing their claims here.
See, e.g., BellSouth Corp. v. FCC,
II
The Commission’s primary reason for denying Graceba’s second petition — that Graceba did not file it within 30 days of the May 1994 promulgation of the bidding credit rule — cannot support the Commission’s order. Because “administrative rules and regulations are capable of continuing application,” limiting review of a rule to the period immediately following rulemaking “would effectively deny many parties ultimately affected by a rule an opportunity to question its validity.”
Functional Music, Inc. v. FCC,
The Commission now maintains that 47 U.S.C. § 405, which imposes a time limit on petitions for reconsideration, precluded its consideration of Graceba’s constitutional challenge because, although filed immediately after the Supreme Court decided
Ada-rand,
the petition was not brought within 30 days of any agency action, including public notice of the July 1994 auction results. However, not only does this reasoning appear nowhere in the Commission’s order,
see Burlington Truck Lines, Inc. v. United States,
We think the Commission exercised that discretion by going on to consider, though briefly, Graeeba’s claim that it was entitled to a 25 percent reduction in its license price. On that score, the Commission found that Graceba had failed to “demonstrate why it require[d] financial assistance under the 25 percent bidding credit rule.” In re Interactive Video Data Service (IVDS) Licenses, 11 F.C.C. Red. at 1285. But because nothing in the bidding credit rule requires recipients of bidding credits to make individualized showings of financial need or discrimination, see Fourth Report and Order, 9 F.C.C. Red. at 2337-39; 47 C.F.R. § 1.2110(b) (defining businesses eligible for bidding credit), the absence of evidence of such hardships in Graceba’s case, standing alone, cannot support the agency’s decision.
Claiming that the IVDS auction and the IVDS licence grants were final long before the Supreme Court decided
Adarand
and Graceba filed its constitutional claim, the Commission now argues that its rejection of Graceba’s second petition was “consistent with established principles of finality and ret-roactivity.” Respondent’s Br. at 25. Whatever the force of this reasoning,
compare Harper v. Virginia Dep’t of Taxation,
Because the Commission had a fair opportunity to consider Graceba’s constitutional challenge, and because it did consider whether Graceba was entitled to the relief sought, we have jurisdiction to decide the issue ourselves regardless of whether the underlying petition suffered from procedural defects unaddressed by the agency.
See Meredith,
Ill
We have considered Graeeba’s non-constitutional arguments concerning the FCC’s auction procedures, raised in its initial petition to the Commission, and find them without merit. Accordingly, the petition for review is granted in part and denied in part.
So ordered.
