Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
The principal issue in these appeals is whether the statutory ten-month period for final action on applications for correction of Coast Guard records is directory or mandatory. 1 The Secretary of Transportation appeals from the grants of summary judgment to appellees Hyman G. Gottlieb and Robert L. Gazlay, on the ground that, the district courts disregarded well-settled law in ruling that the statutory period was mandatory and divested the Secretary of authority to act after its expiration. The Secretary thus maintains the district courts erred in concluding that upon the expiration of the statutory period, the recommended decisions of the Coast Guard Board for the Correction of Military Records, which would usually require the Secretary’s approval, automatically became the final agency decisions. The Secretary also contends that the district court erred in ruling that Gazlay was denied due process when he was not afforded the opportunity to examine and respond to the Board’s recommended decision that was forwarded to the Secretary for approval. We hold that the ten-month period is directory and that Gazlay was not denied due process. Accordingly, we reverse.
I.
From 1987 through 1989, Gazlay was a lieutenant commander in the Coast Guard under the supervision of Commander J.R. Sproat. Sproat filed two Officer Evaluation *732 Reports on Gazlay, giving him high but not exceptional marks. Gazlay was passed over for promotion to commander in 1989 and 1990. In 1989, Sproat informed his superior that his evaluation reports were invalid and submitted replacement reports that were more complimentary to Gazlay. On May 23, 1990, Gazlay filed an application requesting the Board for Correction of Military Records to authorize the replacement of the earlier reports. The Board agreed that Gazlay was entitled to substantially the relief he requested, and, on March 13, 1991, forwarded its recommendation to the Secretary of Transportation for approval. 2 After receiving the Secretary’s disapproving comments, the Board issued a decision, dated July 26,1991, denying Gazlay’s application but providing that the replacement reports would be added to his file.
Gazlay filed suit against the Secretary, requesting the relief specified in the Board’s initial recommended decision. The district court granted Gazlay’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that the Secretary lacks statutory authority to act after the expiration of ten months, and, therefore, when the Board acts within ten months, its recommended decision becomes the final agency decision once ten months have passed, regardless of subsequent action by the Secretary.
Gazlay v. Busey,
Gottlieb, in turn, benefitted from the district court’s opinion in Gazlay’s case. Gott-lieb entered the Coast Guard in 1919 and attained the permanent grade of chief pay clerk. He received temporary appointments as lieutenant and lieutenant commander, but later reverted to the rank of chief pay clerk. In 1947 he retired due to a disability. A retirement board found that the highest rank of service in which Gottlieb performed satisfactorily was chief pay clerk. Gottlieb petitioned the Board to correct his records to reflect his service as a lieutenant commander. In 1949, the Board granted part of the requested relief by changing his record to reflect the rank of lieutenant. Gottlieb’s requests for reconsideration in 1949, 1950, 1961, and 1962 were unavailing. On July 31, 1990, Gottlieb again requested reconsideration, and on August 6, 1991, the Board forwarded to the Secretary for approval its recommended decision that the 1949 ruling was erroneous and that Gottlieb should be restored to the rank of retired lieutenant commander, retroactive to 1947. After the Secretary disapproved the Board’s recommended decision and denied Gottlieb’s request for reconsideration, Gottlieb filed- suit against the Secretary. Relying on
Gazlay v. Busey,
II.
The Secretary appeals from the judgments for appellees on the ground that the law is clear that the ten-month deadline must be viewed as directory where a remedy to compel agency action already exists and Congress has not expressly indicated the consequences of missing the deadline. It follows, he argues, that the district courts erred in ruling that the Board’s recommended decision was the final agency decision. Appel-lees respond that although a congressional deadline, standing alone, does not necessarily divest an agency of power to act after the deadline has passed, the mandatory nature of the ten-month period is clear from its language, context, and legislative history, and that the appropriate remedy for its violation is for the Board’s recommended decision to become final. The court reviews the grant of summary judgment
de novo. Tao v. Freeh,
*733 Under 10 U.S.C. § 1552(a)(1) (Supp. V 1993), the Secretary is authorized to correct Coast Guard military records. Corrections are to be made pursuant to procedures established by the Secretary. Id. § 1552(a)(3). By regulation, the Secretary establishеd the Board to make final decisions in some areas and recommended decisions in others. 33 C.F.R. § 52.35-15 (1990); id. § 52.64 (1991). The Secretary authorized the Board to take final action when the Board unanimously denies applications for correction of Coast Guard records. Id. § 52.35-15(a)(l) (1990); id. § 52.64(a)(1) (1991). In limited circumstances not relevant here, the Board may also grant affirmative relief. See id. § 52.35 — 15(a)(2)—(3) (1990); id. § 52.64(a)(2)-(3) (1991). In all other circumstances, the Board must “forward the record of its proceedings to the Secretary for approval, disapproval, or return for additional consideration.” Id. § 52.35-15(b) (1990); id. § 52.64(b) (1991).
Section 212 of the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 1989 directed the Secretary to amend the regulations governing the Board’s procedures “to ensure ... that final action on the application is taken within 10 months of its receipt.” 3 Section 212 also directed the Secretary to provide the Board with sufficient staff to ensure compliance with the ten-month period. Id. Thereafter, the Secretary promulgated a regulation providing that “[f]inal action on an application for correction of a military record shall be taken within 10 months after all the elements of a complete application ... have been received by the Board.” 33 C.F.R. § 52.68 (1991).
It is well settled, as the Secretary argues in his brief, that “where Congress has placed an agency under a legal obligation to render a decision within a stated time period but has not set forth the consequences of exceeding that period, ordinarily the time period is directory rather than mandatory, and an agency will not lose jurisdiction over the matter upon еxpiration of that period.” The Supreme Court’s decision in
Brock v. Pierce County,
First, Congress did not specify in § 212 any consequences for missing the ten-month deadline; neither the statute imposing the deadline nor the implementing regulations suggest that failure to comply with the deadline would diminish the authority of the Secretary. Unlike the usual statute of limitations which governs the filing of a complаint, § 212 requires resolution of the entire dispute within the limitation period. This resolution “is a more substantial task than filing a complaint, and the Secretary’s ability to complete it within [ten months] is subject to factors beyond his control. There is less reason, therefore, to believe that Congress intended such drastic consequences to follow
*734
from the Secretary’s failure to meet the [ten-month] deadline.”
Brock v. Pierce County,
Congressional intent that the ten-month deadline be directory rather than mandatory is suggested as well by the fact that the language used in § 212 has been used elsewhere by Congress when it is clear that no sanction for noncompliance was intended.
4
Indeed, even when Congress has employed stronger language, this court has repeatedly concluded that missing a statutory deadline does not divest an agency of authority over a case or issue.
See Linemaster Switch Corp. v. EPA,
Second, the legislative history on which the district courts rely to find a mandatory time period divesting the Secretary of authority to act is unpersuasive. The district courts were aware of the well-settled law against assuming that Congress intended an agency to lose its power to act, but concluded that appellees’ cases fell within an exception under which a statutory deadline for agency action can bar later action even though the consequence is not stated in the statute.
Gazlay v. Busey,
The district court pointed to the fact that § 212 was enacted following a stipulated settlеment in
Moore v. Board for Correction of Military Records of the Coast Guard,
Civ. No. 87-2689 (D.D.C. April 29,1988), in which the Coast Guard agreed to take measures to ensure expedited resolution of applications.
Gazlay v. Busey,
We agree with the district court that there is strong evidence that Congress was concerned about the lengthy delays in processing Coast Guard applications. Section 212 was, as the district court noted, targeted specifically to the Coast Guard, to the exclusion of all other services. Id. at 31. The legislative history makes clear that Congress viewed timely determinations by the Board as important in preventing the unjust premature ending of Coast Guard careers. 6
But it is clear as well that Congress’ ultimate concern was that appropriate relief be provided. Both of § 212’s directives — to assure adequate staffing for processing applications and to render decisions within ten months — were undoubtedly designed “to spur the Secretary to action, not to limit the scope of his authority.”
Brock v. Pierce County,
The record suggests at least one salient reason why Congress avoided mandating such a result. The Secretary advised Congress that some flexibility in timing was required to ensure the just and fair handling of eases. See Report of the Department of Transportation on the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 1993, H.R.Rep. No. 146, 103d Cоng., 1st Sess. 28 (1993) (“Some cases simply take longer than others because they involve intricate or difficult legal and factual issues.”). Congress could readily appreciate that stripping the Secretary of authority to act after ten months could deny relief to deserving applicants. Under such a regime, if a non-unanimous Board had recommended denial of an application and the Secretary was unable to act because ten months had expired, the applicant would be disadvantaged by a rule making the Board’s recommended decision final. Similarly, deeming all applications to be granted after ten *736 months could result in adverse consequences for the government, including a flood of applications that would clog the system. In view of the complexities likely to be presented in individual cases and the competing interests at stake, Congress understandably required the Secretary to act promptly, but also declined to dictate what would happen if the Secretary faded to do so.
The Supreme Court has considered instances in which Congress had comparably strong reasons for placing similar time limitations on agencies and expecting compliance.
See, e.g., James Daniel Good Real Property,
— U.S. —,
Even were the legislative history more favorable to appellees’ position that Congress intended to strip the Secretary of authority to act after expiration of the ten-month period, the district courts’ remedy — making the Board’s recommended decisions the agency’s final decisions — does not necessarily follow. The statutory and regulatory scheme requires the Secretary to make decisions granting affirmative relief such as appellees requested.
8
The Board’s decisions are final decisions only in those areas where the Secretary has delegated such authority to it.
See
33 C.F.R. 52.64(a) (1993).
9
Ail of the Board’s actions in other areas are recommended decisions for the Secretary’s approval and labeled as such in the Board’s memorandum of transmittal.
10
Thus, the failure of the Secretary to act timely does not automatically transform the Board’s recommended deсision into the Secretary’s final decision.
*737
Consequently, even if Congress intended the ten-month period to be mandatory, Congress has not indicated that the courts should recast this regulatory scheme and convert the Board’s limited authority into final authority, when the less drastic remedy of a court order compelling agency action exists.
See In re Barr,
Accordingly, we hold that the district courts erred in interpreting § 212 to impose a deadline beyond which the Board’s latest recommended decision becomes the final agency decision.
III.
The Sеcretary also contends that the district court erred in ruling in Gazlay’s case that “[t]he [Secretary’s] review was also defective because Gazlay was not afforded any opportunity to examine and make a submission in light of the lower body’s determination.”
Gazlay v. Busey,
Gazlay maintains, however, that regardless of the applicability of thе APA, the failure of the Secretary to disclose the Board’s initial recommended decision and to allow comment on it was a denial of due process in violation of the Fifth Amendment. He relies primarily on
Koniag
and
Morgan v. United States,
Accordingly, we reverse the grants of summary judgment to appellees.
Notes
. Section 212 of the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 1989, Pub.L. 101-225, 103 Stat. 1908, 1914 (1989) (codified at 10 U.S.C. § 1552 note (Supp. V 1993)), provides:
Not later than 6 months after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Transportation shall — '
(1) amend part 52 of title 33, Code of Federal Regulations, governing the proceedings of the board established by the Secretary under section 1552 of title 10, United States Code, to ensure that a complete application for correction of military records is processed expeditiously and that final action on the application is taken within 10 months of its receipt; and
(2) appoint and maintain a permanent staff, and a panel of civilian officers or employees to sеrve as members of the board, which are adequate to ensure compliance with paragraph (1) of this subsection.
. To the extent that the Secretary has not authorized the Board to exercise final authority, see 33 C.F.R. 52.64 (1993), the Secretary has delegated the authority to approve or disapprove the Board's recommended decisions to the Deputy General Counsel. 49 C.F.R. 1.57(e) (1993). For purposes of these appeals, we refer to the Secretary as the final decision maker under the statute.
. See supra note 1.
. See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. § 1701r-l(b)(l) (1988) ("Not later thаn the expiration of the twelvemonth period following November 30, 1983, the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and the Secretary of Agriculture shall each issue such regulations as may be necessary to ensure ... attaining the goal of providing decent, safe, and sanitary housing for the elderly or handicapped.”); 49 U.S.C. app. § 1374 note (1988) ("Within one hundred and twenty days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Transportation shall promulgate regulations to ensure non-discriminatoiy treatment of qualifiеd handicapped individuals consistent with safe carriage of all passengers on air carriers.”).
. Many statutes do specify such consequences. See, e.g., 25 U.S.C. § 2710(e) (1988) (if Chairman of the National Indian Gaming Commission fails to act on a request for approval of a tribal gaming ordinance within 90 days of its submission, the ordinance "shall be considered to have been approved”); id. § 2710(d)(8)(C) (if Secretary fails to disapprove state-tribal compact within 45 days, "the compact shall be considered to have been approved”); see also 15 U.S.C. § 3416(a)(2) (1988) (failure to act timely treated as denial of aрplication); 16 U.S.C. § S44e(b)(3)(A) & (C) (1988) (failure to act timely treated as approval of submitted ordinance); 22 U.S.C. § 4113(f)(3) (1988) (same, regarding agreement); 42 U.S.C. 1396n(h) (1988) (same, regarding request).
. The House Report on the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 1989 states that:
[Lengthy delays] are problematic because Coast Guard members often are not aware that there is a significant problem with their military record until they are passed over for promotion because of it. If a member's appeal is not acted on within a year[,] the officer will likely be passed over for promotion again. In many cases this will mean an end to the officer’s Coast Guard career.
H.R.Rep. No. 227, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. 33 (1989), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News, p. 1394.
. In the 103d Congress, the House of Representatives passed, but Congress did not enact, a provision explicitly providing that the ten-month period is mandatory and that upon its expiration without action by the Secretary, the Board's recommended decision becomes the final agency decision.
See
§ 204(a) of H.R. 2150, a bill to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 1994 for the U.S. Coast Guard, 103d Cong., 1st Sess. (1993), 139 Cong.Rec. H5542 (daily ed. July 30, 1993). Because this provision was not enacted into law, it is impossible to draw any conclusions from it or the House Committee report.
See Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
.
Miller v. Lehman,
. The cases cited in note 8,
supra,
and this regulation dispose of аppellees contention that 10 U.S.C. § 1552 does not authorize the Secretary to issue a final decision because, under the statute, "corrections shall be made by the Secretary acting through boards of civilians.”
See Miller v. Lehman,
.The Board’s initial proposed decisions in ap-pellees' cases included the heading on the first page: "FINAL DECISION." However, by covering memorandum they were forwarded to the Secretary as "recommended decision[s]” and were undated. On the last page of each decision, a space was designated for the Secretary's signature beneath the word “APPROVED”; adjacent to the line for the Secretary’s signature was a line for the date to be added. By contrast, when the Board renders final decisions pursuant to delegated authority from the Secretary, the Board’s decision is dated and there is no place for the Secretary's signature.
. The court appreciates the parties’ submission of supplemental briefs on the due process issue in response to the court’s request.
. Gazlay’s contention that the Board’s final decision was arbitrary because it was made solely to avoid establishing a precedent that would result in a flood of applications to the Board is unpersuasive.
See Gazlay v. Busey,
