Appellant Don A. Kemp appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of appellees on his claims for violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”) and the Rehabilitation Act (“RA”) arising from the termination of employment as a federal court security officer. Specifically, the district court held that Kemp failed to show a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether he has a “disability,” as that term is defined under the ADA. Finding no error, we affirm.
I.
Appellant Don A. Kemp was discharged from his position as a court security officer (“CSO”) with the United States Marshals Service (“USMS”) after failing to meet the minimum unaided hearing requirement established for CSOs. Kemp, who has worked in the military and in law enforcement for over thirty years, began wearing a hearing aid in the early 1980s and added a second aid in 1989. It is undisputed that he has no problems hearing so long as he wears his aids. In 2000, while working as a police officer, Kemp inquired about a position as a CSO with AKAL Security, Inc. (“AKAL”), a private firm that contracts with USMS to provide security at a federal courthouse in Louisiana. When he *234 applied for the position, Kemp informed AKAL that he wore hearing aids to compensate for his hearing loss, but AKAL did not indicate that this circumstance would cause any problems. AKAL later offered Kemp a job as a CSO contingent upon his successful passage of a medical examination required by USMS for all CSOs.
Kemp began working at the courthouse in February 2001 after undergoing an initial medical examination. Shortly thereafter, USMS notified him that the results of that exam indicated that his unaided hearing did not meet the minimum standard for the CSO position. Kemp underwent further testing in April at USMS’s direction, but USMS regulations prohibited him from using his hearing aids during the tests. In July 2001, USMS informed AKAL that Kemp did not meet USMS medical qualifications for minimum unaided hearing and that his credentials as a CSO would be immediately revoked on that basis. AKAL consequently terminated Kemp, but it assisted him in appealing the disqualification decision, writing a letter to USMS requesting a reconsideration of the decision to revoke Kemp’s credentials and seeking confirmation that his medical condition had been individually assessed. Despite those efforts, USMS did not reinstate his credentials.
Following his termination, Kemp filed suit against the defendants alleging violations of the ADA, the RA, and Louisiana anti-discrimination law. He also claimed that he had been terminated in violation of his equal protection and due process rights. The district court granted AKAL’s summary judgment motion on all claims in November 2008, and it entered summary judgment in favor of the government on all claims in March 2009. Kemp appeals the grants of summary judgment as to his ADA and RA claims only. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
This court reviews a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. LeMaire v. La. Dep’t of Transp. & Dev.,
III.
Kemp argues that by terminating his employment due to his failure to meet USMS’s established unaided hearing requirement, AKAL violated the ADA, and USMS violated the RA. Both of these statutes prohibit employment discrimination against qualified individuals with disabilities, but the statutes govern different entities: the ADA applies only to public entities, including private employers, 42 U.S.C. § 12131(1), whereas the RA prohibits discrimination in federally-funded programs and activities, 29 U.S.C. § 794(a). The RA and the ADA are judged under the same legal standards, and the same remedies are available under both Acts.
See Delano-Pyle v. Victorta County, Tex.,
The ADA provides that no covered employer shall “discriminate against a qualified individual with a disability because of the disability of such individual in regard to ... discharge of employees.” 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a). To prevail on his ADA and RA claims, Kemp must establish that (1) he is disabled within the meaning of the ADA, (2) he is qualified and able to perform the essential functions of his job, and (3) his employer fired him because of his disability.
See Talk v. Delta Airlines, Inc.,
Kemp disputes the district court’s holding that he failed to meet the “threshold requirement” of showing that he is disabled under the terms of the ADA.
Rogers v. Int’l Marine Terminals, Inc.,
A.
Kemp first challenges the district court’s conclusion that, because his hearing impairment is not substantially limiting when it is mitigated through Kemp’s use of his electronic hearing aid, he did not raise a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether he had “a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities of such individual.” 42 U.S.C. § 12102(l)(a). In reaching this holding, the district court relied on the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Sutton v. United Air Lines, Inc.
and
Murphy v. United Parcel Service, Inc.,
which held that courts must take into account the benefit of any impairment-mitigating devices that the plaintiff uses in determining whether he is disabled within the meaning of the ADA.
See Sutton,
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According to Kemp, the ADAAA was enacted specifically for the purpose of remedying the catch-22 created by the
Sutton
decision in which an employer may evaluate an employee’s capabilities without regard to mitigating devices, but the use of such devices is nevertheless considered when the court determines whether that employee is “disabled” under the terms of the ADA. Kemp is correct that the ADAAA sought to supersede
Sutton.
The “Findings and Purposes” section of the Act explained that Congress considered “the holdings of the Supreme Court in
Sutton v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
Kemp concedes that he filed his lawsuit before the ADAAA became effecfive, but he urges us to find that the ADAAA may be applied retroactively such that we may consider whether Kemp was disabled in a major life activity without regard to the mitigating effects of his hearing aids. However, Kemp relegated this argument to a footnote in his brief, and he has provided no support for his contention that the ADAAA could be applied in such a manner. Regardless, his argument is foreclosed by our decision in
Carmona v. Southwest Airlines,
in which we declined to “find that Congress intended the ADAAA to apply retroactively.”
B.
Kemp also disputes the district court’s conclusion that he failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether he is “regarded as having” an
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impairment that substantially limits a major life activity. 42 U.S.C. § 12102(1)(C). The ADA’s definition of “disability” permits suits “by plaintiffs who, though not actually disabled per § 12102(2)(A), are nonetheless ‘regarded as having such an impairment.’ ”
Gowesky v. Singing River Hosp. Sys.,
We first consider Kemp’s argument that he produced evidence that AKAL and USMS regarded him to be substantially limited in the life activity of hearing, and that he was ultimately terminated based on this perception. To establish that he was fired as a result of a perceived “substantial limitation,” Kemp was required to produce evidence that his employer regarded him as being “[ujnable to perform a major life activity that the average person in the general population can perform; or [significantly restricted as to the condition, manner, or duration under which an individual can perform a particular major life activity as compared to the condition, manner, or duration under which the average person in the general population can perform that same major life activity.”
Toyota Motor Mfg., Ky., Inc. v. Williams,
Nothing in the record supports the notion that AKAL believed Kemp to be significantly restricted in his ability to hear when he was wearing his hearing aids, and the undisputed evidence suggests quite the opposite. AKAL was aware of his hearing impairment and his use of hearing aids when it initially offered him the CSO position. Even after he failed the unaided hearing test, AKAL continued to consider him fully capable of hearing on a functional basis, as it wrote to USMS on his behalf to request a reconsideration of USMS’s disqualification decision. Kemp likewise has failed to produce evidence suggesting that USMS considered him to be substantially limited in his ability to hear when he was wearing his hearing aids. He claims that USMS’s requirement for unaided hearing is itself evidence of a perception that persons who require the use of hearing aids are “substantially limited” in their ability to hear, but we find that this requirement alone does not create a fact issue as to whether USMS perceived him as substantially limited in the life activity of hearing. Similarly, the Ninth Circuit has considered whether a “disqualification under USMS’s hearing standards” constitutes evidence that USMS regarded a hearing-impaired CSO as substantially limited in her ability to hear and reached the same conclusion: a CSO’s “failure to meet the USMS hearing
*238
standards does not raise a genuine issue of material fact that the USMS regarded her, as disabled.”
Walton v. U.S. Marshals Serv.,
His claim that AKAL and USMS regarded him as substantially limited in the major life activity of working fares no better. The Supreme Court has held that “[wjhen the major life activity under consideration is that of working, the statutory phrase ‘substantially limits’ requires, at a minimum, that [Kemp] allege [he is] unable to work in a broad class of jobs.”
Sutton,
free to decide that physical characteristics or medical conditions that do not rise to the level of an impairment — such as one’s height, build, or singing voice— are preferable to others, just as it is free to decide that some limiting, but not substantially limiting, impairments make individuals less than ideally suited for a job.
Id. at 490-91. Thus, to prevail, Kemp must prove that he was regarded as “significantly restricted in the ability to perform either a class of jobs or a broad range of jobs in various classes as compared to the average person having comparable training skills and abilities.” Id. at 491 (emphasis added).
Kemp has failed to submit evidence establishing that either AKAL or USMS believed him to be limited to such a great extent. As mentioned above, the record reflects that AKAL did not even consider him to be substantially limited in his ability to work as a CSO, as it urged USMS to reinstate him even after USMS determined that he could not meet the unaided hearing requirement.
Nor is there any evidence suggesting that USMS regarded him as being significantly restricted in his ability to perform other government and law enforcement jobs. Kemp posits that he submitted competent summary judgment evidence by showing that USMS utilizes, an unaided hearing requirement — a requirement that he alleges eliminates him from eligibility for all government law enforcement jobs, not just the -job of CSO, thereby substantially limiting him in his major life activity of working. USMS determined only that his unaided hearing deficiency disqualified him from the position of CSO, but “[t]he inability to perform a single, particular job does not constitute a substantial limitation in the major life activity of working.”
Dutcher v. Ingalls Shipbuilding,
Accordingly, we hold that Kemp has failed to produce evidence of “a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more [of his] major life activities” or that he is “regarded as having such an impairment,” and we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the appellees. See 42 U.S.C. § 12102(1)(A), (C). AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Kemp alternatively argues that, even assuming that
Sutton
governs his claim,
Sutton
does not "exempt from liability” an employer that bans the use of a mitigating device in determining whether an employee meets occupation requirements. We disagree. The ADA prohibits discrimination only against those individuals who can show that they are "disabled,” as that term is defined in the ADA.
See Rogers,
. We disagree with Kemp's assertion that our decision in
Rodriguez v. ConAgra Grocery Products Co.,
requires us to hold that the unaided hearing requirement necessarily means Kemp’s employer considered him to be incapable of working in other law enforcement or government jobs.
See Rodriguez,
