Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
Floyd E. Lytes sued his former employer, the District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority, a/k/a WASA, alleging it refused to accommodate his disability and then terminated his employment, in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990(ADA). The district court granted summary judgment to the Authority because it concluded no reasonable jury could find Lytes was disabled when the alleged discrimination occurred. While Lytes’s appeal was pending, the ADA Amendments Act of 2008 became law. We hold the Amendments do not apply retroactively and, applying the pre-Amendments ADA, affirm the judgment of the district court because, based upon record evidence, no reasonable jury could find Lytes was disabled when he was refused accommodation and discharged.
I. Background
The pre-Amendments ADA protected a “qualified individual with a disability” from discrimination in the “terms, conditions, and privileges of employment,” 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a) (2000), including an employer’s refusal to “mak[e] reasonable accommodations” for an individual’s disability, id. § 12112(b)(5)(A). As relevant here, an individual was disabled if he had “a physical or mental impairment that substantially limit[ed] [him in] one or more ... major life activities [MLAs],” i.e., was actually disabled, or if he was “regarded as having such an impairment.” Id. § 12102(2)(A) & (C).
In May 2000, Lytes, a plant operator, injured his back while at work. He was diagnosed with chronic degenerative disc disease and underwent corrective surgery. Lytes stopped working around December 2000, at which time he began receiving workers’ compensation. Two months later he had a heart attack and underwent angioplasty, followed in June 2002 by spinal fusion surgery designed to relieve pain in his back and legs.
A physician who twice examined Lytes at the request of the Authority’s workers’ compensation insurance carrier disagreed with Lytes’s orthopedic surgeon, Dr. James Tozzi, regarding Lytes’s physical capabilities. Accordingly, the WASA asked Dr. Tozzi to authorize a functional capacity evaluation (FCE). The FCE was done in February 2003 and indicated Lytes had “mild restricted standing and walking tolerances” and limitations in “squatting, bending, ladder climbing, and overhead reaching.” These functional deficits placed Lytes “at the sedentary-light physical demand level with ... a workplace tolerance of 8 hours.”
Dr. Tozzi noted progressive improvement in Lytes’s condition after the FCE. In September 2003 he upgraded Lytes to light duty with limitations imposed “primarily to avoid recurrent injury” to Lytes’s spine. The next day Lytes met with the Authority’s risk manager, who told him light duty was unavailable and encouraged him to continue to collect workers’ compensation, which he did.
In a December 2003 letter the WASA informed Lytes he was medically disqualified from returning as a plant operator and had 60 days to find a suitable position at the Authority. When Lytes was unable to do so, the WASA terminated his employment in a March 2004 letter. Lytes *939 filed a charge of disability discrimination, which the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission dismissed. Thereafter Lytes, who was then represented by counsel, sued the Authority, claiming violations of the ADA, several other statutes, and the WASA’s collective bargaining agreement, and requested retrospective relief, including compensatory damages and back pay.
Only Lytes’s ADA claim is at issue in this appeal. In the district court the Authority moved for summary judgment on that claim, arguing no reasonable jury could find Lytes was disabled when he was refused accommodation and discharged. Lytes focused his response upon the argument that the Authority’s risk manager perceived him to be disabled, but also alleged, without pointing to any evidence in the record, he was actually disabled because of restrictions on bending, “carrying] heavy weights,” reaching and twisting, and mowing the lawn “for long periods.” The district court rejected Lytes’s “ ‘perceived disability’ theory” and held the work restriction and limitations on household chores could not support a finding that Lytes was actually disabled.
See
Lytes appealed pro se. This court appointed Steven H. Goldblatt, Director of the Appellate Litigation Program at Georgetown University Law Center, as amicus curiae to support his position, and Lytes filed a letter stating he would rely upon the submissions of the amicus.
On September 25, 2008 the Congress enacted the ADA Amendments Act of 2008 (ADAA) in order to “reinstat[e] a broad scope of protection” under the ADA and to “reject” the holdings in
Toyota Motor Mfg., Ky. v. Williams,
II. Analysis
Citing the ADAA, the amicus challenges only the district court’s holding Lytes was not actually disabled. We review the judgment of the district court
de novo, see Taylor v. Small,
A. Retroactivity
In
Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
The amicus does not argue the Congress clearly answered the retroactivity question. Instead, he contends the Congress left to the courts the task of distinguishing between provisions of the ADAA that “alter settled law,” and therefore are subject to the presumption against retroactivity, and those that merely clarify the law and therefore guide our interpretation of the ADA.
See Cookeville Reg’l Med. Ctr. v. Leavitt,
The Authority argues the Congress, by delaying the effective date of the statute, mandated purely prospective application of the ADAA.
See id.
§ 8,
We agree with the Authority’s principal point: By delaying the effective date of the ADAA, the Congress clearly indicated the statute would apply only from January 1, 2009 forward. If the Congress intended merely to “clarify” the ADA, then its decision to delay the effective date would make no sense; it would needlessly have left the ADA unclear for the more than three months between enactment of the ADAA on September 25, 2008 and its going into effect on January 1, 2009. Nothing on the face of the statute indicates the Congress intended this peculiar scenario. If, in contrast, the Congress intended the Amendments to have a purely prospective effect, then its decision to delay the effective date of the ADAA makes sense. Indeed, we can imagine no reason for the Congress to have delayed the effective date other than to give fair warning of the Amendments to affected parties and to protect settled expectations. That is why the Congress delayed the effective date of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA) with respect “to certain benefit programs” at the same time it overruled
General Electric Co. v. Gilbert,
*941
Without drawing our attention to any particular case, the amicus contended at oral argument that precedent precludes ending the inquiry at the first step of the
Landgmf
analysis. Having surveyed the decisions of the Supreme Court, we see that, although the Congress’s decision to delay the effective date of a statute generally indicates it intends prospective only effect, when an alternative and time-neutral explanation of the delay appears on the face of the statute, a court indeed must proceed to the second step, as the Supreme Court has twice done when determining the temporal reach of provisions of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996(IRA).
See Fernandez-Vargas,
A statute' also may be ambiguous if, notwithstanding a delayed effective date, it has a provision that seems to call for its retroactive application.
See Princz v. Fed. Republic of Germany,
Even if the delayed effective date were not dispositive in this case, the ADAA would be subject to the presumption against retroactivity. In repudiating the rule of construction described in
Toyota
and adding to the ADA a list of illustrative
*942
MLAs, ADAA § 4(a),
B. Merits
Under the law prior to its amendment, we observed that the “ADA promotes equal opportunity for the disabled, but only after [the] ... ‘demanding standard’ [of Toyota] is met.”
Singh v. George Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. & Health Scis.,
There is no dispute that Lytes had a physical impairment at the relevant time. The amicus maintains Lytes’s condition substantially limited him in the already-recognized MLA of performing manual tasks,
see Toyota,
Careful daily living is to ensure there will be no further damage to his back area. The pain is there but it is manageable. However, the restrictions in not being able to bend consistently, carry heavy weights, reach or twist not only applies to any work restrictions, but also restriction on life chores. He can not or should not mow the lawn for long periods, no squatting or bending to repair any pipes at home. He has become adapt in getting dressed so as not bend. He has attempted to improve his condition by daily walks, and drives but not long distances.
Even assuming these unadorned' allegations were sufficient to preserve the amicus’s arguments, we may still affirm the judgment of the district court.
See Tax Analysts v. IRS,
Upon that assumption, the amicus still must show, as he acknowledges, that Lytes was substantially limited, when compared to an average person, because his condition either prevented him from or significantly restricted him in lifting, bending, performing manual tasks, or working.
See
*943
Toyota,
In opposing the Authority’s motion for summary judgment, Lytes alleged only that he was “restriet[ed] in not being able to bend consistently, carry heavy weights, reach or twist.” The amicus goes beyond that allegation and points to record evidence that he argues creates a triable issue. The Authority argues Lytes’s failure to point the district court to any evidence is fatal to the amicus’s argument on appeal.
See Potter v. District of Columbia,
Under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the Authority had “the initial responsibility of informing the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions” of the record it “believe[d] demonstrate^ the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Although we have cautioned that “treating an issue as conceded for failure to respond fully to a motion for summary judgment ‘should only be applied to egregious conduct,’ ”
Burke v. Gould,
The amicus relies primarily upon the results of the February 2003 FCE and secondarily upon Lytes’s deposition, in which he asserted he could not, in September 2003, shower, put on his shoes, or use the toilet “without assistance.” In the district court, however, Lytes impugned the FCE by (1) alleging he “continued to improve” between February 2003 and September 2003, when he was refused accommodation; (2) arguing “the use of the FCE is extremely suspect”; and (3) questioning whether it would be admissible at trial. Although the amicus strives to deny Lytes repudiated the FCE in the district court, it is clear Lytes did just that, which exceeds the default of the nonmovant in
Burke. See id.
at 516. The amicus may not now reverse course on Lytes’s behalf.
Cf. United States v. Ginyard,
Therefore, like the district court we consider only the evidence of Lytes’s condition available when the Authority refused to return him to light duty and terminated his employment in March 2004.
See
Under the “demanding standard” of
Toyota,
Finally, with respect to working, in its motion for summary judgment the Authority cited
Duncan,
III. Conclusion
By enacting the ADAA, the Congress broadened the class of persons entitled to protection under the ADA. Because the Congress delayed the effective date of the ADAA, we presume, in the absence of any legislative indication to the contrary, that it does not apply retrospectively to Lytes’s case. Applying the pre-Amendments ADA, we hold Lytes failed to meet his burden of identifying record evidence creating a triable issue as to whether he was actually disabled as that standard was described in Toyota.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
We need not and therefore do not resolve the parties' disputes over the timeliness of Lytes's EEOC charge,
see Zipes v. Trans World Airlines,
