Appellants, Valencia Mills and a class of individuals composed of all black children enrolled in the Dekalb County School System and their parents and legal guardians (collectively, appellants), appeal the district court’s order concerning attorney’s fees for work performed on various issues during the final years of this litigation. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Appellee, the Dekalb County Board of Education (the DCBE), operates the Dekalb County School System (the DCSS).
1
Historically, in accordance with state law and its own policies, the DCSS conducted a segregated system of education with separate schools for black and white school children. Despite the order of the Supreme Court in
Brown v. Board of Education,
In response to appellants’ seeking additional relief in 1983, the district court held that the DCSS had attained unitary status. The appellants appealed to this court, and we reversed, holding, among other things, that the district court had improperly declared the DCSS to be a unitary system without first notifying appellants and conducting a hearing on that issue.
Pitts v. Freeman,
In July 1989, appellants filed motions objecting to the DCSS’s methods of equalizing teacher resources between black and white schools. At that time, two groups of teachers, who also protested these methods, moved to intervene. The district court denied them intervention, and they appealed to this court. We affirmed the district court, and appellants received costs from the attempted intervenors.
Pitts v. Freeman,
In October 1989, this court held that the DCSS had not achieved unitary status. We agreed with the district court’s conclusion that the DCSS had not fulfilled its obligations with respect to faculty and staff assignments, but reversed the court’s decision that the schools were unitary in the area of student assignments. This court also rejected the DCSS’s argument with respect to the distribution of educational resources.
Pitts v. Freeman,
Also in March 1990, a group of parents of and on behalf of black children in the school system moved to intervene in the remedial phases of this action (the intervenors). Specifically, the intervenors believed that the appellants’ advocacy of large-scale involuntary busing to achieve strict racial quotas sacrificed the quality of education that the children would receive. In response, the DCSS filed a motion neither opposing nor *731 supporting the motion to intervene. The DCSS interpreted the proposed intervention as a challenge to the adequacy of the class and wanted the court to ensure that the class was sufficiently represented so that the results of any further proceedings would be binding on the entire class. In April 1990, the DCSS filed an additional motion, requesting a hearing to determine the issue of class adequacy. Appellants, however, opposed the intervention, arguing that no intervention as a matter of right existed in class action school desegregation cases and that the intervenors should not be granted permissive intervention. Appellants asserted, among other things, that the intervenors did not represent an identifiable class or subclass, the intervention attempt was untimely, and the current class adequately represented the interests of the intervenors. The court held a hearing on this and related issues and, in December 1990, concluded that appellants and their counsel were not inadequate per se and thus should not be replaced. The court, however, did allow the parents to intervene because of the appellants’ limited view of the potential remedies in this case. Appellants appealed this interlocutory order, and the intervenors cross-appealed. This court, however, dismissed both appeals for lack of jurisdiction. Mills v. Freeman, No. 91-8065 (11th Cir. June 13, 1991) (order dismissing appeal and cross-appeal).
In January 1991, appellants filed a second fee petition pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988, requesting attorney’s fees and costs for the district court’s December 1990 order establishing the adequacy of class representation and class counsel (the second fee petition). The DCSS opposed the petition on grounds including (1) that appellants had not prevailed on the merits, (2) the legal relationship between appellants and the DCSS had not changed to appellants’ advantage and (3) the dispute was among class members. Noting that the appellants themselves had appealed the December 1990 order to this court, and that the Supreme Court had granted the DCSS’s writ of certiorari concerning this court’s reversal of the June 1988 order in Pitts I, the district court deferred ruling on the second fee petition until this court and the Supreme Court decided the matters pending before them.
In March 1992, the Supreme Court reversed this court’s decision in
Pitts I
and held that the district court had the authority to relinquish its supervision and control over the school system in incremental stages before unitariness had been achieved in every area of school operations.
Freeman v. Pitts,
On May 14,1993, Borowski moved to withdraw and filed her third fee petition for all of the services she and her law firm provided from November 1988 through May 1993, totaling $334,266.75 in fees and $11,239.32 in costs. Appellants argued that because they were the prevailing parties in the 1969 litigation, they would continue to be the prevailing parties until the DCSS was finally dismissed in its entirety from the court’s supervision. Appellants included a monthly summary of hours expended and costs incurred, but not a detailed accounting because such accounting would reveal work product and attorney-client privileged matters. The DCSS filed a response, opposing appellants’ request for attorney’s fees and costs. The DCSS asserted, among other things, that (1) Borowski’s activities did not generate any substantial benefits for the class, and thus the appellants had not achieved the requisite degree of success to obtain a fee award; (2) appellants had been paid fees and costs in connection with the June 1988 order; and (3) appellants were not entitled to fees for appellate work because the appellate courts had not awarded them fees or costs.
*732 In January 1994, the district court granted Borowski’s petition to withdraw and denied the first and second fee petitions and all costs. The district court denied the first fee petition based on the belief that it did not have the authority to award fees for appellate work in the absence of orders from this court or the Supreme Court, and because the appellate courts had not ordered the DCSS to pay the appellants’ costs on appeal. The court denied the second fee petition because it found that the parents’ motion to intervene, essentially challenging the adequacy of class representation, was separate from the 1969 desegregation order, and, for the purposes of this issue, the appellants were not prevailing parties. Finally, the court awarded appellants $56,233.75 in fees and $2,672.80 for paralegal assistance in connection with monitoring activities. 2 The district court denied appellants’ request for $11,735.56 in costs, finding that they were not reasonably necessary to monitor the DCSS’s compliance with the 1969 order. Appellants filed the instant appeal, and the DCSS cross-appealed. 3
II. CONTENTIONS
Appellants first contend that the district court erred in determining that they were not entitled to attorney’s fees and costs in connection with their opposition of the parents’ attempted intervention. Appellants argue that because (1) they have been the prevailing parties since the 1969 order, (2) they “substantially” prevailed on the issue; and (3) the DCSS initiated the challenge to the adequacy of class representation and class counsel, appellants are entitled to such fees and costs incurred in opposing the intervention. Appellants next contend that the court erred in reducing their monitoring fees and denying them costs. According to appellants, the court should have accepted their proffer for an in camera review of their detailed time sheets of their activities in connection with monitoring compliance with the 1969 order. Appellants assert that the time sheets contained information which supported a larger fee award for monitoring than the court granted and that they did not present the detailed documents because the documents also contained trial strategy and privileged material concerning the on-going litigation. Appellants’ third contention is that the district court erred in faffing to award attorney’s fees for their appellate work. Appellants argue that costs under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 39 and fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 are not analogous. Therefore, according to appellants, the district court was not precluded from awarding fees merely because this court and the Supreme Court ordered both parties to bear their own appellate costs or because this court was silent on the issue of fees.
In response to appellants’ first contention, the DCSS contends that the standard for awarding fees is the extent that the appellants have prevailed on each substantive issue and that appellants did not succeed in opposing the parents’ intervention. With regard to appellants’ monitoring fees claim, the DCSS cross-appeals and argues that because the record contains no evidentiary basis to support the fee award that the district court granted for monitoring activities, appellants should not have received any fees for monitoring. According to the DCSS, appellants never met their burden of submitting supporting documentation with their fee requests and could have protected any sensitive material through redaction. Finally, the DCSS contends that the district court did not have the authority to award attorney’s fees *733 or costs for appellants’ appellate work because this court failed to do so on remand after the Supreme Court reversed this court’s decision in Pitts I. The DCSS asserts that since this court’s previous award of attorney’s fees was based on Pitts I, that award was no longer viable.
III. ISSUES
We discuss three issues in this case: (1) whether appellants are entitled to attorney’s fees in connection with opposing the intervention of the parents; (2) whether the district court correctly awarded monitoring fees to the appellants; and (3) whether Borowski was entitled to attorney’s fees for the work expended appealing the June 1988 district court order concerning the status of the school system.
TV. DISCUSSION
The Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Award Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988, directs that “the court, in its discretion, may allow the
prevailing party,
other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs” incurred in certain proceedings to enforce civil rights. 42 U.S.C.A. § 1988(b) (West Supp.1997) (emphasis added). A prevailing party is one who “ ‘succeed[s] on any significant issue in litigation which achieves some of the benefit the parties sought in bringing suit.’”
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
The district court denied appellants’ petition for attorney’s fees with regard to work done to oppose the parents’ motion to intervene in this case because it found that the challenge to the adequacy of class representation had no effect on the 1969 desegregation order and appellants’ opposition to that motion was not reasonably related to monitoring compliance with the desegregation order. In addition, the court found that the appellants were not prevailing parties with respect to the intervention issue because although appellants were not inadequate class representatives per se, they did not sufficiently represent the views of all of the class members. As a result, the district court granted the parents’ motion to intervene.
We agree that the appellants were not prevailing parties with respect to the intervention issue and find that the intervention claim was distinct from appellants’ success on the 1969 desegregation order. The motion to intervene concerned a challenge to the adequacy of the class and class counsel. The court found that appellants failed to represent the views of all class members and thus allowed the intervention. ‘Where the plaintiff has failed to prevail on a claim that is distinct in all respects from his [or her] successful claims, the hours spent on the unsuccessful claim should be excluded in considering the amount of a reasonable fee.”
Hensley,
The second issue we address is whether the district court correctly awarded appellants fees for their post-judgment monitoring activities. The district court awarded appellants 449.87 hours for monitoring the 1969 desegregation order at a rate of $125 per hour and 66.82 hours for paralegal assistance at a $40 per hour rate. The court denied any compensation for costs because the court found that they were not reasonably necessary to the monitoring.
*734
We have previously granted attorney’s fees for post-judgment monitoring in a civil rights case.
See Miller v. Carson,
all three motions for attorney’s fees and the supporting documents filed with them, all pleadings and other documents filed with the court, all hearing and conferences before this court, as well as information regarding all appeals, petitions, briefs, and motions filed with both the Eleventh Circuit and the Supreme Court on [appellants’] behalf.
Mills v. Freeman,
No. 11946-WCO, slip op. at 33 (N.D.Ga. Jan. 20, 1994). In addition, the court articulated the reasons for its decision and showed its calculations, allowing for a meaningful review of its judgment.
See Norman,
Finally, we address the issue of whether appellants should have been awarded attorney’s fees for their work in appealing the June 1988 order of the district court granting in part and denying in part the DCSS’s attainment of unitary status. It is long established in this circuit that this court has the discretion to award attorney’s fees and costs for the work expended before it.
See Davis v. Roadway Express, Inc.,
In the present case, this court initially awarded appellants attorney’s fees for their work appealing the June 1988 order. The Supreme Court, however, reversed the decision underlying that award.
Freeman,
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we find that appellants were not prevailing parties for the purposes of the intervention issue. In addition, the district court did not abuse its discretion in its determination of fees for the monitoring efforts of appellants. Finally, we conclude that the district court did not have the authority to award attorney’s fees for appellate work because appellants did not timely file a petition in this court for the work accomplished on the appeal of the June 1988 order of the district court. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We will use the term "the DCSS” to refer to the DCBE, appellee Robert Freeman, who was its former superintendent, and appellee James Hallford, his successor.
. Borowski requested fees for 2,610.65 hours of work on this case. After (1) concluding that the $125 per hour rate was reasonable; (2) subtracting 1,035 hours for appellate work and the intervention issues; and (3) further reducing the award by twenty-five percent for time that would not have been billable to a fee-paying client, duplicative work with other attorneys and Borowski's lack of practical experience, the court awarded Borowski fees for a total of 449.87 hours.
. On June 12, 1996, the district court concluded that the DCSS’s constitutional violations had been fully remedied and granted the DCSS’s motion for final dismissal from the court's supervision. Mills v. Freeman,
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. The district court erred in concluding that because this court did not award appellants costs pursuant to rule 39, the court did not have the authority to award lees pursuant to section 1988. The award of costs pursuant to rule 39 is “separate and distinct from and totally unrelated to an award of attorney's fees pursuant to the directions of [section] 1988.” Kelley v. Metropolitan County Bd. of Educ.,
