2. Relevant Federal Policies Towards Puerto Rico
The complaint alleges that Government used tax policy to encourage private companies to invest in Puerto Rico prior to 1996. Compl. ¶ 4. The complaint alleges that ending this policy contributed to Puerto Rico slipping into a recession, which is now going on 13 years.
3. Plaintiffs
All the Plaintiffs reside in Puerto Rico. Compl. ¶¶ 14-23. They all allege that, were they to reside in a state, they would receive benefits under one or more of the challenged programs. Id. In lieu of discussing each Plaintiff's background, this memorandum of decision examines four Plaintiffs' circumstances, which -- as explained below -- suffice at this time to ground this Court's authority to adjudicate this suit's subject matter.
a. Peña
At the time she filed suit, Peña was 71 years old and a United States citizen. Id. ¶ 14. Although she (apparently) was not born in Puerto Rico, she resided there from 1978 to 2008, before relocating to New York City. Id. During her time in New York City, Peña received about $ 733.00 in SSI and $ 198.00 in SNAP benefits monthly. Id. ¶ 14a-b.
Peña moved back to Puerto Rico in 2016 and currently resides in San Juan. Id. ¶ 14. She is unemployed and receives $ 64.00 in AABD benefits monthly. Id. ¶¶ 14, 14a. Initially upon her return, Peña's NAP benefits amounted to $ 154.00 per month, although at the time of briefing on the motion to dismiss they had increased to $ 192.50 on account of the post-hurricane temporary increase in the federal NAP block grant. Id. ¶ 14b & n.17; Opp'n 13.
b. Santiago and Vélez
Santiago and Vélez are a married couple, ages 63 and 73 respectively, residing in Toa Alta, Puerto Rico. Id. ¶¶ 15-16. Their household consists of them plus two grandchildren, over whom they have custody. Id. ¶¶ 15b, 16b. The complaint alleges that both Santiago and Vélez "suffer[ ] from multiple incapacitating health conditions, such as asthma, high blood pressure, and cardiac conditions." Id. ¶¶ 15a, 16a. Further, the complaint states that Santiago uses an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator and that Vélez cannot see out of one eye. Id.
While the complaint does not allege that either Santiago or Vélez receives AABD benefits, it claims that their aforementioned disabilities and Vélez's partial blindness would qualify them for SSI benefits but for their residence in Puerto Rico instead of a state. Id. Their household benefits from $ 416.00 in NAP payments, which, the complaint asserts, is lower than the payments that it would be eligible to receive under SNAP. Id. ¶¶ 15b, 16b.
c. Aguilar
Aguilar, age 82, lives in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Id. ¶ 17. The complaint alleges that she cannot see out of her left eye and has many cardiological and neurological ailments. Id. Her sole sources of monthly income are a pension of $ 526.58 and Social Security disability benefits of $ 919.00. Id. She receives healthcare using Medicare
II. SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION
The Court has subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate this case. First, despite the Government's exhortations, Mot. Dismiss 8-11, the Plaintiffs do not need to comply with a statutory requirement to channel their SSI and LIS challenges through an administrative process because they lacked an administrative avenue to pursue them. See Shalala v. Illinois Council on Long Term Care, Inc.,
A. Standard of Review
Challenges to the Plaintiffs' proper channeling of and standing to bring their claims implicate the Court's subject matter jurisdiction. See Corliss v. Barnhart,
B. Analysis
The Court concludes that it has federal question jurisdiction over this action because the Plaintiffs need not pursue Social Security and Medicare claims through an administrative process when the Social Security Administration does not permit them to apply for benefits. See Illinois Council,
1. Enforcing a Channeling Requirement Would Result in No Review at All
The Plaintiffs cannot pursue their arguments in an administrative process that would lead to judicial review. The Government insists that the Social Security and Medicare Acts require the Plaintiffs to channel their claims through an administrative review process prior to seeking judicial review. Mot. Dismiss 8-11. In response, the Plaintiffs contend that their
The Social Security and Medicare Acts contain so-called "channeling requirements," which mandate that plaintiffs bring claims "arising under" those acts through an administrative review process prior to judicial review. See
The "no review at all" exception does not apply when an agency simply declines to consider an argument or provide the requested relief because a federal court may still supplement the administrative record and enter appropriate relief. See Justiniano v. Social Sec. Admin.,
The Plaintiffs assert that their claims fall within the "no review at all" exception because the Social Security Administration, which administers the applications for both SSI and LIS, prevented them from applying. Opp'n 7. In support of this position, they submit a declaration sworn under penalty of perjury from one of their attorneys, Alana Vizcarrondo ("Attorney Vizcarrondo"), which details her attempts to apply for benefits on behalf of her clients. Opp'n, Ex. 1, Decl. Alana Vizcarrondo ("Vizcarrondo Decl.") 4, ECF No. 18-1.
The parties agree that an applicant may file a request for benefits in three ways: by (1) completing an online form, (2) meeting with a Social Security representative in-person, or (3) requesting a form from the Social Security Administration and mailing back a completed version. See Opp'n 6-7; Reply 6.
Attorney Vizcarrondo declares that she could not submit online applications for either set of benefits because the Social Security Administration website states that Puerto Rico residents may not apply for those benefits. Vizcarrondo Decl. ¶¶ 7, 13-15. As for the latter two options, Attorney Vizcarrondo recounts that, when she called the Guaynabo, Puerto Rico Social Security Administration office, Social Security Administration employees told her
Although the Government represents that it has a policy of accepting all applications for SSI and LIS, Reply 2-3, the Government does not controvert Attorney Vizcarrondo's averment that employees at the Guaynabo Social Security Administration Office told her that it did not have the ability to take the Plaintiffs' applications. Vizcarrondo Decl. ¶¶ 8, 16. This is consistent with the undisputed Social Security Administration websites and forms, which evince an implicit policy not to review applications from Puerto Rico residents at all. See generally Vizcarrondo Decl., Exs. A (Supplemental Security Income Application Instructions) & C (Medicare Part D Low Income Subsidies Application Instructions). Ergo, the Court rules that the Plaintiffs' claims need not be channeled through an administrative process before receiving judicial review.
2. The Plaintiffs Sufficiently Allege That They Suffered an Injury in Fact by Dint of Their Ineligibility for SNAP Benefits
Plaintiffs have standing to bring their SNAP claims.
Of the elements of constitutional standing, the Government suggests that the Plaintiffs only have failed to allege an injury in fact from their ineligibility for SNAP. Mot. Dismiss 15-17; Reply 6-7 & n.9. "[I]n a lawsuit brought to force compliance,
The Government contends that the Plaintiffs currently receive NAP benefits in excess of the benefits they could receive from SNAP because of a 2017 increase in federal funding for NAP. Reply 6-7. The Government thus insists that the Plaintiffs may not challenge SNAP because they are not suffering an injury.
The Plaintiffs respond that their allegation that they would qualify for SNAP because of their low incomes and limited resources establishes an injury in fact on a motion to dismiss. Opp'n 12. They also dispute that the 2017 temporary increase in NAP funding caused every Plaintiff to receive as much or more in NAP benefits than they would have with SNAP. Id. at 13. Furthermore, the Plaintiffs argue that because the 2017 increase expires in 2019, it constitutes a voluntary (and temporary) cessation of an allegedly unconstitutional policy, and so it does not defeat standing. Id. (citing City of Mesquite v. Aladdin's Castle, Inc.,
At the motion to dismiss stage, the Court credits the complaint's allegations that at least Plaintiffs Santiago and Vélez would qualify for SNAP if they lived in a state and that SNAP benefits would exceed their NAP benefits. The complaint alleges that Plaintiffs Santiago and Vélez are married, unemployed, aged 63 and 73 respectively, and responsible for two young grandchildren. Compl. ¶¶ 15-16. The complaint further states that their household receives $ 416.00 in NAP benefits and that the household would be eligible to receive more in SNAP benefits.
The Government raises legitimate concerns about whether the Plaintiffs actually would qualify and the exact amount they would receive under NAP and SNAP,
In any event, Puerto Rico has depleted the funds Congress appropriated for the one-time funding increase. See Danica Coto, Puerto Ricans Struggle to Buy Food Amid Funding Shortfall, Wash. Post (Mar. 29, 2019), https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/congress/puerto-rico-seeks-more-federal-funds-as-congress-stalls/2019/03/29/d007149c-523a-11e9-bdb7-44f948cc0605_story.html?utm_term=.d37b960c4fbf. That depletion was "likely to occur" when the Plaintiffs filed their suit because Congress had only appropriated a lump-sum increase in discretionary spending on NAP, as opposed to amending the mandatory block grant for NAP. See Friends of the Earth,
At least Santiago and Vélez thus have suffered an injury in fact with regard to SNAP benefits, and because the presence of one party with standing suffices to provide this Court with jurisdiction, the Court DENIED the Government's motion to dismiss on standing grounds. See Rumsfeld v. Forum for Acad. & Inst. Rights, Inc.,
III. FAILURE TO STATE A CLAIM
The Court also DENIED the motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. While it rejects the Plaintiffs and their amici's entreaties to apply heightened scrutiny, the Court reads the complaint plausibly to allege that the challenged programs' exclusion of Puerto Rico residents does not withstand rational basis review.
A. Standard of Review
A complaint survives a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss where it alleges "enough facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face."See Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution forbids states from denying "any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." The Supreme Court has recognized that discrimination may constitute "a denial of due process of law," thereby violating the Fifth Amendment, which applies to the federal government. Bolling v. Sharpe,
As analyzed in detail below, precedent requires the Court to apply rational basis review to these equal protection claims. See infra, section III.B.1. Rational basis review requires that the "classification in question is rationally related to a legitimate [government] interest." Powell v. Tompkins,
B. Analysis
The complaint survives this motion to dismiss, but only just. Notwithstanding the Plaintiffs and their amici's pleas, see, e.g., Opp'n 16-19, Supreme Court precedent requires this Court to apply rational basis review to this alleged violation of the Fifth Amendment's Equal Protection guarantee, see Harris v. Rosario,
1. Supreme Court Precedent Requires the Court to Apply Rational Basis Review
The Plaintiffs admit that the Supreme Court applied rational basis review to prior equal protection claims that Puerto Rico residents advanced but argue that recent Supreme Court cases undermine those precedents. Opp'n 2. The Government responds
a. The Court must first identify the precise holdings of relevant Supreme Court precedents
Evaluating this debate requires a close study of two Supreme Court per curiam summary reversals: Califano v. Gautier Torres,
Still, the facts presented and the arguments the Supreme Court actually addressed in the relevant cases limit their reach. See Illinois State Bd. of Elections v. Socialist Workers Party,
b. Califano v. Gautier Torres,
In Califano, the Government appealed a court ruling that the SSI program's exclusion of Puerto Rico residents violated the constitutional right to travel as applied to beneficiaries who lost eligibility upon moving to the island.
First, because of the unique tax status of Puerto Rico, its residents do not contribute to the public treasury. Second, the cost of including Puerto Rico would be extremely great -- an estimated $ 300 million per year. Third, inclusion in the SSI program might seriously disrupt the Puerto Rican economy.
c. Harris v. Rosario,
In Harris, however, the Supreme Court read Califano more broadly than its text might naturally suggest. See Harris,
Congress, which is empowered under the Territory Clause of the Constitution, U.S. Const., Art. IV, § 3, cl. 2, to "make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory ... belonging to the United States," may treat Puerto Rico differently from States so long as there is a rational basis for its actions. In [ Califano ], we concluded that a similar statutory classification was rationally grounded on three factors: Puerto Rican residents do not contribute to the federal treasury; the cost of treating Puerto Rico as a State under the statute would be high; and greater benefits could disrupt the Puerto Rican economy. These same considerations are forwarded here in support of [this program] and we see no reason to depart from our conclusion in [ Califano ] that they suffice to form a rational basis for the challenged statutory classification.
d. The "reach and content" of Califano and Harris
The reasoning of Califano and Harris invites at least five observations relevant to this motion's resolution. First, although the Harris plaintiffs challenged the statute under the Fifth Amendment, the Supreme Court did not cite either the Fifth or Fourteenth amendments' equal protection provisions in its analysis. See
The Supreme Court's choice to cite the Territory Clause and not the Due Process Clause appears odd because the case on its face is not about the reach of Congress's authority to govern Puerto Rico as a jurisdiction but on its discriminatory treatment of Puerto Rico residents. The Government here relies on the citation to the Territory Clause to suggest that a weaker form of rational basis review applies to legislation Congress passed pursuant to the Territory Clause. Mot. Dismiss
Second, the Supreme Court construed Califano in Harris to "conclude" that SSI's bar of Puerto Rico residents had a rational basis. Harris,
Third, the Supreme Court never explained what it meant -- either in Califano or Harris-- when it reasoned that extending benefits programs might "disrupt" the Puerto Rican economy. See Harris,
Fourth, the three reasons that the Supreme Court offered might change over time. The Supreme Court cited a contemporary policy evaluation document -- the HEW Report -- to locate a rational basis for Congress's decision to exclude Puerto Rico residents from the challenged programs.
Fifth, the Supreme Court's comment that "Puerto Rican residents do not contribute to the federal treasury" requires some explanation because Puerto Rico residents did pay some taxes in both 1978 and 1980, the years of the Califano and Harris decisions, respectively. See Harris,
At bottom, then, the Court reads Harris and Califano to stand for the following: rational basis review applies to equal protection challenges to social welfare programs made unavailable to Puerto Rico residents and the facts presented in those two cases provided rational bases for the distinctions there.
e. Harris and Califano are still good law
The Plaintiffs and their amici invite the Court to disregard Harris and Califano on the ground that the Supreme Court has undermined their reasoning. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court has not overruled either decision or expressly repudiated their reasoning. As a consequence, this Court is bound to follow those cases unless and until the Supreme Court states otherwise. See Figueroa v. Rivera,
In a recent challenge to the SSI program's exclusion of Puerto Rico residents, Chief Judge Gelpí reasoned that he did not need to apply Harris or Califano because Boumediene v. Bush,
Despite Chief Judge Gelpí's suggestion, the Supreme Court did not hold in Harris or Califano that Congress could "switch the Constitution on or off at will" as the Supreme Court forbade in Boumediene. See Vaello-Madero,
Windsor, wherein the Supreme Court struck down the Defense of Marriage Act, also fits with Harris and Califano. There, the Supreme Court held that the law did not pass rational basis review because the only support the Court found for the act was animus, whereas in Harris and Califano, the Court located other legitimate reasons. Compare Windsor,
In sum, the Court rules that Harris and Califano stand for the following two propositions: First, when Congress legislates differently for Puerto Rico, or its residents, than it does for the states, or their residents, those distinctions receive rational basis review. Second, the contemporary factual reasons that the Supreme Court cited in those cases -- Puerto Rico's tax status, the cost of extending benefits, and the potential to disrupt the Puerto Rican economy -- cleared the bar of rational basis review.
2. The Complaint Plausibly Alleges That Puerto Rico Today Differs Materially from Puerto Rico in 1980
The Plaintiffs' complaint states a plausible claim for relief for three reasons. First, the Supreme Court in Harris and Califano did not hold that each of the three reasons it cited sufficed independently to justify the discrimination in those programs. The Court takes those cases to hold that those reasons combined justify disparate treatment of Puerto Rico residents. Second, the complaint plausibly alleges that the justifications that the Government proffered in Harris and Califano no longer support the disparate treatment of Puerto Rico residents in these particular programs. See, e.g.,
a. Each cited reason in the Harris and Califano cases was necessary to their outcomes
The Harris and Califano decisions rested on three interdependent reasons, none of which the Supreme Court expressly indicated was independently sufficient. Indeed, Harris strongly suggests that all three bases were necessary to support the laws in question. See
Further, the Supreme Court has held that the second reason cited in Harris and Califano, to save money, cannot support a finding of rational basis on its own. See Harris,
The Government points out that the Court's review of Congress's spending decisions "must be deferential." Reply 14 (citing Lyng v. International Union, United Auto., Aerospace & Agric. Implement Workers of Am., UAW,
Accordingly, Congress cannot categorically exclude a non-suspect class of people -- e.g. red-haired citizens -- from federal benefits programs simply to save money. Although Congress need not identify the reason itself, a court must be able to identify a valid rationale to buttress the cost-saving decision. See United States R.R. Ret. Bd.,
Consequently, both the Supreme Court's grammar and pre and post- Harris case law suggest that each reason it offered in Harris was necessary to its holding.
b. Changed circumstances distinguish the programs involved in Harris and Califano from the challenged programs here
The complaint plausibly alleges that the other two reasons that the Government propounded in those cases, Puerto Rico's tax status and the potential disruption to the Puerto Rican economy, no longer obtain.
Moreover, the Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017, Pub. L. No. 115-97, significantly altered the federal tax regime. Some commentary has suggested that it raises taxes on Puerto Rico businesses. See, e.g., Brittany De Lea, Tax Reform in US 'Hinders' Puerto Rico Recovery: Gov. Rossello, FoxBusiness (Feb. 15, 2018), https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/tax-reform-in-us-hinders-puerto-rico-recovery-gov-rossello (discussing a 12.5% excise tax imposed on profits created by use of intellectual property in Puerto Rico, enacted at Pub. L. No. 115-97, subtit. I.D, subpt. B, ch. I,
The Plaintiffs and their amici posit that the Supreme Court erred in 1980 when it relied on the statement that Puerto Rico residents "do not contribute to the public treasury." See, e.g., Opp'n 22 (quoting United States v. Vaello-Madero,
The Court would benefit from discovery about the effect of any post-1980 changes to collections of taxes that fund the general treasury -- other than payroll taxes -- from Puerto Rico (such as import/export taxes). The complaint alleges enough for the Court to infer that the federal tax burden on Puerto Rico residents may have increased, as the complaint alleges that federal business taxes have increased since 1996. See Compl. ¶ 4. The parties have not provided this data, although Congresswoman Velázquez links to Internal Revenue Service statistics that lump together payroll and income taxes. See Congresswoman Velázquez Amicus Br. 10 nn.7 & 8. If Puerto Rican payments to the general federal treasury relative to the size of the territory's economy are very similar to those from the other states and territories, it may not be rational to deny Puerto Rico residents these benefits on the basis that Puerto Rico contributes less to the federal fisc.
As the complaint alleges that close to 60% of Puerto Rico residents live below the poverty line, the inapplicability of the income tax may not cost the federal fisc much at all, given that tax's progressivity. See Compl. ¶ 9. Perhaps discovery will show that other taxes hit Puerto Rico residents particularly hard, so as to make up for the income tax's absence. See Plyler v. Doe,
Second, the complaint alleges -- and the Government's motion papers do not refute -- that Hurricane Maria and Puerto Rico's municipal bankruptcy have profoundly changed Puerto Rico's economy for the worse. Compl. ¶¶ 1, 2, 8, 72-73. Taking that as true, as the Court must at the motion to dismiss stage, the Government cannot justifiably base its current policy on 1980 concerns about disrupting the Puerto Rican economy. See Pimentel v. City of Methuen,
The Government attempts to justify its claims that Congress could rationally believe that extending these programs to Puerto Rico might disrupt the island's economy, but its arguments are wanting for four reasons, two of which are procedural and two of which are substantive.
First, the Government only advances an argument about the administrative costs that Puerto Rico's territorial government might be required to pay to operate SNAP. See
Second, it relies on an estimate from a 2010 report that it does not attach to its brief. See id.& n.18 (citing Food and Nutrition Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Implementing Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in Puerto Rico: A Feasibility Study ii-iii, 77-83). This report is evidence and, while it may be probative, it cannot defeat a well-pleaded complaint at the motion to dismiss stage. Cf. Watterson,
Third, the quoted language from the report reprinted in the Government's brief does not indicate that the benefits would "disrupt" Puerto Rico's economy but instead that they would be expensive to administer. See
Fourth, the Government cites a report from 2010. Reply 15 & n.18. The data used to compile the report is surely older. See
While due process does not require Congress to follow any particular economic theory, for this reason to satisfy the rational basis requirement, the Court must be able to locate some economic theory explaining how extending these benefits would disrupt Puerto Rico's economy.
The Plaintiffs, it should be noted, face a steep climb after discovery. The Government correctly points out the generally deferential standard applicable to rational basis review. Reply 11-12 ("Rational basis review does not 'permit courts to pass judgment on the effectiveness of the legislature's proposed classifications.' " (quoting Gun Owners' Action League, Inc. v. Swift,
In any event, an animus theory does not provide the Plaintiffs with an easier or perhaps even an analytically different route to success: It is well-established in the First Circuit that a plaintiff cannot allege an animus theory simply "by asserting an inequity and tacking on the self-serving conclusion that the defendant was motivated by a discriminatory animus." See Barrington Cove Ltd. P'ship v. Rhode Island Hous. & Mortg. Fin. Corp.,
To be clear, the Government does not have the burden of supplying facts to support their purported rational bases; moving forward, the Plaintiffs must provide evidence that renders the Government's policies without rationality in light of "any reasonably conceivable state of facts." See Beach Commc'ns,
c. Harris and Califano constitute analogous, as opposed to directly applicable, cases
The Government objects that Harris and Califano's outcomes bind this Court's disposition
The Plaintiffs' challenge to the SSI program, however, is more fraught. As explained above, the Supreme Court in Harris construed Califano to hold that the SSI program's disparate treatment of Puerto Rico residents did not violate equal protection. Harris,
Nevertheless, Harris and Califano may not bind this Court to dismiss an equal protection challenge to SSI for two reasons. First, this Court could hold that, to the extent that Harris purports to represent a new holding as opposed to apply the same rule as Califano, reading a new holding into Califano constitutes nonbinding dicta, because Harris addressed only the AFDC program. See Harris,
This Court, however, views this reading as too formalistic -- the Supreme Court in Harris did not spill much ink in deciding that AFDC passed muster under the rational basis test precisely because it considered that it had settled that question in Califano. See Harris,
Instead, the Court adopts National Coalition's approach: i.e., to evaluate an equal protection challenge at the time plaintiffs file it.
The Government protests that changed circumstances cannot allow the Plaintiffs to avoid Harris and Califano. Reply 12 (quoting Montalvo-Huertas v. Rivera-Cruz,
Montalvo-Huertas, however, offers an example of how the actual reasons upon which a legislature relied do not control the rational basis analysis, for the First Circuit considered hypothetical justifications in rejecting the challenge.
Accordingly, the Supreme Court's characterization of Califano in Harris does not foreclose a new challenge to the SSI program.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, this Court DENIED the Government's motion to dismiss, ECF No. 10.
SO ORDERED
Notes
The Plaintiffs cite an article from Prensa Latina, which appears to be the Cuban state news agency, for this estimate. See Compl. ¶ 9 & n.15 (referring to Poverty Rises to 52.3 Percent in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, Prensa Latina (Nov. 28, 2017), https://tinyurl.com/ycnhxhwu). Although the Plaintiffs' link does not work and the Court has credibility concerns about Cuban state news, the Court credits this allegation only for the purpose of resolving this motion to dismiss, although it keeps an open mind as to whether the Plaintiffs can establish the accuracy of this estimate at a later stage of this proceeding. See Dixon v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
The Plaintiffs implicitly concede that their arguments arise under the Social Security and Medicare Acts. See Opp'n 5-9.
The Court therefore has no occasion to address the Plaintiffs' arguments that they presented their claims for benefits and that the Court ought waive the requirement that they exhaust the administrative process. See Opp'n 8-9.
Because the Supreme Court has inferred that the Fifth Amendment equal protection guarantee provides parties with a private cause of action for damages within federal question jurisdiction, Davis v. Passman,
The Government questions, in its motion to dismiss, the standing of several of the Plaintiffs to contest the denial of SSI to Puerto Rico residents. Mot. Dismiss 14-15. Yet the Government acknowledges that Peña has standing to sue, Reply 6 n.9, and so the Court has jurisdiction to entertain the SSI count. See Rumsfeld v. Forum for Acad. & Inst. Rights, Inc.,
Most pertinently, the Government asserts that material differences exist in how NAP and SNAP calculate a claimant's resources, which must be below a certain threshold for a claimant to obtain benefits. See Mot. Dismiss 4, 16. The Government, however, does not point to differences that might make a material difference. At the time of briefing, SNAP permitted a household to hold more countable resources than NAP did. See id. at 4 (stating that SNAP allowed $ 3,250 in countable resources for households with a member aged 60 or over and NAP $ 3,000). If discovery reveals that the Plaintiffs challenging SNAP rely on exclusions unavailable in SNAP to qualify for NAP, this Court will reconsider their standing.
The Insular Cases are seven cases that the Supreme Court decided shortly after Spain ceded Puerto Rico to the United States. Balzac v. Porto Rico,
The Government also provides new estimates for the cost of extending SSI and SNAP benefits to Puerto Rico residents. See Reply 14 n.17. It does not assert how much it would cost to extend LIS to Puerto Rico residents. See generally Reply. In any event, the Plaintiffs concede that extending these benefits would result in increased costs. See Compl. ¶ 88. Nevertheless, as explained above, Congress must advance an independent, legitimate reason for its money-saving decisions. See section III.B.2, supra. Likewise, the Court does not analyze whether changed circumstances undermine the expense justification for SSI or SNAP, as that consideration alone could not justify the exclusion of Puerto Rico residents from these programs.
The Government suggests that Plyler"turn[ed] on application of intermediate scrutiny, not rational basis review." Reply 15 (citing Plyler,
Higher courts have yet to sort out the precise standard of review that the Supreme Court applied in Plyler. In Kadrmas v. Dickinson Public Schools, the Supreme Court said that Plyler did not fit the pattern of cases applying intermediate scrutiny and suggested that "unique circumstances" drove its outcome. See
The Government did not seem to defend this rationale at the motion hearing.
The Government also neither attached this report nor provided a link to it.
Although the Supreme Court did not sketch out the precise contours of the economic theory undergirding Califano and Harris, it does not take much imagination to hypothesize one. For example, prior to 1996, Congress enacted various tax incentives targeted at growing the private sector in Puerto Rico. During that time, a rational legislator might have feared that extending welfare benefits, while at the same time not levying income taxes, not only might have cancelled out those tax incentives, but also might have sabotaged the Congressional goal by deterring Puerto Rico residents from private sector employment. The allegations in the complaint appear to undermine the vitality of that particular theory, however. To wit, since the Supreme Court handed down those cases, Congress repealed Puerto Rico's business tax incentives and seemed to have raised taxes on Puerto Rico manufacturers, while Puerto Rico's economy has slumped further. See De Lea,
As an alternative rational basis, the Government cites "the fact that providers in Puerto Rico have 'lower operating costs' compared to providers in the States." Mot. Dismiss 22 (quoting Hospital San Rafael, Inc. v. Sullivan,
The Plaintiffs contend that Shelby County v. Holder,
The Plaintiffs quote the Supreme Court's statement in Whole Woman's Health that "Factual developments may show that constitutional harm, which seemed too remote or speculative to afford relief at the time of an earlier suit, was in fact indisputable. In our view, such changed circumstances will give rise to a new constitutional claim." Opp'n 22 (quoting Whole Woman's Health,
On the other hand, the Plaintiffs' reference to Shelby County seems well-placed. Opp'n 22 (quoting Shelby Cty.,
Consequently, this Court notes that one way to interpret the Supreme Court's instruction to consider the current state of affairs is that it is an incidence of our system of judicial review where courts do not pass upon questions of constitutional interpretation in the abstract, but instead train their attention to discrete cases and controversies. See U.S. Const., art. III; see also Mance v. Sessions,
The Government suggests that Shelby County's reliance on federalism principles in announcing its holding undermines its applicability here. See Reply 12. This Court is not so sure. In light of Puerto Rico's status as a semi-self-governing territory, the Court queries whether federalism principles, such as those discussed in Shelby County, ought inform implicit limits on Congress's authority to govern Puerto Rico pursuant to the Territory Clause. See Adam W. McCall, Note, Why Congress Cannot Unilaterally Repeal Puerto Rico's Constitution,
The Plaintiffs also observe that the Supreme Court held in Califano and Harris that the three above-mentioned reasons justified treating Puerto Rico differently than the states, not from other territories (some of the residents of which receive certain of the challenged benefits). Opp'n 23. The Government counters that it manages each territory independently. Reply 13 & n.16. That may be so in practice, but neither party points to authoritative materials requiring the Court to bless or reject that practice in this context. The texts of the Territory Clause and the Equal Protection Clause do not require either outcome, nor does the one case that the Government cites in support of its position. See
