OPINION
Randal Crocker charges that the United States Postal Service refused to hire him due to his disability, in violation of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Crocker pled both disparate treatment and disparate impact causes of action below, arguing that he was able to perform the essential functions of the position he sought despite his disability. Because Crocker failed to offer medical evidence contemporaneous with his nonhiring to contradict the evidence upon which the Postal Service relied, we hold that he did not meet his burden of proof for either cause of action. Accordingly, we affirm both the district court’s dismissal on summary judgment of the disparate treatment claim and its post-trial dismissal of the disparate impact claim.
I
Mr. Crocker suffers from Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy, a neurological disorder that manifests itself in him as excruciating pain in his right thigh from the knee to the groin if he puts too much weight on his right foot. Though expressing reservations, Postmaster William Dyer hired Crocker contingent on his passing a pre-employment physical. Dr. Hubert Hill, a physician under contract to do physicals for the Postal Service, examined Crocker on November 29, 1994. Dr. Hill determined that Crocker failed the physical because he could not walk without crutches. Dr. John Dougherty, a neurologist, performed a second pre-employment physical on Crocker on December 28, 1994. He likewise determined that Crocker’s inability to walk without the use of crutches made him unable to perform the essential functions of the letter carrier position.
Based on the opinions of Drs. Hill and Dougherty, Dyer decided not to hire Crocker after he failed the physical. The Postal Service notified him of his nonhiring in a letter date-stamped July 7, 1995. As it must for any veteran who has a compen-sable disability, the Postal Service processed Crocker’s nonhiring through the Office of Personnel Management, a federal agency separate from the Postal Service. The letter notifying Crocker of his nonhir-ing also advised him of his right to submit supporting material to the OPM regarding his automatic appeal within 15 days of receiving the letter. It noted that “[t]he best evidence to provide is an objective medical finding from a board certified specialist in the field that deals with your particular problem.” The OPM sent Crocker a letter date-stamped August 18, 1995 informing him that his nonhiring had been upheld, but indicating that he should forward to that office any “additional specific medical documentation that contradicts these findings” about his capacity to work.
Rather than seek a contrary medical opinion when he received either of these letters, Crocker filed a discrimination complaint with the Postal Service. By law, such a complaint had to be brought within 45 days of the July 7 letter informing Crocker of his nonhiring. Crocker first contacted the Postal Service about *318 filing a complaint on November 4, 1995, 120 days after being notified of his nonhir-ing. Because the complaint was filed in an untimely fashion, the Postal Service rejected it in a letter to Crocker date-stamped January 4, 1996. He filed the discrimination complaint at issue in this appeal on April 3, 1996. The medical examinations Crocker used at trial to argue his fitness for the letter carrier position took place in December 1996 and April 1997. Those examinations cannot prove that Crocker was physically capable of performing the job at the time he was not hired. Even if he would have passed the physicals later, as he now contends, that does not mean he should have passed the earlier ones. Two years separate the two sets of evaluations, and, significantly, Crocker changed the treatment for his RSD in the intervening period. Crocker complains that he did not have much time to seek a medical opinion supporting his case after receiving the January 4, 1996 letter. That argument ignores the fact that Crocker was on notice as of July 7, 1995 that he needed contrary medical evidence to dispute his nonhiring.
Crocker filed suit in federal district court on April 3, 1996, alleging that the Postal Service failed to hire him because he was disabled. The parties consented below to the jurisdiction of a United States Magistrate Judge with an appeal lying directly to this court.
See
28 U.S.C. § 636(c). The Postal Service moved for summary judgment on the disparate treatment claim and the magistrate judge granted the motion, reasoning that Crock-er was not otherwise qualified for the position since he could not perform its essential functions and that he had shown no proof of animus on the part of the Postal Service. However, the magistrate judge discerned a separate disparate impact claim in the complaint on which he conducted a bench trial. Under this theory, the criteria used by the Postal Service to assess physical abilities disproportionately impact otherwise qualified persons with RSD. After trial, the court dismissed the latter claim as well, determining again that Crocker was not otherwise qualified for the letter carrier position. We review a magistrate judge’s decision to grant summary judgment
de novo.
In cases referred to a magistrate judge by a district judge for decision with consent of the parties under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), we review the magistrate judge’s findings of fact for clear error, as we would the findings of a district judge.
See Sherri A.D. v. W.N. Kirby,
II
To make out a claim under the Rehabilitation Act, a plaintiff in a covered position must establish that he is: 1) an individual with a disability under the Act, 2) otherwise qualified for the job with or without a reasonable accommodation, and 3) being discriminated against solely because of his handicap.
See Burns v. City of Columbus, Dep’t of Pub. Safety,
Hence, for Crocker to show that he was otherwise qualified for the position, he has to show that he could have met the physical demands of the job. The Postal Service relied on the opinions of two private physicians, including a neurological specialist, in reaching its decision not to hire Crocker. Crocker argues that the subsequent testimony of two other evaluators who performed more elaborate examinations renders reliance on the earlier medical opinions unreasonable. Even if the earlier medical opinions were demonstrably flawed, the Postal Service’s reasonable reliance upon them is not discriminatory.
See Severino v. North Fort Myers Fire Control Dist.,
Crocker makes much of the fact that the job descriptions sent to Drs. Hill and Dougherty were incomplete, and that Human Resources Manager Charles Brantley sent Dr. Hill a letter prejudging Crocker’s fitness for the job. Taken together, Crocker argues, these conditions preclude a claim of good-faith reliance by the Postal Service on the earlier medical opinions. As the lower court found, there is no evidence that Crocker was not hired for any reason other than failing the physicals. Indeed, Brantley’s letter notes that Crocker “was using crutches and dragging his feet the last time I saw him.” If anything, that serves as further contemporaneous evidence that Crocker had not adapted as well to his crutches at that time as he has now. The incomplete job descriptions did not affect the medical finding that Crocker could not walk without crutches relied upon by the Postal Service.
Crocker also complains that the Postal Service did not offer him any accommodation, but since Crocker did not suggest until trial that he needed an accommodation, the Postal Service had . no legal duty to provide him one.
See Kalten-
*320
berger v. Ohio College of Podiatric Med.,
This ease is not like
Holiday v. City of Chattanooga,
a recent nonhiring case brought under the Americans -with Disabilities Act. There the applicant’s status as “otherwise qualified” was also in dispute.
See Holiday v. City of Chattanooga,
Ill
Crocker’s appeal of his disparate impact claim fails for much the same reasons. Initially, however, it should be noted that this circuit has not explicitly recognized the availability of a disparate impact cause of action under the Rehabilitation Act. One earlier effort to do so on a broad basis in
Jennings v. Alexander
was rebuffed by the Supreme Court.
See Jennings v. Alexander,
There is good reason to believe that a disparate impact theory is not available under the Rehabilitation Act. Although Title VII contains a provision allowing an overtly discriminatory hiring criterion when it is a bona fide occupational qualification, that provision has proven much less expansive in practice than the Rehabilitation Act’s safe harbor provision for nonhiring.
Compare
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(e),
with
29 U.S.C. § 794. The Rehabilitation Act’s “otherwise qualified” language specifically allows for disabled people to be disparately affected by legitimate job criteria, so a wholesale importing of Title VII’s disparate impact cause of action into the Rehabilitation Act context might be inappropriate.
Cf. Mullin v. Raytheon Co.,
In any event, a disparate impact theory is unavailable under the facts of this case. A disparate impact framework involves burden shifting, and this court has held that burden shifting is inappropriate in Rehabilitation Act cases such as this where the employer relies in part on the employee’s disability in finding the employee not otherwise qualified for the job. “[W]hen an employer admits (or the evidence establishes) that its decision was based upon the employee’s disability, direct evidence of discrimination exists [and] ... application of the
McDonnell Douglas [Corp. v. Green,
Even if a disparate impact claim were allowed, to establish a prima facie case:
Plaintiff would have to support [his] claim by offering “statistical evidence of a kind and degree sufficient to show that the practice in question has caused the [nonhiring of employees] ... because of their membership in a protected group.” Abbott v. Federal Forge, Inc.,912 F.2d 867 , 872 (6th Cir.1990). Given [his] failure to present any evidence at all to support [his] adverse impact theory, judgment was properly granted in favor of the [Postal Service] on this claim.
*322
Gantt,
IV
Because Crocker could not make a pri-ma facie showing that he was “otherwise qualified” for the position for which he was not hired, the judgment of the magistrate judge is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. If, as Crocker attests, his crutches truly do not “substantially limit his major life activities,” then the magistrate judge erred in determining that Crocker is disabled.
See Sutton v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
