Thе plaintiff, a former state prisoner, seeks damages from the state prison administration under the part of the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101
et seq.,
that governs the provision of public services. Title II, Subtitle A, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12131-12134. He also seeks damages under section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794, but this claim need not be discussed separately. The Rehabilitation Act is materially identicаl to and the model for the ADA,
Bryant v. Madigan,
The district court dismissed the suit on the pleadings, on the ground that the Act is inapplicable to prison inmates — a questiоn of first impression in this circuit, having been expressly left open in
Bryant v. Madigan, supra,
and
Love v. Westville Correctional Center,
The Americans with Disabilities Act confers rights on “qualified individuals] with a disability” who are denied access to “services, programs, or activities of a public entity.” 42 U.S.C. § 12132. (See 29 U.S.C. § 794(a) for the parallel language of the Rehabilitation Act.) A “qualified individual” is defined as someone who with or without a reasonable аccommodation has the physical and mental capacity to participate in the program or activity in question, 42 U.S.C. § 12131(2); and in the present posture of this case we must assume that the plaintiff satisfies this criterion. The statute defines “public entity” as either a state or local government or any department or other instrumentality of a state or local government, so the Indiana Department of Corrections is covered. Incarceration itself is hardly a “program” or “activity” to which a disabled person might wish access,
Bryant v. Madigan, supra,
The state concedes that the statute is applicablе to prisons, as distinct from prisoners, and thus that its protections are applicable to
*484
guards and other prison employees, as assumed in
Miller v. Illinois Dept. of Corrections,
Realistically, judges do this, or something like it, at times. An example much emphasized by the state in this ease is the exclusion of prisoners employed in a prison from the minimum-wage and maximum-hours provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act. See, e.g.,
Vanskike v. Peters,
But courts do not create exceptions to statutes every time it seems that the legislature overlooked something. The legislative role of the courts is more confined than that of the legislature. E.g.,
Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida,
— U.S.-,-,
The state’s first argument for a judge-made exception straddles the two criteria. The argument is that Congress cannot invade an “essential state function,” such as prison administration, without a clear statement of its intent to invade it. “Clear statement” rules of statutory interpretation occupy an intermediate zone — some would say a no man’s land — between interpretations motivated by desire to avoid a constitutional challenge and interpretations motivated by desire to give effect to the legislature’s intentions. They give quasi-constitutional protection — quasi-constitutional because based on constitutional values but not an interpretation of the Constitution, and therefore subject to being overruled by Congress — to quasi-constitutional interests, such as the interest of the state in being allowed to perform the traditional core functions of state government without federal interference. See, e.g.,
Gregory v. Ashcroft,
Prison administration is indeed a core function of state government, as is education. But the state’s concession that the Americans with Disabilities Act applies to the prison’s relations with its employees and visitors, as well as to the public schools, suggests that the clear-statement rule does not carry this particular core function of state government outside the scope of the Act. We doubt, moreover, that Congress could speak much more clearly than it did when it made the Act expressly аpplicable to all public entities and defined the term “public entity” to include every possible agency of state or local government. Maybe there is an inner core of sovereign functions, such as the balance of power between governor and state legislature, that if somehow imperiled by the ADA would be protected by the clear-statement rule, cf.
Gregory v. Ashcroft, supra,
The second and as it seems to us firmer basis for judgermade exceptions to statutes is where the exception is necessary to save the statute from generating absurd consequences. E.g.,
Public Citizen v. U.S. Department of Justice,
It might seem absurd to apply the Americans with Disabilities Act to prisoners. Prisoners are not a favored group in society; the propensity of some of them to sue at the drop of a hat is well known; prison systems are strapped for funds; the practical effect of granting disabled prisoners rights of access that might require costly modifications of prison facilities might be the curtailment of educational, recreational, and rehabilitative programs for prisoners, in which evеnt everyone might be worse off. But unlike the minimum-wage case, there is another side to the issue. The Americans with Disabilities Act was cast in terms not of subsidizing an interest group but of eliminating a form of discrimination that Congress considered unfair and even odious. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101(a)(2), (a)(3); H.R.Rep. No. 485(11), 101st Cong., 2d Sess. 22, 30, 42 (1990) IIS.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1990, pp. 267, 303, 311-12, 324. The Act assimilates the disabled to groups that by reason of sex, age, race, religion, nationality, or ethnic origin are believed to be victims of discrimination. Rights against discrimination are among the few rights that prisoners do not park at the prison gates. E.g.,
Turner v. Safley, supra,
Insofar as the Act is intended to “mainstream” disabled people, see H.R.Rep. No. 485(11), supra, at 35, its application to prisoners might produce some anomalies. The disabled prisoner might be on death row, or serving a life term without possibility of parole, though these wоuld be reasons unrelated to any discrimination against the handicapped for denying the prisoner access to programs designed to help him become a productive member of society upon his release from prison. Most prisoners, in any event, are not executed, and are eventually released, as was the plaintiff in this case. They have the same interest in access to the programs, services, and activities available to the other inmates of their prison as disabled people on the outside have to the counterpart programs, services, and activities available to free people. They have no right to more services than the аble-bodied inmates, but they have a right, if the Act is given its natural meaning, not to be treated even worse than those more fortunate inmates.
*487 Of course the failure to exclude prisoners from the Act may well, despite what we have said, have been an oversight. But we do not have enough confidence that this is so to justify our making the exception ourselvеs when we have no statutory handle or any clue in the legislative history (the only clue— the judicial interpretation of the Rehabilitation Act at the time the ADA was passed— cuts against creating the exception) that might enable us to exercise a creativity fairly describable as interpretive rather than legislative.
What we have said scotches the state’s argument that the suit is barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Like the other antidiscrimination statutes, the Americans with Disabilities Act is an exercise of Congress’s power under section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment (as well as under the commerce clause, which is not excepted from the Eleventh Amendment) to enact legislation designed to enforce and bolster the substantive provisions of the amendment, in this case the equal protection clause. 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101(a)(7), (b)(4). The Eleventh Amendment does not insulate the states from suits in federal courts to enforce federal statutes enacted under the authority of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida, supra,
— U.S. at -,
So the judgment dismissing the suit must be reversed, and the suit reinstated. This does not mean the plaintiff will prevail. Even if everything in the complaint is true, which we do not know, since the answer denies the principal allegations, the defendant may be able to show that there was no reasonable accommodation that would have enabled the plaintiff to participate in the programs or services that he complains about being еxcluded from, or may be able to show that any necessary accommodation would impose an undue burden on the prison system. Terms like “reasonable” and “undue” are relative to circumstances, and the circumstances of a prison are different from those of a school, an office, or a factory, as the Supreme Court has emphasized in the parallel setting of prisoners’ constitutional rights. E.g.,
Turner v. Safley, supra,
Reversed And RemaNded.
