Under the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, only U.S. citizens are eligible to receive Food Stamps.' The plaintiffs in this case are permanent resident aliens who received Food Stamps prior to the statute’s effective date and whose applications for U.S. citizenship are pending with the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). They argue that the transition procedures implementing the new citizenship requirement violate their due process rights, for INS processes citizenship applications too slowly for them to have a meaningful opportunity to meet the new criterion. The district court denied their claim on summary judgment. The court also denied their request for certification of a nationwide class, deciding instead to certify a class limited to plaintiffs in the Seventh Circuit. We affirm the district court’s decisions on these points.
I.
The Food Stamps program entitles qualified recipients to benefits for a specified period of time, known as a “certification period,” which may not exceed 12 months (or 24 months if all the members of the adult members of the household are elderly or disabled). 7 U.S.C. § 2012(c). Benefits terminate automatically at the end of the сertification period. Id. § 2020(e)(4). As the end of the certification period approaches, recipients may elect to engage in a “recerti-fication process” to establish their continuing eligibility for Food Stamps. The recer-tification process provides recipients with, among other things, notice of impending termination of benefits, an opportunity to submit all information necessary to determine eligibility, and a face-to-face interview. Id. § 2020(e)(4); 7 C.F.R. § 273.14. The process is streamlined to enable Food Stamp recipients who successfully recertify to maintain a continuous flow of benefits from one certification period to the next. 7 C.F.R. § 273.14(d).
Section 402(a)(1) of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (“the Act”), Pub.L. No. 104-193, 110 Stat. 2105, 2262, added for the first time a citizenship rеquirement to the Food Stamp program’s eligibility criteria. 8. U.S.C. § 1612(a)(1). The Act also provided transition procedures for applying the new citizenship requirement. Id. § 1612(a)(2)(D)(ii)(I)-(III) (as amended by § 510 of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA), Pub.L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009, 3009-673). Under the transition procedures, all recipients whose eligibility could be affected by the new law were required to complete the recertifi-cation process, which requires proof of citizenship, between April 1, 1997 and-August 22, 1997. Thus, legal aliens who had been receiving Food Stamps were cut off on August 22, 1997 unless they became citizens prior to that' date.
The plaintiffs in this class action are impoverished permanent resident aliens who applied for citizenship before August 22, 1997, and who are awaiting resolution of their citizenship applications by INS. INS proсesses citizenship applications slowly and, the plaintiffs argue, ineptly. In the summary judgment proceedings below, the plaintiffs presented evidence of INS processing delays ranging from several months to over three years. The plaintiffs also presented evidence that INS ultimately approves over 80% of citizenship applications. As a result of INS’s long delays in processing applicаtions, the vast majority of which ultimately are approved, the plaintiffs — who claim to meet all the requirements for citizenship— have not been able to become citizens prior to implementation of the hew Food Stamps citizenship eligibility requirement.
The plaintiffs filed suit in the district court seeking certification as a nationwide class and alleging that the statutory transition procedure, couрled with INS’s delay in processing their citizenship applications, violates their due process rights to a fair opportunity to prove continuing eligibility for food stamps through the. statutory recertification procedures. The district court entered summary judgment for the defendants, holding that the plaintiffs failed to show the existence of a protected property interest and that, even if there were a property interest, the legislative process afforded plaintiffs all the process that was due. The district court also declined to certify a nationwide class -and in
II.
To prevail on their due process claim, the plaintiffs must first demonstrate that they were deprived of a protected property interest; if they make this showing, then we proceed to determine what process they were due in connection with that deprivation. See Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
The nature of the plaintiffs’ asserted property right requires some explication. The plaintiffs emphasize that they do not claim a property right directly in a continuous stream of benefits, which they concede would be a losing claim given the time-limited nature of the entitlement to Food Stamps. See Holman v. Block,
Thus, the plaintiffs assert a property interest not just in the recertification procedures, but in meaningful recertification procedures — that is, recertification procedures that afford them a fair opportunity to prove continuing eligibility. Plaintiffs argue that they were deprived of this property right because the transition procedures implementing the citizenship requirement virtually eliminated any fair opportunity to establish continuing eligibility in time to avoid a break in benefits. According to the plaintiffs, the strict August 22nd deadline, together with INS’s alleged ineptitude and delay, converted the recertification process into a sham, for plaintiffs had no chance to become citizens in time to meet the deadline.
The plaintiffs rely on Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
The Supreme Court held that the dismissal of Logan’s complaint violated Logan’s due process rights to use the statutorily-mandated procedures for adjudicating his discrimination claim. Following its customary two-pronged due process analysis, the Court first held that Logan had a protectable property
According to the plaintiffs, Logan stands for the proposition that there can be a property right in procedures that allow for a fair opportunity to adjudicate an underlying claim — such as a claim of discrimination, as in Logan, or a claim of continued eligibility for benefits, as in the instant case — regаrdless of whether any property -interest attaches to the underlying claim itself. We do not believe that Logan may be read so broadly. Logan does refer to the “right to use the FEPA’s adjudicatory procedures”, id at 429-30,
Thus, the plaintiffs’ reliance on Logan gets them no closer to their goal of establishing a property interest in the Food Stamp recerti-fication procedures. This result is unsurprising, for defining access to procedures as a protectable property interest would eliminate the distinction between property and the procedures that are constitutionally required to protect it. The Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized the importance of this distinction, and the Court has not looked favorably upon claims of a property entitlement to a set of procedures. See, e.g., Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
The problem with the plaintiffs’ argument is that, in theory, almost any procedure can be cast in terms of providing a “fair opportunity” to obtain the substantive benefit that might lie at the end of the procedure. That is what procedures are for. To characterize this feature as creating property rights, hоwever, would make the scope of the Due Process Clause virtually boundless. It would
We are also unpersuaded by the plaintiffs’ reliance on Youakim v. McDonald,
The plaintiffs argue that Youakim controls this ease becаuse the transition procedure for implementing the Food Stamp program’s citizenship requirement, like the transition procedure in Youakim, fails to afford former beneficiaries a meaningful opportunity to establish their continuing eligibility for benefits. The crucial difference between Youak-im and this case, however, is that the Youakim plaintiffs had an undisputed property entitlement to foster care benefits:
[T]he foster care benefits here are a species of property that is protected under the Constitution, and the State does not seriously contest that conclusion. Entitlements to a broad range of health and welfare benefits have been considered as ‘property’ under the Due Process Clause. The Director has offered no meaningfid distinction between the[se] benefits ... and the foster care benefits that concern us hеre.
Id. at 1288 (citations omitted). Since the foster care benefits were coneededly property, the only dispute was whether the plaintiffs’ property interest survived the legislative reforms that added the new licensing requirement. Thus, Youakim does not help the plaintiffs in this case to establish their property interest in meaningfid recertification procedures, for the entitlement in Youakim was to substantive benefits, not to a particular set of procedures. Youakim may be relevant to the second prong of the plaintiffs’ due process argument — -the process that is due in connection with the deprivation of property resulting from a legislative change to a benefits program — but it is not relevant to establishing the requisite first prong.
Because the plaintiffs fail to establish a property interest, we conclude that the transition procedures implementing the new citizenship requirement do not violate their due process rights. We therefore affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment for the defendants on the plaintiff’s due process claim.
After rejecting the plaintiffs’ due process claim, the district court proceeded to certify a class limited to persons in the Seventh Circuit. The plaintiffs challenge this certificаtion, arguing that they had met all the requirements for certification of a nationwide class.
We review the district court’s class certification for an abuse of discretion. Mira v. Nuclear Measurements Corp.,
(1) the class is'so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable, (2) there are questions of law or fact common to the class, (3) the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of the claims or defenses of the class, and (4) the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class.
The district court addressed the class certification issue only briefly, noting at the outset that it “agrees that the geographic- scope of the class should be limited to the Seventh Circuit” because the named plaintiffs all reside there and because the plaintiffs rely “almost exclusively” on Youakim. After making this statement, the district court proceeded to conclude that “[pjlaintiffs satisfy the other requisites of class certification under 23(a) and (b)(2).”
The plaintiffs argue that the district court’s determination that they met all the requirements of Rule 23(a) rеquires certification of a nationwide class. However, we read the district court’s decision differently. The district court first concluded that the geographic scope of the class should be narrowed; only then did it state that the plaintiffs had met the requirements of Rule 23. We infer from this that when the district court considered the Rule 23 factors, it was addressing the geographically-limited class, not the nationwide class sought by the plaintiffs. Thus, although the district court’s statement of reasons could be more robust, we do not find a contradiction in its reasoning.
In light of the district coürt’s justifications for limiting the class to plaintiffs residing in the Seventh Circuit, it appears that the district court did not believe-that a nationwide class would present common questions of law or that the claims or defenses of the representative parties would be typical of the claims of the class, as required by Rule 23. The district court evidently reached this conclusion because of the plaintiffs’ heavy reliance on Seventh Circuit precedent, particularly Youakim. Given the fact that all the named plaintiffs reside in the Seventh Circuit, the range in INS processing delays across different geographic regions, and the plaintiffs’ reliance on Seventh Circuit cаse law, we believe that the.district court’s certification of a geographicallylimited class was within its discretion, particularly given the Supreme Court’s admonition that certification of a nationwide class may “have a detrimental effect by foreclosing adjudication by a number of different courts and judges, and of increasing, in certain cases, the pressures on [the Supreme Court’s] docket.” Califano v. Yamasaki
We therefore affirm the decision of the district court.
