This appeal presents the question whether 42 U.S.C. § 300e-9 (1988) of the Health Maintenance Organization Act of 1973 confers on health maintenance organizations (HMOs) a private cause of action against employers. The Health Care Plan, Inc. (“HCP”) — a federally-qualified HMO— brought an action for damages and injunc-tive relief against Aetna Insurance Co., pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 300e-9 and N.Y.Pub.Health Law § 4407 (McKinney 1985 & Supp.1992), to remedy Aetna’s refusal to include HCP as an option in its 1992 employee health benefits plan. HCP appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of New York, John T. Curtin,
Judge,
which dismissed the federal claims on the grounds that section 300e-9 bestowed no private right of action on HMOs and refused to entertain pendant jurisdiction over the state law claim.
I
Section 300e-9(a) — known as the dual option requirement — specifies that employers which are subject to minimum wage regulations under the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. § 206 (1988), 1 employ at least twenty-five employees per year, and offer their employees a health benefits plan must also offer their employees the option of joining an HMO, if a federally-qualified HMO is available in the area. 2 If both the staff-model and the individual-practice/group-model varieties of HMOs exist in the area, 3 employers subject to section 300e-9 must include within their benefits options at least one of each of these two types of HMOs. 42 U.S.C. § 300e-9(b) (1988).
In 1979, HCP — a qualified, staff-model HMO, providing services in Erie County, New York — requested that Aetna offer its Erie County employees the option of participating in HCP’s health program. Aetna complied with HCP’s request, as required by section 300e-9. By 1990, twelve of Aet-na’s thirty-five employees in Erie County belonged to HCP. In 1991, Aetna informed HCP that, as of 1992, it would no longer offer HCP as an option in their employee health benefits plan. Aetna cited as the basis for discontinuing the HCP option HCP’s failure either to respond to a letter of agreement Aetna had circulated to *740 HMOs included in its health benefits plans or to submit a written request to be included among Aetna’s options to its employees in 1992 as required by 42 C.F.R. § 417.152 (1991). HCP, on the other hand, denies the validity of both of the reasons Aetna provided for dropping the HCP option. The dispute over whether Aetna discontinued offering its employees HCP’s services in violation of section 300e-9, however, is not before us on appeal. The only issue on appeal is whether the district court erred in its determination that section 300e-9 does not confer on HCP, or any other HMO, the right to bring a private action in federal court against an employer.
II
Section 300e-9 makes no explicit mention of a. private right of action to pursue remedies for violations of the Act. We must determine, therefore, whether Congress intended in enacting the HMO Act or its amendments to create an implied private right of action.
4
Suter v. Artist M.,
- U.S.-,
Framing its arguments in terms of the
Cort
analysis, HCP argues that Congress’ intent to create a private right of action emerges from section 300e-9. According to HCP, HMOs were the intended beneficiary of section 300e-9, thus, satisfying the first
Cort
factor. The logic that underlies this
Cort
factor is that if Congress intended to benefit a certain group through legislation, it is more likely that Congress intended for that group to seek relief directly in federal court.
Pryor,
HCP claims that the second
Cort
factor — the central question whether the language, structure, or legislative history of the statute provide a predicate for the implication of a private remedy — is satisfied by the “specific right-creating language” of section 300e-9(a)-(b). The language of section 300e-9 leaves no doubt that Congress intended to impose obligations upon
employers.
But these obligations, in and of themselves, do not provide a basis for conferring a private right of action on
HMOs,
without further indication of congressional intent.
See TAMA,
HCP argues that we must look to the context within which Congress legislated to uncover congressional intent. When Congress enacted the HMO Act, it operated on the basis of a different paradigm of the judiciary’s role in the creation of causes of action. At that time, the prevailing view was that courts should create private rights of action if they would help effectuate the purpose of the statute and the legislative history did not bear witness to Congress’ opposition to such remedies,
see J.I. Case Co. v. Borak,
HCP seizes upon dicta from
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Curran,
Thus, the emphasis of our inquiry, as noted above, is whether Congress intended to create a private cause of action. The first two
Cort
factors fail to indicate that Congress intended a private cause of action pursuant to section 300e-9 and, in this context, the final two
Cort
factors, in and of themselves, would not constitute sufficient evidence of congressional intent. Therefore, we need not consider the remaining
Cort
factors.
See California v. Sierra Club,
Ill
HCP next contends that when considering whether a statute implies a private right of action for
equitable relief,
courts need not engage in a restrictive, Cori-type analysis to ascertain Congress’ intent. For each type of remedy a litigant seeks, according to this argument, courts must examine whether Congress intended the cause of action. HCP, furthermore, draws a distinction between equitable remedies and damage remedies with respect to the analysis used to determine if the statute implies a private right of action. Damage remedies, indeed, have a potential to result in either under- or over-deterrence; thus, by implying private damage remedies the judiciary runs the risk of undermining the legislative purpose of a statute.
See
Tamar Frankel,
Implied Rights of Action,
67 Va.L.Rev. 553, 570-78 (1981). Injunctive relief and other equitable remedies, in contrast, often do not give rise to the same concerns.
See Piper v. Chris-Craft Indus.,
IV
We find that there is no affirmative evidence of Congress’ intent to bestow a private cause of action on HMOs to enforce section 300e-9. We therefore affirm the district court’s order dismissing HCP’s suit against Aetna for alleged violations of section 300e-9 in conjunction with Aetna’s discontinuation of HCP as an option in its employee benefits plan.
Notes
. Employers that would be subject to ,29 U.S.C. § 206 but for the exception established by 29 U.S.C. § 213(a) and that meet the remaining criteria of section 300e-9 are also subject to the requirements of section 300e-9.
. Section 300e-9(a), in pertinent part, provides:
(1) In accordance with regulations which the Secretary shall prescribe—
(A) each employer—
(i) which is now or hereafter required during any calendar quarter to pay its employees the minimum wage prescribed by section 206 of Title 29 (or would be required to pay its employees such wage but for section 213(a) of Title 29), and
(ii) which during such calendar quarter employed an average number of employees of not less than 25,
shall include in any health benefits plan
offered to such employees in the calendar year beginning after such calendar quarter the option of membership in qualified health maintenance organizations which are engaged in the provision of basic health services in health maintenance organization service areas in which at least 25 of such employees reside.
.In a staff-model HMO, the majority of basic health services are provided by health professionals who are employed by the HMO. See § 300e-9(b)(l). In a group-model HMO, the HMO contracts with an independent physician practice group to provide care to subscribers. In an individual-practice association model HMO, the HMO contracts with independent physicians or groups of physicians to provide services. Clark Havighurst, Doctors and Hospitals: An Antitrust Perspective on Traditional Relationships, 1984 Duke LJ. 1071, 1073 n. 3.; see § 300e-9(b)(2).
. We do not reach the question whether section • 300e-9 confers a private right of action on employees nor do we consider whether an HMO may assert third-party standing to represent the interests of employees.
But fee UAW v. Ring Screw Works,
. To the extent that HCP intends to argue that the contemporary legal context in which Congress legislated has bearing on Congress' intent — rather than on the method of analysis we employ to determine that intent — HCP is un-doubtably correct.
See Karahalios,
. The enforcement methods expressly provided for in a statute, of course, may constitute evidence of Congress’ intent whether or not to create a private cause of action.
