Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
Facing a serious financial crisis, the University of the District of Columbia, an independent agency of the D.C. government, implemented a number of cost-saving measures, including a plan to scale back its 1992 summer school program by not extending summer contracts to its department chairpersons. Protesting this sharp departure from a decade-long practice of issuing such contracts, thirty-three of the department chairs filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988). They claimed that the University had deprived them of a constitutionally protected property right without due process of law in violation of the Fifth Amendment and had breached their contractual rights as employees of the government of the District of Columbia. The district court granted summary judgment to the University with respect to the chairpersons’ Fifth Amendment claim and dismissed their common law contract claim for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment. Even if the chairpersons had a constitutionally protected property interest in summer employment— an issue that we do not address — we hold that the University’s grievance procedures, which the chairpersons did not pursue, would have accorded them all the process that they were due. We also affirm the district court’s dismissal of the chairpersons’ common law claim and decline to address their constitutional Contract Clause claim because they did not raise it in the district court.
I.
The University’s fifty departments are headed by chairpersons chosen from among the regular faculty by the deans of the relevant colleges. Chairpersons perform administrative and supervisory duties, in addition to teaching. Like regular faculty members, chairpersons are employed by the University pursuant to nine-month “academic year” contracts. Until the summer of 1992, the University also offered chairpersons additional contracts covering the eight-week summer term with compensation set at twenty-two percent of their academic year faculty salaries.
In the autumn of 1991, the University began to address budget shortfalls that it anticipated would result from reduced government funding and depletion of its cash reserves. Dr. Tilden LeMelle, President of the University, proposed a wide range of initiatives designed to lower operating costs, such as hiring freezes, pay cuts and program restructuring. One of his recommendations led to a decision not to issue contracts to department chairpersons for the 1992 summer term.
On April 28, 1992, Acting Provost and Vice-President for Academic Affairs Marcel-lina Brooks formally announced the summer contract decision to the deans and instructed them to inform their respective chairpersons. Two weeks later, on May 14, she sent a written memorandum directly to the chairpersons, advising them that: “In the interest of expanding the course offerings during this time of fiscal limitations, the University will not employ department chairpersons this summer. You will resume your duties as chairperson effective August 16, 1992.” Memorandum from Marcellina Brooks, Acting Provost and Vice-President for Academic *1471 Affairs, to Department Chairpersons (May 14, 1992), in Joint Appendix (J.A.) at 216. This decision became effective at the beginning of the summer term, a few days after the academic year ended on May 15.
Surprised by this change in the University’s practice of issuing summer contracts, the chairpersons complained to their respective deans. The deans uniformly disclaimed any ability to alter the administration’s decision. On behalf of a group of chairpersons, one chairperson wrote to President LeMelle requesting that he “direct[] immediate issuance of chairpersons’ summer employment contracts” or “notify me ... of the appropriate procedures for bringing a formal grievance against the University on behalf of the departmental chairpersons.” Letter from Dr. Wilmer L. Johnson to Dr. Tilden J. LeMelle 2 (June 9, 1992), in J.A. at 66. Although the President’s response said that he had forwarded the letter to the University’s General Counsel, Letter from Dr. Tilden J. LeMelle to Dr. Wilmer L. Johnson (July 7, 1992), in J.A. at 68, the chairpersons did not receive a formal response from the General Counsel’s office. Nor did the chairpersons initiate a formal grievance.
In January of the following year, thirty-three of the department chairpersons brought this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the Board of Trustees of the University, President LeMelle and Acting Provost Brooks, alleging that they had been deprived of summer employment in 1992 without due process in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
See Bolling v. Sharpe,
The district court rejected the chairpersons’ claim that a property right to summer employment arose from the D.C. Municipal Regulations, D.C.Mun.Regs. tit. 8 (1988), or from the University’s practice of issuing summer contracts to department chairs. In the absence of a “mutually explicit understanding,”
Perry v. Sindermann,
II.
We review
de novo
the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
See Propert v. District of Columbia,
In order to assess whether the government has violated the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause, we engage in a “familiar two-part inquiry”: we must determine whether the plaintiffs were deprived of a protected interest, and, if so, whether they received the process they were due.
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
In response to the question “what process is due,”
Morrissey v. Brewer,
The chairs claim that the notice they received was insufficient, but they do not support this assertion, nor could they: the department chairpersons received written notice of the administration’s decision from Acting Provost Brooks on May 14. Brooks’ memorandum clearly satisfies the due process requirement that notice be “reasonably calculated to reach interested parties.”
Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
The University’s grievance procedures, adopted in compliance with D.C.Code Ann. § l-617.2(a) (1992) and set forth in D.C.Mun. Regs. tit. 8, ch. 16 (1988), offer employees an opportunity to challenge a decision or policy of the University. A “grievance” encompasses complaints alleging a “violation ... of University rules or applicable law” or “[a] failure to act pursuant to the policies and practices of the University....” Id. at § 1600.3. Upon lodging a formal written grievance, a grievant has the opportunity to engage in “informal discussions” with an immediate supervisor, id. at § 1603.2, who in turn grants the relief sought or refers the matter, within five days, to the next level supervisor, id. at § 1603.3. If, as would have been the case here, the second level supervisor is a vice-president, the grievant can request review by an impartial panel. Id. at § 1605.2.
The regulations require the impartial panel to conduct an independent inquiry, id. at § 1606.1, which may include gathering documentary evidence, conducting personal interviews, calling a group meeting, holding an informal hearing or any combination thereof, id. at § 1606.2. If the panel holds a hearing, it must seek “to bring out pertinent facts regarding the grievance raised,” id. at § 1607.2, and the grievant has a right to present witnesses, id. at § 1608.1. After the panel has conducted its inquiry, it must afford the grievant an opportunity to review the investigative file and to respond. Id. at § 1606.3. The panel then reports its findings and recommendations to the appropriate vice-president and the grievant. Id. While the regulations provide no time limit for the panel’s proceedings, they do require the vice-president to make a decision within fifteen days of receipt of the panel’s recommendations. Id. at § 1609.1. In most cases, including this one, the grievant has a right to appeal to the D.C. Office of Employee Appeals, id. at § 1609.5; see also D.C.Code *1473 Ann. § l-617.3(b) (1992), and any subsequent decision by the Office of Employee Appeals may be appealed to the Superior Court of the District of Columbia, see D.C.Code Ann. § 1-606.3(d) (1992).
We are satisfied that these procedures incorporate the basic element of due process: the opportunity to be heard by a neutral decision-maker.
See Propert,
The chairpersons argue that the procedures could not have provided them with a hearing before the deprivation occurred, contending that a “pre-deprivation” hearing is required by the Due Process Clause. We, of course, cannot know for certain whether the University’s procedures could have afforded review by an impartial panel before the summer term began since the chairpersons never took advantage of them. As we understand the record, however, a hearing prior to the beginning of the summer term was at least possible. Had the chairpersons filed a formal written grievance immediately after their deans informed them of the administration’s decision, they could have requested review by an impartial panel within five days. See D.C.Mun.Regs. tit. 8, § 1603.3. Although the regulations do not establish any binding deadlines for an investigative panel, it is possible that a panel would have moved quickly in light of the impending opening of the summer term.
The outcome of this case, however, does not turn on whether the University’s procedures could have provided a hearing prior to the beginning of the summer term, for we conclude that, under these circumstances, due process does not require one. Nothing in
Propert v. District of Columbia, supra,
upon which the chairs principally rely to support their contention that a pre-deprivation hearing is required, is to the contrary. There we held that the District of Columbia’s procedures for destroying a registered vehicle identified as “junk” failed to satisfy the minimum requirements of due process, not because a pre-deprivation hearing was not held, but because the District provided no hearing procedure at all.
While a pre-deprivation hearing is certainly the preferred manner of satisfying due process, the Supreme Court has made clear that a post-deprivation opportunity to be heard is sufficient in “extraordinary situations where some valid governmental interest is at stake that justifies postponing the hearing until after the event.”
James Daniel Good,
— U.S. at -,
We begin with “the private interest that will be affected” by the University’s decision.
Mathews v. Eldridge,
We next consider “the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards,” the second of the three
Mathews
factors.
Mathews v. Eldridge,
With respect to the final
Mathews
factor— the government’s interest, “including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail,”
Mathews v. Eldridge,
Weighing the
Mathews
factors, we find that, under the circumstances of this ease, the grievance procedures would have satisfied due process even if they could not have been completed until after the beginning of the summer program. The chairpersons’ private interest was strictly monetary, of limited duration, without personal stigma and fully compensable through a post-deprivation financial award in their favor; pre-deprivation hearings were not likely to reduce the risk of an erroneous decision; and finally the government’s interest in continuing to provide educational services to the community while remaining solvent was substantial.
See Memphis Light,
III.
The district court dismissed the chairpersons’ breach of contract claim because they had failed to exhaust their administrative remedies under the District of Columbia Comprehensive Merit Personnel Act, D.C.Code Ann. §§ 1-601.1 to 1-637.2 (1992), and the University’s grievance procedures, D.C.Mun.Regs. tit. 8, ch. 16. The chairpersons do not appeal the district court’s determination that their contract claim fell within the statutory definition of “grievance,” nor do they appeal the court’s determination that they did not avail themselves of the grievance procedures. Instead, they argue that pursuing their administrative remedies would have been futile because “the relevant officials [had] already committed themselves to a course of action.” Appellants’ Brief at 29. Even construing the allegations of the complaint most favorably to the pleader, as we are required to do when reviewing a dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction,
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
In this circuit, the exhaustion requirement “may be waived only in the most exceptional circumstances.”
Communications Workers of America v. AT & T,
To demonstrate the futility of pursuing a grievance, the chairpersons cull several allegations from their complaint, including: “The deans said that they were not a party to the decision and could not do anything about it,” Complaint, UDC Chairs Chapter, Am. Ass’n of Univ. Professors, No. 93cv0141, at ¶ 9 (D.D.C. Jan. 21, 1993),
in
J.A. at 6; a representative of the chairpersons wrote to President LeMelle requesting that summer contracts be issued to the chairpersons or that the President notify the chairpersons “of the
*1476
appropriate procedures for bringing a formal grievance against the University on behalf of the department chairpersons,” but the President’s only response was to forward the letter to the University’s General Counsel,
id.;
and finally the General Counsel “acknowledged” to two of the plaintiffs that chairs would have to “file suit” if they wanted compensation for the summer of 1992,
id.
at ¶ 10,
in
J.A. at 7. These allegations, which add up to the proposition that the deans would not, or could not, reconsider the summer contract decision and that an appeal to the Provost, the person who announced the decision, would be futile, fall short of demonstrating to us that the University’s grievance procedures would have been “clearly useless.”
Randolph-Sheppard,
Finally, we decline to consider the chairpersons’ claim of a Contract Clause violation. U.S. Const, art. I, § 10, cl. 1. They raised it for the first time on appeal, and this court has consistently declined to decide claims not raised in the district court.
See, e.g., Boehner v. Anderson,
So ordered.
