Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
Appellants are two veterans associations appealing the district court’s dismissal of their suit alleging that the Department of Veterans Affairs violated the APA and the Constitution (due process clause) because of the average time it takes the VA to process veterans’ claims. The district court held that it lacked jurisdiction and we agree, although for somewhat different reasons.
I
Congress has created a number of programs that provide monetary benefits to America’s veterans and them families. One of the largest such programs provides disability benefits to veterans for service-related injury or disease. Approximately 3.4 million veterans currently receive disability benefits from the VA.
Veterans who seek disability benefits must file a claim with the VA at one of its 57 regional offices throughout thе country. The VA is required by statute to assist veterans in developing evidence to support their claims.
1
The VA
inter alia
arranges for and provides medical examinations when necessary, seeks all government records relevant to a claim (such as military service records and treatment records from VA medical facilities), and makes reasonable efforts to acquire non-federal records identified by the veterаn. Once all relevant evidence has been gathered, a VA “rating specialist” evaluates the claim. This process is informal and non-adversarial.
See Walters v. Nat’l Ass’n of Radiation Survivors,
Veterans who wish to contest this initial decision may do so. They may (but are not required to) elect to have their claim reviewed by a more senior rating specialist within the regional office where the claim was initially adjudicated and, if still dissatisfied, they may appeal to the Board оf Veterans’ Appeals. The Board, led by a chairman responsible to the Secretary of the VA, conducts de novo review of presented claims. While the Board only decides appeals after a claimant has been given the opportunity for a hearing, these proceedings are also quite informal. See id. at 310-11. Adverse decisions by the Board can subsequently be appealed exclusively to the United Statеs Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (“CAVC”), an independent Article I federal court. The CAVC may review all legal issues, including constitutional claims, and, notably, has the power to “compel action of the Secretary unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed.” Decisions of the CAVC may be appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit which has authority to “decide all relevant questions of law, including interpreting constitutional and statutory provisions.” 2 Further review, of course, may be sought in the United States Supreme Court.
Congress has divested other federal courts of authority to review certain decisions relating to benefits. Thus, 38 U.S.C. §511 provides that, “[t]he Secretary shall decide all questions of law and fact necessary to a decision by the Secretary under a law that affects the provision of benеfits by the Secretary to veterans or the depen *657 dents or survivors of veterans,” but, subject to a few carefully defined exceptions (including the appeals process outlined above), “the decision of the Secretary as to any such question shall be final and conclusive and may not be reviewed by any other official or by any court, whether by an action in the nature of mandamus or otherwise.” Congress, moreover, specified that challenges to VA regulations may only be brought in the Federal Circuit.
Over the last several years, various entities including the Government Accountability Office, veterans service organizations, and congressional committees have raised concerns regarding the timeliness with which the VA system processes claims for benefits. In a 2005 report to the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, the GAO notеd “large numbers of pending claims and lengthy processing times” in the VA’s disability program, and subsequent GAO testimony to a House of Representatives subcommittee indicated that the VA’s inventory of pending claims and their average time pending had increased “significantly” over the previous 3 years. 3
Congress has taken some steps to speed up the claim processing. In 2007, for example, Congress provided funding to the VA to hire an аdditional 3,100 employees, the vast majority of which were hired into the division responsible for processing disability claims. Congress also recently enacted a law requiring that the VA establish a pilot program in 10 of its regional offices under which fully developed disability claims (a subset of claims where no additional evidence need be collected) are adjudicated within 90 days. 4 Congress has not, however, enacted any statutory deadlines that would require the VA to adjudicate all disability claims within a definite time period.
Unsatisfied with these measures, two advocacy groups for veterans, Vietnam Veterans of America and Veterans for Modern Warfare filed a complaint which alleged that the VA was in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act and the Due Process Clause of the Constitution (as well as federal statutes that require the VA to provide “expeditious treatment” to claims that are remanded from the CAVC to the VA, see 38 U.S.C. § 7112, and from the Board back to the VA regional office, see id. at § 5109B) because it generally takes too long for a veteran to get relief. The plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment as well as an injunction requiring the VA to issue “an initial decision on every veteran’s claim for benefits within 90 days” and to “ensure that appeals of claims decisions are resolved within 180 days.”
The complaint seeks a ruling that the VA’s entire disability benefits processing system is illegal. It does not suggest the time the VA has taken to adjudicate the claim of any single veteran is unreasonably long, but rather alleges that the average time the VA has taken to reach initial decisions at the regional office stage, the average time the Board takes to resolve appeals, and the average time it takes the regional offices to resolve claims remanded by the Board are all unreasonably long. The plaintiffs, mоreover, actually disavow any intention of seeking relief in any individual claim by stating, “[t]o the extent any of the facts presented herein apply to individuals rather than to veterans as a whole, they are intended for illustrative *658 purposes only. Nothing in this complaint is intended as, nor should it be construed as, an attempt to obtain review of an individual determination by the VA or its appellate system.”
The district court denied the рlaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction and, in a published order, granted the VA’s motion to dismiss on the grounds that plaintiffs lacked standing because they sought to impose on the VA a “uniform timeline for assessing these claims even though the claims are not monolithic.” And the court stated that the plaintiffs were not “likely to have the injuries redressed by a favorable decision due to the plaintiffs’ failure to state a claim with respect to a violation of the APA or the Due Process Clause.” (emphasis added).
II
Appellants contend that the district court conflated the merits of the case with standing. We agree. Whether or not plaintiffs stated a claim — whether they had a cause of action — -goes to the merits of the case and, as we have held, the merits must be assumed when considering standing.
City of Waukesha v. EPA
But the government raises other jurisdictional arguments. Perhaps most prominent is its contention that § 511 precludes district court (and our) jurisdiction because appellants are essentially challenging the Secretary’s conclusions of “law and fаct necessary to a [benefits] decision.” Appellants respond that they are not challenging the Secretary’s actual decision in any case, but rather his failure to decide cases in a timely manner. Yet, one might think that inherent in any adjudicatory decisionmaking process is an implicit determination as to when the decision maker will get to the case. And in this situation we are not dealing with a true judicial-like role, but rathеr institutional decisionmaking by a huge department, implicating resource allocation and management practices in which necessarily the pace of decisionmaking would have had to be addressed. Whether looking at an individual case or a mass of cases, a decision or decisions as to when to issue opinions would appear to be a preliminary decision necessary to a final decision — and although more precisely an administrative determination, it would seem to be covered by the broad cloak “law and fact” phrase of § 511.
The government points to two of our cases in support,
Price v. United States,
Appellants, however, point to another case of ours,
Broudy v. Mather,
Undeniably, as the government suggested, there is tension between Price and Thomas on the one hand and Broudy on the other — particularly in light of our recognition in Price that the record did not even indicate whether the plaintiff had actually brought his reimbursement claim. (Moreover, as an added point in the government’s favor, we note that § 511 expressly precludes a mandamus action- — the common law writ designed to deal with unreasonable delay.) We need not seek to resolve the tension between our cases, however, because we perceive another jurisdictional ground upon which we may more comfortably rely.
The government contends that a second jurisdictional defect undermines appellant’s case — that APA Section 704 precludes the suit because that section authorizes review only if a party laсks an adequate remedy, and as the government contends, any veteran can bring an unreasonable delay action in the CAVC. Both the Sixth and Eighth Circuits have denied veterans claims on just this basis.
See, e.g., Beamon v. Brown,
*660
To be sure, the question of whether the plaintiffs could have pursued individual due process claims on behalf of their members is somewhat different. Still a claim that a plaintiff has been denied due process because of delayed agency action is essentially no different than an unreasonable delay claim; indeed, if there is any difference at all, it is that an unreasonable delay claim would likely be triggеred
prior to
a delay becoming so prolonged that it qualifies as a constitutional deprivation of property.
See Sehroeder v. City of Chicago,
If plaintiffs were able to circumvent the CAVC’s jurisdiction by creative pleading, district courts would be forced to issue unnecessary constitutional decisions whеn a statutory ground for the decision would do. Plaintiffs would be able to seek the same exact relief in multiple fora— bringing the due process claim in the district court and the unreasonable delay claim in the CAVC — despite the general rule proscribing the splitting of a cause of action.
See, e.g., Wilson v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp.,
*661
Our discussion of this issue is tentative, however, because again we encounter some conflict in our own opinions — this time as to whether the APA’s reviewability provision (§ 704) is jurisdictional and, therefore, whether it is properly considered anterior to any merits questions. In a line of our cases stretching from the 1980s to 2005, we repeatedly stated — and held — that the APA’s reviewability provisions were jurisdictional.
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We did so notwithstanding a footnote in a Supreme Court opinion,
Air Courier Conference v. Am. Postal Workers Union,
Nevertheless, in 2006, we changed course in
Center for Auto Safety v. NHTSA
It is settled law that an association has standing to sue only if at least one member would have standing on his or her own right.
Young America’s Foundation v. Gates,
If the affiants were suing by themselves — which is how we must analyze the claim — asserting that the average time of processing was too long, it would be apparent that they were presenting a claim not for themselves but for others, indeed, an unidentified group of others. But one can not have standing in federal court by asserting an injury to someone else.
See City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s order granting the motion to dismiss is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
. See 38 U.S.C. § 5103, et seq.
. 38 U.S.C. § 7261(a); id. at § 7292(d)(1).
. U.S. Gen. Accountability Office, GAO-05749T, Claims Processing Problems Persist and Major Performance Improvements May Be Difficult, 3 (2005); U.S. Gen. Accountability Office, GAO-07-5 62T, Processing of Claims Continues to Present Challenges 3 (2007).
. See Veterans’ Benefits Improvement Act of 2008, Pub.L. 110-389, 122 Stаt. 4145 (Oct. 10, 2008).
. In reaching this conclusion we relied on the Federal Circuit’s opinion in
Hanlin v. United States,
. In response to questions raised at oral argument, plaintiffs submitted a Rule 28(j) letter in which they contended that the CAVC's authority to
compel
unreasonably delayed VA action would not be an adequate alternative remedy even for claims brought by individual veterans. Plaintiffs argue that because the CAVC only has jurisdiction of final decisions by the Board of Veterans’ Appeals, the CAVC is powerless to order the VA to act when the veteran is still waiting for a decision. But the CAVC has power to issue writs of mandamus compelling VA officials to take action that has been unreasonably delayed even if there has been no final decision by the Board.
See, e.g., Erspamer v. Derwinski,
. Nor do we think
Webster v. Doe,
.
See Ticor Title Ins. Co. v. FTC,
. The Supreme Court relied on
Califano v. Sanders,
. The court does have a method — the
Irons
footnote — which allows the full court to endorse such a reversal of course without full
en banc
rehearing.
See Irons v. Diamond,
. The plaintiffs' affidavits also reference members whose claims have been fully processed and identify negative effects they suffered while they waited for a decision. But veterans whose claims have already been processed would no longer have standing to seek the declaratory and injunctive relief plaintiffs seek in this case.
City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
