Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
Appellants Walter Woodburn Eubanks and Tommy Shaw appeal an order denying their motions to opt out of a settlement agreement in a class action alleging discriminatory employment practices by the Library of Congress. Appellants, who contend that they were denied promotions on account of their race, seek to opt out of the class, which was certified pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(2), so that they can pursue individual claims that they are entitled to promotions and back pay. They contend that the district court erred as a matter of law in ruling that it lacked discretion to permit opt-outs from the (b)(2) class, and abused its discretion in ruling, alternatively, that appellants had failed to show that they were entitled to opt out. We agree with appellants that the district court erred in ruling it lacked discretion to permit appellants to opt out of the class, but we find no abuse of discretion by the court in denying their motions to do so.
I.
In 1975, Howard Cook, David Andrews, and the Black Employees of the Library of Congress (“BELC”) filed an administrative
*89
complaint with the Library of Congress alleging that it had engaged in discriminatory employment practices in violation of § 717 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16. In 1982, after the Library rejected their administrative complaint, Cook and the BELC filed the instant lawsuit, alleging that the Library systematically discriminated against African American professional and administrative employees in promotion and advancement decisions. After permitting six new employees, including appellant Shaw, to intervene as plaintiffs, the court denied intervention by thirty-one additional employees and they appealed. This court reversed, holding that the thirty-one employees were entitled to intervene as a matter of right.
Cook v. Boorstin,
On remand, while the plaintiffs’ renewed motion for class certification was pending, the Library conceded liability as to the Shaw 4(a) subclass, but not as to any individual, non-class claims. The district court enjoined the Library from making new appointments pursuant to § 4(a), assessed monetary damages in the amount of $805,264.01 for front pay and back pay, 2 and awarded $10,000 to appellant Shaw as the subclass representative. The money damages were to be allocated among class members on the basis of individual hearings before a magistrate judge.
Meanwhile, in 1988, the district court certified a class pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2) of:
All past, present, and future black employees at the Library of Congress who possess the minimum objective qualifications necessary to be eligible under valid, nondiscriminatory standards for selection or promotion to any professional or administrative position at the Library of Congress, and who have been, are being, or may in the future be, denied equal employment or promotional opportunities as a result of defendant’s discriminatory practices____
On August 14, 1992, the district court granted the plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment, ruling that as to the (b)(2) class plaintiffs had made out a prima facie case of both disparate treatment and disparate impact in the competitive promotion process, and that the Library had failed to present any legitimate, nondiscriminatory justification for its employment selection procedure. Thereafter the parties entered into a settlement agreement.
The settlement agreement set new procedures for competitive selections and required non-competitive personnel actions to be *90 based on “legitimate, nondiscriminatory job-related criteria.” It also called for equal employment opportunity training of Library supervisors, and required the Library to provide plaintiffs’ counsel with access to records to monitor compliance. In addition, the settlement agreement required the Library to pay $8.5 million “in full and complete satisfaction of all claims for back pay,” and provided that “[t]he payment of this sum shall resolve all claims for monetary relief that are or could have been claimed in actions barred by the preclusive effect of this Agreement as provided in Paragraph 31, except for claims for attorneys’ fees, costs, and interest on fees and costs.” 3 The settlement included the $805,264.01 previously awarded by the district court to the Shaw 4(a) subclass. Further, the Library agreed to promote 40 class members and to reassign laterally up to 10 class members. All issues of class membership and the allocation or distribution of relief under the agreement were to be decided by a Settlement Committee of up to thirteen class members, subject to review by the district court. 4
The settlement agreement made no provision for class members to opt out of the settlement to pursue individual claims against the Library. In a separate letter to the Library’s counsel, class counsel agreed to refrain from advocating opt-outs to class members, and to advise the court that the settlement was fair and reasonable to the class as a whole. Class counsel also agreed not to advise on the fairness or legality of opting out for individual class members and, if asked by the court, to state that the law appeared to give the court discretion to allow opt-outs in certain circumstances.
Appellant Eubanks, an economist who has a doctoral degree and has worked for the Library since 1984, holds a Senior Level II (GS-16 equivalent) position with the Congressional Research Service Economics Division. On January 7,1993, he filed an administrative complaint with the Library, see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16, alleging that the Library had chosen a new chief of the Economies Division without competitive posting or other notice, in violation of Library regulations and the district court’s order enjoining the use of § 4(a). Although the Library investigated the complaint, it took no final action. Eu-banks subsequently submitted a claim form in the class action and was notified that he would receive $6,842.32, but no promotion, as his share of the settlement. 5 Eubanks thereafter moved for leave to opt out of the settlement so that he could pursue an individual Title VII claim against the Library.
Appellant Shaw, who has a doctorate in personnel and industrial psychology, has worked for the Library since 1974. In 1980, he filed an administrative complaint alleging that the Library had “systematically exclud
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ed” him from consideration for the position of Director of Personnel, selecting a white male instead. Shaw maintains that the Library failed to conduct any competitive selection process, and selected the new Director without posting notice pursuant to § 4(a). In 1981, Shaw filed a second administrative complaint. While these complaints were pending, Shaw intervened in the instant case and was certified as the sole representative of the 4(a) subclass.
See Cook,
The district court denied the motions of four class members, including appellants, to opt out of the settlement agreement. The court ruled that “there is no right to opt out of this class certified pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2) and, alternatively, that, even if such a right existed, the movants have not demonstrated an entitlement to the relief requested----” With respect to appellants’ claims that they were uniquely situated, the court found that:
None of the movants has demonstrated a right to relief or presented circumstances that so distinguish his or her claims from those of the main class that would permit him or her to opt out. Indeed, this action is one in which “the party opposing the class has acted or refused to act on grounds generally applicable to the class.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2). This is not a case in which individual class members have alleged or demonstrated that they have suffered in any unique way, necessitating that the right to opt out be provided when the parties have failed to establish it in their agreement.... [T]he movants have failed to show special circumstances requiring that they be permitted to opt out.
The district court subsequently approved the settlement agreement. Appellants appeal the order denying their motions to opt out, but not the order approving the settlement agreement.
II.
The 1966 amendments to Rule 23(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure created three distinct categories of class actions that may be maintained: the (b)(1) action, the (b)(2) action, and the (b)(3) action. 6 The three categories are not mutually exclusive, and a class may be certified under more than one category. 3B James Wm. Moore et al., Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 23.31[2], at 23- *92 235 (2d ed.1996); 1 Herbert Newberg & Alba Conte, Newberg on Class Actions § 4.01, at 4-4 to 4-5 (3d ed.1992). However, there are important procedural distinctions between the (b)(1) and (b)(2) actions and the (b)(3) action. Rule 23(c)(2) provides that all class members in a (b)(3) action are entitled to notice and an opportunity to exclude themselves from the class and the preclusive effect of any judgment by “opting out” of the lawsuit. 7 The rule has no comparable provision for (b)(1) and (b)(2) classes.
Title VII and other civil rights class actions are frequently certified pursuant to Rule 23(b)(2).
See generally
7A Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Mary Kay Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1776 (1986);
see also
Fed.R.Civ.P. 23 advisory committee’s note (1966). Although the defining characteristic of the (b)(2) class is that it seeks declaratory or injunctive relief applicable to the class as a whole, it is not uncommon in employment discrimination cases for the class also to seek monetary relief in the form of back pay or front pay. Courts have generally permitted (b)(2) classes to recover monetary relief in addition to declaratory or injunctive relief, at least where the monetary relief does not predominate.
See Probe v. State Teachers’ Retirement System,
Appellants do not contend that the instant lawsuit was improperly certified as a (b)(2) class action but only that the district court erred in not permitting them to opt out of the class action so they could pursue individual claims for monetary relief. Relying on
Luevano v. Campbell,
The availability of opt-out rights in (b)(1) and (b)(2) class actions is an unsettled question in this circuit.
8
A number of courts have held that, as a general matter, due process does not require that (b)(1) or (b)(2) class members be given an opportunity to opt out.
See, e.g., In re Asbestos Litigation,
The rigidity of this position has not escaped criticism, however. For, as one commentator has noted, “[a]s has become increasingly apparent since 1966, these amendments created an awkward mismatch between the subdivisions under which class actions are certified and the procedural protections to which a class is entitled.” George Rutherglen,
Better Late Than Never: Notice and Opt Out at the Settlement Stage of Class Actions,
71 N.Y.U. L.Rev. 258, 260 (1996). This commentator has observed that “[t]he Advisory Committee foresaw neither the surge in filings of Title VII class actions nor decisions that award individual compensatory relief based on findings of classwide discrimination.” George Ruth-erglen,
Notice, Scope and Preclusion in Title VII Class Actions,
69 Va L.Rev. 11, 25 (1983).
9
Consequently, this commentator concludes, the Advisory Committee did not address the need for notice in Title VII class actions seeking compensatory as well as in-junctive relief.
Id.; see also
Wright,
supra,
§ 1776, at 495. The Advisory Committee’s lack of foresight in this regard may also explain Rule 23’s failure to address the possible need for opt-out rights in non-(b)(3) actions. Several commentators have suggested that, despite the absence of any such requirement in Rule 23, where class members seek individual compensatory relief in addition to broad classwide injunctive relief, it is appropriate for a court to afford them the procedural protections of notice and an opportunity to opt out. Newberg & Conte,
supra,
§ 4.14, at 4-51 to 4-52; Rutherglen,
Notice and Opt-Out, supra,
Although the cases permitting opt-outs in (b)(1) and (b)(2) actions are few,
see, e.g., County of Suffolk v. Long Island Lighting Co.,
The Eleventh Circuit concluded that the district court abused its discretion in not permitting opt-out rights in
Holmes,
We join those circuits holding that the language of Rule 23 is sufficiently flexible to afford district courts discretion to grant opt-out rights in (b)(1) and (b)(2) class actions. The rule itself does not expressly preclude opt-outs in non-(b)(3) actions, and the procedural flexibility suggested in subsection (d) is consistent with the view of Professor Moore that within the basic framework of Rule 23, “the supportable range of judicial choice appears quite wide.” Moore et al.,
supra,
¶23.40[4], at 23-283. Although, as a general matter, courts should not permit opt-outs when doing so would undermine the policies behind (b)(1) or (b)(2)
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certification, where both injunctive and monetary relief are sought, the need to protect the rights of individual class members may necessitate procedural protections beyond those ordinarily provided under (b)(1) and (b)(2). As the Eleventh Circuit observed in
Holmes,
The government has expressed concern that under a flexible approach class members with individual monetary claims found to merit additional procedural protection would routinely opt out of class-wide settlements, and “defendants would not be inclined to settle where the result would likely be a settlement applicable only to class members with questionable claims, with those having stronger claims opting out to pursue their individual claims separately.”
Kincade v. General Tire & Rubber Co.,
With these considerations in mind, we conclude that when a (b)(2) class seeks monetary as well as injunctive or declaratory relief the district court may exercise discretion in at least two ways.
14
The court may conclude that the assumption of eohesiveness for purposes of injunctive relief that justifies certification as a (b)(2) class is unjustified as to claims that individual class members may have for monetary damages. In such a case, the court may adopt a “hybrid” approach, certifying a (b)(2) class as to the claims for declaratory or injunctive relief, and a (b)(3) class as to the claims for monetary relief, effectively granting (b)(3) protections including the right to opt out to class members at the monetary relief stage.
See Holmes,
III.
The question remains whether the district court abused its discretion in denying appellants’ motions to opt out. This means, simply, whether the denial fell within the range of permissible alternatives available to the district court, not whether this court might have decided the motions differently.
See generally Kickapoo Tribe v. Babbitt,
Eubanks’ primary contention is that “basic fairness” requires that he be permitted to opt out of the lawsuit because he is “uniquely situated” relative to the rest of the class. He is unique, he maintains, because he filed a timely administrative complaint in 1993 to challenge the Library’s denial of a promotion on December 21, 1992, more than four months after the district court entered partial summary judgment against the Library. Although the Library completed its investigation of his complaint by mid-November 1993, it never took final action on the complaint. Consequently, Eubanks contends, the Library deliberately left his claim in “procedural limbo” so that it would ultimately be barred by the class action settlement.
Had Eubanks pursued a separate lawsuit against the Library, his situation would present similarities to
Suffolk,
Shaw contends that “basic fairness” dictates that he should be permitted to opt out because the district court and class counsel had previously represented that he would receive a “separate hearing” on his individual damages. In 1988, after the Library conceded liability with respect to the Shaw 4(a) subclass, the district court awarded front and back pay, with the funds to be distributed after individual hearings before a magistrate judge. While noting in its order that Shaw had asserted that he was entitled to lost wages of $110,000 and fringe benefits as a result of being denied promotion to the position of Director of Personnel, the court ruled that it “need not resolve this dispute at present, as Dr. Shaw may litigate his back pay claim along with the other class members before the Magistrate.”
We do not interpret the district court’s order as a promise that Shaw would be allowed to pursue his individual claim separately from the other class members. Rather, the district court treated Shaw like the other members of the Shaw 4(a) subclass, allowing him to present an individualized claim for a share of the settlement fund to the magistrate judge. Nor, more importantly, can Shaw plausibly claim prejudice from the fact that the district court never implemented these procedures. Although the district court’s back and front pay awards to the Shaw 4(a) subclass were subsumed in the settlement, the Settlement Committee awarded $805,264.01 of the $8.5 million settlement to Shaw 4(a) subclass members, an amount equivalent to the back and front pay awards ordered by the court. In addition, the Settlement Committee awarded Shaw the $10,000 he was entitled to receive as the subclass representative. Although the magistrate judge never conducted individualized hearings, Shaw had an opportunity to file an individual claim with the Settlement Committee, and to challenge the Committee’s determination at the fairness hearing before the district court. In due process terms, this procedure was equivalent to the “individualized hearings” that the court had previously
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contemplated.
See A.H. Robins,
To the extent that Shaw contends that he is entitled not only to an individual hearing on damages, but also to opt out and recover damages from outside the $8.5 million settlement fund, his argument, like Eubanks’, would be stronger had he taken any steps between 1980 and 1995 to prosecute his individual claim. Instead, Shaw chose to wait while the class action proceeded. Indeed, Shaw’s request that the district court now treat his claim as “distinguished” from those of the other class members is somewhat ironic in view of his service as the sole representative of the 4(a) subclass. The district court, in certifying the subclass, was required to find that Shaw’s claims were typical of the claims of the subclass members. Fed. R.Civ.P. 23(a). Nothing prevented Shaw from pursuing an individual lawsuit during the past seventeen years, and yet he chose to treat his claim as part of the class claim.
This is not to suggest that filing an individual lawsuit is a necessary prerequisite to preserving opt-out rights that may be available under subdivisions (b)(1) or (b)(2). Rather, our discussion must be read in the context of whether fairness concerns in favor of allowing appellants to opt out outweighed concern about the efficient conduct of the lawsuit.
Suffolk
is one example in which the balance weighed in favor of opt-outs, based on the fact that one member of the class had litigated an individual suit at great expense and that there was no potential prejudice to the prospects for classwide recovery.
Insofar as appellants’ uniqueness claims are concerned, they have not shown that the district court failed to give sufficient consideration to the fact that they were among the highest ranking members of the main class, in Eubanks’ case, and of both the main class and the 4(a) subclass, in Shaw’s case. Essentially, as two of the few high ranking African American employees of the Library, they contend that their opportunities for promotion are much more limited than those of other class members, and that the damages they suffered as a result of not being appointed to the positions for which they were qualified are correspondingly greater. Accepting their assertions as true, however, does not demonstrate an abuse of discretion by the district court in denying them permission to opt out. Under the distribution formula in the settlement agreement, class members who were in professional or administrative positions received a greater share of the settlement funds than class members who were not in such positions. Neither Eubanks nor Shaw appealed the district court’s order determining that this distribution represented a fair allocation of the funds. While appellants cite statistics showing that the number of African Americans employed or applying for positions at their level is minuscule in comparison to the numbers at lower levels, they offer no data to suggest that the relief they received under the settlement agreement was unfair in comparison to the relief received by other class members.
17
That both appellants received less under the settlement agreement than they might have expected to receive had they prevailed in individual lawsuits cannot alone justify an opt-out, as no party can reasonably expect to receive in a settlement precisely what it would receive if it prevailed on the merits.
See EEOC v. Hiram Walker & Sons, Inc.,
Accordingly, given the plaintiffs’ consistent position that the lawsuit was properly certified as a (b)(2) class action, we conclude, in light of the opportunities afforded to appellants to present evidence and upon review of that evidence, that the district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that they failed to show that “basic fairness” required that they be permitted to opt out of the settlement agreement, and we affirm the denial of their motions to opt out of the class settlement.
Notes
. The name of the subclass refers to § 4(a) of the Library's regulations. Section 2 of Library Regulation 2010-14 provides, in relevant part that “[a]ll vacancies within the Library, except those noted in Section 4 below, shall be posted ...." Section 4 provides, in relevant part:
It is the policy of the Library to keep exceptions to the foregoing to a minimum. Exceptions shall be permitted only in the following cases:
(a) Positions for which, because of their unusual or special character, the Librarian may determine that the posting of notice of a vacancy is impractical or undesirable. The Librarian will report to the staff contemporaneously on any appointments made under this exception, either in a Special Order or in the Information Bulletin.
. The award of back pay was intended to compensate the subclass members for lost wages for the period from 1973, two years before the administrative complaint was filed, to 1987, when the Library conceded liability. The award of “front pay” was intended to compensate subclass members for lost wages incurred after the concession of liability, and “for the fact that the wrongs for which they are entitled to receive back pay cannot be righted without delay.”
Thompson v. Sawyer,
. Paragraph 31 provided that:
The terms of this Agreement shall constitute full and complete satisfaction of all claims of Class Members against the defendant concerning racial discrimination in violation of Title VII ..., resulting in non-selection, either competitively or non-competitively, in or into Professional and Administrative positions within the Library that arise out of events occurring up to final District Court approval of the Agreement. Upon Final Court Approval of this Agreement, the class as a whole and each Class Member shall be bound by the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel with respect to all such claims.
. The $8.5 million settlement fund was distributed as foEows: First, the Settlement Committee made various payments to class representatives, named plaintiffs, and intervenors, in recognition of the time and energy they contributed to the lawsuit. Included among these payments was the $10,000 previously awarded to appellant Shaw by the district court. Second, the Committee allocated $805,264.01 to the members of the 4(a) subclass, an amount equal to that previously awarded by the district court, to be distributed according to a formula whereby no class member could receive more than $20,000. Third, of the remaining funds, the Committee allocated one-half to members of the main class who were in professional or administrative positions, and divided the other half between members of the main class who were in professional or administrative positions, and those who were not in such positions, but who believed they would have been if nondiscriminatory standards had been used for promotions; the latter division was proportional to the total number of class members in each group. These funds were allocated among the members of each group according to a formula based upon length of employment and number of competitive promotions received.
.Eubanks asserts that the Settlement Committee subsequently increased his monetary award to $6,963.84 to remedy a calculation error.
. All proposed classes must satisfy the prerequisites of Rule 23(a): that the class is so numerous as to make joinder impracticable, that there are questions of law or fact common to the class, that the claims or defenses of the representative parties typify those of the class, and that the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class. Rule 23(b) provides, in relevant part:
An action may be maintained as a class action if the prerequisites of subdivision (a) are satisfied, and in addition:
(1)the prosecution of separate actions by or against individual members of the class would create a risk of
(A) inconsistent or varying adjudications with respect to individual members of the class which would establish incompatible standards of conduct for the party opposing the class, or
(B) adjudications with respect to individual members of the class which would as a practical matter be dispositive of the interests of other members not parties to the adjudications or substantially impair or impede their ability to protect their interests; or
(2) the party opposing the class has acted or refused to act on grounds generally applicable to the class, thereby making appropriate final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief with respect to the class as a whole; or
(3) the court finds that the questions of law or fact common to the members of the class predominate over any questions affecting only individual members, and that a class action is superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy....
. Rule 23(c)(2) provides:
In any class action maintained under subdivision (b)(3), the court shall direct to the members of the class the best notice practicable under the circumstances, including individual notice to all members who can be identified through reasonable effort. The notice shall advise each member that (A) the court will exclude the member from the class if the member so requests by a specified date; (B) the judgment, whether favorable or not, will include all members who do not request exclusion; and (c) any member who does not request exclusion may, if the member desires, enter an appearance through counsel.
.
But see Larionoff v. United States,
.Tifie VII cases seeking individual monetary damages as well as classwide injunctive relief may be equally amenable to certification as (b)(3) actions, and "the arguments supporting certification exclusively under subdivision (b)(2) are surprisingly weak.” Rutherglen, Notice, Scope and Preclusion, supra, 69 Va. L.Rev. at 24. To the extent that the preference for (b)(2) certification reflects concern about the burden of the mandatory notice requirements applicable under (b)(3), see Moore et al., supra, ¶ 23.31[3], at 23-237, that concern is somewhat less pressing where, as in the instant case, individual notice will ultimately be required to distribute the settlement fund.
. See also Gerald E. Rosen, Title VII Classes and Due Process: To (b)(2) or Not to (b)(2), 26 Wavne L.Rev. 919, 951-54 (1980).
. Rule 23(d) provides, in pertinent part, that the district court:
may make appropriate orders ... (2) requiring, for the protection of the members of the *94 class or otherwise for the fair conduct of the action, that notice be given in such manner as the court may direct to some or all of the members of any step in the action, or of the proposed extent of the judgment, or of the opportunity of members to signify whether they consider the representation fair and adequate ... [or] (5) dealing with similar procedural matters....
. The Library is committed to the settlement agreement regardless of whether appellants are permitted to opt out. In a motion filed in this court on October 16, 1996,' seeking issuance of a separate judgment and mandate so that implementation of the settlement agreement could proceed notwithstanding the pendency of the instant appeals, the plaintiff class stated that the Library had consented to the relief requested, and authorized counsel to make known to the court its position that resolution of the opt-out issue would not affect the settlement agreement as a whole. At oral argument, the Library did not take issue with this representation. Only four members of the class sought to opt out.
. This problem did not arise in
Suffolk
because the court notified the parties that Suffolk would be permitted to opt out when it certified the class.
. Newberg and Conte suggest that a district court may provide opt-out rights to a (b)(2) class in four different ways:
First, ... the court could limit the Rule 23(b)(2) certification to certain issues only. Second, the court could certify the injunction claims under Rule 23(b)(2) .and the damages claims under Rule 23(b)(3). Third, the court could certify the entire class initially under Rule 23(b)(2), bifurcate the trial so that the defendant’s liability potentially for both forms of relief is determined initially, and reconsider the class certification category if the plaintiffs and the class are successful at the liability stage. Finally, the court could certify special claims or issues under Rule 23(b)(2) and treat till the nondesignated claims or issues as individual or incidental ones to be determined separately after liability to the class has been adjudicated.
Newberg & Conte, supra, § 4.14, at 4-51 to 4-52. For our purposes here, we need not analyze the distinctions between these approaches.
. We note that the district court afforded all class members substantial procedural protections. The settlement agreement provided that prior to its final approval, individual notice of the proposed settlement would be mailed to all potential class members of which the Library was aware or who could reasonably be identified. In addition, notice would be published in area newspapers and publications of the Library of Congress. Individuals who submitted claim forms received follow-up notices, advising them of the Settlement Committee’s determination of the relief they were entitled to receive, and that they could contest any aspect of the award at a "fairness hearing” before the district court prior to the court's final approval of the settlement agreement. Of course, as we understand their argument, appellants seek to be compensated independently of the settlement fund, rather than simply to claim a larger share of that fund. Although the procedural protections they received may not have been precisely equivalent to the rights accorded to (b)(3) class members, appellants point to nothing that would indicate that they did not have a meaningful opportunity to present the merits of their individual claims.
See Williams,
. Because appellants have not raised the issue, the court has no occasion to decide whether opt-out rights in (b)(2) actions may ever be required under the Due Process Clause of the Constitution.
See Ticor Title Ins. Co. v. Brown,
. The statistics cited by appellants indicate that of 10,872 African American applicants to the Library from 1979 through 1988, less than 300 (289) were for positions higher than the GS-13 level. Similarly, of the 4,783 employees of the Library who applied for promotion during that period, only 83 applicants sought positions above the GS-13 level.
