Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 prohibits
discrimination against handicapped persons in "any program or
activity receiving Federal financial assistance." The United States
provides financial assistance to airport operators through grants
from a Trust Fund under the Airport and Airway Development Act of
1970 and its successor statute, the Airport and Airway Improvement
Act of 1982 (Trust Fund Acts). The Government also operates a
nationwide air traffic control system. Respondent organizations
representing handicapped individuals brought an action in the Court
of Appeals challenging,
inter alia, the conclusion of the
Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) that its regulatory authority under
§ 504 was limited to those few airlines that receive subsidies
under the Federal Aviation Act. The Court of Appeals held that
§ 504 gave CAB jurisdiction over all air carriers by virtue of
the extensive program of federal financial assistance to airports
under the Trust Fund Acts, and that the air traffic control system
was an additional source of financial assistance to airlines. The
court then vacated the regulations to the extent that their
application was limited to carriers receiving funds under the
Federal Aviation Act, and instructed the Department of
Transportation, CAB's successor, to issue new regulations that
would apply to all commercial airlines.
Held: Section 504 is not applicable to commercial
airlines. Pp.
477 U. S.
603-612.
(a) Section 504's scope is limited to those who actually
"receive" federal financial assistance. Congress sought to impose
§ 504 coverage as a condition or obligation tied to the
recipient's agreement to accept the federal funds. By so limiting
coverage to recipients, Congress imposed § 504's obligations
upon those who are in a position to accept or reject those
obligations as part of the decision whether or not to "receive"
federal funds. In this case, the only parties in that position are
the airport operators who are the recipients of federal funds under
the Trust Fund Acts. Pp.
477 U. S.
603-606.
(b) To assert that the economic benefit to airlines from the aid
to airports is a form of federal financial assistance ignores the
distinction that
Page 477 U. S. 598
Congress made in § 504 that the statute covers only those
who receive the aid, and does not extend to those who benefit from
it. Pp.
477 U. S.
606-607.
(c) To tie § 504's scope to economic benefit derived from
the Trust Fund expenditures in question here would give § 504
almost limitless coverage. Congress recognized a need to improve
airports in order to benefit a wide variety of persons and
entities, all of them classified together as beneficiaries, and did
not set up a system whereby passengers are the primary or direct
beneficiaries and all others, including airlines, benefited by the
Trust Fund Acts are indirect recipients of the financial assistance
to airports. Pp.
477 U. S.
608-610.
(d) The Court of Appeals' attempt to fuse airports and airlines
into a single program or activity for purposes of § 504 is
unavailing. Regulatory coverage tied to the scope of the intended
beneficiaries of the Trust Fund Acts is inconsistent with
congressional intent in passing § 504. Pp.
477 U. S.
610-611.
(e) Since the air traffic control system is "owned and operated"
by the United States, it is not "Federal financial assistance"
within the meaning of § 504. Rather, it is a federally
conducted program that has many beneficiaries, but no recipients.
Pp.
477 U. S.
611-612.
243 U.S.App.D.C. 237, 762 F.2d 694, reversed and remanded.
POWELL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C.J., and WHITE, REHNQUIST, STEVENS, and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined.
MARSHALL, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN and
BLACKMUN, JJ., joined,
post, p.
477 U. S.
613.
Page 477 U. S. 599
JUSTICE POWELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 prohibits
discrimination against handicapped persons in any program or
activity receiving federal financial assistance. The United States
provides financial assistance to airport operators through grants
from a Trust Fund created by the Airport and Airway Development Act
of 1970. The Government also operates a nationwide air traffic
control system. This case presents the question whether, by virtue
of such federal assistance, § 504 is applicable to commercial
airlines. [
Footnote 1]
I
Respondents successfully challenged regulations promulgated by
the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) to implement § 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 87 Stat. 390, as amended; 29 U.S.C.
§ 790
et seq. (1982 ed. and Supp. II). To understand
respondents' arguments, it is necessary to review the process by
which the regulations were promulgated.
A.
The Rulemaking Process
Section 504 provides:
"No otherwise qualified handicapped individual in the United
States . . . shall, solely by reason of his handicap, be excluded
from the participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be
subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving
Federal financial assistance. . . ."
29 U.S.C. § 794. The statute did not specifically provide
for administrative implementation. In 1976, however, the President
issued Executive Order No. 11914, 3 CFR 117 (1976-1980), calling on
the
Page 477 U. S. 600
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare [
Footnote 2] to coordinate rulemaking under §
504 by all federal agencies. At that time, two federal agencies
were principally concerned with aviation: the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), which is primarily concerned with the Air
Traffic Control System and the safety of airline operations,
including airports, and CAB, which was primarily concerned with
economic regulation of the airline industry. [
Footnote 3] Because § 504 had been modeled
after Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §
2000d
et seq., [
Footnote
4] both FAA and CAB patterned their proposed rules after the
regulations issued to implement Title VI.
1. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Under § 504
CAB issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on June 6, 1979.
[
Footnote 5] CAB concluded that
its authority under § 504 was limited to those few airlines
that receive a subsidy under § 406(b) or § 419 of the
Federal Aviation Act. [
Footnote
6] CAB announced
Page 477 U. S. 601
its intention, however, to go beyond its § 504 jurisdiction
in order to regulate the activities of all commercial airlines. CAB
relied on its authority under § 404 of the Federal Aviation
Act of 1958, 49 U.S.C.App. § 1374.
Section 404 contains two provisions relevant here: §
404(a)(1), requiring all air carriers to "provide safe and adequate
service, equipment, and facilities," and § 404(b), prohibiting
carriers from
"subjecting any particular person . . . to any unjust
discrimination or any undue or unreasonable prejudice or
disadvantage in any respect whatsoever."
CAB explained that
"the proposed rules would emphasize that the handicapped are
protected by the adequacy of service and antidiscrimination
provisions of Section 404 . . . which are applicable to all air
carriers, whether or not receiving Federal financial
assistance."
44 Fed.Reg. 32401-32402 (1979). Somewhat inexplicably, CAB
relied on both provisions of § 404 taken together to support
its regulatory authority over the on-board activities of air
carriers, even though it was aware that, under the Airline
Deregulation Act of 1978, [
Footnote
7] the antidiscrimination provision of § 404(b) would
lapse as of January
Page 477 U. S. 602
1, 1983, and only § 404(a)(1), requiring "safe and adequate
service," would remain in effect.
2. The Final Regulations
CAB received public comment on the proposed regulations. Several
airlines and the Air Transport Association challenged CAB's
regulatory jurisdiction over the airlines. In the interim,
Executive Order No. 12250, 3 CFR 298 (1981), transferred
responsibility for coordinating the administration of various civil
rights statutes, including § 504, from the Secretary of Health
and Human Services to the Attorney General. After public comment
and consultation with the Attorney General, CAB issued final
regulations. 14 CFR pt. 382 (1986), 47 Fed.Reg. 25948
et
seq. (1982).
The regulations have three subparts. Subpart A prohibits
discrimination in air transportation against qualified handicapped
persons. Subpart B contains specific, detailed requirements that
must be followed by all air carriers in providing service to the
handicapped. Subpart C sets forth compliance and enforcement
mechanisms. As to all three subparts, CAB adhered to its original
position that § 504 supported regulatory jurisdiction only
over those carriers that receive funds under § 406 or §
419. CAB concluded, however, that the surviving portion of §
404 -- the "safe and adequate service" clause of § 404(a)(1)
-- did not support imposition of the specific provisions of
subparts B and C on nonsubsidized carriers. Thus, those subparts
would apply only to the extent authorized by § 504, that is,
to carriers receiving subsidies under § 406 or § 419. CAB
concluded, however, that it had authority to extend the reach of
subpart A to all air carriers by virtue of § 404(a)(1)'s "safe
and adequate service" clause. The Attorney General approved these
regulations.
B.
The Court of Appeals Decision
Respondents Paralyzed Veterans of America and two other
organizations representing handicapped individuals
Page 477 U. S. 603
(collectively PVA) [
Footnote
8] brought this action in the Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit. PVA challenged the substance of some of the
regulations, as well as CAB's conclusion regarding its rulemaking
authority under § 504. Only the latter claim is before us. On
that issue, PVA contended that CAB's interpretation of the scope of
its rulemaking authority under § 504 was inconsistent with
congressional intent and controlling legal precedent.
The Court of Appeals agreed with PVA's position.
Paralyzed
Veterans of America v. CAB, 243 U.S.App.D.C. 237, 752 F.2d 694
(1985). In the court's view, § 504 gave CAB jurisdiction over
all air carriers by virtue of the extensive program of federal
financial assistance to airports under the Airport and Airway
Development Act of 1970, 49 U.S.C. § 1714, as amended (1976
ed., Supp. V). [
Footnote 9] The
Court of Appeals found an additional source of financial assistance
to airlines in the form of the air traffic control system in place
at all major airports. The court vacated the regulations to the
extent that their application was limited to carriers receiving
funds under § 406 or § 419. It instructed DOT -- CAB's
successor agency after CAB was disbanded [
Footnote 10] -- to issue new regulations that would
apply to all commercial airlines.
We granted certiorari to resolve the question of the scope of
DOT's regulatory jurisdiction under § 504. 474 U.S. 918
(1985). We now reverse.
II
It may be helpful briefly to explain the limited nature of the
question before us. This case does not present any challenge to
CAB's interpretation of the scope of its regulatory jurisdiction
under § 504. Nor is there any challenge to the application
Page 477 U. S. 604
of subpart A -- the general antidiscrimination regulation -- to
all commercial airlines. The only issue before us is the Court of
Appeals' conclusion that § 504 applies to commercial airlines
as recipients of federal financial assistance.
Section 504 prohibits discrimination against any qualified
handicapped individual under "any program or activity receiving
Federal financial assistance." We examine first the grants of
federal funds to airport operators, which clearly are federal
financial assistance, to determine whether it fairly can be said
that commercial airlines "receive" these grants.
A
The starting point of any inquiry into the application of a
statute is the language of the statute itself.
Reiter v.
Sonotone Corp., 442 U. S. 330,
442 U. S. 337
(1979). By its terms, § 504 limits its coverage to the
"program or activity" that "receiv[es]" federal financial
assistance. At the outset, therefore, § 504 requires us to
identify the recipient of the federal assistance. We look to the
terms of the underlying grant statute.
The grant statutes relied on by the Court of Appeals are the
Airport and Airway Improvement Act of 1982 (1982 Act), 49
U.S.C.App. § 2201
et seq., and its predecessor
statutes, particularly the Airport and Airway Development Act of
1970 (1970 Act), Pub.L. 91-258, 84 Stat. 219
et seq.
(formerly codified at 49 U.S.C. § 1701
et seq. (1976
ed.)). The 1970 Act established the Airport and Airway Trust Fund,
appropriations from which are used to fund airport development. The
purpose of disbursements from the Trust Fund is to establish "a
nationwide system of public airports adequate to meet the present
and future needs of civil aeronautics." 84 Stat. 224. Congress
directed the Secretary of Transportation to prepare a national
airport system plan,
id. at 221, and required airport
project applications to be consistent with that plan.
Id.
at 226. In the 1982 Act, Congress authorized disbursements from the
Trust Fund for the Airport Improvement Program (AIP). Under AIP,
airport operators
Page 477 U. S. 605
submit project grant applications for "airport development or
airport planning." 49 U.S.C.App. §2201(a). Funds are disbursed
for a variety of airport construction projects:
e.g., land
acquisition, 14 CFR § 151.73 (1986); runway paving, §
151.77; and buildings, sidewalks, and parking, § 151.93. The
use of the Trust Fund is strictly limited to projects that concern
airports.
See, e.g., § 151.89 (authorizing road
construction) ("Only those airport entrance roads that are
definitely needed and are intended only as a way in and out of the
airport are eligible").
It is not difficult to identify the recipient of federal
financial assistance under these Acts: Congress has made it
explicitly clear that these funds are to go to airport operators.
Not a single penny of the money is given to the airlines. Thus, the
recipient for purposes of § 504 is the operator of the
airport, and not its users.
Congress limited the scope of § 504 to those who actually
"receive" federal financial assistance because it sought to impose
§ 504 coverage as a form of contractual cost of the
recipient's agreement to accept the federal funds.
"Congress apparently determined that it would require
contractors and grantees to bear the costs of providing employment
for the handicapped as a
quid pro quo for the receipt of
federal funds."
Consolidated Rail Corporation v. Darrone, 465 U.
S. 624,
465 U. S. 633,
n. 13 (1984). We relied on this same rationale in
Grove City
College v. Bell, 465 U. S. 555
(1984), where we noted that the recipient of the federal assistance
-- the college -- was free to terminate its participation in the
federal grant program, and thus avoid the requirements of Title IX.
Id. at
465 U. S. 565,
n. 13. Under the program-specific statutes, Title VI, Title IX, and
§ 504, Congress enters into an arrangement in the nature of a
contract with the recipients of the funds: the recipient's
acceptance of the funds triggers coverage under the
nondiscrimination provision.
See Soberal-Perez v. Heckler,
717 F.2d 36, 41 (CA2 1983) ("This emphasis upon the contractual
nature of the receipt of federal moneys in exchange
Page 477 U. S. 606
for a promise not to discriminate is still another reason to
conclude that Title VI does not cover direct benefit programs,
since these programs do not entail any such contractual
relationship"),
cert. denied, 466 U.S. 929 (1984). By
limiting coverage to recipients, Congress imposes the obligations
of § 504 upon those who are in a position to accept or reject
those obligations as a part of the decision whether or not to
"receive" federal funds. In this case, the only parties in that
position are the airport operators.
B
Respondents attempt to avoid the straightforward conclusion that
airlines are not recipients within the meaning of § 504 by
arguing that airlines are "indirect recipients" of the aid to
airports. They contend that the money given to airports is simply
converted by the airports into nonmoney grants to airlines. Under
this reasoning, federal assistance is disbursed to airport
operators in the form of cash. The airport operators convert the
cash into runways and give the federal assistance -- now in the
form of a runway -- to the airlines. In support of this position,
respondents point to the fact that many of the structures
constructed at airports with aid from the Trust Fund are
particularly beneficial to airlines,
e.g., runways,
taxiways, and ramps. They also find support for their position in
Grove City's recognition that federal financial assistance
could be either direct or indirect. This argument confuses intended
beneficiaries with intended
recipients. While we
observed in
Grove City that there is no "distinction
between direct and indirect aid" and that
"[t]here is no basis in the statute for the view that only
institutions that themselves apply for federal aid or receive
checks directly from the Federal Government are subject to
regulation,"
we made these statements in the context of determining whom
Congress intended to receive the federal money, and thereby be
covered by Title IX. 465 U.S. at 564. It was clear in
Grove
City that Congress' intended recipient was
Page 477 U. S. 607
the college, not the individual students to whom the checks were
sent from the Government. It was this unusual disbursement pattern
of money from the Government through an intermediary (the students)
to the intended recipient that caused us to recognize that federal
financial assistance could be received indirectly. While
Grove
City stands for the proposition that Title IX coverage extends
to Congress' intended recipient, whether receiving the aid directly
or indirectly, it does not stand for the proposition that federal
coverage follows the aid past the recipient to those who merely
benefit from the aid. In this case, it is clear that the airlines
do not actually receive the aid; they only benefit from the
airports' use of the aid.
Respondents do not contend that airlines actually receive or are
intended to receive money from the Trust Fund. Nor can they argue
that the airport operators are, like the students in
Grove
City, mere conduits of the aid to its intended recipient,
since, unlike the students, the airports are the intended
recipients of the funds. Rather, respondents assert that the
economic benefit to airlines from the aid to airports is a form of
federal financial assistance. This position ignores the very
distinction made by Congress in § 504, and recognized in
Grove City: The statute covers those who receive the aid,
but does not extend as far as those who benefit from it. In
Grove City, we recognized that most federal assistance has
"economic ripple effects." We rejected the argument that those
indirect economic benefits can trigger statutory coverage.
Id. at
465 U. S. 572.
Congress tied the regulatory authority to those programs or
activities that
receive federal financial assistance; the
key is to identify the recipient of that assistance. In this case,
it is clear that the recipients of the financial assistance
extended by Congress under the Trust Fund are the airport
operators. [
Footnote 11]
Page 477 U. S. 608
C
By tying the scope of § 504 to economic benefit derived
from Trust Fund expenditures, respondents would give § 504
almost limitless coverage. Congress' purpose in passing the Acts
and establishing the Trust Fund was to confer economic benefits on
a large number of persons and businesses. As the House Committee on
Interstate and Foreign Commerce explained:
"In addition to the actual users of the airport and airway
system -- such as airline passengers, general aviation, including
private and business aviation operations, air freight forwarders,
individual corporate and private shippers, etc. -- there are others
who benefit substantially from aviation; primarily, perhaps, the
military should be considered. From a civilian standpoint, those
who benefit indirectly include the aircraft manufacturers and all
of those whose employment is directly or indirectly related to
aviation. To illustrate, an aircraft or aircraft component
manufacturer may employ thousands of persons who never fly, yet
those persons' economic lives depend entirely on aviation. More
indirectly, but still to be considered, are those who make their
livelihood by providing services for the manufacturers' employees.
The employees of such corporations indirectly support such
nonaviation interests such as real estate brokers and builders,
doctors, dentists, school teachers, etc. This is brought forth here
to establish the fact that air transportation in a true sense
touches every American home, whether those in the home ever fly or
not."
H.R.Rep. No. 91-601, p. 6 (1969).
Page 477 U. S. 609
Even if the reach of § 504 were limited to those whom
Congress specifically intended to benefit, the scope of the statute
would be broad indeed, covering whole classes of persons and
businesses with only an indirect relation to aviation. The
statutory "limitation" on § 504's coverage would virtually
disappear, a result Congress surely did not intend.
Respondents contend that distinctions can be drawn among classes
of beneficiaries under the 1982 and 1970 Acts. In particular, they
assert that the ultimate beneficiaries under the Acts are the
passengers, while the economic benefit derived by the airlines is
intended to aid the airlines in benefiting the passengers. Section
504 provides no basis for this distinction. Nor can we find a basis
in the Trust Fund Acts for preferring passengers over other
beneficiaries. Nowhere has Congress expressed a special intent to
benefit passengers. Nor has it indicated that the economic benefit
to airlines, either because it was more direct or for any other
reason, makes them a recipient of federal financial assistance.
Rather, Congress recognized a need to improve airports in order to
benefit a wide variety of persons and entities, all of them
classified together as beneficiaries. [
Footnote 12] Congress did not set up a system where
passengers were the primary or direct beneficiaries, and all others
benefited by the Acts are indirect recipients of the financial
assistance to airports.
In almost any major federal program, Congress may intend to
benefit a large class of persons, yet it may do so by funding
Page 477 U. S. 610
-- that is, extending federal financial assistance to -- a
limited class of recipients. Section 504, like Title IX in
Grove City, draws the line of federal regulatory coverage
between the recipient and the beneficiary.
III
The Court of Appeals found that airports and airlines are
"inextricably intertwined," and that the "indissoluble nexus
between them is the provision of commercial air transportation."
243 U.S.App.D.C. at 257, 752 F.2d at 714. For these reasons, the
Court of Appeals concluded that commercial airlines are part of a
federally assisted program of "commercial air transportation"
because they make use of airports that accept federal funds, and
because airports are "indispensable" to air travel.
We find this reasoning overbroad and unpersuasive. The Court of
Appeals defined "program or activity" in part by reference to who
is benefited by the financial assistance to airports.
See
id. at 257-258, 752 F.2d at 714-715. As shown above,
regulatory coverage tied to the scope of the intended benefits of
the Trust Fund Acts is inconsistent with congressional intent in
passing § 504. We recognized in
Alexander v. Choate,
469 U. S. 287,
469 U. S. 299
(1985), that
"[a]ny interpretation of § 504 must . . . be responsive to
two powerful but countervailing considerations -- the need to give
effect to the statutory objectives and the desire to keep §
504 within manageable bounds."
The Court of Appeals' reasoning extends § 504 beyond its
bounds. Under the Court of Appeals' view, various industries and
institutions would become part of a federally assisted program or
activity, not because they had received federal financial
assistance, but because they are "inextricably intertwined" with an
institution that has. For example, Congress, with the assistance of
the States, has engaged in a mammoth program of interstate highway
construction and maintenance.
See the Federal-Aid Highway
Act of 1956, Pub.L. 627, 70 Stat. 374. Congress in this program
Page 477 U. S. 611
used a Trust Fund approach similar to the Airport and Airway
Development Act of 1970. If we accepted the Court of Appeals'
construction of "program or activity," we would also be compelled
to conclude that industries that depend on the federally funded
highways for their existence, such as trucking firms and delivery
services, are part of a program or activity of national highway
transportation. The same could be said of federally supported port
facilities. This interpretation of § 504 would give it a scope
broader than its language implies, and one never intended by
Congress.
The Court of Appeals' reliance on
Grove City in support
of its definition of the relevant program or activity is misplaced.
In
Grove City, despite the arguably "indissoluble nexus"
among the various departments of a small college, we concluded that
only the financial aid program could be subjected to Title IX. In
any analogy between
Grove City and this case, airport
operators would be placed in the position of the college. It is
readily apparent that our conclusion in
Grove City that
only a portion of the college was covered by Title IX cannot
support the conclusion that commercial air transportation -- a
concept much larger than the airports -- is the program or activity
covered by § 504. The Court of Appeals' attempt to fuse
airports and airlines into a single program or activity is
unavailing. It is by reference to the grant statute, and not to
hypothetical collective concepts like commercial aviation or
interstate highway transportation, that the relevant program or
activity is determined.
IV
The Court of Appeals also held that the federally provided air
traffic control system is a form of federal financial assistance to
airlines. [
Footnote 13] The
Federal Government spends some
Page 477 U. S. 612
$2 billion annually to run this system 24 hours a day nationwide
and in various spots around the world. The air traffic controllers
are federal employees, and the Federal Government finances
operation of the terminal control facilities. In short, the air
traffic control system is "owned and operated" by the United
States. For that reason, the air traffic control system is not
"federal financial assistance" at all. Rather, it is a federally
conducted program that has many beneficiaries, but no recipients.
The legislative history of Title VI makes clear that such programs
do not constitute federal financial assistance to anyone. As
then-Deputy Attorney General Katzenbach explained:
"Activities wholly carried out by the United States with Federal
funds, such as river and harbor improvements and other public
works, defense installations, veterans' hospitals, mail service,
etc., are not included in the list [of federally assisted
programs]. Such activities, being wholly owned by, and operated by
or for, the United States, cannot fairly be described as receiving
Federal 'assistance.' While they may result in general economic
benefit to neighboring communities, such benefit is not considered
to be financial assistance to a program or activity within the
meaning of title VI."
110 Cong.Rec. 13380 (1964). That reasoning, of course, applies
with equal force to § 504. The federal air traffic control
system is a public program that does not involve "financial
assistance" to anyone. [
Footnote
14]
Page 477 U. S. 613
V
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is accordingly reversed,
and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
As used herein, the term "airport operator" refers to the
various entities that own or manage airports and that have
authority to apply for planning or development grants from the
Trust Fund. "Commercial airlines" refers to an passenger carriers
formerly certificated by the Civil Aeronautics Board.
[
Footnote 2]
This responsibility later was transferred to the Secretary of
Health and Human Services when the Department of Health, Education
and Welfare was divided into the Department of Education and the
Department of Health and Human Services.
See The
Department of Education Organization Act, Pub.L. 96-88, 93 Stat.
669, codified at 20 U.S.C. § 3401
et seq.
[
Footnote 3]
The FAA became part of the Department of Transportation (DOT) in
1966. CAB later was disbanded and its functions largely transferred
to DOT under the Civil Aeronautics Board Sunset Act of 1984, Pub.L.
98-443, 98 Stat. 1703
et seq.
[
Footnote 4]
Title VI is the congressional model for subsequently enacted
statutes prohibiting discrimination in federally assisted programs
or activities. We have relied on case law interpreting Title VI as
generally applicable to later statutes.
See Grove City College
v. Bell, 465 U. S. 555,
465 U. S. 566
(1984);
see also S.Rep. No. 93-1297, p. 39 (1974).
[
Footnote 5]
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Part 382, Nondiscrimination on
the Basis of Handicap, 44 Fed.Reg. 32 401 (1979).
[
Footnote 6]
49 U.S.C.App. §§ 1376(b) and 1389 (1982 ed. and Supp.
II). Section 406 created a program designed to guarantee the air
service necessary to transport mail to small communities. That
program was terminated in 1982. In 1978, CAB began operating the
"section 419 program" in order to subsidize small community and
other essential air service that would not otherwise be provided.
See Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, Pub.L. 95-504,
§ 33, 92 Stat. 1732. This program will operate through
1988.
CAB's decision not to regulate the on-board activities of
commercial airlines was consistent with administrative practice
under Title VI, which prohibits racial discrimination in any
program or activity receiving federal financial assistance. None of
the agencies concerned with aviation attempted to regulate the
on-board activities of commercial airlines under Title VI. Thus,
the consistent administrative interpretation of the
program-specific language of Title VI and § 504 has been that
it does not cover commercial airlines, unless the airline itself
received subsidies from CAB.
See 14 CFR § 379.2
(1965), 29 Fed.Reg. 19287 (1964) (CAB); 14 CFR § 15.5(c)
(1965), 29 Fed.Reg.19283 (1964) (FAA). That interpretation of the
statutes by the agencies charged with their enforcement in the area
of aviation is entitled to deference.
Ford Motor Credit Co. v.
Milhollin, 444 U. S. 555,
444 U. S. 566
(1980).
[
Footnote 7]
Pub.L. 95-504, § 40(a), 92 Stat. 1705, 1744 (codified at 49
U.S.C.App. § 1551 (a)(2)(B)).
[
Footnote 8]
The other respondents are the American Council of the Blind and
the American Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities.
[
Footnote 9]
The 1970 Act has been replaced with the Airport and Airway
Improvement Act of 1982, 49 U.S.C.App. § 2201
et
seq.
[
Footnote 10]
See n 3,
supra.
[
Footnote 11]
This is not to say that Congress could not give federal
financial assistance in the form of property improvements, such as
a runway. Although the word "financial" usually indicates "money,"
federal financial assistance may take nonmoney form.
Cf. Grove
City, 465 U.S. at
465 U. S.
564-565. Again, the relevant starting point is the grant
statute. If it extends money, then the recipient for the purposes
of § 504 is the entity that receives the money. If the grant
statute extends something other than money, then the recipient is
the entity that receives whatever thing of value is extended by the
grant statute.
[
Footnote 12]
For example, Congress recognized that improved airports would
not only satisfy the growing needs of commercial aviation, but also
would help foster the significant growth that other areas of civil
aviation were experiencing, including air carriers and passengers,
air cargo carriers, air taxis, private business flying, and private
recreational flying. H.R.Rep. No. 91-601, p. 5 (1969). In short,
Congress intended to benefit interstate commerce in general through
the means of aiding airports. In the 1970 Act, for example,
Congress justified the expenditure because
"substantial expansion and improvement of the airport and airway
system is [
sic] required to meet the demands of interstate
commerce, the postal service, and the national defense."
84 Stat. 219. The 1982 Act contains a similar statement of
purpose. 49 U.S.C.App. § 2201(a)(2).
[
Footnote 13]
The Court of Appeals concluded that the air traffic control
system constituted federal financial assistance, without
specifically concluding that the on-board activities of commercial
airlines are a program or activity receiving that assistance.
Respondents have suggested that we do not need to reach the
question whether the air traffic control system is federal
financial assistance. We disagree. If we did not reach the issue,
then on remand DOT would be required to formulate its policies in
accordance with the conclusion of the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 14]
The Court of Appeals reasoned that the air traffic control
system constitutes federal financial assistance because the Federal
Government is providing the airlines the services of federal
personnel. That reasoning is inconsistent with the longstanding and
consistent interpretation of the relevant agencies. FAA, like other
agencies, originally promulgated regulations implementing Title VI
that defined federal financial assistance in a way that allowed for
nonmoney assistance. In its definition section, FAA included among
possible forms of federal assistance the "detail of Federal
personnel." 14 CFR § 15.23(3) (1965), 29 Fed.Reg. 19286
(1964). DOT's current Title VI regulations use the same phrase. 49
CFR § 21.23(c)(3) (1985). The air traffic control system does
not involve the "detail" of federal personnel; there is, in fact,
no other air traffic control entity to which federal personnel can
be "detailed" -- the system is self-contained. In 1978, pursuant to
its responsibility to coordinate the implementation of regulations
under § 504 by federal agencies, the Department of Health,
Education, and Welfare (HEW) published guidelines that substituted
the word "services" for "detail." 43 Fed.Reg. 2137. But at the same
time, HEW explained that it did not intend any substantive change
in the definitions:
"Despite some difference in the wording of the definitions of
federal financial assistance in the regulations implementing
section 504 and title VI, the substance of the two definitions does
not differ."
Id. at 2132. Later, the Department of Justice was given
the task of coordinating the regulations under various civil rights
laws, including § 504. Exec.Order No. 12250, 3 CFR 298 (1980).
It retained the HEW definition of federal financial assistance that
included "[s]ervices of Federal personnel." 28 CFR §
41.3(e)(2) (1985). Since the first regulations under Title VI, the
interpretation of federal financial assistance has been that the
detail, or loan, of federal personnel can constitute federal
assistance. "Services" in this context means "detail." No such
selection of federal personnel for a particular duty is involved
here. The Court of Appeals erred in ignoring this longstanding
administrative interpretation.
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v.
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
467 U. S. 837, 844
(1984). We note that any other interpretation would give almost
limitless meaning to the term "federal financial assistance."
JUSTICE MARSHALL, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE BLACKMUN
join, dissenting.
The Court starts from the proposition that no federal funds
under the Airport and Airway Improvement Act of 1982, 49 U.S.C.App.
§ 2201
et seq., are disbursed directly to
commercial
Page 477 U. S. 614
airlines. It infers that commercial airlines therefore do not
"receive" federal financial assistance. And it concludes that
§ 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 is therefore wholly
inapplicable to those airlines. That reasoning misperceives the
proper inquiry under § 504.
Section 504 provides that
"[n]o otherwise qualified handicapped individual . . . shall,
solely by reason of his handicap, be excluded from the
participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to
discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal
financial assistance or under any program or activity conducted by
any Executive agency. . . ."
29 U.S.C. § 794. The appropriate question is thus not
whether commercial airlines "receive" federal financial assistance.
Rather, it is whether commercial airlines are in a position to
"exclud[e handicapped persons] from the participation in, . . .
den[y them] the benefits of, or . . . subjec[t them] to
discrimination under" a program or activity receiving federal
financial assistance or conducted by an Executive agency. I believe
that they are, and I therefore dissent.
I
The Court begins its analysis at the proper place: the
underlying grant statute.
See Note, 83 Colum.L.Rev. 1210,
1227-1232 (1983). The Airport and Airway Improvement Act of 1982
(Act), which replaced the Airport and Airway Development Act of
1970, Pub.L. 91-258, 84 Stat. 219
et seq., is designed to
ensure "the safe operation of the airport and airway system" and to
ensure that system's more effective management and utilization. 49
U.S.C.App. §§ 2201(a)(1), (2). To that end, the Act
authorizes the Secretary of Transportation to make grants to owners
of public-use airports and to certain governmental units for
airport development and airport planning. §§ 2204(a),
2208(a). It provides for certain other disbursements to airport
owners, and to States for the same purposes. §§ 2206,
2207. It authorizes the Secretary to expend other funds for the
purposes of acquiring, establishing,
Page 477 U. S. 615
and improving air navigation facilities, § 2205(a), and
operating and maintaining those facilities, § 2205(c), for
associated research and demonstration projects, § 2205(b), and
for certain weather reporting services, § 2205(d). The Act
finally directs the Secretary to fund the Explosive Detection K-9
Team Training Program for the purpose of detecting explosives at
airports and aboard aircraft. § 2225.
The majority never explains the scope of the "program or
activity receiving Federal financial assistance or . . . conducted
by any Executive agency" that it believes the Act creates. In light
of the Court's treatment of the "program or activity" issue in
Grove City College v. Bell, 465 U.
S. 555 (1984), I believe that the Act is most naturally
viewed as creating "programs" or "activities" relating to the
construction and maintenance of safe and efficient airports, and
the creation of safe airways. That, however, is not the end of the
inquiry.
The next question is whether the Department of Transportation
(DOT) has jurisdiction under § 504 to regulate commercial
airlines in order to ensure that handicapped individuals are not
"excluded from the participation in, . . . denied the benefits of,
or . . . subjected to discrimination under" those programs or
activities. [
Footnote 2/1] In my
view, the nature of airline transportation demands that DOT have
such authority. If commercial airline companies barred the
handicapped from traveling on their airlines at all, then that
conduct would deny the handicapped the benefits of federally funded
and conducted programs and activities relating to the airport and
airway system. When commercial airlines allow the handicapped to
travel on airlines, but, unreasonably and solely because
Page 477 U. S. 616
of their handicap, force them to do so under conditions not
substantially equal to those enjoyed by persons who are not
handicapped, I believe that there too the airlines discriminatorily
deny the handicapped the benefits of federally funded programs or
activities supporting the airport and airway system.
This result derives from the fact that commercial airlines are
in a unique position to deny public access to federally funded
airport and airway services. It is true, as the Court points out,
that the airport and airway system benefits a wide variety of
persons and entities, including some who never fly.
See
ante at
477 U. S.
608-610. At the same time, however, a critical and
obvious benefit of the airport and airway system, for members of
the general public, is that it allows them to purchase tickets on
airlines and to travel from city to city. The vast majority of
members of the general public can enjoy that benefit only to the
extent allowed, and under conditions set, by commercial airlines.
Commercial airlines thus necessarily act as gatekeepers controlling
who shall enjoy, and under what conditions, important benefits
under federally funded and conducted programs. The airlines'
position, as a result, is quite different from that of the trucking
firms and delivery services referred to by the majority,
ante at
477 U. S. 611.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), in promulgating the rules at
issue in this case, apparently relied on an understanding that
§ 504 gave it no authority whatsoever to regulate
Page 477 U. S. 617
the activities of commercial airlines not receiving direct
subsidies under §§ 406 or 419 of the Federal Aviation
Act, 49 U.S.C.App. §§ 1376, 1389 (1982 ed. and Supp. II).
See App. 88a-89a. For the reasons stated above, I believe
that that conclusion was in error. I therefore agree with the Court
of Appeals that the regulations should be remanded to DOT to be
reconsidered in the light of a proper understanding of the agency's
authority under § 504.
II
Were this case to be remanded, it would be appropriate for DOT
to proceed upon an additional premise not available to the CAB in
its original rulemaking proceeding: that DOT has power, through
regulation of airport operators, to ensure that commercial airlines
do not discriminatorily deprive handicapped persons of the benefits
of federal programs supporting the airport and airway system.
[
Footnote 2/3] In order to serve an
airport, an air carrier must enter into a lease with the airport
operator for the use of airport facilities. DOT has power to direct
each federally assisted airport, as part of that lease, to secure
from all air carriers serving the airport an assurance of
compliance with regulatory standards for service to handicapped
persons. [
Footnote 2/4]
Page 477 U. S. 618
Such a requirement would be a proper exercise of authority under
§ 504. For the reasons stated above, discrimination by
commercial airlines against handicapped persons deprives those
persons of equal access to the benefits provided by federally
supported airport and airway programs. An airport can properly be
considered in violation of § 504 when, through its contractual
agreement with the airlines, it perpetuates discrimination against
handicapped persons giving those persons unequal access to those
programs.
See 49 CFR § 27.7 (1985).
III
This case raises important and difficult issues regarding the
extent of federal regulatory authority over entities, not
themselves direct recipients of federal financial assistance, that
nonetheless, in important respects, control the terms of public
access to the benefits of such assistance. The majority ignores
these issues because it believes that the single question whether
commercial airlines are direct "recipients" of federal financial
assistance disposes of this case. Because I find the matter more
complicated than that, I dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The original rulemaking proceedings in this case were undertaken
by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB). As the Court explains,
ante at
477 U. S. 600,
n. 3, however, the relevant functions of the CAB were transferred
to DOT under the Civil Aeronautics Board Sunset Act of 1984, Pub.L.
98-443, 98 Stat. 1703
et seq. See also Paralyzed
Veterans of America v. CAB, 243 U.S.App.D.C. 237, 267, 752
F.2d 694, 724 (1985).
[
Footnote 2/2]
The majority ignores this aspect of the question presented by
the parties by relying unwaveringly on the fact that, as a general
matter, no federal funds are disbursed directly to commercial
airlines. The Court, however, has never held that fact dispositive.
In
Grove City College v. Bell, 465 U.
S. 555 (1984), indeed, on which the majority heavily
relies, the federal funds triggering Title IX coverage were not
disbursed to Grove City College at all, but to some of its
students. We nonetheless found part of the college subject to Title
IX.
Cf. Frazier v. Board of Trustees of Northwest Mississippi
Regional Medical Center, 765 F.2d 1278, 1290 (CA5 1985).
[
Footnote 2/3]
At the time of the original rulemaking proceeding, the involved
federal agencies had apparently agreed that regulation of airlines
would be in the hands of the CAB, but that regulation of airport
operators would be left to DOT.
See 44 Fed.Reg. 31451
(1979). DOT, in fact, postponed its inquiry into whether it should
require airport operators, "through their leasing agreements with
the airlines," to require the airlines to provide service to the
handicapped on a nondiscriminatory basis, because the CAB was
considering imposing such regulation on the airlines directly.
Ibid. At present, DOT exercises jurisdiction over both
airlines and airport operators.
[
Footnote 2/4]
DOT officials, at least in the past, have shared this view.
See Review of Airline Deregulation and Sunset of the Civil
Aeronautics Board (Legislative Proposals Relating to Airline
Deregulation and CAB Sunset): Hearings before the Subcommittee on
Aviation of the House Committee on Public Works and Transportation,
98th Cong., 2d Sess., 16 (1984) (statement of James Burnley, Deputy
Secretary of Transportation) ("I don't think there is any question
that we would have the authority to require a federally assisted
airport in its contracts with carriers, who are given the right to
use the facilities at those airports, that they provide that there
will be no discrimination against the handicapped");
see
also 44 Fed.Reg. 31451 (1979).