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    YESKEY v PA DEPT CORRECTIONS Filed July 10, 1997

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT

    NO. 96-7292

    RONALD R. YESKEY,

    APPELLANT

    v.

    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF

    CORRECTIONS; JOSEPH D. LEHMAN; JEFFREY A.

    BEARD, PH.D.; JEFFREY K. DITTY; DOES NUMBER 1

    THROUGH 20, INCLUSIVE,

    APPELLEES

    On Appeal From the United States District Court

    For the Middle District of Pennsylvania

    (D.C. Civ. No. 95-cv-02125)

    Argued: January 31, 1997

    Before: BECKER, ROTH, Circuit Judges , and

    BARRY, District Judge .*

    (Filed July 10, 1997)

    L. ABRAHAM SMITH, ESQUIRE

    (ARGUED)

    P.O. Box 1644

    Greensburg, PA 15601

    Attorney for Appellant

    _________________________________________________________________

    *Honorable Maryanne Trump Barry, United States District Judge for

    the District of New Jersey, sitting by designation.


    THOMAS W. CORBETT, JR.

    Attorney General

    R. DOUGLAS SHERMAN (ARGUED)

    Deputy Attorney General

    CALVIN R. KOONS

    Senior Deputy Attorney General

    JOHN G. KNORR, III

    Chief Deputy Attorney General

    Office of Attorney General

    15th Floor, Strawberry Square

    Harrisburg, PA 17120

    Attorneys for Appellees

    OPINION OF THE COURT

    BECKER, Circuit Judge .

    Ronald R. Yeskey is a Pennsylvania prison inmate who

    was denied admission to the Pennsylvania Department of

    Correction's Motivational Boot Camp program because of a

    history of hypertension, despite the recommendation of the

    sentencing judge that he be placed therein.1 Yeskey brought

    suit in the district court under the Americans With

    Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. , alleging

    that his exclusion from the program violated that enactment.2

    The district court dismissed Yeskey's complaint, Fed. R.

    _________________________________________________________________

    1. The Motivational Boot Camp Act, 61 P.S. §1121 et seq ., established a

    "motivational boot camp" to which certain inmates may be assigned by

    the Department of Corrections to serve their sentences for a period of six

    months. The boot camp provides rigorous physical activity, intensive

    regimentation and discipline, work on public projects, and other

    treatment. Id. §1123. Pursuant to statute, placement of inmates in the

    boot camp is discretionary, and, as such, no inmate has a right to such

    placement. Id. §1126(d). Upon successful completion of the six months

    incarceration, the inmate is released on parole for intensive supervision

    as determined by the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole. Id.

    §1127.

    2. Yeskey also asserted claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law.

    2


    Civ. P. 12(b)(6), holding that the ADA is inapplicable to

    state prisons. The question of the applicability of the ADA

    to prisons is an important one, especially in view of the

    increased number of inmates, including many older,

    hearing-impaired, and HIV-positive inmates, in the nation's

    jails. See generally Ira P. Robbins, George Bush's America

    Meets Dante's Inferno: The Americans with Disabilities Act in

    Prison , 15 Yale L. & Pol'y Rev. 49, 56-63 (1996). For the

    reasons that follow, we reverse.3

    I.

    Because this appeal turns on statutory construction, we

    begin with the text of the relevant statute, or more

    precisely, statutes. Although Yeskey only invoked the ADA,

    our discussion necessarily involves Section 504 of the

    Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794(a). Section 504, the first

    federal statute to provide broad prohibitions against

    discrimination on the basis of disability, applies only to

    programs and activities receiving federal financial

    assistance. Title II of the ADA, the broader statute, enacted

    in 1990, extends these protections and prohibitions to all

    state and local government programs and activities,

    regardless of whether they receive federal financial

    assistance. Congress has directed that Title II of the ADA be

    interpreted in a manner consistent with Section 504, 42

    U.S.C. § 12134(b), 12201(a),4 and all the leading cases take

    up the statutes together, as will we.

    The substantive provisions of the statutes are similar.

    Section 504 provides in pertinent part:

    _________________________________________________________________

    3. By the time this case was listed for submission in this Court, only a

    short time remained on Yeskey's sentence, and we have unfortunately

    been unable to dispose of it until now. He may have been released (the

    parties have not informed us on this point). However, Yeskey's complaint

    included a claim for damages, and hence the case is not moot. We also

    note that, since boot camp placement commences contemporaneous with

    the execution of sentence, it would probably be nigh impossible to test

    improper exclusion from the boot camp program in federal court before

    the six month placement expires, likely creating a situation capable of

    repetition yet evading review, which excuses mootness.

    4. See generally Robbins, supra , at 73-76.

    3


    No otherwise qualified individual with a disability in

    the United States . . . shall, solely by reason of her or

    his disability, 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(a).

    Title II of the ADA provides in pertinent part:

    no qualified individual with a disability shall, by reason

    of such disability, be excluded from participation in or

    be denied the benefits of the Services, programs, or

    activities of a public entity, or be subjected to

    discrimination by any such entity.

    42 U.S.C. § 12132.

    The statutory definition of "[p]rogram or activity" in

    Section 504 indicates that the terms were intended to be

    all-encompassing. They include " all of the operations of --

    (1)(A) a department, agency, special purpose district, or

    other instrumentality of a State or of a local government

    . . . any part of which is extended Federal financial

    assistance." 29 U.S.C. §794(b) (emphasis added). It is hard

    to imagine how state correctional programs would not fall

    within this broad definition.

    Moreover, a word in a statute "must be given its `ordinary

    or natural' meaning," see Bailey v. United States , 116 S. Ct.

    501, 506 (1995), and the ordinary meanings of "activity"

    and "program" clearly encompass those that take place in

    prisons. "Activity" means, inter alia , "natural or normal

    function or operation," and includes the "duties or

    function" of "an organizational unit for performing a specific

    function." Webster's Third New International Dictionary 22

    (1986). "Program" is defined as "a plan of procedure: a

    schedule or system under which action may be taken

    toward a desired goal." Id. at 1812. Certainly, operating a

    prison facility falls within the "duties or functions" of local

    government authorities. Moreover, Title II's definition of a

    "public entity" clearly encompasses a state or local

    correctional facility or authority: " any department, agency,

    4


    . . . or other instrumentality of a State or States or local

    government[.]" 42 U.S.C. § 12131(1)(B) (emphasis added).

    This conclusion is bolstered by the Department of Justice

    (DOJ) regulations implementing both Section 504 and Title

    II of the ADA. These regulations were expressly authorized

    by Congress, 29 U.S.C. § 794(a); 42 U.S.C. §§ 12134(a),

    12206, and, in view of Congress' delegation, the DOJ's

    regulations should be accorded "controlling weight unless

    [they are] `arbitrary, capricious, or manifestly contrary to

    the statute,' " Babbitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of

    Communities for a Great Oregon , 115 S. Ct. 2407, 2418

    (1995). The same is true of the preamble or commentary

    accompanying the regulations since both are part of the

    DOJ's official interpretation of the legislation. Thomas

    Jefferson Univ. v. Shalala , 114 S. Ct. 2381, 2386 (1994).

    DOJ interprets both Section 504 and Title II of the ADA to

    apply to correctional facilities.

    The regulations promulgated by DOJ to enforce Section

    504 define the kinds of programs and benefits that should

    be afforded to individuals with disabilities on a

    nondiscriminatory basis. The regulations define "program"

    to mean "the operations of the agency or organizational unit

    of government receiving or substantially benefiting from the

    Federal assistance awarded, e.g. , a police department or

    department of corrections ." 28 C.F.R. § 42.540(h) (1996)

    (emphasis added). The term "[b]enefit" includes "provision

    of services, financial aid or disposition ( i.e. , treatment,

    handling, decision, sentencing, confinement , or other

    prescription of conduct)." Id. § 42.540(j) (emphasis added).

    The appendix to the regulations, attached to the Final Rule

    (45 Fed. Reg. 37620, 37630 (1980)), makes clear that

    services and programs provided by detention and

    correctional agencies and facilities are covered by Section

    504. This coverage is broad, and includes "jails, prisons,

    reformatories and training schools, work camps, reception

    and diagnostic centers, pre-release and work release

    facilities, and community-based facilities." Id.

    The appendix further provides that those facilities

    designated for use by persons with disabilities are "required

    to make structural modifications to accommodate detainees

    or prisoners in wheelchairs." Id. The DOJ regulations

    5


    applicable to federally conducted programs also make it

    clear that institutions administered by the Federal Bureau

    of Prisons are subject to Section 504. See 28 C.F.R.

    § 39.170(d)(1)(ii) (Section 504 complaint procedure for

    inmates of federal penal institutions); id. pt. 39, Editorial

    Note, at 675 (Section 504 regulations requiring

    nondiscrimination in programs or activities of the

    Department of Justice apply to the Federal Bureau of

    Prisons); id. at 676 (federally conducted program is

    "anything a Federal agency does").

    The regulations promulgated under Title II of the ADA

    afford similar protections to persons with disabilities who

    are incarcerated in prisons, or otherwise institutionalized

    by the state or its instrumentalities, regardless of the public

    institution's receipt of federal financial assistance. The

    regulations state that the statute's coverage extends to "all

    services, programs, and activities provided or made

    available by public entities." Id. § 35.102(a). This broad

    language is intended to "appl[y] to anything a public entity

    does." Id. pt. 35, app. A, subpt. A at 456. As part of its

    regulatory obligations under Title II, the DOJ is designated

    as the agency responsible for coordinating the compliance

    activities of public entities that administer "[a]ll programs,

    services, and regulatory activities relating to law

    enforcement, public safety, and the administration of

    justice, including courts and correctional institutions." Id.

    § 35.190(b)(6). The preamble to the ADA regulations also

    refers explicitly to prisons, stating that, where an individual

    with disabilities "is an inmate of a custodial or correctional

    institution," the entity is required to provide"assistance in

    toileting, eating, or dressing to [that] individual[ ]." Id. pt.

    35, app. A at 468.5

    _________________________________________________________________

    5. Moreover, the DOJ Title II Technical Assistance Manual specifically

    lists "jails and prisons" as types of facilities that, if constructed or

    altered after the effective date of the ADA (January 26, 1992), must be

    designed and constructed so that they are readily accessible to and

    usable by individuals with disabilities. Title II Technical Assistance

    Manual II-6.0000, II-6.3300(6). The design standards applicable to

    facilities covered by Section 504 and Title II also include specific

    provisions relating to correctional facilities. The DOJ Section 504

    regulations adopt the Uniform Federal Accessibility Standards (UFAS),

    6


    In sum, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, Title II of

    the ADA, and the specific provisions in the DOJ's

    regulations listing correctional facilities or departments as

    covered entities confirm that the Rehabilitation Act and the

    ADA apply to state and locally-operated correctional

    facilities.

    II.

    The weight of judicial authority also supports our

    conclusion that the ADA applies to prison programs. In

    Crawford v. Indiana Department of Corrections , ___ F.3d ___,

    1997 WL 289101 (7th Cir. June 2, 1997), the Seventh

    Circuit held that Title II of the ADA applied to state prisons

    in the case of a blind, former state prisoner who sought

    damages resulting from his exclusion from a variety of

    programs, activities, and facilities at the prison that were

    routinely available to the prison's population, including

    educational programs, the library, and the dining hall.

    Accord Duffy v. Riveland , 98 F.3d 447, 455 (9th Cir. 1996);

    Harris v. Thigpen , 941 F.2d 1495, 1522 n.41 (11th Cir.

    1991) (holding Rehabilitation Act applicable).

    Two circuits have questioned the applicability of Section

    704 and Title II to prisons. See Torcasio v. Murray , 57 F.3d

    1340, 1344-46 (4th Cir. 1995) (coverage of prisons by

    Section 504 and Title II not clearly established in qualified

    immunity context), cert. denied , 116 S. Ct. 772 (1996);

    _________________________________________________________________

    which apply to federal agencies and entities receiving federal financial

    assistance. 28 C.F.R. § 42.522(b). UFAS lists"jails, prisons,

    reformatories" and "[o]ther detention or correctional facilities" as

    institutions to which the accessibility standards apply. 41 C.F.R. subpt.

    101-19.6, app. A at 150. Under Title II, covered entities building new or

    altering existing facilities may follow either UFAS or the ADA

    Accessibility Guidelines for Buildings and Facilities (ADAAG). 28 C.F.R.

    § 35.151(c); see id. pt. 36, app. A. Amendments to the ADAAG, adopted

    as an Interim Final Rule, effective December 20, 1994, by the

    Architectural & Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, include

    specific accessibility guidelines for "detention and correctional facilities."

    59 Fed. Reg. 31676, 31770-72 (1994). The Department of Justice has

    proposed adoption of the interim final rule. Id. at 31808. The ADAAG is

    not effective until adopted by the DOJ.

    7


    White v. State of Colorado , 82 F.3d 364, 367 (10th Cir.

    1996) (neither ADA nor Rehabilitation Act applies to prison

    employment). In our view, these opinions are seriously

    flawed. The leading case in support of the Commonwealth's

    position is Torcasio , which was followed by the district

    court here, and so we focus our sights on that case.6

    The Fourth Circuit in Torcasio acknowledged that the

    broad language prohibiting discrimination on the basis of

    disability in both statutes "appears all-encompassing," 57

    F.3d at 1344. Nevertheless, the Torcasio court was

    reluctant to find either statute applicable to prisons

    because of the so-called "clear statement" doctrine, as set

    out in Will v. Michigan Department of State Police , 491 U.S.

    58, 65 (1989):

    if Congress intends to alter the "usual constitutional

    balance between the States and the Federal

    Government," it must make its intention to do so

    "unmistakably clear in the language of the statute."

    Atascadero State Hospital v. Scanlon , 473 U.S. 234 ,

    242 . . . (1985); see also , Pennhurst State School and

    Hospital v. Halderman , 465 U.S. 89, 99 . . . (1984).

    Because it found the operation of prisons to be a "core state

    function," 57 F.3d at 1345, and because neither Section

    504 nor Title II includes an express statement of its

    application to correctional facilities, the Torcasio court

    expressed its doubt that Congress had "clearly" intended

    either statute to apply to state prisons. Id. at 1346.

    This extension of the clear statement rule was

    unwarranted. Will , Atascadero , and Pennhurst all involved

    instances in which there had been no express waiver or

    abrogation of the state's traditional immunity from suit,

    either by the state itself ( Pennhurst ), or by Congress ( Will ,

    Atascadero ). Here, in contrast, both Section 504 and Title

    _________________________________________________________________

    6. Torcasio did not decide whether either Section 504 or Title II of the

    ADA applies to prisons; rather, it concluded that such coverage was not

    clearly established at the time of the events at issue, and that the

    individual defendants in that case therefore were entitled to qualified

    immunity. In reaching its qualified immunity ruling, however, the

    Torcasio court discussed the reach of the two statutes at length, and

    expressed its doubt that either applied to prisons.

    8


    II of the ADA contain an "unequivocal expression of

    congressional intent to overturn the constitutionally

    guaranteed immunity of the several states." Pennhurst , 465

    U.S. at 99 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted);

    see 42 U.S.C. § 2000d-7(a)(1) ("A State shall not be immune

    under the Eleventh Amendment . . . from suit in Federal

    court for a violation of section 504 of the Rehabilitation

    Act."); id. § 12202 ("A State shall not be immune under the

    eleventh amendment . . . from an action in Federal or State

    court of competent jurisdiction for a violation of[the

    ADA].").

    To be sure, when "Congress intends to alter the usual

    constitutional balance between the States and the Federal

    Government, it must make its intention to do so

    unmistakably clear in the language of the statute." Gregory

    v. Ashcroft , 501 U.S. 452, 460 , 461 (1991) (internal

    quotation marks and citations omitted). This requirement,

    however, is a "rule of statutory construction to be applied

    where statutory intent is ambiguous." Id. at 470. It is not

    a warrant to disregard clearly expressed congressional

    intent.

    Torcasio 's statement that Congress must specifically

    identify state or local prisons in the statutory text, if it

    wishes to regulate them, was expressly disavowed by the

    Supreme Court in Gregory . See id. at 467 ("This does not

    mean that the Act must mention judges explicitly.").

    Congress need only make the scope of a statute "plain." Id.

    And Congress has done that here. Both Section 504 and

    Title II speak unambiguously of their application to state

    and local governments and to "any" or "all" of their

    operations. In light of the clear and all-encompassing

    language of both statutes, there is no basis for requiring

    Congress to have detailed which of the many important

    components of state and local governments were to be

    included in the terms "any" and "all."

    In Crawford , supra , just as in this case, the state relied

    on the fact that prison administration was a "core" state

    function in arguing that the clear statement rule was

    triggered. Judge Posner responded most forcefully:

    Prison administration is indeed a core function of state

    government, as is education. But the state's concession

    9


    that the Americans with Disabilities Act applies to the

    prison's relations with its employees and visitors, as

    well as to the public schools, suggests that the clear-

    statement rule does not carry this particular core

    function of state government outside the scope of the

    Act. We doubt, moreover, that Congress could speak

    much more clearly than it did when it made the Act

    expressly applicable to all public entities and defined

    the term "public entity" to include every possible

    agency of state or local government. Maybe there is an

    inner core of sovereign functions, such as the balance

    of power between governor and state legislature, that if

    somehow imperiled by the ADA would be protected by

    the clear-statement rule, cf. Gregory v. Ashcroft , supra ,

    501 U.S. at 461 -63; but the mere provision of public

    services, such as schools and prisons, is not within

    that inner core.

    Crawford , ___ F.3d ___, 1997 WL 289101, at *4. We agree.

    III.

    Despite the Commonwealth's contention to the contrary,

    moreover, prisoners (in contrast to prisons ) are not excluded

    from coverage because Section 504 and Title II protect only

    "qualified individual[s] with a disability." That term is

    defined in Title II to mean:

    an individual with a disability who, with or without

    reasonable modifications . . . meets the essential

    eligibility requirements for the receipt of services or the

    participation in programs or activities provided by a

    public entity.

    42 U.S.C. § 12131(2). The terms "eligibility" and

    "participation" do not, as Torcasio stated, see 57 F.3d at

    1347, "imply voluntariness" or mandate that an individual

    seek out or request a service to be covered. To the contrary,

    the term "eligibility" simply describes those who are "fitted

    or qualified to be chosen," without regard to their own

    wishes. See Webster's Third New International Dictionary ,

    supra at 736.

    Judge Posner addressed a related aspect of the case quite

    incisively:

    10


    It might seem absurd to apply the Americans with

    Disabilities Act to prisoners. Prisoners are not a

    favored group in society; the propensity of some of

    them to sue at the drop of a hat is well known; prison

    systems are strapped for funds; the practical effect of

    granting disabled prisoners rights of access that might

    require costly modifications of prison facilities might be

    the curtailment of educational, recreational, and

    rehabilitative programs for prisoners, in which event

    everyone might be worse off. But . . . there is another

    side to the issue. The Americans with Disabilities Act

    was cast in terms not of subsidizing an interest group

    but of eliminating a form of discrimination that

    Congress considered unfair and even odious. The Act

    assimilates the disabled to groups that by reason of

    sex, age, race, religion, nationality, or ethnic origin are

    believed to be victims of discrimination. Rights against

    discrimination are among the few rights that prisoners

    do not park at the prison gates. Although the special

    conditions of the prison setting license a degree of

    discrimination that would not be tolerated in a free

    environment, there is no general right of prison officials

    to discriminate against prisoners on grounds of race,

    sex, religion, and so forth. If a prison may not exclude

    blacks from the prison dining hall and force them to

    eat in their cells, and if Congress thinks that

    discriminating against a blind person is like

    discriminating against a black person, it is not obvious

    that the prison may exclude the blind person from the

    dining hall, unless allowing him to use the dining hall

    would place an undue burden on prison management.

    Crawford , __ F.3d __, 1997 WL 289101, at *5 (citations

    omitted). We agree here as well.

    In sum, in enacting the ADA, Congress "invoke[d] the

    sweep of [its] authority, including the power to enforce the

    fourteenth amendment and to regulate commerce, in order

    to address the major areas of discrimination faced day-to-

    day by people with disabilities." 42 U.S.C. § 12101(b)(4).

    The "critical areas" in which "discrimination against

    individuals with disabilities persists" were set forth in the

    statute, and include "institutionalization." Id. § 12101(a)(3).

    11


    Thus, if the plain words of a statute are to guide the courts

    in interpreting it, then both statutes must be held to apply

    to state and local correctional facilities.7 Essentially, the

    Commonwealth is asking us to amend the statute,

    something we cannot do.

    IV.

    The foregoing discussion establishes that the ADA applies

    to Yeskey's claim. His claim for injunctive relief is,

    apparently, moot in view of the impending (or actual)

    completion of his prison term. His claim for damages will

    turn, presumably, on whether he should (or would) have

    been admitted to the boot camp. Even with the ADA

    applicable, Yeskey might not have been admitted for a

    number of reasons, which will have to be explored on

    remand.

    The Commonwealth has invoked the specter of federal

    court management of state prisons:

    Application of the ADA to internal prison

    management would place nearly every aspect of prison

    management into the court's hands for scrutiny simply

    because an inmate has a disability. See Pierce v. King ,

    918 F. Supp. 932, 941 (E.D.N.C. 1996). For instance,

    if the ADA applies to routine prison decisions, it is not

    unfathomable that courts will be used to reconstruct

    cells and prison space, to alter scheduling of inmate

    movements and assignments and to interfere with

    security procedures.

    Brief at 15. Although these considerations do not override

    our conclusion that the ADA applies to prisons, our holding

    does not dispose of the controversial and difficult question

    whether principles of deference to the decisions of prison

    officials in the context of constitutional law apply to

    _________________________________________________________________

    7. We add that the legislative history does not inveigh against this

    conclusion. When the ADA was enacted in 1990, the Rehabilitation Act

    had been law for seventeen years and a number of cases had held it

    applicable to prisons and prisoners, yet Congress did not amend that Act

    or alter any language so as to extirpate those interpretations.

    12


    statutory rights. See generally Robbins, supra , at 94-97.8

    We are not sure of the answer, and need not address that

    question now for, at all events, we doubt that it will be

    germane in this case. We do, however, "flag" it for another

    day.

    The judgment of the district court will be reversed, and

    the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with

    this opinion.

    A True Copy:

    Teste:

    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals

    for the Third Circuit

    _________________________________________________________________

    8. Turner v. Safley , 482 U.S. 78 (1987), establishes a four-part

    "reasonableness" test for judicial deference to prison managment

    decisions in the face of constitutional challenges (usually under the

    Eighth Amendment). The first requirement is "a valid rational

    connection" between the regulation and the alleged governmental

    interest. The second inquiry is whether alternative means exist for

    inmates to exercise the right under consideration. The third issue is the

    effect that accommodation of the asserted right will have on security,

    administrative efficiency, prison staff, and the larger inmate population.

    The final prong of the test is whether an alternative means exists for

    prison officials to accomplish their objectives without infringing on

    inmates' rights. See also O'Lone v. Estate of Shabazz , 482 U.S. 342  

    (1987) (reaffirmed the Turner standard with respect to alleged

    infringement of inmates' First Amendment right to free exercise of

    religion).

    The Ninth Circuit has held that the Turner standard applies to

    statutory rights such as those created by the ADA. In Gates v. Rowland ,

    39 F.3d 1439 (9th Cir. 1994), the court reversed a lower court's ruling

    that denial of food-service positions to HIV-positive inmates

    discriminated against them impermissibly. Reasoning that, where

    constitutional protections bend, statutory privileges must too, the court

    deferred to the penalogical concerns asserted by prison officials. The

    Eighth Circuit disagrees. See Pargo v. Elliott , 49 F.3d 1355 (8th Cir.

    1995)( Turner does not foreclose all heightened judicial review.)

    13

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