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                                            FILED
                               United States Court of Appeals
                                        Tenth Circuit
      
                                         SEP 25 2000
      
                                       PATRICK FISHER
                                            Clerk                                      PUBLISH
             
                               UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
             
                                       TENTH CIRCUIT
             
             
             
             ADARAND CONSTRUCTORS, INC.,  a   No. 97_1304
             Colorado corporation,            
                                              
                   Plaintiff _ Appellee,            
             v.                               
                                              
             RODNEY E. SLATER, Secretary of   
              the Department of Transportation;
              KENNETH R. WYKLE, Administrator  
              of the Federal Highway  Administration;
             VINCENT F.  SCHIMMOLLER, Administrator
             of  Region VIII of the Federal   
             Highway  Administration; LARRY   
             C. SMITH,   Engineer of the Central
             Federal Lands  Highway Division, 
                                              
             Defendants _ Appellants,         
                                              
                                              
             PACIFIC LEGAL FOUNDATION;  ASSOCIATED
             GENERAL  CONTRACTORS OF AMERICA, 
              INC.; EMPLOYMENT LAW  CENTER;    
             MINORITY BUSINESS  ENTERPRISE    
             LEGAL DEFENSE  AND EDUCATION     
             FUND, INC.,                      
                                              
                 Amici Curiae.                    
                                              
    
             
             
                                     OPINION ON REMAND
             
             
             
                         Appeal from the United States District Court
                                for the District of Colorado
                                    (D.C. No. 90_K_1413)
             
             
             
             Leslie A. Simon, Attorney, United States Department of Justice, (Nancy E. 
             McFadden, General Counsel, Paul M. Geier, Assistant General Counsel for 
             Litigation, Edward V.A. Kussy, Acting Chief Counsel, Federal Highway 
             Administration, Sara McAndrew, Trial Attorney, Peter S. Smith, Trial Attorney, 
             of the United States Department of Transportation, Washington, D.C.; Isabelle 
             Katz Pinzler, Acting Assistant Attorney General, William R. Yeomans, Acting 
             Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Bill Lann Lee, Acting Deputy Assistant 
             Attorney General, Thomas E. Perez, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Mark L. 
             Gross, Attorney, Louis E. Peraertz, Attorney, of the United States Department of 
             Justice, Washington, D.C., with her on the briefs), for Defendants _ Appellants.
             
             William Perry Pendley (Todd S. Welch and J. Scott Detamore, with him on the 
             briefs), Mountain States Legal Foundation, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff _
             Appellee.
             
             Robin L. Rivett, Sharon L. Browne, and Stephen R. McCutcheon, Jr., for Pacific 
             Legal Foundation, Sacramento, California, filed an amicus curiae brief. 
             
             Julian A. Gross and William C. McNeill III, Legal Aid Society of San Francisco, 
             for the Employment Law Center, San Francisco, California, and Franklin M. Lee 
             and Tracie Anita Watkins for the Minority Business Enterprise Legal Defense and 
             Education Fund, Inc., Washington, D.C., filed an amicus curiae brief.
             
             Michael E. Kennedy, General Counsel for Associated General Contractors of 
             America, Inc., and John G. Roberts, Jr., David G. Leitch, and H. Christopher 
             Bartolomucci of Hogan & Hartson, L.L.P., Washington, D.C., filed an amicus 
             curiae brief for Associated General Contractors of America, Inc.
             
             
             
             Before LUCERO, Circuit Judge, McKAY, Senior Circuit Judge, and MURPHY, 
             Circuit Judge.
             
             
             
             LUCERO, Circuit Judge.
             
    
     
             
    
             
    
                  Following the Supreme Court's vacation of our dismissal on mootness 
    
             grounds, we address the merits of this appeal, namely, the federal government's 
    
             challenge to the district court's grant of summary judgment to plaintiff_appellee 
    
             Adarand Constructors, Inc.  In so doing, we must resolve the constitutionality of 
    
             the use in federal subcontracting procurement of the Subcontractor Compensation 
    
             Clause ("SCC"), which employs race_conscious presumptions designed to favor 
    
             minority enterprises and other "disadvantaged business enterprises" ("DBEs"). 
    
             Our evaluation of the SCC program utilizes the "strict scrutiny" standard of 
    
             constitutional review enunciated by the Supreme Court in an earlier decision in 
    
             this case, Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Peņa, 515 U.S. 200 (1995) ("Adarand 
    
             III").  
    
                  In his concurring opinion in Adarand III, Justice Scalia succinctly 
    
             articulated this Nation's guiding aspiration:  "In the eyes of government, we are 
    
             just one race here.  It is American."  Id. at 239 (Scalia, J., concurring in part and 
    
             concurring in the judgment).  Until that future day when national aspiration and 
    
             national reality converge, the Court has made clear that under certain 
    
             circumstances the federal government may use race_conscious means to remedy 
    
             the effects of historical and present_day racial discrimination.  Inherently, we 
    
             resolve whether the two branches of the government_the Legislative and the
             
     
             Executive_that have chosen to hasten that future day have met the constitutional 
    
             standards enunciated by the third branch.  Since the district court last considered 
    
             this case, and after lengthy congressional hearings in response to the Adarand III 
    
             decision, the federal government has significantly changed the way in which it 
    
             implements the challenged race_conscious programs in highway construction 
    
             contracting.  It is ultimately our considered judgment that the SCC program and 
    
             the DBE certification programs as currently structured, though not as they were 
    
             structured in 1997 when the district court last rendered judgment, pass 
    
             constitutional muster:  They are narrowly tailored to serve a compelling 
    
             governmental interest.  Thus, exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 
    
             § 1291, we reverse the judgment of the district court below.
    
                                             I
    
                  The Supreme Court has characterized the facts of this case as "fairly 
    
             straightforward," Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 206, summarizing the relevant facts as 
    
             follows:
    
                       In 1989, the Central Federal Lands Highway Division 
                  (CFLHD), which is part of the United States Department of 
                  Transportation (DOT), awarded the prime contract for a highway 
                  construction project in Colorado to Mountain Gravel & Construction 
                  Company.  Mountain Gravel then solicited bids from subcontractors 
                  for the guardrail portion of the contract.  Adarand, a Colorado_based 
                  highway construction company specializing in guardrail work, 
                  submitted the low bid.  Gonzales Construction Company also 
                  submitted a bid.
             
    
     
             Id. at 205.  At the time, Gonzales was certified as a small business owned and 
    
             controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals, while Adarand 
    
             was not.  See id.  This litigation centers around the SCC, a clause which was 
    
             included in CFLHD's prime contract with Mountain Gravel.  The SCC provided 
    
             "that Mountain Gravel would receive additional compensation if it hired 
    
             subcontractors certified as small businesses controlled by `socially and 
    
             economically disadvantaged individuals.'"  Id. (citation omitted).
    
                  Adarand submitted an affidavit stating that but for the additional 
    
             compensation Mountain Gravel obtained by hiring Gonzales, a certified business, 
    
             it would have hired Adarand for the guardrail work.  See id.  Adarand sued, 
    
             arguing that the use of a race_conscious presumption in determining who is a 
    
             socially and economically disadvantaged individual for purposes of the SCC 
    
             violated its Fifth Amendment equal protection rights.  See id. at 205_06. 
    
                  In Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Skinner, 790 F. Supp. 240 (D. Colo. 1992) 
    
             ("Adarand I"), the district court addressed Adarand's challenge to "the DBE 
    
             program as administered by the CFLHD within Colorado."  Id. at 241 (footnote 
    
             omitted).  Without focusing specifically on the SCC and its operation, the court in 
    
             Adarand I upheld as constitutional, under intermediate scrutiny, statutory 
    
             provisions defining DBEs and setting goals for DBE participation in government 
    
             contracting.  See id. at 241, 244_45 (relying on Fullilove v. Klutznick, 448 U.S.
             
     
             448, 480 (1980); Metro Broadcasting, Inc. v. FCC, 497 U.S. 547, 598_601 
    
             (1990)).
    
                  In Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Peņa, 16 F.3d 1537, 1539 (10th Cir. 1994) 
    
             ("Adarand II"), this Court affirmed the district court's judgment on different 
    
             grounds.  We concluded that Adarand had standing to challenge the SCC program 
    
             as it pertains to minority business enterprises but not women_owned business 
    
             enterprises and addressed our inquiry to the SCC as a program implemented 
    
             pursuant to § 502 of the Small Business Act of 1958 ("SBA"), Pub. L. No. 85_
    
             536, 72 Stat. 384 (codified as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 631 et seq.).  See Adarand II, 
    
             16 F.3d at 1543 (citing 15 U.S.C. § 644(g)).  Like the district court, we relied on 
    
             Metro Broadcasting, 497 U.S. at 565, applying intermediate scrutiny to the SCC 
    
             and holding "the SCC program . . . constitutional because it is narrowly tailored 
    
             to achieve its significant governmental purpose of providing subcontracting 
    
             opportunities for small [DBEs], as required under section 502 of the [SBA]." 
    
             Adarand II, 16 F.3d at 1547.
    
                  The Supreme Court reversed.  It overruled Metro Broadcasting and cast 
    
             doubt on Fullilove insofar as that case might be read to apply less than strict 
    
             scrutiny to federal programs involving racial classifications.  See Adarand III, 515
             
     
             U.S. at 227, 235.(1)
    
                  On remand, the district court held the SCC program unconstitutional, 
    
             finding it insufficiently narrowly tailored to further a compelling interest because 
    
             the program was both over_ and under_inclusive, including minority individuals 
    
             who were not in fact disadvantaged and excluding non_minority individuals who 
    
             were disadvantaged.  See Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Peņa, 965 F. Supp. 1556 
    
             (D. Colo. 1997) ("Adarand IV").  With regard to the Court's pronouncement in 
    
             Adarand III that strict scrutiny is not "fatal in fact," the district court found it 
    
             "difficult to envisage a race_based classification" that would ever be narrowly 
    
             tailored, thereby effectively pronouncing strict scrutiny fatal in fact.  Id. at 1580. 
    
             The district court granted summary judgment to Adarand.
    
                  Following Adarand IV, we considered the government's contention that 
    
             subsequent events had rendered the case moot.  See Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. 
    
             Slater, 169 F.3d 1292 (10th Cir. 1999) ("Adarand V").  Specifically, because 
    
             Adarand applied for and was granted DBE certification by the Colorado Department of Transportation ("CDOT"), we concluded that Adarand could no 
    
             longer demonstrate an injury stemming from the SCC sufficient to confer 
    
             standing.  See id. at 1296_97.  Hence, the case was moot.  See id.
    
                  The Supreme Court disagreed.  See Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Slater, 
    
             120 S. Ct. 722 (2000) ("Adarand VI").  Relying on its decision in Friends of the 
    
             Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Environmental Services (TOC), Inc., 120 S. Ct. 693 (2000), 
    
             handed down on the same day as its Adarand VI remand, the Court stated it had 
    
             "recently noted" that a possibility of a defendant "engag[ing] in (or resum[ing]) 
    
             harmful conduct" might be too speculative to confer standing but not too 
    
             speculative to overcome mootness.  Adarand VI, 120 S. Ct. at 726 (quoting 
    
             Friends of the Earth, 120 S. Ct. at 699).  The Court held it was "far from clear" 
    
             that DOT would not initiate proceedings to revoke Adarand's status and because 
    
             "it is impossible to conclude that respondents have borne their burden of 
    
             establishing that it is `absolutely clear that the allegedly wrongful behavior could 
    
             not reasonably be expected to recur,' petitioner's cause of action remains alive." 
    
             Id. at 726_27 (quoting Friends of the Earth, Inc., 120 S. Ct. at 708).  With the 
    
             reversal of our judgment in Adarand V, this appeal was remanded to us for 
    
             consideration on the merits.  See id. at 726_27.
    
                  In the discussion that follows, we first dispose of three threshold concerns: 
    
             (1)       The principal focus of Adarand III was not an analysis of the particular 
             statutes and regulations before the Court under its newly_announced standard, but 
             the far more abstract question of whether "benign" race_conscious programs are 
             subject to the "strict scrutiny" doctrine, a question which the majority answered in 
             the affirmative.  See Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 225_27.  In its enunciation of the 
             strict scrutiny standard and its overruling of Metro Broadcasting, the Court 
             accorded very little attention to the application of the strict scrutiny test to the 
             particular programs at issue in this case.
             
     
             (1) a determination of the appropriate versions of the statutes and regulations at issue in this case; (2) the scope of our review of the SCC program; and (3) a brief 
    
             overview of the relevant statutory framework and of the SCC program.  Then, in 
    
             Part III we subject the SCC program to strict scrutiny, examining the compelling 
    
             interest underlying the program as well as its narrow tailoring, and addressing 
    
             specific issues that the Supreme Court in Adarand III directed that we consider. 
    
             Finally, in Part IV, we briefly discuss the government's request that we 
    
             consolidate with the instant action a pending, potentially related case, originally 
    
             filed under the name Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Romer, No. CIV. A. 97_K_
    
             1351 (D. Colo. June 26, 1997). 
    
                                             II
    
                  We begin by addressing the scope of our inquiry in this appeal.  It is 
    
             essential that we decide which versions of the statutes and regulations at issue are 
    
             properly before us, as well as which portions of those statutes and regulations are 
    
             relevant to this appeal.
    
                  Several statutes are implicated in this case, notably §§ 8(a), 8(d) and 502 of 
    
             the SBA (codified as amended at 15 U.S.C. §§ 637(a), (d), and 644(g)), § 106(c) 
    
             of the Surface Transportation and Uniform Relocation Assistance Act of 1987 
    
             ("STURAA"), Pub. L. No. 100_17, 101 Stat. 132, 145 (1987), § 1003(b) of the 
    
             Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 ("ISTEA"), Pub. L. No. 
    
             102_240, 105 Stat. 1914, 1919_21 (1991), § 1101(b) of the Transportation Equity
             
     
             Act for the 21st Century of 1998 ("TEA_21"), Pub. L. No. 105_178, 112 Stat. 107, 
    
             113_15 (1998), as well as their accompanying administrative regulations.
    
                              A. The Versions To Be Considered
    
                  With regard to the foregoing statutes, regulations, and SCC, the parties 
    
             disagree as to whether we may properly consider intervening changes in the law 
    
             between 1992 when Adarand I was handed down and the present.(2)  Our resolution 
    
             of that dispute is ultimately compelled by the logic of the well_settled precedent 
    
             of both the Supreme Court and this Circuit.  Adarand seeks only prospective 
    
             declaratory and injunctive relief.  See Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 210.(3)  Application 
    
             of the intervening statutory and regulatory changes to this type of claim does not 
    
             implicate any presumption against the retroactive application of statutes.  See 
    
             Landgraf v. USI Film Prods., 511 U.S. 244, 273 (1994) ("Even absent specific 
    
             legislative authorization, application of new statutes passed after the events in 
    
             suit is unquestionably proper in many situations.  When the intervening statute . . 
    
             . affects the propriety of prospective relief, application of the new provision is not retroactive."); Jurado_Gutierrez v. Greene, 190 F.3d 1135, 1149 (10th Cir. 1999) 
    
             (applying Landgraf), cert. denied sub nom. Palaganas_Suarez v. Greene, 120 S. 
    
             Ct. 1539 (2000); see also Jones v. Hess, 681 F.2d 688, 695 n.9 (10th Cir. 1982) 
    
             ("Generally an appellate court must apply the law in effect at the time it renders 
    
             its decision where a change in law occurs while a case is on direct appeal, 
    
             although there may well be an exception to this rule to prevent manifest 
    
             injustice." (citations omitted)); McMahan v. Hunter, 179 F.2d 661, 663 (10th Cir. 
    
             1950) ("[W]here a rule of law was changed after the decision in the trial court but 
    
             before the decision in the Appellate Court, the decision in the Appellate Court 
    
             must be according to the new law."); 13A Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal 
    
             Practice & Procedure, Jurisdiction 2d § 3533.6 (1984) ("Ordinarily, courts . . . 
    
             apply[] the law in force at the time of decision, unless a good reason appears for 
    
             ignoring the change."); cf. Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v. Bonjorno, 494 
    
             U.S. 827, 836_37 (1990).  To ignore intervening changes in the statutory and 
    
             regulatory framework underlying this litigation would be to shirk our 
    
             responsibility to strictly scrutinize the real_world legal regime against which 
    
             Adarand seeks prospective relief.  The changes in the law are squarely before us 
    
             today, and we discern no reason to leave their scrutiny to future litigation, in 
    
             effect prolonging the instant litigation and fostering "both a wasteful expenditure 
    
             (2)       We have therefore requested and received supplementary briefing from 
             the parties on intervening changes in the statutory and regulatory scheme at issue 
             in the instant action.
             (3)       Although Adarand also seeks "such other and further relief as to the 
             Court seems just and equitable," this highly general language does not constitute 
             a prayer for retrospective relief under the circumstances of this case.  (Appellants' 
             App. at 10.)  Moreover, on appeal Adarand seeks to uphold the district court's 
             grant of summary judgment and declaratory and injunctive relief and has not filed 
             a cross_appeal seeking damages or another form of retrospective relief.
             
     
             of resources by courts and litigating parties and the gradual undermining of public confidence in the judiciary_in short, Dickens's Jarndyce v. Jarndyce syndrome." 
    
             McIlravy v. Kerr_McGee Coal Corp., 204 F.3d 1031, 1035 (10th Cir. 2000).
    
                  However, considering that we are reviewing a decision of the district court 
    
             below that relied on older versions of the statutes, regulations, and SCC, and 
    
             because we are mindful that future statutory and regulatory changes may cause the 
    
             government to "engage in (or resume) [the] harmful conduct" in question earlier 
    
             in this litigation so as to militate against a finding of mootness, Adarand VI, 120 
    
             S. Ct. at 726 (quoting Friends of the Earth, 120 S. Ct. at 699), we consider the 
    
             statutory and regulatory framework in its prior stages as well.(4)  See also 
    
             Northeastern Fla. Chapter of Associated Gen. Contractors of Am. v. City of Jacksonville, 508 U.S. 656, 662 (1993) ("[A] defendant's voluntary cessation of a 
    
             challenged practice does not deprive a federal court of its power to determine the 
    
             legality of the practice." (quoting City of Mesquite v. Aladdin's Castle, Inc., 455 
    
             U.S. 283, 289 (1982))).  It is not fanciful to suggest that the government may 
    
             retreat to prior practice, but if the government did so, this opinion expressly holds 
    
             that such an action would be unconstitutional for the reasons discussed below.
    
                      B.  The Scope of the SCC Program Under Scrutiny
    
                  We next clarify the scope of the SCC program under review.  In that regard, 
    
             we are bound by the Supreme Court's ruling on Adarand's standing in Adarand 
    
             III as law of the case.  Based on its conclusion that "CFLHD is likely to let 
    
             contracts involving guardrail work that contain a[n] [SCC] at least once per year 
    
             in Colorado, that Adarand is very likely to bid on each such contract, and that 
    
             Adarand often must compete for such contracts against small disadvantaged 
    
             businesses," the Court held Adarand has standing to challenge "the race_based 
    
             rebuttable presumption used in some certifications under the Subcontracting 
    
             Compensation Clause."  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 212_13 (citation omitted).  
    
                  We recognize, however, that there are programs that the Supreme Court did 
    
             not hold Adarand has standing to challenge.  First is the § 8(a) program, discussed 
    
             below.  See 15 U.S.C. § 637(a).  Subsection 8(a) does not involve the use of 
    
             SCCs, nor has Adarand made any showing that it has been injured by non_
    
             inclusion in the § 8(a) program.  Second, we specifically held in Adarand II that 
    
             Adarand has not shown standing to challenge "the provisions of the SCC program 
    
             pertaining to women_owned business enterprises (WBE)."  16 F.3d at 1543.  This 
    
             conclusion was left undisturbed by the Supreme Court, see Adarand III, 515 U.S. 
    
             (4)       Thus, we refuse the government's invitation to ignore the SCC program 
             by virtue of its citation to a March 29, 2000 memorandum from the Manager of 
             the Federal Lands Program indicating that the SCC is no longer in use in federal 
             highway construction procurement contracts.  We likewise reject the 
             government's argument, relying on Lawrence v. Chater, 516 U.S. 163, 165_66 
             (1996), that we must remand this case to the district court for consideration of 
             intervening statutory and regulatory changes.  The government's reliance on 
             Lawrence is misplaced:  That case involved the Supreme Court's exercise of its 
             power to "grant certiorari, vacate the judgment below, and remand the case" to a 
             "lower federal court" in light of intervening regulatory changes, and not the 
             power of a lower federal court to decide a case on remand from the Supreme 
             Court.  Id. (emphasis added).  In the present case, the parties have briefed 
             intervening changes in the law, there are no disputed factual issues, and we see no 
             reason to delay this already protracted litigation by remanding to the district 
             court, especially considering the district court's statement that it would be 
             "difficult to envisage a race_based classification" that would ever be narrowly 
             tailored, thereby effectively pronouncing strict scrutiny fatal in fact, Adarand IV 
             965 F. Supp. at 1580, a view which we reject in the discussion that follows.
             
     
             at 210_12, and remains law of the case, and we discern no clear error in that prior 
    
             decision or manifest injustice sufficient to warrant overriding the law of the case 
    
             doctrine, see Agostini v. Felton, 521 U.S. 203, 236 (1997); McIlravy, 204 F.3d at 
    
             1034_35.  Furthermore, our decision in Adarand II, as well as the Supreme 
    
             Court's remand in Adarand III, was limited to the question of the constitutionality 
    
             of the use of a race_conscious presumption in the SCC program.  See Adarand III, 
    
             515 U.S. at 237_38.  This case does not involve, nor has Adarand ever 
    
             demonstrated standing to bring, a generalized challenge to the policy of 
    
             maximizing contracting opportunities for small disadvantaged businesses set forth 
    
             in 15 U.S.C. §§ 637 and 644(g), or to the various goals for fostering the 
    
             participation of small minority_owned businesses promulgated pursuant to 15 
    
             U.S.C. § 644(g), also discussed below.  Nor are we presented with any indication 
    
             that Adarand has standing to challenge paragraphs (4)_(6) of 15 U.S.C. § 637(d). 
    
             Finally, we agree with the government that throughout the course of this 
    
             litigation, Adarand's challenge has been to the use of the SCC in direct federal 
    
             highway procurement contracts entered into by the CFLHD with funds appropriated under STURAA, ISTEA, and TEA_21.  In the discussion that 
    
             follows, we therefore address the constitutionality of the relevant statutory 
    
             provisions as applied in the SCC program, as well as their facial constitutionality. 
    
             To the extent the district court's judgment can be construed as having reached 
    
             statutes, programs, and issues beyond the scope of Adarand's standing and the 
    
             Supreme Court's remand in Adarand III, we reverse that judgment.
    
                    C.  Overview of the Statutory Framework and the SCC
    
                  We are now in a position to offer a brief overview of the statutory 
    
             framework and the SCC underlying this litigation.  
    
                       The [SBA] . . . declares it to be "the policy of the United 
                  States that small business concerns, [and] small business concerns 
                  owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged 
                  individuals, . . . shall have the maximum practicable opportunity to 
                  participate in the performance of contracts let by any Federal 
                  agency."  § 8(d)(1), 15 U.S.C. § 637(d)(1).  The [SBA] defines 
                  "socially disadvantaged individuals" as "those who have been 
                  subjected to racial or ethnic prejudice or cultural bias because of 
                  their identity as a member of a group without regard to their 
                  individual qualities," § 8(a)(5), 15 U.S.C. § 637(a)(5), and it defines 
                  "economically disadvantaged individuals" as "those socially 
                  disadvantaged individuals whose ability to compete in the free 
                  enterprise system has been impaired due to diminished capital and 
                  credit opportunities as compared to others in the same business area 
                  who are not socially disadvantaged."  § 8(a)(6)(A), 15 U.S.C. 
                  § 637(a)(6)(A).
                  
                       In furtherance of the policy stated in § 8(d)(1), the Act 
    
     
                  establishes "[t]he Government_wide goal for participation by small 
                  business concerns owned and controlled by socially and economically 
                  disadvantaged individuals" at "not less than 5 percent of the total 
                  value of all prime contract and subcontract awards for each fiscal year."  15 U.S.C. § 644(g)(1).  It also requires the head of each 
                  federal agency to set agency_specific goals for participation by 
                  businesses controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged 
                  individuals.  Id.
    
             Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 206.  These goals must "realistically reflect the 
    
             potential" of small disadvantaged businesses to perform subcontracts.  See 15 
    
             U.S.C. § 644(g)(2), (h)(1).  Under both § 8(a) and § 8(d), subcontractors can be 
    
             certified as DBEs, qualifying them for the SCC program at issue in this litigation.
    
                  STURAA, ISTEA, and TEA_21, the transportation appropriations statutes at 
    
             issue in this case, incorporate the presumption of disadvantage from SBA § 8(d). 
    
             See STURAA § 106(c)(2)(B), ISTEA § 1003(b)(2)(B); TEA_21 § 1101(b)(2)(B) 
    
             (providing that the term "socially and economically disadvantaged individuals" 
    
             has the meaning of such term under SBA § 8(d) "and relevant subcontracting 
    
             regulations promulgated pursuant thereto.").  STURAA, ISTEA, and TEA_21 all 
    
             set forth aspirational goals of 10% DBE participation in federal subcontracting. 
    
             See STURAA § 106(c)(1); ISTEA § 1003(b)(1); TEA_21 § 1101(b)(1).(5)
    
                  The SCC is a means of implementing the various statutory goals and 
    
             directives at issue in this litigation.  This clause provides a financial bonus of up 
    
             to 10% of an approved subcontract (no more than 1.5% or 2% of the original
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (5)       The relevant statutes have remained unchanged in all respects material to 
             this litigation from 1992 to the present, except as noted in the Appendix to this 
             opinion.
             
     
             contract, depending on how many DBEs are employed) to a prime contractor for 
    
             employing a DBE.  (See Appellants' App. at 55_56.)  Subcontractors must be 
    
             certified as DBEs by "the SBA, a state highway agency, or some other certifying 
    
             authority acceptable to the contracting officer" pursuant to the "[§] 8(a) or [§] 
    
             8(d) program, or certification by a State under the DOT regulations."  Adarand 
    
             III, 515 U.S. at 209_10.  In November of 1997, the SCC at issue in Adarand IV 
    
             was revised, leaving the basic framework in place.  At present, the government 
    
             maintains, and Adarand does not dispute, that SCCs are no longer in use.   (See 
    
             Appellants' Supp. Br. Attach. 1.)
    
                  A discussion of the complex, cumbersome, and changing regulations 
    
             promulgated pursuant to the foregoing statutes, as well as a more thorough 
    
             summary both of the statutory framework itself and of the SCC, is incorporated as 
    
             an Appendix to this opinion.  Otherwise, changes in the relevant portions of the 
    
             regulations and SCC are discussed in our application of the strict scrutiny 
    
             standard that follows.
    
                                            III
    
                  In reviewing the district court's grant of summary judgment to Adarand, we 
    
             employ our customary standard of review:
    
                   We review a grant of a motion for summary judgment de novo, 
                  applying the same legal standard used by the district court.  See 
                  Byers v. City of Albuquerque, 150 F.3d 1271, 1274 (10th Cir. 1998). 
                  Summary judgment is appropriate "if the pleadings, depositions,
             
     
                  answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the 
                  affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any 
                  material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a 
                  matter of law."  Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).  We view the evidence, and all 
                  reasonable inferences drawn therefrom, in the light most favorable to 
                  the nonmoving party.  See Byers, 150 F.3d at 1274.
    
             McGarry v. Board of County Comm'rs, 175 F.3d 1193, 1198 (10th Cir. 1999).  At 
    
             the very outset, before immersing ourselves in the intricacies of the issues before 
    
             us, we emphasize our substantial agreement with much of the district court's 
    
             judgment as it pertains to the versions of the statutes and regulations in place in 
    
             1996.  Insofar as the court's judgment does not exceed the proper scope of its 
    
             review and with the significant caveat that we disagree both with the court's 
    
             conclusion regarding the fatality in fact of strict scrutiny and with its ultimate 
    
             result in light of the current version of the relevant regulations, we take the 
    
             district court's view of the matter.  And we share wholeheartedly its sentiment 
    
             that the time has come for this litigation to come to an end.  See Adarand IV, 965 
    
             F. Supp. at 1558.
    
                         A.  Evolution of Strict Scrutiny Standards
    
                  The Supreme Court's declarations in the affirmative action area are 
    
             characterized by plurality and split opinions and by the overruling of precedent. 
    
             This fractured prism complicates the task of lower courts in both identifying and 
    
             applying an appropriate form of equal protection review.  We therefore begin our
             
     
             analysis with a brief review of what we understand to be the current state of the 
    
             law in this area.
    
                  Twenty years ago, the Supreme Court addressed a direct precursor of the 
    
             statutes at issue today in Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 448.  Although Fullilove failed to 
    
             produce a majority opinion, six Justices voted to affirm the program at issue_the 
    
             "minority business enterprise" ("MBE") provision of the Public Works 
    
             Employment Act of 1977, Pub. L. 95_28, 91 Stat. 116, § 103(f)(2).  See Fullilove, 
    
             448 U.S. at 453.  The MBE provision required that, subject to waiver by the 
    
             Secretary of Commerce, "no grant shall be made under this Act for any local 
    
             public works project unless the applicant gives satisfactory assurance to the 
    
             Secretary [of Commerce] that at least 10 per centum of the amount of each grant 
    
             shall be expended for minority business enterprises."  Id. at 454 (quoting 42 
    
             U.S.C. § 6705(f)(2) (1976 ed., Supp. II)).  For purposes of the MBE set_aside, 
    
             MBEs were defined as businesses owned and controlled by individuals who could 
    
             be classified as "Negroes, Spanish_speaking, Oriental, Indians, Eskimos, and 
    
             Aleuts."  Id. (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 6705(f)(2)).  The MBE program was a 
    
             mandatory set_aside; under the relevant regulations, a request for waiver could be 
    
             granted, among other circumstances, if a minority business enterprise quoted an 
    
             "unreasonable" price.  Id. at 470_71 (internal quotation and citation omitted).
    
    
     
                  Chief Justice Burger, joined by Justices White and Powell, applied what 
    
             appears to be a more deferential standard than what the Court often terms "strict 
    
             scrutiny":
    
                  A program that employs racial or ethnic criteria, even in a remedial 
                  context, calls for close examination; yet we are bound to approach 
                  our task with appropriate deference to the Congress, a co_equal 
                  branch charged by the Constitution with the power to "provide for 
                  the . . . general Welfare of the United States' and `to enforce, by 
                  appropriate legislation," the equal protection guarantees of the 
                  Fourteenth Amendment.
             
             Id. at 472 (quoting U.S. Const., art. I, § 8, cl. 1); see also City of Richmond v. 
    
             J.A. Croson Co., 488 U.S. 469, 487 (1989) (Op. of O'Connor, J.) ("The principal 
    
             opinion in Fullilove, written by Chief Justice Burger, did not employ `strict 
    
             scrutiny' or any other traditional standard of equal protection review.").
    
                  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 235, cast doubt on Fullilove.  "[T]o the extent (if 
    
             any) that Fullilove held federal racial classifications to be subject to a less 
    
             rigorous standard, it is no longer controlling.  But we need not decide today 
    
             whether the program upheld in Fullilove would survive strict scrutiny as our more 
    
             recent cases have defined it."  Id.  We interpret that statement in Adarand III as 
    
             precluding reliance on Fullilove for either the standard of review or the result in 
    
             this case.  Otherwise, the programs at issue here would almost certainly pass 
    
             muster under the Fullilove standard because, in furtherance of substantially 
    
             similar goals, the programs before us impose a significantly more flexible and
             
     
             less intrusive remedy_a voluntary subsidy as opposed to a fixed set_aside subject 
    
             to waiver.(6)
    
                  In 1989 the Court produced a majority for a portion of an affirmative action 
    
             opinion.  See Croson, 488 U.S. at 469.  In Croson, the Court struck down under 
    
             strict scrutiny a municipal plan requiring "prime contractors to whom the city 
    
             awarded construction contracts to subcontract at least 30% of the dollar amount of 
    
             the contract to one or more [MBEs]."  Id. at 477.  In so doing, Justice O'Connor, 
    
             joined by Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice White, rejected the competing 
    
             arguments that a state's power to remedy racial discrimination is equal to that of 
    
             Congress under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment and that the Fourteenth 
    
             Amendment effectively preempts state action in matters of race.  See id. at 489_93 (Op. of O'Connor, J.).(7)  A plurality of the Court then proceeded to reject the 
    
             proposition that the level of scrutiny varies in cases of "benign" and invidious 
    
             racial classifications, noting that black Americans constituted a controlling 
    
             political majority in the city of Richmond, a fact militating against the application 
    
             of a more deferential standard of review.  Id. at 495_96 (Op. of O'Connor, J.).  
    
                  What did produce a clear majority in Croson was the proposition that "the 
    
             factual predicate offered in support of the Richmond Plan suffers from the two 
    
             defects identified as fatal in Wygant [v. Jackson Board of Education, 476 U.S. 
    
             267 (1986)]," Croson, 488 U.S. at 498, namely, failure to make findings specific 
    
             to the market to be addressed by the remedy and to provide limits to the scope of 
    
             that remedy due to only generalized findings of discrimination.(8)  The Court stated
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (6)       We note that the Adarand III Court's qualified repudiation of Fullilove 
             would appear to leave in place other aspects of that case, most notably its factual 
             determinations regarding congressional findings and the legislative history of the 
             SBA discussed in the Chief Justice's opinion and further elaborated upon in the 
             concurring opinion of Justice Powell.  See Croson, 488 U.S. at 488 (Op. of 
             O'Connor, J.) ("In reviewing the legislative history behind the Act, the principal 
             opinion focused on the evidence before Congress that a nationwide history of past 
             discrimination had reduced minority participation in federal construction grants." 
             (citing Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 458_67 (Op. of Burger, C.J.)); id. at 489 (citing the 
             concurring opinion of Powell, J., in Fullilove).  Thus, where Fullilove's factual 
             findings bear on the factual underpinnings of this case, we so note in the 
             discussion that follows.  The separate question of whether those findings are 
             adequately supported by evidence, pursuant to Adarand III's application of 
             Croson to federal race_conscious programs, is one we consider at length in 
             Subsection B below.
             (7)       Despite overruling Metro Broadcasting and casting doubt on Fullilove, 
             the majority opinion in Adarand III firmly rejected the suggestion "that any 
             Member of this Court has repudiated in this case his or her previously expressed 
             views on the subject" of Congress's powers under 5 of the Fourteenth 
             Amendment.  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 231.
             (8)       Croson cannot be read, as Adarand would have it, as standing for the 
             proposition that findings of "the present effects of past discrimination in the 
             construction industry," 488 U.S. at 498 (citation omitted), are automatically 
             insufficient to justify remedial action.  This characterization of Croson overlooks 
             a very significant difference between the Richmond Plan at issue in Croson and 
             the congressional enactments at issue in the instant case.  The City of Richmond 
             had no authority to remedy the present effects of past discrimination in the entire 
             construction industry nationally, and the City was not permitted to simply infer 
             that congressional findings as to the entire industry applied equally to the 
             particular market within its jurisdiction.  See id. at 504_05.  The remediation of 
             nation_wide problems, however, is particularly within the purview of Congress,and findings of industry_wide discrimination are precisely what is relevant to a 
             federal decision to undertake remedial action.  See id. at 490, 504.
             
     
             that "[w]hile there is no doubt that the sorry history of both private and public 
    
             discrimination in this country has contributed to a lack of opportunities for black 
    
             entrepreneurs, this observation, standing alone, cannot justify a rigid racial quota 
    
             in the awarding of public contracts in Richmond, Virginia."  Id. at 499.  In 
    
             particular, the majority noted it was "sheer speculation" to simply guess how 
    
             many firms there would be absent past discrimination and "[t]he 30% quota 
    
             cannot in any realistic sense be tied to any injury suffered by anyone."  Id.
    
                  After noting the City of Richmond's failure to link its remedial program to 
    
             specifically identified past discrimination, the Croson majority made two 
    
             additional observations explaining why the City's program was not narrowly 
    
             tailored.  See id. at 507.  First, the Court noted "there does not appear to have 
    
             been any consideration of the use of race_neutral means to increase minority 
    
             business participation in city contracting."  Id. (citing United States v. Paradise, 
    
             480 U.S. 149, 171 (1987)).  The Court suggested that race_neutral programs of 
    
             municipal financing for small firms might increase minority participation without 
    
             the use of a direct racial preference.  See id.
    
                  Second, the Court declared "[t]he 30% quota cannot be said to be narrowly 
    
             tailored to any goal, except perhaps outright racial balancing.  It rests upon the
             
     
             `completely unrealistic' assumption that minorities will choose a particular trade 
    
             in lockstep proportion to their representation in the local population."  Id. 
    
             (quoting Sheet Metal Workers v. EEOC, 478 U.S. 421, 494 (1986) (O'Connor, J., 
    
             concurring in part and dissenting in part)).
    
                  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 235 (citing Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 496 (Powell, J., 
    
             concurring)), followed and held that "[f]ederal racial classifications, like those of 
    
             a State, must serve a compelling governmental interest, and must be narrowly 
    
             tailored to further that interest."  Now, informed by the Supreme Court's 
    
             directives pertaining to remand, and its multifaceted jurisprudence on affirmative 
    
             action programs, we turn to the task of assessing the application of racial 
    
             presumptions in the SCC program under a strict scrutiny standard.
    
                                  B.  Compelling Interest
    
                  We "decide the question [of] whether the interests served by the use of 
    
             [SCCs] are properly described as `compelling.'"  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 237.  In 
    
             so doing, our inquiry necessarily consists of four parts:  First, we must determine 
    
             whether the government's articulated goal in enacting the race_based measures at 
    
             issue in this case is appropriately considered a "compelling interest" under the 
    
             governing case law; if so, we must then set forth the standards under which to 
    
             evaluate the government's evidence of compelling interest; third, we must decide 
    
             whether the evidence presented by the government is sufficiently strong to meet
             
     
             its initial burden of demonstrating the compelling interest it has articulated; and 
    
             finally, we must examine wether the challenging party has met its ultimate burden 
    
             of rebutting the government's evidence such that the granting of summary 
    
             judgment to either party is proper.  We begin, as we must, with an inquiry into the 
    
             meaning of "compelling interest."
    
                  1.  "Compelling Interest" in Race_Conscious Measures Defined
    
                  We know from Adarand III that, as a general proposition, there may be a 
    
             compelling interest that supports the enactment of race_conscious measures. 
    
             Justice O'Connor explicitly states:  "The unhappy persistence of both the practice 
    
             and the lingering effects of racial discrimination against minority groups in this 
    
             country is an unfortunate reality, and government is not disqualified from acting 
    
             in response to it."  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 237; see also Shaw v. Hunt, 517 U.S. 
    
             899, 909 (1996) (stating that "remedying the effects of past or present racial 
    
             discrimination may in the proper case justify a government's use of racial 
    
             distinctions" (citing Croson, 488 U.S. at 498_506)).  Interpreting Croson, we have 
    
             recognized that "the Fourteenth Amendment permits race_conscious programs that 
    
             seek both to eradicate discrimination by the governmental entity itself and to 
    
             prevent the public entity from acting as a `"passive participant" in a system of 
    
             racial exclusion practiced by elements of the local construction industry' by 
    
             allowing tax dollars `to finance the evil of private prejudice.'"  Concrete Works
             
     
             of Colo., Inc. v. City & County of Denver, 36 F.3d 1513, 1519 (10th Cir. 1994) 
    
             (quoting Croson, 488 U.S. at 492). 
    
                  The government identifies the compelling interest at stake in the use of 
    
             racial presumptions in the SCC program as "remedying the effects of racial 
    
             discrimination and opening up federal contracting opportunities to members of 
    
             previously excluded minority groups." (Appellants' Br. at 21.)  The district court 
    
             in Adarand IV, 965 F. Supp. at 1572, held this interest is properly described as 
    
             compelling, reasoning that "it appears that Justice O'Connor's assertion in 
    
             Croson, that Congress has the ability under Section 5 [of the Fourteenth 
    
             Amendment] to recognize and address racial discrimination, has been left 
    
             undisturbed."  Although we decline to address the precise relationship between 
    
             § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment and the power of Congress, acting through the 
    
             Executive branch, to address racial discrimination by the states, we readily 
    
             conclude that the federal government has a compelling interest in not perpetuating 
    
             the effects of racial discrimination in its own distribution of federal funds and in 
    
             remediating the effects of past discrimination in the government contracting 
    
             markets created by its disbursements.  See Croson, 488 U.S. at 492 (Op. of 
    
             O'Connor, J.) ("It is beyond dispute that any public entity, state or federal, has a 
    
             compelling interest in assuring that public dollars, drawn from the tax 
    
             contributions of all citizens, do not serve to finance the evil of private prejudice."
             
     
             (citing Norwood v. Harrison, 413 U.S. 455, 465 (1973))); Norwood, 413 U.S. at 
    
             463 ("That the Constitution may compel toleration of private discrimination in 
    
             some circumstances does not mean that it requires state support for such 
    
             discrimination.").  
    
                  In its brief, Adarand cites general language from Adarand III in an attempt 
    
             to limit the permissible scope of Congress's power to redress the effects of racial 
    
             discrimination, ignoring the substantial differences between the scope of 
    
             problems to be addressed by Congress and those to be addressed by a city council 
    
             such as that in Croson.  The fact that Congress's enactments must serve a 
    
             compelling interest does not necessitate the conclusion that the scope of that 
    
             interest must be as geographically limited as that of a local government.  See 
    
             Croson, 488 U.S. at 489 (Op. of O'Connor, J.).(9)  Although there is not a clear 
    
             majority on the Court for the proposition that § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment 
    
             grants Congress broad remedial powers in the area of discrimination, in Section II 
    
             of Justice O'Connor's opinion in Croson, Justice O'Connor and Chief Justice 
    
             Rehnquist endorsed that proposition.  See Croson, 488 U.S. at 490 ("That 
    
             Congress may identify and redress the effects of society_wide discrimination does
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (9)       Contractors Association of Eastern Pennsylvania, Inc. v. City of 
             Philadelphia, 6 F.3d 990 (3d Cir. 1993), cited by appellee, is distinguishable both 
             in that it involved a city_based rather than a nationwide program, and in that the 
             program at issue was based on far scantier evidence than that available in the 
             instant case.
             
     
             not mean that, a fortiori, the States and their political subdivisions are free to 
    
             decide that such remedies are appropriate.").  The geographic scope of Congress's 
    
             reach in this regard is "society_wide" and therefore nationwide.  See id.(10)
    
                  2.  Evidence Required to Show Compelling Interest
    
                  While the government's articulated interest is compelling as a theoretical 
    
             matter, we must yet determine whether the actual evidence proffered by the 
    
             government supports the existence of past and present discrimination in the 
    
             publicly_funded highway construction subcontracting market.  Generally, 
    
                   [a]bsent searching judicial inquiry into the justification for . . . race_
                  based measures, there is simply no way of determining what 
                  classifications are . . . in fact motivated by illegitimate notions of 
                  racial inferiority or simple racial politics.  Indeed, the purpose of 
                  strict scrutiny is to `smoke out' illegitimate uses of race by assuring 
                  that the legislative body is pursuing a goal important enough to 
                  warrant the use of a highly suspect tool.
             
             Id. at 493 (Op. of O'Connor, J.); see also Shaw v. Reno, 509 U.S. 630, 643_44 
    
             (1993) ("A racial classification, regardless of purported motivation, is 
    
             presumptively invalid and can be upheld only upon an extraordinary 
    
             justification." (quoting Personnel Administrator of Mass. v. Feeney, 442 U.S. 
    
             256, 272 (1979)) (further citations omitted)). 
    
                  Our "benchmark for judging the adequacy of the government's factual 
    
             predicate for affirmative action legislation [i]s whether there exists a `strong basis 
    
             in evidence for [the government's] conclusion that remedial action was 
    
             necessary.'"  Concrete Works, 36 F.3d at 1521 (quoting Croson, 488 U.S. at 500 
    
             (quoting Wygant, 476 U.S. at 277 (plurality))) (emphasis in Concrete Works). 
    
             Both statistical and anecdotal evidence are appropriate in the strict scrutiny 
    
             calculus, although anecdotal evidence by itself is not.  See Concrete Works, 36 
    
             F.3d at 1520_21.  
    
                  Although Croson places the burden of production on the 
                  [government] to demonstrate a "strong basis in evidence" that its 
                  race_ and gender_conscious contract program aims to remedy 
                  specifically identified past or present discrimination, the Fourteenth 
                  Amendment does not require a court to make an ultimate judicial
                  (10)       The parties and their respective amici curiae differ sharply as to the 
             relevant geographical scope to be considered in assessing the government's basis 
             in evidence for concluding that race_conscious remedial action is necessary. 
             Adarand and its amici argue based on Croson for the necessity of findings 
             regarding both discrimination and the availability of qualified DBEs in a 
             particular local market as a necessary prerequisite to any government action.  We 
             disagree, concluding that the absence of such findings is more properly addressed 
             in this case under the rubric of narrow tailoring.  Quite apart from the question of 
             Congress's power under 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment left unresolved by the 
             Adarand III majority, see Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 230_31, the compelling 
             interests to be addressed by Congress, whether under the Commerce Clause, 
             Spending Clause, or Fourteenth Amendment, are necessarily different in 
             geographic scope than those properly addressed by a city.  See, e.g., Croson, 488 
             U.S. at 505 (focusing on lack of "identified discrimination in the Richmond 
             construction industry"); Concrete Works, 36 F.3d at 1520 (identifying "the six_
             county Denver Metropolitan Statistical Area" as one acceptable geographical 
             region for inquiry into an affirmative action measure by the City and County of 
             Denver).  That said, Adarand's concern with the availability of DBEs in a 
             particular market is certainly an important one, see Croson, 488 U.S. at 502, and, 
             as discussed below, the lack of evidence provided by the government regarding 
             local availability and the government's concomitant failure to tailor contracting 
             regulations accordingly constitute one of the chief barriers to finding the previous 
             statutory and regulatory scheme narrowly tailored.
             
     
                  finding of discrimination before [the government] may take 
                  affirmative steps to eradicate discrimination.  
                  
             Id. at 1522 (citing Wygant, 476 U.S. at 292 (O'Connor, J., concurring)).  After 
    
             the government's initial showing, the burden shifts to Adarand to rebut that 
    
             showing:  "Notwithstanding the burden of initial production that rests" with the 
    
             government, "[t]he ultimate burden [of proof] remains with [the challenging 
    
             party] to demonstrate the unconstitutionality of an affirmative_action program." 
    
             Id. (quoting Wygant, 476 U.S. at 277_78 (plurality)).  "[T]he nonminority 
    
             [challengers] . . . continue to bear the ultimate burden of persuading the court that 
    
             [the government entity's] evidence did not support an inference of prior 
    
             discrimination and thus a remedial purpose."  Id. at 1522_23 (quoting Wygant, 
    
             476 U.S. at 293 (O'Connor, J., concurring)).
    
                  In addressing the question of what evidence of discrimination supports a 
    
             compelling interest in providing a remedy, we consider both direct and 
    
             circumstantial evidence, including post_enactment evidence introduced by 
    
             defendants as well as the evidence in the legislative history itself.  See Concrete 
    
             Works, 36 F.3d at 1521, 1529 n.23 (considering post_enactment evidence).(11)
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (11)       Post_enactment evidence is particularly relevant when, as here, it was 
             gathered specifically to respond to the Supreme Court's Adarand III decision, 
             which applied a new compelling interest standard to the federal government's 
             affirmative action programs.  See AppendixThe Compelling Interest for 
             Affirmative Action in Federal Procurement, 61 Fed. Reg. 26,050 (1996) (notingpurpose of responding to Adarand III).
             
     
             Furthermore, we may consider public and private discrimination not only in the 
    
             specific area of government procurement contracts but also in the construction 
    
             industry generally; thus, any findings Congress has made as to the entire 
    
             construction industry are relevant.  See id. at 1523, 1529; see also Croson, 488 
    
             U.S. at 492 (Op. of O'Connor, J.).  
    
                  It is with the foregoing principles in mind that we turn to an examination of 
    
             the evidentiary basis on which Congress relied to support its finding of 
    
             discrimination and continuing effects of past discrimination against minorities in 
    
             the publicly_funded and private construction industry.
    
                  3.  Evidence in the Present Case
    
                  There can be no doubt that Congress repeatedly has considered the issue of 
    
             discrimination in government construction procurement contracts, finding that 
    
             racial discrimination and its continuing effects have distorted the market for 
    
             public contracts_especially construction contracts_necessitating a race_
    
             conscious remedy.  See, e.g., Appendix_The Compelling Interest for Affirmative 
    
             Action in Federal Procurement, 61 Fed. Reg. 26,050, 26,051_52 & nn.12_21 
    
             (1996) ("The Compelling Interest") (citing approximately thirty congressional 
    
             hearings since 1980 concerning minority_owned businesses).  But the question is
             
     
             not merely whether the government has considered evidence, but rather the nature 
    
             and extent of the evidence it has considered.  
    
                  Of course, statements made with regard to discrimination in the 
    
             subcontracting industry by congressional reports and by members of Congress are 
    
             insufficient in themselves to support a finding of compelling interest.  We must 
    
             probe more deeply into the legislative history of the enactments at issue.  We 
    
             cannot merely recite statements made by members of Congress alleging a finding 
    
             of discriminatory effects and the need to address those effects, such as the 
    
             following:
    
                  Where there are no DBE programs, women and minority_owned small 
                  businesses are shut out of the highway construction. The Federal 
                  DBE program serves to redress the inequality and redress the 
                  unfortunate fact that all across the country women and minorities 
                  would not otherwise have access to construction contracts.
             
             144 Cong. Rec. S1421 (March 5, 1998) (statement of Sen. Moseley_Braun).  Such 
    
             findings are not enough to satisfy strict scrutiny standards.  See Croson, 488 U.S. 
    
             at 500 ("[W]hen a legislative body chooses to employ a suspect classification, it 
    
             cannot rest upon a generalized assertion as to the classification's relevance to its 
    
             goals." (citing McLaughlin v. Florida, 379 U.S. 184, 190_92 (1964))).  The 
    
             question that Croson requires us to ask is whether there is a strong basis in 
    
             evidence to support the legislature's conclusion.
    
                  In Concrete Works, we noted that
    
    
     
                  Neither Croson nor its progeny clearly state whether private 
                  discrimination that is in no way funded with public tax dollars can, 
                  by itself, provide the requisite strong basis in evidence necessary to 
                  justify a municipality's affirmative action program.   A plurality in 
                  Croson simply suggested that remedial measures could be justified 
                  upon a municipality's showing that "it had essentially become a 
                  `passive participant' in a system of racial exclusion practiced by 
                  elements of the local construction industry."  Croson, 488 U.S. at 
                  492.   Although we do not read Croson as requiring the municipality 
                  to identify an exact linkage between its award of public contracts and 
                  private discrimination, such evidence would at least enhance the 
                  municipality's factual predicate for a race_ and gender_conscious 
                  program.  
             
             Concrete Works, 36 F.3d at 1529.  Unlike Concrete Works, the evidence 
    
             presented by the government in the present case demonstrates the existence of two 
    
             kinds of discriminatory barriers to minority subcontracting enterprises, both of 
    
             which show a strong link between racial disparities in the federal government's 
    
             disbursements of public funds for construction contracts and the channeling of 
    
             those funds due to private discrimination.  The first discriminatory barriers are to 
    
             the formation of qualified minority subcontracting enterprises due to private 
    
             discrimination, precluding from the outset competition for public construction 
    
             contracts by minority enterprises.  The second discriminatory barriers are to fair 
    
             competition between minority and non_minority subcontracting enterprises, again 
    
             due to private discrimination, precluding existing minority firms from effectively 
    
             competing for public construction contracts.  The government also presents 
    
             further evidence in the form of local disparity studies of minority subcontracting
             
     
             and studies of local subcontracting markets after the removal of affirmative action 
    
             programs.  Discussion of each of those bodies of evidence follows.(12)
    
                  a.  Barriers to Minority Business Formation in Construction Subcontracting
    
                  As to the first kind of barrier, the government's evidence consists of 
    
             numerous congressional investigations and hearings as well as outside studies of 
    
             statistical and anecdotal evidence_cited and discussed in The Compelling 
    
             Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. 26,054_58_and demonstrates that discrimination by prime 
    
             contractors, unions, and lenders has woefully impeded the formation of qualified 
    
             minority business enterprises in the subcontracting market nationwide.  
    
                  The evidence demonstrates that prime contractors in the construction 
    
             industry often refuse to employ minority subcontractors due to "old boy" 
    
             networks_based on a familial history of participation in the subcontracting 
    
             market_from which minority firms have traditionally been excluded.  See H.R. 
    
             Rep. 103_870 15 n.36 (1994) ("[T]he construction industry is . . . family dominated.  Many firms are in their second or third generation operating 
    
             structures.  Minorities and women, unless they are part of construction families, 
    
             have been and will continue to be excluded whenever possible."); The Meaning 
    
             and Significance for Minority Business of the Supreme Court Decision in the City 
    
             of Richmond v.  J.A. Croson: Hearing Before the Legislative & Nat'l Sec. 
    
             Subcomm. of the House Comm. on Gov't Operations, 100th Cong. 111 (1990) 
    
             ("The Significance of Croson") (statement of Manuel Rodriguez, President, R&D 
    
             Development, Inc., specializing in mechanical construction, and past president 
    
             and founder of the National Hispanic Association of Construction Enterprises) 
    
             ("[F]ew [minorities] today have families from whom they can inherit a 
    
             construction business."); see also Minority Business Development Program 
    
             Reform Act of 1987: Hearings on S. 1993 & H.R. 1807 Before the Senate Comm. 
    
             on Small Bus., 100th Cong. 127 (1988) (statement of Parren Mitchell, Chairman, 
    
             Minority Business Enterprise Legal Defense and Education Fund) (noting the 
    
             "harsh reality" of the "old_boy network" that prevents minority_owned firms from 
    
             breaking into the private sector); H.R. Rep. No. 103_870 15 & n.36 (1994) 
    
             (discussing evidence of the discriminatory exclusion of minority firms from 
    
             business networks); The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. at 26,057 & nn.82_83 
    
             (citing studies explaining minorities' exclusion from the construction trades as a 
    
             result of the lack of familial connections).
    
             (12)       In the discussion that follows, we take judicial notice of the content of 
             hearings and testimony before the congressional committees and subcommittees 
             cited by the government.  Furthermore, we note in passing that there is an even 
             more substantial body of legislative history supporting the compelling interest in 
             the present case than that cited by the government.  See, e.g., Barriers to Full 
             Minority Participation in Federally Funded Highway Contracts: Hearing Before a 
             Subcomm. of the House Comm. on Gov't Operations, 100th Cong. (April 1, 
             1998); Problems Facing Minority and Women_Owned Small Businesses in 
             Procuring U.S. Government Contracts: Hearing Before the Commerce, Consumer, 
             & Monetary Affairs Subcomm. of the House Comm. on Gov't Operations, 103d 
             Cong. (July 12, 1993).
             
     
                   Furthermore, subcontractors' unions place before minority firms a plethora 
    
             of barriers to membership, thereby effectively blocking them from participation in 
    
             a subcontracting market in which union membership is an important condition for 
    
             success.  See Minority Business Participation in Department of Transportation 
    
             Project: Hearing Before a Subcomm. of the House Comm. on Gov't Operations, 
    
             99th Cong. 203 (1985) (testimony of James Haughton, President, Fight Back) 
    
             (minority contractors continue to "suffer[] very heavily because they have been 
    
             victims to that discrimination as practiced by the unions"); The Significance of 
    
             Croson at 117_19 (statement of Manuel Rodriguez) (describing the way in which 
    
             union discrimination prevents access to skills and experience needed to form a 
    
             business); The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. at 26,055_56 & nn.53 & 62 
    
             (citing studies of statistical and anecdotal evidence finding racism by construction 
    
             trade unions in several cities and states and concluding that racism is a major 
    
             cause of the lack of minority business formation in the construction industry).
    
                  The government's evidence is particularly striking in the area of the race_
    
             based denial of access to capital, without which the formation of minority 
    
             subcontracting enterprises is stymied.  See, e.g., Availability of Credit to 
    
             Minority_Owned Small Businesses: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Fin. Insts. 
    
             Supervision, Regulation & Deposit Ins. of the House Comm. on Banking, Fin. & 
    
             Urb. Affs., 103d Cong. 19_20 (1994) (statement of Toni Hawkins, Executive
             
     
             Director, National Black Business Counsel) (noting the existence and examples of 
    
             discrimination in business lending); id. at 27 (statement of Wayne Smith, 
    
             Chairperson, Black Urban Alliance: African American Chamber of Commerce of 
    
             Newark, NJ) (stating that while perhaps more subtle than discrimination in 
    
             mortgage lending, discrimination in business lending exists); id. at 209 (statement 
    
             of M. Harrison Boyd, President/CEO, HBA Management Services Group, Inc.) 
    
             (White bank employees "have been, and are continually, programmed to perceive 
    
             minority business loans as bad business, and/or at a minimum, risky and less 
    
             desirable."); H.R. Rep. No. 103_870 7 (1994) ("There is a widespread reluctance 
    
             on the part of the commercial banking, venture capital, . . . and capital markets to 
    
             take the same risk with a [minority] entrepreneur that they would readily do with 
    
             a white one." (quoting testimony of Sherman Copelin, President of the National 
    
             Business League)); Disadvantaged Business Set_Asides in Transportation 
    
             Construction Projects: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Procurement, Innovation, 
    
             and Minority Enter. Dev. of the House Comm. on Small Bus., 100th Cong. 26 
    
             (1988) (statement of Joann Payne, President, PSM Consultants) ("[B]ecause of the 
    
             ethnic and sex discrimination practiced by lending institutions, it was very 
    
             difficult for minorities and women to secure bank loans. . . ."); The 
    
             Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program of the Federal_Aid Highway Act: 
    
             Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Transp. of the Senate Comm. on Env't & Pub.
             
     
             Works, 99th Cong. 363 (1985) (statement of James K. Laducer, Director, North 
    
             Dakota Minority Business Enterprise Programs, United Tribes Educational 
    
             Technical Center) (North Dakota banks "refuse to lend monies to minority 
    
             businesses from nearby Indian communities."); Fiscal Economic & Social Crises 
    
             Confronting American Cities: Hearings Before the Senate Comm. on Banking, 
    
             Housing, & Urb. Affs., 102d Cong. 431 (1992) (statement of Anthony Robinson, 
    
             President, Minority Business Enterprise Legal Defense and Education Fund) 
    
             ("[T]he legitimate capital needs of the minority business community are ignored 
    
             or held to such a higher underwriting standard and systematically denied venture 
    
             capital."); Federal Minority Business Programs: Hearing Before the House Comm. 
    
             on Small Bus., 102d Cong. 89 (1991) (statement of Joshua I. Smith, Chairman, 
    
             U.S. Commission on Minority Business Development) (attaching Interim Report 
    
             1990 of the United States Commission of Minority Business Development, which 
    
             states minority business owners' "access to credit ha[s] been historically 
    
             limited"); Minority Construction Contracting: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on 
    
             SBA, the Gen. Econ. & Minority Enter. Dev. of the House Comm. on Small Bus., 
    
             101 Cong. 26 (1989) (statement of Cleveland M. Chapman, President, Midwest 
    
             Contractors For Progress) (citing statistics demonstrating discrimination in 
    
             lending in Chicago).  For example, "[t]he average loan to a black_owned 
    
             construction firm is $49,000 less than the average loan to an equally matched
             
     
             nonminority construction firm."  The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. at 26,058 
    
             & n.91 (citing Grown & Bates, Commercial Bank Lending Practices & the 
    
             Development of Black_Owned Construction Companies., 14 J. Urb. Aff. at 34 
    
             (1992)).  "All other factors being equal, a black business owner is approximately 
    
             15 percent less likely to receive a business loan than a white owner."  Id. at 
    
             26,058 & n.90 (citing Faith Ando, Capital Issues and the Minority_Owned 
    
             Business, 16 Rev. Black Pol. Econ. at 97 (1988)).  Another study 
    
                  surveyed 407 business owners in the Denver area. It found that 
                  African Americans were 3 times more likely to be rejected for 
                  business loans than whites.  The denial rate for Hispanic owners was 
                  1.5 times as high as white owners.  Disparities in the denial rate 
                  remained significant even after controlling for other factors that may 
                  affect the lending rate, such as the size and net worth of the business. 
                  The study concluded that "despite the fact that loan applicants of 
                  three different racial/ethnic backgrounds in this sample (Black, 
                  Hispanic and Anglo) were not appreciably different as 
                  businesspeople, they were ultimately treated differently by the 
                  lenders on the crucial issue of loan approval or denial." 
                  
             Id. at 26,058 (footnotes omitted) (citing The Colorado Center for Community 
    
             Development, University of Colorado at Denver, Survey of Small Business 
    
             Lending in Denver  v (1996)).  Such findings strongly support an initial showing 
    
             of discrimination in lending; and we take judicial notice of the obvious causal
             
     
             connection between access to capital and ability to implement public works 
    
             construction projects.(13)
    
                  b.  Barriers to Competition by Existing Minority Enterprises
    
                  With regard to barriers faced by existing minority enterprises, the 
    
             government presents evidence tending to show that discrimination by prime 
    
             contractors, private sector customers, business networks, suppliers, and bonding 
    
             companies fosters a decidedly uneven playing field for minority subcontracting 
    
             enterprises seeking to compete in the area of federal construction subcontracts.  
    
                  The government presents powerful evidence that 
    
                  [a]ll too often, contracting remains a closed network, with prime 
                  contractors maintaining long_standing relationships with 
                  subcontractors with whom they prefer to work.  Because minority 
                  owned firms are new entrants to most markets, the existence and 
                  proliferation of these relationships locks them out of subcontracting 
                  opportunities.  As a result, minority_owned firms are seldom or never 
                  invited to bid for subcontracts on projects that do not contain 
                  affirmative action requirements.  
                  
             The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. 26,058 & nn.98_99 (footnotes omitted) 
    
             (citing studies of statistical and anecdotal evidence of minority business participation in state and local construction industries).  The government has also 
    
             presented sobering evidence that 
    
                  when minority firms are permitted to bid on subcontracts, prime 
                  contractors often resist working with them.  This sort of exclusion is 
                  often achieved by white firms refusing to accept low minority bids or 
                  by sharing low minority bids with another subcontractor in order to 
                  allow that business to beat the bid (a practice known as "bid 
                  shopping").
                  
             Id. at 26,058_59 (citing studies of statistical and anecdotal evidence detailing bid 
    
             shopping in several localities).  
    
                  It is clear to us that Congress has devoted considerable energy to 
    
             investigating and considering this systematic exclusion of existing minority 
    
             enterprises from opportunities to bid on construction projects resulting from the 
    
             insularity and sometimes outright racism of the non_minority firms in the 
    
             construction industry.  See, e.g., How State and Local Governments Will Meet the 
    
             Croson Standard (Minority Set_Asides): Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Civ. & 
    
             Const. Rights of the House Comm. on the Judiciary, 100th Cong. 53_54 (1989) 
    
             (statement of Marc Bendick, Bendick & Egan Economic Consultants, Inc.) ("[W]e 
    
             must not for a moment underestimate the role of continuing pervasive blunt 
    
             discrimination by the private market. . . .  The same prime contractor who will use 
    
             a minority subcontractor on a city contract and will be terribly satisfied with the 
    
             (13)       Lending discrimination alone of course does not justify action in the 
             construction market.  See Croson, 488 U.S. at 510 (Op. of O'Connor, J.) (noting a 
             municipality's alternative remedy of taking direct action against discrimination in 
             the provision of credit).  However, the persistence of such discrimination, which 
             is already unlawful under federal law, supports the assertion that the formation, as 
             well as utilization, of minority_owned construction enterprises has been impeded.
             
     
             firm's performance, will simply not use that minority subcontractor on a private 
    
             contract where the prime contractor is not forced to use a minority firm."); The Significance of Croson at 121_22 (statement of Manuel Rodriguez); id. at 104_06 
    
             (statement of E.R. Mitchell, Jr., President of E.R. Mitchell Construction Company 
    
             and President of the Atlanta Chapter of the National Association of Minority 
    
             Contractors) (identifying racially discriminatory actions by federal and state 
    
             government agencies in the bidding process on construction contracts).
    
                  The government's evidence strongly supports the thesis that informal, 
    
             racially exclusionary business networks dominate the subcontracting construction 
    
             industry, shutting out competition from minority firms.  See, e.g., The 
    
             Significance of Croson at 107 (statement of E.R. Mitchell, Jr.) ("[Q]ualified black 
    
             firms are outside the business network of established white firms.  By virtue of 
    
             being outsiders to their communications loop, it is impossible to successfully bid 
    
             because we remain forever strangers to white owners and developers."); The 
    
             Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. at 26,059_60 & nn.107, 109_110 (citing studies 
    
             and articles on statistical and anecdotal evidence demonstrating discriminatory 
    
             treatment in the bidding process).
    
                  Minority subcontracting enterprises in the construction industry find 
    
             themselves unable to compete with non_minority firms on an equal playing field 
    
             due to racial discrimination by bonding companies, without whom those minority 
    
             enterprises cannot obtain subcontracting opportunities.  The government presents 
    
             evidence both that bonding is an essential requirement of participation in federal
             
     
             subcontracting procurement, see The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. at 26,060 
    
             (citing 40 U.S.C. §§ 270a_270e), and a "vicious circle" whereby minority 
    
             subcontractors cannot obtain bonding due to lack of experience, and "since they 
    
             cannot get bonding, they cannot get experience," The Compelling Interest, 61 
    
             Fed. Reg. at 26,060 (footnote omitted).  Minority Business Participation in 
    
             Department of Transportation Project: Hearing Before a Subcomm. of the House 
    
             Comm. on Gov't Operations, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 159 (1985) (statement of 
    
             Sherman Brown, President, MCAP, Inc.) ("Virtually everyone connected with the 
    
             minority contracting industry . . . apparently agrees that surety bonding is one of 
    
             the biggest obstacles in the development of minority firms.").  The government 
    
             additionally presents evidence of an insular "old_boy" network in bonding that 
    
             excludes minority firms.  See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 103_870 at 15 & n.36.  There is 
    
             also strong evidence of overt racial discrimination in the bonding market.  See, 
    
             e.g., Discrimination in Surety Bonding: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on 
    
             Minority Enter., Fin. & Urb. Dev. of the House Comm. on Small Bus., 103d 
    
             Cong. 2 (1993) (statement of John B. Cruz, III, President, John B. Cruz 
    
             Construction Co.) (describing racial discrimination his company suffered in its 
    
             efforts to obtain bonding); City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson: Impact and 
    
             Response: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Urb. & Minority_Owned Bus. Dev. of 
    
             the Senate Comm. on Small Bus., 101st Cong. 40_41, 43 (1990) (statement of
             
     
             Andrew Brimmer, President, Brimmer and Company, Inc., Economic and 
    
             Financial Consultants) (presenting the results of a study showing discrimination 
    
             in bonding faced by African_American, Hispanic, and Pacific_Islander_owned 
    
             firms in the Atlanta area); id. at 165_66 (statement of Edward W. Bowen, Project 
    
             Administrator, Prentiss Properties, Ltd.) (noting that unclear bonding standards 
    
             permit denials of bonding that are arbitrary and capricious and racially_biased); 
    
             Disadvantaged Business Set_Asides in Transportation Construction Projects, 
    
             supra, at 107 (statement of Marjorie L. Herter, National President, Women 
    
             Construction Owners & Executives, USA; President, Vee See Construction Co.) 
    
             ("Discrimination against women and minorities in the bonding market is quite 
    
             prevalent."); The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. at 26060 & n.118 (citing 
    
             studies of statistical and anecdotal evidence of widespread racial discrimination in 
    
             bonding).  For example, the government cites a Louisiana study according to 
    
             which "minority firms were nearly twice as likely to be rejected for bonding, three 
    
             times more likely to be rejected for bonding for over $1 million, and on average 
    
             were charged higher rates for the same bonding policies than white firms with the 
    
             same experience level," The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. at 26,060 & n.119 
    
             (citing D.J. Miller & Associates, 2 State of Louisiana Disparity Study at 35_57 
    
             (1991)), while an Atlanta study found similarly glaring disparities in the ability of 
    
             minority versus non_minority construction firms to obtain bonding generally and
             
     
             "unlimited bonding" in particular, Andrew F. Brimmer & Ray Marshall, Public 
    
             Policy and Promotion of Minority Economic Development: City of Atlanta and 
    
             Fulton County, Georgia at 19_20 (1990) (cited in City of Richmond v. J.A. 
    
             Croson: Impact and Response: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Urb. & Minority_
    
             owned Bus. Dev. of the Sen. Comm. on Small Bus., 101st Cong. 193_94 (1990)).
    
                  Finally, the government presents evidence of discrimination by suppliers, 
    
             the result of which is that nonminority subcontractors receive special prices and 
    
             discounts from suppliers not available to minority subcontractors, driving up 
    
             "anticipated costs, and therefore the bid, for minority_owned businesses."  Id. at 
    
             26,061; see also id. at n.123 (citing studies detailing discrimination by suppliers); 
    
             The Significance of Croson at 106 (statement of E.R. Mitchell, Jr.) ("[C]ommon 
    
             suppliers working on projects routinely give white subs better prices for materials 
    
             than they do black subs.").
    
                  Contrary to Adarand's contentions, on the basis of the foregoing survey of 
    
             evidence regarding minority business formation and competition in the 
    
             subcontracting industry, the government's evidence as to the kinds of obstacles 
    
             minority subcontracting businesses face constitutes a strong basis for the 
    
             conclusion that those obstacles are not "the same problems faced by any new 
    
             business, regardless of the race of the owners."  (Appellee's Br. at 28.)
    
                  c.  Local Disparity Studies
    
    
     
                  Following the Supreme Court's decision in Croson, numerous state and 
    
             local governments have undertaken statistical studies to assess the disparity, if 
    
             any, between availability and utilization of minority_owned businesses in 
    
             government contracting.  See The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. at 26,061_62 
    
             (presenting the Urban Institute's analysis of thirty_nine disparity studies); see also 
    
             144 Cong. Rec. S5413_14 (May 22, 1998) (statement of Senator Chafee) 
    
             (discussing a disparity study conducted for CDOT that found "a 
    
             disproportionately small number of . . . minority_owned contractors participating 
    
             in Colorado's transportation construction industry . . . .  Hispanic firms received 
    
             less than one_half of one percent (.26%). . . .  The vast majority of 
    
             contracts_more than 99 percent_went to firms owned by white men.").  The 
    
             government's review of those studies reveals that although such disparity was 
    
             least glaring in the category of construction subcontracting, even in that area 
    
             "minority firms still receive only 87 cents for every dollar they would be expected 
    
             to receive" based on their availability.  The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. at 
    
             26,062.  In that regard, the Croson majority stated that "[w]here there is a 
    
             significant statistical disparity between the number of qualified minority 
    
             contractors willing and able to perform a particular service and the number of 
    
             such contractors actually engaged by the [government] or the [government's] 
    
             prime contractors, an inference of discriminatory exclusion could arise."  488
             
     
             U.S. at 509 (Op. of O'Connor, J.) (citations omitted).  We are certainly mindful 
    
             that "where special qualifications are necessary, the relevant statistical pool for 
    
             purposes of demonstrating discriminatory exclusion must be the number of 
    
             minorities qualified to undertake the particular task."  Id. at 501_02.  But here, we 
    
             are unaware of such "special qualifications" aside from the general qualifications 
    
             necessary to operate a construction subcontracting business.  At a minimum, the 
    
             disparity indicates that there has been under_utilization of the existing pool of 
    
             minority subcontractors; and there is no evidence either in the record on appeal or 
    
             in the legislative history before us that those minority subcontractors who have 
    
             been utilized have performed inadequately or otherwise demonstrated a lack of 
    
             necessary qualifications.
    
                  The disparity between minority DBE availability and market utilization in 
    
             the subcontracting industry raises an inference that the various discriminatory 
    
             factors the government cites have created that disparity.  In Concrete Works, we 
    
             stated that "[w]e agree with the other circuits which have interpreted Croson 
    
             impliedly to permit a municipality to rely . . . on general data reflecting the 
    
             number of MBEs and WBEs in the marketplace to defeat the challenger's 
    
             summary judgment motion," and we do not see Adarand III as requiring any 
    
             different standard in the case of an analogous suit against the federal government.
             
     
             36 F.3d at 1528.(14)  Although the government's aggregate figure of a 13% 
    
             disparity between minority enterprise availability and utilization is not 
    
             overwhelming evidence, it is significant.  It is made more significant yet by the 
    
             evidence showing that discriminatory factors discourage both enterprise formation 
    
             of minority businesses and utilization of existing minority enterprises in public 
    
             contracting.  Of course, it would be "sheer speculation" to even attempt to attach 
    
             a particular figure to the hypothetical number of minority enterprises that would 
    
             exist without discriminatory barriers to minority DBE formation.  Croson, 488 
    
             U.S. at 499.  However, the existence of evidence indicating that the number of 
    
             minority DBEs would be significantly (but unquantifiably) higher but for such barriers is nevertheless relevant to the assessment of whether a disparity is 
    
             sufficiently significant to give rise to an inference of discriminatory exclusion.(15)
    
                  d.  Results of Removing Affirmative Action Programs
    
                  We take notice of an additional source of evidence of the link between 
    
             compelling interest and remedy.  There is ample evidence that when race_
    
             conscious public contracting programs are struck down or discontinued, minority 
    
             business participation in the relevant market drops sharply or even disappears. 
    
             See, e.g., 144 Cong. Rec. S1421 (March 5, 1998) (statement of Sen. Moseley_
    
             Braun) (citing statistics); The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. 26,062 & nn.130_
    
             134 (citing studies).  Although that evidence standing alone is not dispositive, it 
    
             strongly supports the government's claim that there are significant barriers to 
    
             minority competition in the public subcontracting market, raising the specter of 
    
             racial discrimination.  "Where there is a significant statistical disparity between 
    
             the number of qualified minority contractors willing and able to perform a 
    
             particular service and the number of such contractors actually engaged by the
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (14)       We reject the decidedly vague urgings of Adarand's amici curiae to 
             reject disparity studies generally as biased and/or insufficiently reliable. 
             Certainly, the conclusions of virtually all social scientific studies may be cast into 
             question by criticism of their choice of assumptions and methodologies.  The very 
             need to make assumptions and to select data sets and relevant variables precludes 
             perfection in empirical social science.  However, general criticism of disparity 
             studies, as opposed to particular evidence undermining the reliability of the 
             particular disparity studies relied upon by the government, is of little persuasive 
             value and neither compels us to discount the disparity evidence presented in the 
             government's appendix nor does it create "a legitimate factual dispute about the 
             accuracy of [the government's] data."  Concrete Works, 36 F.3d at 1528 (refusing 
             to grant summary judgment because of a legitimate factual dispute about the 
             accuracy of disparity study data).  Moreover, a generalized assertion that disparity 
             studies lack reliability is in conflict with Croson, which suggests that disparity 
             studies are entirely relevant to an assessment of whether sufficiently strong 
             evidence exists to support a compelling interest in a race_conscious remedy.  See 
             488 U.S. at 501; Concrete Works, 36 F.3d at 1528 ("[O]nce credible information 
             about the size or capacity of the firms is introduced in the record, it becomes a 
             factor that the court should consider.").  
                  Adarand and its amici curiae misinterpret the case law they cite for the 
             proposition that disparity studies are invalid.  For example, with regard to Coral 
             Construction Co. v. King City, 941 F.2d 910, 921 (9th Cir. 1991), we agree with 
             the Ninth Circuit that the challengers of a DBE program should have the 
             opportunity to rebut statistical evidence.  In the present case, Adarand has had 
             such an opportunity both in the district court below, see Adarand IV, 965 F. Supp. 
             at 1573_77, and before this Court on appeal, but has failed to present a rebuttal 
             other than an unfocused attack on disparity studies generally.  Relying on Coral 
             Construction Co., Adarand's amici further argue the disparity studies were not 
             introduced into evidence and not rebutted; however, the amici do not, and 
             presumably cannot, cite the portion of the record where Adarand objected on that 
             ground to the introduction of the studies via The Compelling Interest, 61 Fed. 
             Reg. 26,050, and their objection has been waived.  See Lopez v. Behles (In re 
             Am. Ready Mix, Inc.), 14 F.3d 1497, 1502 (10th Cir. 1994) (holding that where 
             the appellant did not show, and the court of appeals could not find, where the 
             issue was raised in the trial court below, the issue was not properly before the 
             court of appeals and would not be considered); Walker v. Mather (In re Walker),959 F.2d 894, 896 (10th Cir. 1992) (holding that as a general rule, the court of 
             appeals will not consider an issue that was not raised below).  As for Associated 
             General Contractors of California, Inc. v. Coalition for Economic Equity, 950 
             F.2d 1401, 1416 (9th Cir. 1991), the court in that case held the statistical evidence 
             presented was sufficient on the facts to establish compelling interest.  Contractors 
             Association of Eastern Pennsylvania, 6 F.3d at 1005, stated that "[d]isparity 
             indices are highly probative evidence of discrimination."  On further appeal in 
             that case, the Third Circuit stated that whether disparity studies provided the 
             requisite strong basis in evidence for upholding the race_conscious program at 
             issue was a "close call" but did not decide the question.  Contractors Ass'n of E. 
             Penn, Inc. v. City of Philadelphia, 91 F.3d 586, 605 (3d Cir. 1996).  Finally, 
             Engineering Contractors Association of South Florida, Inc. v. Metropolitan Dade 
             County, 122 F.3d 895, 903_05, 924 (11th Cir. 1997), can be distinguished on the 
             grounds that the court of appeals affirmed the district court's factual findings 
             which rejected evidence from disparity studies under the deferential "clear error" 
             standard of review.  Here the district court committed no clear error in its finding 
             of compelling interest based on the statistical evidence before it.  To the extent 
             the foregoing cases may be otherwise interpreted, we reject their holdings.
             (15)       Based on a comprehensive review of 1987 census data showing 
             disproportionately low minority business ownership and receipts for minority_
             owned business, the U.S. Commission on Minority Business Development 
             concluded that "minorities are not underrepresented in business because of choice 
             or chance.  Discrimination and benign neglect is the reason why our economy has 
             been denied access to this vital resource."  United States Commission on Minority 
             Business Development, Final Report 60 (1992).
             
     
             locality or the locality's prime contractors, an inference of discriminatory 
    
             exclusion could arise."  Croson, 488 U.S. at 509 (Op. of O'Connor, J.) (citations 
    
             omitted).
    
                  In sum, on the basis of the foregoing body of evidence, we conclude that 
    
             the government has met its initial burden of presenting a "strong basis in 
    
             evidence" sufficient to support its articulated, constitutionally valid, compelling 
    
             interest.  Croson, 488 U.S. at 500 (quoting Wygant, 476 U.S. at 277).
    
                  4.  Adarand's Rebuttal
    
                  Adarand and the amici curiae supporting it have utterly failed to meet their 
    
             "ultimate burden" of introducing credible, particularized evidence to rebut the 
    
             government's initial showing of the existence of a compelling interest in 
    
             remedying the nationwide effects of past and present discrimination in the federal 
    
             construction procurement subcontracting market.(16)  Concrete Works, 36 F.3d at 
    
             1522 (quoting Wygant, 476 U.S. at 277).  Its assertions as to the general 
    
             impermissibility of a race_conscious remedy regardless of the compelling interest 
    
             identified by Congress are not in accordance with equal protection jurisprudence.  It is simply an untenable interpretation of Equal Protection Doctrine to insist that 
    
             the Constitution requires Congress to acquiesce in the workings of an ostensibly 
    
             free market that would direct the profits to be gleaned from disbursements of 
    
             public funds to non_minorities alone.  See Concrete Works, 36 F.3d at 1519 
    
             ("[T]he Fourteenth Amendment permits race_conscious programs that seek . . . to 
    
             prevent the public entity from acting as a `"passive participant" in a system of 
    
             racial exclusion . . .' by allowing tax dollars `to finance the evil of private 
    
             prejudice.'" (quoting Croson, 488 U.S. at 492)); see also Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 
    
             237 ("The unhappy persistence of both the practice and the lingering effects of 
    
             racial discrimination against minority groups in this country is an unfortunate 
    
             reality, and government is not disqualified from acting in response to it.").   
    
                  We reject Adarand's characterization of various congressional reports and 
    
             findings as conclusory and its highly general criticism of the methodology of 
    
             numerous "disparity studies" cited by the government and its amici curiae as 
    
             supplemental evidence of discrimination.(17)  The evidence cited by the government
             (16)       We disagree with Adarand's contention that the government's 
             "Appendix I" to its motion for summary judgment (Appellants' App. at 44_53) is 
             insufficient evidence of Congress's findings.  The Appendix references and 
             discusses the long and comprehensive legislative history and findings on 
             discrimination in the nationwide construction contracting market.  Adarand's 
             challenge to that history is too conclusory to meet its burden under Concrete 
             Works.
             (17)       Adarand III called into question Fullilove's standard of review and 
             possibly its result.  However, as far as we can ascertain, nothing in Adarand III 
             undermines the conclusion of the lead Fullilove opinion that "Congress had 
             abundant evidence from which it could conclude that minority businesses have 
             been denied effective participation in public contracting opportunities by 
             procurement practices that perpetuated the effects of prior discrimination." 
             Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 477_78 (Op. of Burger, C.J.); see also Croson, 488 U.S. at 
             504 ("[In the Fullilove case,] Congress was exercising its powers under 5 of theFourteenth Amendment in making a finding that past discrimination would cause 
             federal funds to be distributed in a manner which reinforced prior patterns of 
             discrimination . . . .  Congress has made national findings that there has been 
             societal discrimination in a host of fields.").
             
     
             and its amici curiae and examined in this opinion only reinforces the conclusion 
    
             that "racial discrimination and its effects continue to impair the ability of 
    
             minority_owned businesses to compete in the nation's contracting markets."  The 
    
             Compelling Interest, 62 Fed. Reg. at 26,062.  In Concrete Works, 36 F.3d at 
    
             1530_31, the plaintiff "specifically identified" and "put forth evidence" showing 
    
             "flaws" in the data justifying the City of Denver's affirmative action program, 
    
             thus precluding summary judgment on the issue of compelling interest.  Here, by 
    
             contrast, the government's evidence permits a finding that as a matter of law 
    
             Congress has the requisite strong basis in evidence to take action to remedy racial 
    
             discrimination and its lingering effects in the construction industry.  This 
    
             evidence demonstrates that both the race_based barriers to entry and the ongoing 
    
             race_based impediments to success faced by minority subcontracting 
    
             enterprises_both discussed above_are caused either by continuing 
    
             discrimination or the lingering effects of past discrimination on the relevant 
    
             market.  Furthermore, Congress is not limited to simply proscribing federal 
    
             discrimination against minority contractors, as it has obviously already done.  The 
    
             Constitution does not obligate Congress to stand by idly and continue to pour
             
     
             money into an industry so shaped by the effects of discrimination that the profits 
    
             to be derived from congressional appropriations accrue exclusively to the 
    
             beneficiaries, however personally innocent, of the effects of racial prejudice.(18)
    
                  We do not intend to suggest that the evidence cited by the government is 
    
             unrebuttable.  We merely point out that under our precedent it is for Adarand to 
    
             rebut that evidence, and it has not done so to the extent required to raise a 
    
             genuine issue of material fact as to whether the government has met its 
    
             evidentiary burden.  We reiterate that "[t]he ultimate burden [of proof] remains 
    
             with [the challenging party] to demonstrate the unconstitutionality of an affirmative_action program."  Id. at 1522 (quoting Wygant, 476 U.S. at 277_78 
    
             (plurality)).  "[T]he nonminority [challengers] . . . continue to bear the ultimate 
    
             burden of persuading the court that [the government entity's] evidence did not 
    
             support an inference of prior discrimination and thus a remedial purpose."  Id. 
    
             (quoting Wygant, 476 U.S. at 293 (O'Connor, J., concurring)).  Because Adarand 
    
             has failed utterly to meet its burden, the government's initial showing stands.
    
                  In sum, guided by Concrete Works, we conclude that the evidence cited by 
    
             the government and its amici, particularly that contained in The Compelling 
    
             Interest, 61 Fed. Reg. 26,050, more than satisfies the government's burden of 
    
             production regarding the compelling interest for a race_conscious remedy. 
    
             Congress has a compelling interest in eradicating the economic roots of racial 
    
             discrimination in highway transportation programs funded by federal monies.  We 
    
             therefore affirm the district court's finding of a compelling interest.
    
                                    C.  Narrow Tailoring
    
                  We turn now to the question of narrow tailoring.  Here, again, we must first 
    
             define "narrow tailoring" for purposes of strict scrutiny and then determine 
    
             whether the SCC program in the present case falls within that definition.
    
                  1.  "Narrow Tailoring" in Race_conscious Programs Defined
    
                  We are guided in our inquiry by the handful of Supreme Court cases that 
    
             have applied the narrow_tailoring analysis to government affirmative action
             (18)       We likewise reject Adarand's contention that Congress must make 
             specific findings regarding discrimination against every single sub_category of 
             individuals within the broad racial and ethnic categories designated by statute and 
             addressed by the relevant legislative findings.  If Congress has valid evidence, for 
             example that Asian_American individuals are subject to discrimination because of 
             their status as Asian_Americans, it makes no sense to require sub_findings that 
             subcategories of that class experience particularized discrimination because of 
             their status as, for example, Americans from Bhutan.  "Race" is often a 
             classification of dubious validityscientifically, legally, and morally.  We need 
             not impart excess legitimacy to racial classifications by taking notice of the harsh 
             fact that racial discrimination commonly occurs along the lines of the broad 
             categories identified: "Black Americans, Hispanic Americans, Native Americans, 
             Asian Pacific Americans, and other minorities."  15 U.S.C. 637(d)(3)(C).
                  The evidence at issue is not, as Adarand would have it, merely evidence of 
             generalized societal discrimination.  See Wygant, 476 U.S. at 276 (Op. of Powell, 
             J.) ("Societal discrimination, without more, is too amorphous a basis for imposing 
             a racially classified remedy.").  Rather, it is evidence of specific barriers to 
             market entry and fair competition facing actual and potential minority participants 
             in the market for public construction contracts.  In short, the construction 
             contracting market is overwhelmingly composed of non_minorities due to the 
             effects of racial discrimination. 
             
     
             programs.  In applying strict scrutiny to a court_ordered program remedying the 
    
             failure to promote black police officers, a plurality of the Court stated that 
    
                  [i]n determining whether race_conscious remedies are appropriate, 
                  we look to several factors, including the necessity for the relief and 
                  the efficacy of alternative remedies; the flexibility and duration of 
                  the relief, including the availability of waiver provisions; the 
                  relationship of the numerical goals to the relevant labor market; and 
                  the impact of the relief on the rights of third parties.
                  
             Paradise, 480 U.S. at 171 (1986) (plurality op. of Brennan, J.) (citations omitted). 
    
             Regarding flexibility, "the availability of waiver" is of particular importance.  Id. 
    
             As for numerical proportionality, Croson admonishes us to beware of the 
    
             "completely unrealistic assumption that minorities will choose a particular trade 
    
             in lockstep proportion to their representation in the local population."  488 U.S. at 
    
             507 (quoting Sheet Metal Workers, 478 U.S. at 494 (O'Connor, J., concurring in 
    
             part and dissenting in part)).  In that context, a "rigid numerical quota" particularly disserves the cause of narrow tailoring.  Id. at 508.(19)  Finally, as for 
    
             burdens imposed on third parties, a plurality of the Court in Wygant stated:
    
                  As part of this Nation's dedication to eradicating racial 
                  discrimination, innocent persons may be called upon to bear some of 
                  the burden of the remedy.  "When effectuating a limited and properly 
                  tailored remedy to cure the effects of prior discrimination, such a 
                  `sharing of the burden' by innocent parties is not impermissible."
    
             476 U.S. at 280_81 (Op. of Powell, J.) (quoting Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 484 
    
             (plurality)) (further quotations and footnote omitted).  We are guided by that 
    
             benchmark.
    
                  Justice O'Connor's majority opinion in Croson adds a further factor to our 
    
             analysis: under_ or over_inclusiveness of the DBE classification.  In Croson, the 
    
             Supreme Court struck down an affirmative action program as insufficiently 
    
             narrowly tailored in part because "there is no inquiry into whether or not the 
    
             particular MBE seeking a racial preference has suffered from the effects of past 
    
             discrimination . . . .  [T]he interest in avoiding the bureaucratic effort necessary
             
    
    
    
             (19)       While Paradise only assumed without deciding that strict scrutiny is the 
             appropriate standard, see 480 U.S. at 166_67 (plurality), it nevertheless applied 
             strict scrutiny to affirm a race_conscious relief measure, see id. at 185_86. 
             Although the Paradise factors require some modification in order to be used for 
             evaluating the nationwide legislative enactment and its implementing regulations 
             and programs at issue here (as opposed to a judicial order aimed at a particular 
             police department), they provide some general guidance on questions the Court 
             considers relevant to the narrow tailoring inquiry.  See also Adarand III, 515 U.S. 
             at 237 (citing the opinions of Justices Brennan, Stevens, and O'Connor in 
             Paradise "to dispel the notion that strict scrutiny is `strict in theory, but fatal in 
             fact'" (quoting Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 519 (Marshall, J., concurring))).
             
     
             to tailor remedial relief to those who truly have suffered from the effects of prior 
    
             discrimination cannot justify a rigid line drawn on the basis of a suspect 
    
             classification."  Croson, 488 U.S. at 508 (citation omitted).  Thus, we must be 
    
             especially careful to inquire into whether there has been an effort to identify 
    
             worthy participants in DBE programs or whether the programs in question paint 
    
             with too broad_or too narrow_a brush.  
    
                  More specific guidance is found in Adarand III.  In remanding for strict 
    
             scrutiny, the Court identified two questions apparently of particular importance in 
    
             the instant case: (1) "[c]onsideration of the use of race_neutral means;" and (2) 
    
             "whether the program [is] appropriately limited [so as] not to last longer than the 
    
             discriminatory effects it is designed to eliminate."  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 237_
    
             38 (internal quotations and citations omitted).  We thus direct our attention to an 
    
             analysis of the program in light of Adarand III's specific questions on remand, 
    
             and the foregoing narrow_tailoring factors, in the following order: (1) the 
    
             availability of race_neutral alternative remedies; (2) limits on the duration of the 
    
             SCC and DBE certification programs; (3) flexibility; (4) numerical 
    
             proportionality; (5) the burden on third parties; and (6) over_ or under_
    
             inclusiveness.
    
    
     
                  2.  Race_neutral Alternative Remedies
    
                   The first factor to be considered is that of the availability of alternative 
    
             remedies to the race_conscious measures at issue.  The district court in Adarand 
    
             IV found, and Adarand does not challenge its finding, that Congress over a period 
    
             of decades attempted to correct by race_neutral means the problem of too few 
    
             minority subcontractors for government construction contracts, and only after it 
    
             continued to find discriminatory effects did it first implement a race_conscious 
    
             remedy.  See Adarand IV, 965 F. Supp. at 1582_83; see also Croson, 488 U.S. at 
    
             507 (noting the finding in Fullilove that "Congress . . . carefully examined and 
    
             rejected race_neutral alternatives before enacting the MBE set_aside").(20)  That 
    
             finding is law of the case and is not clearly erroneous.  See Agostini, 521 U.S. at 
    
             236; McIlravy, 204 F.3d at 1034_35.  The long history of discrimination in, and 
    
             affecting, the public construction procurement market_despite the efforts dating 
    
             back at least to the enactment in 1958 of the SBA to employ race_neutral 
    
             measures_places a formidable burden on both existing and would_be minority participants and thus justifies race_conscious action to address a decidedly racial 
    
             disparity.
    
                  A separate question, however, is whether the FLHP considered other more 
    
             narrowly tailored measures before deciding to implement 15 U.S.C. § 644(g) by 
    
             means of the SCC, with its race_based presumptions of disadvantage.  The 
    
             government's argument focuses on Congress's consideration of race_neutral 
    
             measures prior to enacting its policy of maximizing opportunity for minority_
    
             owned and controlled businesses and setting aspirational goals for the 
    
             participation of such businesses in federal contracting.  Although Congress 
    
             considered the futility of race_neutral measures prior to incorporating the 
    
             aspirational goals into the SBA and the relevant appropriations measures, the 
    
             government fails to address whether the FLHP considered either measures short 
    
             of a race_conscious subsidy to prime contractors or a more refined means of 
    
             assessing subcontractors' eligibility for race_conscious programs prior to 
    
             promulgating the regulations implementing the SCC.  The record persuades us 
    
             that under the high degree of solicitude for individual rather than race_based 
    
             consideration mandated by the Court's strict scrutiny standard, the government 
    
             has not shown that the FLHP adequately considered such alternative measures in 
    
             the 1996 SCC program.  
    
             (20)       Although the standard of review and result of Fullilove have been called 
             into question by Adarand III, the district court noted, in our view correctly, that a 
             square majority of the Court in Croson cited with approval the principal opinion 
             in Fullilove for this factual finding.  We fail to see how this factual aspect of 
             Fullilove has been impaired; Adarand offers no authority to refute the finding that 
             three decades of race_neutral measures failed to have any appreciable effect on 
             the exclusion of minorities from the receipt of government highway largesse. 
             Adarand offers no evidence to rebut the district court's conclusion that Congress 
             entertained and indeed attempted years of race_neutral measures without success 
             before resorting to the programs at issue in this lawsuit.
             
     
                   Again, the situation has since changed dramatically.(21)  A comparison of that 
    
             previous SCC program with the new federal regulations under TEA_21 is 
    
             particularly instructive.  The current, revised regulations instruct recipients that 
    
             "[y]ou must meet the maximum feasible portion of your overall goal by using 
    
             race_neutral means of facilitating DBE participation," 49 C.F.R. § 26.51(a) 
    
             (2000); see also 49 C.F.R. § 26.51(f) (2000) (if a recipient can meet its overall 
    
             goal through race_neutral means, it must implement its program without the use of 
    
             race_conscious contracting measures), and enumerate a list of race_neutral 
    
             measures, see 49 C.F.R. § 26.51(b) (2000).  The current regulations also outline 
    
             several race_neutral means available to program recipients including helping 
    
             overcome bonding and financing obstacles, providing technical assistance, 
    
             establishing programs to assist start_up firms, and other methods.  See 49 C.F.R. 
    
             § 26.51(b).  We therefore are dealing here with revisions that emphasize the 
    
             continuing need to employ non_race_conscious methods even as the need for race_
    
             conscious remedies is recognized.  The record before us does not indicate whether 
    
             or not FLHP considered race_neutral measures prior to resorting to the SCC.  This 
    
             absence weighs strongly against any finding of narrow tailoring.  See Adarand III,
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (21)       The regulatory changes discussed below resulted from several years of 
             study and consideration of Croson and Adarand III.  See 64 Fed. Reg. 5096, 5101_
             03 (1999) (discussing how regulatory changes address the requirements of narrow 
             tailoring). 
             
     
             515 U.S. at 237_38; Croson, 488 U.S. at 507.  The district court was therefore 
    
             correct, given the information before it at the time, that the SCC program was not 
    
             narrowly tailored, and should the government reinstitute the revised program 
    
             without considering race_neutral measures similar to those outlined in 49 C.F.R. 
    
             § 25.51(a) and (b) (2000), that program too would be insufficiently narrowly 
    
             tailored.
    
                  3.  Appropriate Limit on Duration
    
                  A second important factor in any narrow_tailoring analysis is a limit on the 
    
             duration of the race_conscious measures at issue.  The district court declined to 
    
             address this aspect of the Supreme Court's inquiry on remand because of the 
    
             court's finding that the 1996 SCC program was not narrowly tailored for other 
    
             reasons.  See Adarand IV, 965 F. Supp. at 1584.  Although we agree for different 
    
             reasons that the 1996 program the district court considered was insufficiently 
    
             narrowly tailored to pass constitutional muster, the factor of limited duration is 
    
             mentioned in Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 238, and we accept the Court's invitation to 
    
             consider this factor now.
    
                  The duration of a particular company's DBE status is limited by statute and 
    
             regulation to approximately ten_and_one_half years under the § 8(a) certification 
    
             program.  See 15 U.S.C. §§ 634(b)(6), 636(j)(10)(C)(i), 637(a), (d); 13 C.F.R. 
    
             § 124.110 (1996); 13 C.F.R. § 124.2 (2000).  Moreover, each participant in the
             
     
             § 8(a) program is required to annually submit financial and other information, on 
    
             the basis of which the SBA reevaluates and may "graduate" a small disadvantaged 
    
             business from the program as no longer qualified (e.g., because the criteria of 
    
             economic disadvantage are no longer met).  See 15 U.S.C. §§ 636(j)(10)(G), 
    
             637(a)(6)(B), (C).  The § 8(a) program's inherent time limit and graduation 
    
             provisions ensure that it, like the program upheld in Paradise, is carefully 
    
             designed to "endure[] only until . . . the discriminatory impact" has been 
    
             eliminated; once a DBE loses its economic disadvantage, it loses its certification. 
    
             Paradise, 480 U.S. at 178.  As far as we can ascertain from the regulations 
    
             previously in effect, the § 8(d) program did not have an analogous individual time 
    
             limit.  Therefore, insofar as the 1996 SCC program relied on § 8(a) criteria, those 
    
             criteria increased the narrow tailoring of the program.  However, insofar as the 
    
             program relied on § 8(d) criteria, through state certifications,(22) we discern no 
    
             evidence that the specific criteria of DBE eligibility provide a temporal limit to 
    
             the program.  Thus, insofar as the district court suggested that an SCC program 
    
             based on § 8(a) criteria would be insufficiently narrowly tailored, we disagree; the 
    
             court's skepticism about the fatality in fact of strict scrutiny in the narrow_
    
             tailoring context is contrary to the Supreme Court's own pronouncements in both 
    
             Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 237, and Croson, 488 U.S. at 509.
    
                  In this respect, too, we note that the government has modified its 
    
             unconstitutional practices.  The current § 8(d) program regulations specifically 
    
             incorporate the certification requirements from the Small Business Administration 
    
             regulations implementing the § 8(a) program.  See 48 C.F.R. § 19.001 (2000) 
    
             (incorporating certification requirements of 13 C.F.R. pt. 124, subpt. B); 13 
    
             C.F.R. § 124.1002(a) (2000) (incorporating § 8(a) criteria from 13 C.F.R. pt. 124, 
    
             subpt. A).  The regulations incorporated into the § 8(d) program provide for a 
    
             certification of a business as socially and economically disadvantaged for three 
    
             years after either the initial certification or other administrative determination. 
    
             See 13 C.F.R. § 124.1014 (2000).  If a business wishes to remain certified for 
    
             longer than three years, it must "submit a new application and receive a new 
    
             certification."  Id. § 124.1014(c).(23)  Therefore, with regard to appropriate 
    
             limitations on duration, the current DBE certification programs are narrowly 
    
             tailored.
    
             (22)       Notably, Gonzalez was certified through such a state program in the 
             present case, belying the government's argument that there was no evidence of 
             unconstitutional state certifications under the version of 8(d) in place at the 
             time this litigation commenced.  
             (23)       Although the 8(a) program provides for annual rather than tri_annual 
             review of DBE certification, for purposes of the "duration" prong of the narrow_
             tailoring inquiry, that difference is not so glaring as to require striking down the 
             8(d) program; rather, it is the periodic reevaluation of disadvantaged status that 
             renders this aspect of the program narrowly tailored because in that way, the 
             program will not last longer than the situation it seeks to correct.
             
     
                   Finally, we note that Congress extensively debated whether to renew the 
    
             DBE program prior to passing TEA_21 in 1998.  See, e.g., 144 Cong. Rec. S1481_
    
             06, S1481_96 (March 6, 1998); id. S1395_01, S1395_434 (March 5, 1998); id. 
    
             H1885_04, H2000_11 (Apr. 1, 1998).  These debates, in addition to the limited 
    
             duration of the DBE program in accordance with the limited duration of TEA_21 
    
             and other highway appropriations statutes like it, indicate that the race_conscious 
    
             programs at issue are "appropriately limited" to last no longer than "the 
    
             discriminatory effects [they are] designed to eliminate."  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 
    
             238 (quotation omitted).  
    
                  4.  Additional Narrow_Tailoring Factors
    
                  Although they were not emphasized by the Adarand III Court, we deem the 
    
             other factors discussed in Paradise, 480 U.S. at 171, and Croson, 488 U.S. at 507_
    
             08, to be of value in the narrow tailoring analysis, and we turn to them now.
    
                  a.  Flexibility
    
                  The 1996 SCC program, providing a subsidy for the use of DBEs, is 
    
             certainly more flexible than the set_asides considered in either Fullilove or Croson 
    
             because the program is not mandatory.  It does not require the use of DBEs in 
    
             subcontracting against the will of the prime contractor.  See Adarand IV, 965 F. 
    
             Supp. at 1583 (finding that the prime contractor's choice to avail itself of the 
    
             SCC is "more flexible than the `rigid racial quota' struck down in Croson, 488
             
     
             U.S. at 499, and the 10 percent set aside upheld in Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 513_
    
             14").(24)  Moreover, the 1996 SCC program incorporates an additional element of 
    
             flexibility_"the availability of waiver," Paradise, 480 U.S. at 171_because any 
    
             prime contractor is free not to take advantage of the clause and will never be 
    
             required to make a "gratuitous" choice of subcontractors, id. at 178.  With regard 
    
             to flexibility, the 1996 program passes muster under a narrow_tailoring analysis.  
    
                  Nothing has changed in this regard from 1996 until the present that would 
    
             militate the contrary conclusion.  On the contrary, the present version of the 
    
             regulations have increased the flexibility of the government's DBE programs:  An 
    
             express waiver provision has been added to the current regulations.  See 49 
    
             C.F.R. § 26.15 (2000) (allowing recipients of federal highway construction funds to seek waivers and exemptions, despite the already non_mandatory nature of 
    
             DBE programs).
    
                  b.  Numerical Proportionality
    
                  The essential question arising out of the numerical proportionality factor of 
    
             Paradise is whether the aspirational goals of 5% in the SBA and 10% participation 
    
             contained in STURAA, ISTEA, and TEA_21 are proportionate only if they 
    
             correspond to an actual finding as to the number of existing minority_owned 
    
             businesses.  Despite involving a rigid quota rather than flexible and periodically 
    
             adjusted aspirational goals, Croson may be read to suggest as much.  See Croson, 
    
             488 U.S. at 507 (characterizing as "completely unrealistic" the "assumption that 
    
             minorities will choose a particular trade in lockstep proportion to their 
    
             representation in the local population" (citing Sheet Metal Workers, 478 U.S. 421 
    
             at 494 (O'Connor, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part))).  However, 
    
             because Congress has evidence that the effects of past discrimination have 
    
             excluded minorities from the construction industry and that the number of 
    
             available minority subcontractors reflects that discrimination, the existing 
    
             percentage of minority_owned businesses is not necessarily an absolute cap on the 
    
             percentage that a remedial program might legitimately seek to achieve.  Absolute 
    
             proportionality to overall demographics is an unreasonable goal.  However, 
    
             Croson does not prohibit setting an aspirational goal above the current percentage
             (24)       None of the parties in this case contend that SBA 8(d)(4), 15 U.S.C. 
             637(d)(4), pertains to the SCC.  However, even if 8(d)(4) were relevant here, 
             that would not change our conclusion that the SCC is not mandatory in nature. 
             Section 8(d)(4)(E) informs government agencies letting contracts that they are 
             "authorized to provide such incentives as such Federal agency may deem 
             appropriate in order to encourage such subcontracting opportunities as may be 
             commensurate with the efficient and economical performance of the contract."  15 
             U.S.C. 637(d)(4)(E) (emphasis added).  This language demonstrates that 
             8(d)(4) merely authorizes, but does not require, the use of incentives (of 
             whatever type) to further the aspirational goals of increased participation in 
             government contracts by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals. 
             The fact that the FLHP has discontinued use of the SCC further demonstrates that 
             8(d)(4) in no way requires an incentive clause in federal highway transportation 
             contracts.
             
     
             of minority_owned businesses that is substantially below the percentage of 
    
             minority persons in the population as a whole.  This aspirational goal is 
    
             reasonably construed as narrowly tailored to remedy past discrimination that has 
    
             resulted in homogenous ownership within the industry.  It is reasonable to 
    
             conclude that allocating more than 95% of all federal contracts to enterprises 
    
             owned by non_minority persons, or more than 90% of federal transportation 
    
             contracts to enterprises owned by non_minority males, is in and of itself a form of 
    
             passive participation in discrimination that Congress is entitled to seek to avoid. 
    
             See Croson, 488 U.S. at 492 (Op. of O'Connor, J.).
    
                  Apart from the reasonableness of the goals, the record before us supports 
    
             the government's contention that the 5% and 10% goals incorporated in the 
    
             statutes at issue here, unlike the set_asides in both Fullilove and Croson, are 
    
             merely aspirational and not mandatory.  Cf. Croson, 488 U.S. at 508 (finding no 
    
             need "for a rigid numerical quota").  Therefore, while the goal may well be 
    
             relevant to the numerical proportionality aspect of the Paradise strict scrutiny 
    
             inquiry, we disagree with the district court that the goal itself is facially 
    
             unconstitutional.  Moreover, there is simply no showing that Adarand lost or will 
    
             lose contracts due to the STURAA/ISTEA/TEA_21 10% goals for DBE 
    
             participation, but rather only due to the over_ or under_inclusive race_based 
    
             presumptions involved in certification for 1996 SCC eligibility.  Therefore, we
             
     
             conclude both that Adarand is without standing to mount any independent 
    
             challenge to the 5% and 10% figures and that such a challenge is outside the 
    
             scope of the Supreme Court's Adarand III remand.  See Adarand IV, 965 F. Supp. 
    
             at 1566 n.11 (noting that "Defendants maintain, and Adarand does not dispute, 
    
             that the challenge in this action is based only on the use of the SCC to meet the 
    
             various goals" established by the SBA, STURAA, and ISTEA).
    
                  We also conclude the government failed to carry its evidentiary burden in 
    
             the district court insofar as the use of the 1996 SCC was based on an ill_defined 
    
             12_15% goal apparently adopted by the Federal Highway Administration 
    
             ("FHA").  (See Appellants' App. at 187.)  Unlike the congressionally_mandated 
    
             goals that are supported by legislative history and supplemental evidence, we can 
    
             find no explanation in the record before us of the basis in evidence on which the 
    
             FHA relied in adopting this 12_15% goal (if in fact there is one).  That 
    
             congressional findings support the 5% and 10% aspirational goals in the SBA and 
    
             transportation appropriation statutes, respectively, as well as the delegation of 
    
             responsibility for setting individual goals to various agencies, does not vitiate the 
    
             constitutional duty of those agencies to assure that the goals are supported by 
    
             evidence that meets the requirements of Croson and Concrete Works.  The 
    
             complete absence of an explanation for the 12_15% goal in the record would have 
    
             required granting summary judgment in favor of Adarand on the question of
             
     
             whether use of the 1996 SCC is narrowly tailored to meet the compelling interest 
    
             determined by Congress.
    
                  Once again, however, comparison of the 1996 SCC to the current TEA_21 
    
             regulations is instructive and leads us to the conclusion that the recent regulatory 
    
             changes preclude ruling in favor of Adarand at the present time for reasons 
    
             beyond the abandonment of use of the SCC in federal highway construction 
    
             contracting.  The process by which recipients of federal transportation funding set 
    
             aspirational goals is now much more rigorous.  The current regulation instructs 
    
             each recipient that its "overall goal must be based on demonstrable evidence of 
    
             the availability of ready, willing and able DBEs relative to all businesses ready, 
    
             willing and able to participate on [the recipient's] DOT_assisted contracts" and 
    
             must make "reference to the relative availability of DBEs in [the recipient's] 
    
             market."  49 C.F.R. § 26.45(b) (2000).  In addition, goal setting must involve 
    
             "examining all evidence available in [the recipient's] jurisdiction."  Id. 
    
             § 26.45(c).  Such evidence may include census data and valid disparity studies. 
    
             See id. § 26.45(c)(1)_(3).  After examining this evidence, the recipient must adjust 
    
             its DBE participation goal by examining the capacity of DBEs to perform needed 
    
             work, disparity studies, and other evidence.  See id. § 26.45(d).  When submitting 
    
             a goal, the recipient must include a description of the methodology and evidence 
    
             used.  See id. § 26.45(f)(3).  Significantly, the rigidity of even those realistic
             
     
             goals is negligible.  Once the goals have been set, there is no requirement that the 
    
             recipient actually meet them, merely that it make a good faith effort to do so:  So 
    
             long as good faith efforts were made, failure to meet a goal will not subject a 
    
             recipient to penalties or to being held in noncompliance.  See id. § 26.47(a). 
    
             These new requirements that federal agencies rigorously examine, in a verifiable 
    
             manner, the reasonableness of DBE programs given particular local conditions 
    
             further ensure that government agencies will heed Croson's mandate to avoid 
    
             rigid application of DBE percentages in government contracting.  See 488 U.S. at 
    
             507.
    
                  In sum, in conformity with the aspirational nature of the percentage goals 
    
             of the relevant statutes, the current regulations emphasize that the 10% figure is 
    
             nothing more than "an aspirational goal at the national level," 49 C.F.R. 
    
             § 26.41(b) (2000), which "does not authorize or require recipients to set overall or 
    
             contract goals at the 10 percent level, or any other particular level," id. 
    
             § 26.41(c).  Thus, in practice there are significant requirements currently in place 
    
             that must be met by any recipient of federal highway construction funds before 
    
             setting even an aspirational goal for DBE participation.  There is little danger of 
    
             arbitrariness in the setting of such goals, as was the case in Croson, 488 U.S. at 
    
             507.
    
                  c.  Burden on Third Parties
    
    
     
                  As for the third Paradise factor, the burden on third parties is obviously 
    
             significant enough to grant standing to Adarand.  See Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 
    
             211_12.  While there appears to be no serious burden on prime contractors, who 
    
             are obviously compensated for any additional burden occasioned by the 
    
             employment of DBE subcontractors, at the margin, some non_DBE subcontractors 
    
             such as Adarand will be deprived of business opportunities.  See Wygant, 476 
    
             U.S. at 280_81 (Op. of Powell, J.) ("When effectuating a limited and properly 
    
             tailored remedy to cure the effects of prior discrimination, . . . a `sharing of the 
    
             burden' by innocent parties is not impermissible." (quoting Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 
    
             484 (plurality)) (further quotations and footnote omitted)).  Insofar as the 1996 
    
             and current SCC programs are "limited in scope and duration, [they] only 
    
             postpone[]" the hiring of non_DBEs, "impos[ing] a diffuse burden . . . foreclosing 
    
             only one of several opportunities."  Paradise, 480 U.S. at 183 (quoting Wygant, 
    
             476 U.S. at 283).  
    
                  These further limitations have been incorporated: (1) Compensation under 
    
             the SCC above 1.5_2% of the total contract is prohibited  (see Appellants' App. at 
    
             56); (2) under the revised SCC, there is also a monetary limit to compensation 
    
             under the program of $50,000_$100,000 (see Appellants' Supp. Br. Attach. 2 at 
    
             3).  Thus, the subsidy is capped in such a way as to circumscribe the financial
             
     
             incentive to hire DBEs; after a fairly low threshold, the incentive for the prime 
    
             contractor to hire further DBEs disappears.  
    
                  Moreover, the current regulations are designed to increase the participation 
    
             of non_minority DBEs.  As to those not falling into one of the categories to which 
    
             a presumption of social disadvantage applies, the current regulations retain 
    
             procedures for non_minorities to participate in the DBE program.  Consistent with 
    
             the changes in SBA regulations, proof of social disadvantage by those not so 
    
             presumed may be shown by a preponderance of the evidence, rather than by the 
    
             former "clear and convincing" standard.  Compare 49 C.F.R. §§ 26.61(d), 
    
             26.67(d) (2000) and 13 C.F.R. § 124.105(c)(1) (2000) with 13 C.F.R. 
    
             § 124.105(c)(1) (1996).  The current regulations also require recipients to ensure 
    
             that DBEs are not "so overconcentrated in a certain type of work as to unduly 
    
             burden the opportunity of non_DBE firms to participate."  49 C.F.R. § 26.33(a) 
    
             (2000).
    
                  While at the margin, some DBEs may be hired under the program in lieu of 
    
             non_DBEs, the possibility that innocent parties will share the burden of a remedial 
    
             program is itself insufficient to warrant the conclusion that the program is not 
    
             narrowly tailored.  To invalidate the 1996 and revised SCC and other government 
    
             DBE programs on that basis would be to render strict scrutiny effectively fatal, in
             
     
             contravention of Justice O'Connor's clear statements to the contrary.  See 
    
             Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 237.
    
                  d.  Over_ or Under_Inclusiveness
    
                  The last factor we must consider in applying strict scrutiny in this case is 
    
             that of the over_ or under_inclusiveness of the programs at issue.  One factor in 
    
             the Croson Court's rejection of the Richmond Plan was the lack of "inquiry into 
    
             whether or not the particular MBE seeking a racial preference has suffered from 
    
             the effects of past discrimination."  Croson, 488 U.S. at 508.  
    
                  Even if a race_conscious means of achieving the goal of increasing minority 
    
             participation is necessary, in promulgating the SCC in use at the time of the 
    
             district court's decision in Adarand IV, defendants_appellants have not 
    
             demonstrated that they considered the effectiveness of at least one other, less 
    
             sweeping approach to implementing a race_conscious SCC program: 
    
             disaggregating the presumptions of social and economic disadvantage, as is the 
    
             case under the SBA § 8(a) program, to require a separate determination of social 
    
             disadvantage and economic disadvantage.  See 48 C.F.R. § 52.219_8 (1996). 
    
             Requiring a separate showing as to each type of disadvantage would help address 
    
             the Court's concern in Croson that a government entity undertake the necessary 
    
             administrative effort "to tailor remedial relief to those who truly have suffered 
    
             from the effects of prior discrimination."  488 U.S. at 508.  The record does not
             
     
             disclose any evidence that defendants undertook, and found to be unsuccessful, a 
    
             program incorporating, as under § 8(a), a more individualized inquiry as to 
    
             economic disadvantage prior to implementing the particular SCC program at issue 
    
             in this litigation.
    
                  If the § 8(d) program in place prior to 1999 is interpreted, as we conclude it 
    
             must be, to accord a presumption of economic as well as social disadvantage to 
    
             minority individuals under § 8(d), while not doing so under § 8(a), that fact 
    
             suggests that another more carefully tailored approach is available, i.e., the § 8(a) 
    
             approach of individualized inquiry into economic disadvantage.  The final section 
    
             of Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 238_39, suggests the distinction is relevant.  If 
    
             individualized inquiry into economic disadvantage is sufficient to serve the 
    
             purpose, why then dispense with such inquiry under § 8(d)?  Indeed, if one can 
    
             qualify under § 8(d), what is the significance of permitting qualification under 
    
             § 8(a), aside from the practical matter of already including those DBEs enjoying 
    
             § 8(a) benefits?  
    
                  At the time Adarand IV originally was appealed in 1997, the government 
    
             argued that the more lenient approach of § 8(d) is acceptable because of the 
    
             differing purposes of § 8(a) and § 8(d).
    
                  The [§] 8(a) program is targeted towards a smaller number of firms 
                  and provides direct assistance and protection from open competition 
                  over a period of years to help such firms become viable as prime 
                  contractors.  By contrast, the [§] 8(d) program is focused on opening
                  
     
                  up federal subcontracting opportunities to a much larger number of 
                  small disadvantaged firms, and thus imposes less restrictive 
                  qualifications.
                  
             (Appellants' Br. at 34 (citing 13 C.F.R. § 124.06(b) (1997)).)  That distinction, 
    
             however, fails to identify why an individualized inquiry into economic 
    
             disadvantage, which is admittedly practicable for § 8(a) purposes, was 
    
             unnecessary for the particular purposes of § 8(d) prior to 1999.  To put it simply, 
    
             presuming economic disadvantage based on membership in certain racial groups 
    
             does make § 8(d) "less restrictive," but it is not thereby narrowly tailored.  The 
    
             government fails to explain why it could not have used a non_race_based means of 
    
             making § 8(d) "less restrictive."  Therefore, we must conclude, under Croson, that 
    
             the § 8(d) method of certification reviewed by the district court in Adarand IV is 
    
             not narrowly tailored insofar as it obviates an individualized inquiry into 
    
             economic disadvantage.  See Croson, 488 U.S. at 508 (rejecting an affirmative 
    
             action program in part because "there is no inquiry into whether or not the 
    
             particular MBE seeking a racial preference has suffered from the effects of past 
    
             discrimination . . .[, and] the interest in avoiding the bureaucratic effort necessary 
    
             to tailor remedial relief to those who truly have suffered from the effects of prior 
    
             discrimination cannot justify a rigid line drawn on the basis of a suspect 
    
             classification" (citation omitted)).   
    
    
     
                  Requiring state certification standards to incorporate an individualized 
    
             inquiry into economic disadvantage would certainly increase the burden on 
    
             enterprises seeking DBE certification, as the government argues, and therefore 
    
             would presumably reduce the pool of eligible enterprises.  That increased burden, 
    
             however, is slight when compared with the constitutional imperative to avoid 
    
             over_ or under_inclusive racial classifications_the "Sultan of Brunei" scenario 
    
             that troubled the district court, Adarand IV, 965 F. Supp. at 1581 n.17_, and the 
    
             § 8(d) certification process thus fails to satisfy the narrow tailoring prong of the 
    
             strict scrutiny inquiry.  Cf. Croson, 488 U.S. at 508.  When faced with the readily 
    
             available alternative approach under § 8(a) of requiring would_be DBEs to 
    
             provide a narrative statement of the economic disadvantage they have faced, 
    
             combined with the various other more narrowly tailored alternatives discussed 
    
             above, we fail to see how the SCC approach to certification in use at the time of 
    
             Adarand IV satisfies the rigorous narrow tailoring requirement of the strict 
    
             scrutiny calculus.  In short, by inquiring into economic disadvantage on an 
    
             individual basis, the program could avoid improperly increasing the contracting 
    
             opportunities of those minority entrepreneurs whose access to credit, suppliers, 
    
             and industry networks is already sufficient to obviate the effects of 
    
             discrimination, past and present.
    
    
     
                  Yet again, the government has eliminated its offending 1996 practices.  In 
    
             particular, it has eliminated the discrepancy between the individualized 
    
             determination of economic disadvantage characterizing the § 8(a) program and the 
    
             non_individualized presumption of economic disadvantage characterizing the 
    
             § 8(d) program.  See 48 C.F.R. § 19.001 (2000) (providing that the § 8(d) 
    
             program regulations expressly incorporate the definitions of "small disadvantaged 
    
             business concern" contained in 13 C.F.R. pt 124, subpt. B); 13 C.F.R. 
    
             § 124.1002(a) (2000) (incorporating § 8(a) criteria from 13 C.F.R. pt. 124, subpt. 
    
             A); see also 48 C.F.R. § 19.703 (2000) (eliminating the race_based presumption of 
    
             economic disadvantage of the former regulation); id. § 52.219_8.  The current 
    
             regulations also impose a new requirement on applicants with regard to an 
    
             individualized showing:  They must submit a narrative statement describing the 
    
             circumstances of that purported economic disadvantage.  See 13 C.F.R. 
    
             § 124.104(b)(1) (2000); see also 49 C.F.R. § 26.67(b)(1) (2000) (providing a net 
    
             worth limit for DBEs under ISTEA and TEA_21); id. § 26.65(b) (stating that 
    
             businesses exceeding a certain amount of gross receipts are ineligible for the DBE 
    
             program).  With the individualized determination of § 8(a) extended to economic 
    
             disadvantage under § 8(d), the main obstacle to a finding of narrow tailoring has 
    
             disappeared.  
    
    
     
                  Thus, one of Adarand III's "unresolved questions" has been answered, 
    
             namely, whether the § 8(d) DBE certification program requires an individualized 
    
             showing of economic disadvantage or whether the presumption applies to both 
    
             social and economic disadvantage.  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 238.  The 1996 
    
             § 8(d) certification program did not require an individualized showing of 
    
             economic disadvantage, whereas the current § 8(d) certification program does 
    
             require such an individualized showing.
    
                  There remains a further question of over_ and under_inclusiveness that we 
    
             must consider.  The district court, Adarand IV, 965 F. Supp. at 1580, found that 
    
             the 1996 SCC program was not narrowly tailored in part due to a failure to 
    
             inquire into discrimination against each particular minority racial or ethnic group. 
    
             The district court's opinion cites Adarand's arguments that "there is no evidence 
    
             that Aleuts, Samoans or Bhutans [sic] have been discriminated against in the 
    
             Colorado construction industry."  Id.  Insofar as the district court held that the 
    
             scope of the inquiry into the statutes generally was the Colorado construction 
    
             industry alone, this is at odds with our holdings regarding compelling interest and 
    
             Congress's power to enact nationwide legislation.  Furthermore, as discussed 
    
             below, because of the unreliability of racial and ethnic categories and the fact that 
    
             discrimination commonly occurs based on much broader racial classifications, 
    
             extrapolating findings of discrimination against Native Americans, Asian_Pacific
             
     
             Americans, and Asian_Americans to include Aleuts, Samoans, and Bhutanese, 
    
             respectively, is more a question of nomenclature than of narrow tailoring.  The 
    
             Constitution does not erect a barrier to the government's effort to combat 
    
             discrimination based on broad racial classifications that might prevent it from 
    
             enumerating particular ethnic origins falling within such classifications.  While 
    
             the concept of classifying human beings by race is distasteful, the fact remains 
    
             that discrimination occurs based on such classifications, and engaging the 
    
             classifications in order to eradicate such discrimination is a necessary evil which 
    
             constitutes a compelling government interest.
    
                  We agree in principle that the 1996 SCC program would be more narrowly 
    
             tailored had the CFLHD conducted an inquiry into the scope of discrimination 
    
             within the region it administers as the current regulations mandate.(25)  However, 
    
             the district court's ensuing conclusion appears to stem from a premise that a classification, to be narrowly tailored, must not only include minority individuals 
    
             who have themselves suffered discrimination, but must also automatically include 
    
             all non_minority individuals who have suffered disadvantage as well.  Cf. 
    
             Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 486 ("There has been no showing in this case that Congress 
    
             has inadvertently effected an invidious discrimination by excluding from coverage 
    
             an identifiable minority group that has been the victim of a degree of 
    
             disadvantage and discrimination equal to or greater than that suffered by the 
    
             groups encompassed by the MBE program.").  Requiring that degree of precise fit 
    
             would again render strict scrutiny "fatal in fact."  Id. at 507 (Powell, J., 
    
             concurring).  We hold that such fatality is inconsistent with Adarand III, which 
    
             re_affirmed Paradise, in its declaration that strict scrutiny was not fatal in fact. 
    
             See Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 237.  There can be a permissible middle ground in 
    
             appropriate circumstances between the entirely individualized inquiry of a Title 
    
             VII lawsuit, for example, and an unconstitutionally sweeping, race_based 
    
             generalization.  Indeed, the police officers receiving the benefit of the promotion 
    
             policy in Paradise were not required to prove that they themselves individually 
    
             were victims of past discrimination.(26)
    
             (25)       Nonetheless, the geographic scope of the remedial powers of a local 
             government, as in Croson, and that of Congress's remedial powers under 5 of 
             the Fourteenth Amendment differ.  See Croson, 488 U.S. at 488 (Op. of 
             O'Connor, J.).  In Croson, the City ignored the fact 
             
             that Congress, unlike any State or political subdivision, has a specific 
             constitutional mandate to enforce the dictates of the Fourteenth 
             Amendment.  The power to "enforce" may at times also include the 
             power to define situations which Congress determines threaten 
             principles of equality and to adopt prophylactic rules to deal with 
             those situations.
             
             Id. at 490 (Op. of O'Connor, J.) (citations omitted).
             (26)       Although the viability of Fullilove is uncertain, the Fullilove majority 
             rejected a very similar overinclusiveness challenge to the 1977 10% MBE set_
             aside:
             
             It is also contended that the MBE program is overinclusivethat it 
             bestows a benefit on businesses identified by racial or ethnic criteria 
             which cannot be justified on the basis of competitive criteria or as a 
             remedy for the present effects of identified prior discrimination.  It is 
             conceivable that a particular application of the program may have 
             this effect; however, the peculiarities of specific applications are not 
             before us in this case.
             
             Fullilove, 448 U.S. at 486.
             
     
                  Although we disagree with the district court's effectively fatal standard of 
    
             scrutiny, we again note that comparison with the current SBA § 8(d) and TEA_21 
    
             regulations illustrates how the more careful tailoring now in place avoids some of 
    
             the problems identified by the district court_again, the court's conclusion that 
    
             the "Sultan of Brunei," should he have the temerity to apply, could qualify for 
    
             DBE status.  Adarand IV, 965 F. Supp. at 1581 n.17.  See 13 C.F.R. 
    
             § 124.104(c)(2) (2000); 48 C.F.R. §19.001 (2000); 49 C.F.R. §§ 26.65, 26.67(b) 
    
             (2000) (providing for an individual net worth limit for DBE certification).  The 
    
             current regulations more precisely identify the proper minority recipients of DBE 
    
             certification by periodically re_screening for economic disadvantage all 
    
             candidates for such certification.  See 48 C.F.R. § 19.1014 (2000).
    
                  Mindful of the Supreme Court's mandate to exercise particular care in 
    
             examining governmental racial classifications, we conclude that the 1996 SCC 
    
             was insufficiently narrowly tailored as applied in this case and is thus unconstitutional under Adarand III's strict standard of scrutiny.  Nonetheless, 
    
             after examining the current SCC and DBE certification programs, we conclude 
    
             that the 1996 defects have been remedied, and the relevant programs now meet 
    
             the requirements of narrow tailoring.
    
                                 D.  "Unresolved Question"
    
                  As a final matter, inasmuch as Adarand III suggests that an additional 
    
             "unresolved question[]" concerning one of "the details of the complex regulatory 
    
             regimes," 515 U.S. at 238, bears on the constitutionality of the SCC program, we 
    
             address that question now: namely, whether there are differing definitions of 
    
             economic disadvantage under § 8(a) and § 8(d).  The 1996 regulations establish 
    
             that § 8(a) certification requires, for determination of economic disadvantage, 
    
             comparison with "others in the same or similar line of business who are not 
    
             socially disadvantaged."  13 C.F.R. § 124.106(a) (1996).  Subsection 8(d) 
    
             certification, however, apparently requires comparison with "others in the same or 
    
             similar line of business" generally, presumably with all others, socially 
    
             disadvantaged or not.  13 C.F.R. § 124.106(b) (1996).  Because under 1996 
    
             programs based on § 8(d) economic disadvantage is to be presumed for 
    
             minorities, the § 8(d) comparative analysis would appear to arise only in the event 
    
             of either a challenge to the presumption in the case of a particular minority DBE, 
    
             or application for DBE status by a socially_disadvantaged non_minority
             
     
             subcontractor (the classic example being the white subcontractor from rural 
    
             Appalachia).  We are unable to discern the constitutional relevance of these two 
    
             slightly different methods of comparison.(27)  Moreover, the distinction between the 
    
             two has disappeared in the current version of the regulations.  The current 
    
             regulation retains the more precise definition previously applicable to the § 8(a) 
    
             program, requiring a comparison of the applicant to those who are not socially 
    
             disadvantaged.  See 13 C.F.R. § 124.104(a) (2000); see also 48 C.F.R. § 19.001 
    
             (2000) (incorporating the definitions of "small disadvantaged business concern" 
    
             contained in 13 C.F.R. pt. 124, subpt. B); 13 C.F.R. § 124.1002(a) (2000) 
    
             (incorporating 13 C.F.R. pt. 124, subpt. A, in determining social and economic 
    
             disadvantage).
    
                                             IV
    
                  As a final matter, the government argues that we should remand this case in 
    
             light of a pending, potentially related lawsuit originally filed under the name 
    
             Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Romer, No. CIV. A. 97_K_1351 (D. Colo.) (filed 
    
             June 26, 1997).(28)  Romer involves a challenge by plaintiff in the instant case to use of race_conscious policies in highway construction projects by CDOT. 
    
             Adarand has conceded that its challenge in the instant case is to "the federal 
    
             program, implemented by federal officials," and not to the letting of federally_
    
             funded construction contracts by state agencies.  (Appellee's Br. at 24 n.23.)  We 
    
             do not have before us a sufficient record to enable us to evaluate the separate 
    
             question of CDOT's implementation of race_conscious policies.  The propriety of 
    
             potential consolidation of the instant action and Romer following our remand is a 
    
             question to be considered by the district court in the first instance, should that 
    
             question arise.
    
                                             V
    
                  The judgment of the district court is REVERSED.  This matter is 
    
             remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
             
    
    
    
    
    
             (27)       We reject the contention that two slightly different definitions of 
             economic disadvantage for purposes of two different certification methods create 
             uncertainty as to who is a DBE, thus necessarily precluding any finding of narrow 
             tailoring.
             (28)       Decisions arising out of the Romer litigation include: Adarand 
             Constructors, Inc. v. Romer, 174 F.R.D. 100 (D. Colo. 1997) (denying the federalgovernment's motion to intervene); Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Romer, No. 97_
             1285, 1999 WL 770176 (10th Cir. Sept. 29, 1999) (unpublished) (permitting 
             intervention by the federal government); and Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. 
             Owens, No. CIV. A. 97_K_1351, 2000 WL 490690 (D. Colo. Apr. 24, 2000) 
             (unpublished) (dismissing the governor of Colorado as a defendant).
             
     
                                          APPENDIX
    
                  As noted, several statutes are implicated in this case, notably the Small 
    
             Business Act of 1958 ("SBA"), Pub. L. No. 85_536, 72 Stat. 384, as amended, 15 
    
             U.S.C. §§ 631 et seq., § 106(c) of the Surface Transportation and Uniform 
    
             Relocation Assistance Act of 1987 ("STURAA"), Pub. L. No. 100_17, 101 Stat. 
    
             132, and § 1003(b) of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 
    
             1991 ("ISTEA"), Pub. L. No. 102_240, 105 Stat. 1914, the Transportation Equity 
    
             Act for the 21st Century of 1998 ("TEA 21"), Pub. L. No. 105_178, 112 Stat. 107, 
    
             113, as well as their accompanying administrative regulations.  In the discussion 
    
             that follows, we outline the statutory and regulatory scheme as it was at the time 
    
             of the first and second district court decisions.(29)  Then we discuss the relevant 
    
             changes in that scheme after 1997.
    
                                          A.  SBA
    
                  Subsection 8(d)(1) of the SBA states "[i]t is the policy of the United States 
    
             that small business concerns, and small business concerns owned and controlled 
    
             by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals, . . . shall have the 
    
             maximum practicable opportunity to participate in the performance of contracts
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (29)       The relevant language in the statutes and regulations did not change in 
             any material way between Adarand I and Adarand IV, and therefore references to 
             regulations are to 1991 regulations unless otherwise indicated.  
             
     
             let by any Federal agency."  15 U.S.C. § 637(d)(1).(30)  "Socially disadvantaged 
    
             individuals" are defined as "those who have been subjected to racial or ethnic 
    
             prejudice or cultural bias because of their identity as a member of a group without 
    
             regard to their individual qualities."  15 U.S.C. § 637(a)(5).  The SBA further 
    
             defines "economically disadvantaged individuals" as "those socially 
    
             disadvantaged individuals whose ability to compete in the free enterprise system 
    
             has been impaired due to diminished capital and credit opportunities as compared 
    
             to others in the same business area who are not socially disadvantaged."  15 
    
             U.S.C. § 637(a)(6)(A).(31)  
    
                  15 U.S.C. § 637(d)(2) requires that all federal contracts, with certain 
    
             exceptions not relevant here, contain a clause stating it is the government's policy 
    
             for small disadvantaged businesses to have "the maximum practicable opportunity 
    
             to participate" as contractors or subcontractors.  See 15 U.S.C. § 637(d)(3).  The 
    
             required clause includes the following language:  "The contractor shall presume 
    
             that socially and economically disadvantaged individuals include Black Americans, Hispanic Americans, Native Americans, Asian Pacific Americans, and 
    
             other minorities, or any other individual found to be disadvantaged by the 
    
             Administration pursuant to section 8(a) of the Small Business Act [15 U.S.C. 
    
             637(a)]."  15 U.S.C. § 637(d)(3)(C).(32)  
    
                  15 U.S.C. § 644(g)(1) provides for a government_wide goal of 5% 
    
             minimum minority business participation calculated on the basis of "the total 
    
             value of all prime contract and subcontract awards for each fiscal year." (33)  The
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (30)       The SCC defines Disadvantaged Business Enterprises ("DBEs") as those 
             concerns owned and operated by socially and economically disadvantaged 
             individuals. 
             (31)       It appears that the 1996 regulations implementing the 8(d) certification 
             program provide that the showing of disadvantage requires a general comparison 
             "to others in the same or similar line of business."  13 C.F.R. 124.106(b)(1) 
             (1996).  Justice O'Connor suggests that this distinction may have constitutional 
             significance.  See Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 238.
             (32)       15 U.S.C. 637(d)(4) provides for certain additional requirements for 
             contracts to be awarded "pursuant to the negotiated method of procurement" and 
             exceeding certain dollar amounts.  These requirements include an approved plan 
             providing maximum opportunity for small business concerns, see id. 
             637(d)(4)(D), and provision for agencies to offer incentives to encourage 
             subcontracting opportunities for small business concerns owned and controlled by 
             socially and economically disadvantaged individuals, see id. 637(d)(4)(E).  The 
             parties have not addressed paragraph (4) of 8(d) at all, and, because there is no 
             indication from the parties that Adarand has or will bid for contracts governed by 
             that paragraph's requirement, we do not address it in great detail.
             (33)       Section 644(g)(1) provides in relevant part that 
             
             [t]he President shall annually establish Government_wide goals for 
             procurement contracts awarded to small business concerns and small 
             business concerns owned and controlled by socially and economically 
             disadvantaged individuals . . . .  The Government_wide goal for 
             participation by small business concerns owned and controlled by 
             socially and economically disadvantaged individuals shall be 
             established at not less than 5 percent of the total value of all prime 
             contract and subcontract awards for each fiscal year. . . . 
             Notwithstanding the Government_wide goal, each agency shall have 
             an annual goal that presents, for that agency, the maximum 
             practicable opportunity . . . for small business concerns owned and 
             controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals toparticipate in the performance of contracts let by such agency.
             
     
             Federal Highway Administration appears to have adopted, pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 
    
             § 644(g)(2), goals of 12_15% participation for the period of time pertinent to this 
    
             litigation.  (Appellants' App. at 187.)  These goals are aspirational rather than 
    
             mandatory and must "realistically reflect the potential" of small disadvantaged 
    
             businesses to perform subcontracts.  See 15 U.S.C. § 644(g)(2), (h)(1).  Section 
    
             644(h) further mandates annual reports to the Administration and Congress on the 
    
             results of government agency efforts to increase contracting participation by small 
    
             businesses, including those owned and controlled by socially and economically 
    
             disadvantaged individuals.
    
                  1.  Subsection 8(a)
    
                  The § 8(a) program provides numerous benefits to disadvantaged 
    
             businesses aside from eligibility for the SCC program.(34)  Eligibility requires 
    
             "small" size and 51% ownership by individuals socially and economically 
    
             disadvantaged.  See 13 C.F.R. § 124.103.  Subsection 8(a) regulations incorporate 
    
             a presumption that enumerated minorities are socially disadvantaged, see 13 
    
             C.F.R. § 124.105(b)(1), and others can prove social disadvantage by clear and convincing evidence, see id. § 124.105(c).  The presumption of disadvantage is in 
    
             theory rebuttable by a third party.  See 49 C.F.R. § 23.69.  All businesses must 
    
             separately prove economic disadvantage.  See id. § 124.106(a).  Eligibility for the 
    
             § 8(a) program confers an automatic presumption of disadvantage under § 8(d). 
    
             See 15 U.S.C. § 637(d)(3)(C).
    
                  2.  Subsection 8(d)
    
                  The relevant portions of § 8(d) in themselves require only the inclusion of a 
    
             provision in federal contracts stating the government's policy of maximizing 
    
             contracting opportunities for small businesses, including those owned and 
    
             controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals.  See 15 U.S.C. 
    
             § 637(d)(1)_(3).(35)  Subsection (d) is relevant to this litigation, however, insofar as 
    
             the definition set forth therein serves as a basis for certifying small businesses as 
    
             disadvantaged for purposes of compensating prime contractors under the SCC. 
    
             See 49 C.F.R. § 23.53.(36)  Like § 8(a), § 8(d) includes language instructing
             
             (34)       Although Adarand lacks standing to challenge the constitutionality of the 
             8(a) program per se, we consider its provisions insofar as they are relevant to 
             the use of racially_conscious presumptions in determining certification of DBEs 
             for the SCC program challenged here.
             (35)       There is no indication from any of the parties in their briefs or elsewhere 
             that the particular requirements of paragraphs (4)_(6) of 8(d) are at issue in the 
             instant lawsuit or that Adarand has and will continue to bid for contracts or 
             subcontracts covered by those paragraphs.  See 15 U.S.C. 637(d)(4)_(6).
             (36)       The relevant state DBE program at the time of the contract at issue, 
             under which Adarand's competitor was certified as a DBE, provided that "persons 
             who are members of [specified racial/ethnic minorities] are `rebuttably presumed' 
             to be socially and economically disadvantaged."  (Appellants' App. at 131.) 
             Pursuant to Adarand VI, because Colorado's revised program may be inconsistent 
             with federal requirements, we direct our inquiry to the possibility of reinstatementof the prior state DBE certification requirements, as informed by federal law and 
             regulation.
             
     
             contractors to afford a presumption of social disadvantage based on race.  See id. 
    
             The Court stated that certain regulations based on § 8(d) "appear[] to require an 
    
             individualized, although `less restrictive,' showing of economic disadvantage." 
    
             Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 207 (quoting 13 C.F.R. § 124.106(b)).  However, other 
    
             regulations provide for presumptions of both social and economic disadvantage. 
    
             See Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 207_08 (citing 48 C.F.R. §§ 19.011, 19.703(a)(2)). 
    
             The Court was thus "left with some uncertainty as to whether participation in the 
    
             [§] 8(d) subcontracting program requires an individualized showing of economic 
    
             disadvantage."  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 208.(37)  Both presumptions of 
    
             disadvantage are theoretically rebuttable by a third party.  (See Appellants' App. 
    
             at 131.)
    
                              B.  STURAA and ISTEA provisions
    
                  STURAA and ISTEA are relevant insofar as they incorporate the 
    
             presumption of disadvantage from SBA § 8(d).  See STURAA § 106(c)(2)(B), 
    
             ISTEA § 1003(b)(2)(B) (providing that the term "socially and economically disadvantaged individual" has the meaning of such term under SBA § 8(d) "and 
    
             relevant subcontracting regulations promulgated pursuant thereto.").  Both 
    
             measures set forth aspirational goals of 10% DBE participation in federal 
    
             subcontracting.  See ISTEA § 1003(b)(1).
    
                           C.  Subcontracting Compensation Clause
    
                  The particular means of implementation of the various statutory goals and 
    
             directives at issue in this litigation is the SCC.  This clause provides a financial 
    
             bonus of up to 10% of an approved subcontract (no more than 1.5% or 2% of the 
    
             original contract, depending on how many DBEs are employed) to a prime 
    
             contractor in return for employing a DBE.  (See Appellants' App. at 55_56.)(38)
             (37)       As noted, those portions of 8(d) at issue here perhaps may be more 
             properly characterized as a requirement that a clause be included in contracts than 
             as a discrete program.  However, the Supreme Court has characterized the 
             requirements as a discrete program, and we note that they are certainly relevant to 
             the SCC program at issue because they inform the criteria for certification of 
             DBE participants by state agencies.
             (38)       The Supreme Court in Adarand III stated that "[f]ederal law requires that 
             a subcontracting clause similar to the one used here must appear in most federal 
             agency contracts, and it also requires the clause to state that `[t]he contractor shall 
             presume that socially and economically disadvantaged individuals include Black 
             Americans, Hispanic Americans, Native Americans, Asian Pacific Americans, and 
             other minorities, or any other individual found to be disadvantaged by the [Small 
             Business] Administration pursuant to section 8(a) of the Small Business Act.'" 
             515 U.S. at 205 (quoting 15 U.S.C. 637(d)(2), (3)).  However, examination of 
             the statute reveals that 15 U.S.C. 637, while providing for inclusion in most 
             federal agency contracts of a clause stating that "[i]t is the policy of the United 
             States that . . . small business concerns owned and controlled by socially and 
             economically disadvantaged individuals, . . . shall have the maximum practicable 
             opportunity to participate in the performance of contracts let by any Federal 
             agency," 15 U.S.C. 637(d)(3)(A), the relevant provisions of 8(d) do not 
             require the particular contract provision at issue here: "[m]onetary compensation . 
             . . for awarding subcontracts to small business concerns owned and controlled by 
             socially and economically disadvantaged individuals," Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 
             209 (citation omitted).  Cf. 15 U.S.C. 637(d)(4)(E).  Rather, that clause, theSCC, was established administratively by the Federal Lands Highway Program 
             ("FLHP") of the Department of Transportation ("DOT") pursuant to the FLHP's 
             obligations under 15 U.S.C. 644(g).  (See Appellants' App. at 33.)  In Adarand 
             II, 16 F.3d at 1545_56, ("Adarand II"), we concluded that the FLHP was acting 
             within its delegated power under 644(g) in promulgating the SCC.  The 
             Supreme Court, in altering the equal protection standard of scrutiny applicable to 
             federal action in Adarand III, did not disturb this statutory conclusion.  Therefore 
             it remains law of the case that the SCC constitutes an exercise of the FLHP's 
             delegated authority under 644(g), and we discern no clear error in that prior 
             decision or manifest injustice sufficient to warrant overriding the law of the case 
             doctrine.  See Agostini, 521 U.S. at 236; McIlravy, 204 F.3d at 1034_35.
             
     
             Subcontractors must be certified as DBEs by "the SBA, a state highway agency, 
    
             or some other certifying authority acceptable to the contracting officer" pursuant 
    
             to the "[§] 8(a) or [§] 8(d) program, or certification by a State under the DOT 
    
             regulations."  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 209_10.
    
                                   D.  Post_1996 Changes
    
                  1.  SBA
    
                  There have been no significant changes to § 637(a) or (d) relevant to the 
    
             Adarand litigation after 1996.  Virtually the only changes to these statutory 
    
             sections were additions of language including other groups in the SBA's 
    
             affirmative action program: 1995 (women); 1998 ("HUBZone small business 
    
             concerns"); and 2000 (veterans).  Likewise, the key language in 
    
             § 644(g)(1)_"The Government_wide goal for participation by small business 
    
             concerns owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals shall be established at not less than 5 percent of the total value of all 
    
             prime contract and subcontract awards for each fiscal year"_has not changed. 
    
             However, § 644(g)(1) has been amended at various times during the litigation to 
    
             include government_wide contracting goals for other groups, such as women, 
    
             service_disabled veterans, and HUBZone small business concerns.
    
                  Of the regulations implementing § 8(a) of the SBA, 13 C.F.R. §§ 124.1 et 
    
             seq.,(39) two regulations_those defining social and economic disadvantage_are 
    
             relevant to this litigation and differ significantly from their 1996 counterparts. 
    
             The most extensive changes were made in 1998 and are present in the current 
    
             regulations.
    
                  The regulation defining social disadvantage are presently located at 13 
    
             C.F.R. § 124.103, and its language, preceding the list of presumptively socially 
    
             disadvantaged groups, has changed.  The current regulation states:  "There is a 
    
             rebuttable presumption that the following individuals are socially disadvantaged . 
    
             . . ."  13 C.F.R. § 124.103(b)(1) (2000); see also id. § 124.103(b)(3) ("The 
    
             presumption of social disadvantage may be overcome with credible evidence to
             
    
    
    
    
    
             (39)       The 8(d) program regulations are located at 48 C.F.R. pt. 19, but they 
             specifically incorporate the definitions of "small disadvantaged business concern" 
             contained in 13 C.F.R. pt. 124, subpt. B.  See 48 C.F.R. 19.001 (2000); 13 
             C.F.R. 124.1002(a) (2000) (incorporating 13 C.F.R. pt. 124, subpt. A).
             
     
             the contrary.").  This change reemphasizes that the presumption of social 
    
             disadvantage based on group membership is not absolute.
    
                  In addition, the burden on members of unlisted groups to show they are 
    
             socially disadvantaged has been reduced.  Currently, social disadvantage may be 
    
             established by a "preponderance of the evidence," rather than by the former "clear 
    
             and convincing" evidentiary standard.  Compare 13 C.F.R. § 124.103(c)(1) (2000) 
    
             with 13 C.F.R. § 124.105(c)(1) (1997).  The Small Business Administration 
    
             explains that this change was meant to more narrowly tailor the § 8(a) program in 
    
             light of Adarand III.  See 8(a) Business Development/Small Disadvantaged 
    
             Business Status Determinations, 63 Fed. Reg. 35,726, 35,728 (1998) ("In response 
    
             to the Supreme Court's decision in Adarand [III] . . . , the Department of Justice 
    
             recommended the `preponderance of the evidence' standard for government_wide 
    
             disadvantaged business programs.  [The Small Business Administration] . . . 
    
             continues to believe that the use of this standard strengthens the defense of the [§] 
    
             8(a) B[usiness]D[evelopment] program.").
    
                  The relevant regulations regarding economic disadvantage are presently 
    
             located at 13 C.F.R. § 124.104.  The Adarand III majority expressed concern 
    
             about the "apparent discrepancy between the definitions of which socially 
    
             disadvantaged individuals qualify as economically disadvantaged for the [§] 8(a) 
    
             and [§] 8(d) programs."  Adarand III, 515 U.S. at 238_39.  The new regulations
             
     
             rectify that discrepancy, retaining the more precise definition previously 
    
             applicable to the § 8(a) program, which requires comparing the applicant to those 
    
             who are not socially disadvantaged.  See 13 C.F.R. § 124.104(a) (2000).  The 
    
             current regulations also impose a new requirement on applicants:  They must 
    
             submit a narrative statement describing their economic disadvantage.  See id. 
    
             § 124.104(b)(1) (2000).
    
                  As to duration of DBE certification, the current § 8(d) certification program 
    
             regulations provide for certification of a business as socially disadvantaged for 
    
             three years after either the initial certification or other administrative 
    
             determination.  See 13 C.F.R. § 124.1014 (2000).  If a DBE wishes to retain its 
    
             certification for longer than three years, it must "submit a new application and 
    
             receive a new certification."  Id. § 124.1014(c).  
    
                  2.  STURAA, ISTEA, and TEA_21
    
                  The language in STURAA, ISTEA, and TEA_21 concerning the DBE 
    
             program is similar.  Notably, the requirement that "not less than 10 percent of the 
    
             amounts" authorized under those Acts "shall be expended with small business 
    
             concerns owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged 
    
             individuals" remains unchanged in all three statutes.  TEA_21 § 1101(b)(1), 112 
    
             Stat. at 113; ISTEA § 1003(b)(1), 105 Stat. 1919; STURAA § 106(c)(1), 101 Stat. 
    
             132.
    
    
     
                  The only significant change in the transportation appropriations statutes is 
    
             the addition in both § 1003(b) of ISTEA, 105 Stat. 1920_22, and § 1101(b)(6) of 
    
             TEA_21, 112 Stat. 114_15, of a requirement that the Comptroller General conduct 
    
             a study and report to Congress regarding several aspects of the DBE program.
    
                  In ISTEA § 1003(b)(5), 105 Stat. 1920_22, the Comptroller General is 
    
             given twelve months to study and prepare a report discussing: graduation from the 
    
             program; the extent of out_of_state contracting with disadvantaged businesses by 
    
             prime contractors; whether adjustments could be made "with respect to Federal 
    
             and State participation in training programs and with respect to meeting capital 
    
             needs and bonding requirements" to increase the success of disadvantaged 
    
             business enterprises; possible "revisions and additions to criteria used to 
    
             determine the performance and financial capabilities of" DBEs; the costs and 
    
             benefits of meeting the goal of 10% participation by DBEs; the effect of the 
    
             program on the construction industry; the certification process; and the 
    
             implementation of the program by states.
    
                  In TEA_21 § 1101(b)(6), 112 Stat. 114_15, the Comptroller General is given 
    
             three years to study and prepare a report discussing: the number, participation in 
    
             prime contracts and subcontracts, gross receipts, and net worth of DBEs; the 
    
             overall costs of the DBE program, "including administrative costs, certification 
    
             costs, additional construction costs, and litigation costs"; discrimination against
             
     
             DBEs in various markets including transportation contracting, financial, 
    
             insurance, credit and bonding; the costs of any court order striking down the DBE 
    
             program; and the impact of the program on competition and the creation of jobs.
    
                  The regulations implementing affirmative action programs of STURAA, 
    
             ISTEA, and TEA_21 have undergone the most change of any of the relevant 
    
             regulations at issue over the course of the instant litigation.  According to the 
    
             federal Department of Transportation, the changes were made "primarily in 
    
             response to the `narrow tailoring' requirements of Adarand [III]," and the final 
    
             rule "complies with the requirements that the courts have established for a 
    
             narrowly tailored affirmative action program."  Participation by Disadvantaged 
    
             Business Enterprises in Department of Transportation Programs, 64 Fed. Reg. 
    
             5096 (1999); see also id. at 5101_03 (discussing the requirements of narrow 
    
             tailoring and the ways in which the new regulations attempt to meet those 
    
             requirements).  The current regulations, which apply to any federal highway funds 
    
             authorized under ISTEA or TEA_21, see 49 C.F.R. § 26.3(a) (2000), are located at 
    
             49 C.F.R. pt. 26.
    
                  The current regulations specify that the presumption of economic 
    
             disadvantage automatically is rebutted for any individual whose net worth is 
    
             above $750,000, without a requirement of further proceedings.  See id. 
    
             § 26.67(b)(1) (2000).  This conforms with SBA regulations concerning re_
    
             certification of economic disadvantage.  See 13 C.F.R. § 124.104 (2000).  The 
    
             current regulations also retain the requirement that businesses not exceed a 
    
             certain amount of gross receipts in order to be eligible for the DBE program.  See 
    
             49 C.F.R. § 26.65(b) (2000).
    
                  Regarding the allocation of subcontracts to DBEs, the current regulations 
    
             explicitly prohibit the use of quotas.  See id. § 26.43(a).  Similarly, the current 
    
             regulations prohibit use of set_asides except in "limited and extreme 
    
             circumstances . . . when no other method could be reasonably expected to redress 
    
             egregious instances of discrimination."  Id. § 26.43(b).  Although acknowledging 
    
             that ISTEA and TEA_21 set a goal of 10% DBE participation in government 
    
             contracts, the current regulations term this "an aspirational goal at the national 
    
             level," id. § 26.41(b), which "does not authorize or require recipients to set 
    
             overall or contract goals at the 10 percent level, or any other particular level," id. 
    
    
     
             § 26.41(c).(40)
    
                  Extensive regulatory requirements must be met before goals may be set for 
    
             DBE participation in a particular market.  See id. § 26.45.  Goals must be based 
    
             on "demonstrable evidence of the availability of ready, willing and able DBEs relative to all businesses ready, willing and able to participate" and must make 
    
             "reference to the relative availability of DBEs in [the recipient's local] market." 
    
             Id. § 26.45(b).  In addition, goal setting must involve "examining all evidence 
    
             available in [the recipient's] jurisdiction."  Id. § 26.45(c).  Such evidence may 
    
             include census data and valid disparity studies.  See id. § 26.45(c)(1)_(3).  After 
    
             examining this evidence, the recipient must adjust its DBE participation goals by 
    
             examining the capacity of DBEs to perform needed work, disparity studies, and 
    
             other evidence.  See id. § 26.45(d).  When submitting these goals, the recipient 
    
             must include a description of the methodology and evidence used in setting them. 
    
             See id. § 26.45(f)(3).  Finally, there is no requirement that the recipient actually 
    
             meet its goals, merely that it make a good faith effort to do so; failure to meet 
    
             goals will not subject a recipient to penalties or to being held in noncompliance as 
    
             long as good faith efforts were made.  See id. § 26.47(a).
    
                  Wherever possible, the current regulations require recipients to use race_
    
             neutral means to "meet the maximum feasible portion" of their overall DBE 
    
             participation goals.  Id. § 26.51(a); see also id. § 26.51(f) (if a recipient can meet 
    
             its overall goals through race_neutral means, it must implement its program 
    
             without the use of contract goals).  The current regulations also outline several 
    
             race_neutral means available to program recipients including helping overcome
             
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
             (40)       The term "recipient" is defined by the regulations as "any entity, public 
             or private, to which DOT financial assistance is extended, whether directly or 
             through another recipient, through the programs of the . . . FHWA."  46 C.F.R. 
             26.5 (2000).  The FLHP is such a program and therefore is a "recipient" for 
             purposes of the relevant regulations.  See 23 C.F.R. 645.105(f) (2000).
             
     
             bonding and financing obstacles, providing technical assistance, establishing 
    
             programs to assist start_up firms, and other methods.  See id. § 26.51(b).
    
                  For those not falling into one of the categories to which a presumption of 
    
             social disadvantage applies, the current regulations retain procedures for non_
    
             minorities to participate in the DBE program.  Consistent with the changes in 
    
             SBA regulations, proof of social and economic disadvantage by those not so 
    
             presumed may be shown by a preponderance of the evidence.  See id. §§ 26.61(d), 
    
             26.67(d).  Additionally, the current regulations require recipients to make sure 
    
             DBEs are not "so overconcentrated in a certain type of work as to unduly burden 
    
             the opportunity of non_DBE firms to participate."  Id. § 26.33(a).
    
                  Finally, as to any part of the foregoing DBE statutory and regulatory 
    
             framework, the current regulations allow recipients to seek waivers and 
    
             exemptions, despite the already non_mandatory nature of the DBE programs.  See 
    
             id. § 26.15.  In this way, the statutory and regulatory scheme provides yet another 
    
             means of ensuring that the program is not applied more broadly than warranted.
    
                  3.  SCC
    
                  The government maintains, and Adarand does not dispute, that the SCC, 
    
             which spawned this litigation in 1989, is no longer in use.  (See Appellants' Supp. 
    
             Br. Attach. 1 (memorandum from Arthur E. Hamilton, Federal Lands Program 
    
             Manager to Federal Lands Highway Division Engineers stating that "[t]he SCC
             
     
             will not be placed in any future invitations for bids" and "shall be removed by 
    
             amendment from any invitations for bids where the bid opening has not taken 
    
             place").)  
    
                  In November 1997, before the discontinuation of its use, the SCC was 
    
             revised by the addition of a new section(41) which creates further conditions of 
    
             eligibility for the program.  (See id. Attach. 2 (new section of the SCC).)  To 
    
             begin with, subject to modification based on DBE availability, at least 10% of the 
    
             prime contract must go to DBEs for SCC eligibility.  If a DBE subcontractor is 
    
             hired, that DBE may only contract out to non_DBEs "for onsite work . . . 
    
             incidental to, and necessary for the accomplishment of," the subcontract, in an 
    
             amount not to exceed 50 percent of the value of the DBE's subcontract.  (Id. at 2.) 
    
             In addition to the 1.5_2% cap on the total amount of the prime contract that may 
    
             be awarded pursuant to the SCC, the new section adds a further cap of $50,000 if 
    
             subcontracting to one DBE and $100,000 if subcontracting to more than one DBE.
    
                  The revised SCC retains the provision furnishing prime contractors with 
    
             "[c]ompensation . . . to locate train, utilize, assist, and develop DBEs to become fully qualified contractors in the transportation facilities construction field," but 
    
             adds the explanation that this compensation is provided "to offset costs and 
    
             anticipated risks associated with awarding subcontracts to small business 
    
             concerns owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged 
    
             individuals (DBE)."  (Id. at 1.) 
    
                  Finally, the new section provides an alternative route to certification, "ad 
    
             hoc certification" based on "self certification" accompanied by the requisite 
    
             documents to demonstrate qualification for the program, as well as 
    
             "documentation showing the disposition of any previous application for 
    
             certification the subcontractor has made to any Federal, State or local Government 
    
             agency."  (Id.)  If a would_be self_certified DBE has already been rejected by a 
    
             government agency, ad hoc certification will not be granted "unless the reasons 
    
             for [the previous] denial have been resolved."  (Id.)
    
    
    
             (41)       It is unclear from the record whether the 1997 revision to the SCC 
             entailed the addition of a new section or the replacement of the previous one.  The 
             revision instructs those using the SCC to "[a]dd the following [revision]," 
             (Appellants' Supp. Br. Attach. 2 at 1), rather than replace the existing SCC, and 
             we thus assume the 1997 revision is an addition to the SCC.  However, in either 
             case, our analysis in this opinion remains the same.
             
    
    

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