WIENER, Circuit Judge:
The sole question for us to decide in this appeal is whether participants in the federal Housing Act voucher program (the “voucher program”) may bring a private action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983
to challenge the calculation of their utility allowances by public housing authorities under § 1437f(o)(2) of the United States Housing Act
and implementing regulations.
In answering this question, we need not and therefore do not reach the merits of the participating tenants’ underlying challenge; our inquiry is limited to whether Plaintiffs-Appellants have a private right of action.
Concluding that they do, we
reverse the district court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Plaintiffs-Appellants live in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, and participate in the voucher program under Section 8. Their residential rents and utility expenses are subsidized through federally-funded vouchers provided by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), administered locally by Defendanb-Appel-lee Housing Authority of Jefferson Parish, a public housing authority created by state law. Another Defendant-Appellee, the Louisiana Housing Development Corporation, is a privately held corporation that contracts with the Housing Authority to operate the voucher program in Jefferson Parish.
This “tenant-based” voucher program differs from traditional “project-based” public housing programs by assisting families meeting the statute’s low-income standard in renting housing in the private market. The voucher program thus gives participants the flexibility to choose among a variety of housing options. Further, unlike earlier tenant-based programs, which featured a statutory cap that limited a family’s permissible housing costs to 30 percent of adjusted monthly income, the current voucher program contains no such cap. It gives participants even greater flexibility in the housing market as well as access to more expensive units that better meet their needs. Under the current program, participating families
must
contribute
at least
30 percent of their adjusted monthly incomes to housing costs, and they
may
— but need not — spend more. Therefore, the choice of renting a costlier unit is entirely theirs.
In administering the voucher program, the public housing authority issues vouchers that are payable directly to a participant’s landlord under a housing assistance payment contract (“HAP contract”), the terms of which are governed by the statute and regulations.
Generally, the amount of this payment is calculated as “the amount by which the rent (including the amount allowed for tenant-paid utilities) exceeds ... 30 percent of the monthly adjusted income of the family.”
The “amount allowed for tenant-paid utilities” is determined by the public housing authority, which is directed by regulation to base the utility allowance “on the typical cost of utilities and services paid by energy-conservative households that occupy housing of similar size and type in the same locality ... us[ing] normal patterns of consumption for the community as a whole and current utility rates.”
The public housing authority is further required to “review its schedule of utility allowances each year, and must revise its allowance for a utility category if there has been a change of 10 percent or more in the utility rate since the last time the utility allowance schedule was revised.”
Plaintiffs-Appellants filed the instant lawsuit in the Eastern District of Louisiana in April of 2004, alleging that Defendants-Appellees (collectively, the “Housing Authority”) had not provided them appropriate utility allowances as required by the statute and regulations. Specifically, they contend that the Housing Authority has failed to use current utility rates in calculating the utility allowance, and that it had not revised its utility allowance schedule from 1995 to 2004 despite annual increases in utility rates of 10 percent or more in several years during that period.
The result, insist Plaintiffs-Appellants, is that their rent burdens have been higher than they would have been had the Housing Authority complied with the statute and the implementing regulations, which these participants seek to enforce through their lawsuit.
In October of 2004, the district court, without oral argument or hearing, granted the Housing Authority’s motion to dismiss under Rules 12(b)(1) and (6).
The district court held that the portions of the voucher program statute and implementing regulations pertaining to the utility allowance do not create individual federal rights that may be enforced by private participants through a § 1983 action. The district court also denied Plaintiffs-Appellants’ motion for leave to file a second amended complaint raising the same challenge.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s dismissal of a complaint under Rules 12(b)(1) and (6)
de novo,
taking the allegations of the dismissed complaint to be true.
III. ANALYSIS
Private individuals may bring lawsuits against state actors under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to enforce not only constitutional rights but also rights created by federal statutes.
It is essential to a private enforcement action under § 1983, however, that the federal statute in question
unambiguously
give rise to privately enforceable, substantive rights.
The inquiry in this context is virtually the same as that involved in private rights of action implied directly from a federal statute rather than by way of § 1983.
In either
instance, Congressional intent to create privately enforceable rights is the key.
The Supreme Court applies the three-part test that it enunciated in
Blessing v. Freestone
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WIENER, Circuit Judge:
The sole question for us to decide in this appeal is whether participants in the federal Housing Act voucher program (the “voucher program”) may bring a private action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983
to challenge the calculation of their utility allowances by public housing authorities under § 1437f(o)(2) of the United States Housing Act
and implementing regulations.
In answering this question, we need not and therefore do not reach the merits of the participating tenants’ underlying challenge; our inquiry is limited to whether Plaintiffs-Appellants have a private right of action.
Concluding that they do, we
reverse the district court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Plaintiffs-Appellants live in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, and participate in the voucher program under Section 8. Their residential rents and utility expenses are subsidized through federally-funded vouchers provided by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), administered locally by Defendanb-Appel-lee Housing Authority of Jefferson Parish, a public housing authority created by state law. Another Defendant-Appellee, the Louisiana Housing Development Corporation, is a privately held corporation that contracts with the Housing Authority to operate the voucher program in Jefferson Parish.
This “tenant-based” voucher program differs from traditional “project-based” public housing programs by assisting families meeting the statute’s low-income standard in renting housing in the private market. The voucher program thus gives participants the flexibility to choose among a variety of housing options. Further, unlike earlier tenant-based programs, which featured a statutory cap that limited a family’s permissible housing costs to 30 percent of adjusted monthly income, the current voucher program contains no such cap. It gives participants even greater flexibility in the housing market as well as access to more expensive units that better meet their needs. Under the current program, participating families
must
contribute
at least
30 percent of their adjusted monthly incomes to housing costs, and they
may
— but need not — spend more. Therefore, the choice of renting a costlier unit is entirely theirs.
In administering the voucher program, the public housing authority issues vouchers that are payable directly to a participant’s landlord under a housing assistance payment contract (“HAP contract”), the terms of which are governed by the statute and regulations.
Generally, the amount of this payment is calculated as “the amount by which the rent (including the amount allowed for tenant-paid utilities) exceeds ... 30 percent of the monthly adjusted income of the family.”
The “amount allowed for tenant-paid utilities” is determined by the public housing authority, which is directed by regulation to base the utility allowance “on the typical cost of utilities and services paid by energy-conservative households that occupy housing of similar size and type in the same locality ... us[ing] normal patterns of consumption for the community as a whole and current utility rates.”
The public housing authority is further required to “review its schedule of utility allowances each year, and must revise its allowance for a utility category if there has been a change of 10 percent or more in the utility rate since the last time the utility allowance schedule was revised.”
Plaintiffs-Appellants filed the instant lawsuit in the Eastern District of Louisiana in April of 2004, alleging that Defendants-Appellees (collectively, the “Housing Authority”) had not provided them appropriate utility allowances as required by the statute and regulations. Specifically, they contend that the Housing Authority has failed to use current utility rates in calculating the utility allowance, and that it had not revised its utility allowance schedule from 1995 to 2004 despite annual increases in utility rates of 10 percent or more in several years during that period.
The result, insist Plaintiffs-Appellants, is that their rent burdens have been higher than they would have been had the Housing Authority complied with the statute and the implementing regulations, which these participants seek to enforce through their lawsuit.
In October of 2004, the district court, without oral argument or hearing, granted the Housing Authority’s motion to dismiss under Rules 12(b)(1) and (6).
The district court held that the portions of the voucher program statute and implementing regulations pertaining to the utility allowance do not create individual federal rights that may be enforced by private participants through a § 1983 action. The district court also denied Plaintiffs-Appellants’ motion for leave to file a second amended complaint raising the same challenge.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s dismissal of a complaint under Rules 12(b)(1) and (6)
de novo,
taking the allegations of the dismissed complaint to be true.
III. ANALYSIS
Private individuals may bring lawsuits against state actors under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to enforce not only constitutional rights but also rights created by federal statutes.
It is essential to a private enforcement action under § 1983, however, that the federal statute in question
unambiguously
give rise to privately enforceable, substantive rights.
The inquiry in this context is virtually the same as that involved in private rights of action implied directly from a federal statute rather than by way of § 1983.
In either
instance, Congressional intent to create privately enforceable rights is the key.
The Supreme Court applies the three-part test that it enunciated in
Blessing v. Freestone
to determine whether, in enacting a particular statutory provision, Congress intended to create rights enforceable by private parties: (1) Congress must have intended that the provision in question benefit the private plaintiff; (2) the right assertedly protected by the statute must not be so “vague and amorphous” that its enforcement would strain judicial competence; and (3) the statute must unambiguously impose a binding obligation on the states, with the asserted right couched in mandatory rather than precatory terms.
The Court’s approach to § 1983 enforcement of federal statutes has been increasingly restrictive; in the end, very few statutes are held to confer rights enforceable under § 1983. The narrowness of the doctrine is typified in
Gonzaga University v. Doe,
the Court’s most recent pronouncement on this point, in which it made clear that it “reject[s] the notion that our cases permit anything short of an unambiguously conferred right to support a cause of action brought under § 1983.”
In
Gon-zaga,
in which the three
Blessing
factors were applied in evaluating a provision of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, the Court unsurprisingly held that the statutory language on which the plaintiffs relied does not support an action under § 1983.
We recognize at the outset, therefore, that the result we reach in this case is a rarity, particularly after
Gonzaga.
We are nevertheless convinced that its resolution is controlled by the Supreme Court’s pre-
Gonzaga
decision in
Wright v. City of Roanoke Redevelopment & Housing Authori
ty.
In that case, the Court interpreted a provision of the Housing Act that is
virtually identical
to the one at issue here, to support (1)
a § 1988 challenge
(2)
brought by public housing tenants
concerning (3) the
calculation of their utility allowances.
As
Wright
predated
Blessing
by a decade the Court could not have applied the
“Blessing
test” under that name, yet the Court’s analysis in
Wright
is wholly consistent with that employed in more recent cases, and indeed constitutes an indispensable element of the current methodology.
Moreover,
Gonzaga
expressly relied on
Wright,
pointing to it as a paradigmatic example of an appropriate case for finding the presence of a private right of action under § 1983
and leaving no doubt that
Wright
survives as good law.
A. Wright Dictates the Outcome in this Case
The plaintiffs in
Wright
were tenants in low-income housing projects owned by the City of Roanoke Redevelopment and Housing Authority. They sued the Authority under § 1983, alleging that it over-
billed them for their utilities and thereby violated the statutory rent ceiling that limited their rent to 30 percent of their adjusted monthly income. The statutory language at issue, commonly referred to as the Brooke Amendment, stated that “[a] family shall pay as rent for a dwelling unit assisted under this chapter (other than a family assisted under section 1437f(o)
of this title) ... 30 per centum of the family’s monthly adjusted income .... ”
The implementing HUD regulation, in turn, specified that the statutory term “rent” included “reasonable amounts of utilities determined in accordance with the [public housing authority’s] schedule of allowances for utilities supplied by the project.”
The Supreme Court in
Wright
concluded that “it is clear that
the regulations
gave low-income tenants an enforceable right to a reasonable utility allowance and that
the regulations were fully authorized by the statute.”
The Court found “nothing in the Housing Act or the Brooke Amendment evidencing] that Congress intended to preclude petitioners’ § 1983 claim .... ”
It emphasized that “[t]he Brooke Amendment could not be clearer .... [It] was a mandatory limitation focusing on the individual family and its income. The intent to benefit tenants is undeniable.”
The Court expressly determined that “the benefits Congress intended to confer on tenants are sufficiently specific and definite to qualify as enforceable rights under
Pennhurst
and § 1983, rights that are not ... beyond the competence of the judiciary to enforce.”
The Court was also unconvinced that “the remedial mechanisms provided [in the Housing Act were] sufficiently comprehensive and effective to raise a clear inference that Congress intended to foreclose a § 1983 cause of action for the enforcement of tenants’ rights secured by federal law.”
Plaintiffs-Appellants in the instant case rely heavily on the
Wright
precedent in arguing that they, too, have an enforceable right under the Housing Act to challenge the calculation of the utility allowance schedule. The Housing Authority’s responsive attempt to distinguish
Wright
is unconvincing. Although there are differences between the statutory provision involved in
Wright
and the one at issue here, our careful review of both convinces us beyond cavil that, in adopting the voucher program, Congress intended to create enforceable rights in participating tenants to the same extent as it did in enacting the statute implicated in
Wright.
The key distinction upon which the Housing Authority relies is the statutory cap limiting a participating family’s rent to 30 percent of adjusted monthly income under the Brooke Amendment (the provision at issue in
Wright),
while under § 1437f(o) (the voucher program at issue
here) a family may choose to pay a greater percentage of its income for housing. This is a classic distinction without a difference. In no way does it compel the conclusion that § 1437f(o)(2) does not create a federal right that can be enforced through § 1983.
We discern no meaningful difference between the statutory entitlement of the plaintiffs in
Wright
and that of Plaintiffs-Appellants here, regardless of the fact that the latter entitlement gives participants more choices. The effect of an insufficient utility allowance is the same in either case: Participants are forced to pay more out of pocket than 30 percent of their incomes for housing.
Further, even though the government housing assistance provided under the voucher program is located in a different section of the Housing Act, when we take the entirety of the legislative enactment into account,
we see that Congress acted with precisely the same overarching intent in both sections, viz., to assist low-income families in obtaining a decent place to live.
Logic prevents the conclusion that Congress could have intended to create enforceable rights for one group of Housing Act rental assistance recipients but not the other. Indeed, in the voucher program Congress essentially validated
Wright’s
holding.
The Supreme Court’s holding in
Wright
that Congress intended for the complaining tenants to have an enforceable right under the Housing Act and thus be able to challenge the calculation of the utility allowance
schedule, applies with equal force to the instant case.
(1) Congressional Intent to Benefit Plaintiffs
Congress’s intent to provide meaningful housing assistance benefits to individual families participating in the voucher program is just as undeniable as it was with respect to families covered under the Brooke Amendment.
The statutory language could not be clearer
in providing for “the monthly assistance payment for a family receiving assistance.”
Still, the Housing Authority argues in its appellate brief that Congress did not so clearly intend to benefit voucher program participants because the statutory language “addresses rights and duties that flow between the [public housing authority] and the landlord, while the participants are indirect beneficiaries.”
According to the Housing Authority, the statute’s “focus is on fair compensation to the landlord. Rather than being concerned with the needs of these individuals, the statute is concerned with requiring these individuals to pay what Congress has determined to be their fair share of the rent.”
This distortion of the statute flies in the face of its plain language. The fact that the assistance payments happen to be disbursed directly to the landlord rather than to the tenant is of no consequence. Congress plainly expressed its intent to provide housing assistance for the benefit of the low-income families participating in the program
; it would be absurd to treat the voucher program as a landlords’ relief act!
If anything, the benefit to participants under § 1437f(o)(2) is even more direct than the benefit that the Supreme Court so construed in
Wright.
The Court observed that the Brooke Amendment “was a mandatory
limitation
focusing on the individual family and its income.”
The language of that amendment that the Court held to provide an undeniable benefit stated only that “[a] family shall pay as rent ... 30 per centum of the family’s monthly adjusted income”
; the government assistance to cover any remaining housing costs was merely implied. In contrast, the benefit provided by the statutory language of the voucher program is undeniably direct. Its object is the
“monthly assistance payment for a family,”
a tangible, government-funded benefit focused directly on the family. Even though the voucher is made
payable
to the landlord, Congress’s obvious intent was for such payment to benefit the participating tenant.
The Housing Authority also' asserts that, unlike in
Wright,
when “resort to the HUD regulation was not necessary to establish the right,” Plaintiffs-Appellants in the present case “must reach through the statute to find the right to a utility allow-
anee schedule that is created by a regulation .... ” Yet, once again, the statutory basis for private enforcement is even stronger here than it was in
Wright
In fact, the Housing Authority’s argument gets it exactly backwards.
The statutory language at issue in
Wright
made no mention at all of the utility allowance. It provided only for “rent,” which was subsequently
defined
— by
regulation
— to include “reasonable amounts of utilities determined in accordance with the [public housing authority’s] schedule of allowances for utilities supplied by the project.”
In contrast, the statutory language of the voucher program unmistakably provides^ — in the text of the act itself — for an “amount [to be] allowed for tenant paid utilities.”
Contrary to the Housing Authority’s assertion, the HUD regulations are not necessary to establish Plaintiff-Appellants’ right to the utility allowance, and certainly no more so than they were in
Wright,
where such an allowance was not even mentioned in the text of the statute itself. Congress’s intent to benefit Plaintiffs-Appellants here cannot be gainsaid.
(2) Enforcement Not Beyond Judicial Competence
The regulatory commands to public housing authorities — (1) to base the utility allowance “on the typical cost of utilities and services paid by energy-conservative households that occupy housing of similar size and type in the same locality ... us[ing] normal patterns of consumption for the community as a whole and current utility rates,”
and (2) to “review [the] schedule of utility allowances each year, and ... revise [the] allowance for a utility category if there has been a change of 10 percent or more in the utility rate since the last time the utility allowance schedule was revised”
— are not beyond the competence of the judiciary to enforce. As the Supreme Court observed in
Wright,
“[t]he regulations ... specifically set out guidelines that the [public housing authorities] were to follow in establishing utility allowances”; and the Court concluded that this mandate was not so vague and amorphous as to exceed the ability of the judicial branch to enforce.
The Housing Authority argues further that the discretion it enjoys in calculating the utility allowance schedule renders the statute and regulations unenforceable in the courts. It characterizes as “inherently imprecise [the] task to determine the amorphous ‘typical cost of utilities and services paid by energy-conservative households that occupy housing of similar size and type’ in Jefferson Parish.” Although the calculation and maintenance of the utility allowance schedule may not be an exact science, courts surely are capable of at least reviewing the actions taken by public housing authorities to ensure that they have acted within their discretion.
Additionally, the re
quirement that public housing authorities review their allowances each year and revise them “if there has been a change of 10 percent or more in the utility rate” since the last revision, admits of no discretion at all and could easily be determined and enforced by a court. In short, just as the Supreme Court held in
Wright,
we hold that the statute and regulations pertaining to the utility allowance are not so vague and amorphous as to be beyond the competence of the judiciary to enforce.
(S) Statute Unambiguously Imposes A Binding Obligation In Mandatory Terms
Together, the plain statutory provision for “the amount allowed for tenant-paid utilities,” and, in turn, the wording of the implementing regulation specifying the method and calculation to be used in setting the allowance, unambiguously impose a binding obligation on public housing authorities. Referring our attention back to the first step of the analysis, the Housing Authority argues that somehow it is not bound by the obligation to maintain the utility allowance in conformity with the regulation, arguing that its only obligation is to HUD, and that it has none to program participants. This argument fails for the reasons we have already discussed.
The Housing Authority next contends that its obligations are not binding because HUD may waive them for good cause.
This argument fails, however, for the simple reason that there is no record evidence (or contention) that the Housing Authority ever applied for any such waiver, much less received one. The regulations are binding on the Housing Authority unless and until HUD should grant it a waiver. Moreover, the extent of any waiver relating to the utility allowance that the Housing Authority might obtain would be restricted to the requirement that the Housing Authority revise the allowance when there is an annual utility rate increase of 10 percent or more: HUD has never provided for waivers of the other regulatory requirements that the Housing Authority is alleged to have violated.
The statute and regulations unambiguously impose binding obligations on public housing authorities vis-a-vis the calculation, maintenance, and revision of utility allowances.
(I) No Comprehensive Enforcement Scheme
Even when, as here, our analysis of the
Blessing
factors leads to the conclusion that Congress intended to create privately enforceable rights, “there is only a rebut-table presumption that the right is enforceable under § 1983.”
This is because the possibility exists that Congress could have foreclosed that remedy by providing another.
“When the remedial devices provided in a particular Act are sufficiently comprehensive, they may suffice to demonstrate congressional intent to preclude the
remedy of suits under § 1983.”
The Housing Authority argues in its appellate brief that here, “[t]he remedy for a [public housing authority’s] failure to comply with HUD regulations ranges from a reduction in the amount of funds paid to [it] by HUD up to a complete termination from the program.”
The Housing Authority advances further that even though the regulations require public housing authorities to provide an opportunity for informal hearings concerning the application of the utility allowance schedule to a particular family’s needs, these regulations do not require such hearings concerning the establishment of the utility allowance schedule itself.
As in
Wright,
however, there is absolutely no indication in the statute that Congress intended for
exclusive
enforcement authority to be vested in HUD.
“HUD’s authority to audit, enforce annual contributions contracts, and cut off federal funds ... are generalized powers [that] are insufficient to indicate a congressional intention to foreclose § 1983 remedies.”
Both methods of enforcement, i.e., HUD oversight and private actions under § 1983, may coexist if Congress so intends. And, even though
Gonzaga
emphasized
Pennhurst’s
observation that Spending Clause legislation is most often enforced by the withholding of federal funds rather than by private lawsuits,
the Court recognized and approved of
Wright
as an exception to this general rule. The Court reasoned that the lack of a sufficient federal review mechanism permitting tenants to complain of purported noncompliance weighed against a conclusion that Congress intended to preclude enforcement under § 1983.
Here, as acknowledged by the Housing Authority, voucher program participants are not entitled under the regulations to a hearing concerning establishment of the utility allowance schedule, and no other avenue of relief is provided. There simply is no comprehensive federal remedial scheme provided for the voucher program that would demonstrate Congressional intent to preclude Plaintiffs-Appellants’ right to bring a § 1983 suit.
B. Banks v. Dallas Housing Authority
We turn briefly to the Housing Authority’s contention that this case is not governed by
Wright
but by our decision in
Banks v. Dallas Housing Authority,
in which we considered a different provision of the Housing Act and determined that it did not create a right enforceable under § 1983.
The Housing Authority’s reliance on
Banks
is misplaced: The statutory provision at issue in that case does not even resemble the one that Plaintiffs-Appellants seek to enforce here.
Banks
dealt with an earlier version of 42 U.S.C. § 1437f(e), which authorized HUD to “make assistance payments ... pursuant to a contract with owners ... who agree to
upgrade housing so as to make and keep such housing
decent, safe, and sanitary
)>
Banks
is helpful in the present case only as a reference point along the continuum of decisions concerning § 1983 enforcement of asserted federal statutory rights. The obvious differences between the statutory provision considered in
Banks
and the one at issue here plainly put
Banks
at the opposite end of the spectrum, indeed very near Gonzaga.
Congress’s requirement in the former § 1437f(e) that owners keep and maintain their properties “decent, safe, and sanitary” as a condition of their receipt of funds, is easily distinguished from its provision in § 1437f(o)(2) for a “monthly assistance payment
for the family,”
including a reasonable utility allowance, obviously a tangible government benefit that is directly focused on the family and its income. This provision much more closely resembles the Brooke Amendment at issue in
Wright
than it does the former § 1437f(e).
Banks
simply has no bearing on this case.
IV. CONCLUSION
We reverse the order of the district court dismissing Plaintiffs-Appellants’ claim on grounds that they do not have a right to sue under § 1983 to enforce the statute and regulations concerning the calculation and revision of their utility allowances. Although the statutory provision sought to be enforced in this case and that involved in
Wright
are not the same verbatim, the differences between them are immaterial to the issue of § 1983 enforcement, and the Supreme Court’s decision and reasoning in
Wright
control the outcome here. The Housing Authority’s attempts to distinguish
Wright,
and to liken this case to our decision in
Banks,
are unpersuasive. Application of the
Blessing
factors bolsters our conclusion that the Congressional intent underlying the Brooke Amendment at issue in
Wright,
as discerned by the Supreme Court, is equally present here. We hold that in adopting § 1437f(o)(2), Congress intended to grant to voucher program participants like these Plaintiffs-Appellants, federal rights enforceable under § 1983. For these reasons, the decision of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.