BOWNES, Circuit Judge.
Defendants-appellants Edward J. King, et al., appeal what they assert are “orders” of the district court, issued in the five consolidated cases concerning the rights of mentally retarded citizens of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. They claim that these oral “orders,” made during the course of a district court hearing, alter the terms of the Personnel Decree entered into by the parties. We hold that the statements of the district court were not “orders” and that they, therefore, are not appealable.
This action arises out of five cases, filed as class actions on behalf of residents of five state schools for the mentally retarded. The first of those cases, brought in 1972, involved the Belchertown State School; the remaining suits, filed in 1974 and 1975, centered upon the Fernald State School, the Monson Developmental Center, the Wrentham State School and the Dever State School. All were suits against various officials of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, principally the Commissioner of the Department of Mental Health (DMH). These cases were consolidated in the district court, and were ultimately settled through consent decrees.
In addition to and separate from the five individual consent decrees, the parties entered into a “Final Decree on Personnel at the Five State Schools for the Mentally Retarded” (the “Personnel Decree”).
The Personnel Decree reduces to numerical form the personnel figures thought to satisfy federal requirements.
The process by which the parties reached agreement was lengthy and complex.
The district
court approved the final Personnel Decree on August 2, 1978. The decree superseded several earlier personnel agreements and was ultimately incorporated into the Interim Consent Decree, setting forth the basic obligations of the defendants to the plaintiff class. In the Personnel Decree, the defendants agreed to add 2,047 positions at the five state schools and delineated plans for staff recruitment and training.
The implementation pace varied among the schools, contingent upon such factors as transportation networks, local employment and the capacity of the institutions to absorb new staff.
To assist in the implementation process, the district court, at the suggestion of the parties, appointed a Court Monitor, on March 5, 1979.
Moreover, throughout the implementation phase, the district court conducted many hearings to assess the defendants’ progress. Some were held at the behest of the court, others at the request of the parties or the Court Monitor. This appeal stems from one of those hearings.
On October 31, 1979, the Court Monitor submitted to the parties “Report # 4: A Special Report on Personnel: Establishing Deadlines to Implement Consent Decree Staffing Requirements.” The report dealt with such subjects as the meaning of “compliance” under the Personnel Decree, vacancy rates and staff to client ratios, the role of the Department of Public Health, the role of the district court with respect to federal standards, and strategies for eliminating vacancies. By an October 31 order of the court, a hearing was scheduled for November 15, 1979, “for the purpose of discussing matters affecting compliance with the personnel decree of August, 1978.” Specific topics to be addressed included the Court Monitor’s report and recommendations on compliance deadlines (contained in his October 31 report).
The November 15th hearing on the Court Monitor’s report focused for the most part on the meaning of compliance. The defendants argued in the course of the hearing that compliance did not require that all 2,047 positions be filled, that paragraph 7 of the Decree allowed for a five percent vacancy rate.
The Court Monitor’s report stated that paragraph 7 requires special efforts on the defendants’ part, whenever vacancies exceed five percent, but that “no explicit allowance for such a vacancy rate is
incorporated in this or any other section.”
The Court Monitor further recommended that “[i]n the absence of a specific statement to the contrary ... ‘full staffing’ be interpreted as a 100% fill rate of authorized positions, not 95%.”
In other words, defendants would not be in compliance until the 2,047 positions specified in the decree were filled. The Court Monitor also recommended that a motion to the court be submitted for any modification of the personnel decree.
The matter of what constitutes personnel compliance is important to a determination of the issue of staff reallocation. The Personnel Decree, as the Court Monitor indicated, foresaw the process of staff reallocation — the movement of staff members into community based programs in conjunction with the transfer of residents of state schools to community settings (see Personnel Decree 110).
All parties agree with the general proposition that reallocation of staff from the schools to the community programs should not take place if the defendants are in violation of the Personnel Decree. The defendants claim that they would like to begin the transfer process. Whether they can do so is contingent upon compliance with the Personnel Decree. Hence the importance of resolving the question of whether the defendants are in compliance.
In addressing the compliance issue at the November 15th hearing, the court stated:
Let me tell you this. Compliance is 100 percent. That is what I am looking for, 100 percent.
Anything short of 100 percent, you have to file a motion here and be relieved.
It further explained:
The decree is to be complied with literally. Whatever the numbers call for in the decree, they are to be complied with to the number.
If you seek relief from a particular requirement of the decree, whether it be a date, a number in terms of personnel, a date for completion of a building, a date to report or anything else, you must come to this Court with a motion, timely filed, and request relief.
You are not to assume the authority for any de minimis rule. You are not to
assume that you may allocate from one institution to another. You are not to assume any such thing.
You are to comply literally with the terms of the decree.
The court, however, did remark:
I don’t want you to feel as though you are prohibited from doing anything. What I want you to understand is that if you want to depart from the standards that are called for both in the gross percentages, gross ratios and the specific allocation position by position, then you must come in here and get relief.
The reason that I insist on that is not because I want to run your institution. Indeed, I do not.
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BOWNES, Circuit Judge.
Defendants-appellants Edward J. King, et al., appeal what they assert are “orders” of the district court, issued in the five consolidated cases concerning the rights of mentally retarded citizens of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. They claim that these oral “orders,” made during the course of a district court hearing, alter the terms of the Personnel Decree entered into by the parties. We hold that the statements of the district court were not “orders” and that they, therefore, are not appealable.
This action arises out of five cases, filed as class actions on behalf of residents of five state schools for the mentally retarded. The first of those cases, brought in 1972, involved the Belchertown State School; the remaining suits, filed in 1974 and 1975, centered upon the Fernald State School, the Monson Developmental Center, the Wrentham State School and the Dever State School. All were suits against various officials of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, principally the Commissioner of the Department of Mental Health (DMH). These cases were consolidated in the district court, and were ultimately settled through consent decrees.
In addition to and separate from the five individual consent decrees, the parties entered into a “Final Decree on Personnel at the Five State Schools for the Mentally Retarded” (the “Personnel Decree”).
The Personnel Decree reduces to numerical form the personnel figures thought to satisfy federal requirements.
The process by which the parties reached agreement was lengthy and complex.
The district
court approved the final Personnel Decree on August 2, 1978. The decree superseded several earlier personnel agreements and was ultimately incorporated into the Interim Consent Decree, setting forth the basic obligations of the defendants to the plaintiff class. In the Personnel Decree, the defendants agreed to add 2,047 positions at the five state schools and delineated plans for staff recruitment and training.
The implementation pace varied among the schools, contingent upon such factors as transportation networks, local employment and the capacity of the institutions to absorb new staff.
To assist in the implementation process, the district court, at the suggestion of the parties, appointed a Court Monitor, on March 5, 1979.
Moreover, throughout the implementation phase, the district court conducted many hearings to assess the defendants’ progress. Some were held at the behest of the court, others at the request of the parties or the Court Monitor. This appeal stems from one of those hearings.
On October 31, 1979, the Court Monitor submitted to the parties “Report # 4: A Special Report on Personnel: Establishing Deadlines to Implement Consent Decree Staffing Requirements.” The report dealt with such subjects as the meaning of “compliance” under the Personnel Decree, vacancy rates and staff to client ratios, the role of the Department of Public Health, the role of the district court with respect to federal standards, and strategies for eliminating vacancies. By an October 31 order of the court, a hearing was scheduled for November 15, 1979, “for the purpose of discussing matters affecting compliance with the personnel decree of August, 1978.” Specific topics to be addressed included the Court Monitor’s report and recommendations on compliance deadlines (contained in his October 31 report).
The November 15th hearing on the Court Monitor’s report focused for the most part on the meaning of compliance. The defendants argued in the course of the hearing that compliance did not require that all 2,047 positions be filled, that paragraph 7 of the Decree allowed for a five percent vacancy rate.
The Court Monitor’s report stated that paragraph 7 requires special efforts on the defendants’ part, whenever vacancies exceed five percent, but that “no explicit allowance for such a vacancy rate is
incorporated in this or any other section.”
The Court Monitor further recommended that “[i]n the absence of a specific statement to the contrary ... ‘full staffing’ be interpreted as a 100% fill rate of authorized positions, not 95%.”
In other words, defendants would not be in compliance until the 2,047 positions specified in the decree were filled. The Court Monitor also recommended that a motion to the court be submitted for any modification of the personnel decree.
The matter of what constitutes personnel compliance is important to a determination of the issue of staff reallocation. The Personnel Decree, as the Court Monitor indicated, foresaw the process of staff reallocation — the movement of staff members into community based programs in conjunction with the transfer of residents of state schools to community settings (see Personnel Decree 110).
All parties agree with the general proposition that reallocation of staff from the schools to the community programs should not take place if the defendants are in violation of the Personnel Decree. The defendants claim that they would like to begin the transfer process. Whether they can do so is contingent upon compliance with the Personnel Decree. Hence the importance of resolving the question of whether the defendants are in compliance.
In addressing the compliance issue at the November 15th hearing, the court stated:
Let me tell you this. Compliance is 100 percent. That is what I am looking for, 100 percent.
Anything short of 100 percent, you have to file a motion here and be relieved.
It further explained:
The decree is to be complied with literally. Whatever the numbers call for in the decree, they are to be complied with to the number.
If you seek relief from a particular requirement of the decree, whether it be a date, a number in terms of personnel, a date for completion of a building, a date to report or anything else, you must come to this Court with a motion, timely filed, and request relief.
You are not to assume the authority for any de minimis rule. You are not to
assume that you may allocate from one institution to another. You are not to assume any such thing.
You are to comply literally with the terms of the decree.
The court, however, did remark:
I don’t want you to feel as though you are prohibited from doing anything. What I want you to understand is that if you want to depart from the standards that are called for both in the gross percentages, gross ratios and the specific allocation position by position, then you must come in here and get relief.
The reason that I insist on that is not because I want to run your institution. Indeed, I do not. It is because it’s the only way I know of to maintain control over this rather broad problem, and I don’t want to lose control over it.
With regard to the effect of the Department of Public Health’s survey to determine whether the schools were in compliance with federal standards, the court noted that the study “will be a source of information on compliance to be weighed by the court. The court may bar proposed reallocations if it finds that title XIX standards are not being met, even if the Department of Public Health finds otherwise.”
On November 19, 1979, the defendant moved that the district court commit its “orders” to writing to avoid any uncertainty as to their meaning. The court did not act on this motion. The defendants moved on November 26,1979, that the court vacate its oral “orders” of November 15 and allow the defendants to present additional material in support of their position with respect to the meaning and effect of the Personnel Decree.
At a hearing on December 15th, the district court refused to either reconsider or vacate the terms of compliance or the procedural requirements for relief set at the November hearing. Although the court had at the November hearing characterized its statement with respect to the Personnel Decree as an order, it stated at the hearing on December 18, 1979:
With respect to that motion to vacate to reconsider, I’ve already made some comments which I think cover that. I don’t consider I have an order outstanding which needs to be reconsidered. That’s my position with respect to these decrees, they [s/c] are to be considered literally.
If you think that’s an appealable statement, then appeal it.
The court did note, however, that it would be very much influenced by requests for relief from the decree, if supported by the Court Monitor, and particularly by the parties. The judge commented once again that he was “not saying that the decree cannot be varied or may not be varied, but will be done so only by leave of this Court so I can manage this case.”
Appellants bottom their appeal on the grounds that the hearing statements of the court were “orders” appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 or 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1).
On the merits, they argue that the district court erred in its determination that defendants must achieve a zero percent staff vacancy rate at the five schools for the mentally retarded in order to be in compliance with the Personnel Decree, and that they may not reallocate staff from the schools to community programs unless the
vacancy rate is zero percent or the court decides that circumstances warrant amendment of the Personnel Decree to permit the reallocation. Appellants also contend that the district court violated principles of equity and of federalism. For their part, appellees argue that the determinations of the district court are not appealable; that, even if the orders are appealable, they are well within the discretionary power of the district court to interpret or modify the terms of a consent decree; and that the issues of federalism or equitable jurisdiction are of minimal relevance in a case settled by consent decree.
Because we cannot review an action of the district court unless it is appealable, logic dictates that we consider the matter of appealability at the outset. Typically, a district court order is subject to review because it is either a final decision, 28 U.S.C. § 1291, or an interlocutory injunctive order, 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1).
The appeal-ability issue usually centers on one of two questions: whether the order is “final”
or whether the order is “injunctive.”
The inquiry involves classifying orders already determined to be orders. In the case at hand, an even more fundamental issue is before us — whether the statements of the district judge can be termed “orders” at all.
Our review of the hearings shows that in the context of a discussion regarding the Court Monitor’s report, the district court talked about the obligations of the parties and the process through which they could seek relief. Although the court’s words were forcefully expressed, we do not think they can be characterized as “orders.” Nothing that the court said compelled the parties to change their behavior. Moreover, they were not prevented from doing so. This is not a case in which the court denied a motion from which a party appeals. Nor did the court declare that it would not consider motions for relief from the decree; quite to the contrary. The defendants did not make such a motion. Appellants ask, in effect, that we assume that the district court would deny a motion that they have yet to make and that we then review this hypothetical denial.
We conclude that the district court correctly stated at the December hearing that it did not have an order outstanding; whatever the nomenclature used at the November hearing, the statements were not “orders.” Cases of this kind are particularly difficult because they involve courts in the task of designing social policy and restructuring institutions. Given the intricacies
involved, it is especially important that the issues before us be framed in a manner appropriate for review.
Because the statements are not “orders,” they cannot be appealed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 or 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). It follows that we lack jurisdiction to consider the merits.
Dismissed.
No costs to either party.