Texas Department of Commerce v. United States Department of Labor

137 F.3d 329, 1998 WL 113521
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1998
Docket97-60018
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 F.3d 329 (Texas Department of Commerce v. United States Department of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Department of Commerce v. United States Department of Labor, 137 F.3d 329, 1998 WL 113521 (5th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

WISDOM, Senior Circuit Judge:

The Texas Department of Commerce (Texas Commerce) petitions this Court to review the final decision of the United States Department of Labor (DOL) disallowing $617,-171 in expenditures claimed under the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA) 1 for the grant years of 1989,1990, and 1991. We find that the DOL failed to establish a prima facie ease that Texas Commerce spent JTPA funds unlawfully. We reverse the DOL’s decision.

I.

Congress provides federal funding to state governments under the JTPA to finance job training and placement programs for economically disadvantaged individuals. From 1989 through 1992, the years in question in this suit, Texas Commerce was the designated recipient of these funds for the state of Texas. 2 Texas Commerce allocated its funds among several service delivery areas including the one administered by the Middle Rio Grande Development Council. The DOL challenged the Middle Rio Grande Development Council’s expenditures in this ease.

The administrator of the JTPA funds for a given service delivery area must allocate its expenditures among three categories: train *331 ing, administration, and participant support. 3 The administrator may not spend more than 15% of its allocated funds in any given fiscal year for administrative costs. 4 It may not spend more than 80% of its funds on the combined total of administrative expenses and participant support without receiving a waiver from the state. 5 Each state is primarily responsible for establishing guidelines to ensure that expenditures are charged to the proper cost category. 6 The state’s authority to establish guidelines is prescribed to the extent that the DOL has issued its own regulations. 7

During the years in question, administrators of service delivery areas were authorized to spend JTPA funds on “employment generating activities to increase job opportunities for eligible individuals in the area”. 8 The DOL regulations prohibited charging expenditures for employment generating activities to the training cost category, 9 but those regulations did not explicitly state whether these costs were classified as either administrative or participant support expenditures. The Middle Rio Grande Development. Council charged its expenditures for employment generating activities to participant support. By doing this, the Middle Rio Grande Development Council was able to spend JTPA funds on employment .generating activities without encountering the 15% limit on administrative expenditures. 10

The DOL’s Office of the Regional Inspector General audited the Middle Rio Grande Development Council’s JTPA programs. The inspector general’s office sent a copy of the audit report to the DOL’s grant officer who disallowed $822,257 in expenditures charged to the participant support cost category for employment generating activities. The grant officer maintained that these expenditures could be charged only to administration and were, therefore, subject to the 15% limit.

Texas Commerce appealed the grant officer’s decision to an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). The Middle Rio Grande Development Council intervened in the appeal. The ALJ reversed the grant officer’s decision in its entirety. The ALJ found that the DOL failed to establish a prima facie case that the Middle Rio Grande Development Council violated the JTPA and that the Middle Rio Grande Development Council classified its expenditures properly.

The DOL appealed to an Administrative Review Board which reversed the ALJ’s decision and disallowed $628,115 in expenditures. The Board found that the DOL met its burden of producing evidence of a prima facie violation of the JTPA and that Texas Commerce failed to meet its burden of persuasion to show that it classified the expenditures properly. The Board found that the burden of persuasion on Texas Commerce required it to trace expenditures for employment generating activities to specific, identifiable individuals before those expenditures could be charged to participant support. Texas Commerce petitions this Court to review the Board’s decision under 29 U.S.C. § 1578(a). Only $617,171 remains in issue. 11

II.

Our review of the final decision of the DOL disallowing expenditures under the JTPA is limited. 12 “If the language of the *332 JTPA is plain, we must enforce the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress. If the statute is ambiguous, however, we must defer to reasonable interpretations of the statute by the [DOL].” 13 The DOL’s factual findings shall be conclusive if supported by substantial evidence. 14

At the ALJ’s hearing, the DOL bore the burden of production to prepare and file a report in support of the grant officer’s decision to disallow expenditures. 15 As the party seeking to overturn the grant officer’s decision, Texas Commerce bore the burden of persuasion. 16 The key issue before us is to determine the nature and extent of these respective burdens. ■

Texas Commerce was required to maintain records adequate to show that JTPA funds were spent lawfully. 17 These records enable the DOL to audit these JTPA programs to determine which expenditures should be allowed. 18 Texas Commerce does not bear the initial burden of justifying its expenditures before the ALJ, however. That burden rests upon the DOL which must produce evidence sufficient to establish a prima facie case. 19 This requires evidence sufficient for a reasonable person to conclude that JTPA funds were spent unlawfully. 20 If the records of Texas Commerce were inadequate to show that JTPA funds were spent lawfully, the DOL could meet its burden by establishing the inadequacy of the records. 21 The DOL maintains that these records were inadequate because they did not trace expenditures for employment generating activities to specific, identifiable individuals. We find that the DOL and the Board which accepted the DOL’s argument are in error.

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137 F.3d 329, 1998 WL 113521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-department-of-commerce-v-united-states-department-of-labor-ca5-1998.