This week’s blog entry deals with what is a program under Title II of the ADA, and it also discusses the distinction in causation between the ADA and §504 of the Rehabilitation Act. The case of the day is Decker v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, here, a non-precedential decision decided by the Third Circuit on January 15, 2026. As usual, the blog entry is divided into categories and they are: facts; court’s reasoning that the equal protection claim does not survive; court’s reasoning that the ADA claim does survive but the Rehabilitation Act claim does not; and thought/takeaways. Of course, the reader is free to focus on any or all of the categories. However, this blog is pretty short, the reader will probably wind up reading the whole thing anyway.
I
Facts
It is a really straightforward set of facts. A blind man’s delay in parole placement was the result of his disability as well as his classification as a sex offender. He brought suit alleging violations of the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, ADA, and §504 of the Rehabilitation Act. The District Court dismissed all the claims and Decker appealed.
II
Court’s Reasoning That The Equal Protection Claim Does Not Survive
- Decker brought a “class of one,” claim under the Equal Protection Clause, alleging that he was intentionally treated differently from others similarly situated and there was no rational basis for the difference in treatment.
- When identifying those “similarly situated,” at the pleading stage, a plaintiff must adequately allege that they are alike in all relevant respects to the comparators by offering more than conclusory assertions.
- Decker fails on the comparator part because Pennsylvania law imposes unique collateral consequences on sex offenders, including consequences making it more difficult to qualify for housing. As a result, Decker is not similarly situated as to his placement in halfway houses even aside from other considerations.
III
Court’s Reasoning That the ADA Claim Does Survive but the Rehabilitation Act Claim Does Not
- The substantive standard for determining liability under §504 and Title II of the ADA are identical, except for causation.
- Stating a claim under the ADA or §504 means a plaintiff has to allege: 1) he is a qualified individual; 2) with a disability; 3) who was excluded from participation in or denied the benefits of the services, programs, or other activities for which a public entity is responsible, or was otherwise subjected to discrimination by a public entity; and 4) by reason of his disability. Only the third and fourth requirements are even debated in this case.
- Both the ADA and the Rehabilitation Act provide all-encompassing protection by defining the phrases “service, program, or activity,” under Title II and “program or activity,” under §504 to include all of the operations of a state instrumentality or anything a public entity does.
- Since the scope of the protection is extremely broad, plaintiff can define the specific programs or services at issue narrowly. So, the District Court defining the program broadly as any parole placement by the Department of Corrections was in error.
- Decker specifically sought placement in the Department of Correction’s halfway house program because halfway houses provide services that are often vital to a paroled inmate’s ability to reintegrate. For that reason, Decker rejected an offer from the Department of Corrections for placement in a personal care home reasoning that the personal care home was not a Department of Corrections owned or operated halfway house and did not offer equivalent services and benefits as provided in the halfway house program.
- In a footnote, the court noted that neither party disputed that Decker was a qualified individual with a disability or that he was denied participation in a Department of Corrections program. The parties also appeared to agree that the program at issue was the halfway house program. Finally, Decker did not challenge the district court’s dismissal of his ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims against individual defendants, as individual cannot be personally liable under those statutes.
- The District Court’s defining the program broadly so as to foreclose relief was a flawed analysis because Decker permissibly defined the relevant program with specificity. Since the program at issue as pleaded in Decker’s amended complaint, was the placement in a Department of Corrections owned or operated halfway house, Decker’s decision to refuse an offer for placement in a personal care home did not preclude his claim for denial of participation in that specific program.
- With respect to ADA causation, Decker’s claim survives because he has marshaled evidence showing that his disability was a reason that he was denied placement in the halfway house program since the ADA only requires but for causation.
- With respect to causation on the Rehabilitation Act, disability must be the sole cause of the discriminatory action. This is a standard that Decker cannot get past because of his sexual offender classification and the corresponding collateral consequences also contributing to the Department of Correction’s difficulty in placing him in a halfway house. Even the declaration that Decker obtained showing that disability was a reason for the delayed placement shows that his sexual offender classification was also a reason for the problems in placement.
- In a footnote, the court noted that Decker can pursue compensatory damages because he pleaded facts sufficient to show intentional discrimination under deliberate indifferent standard. Deliberate indifference means showing that the Department of Corrections: 1) had knowledge that a federally protected right is substantially likely to be violated; and 2) failed to act despite that knowledge. The relevant federally protected right is Decker’s right under the ADA to be free from disability discrimination. Decker also adequately pled that the Department of Corrections acted with deliberate indifference when despite it stating that Decker required minimal accommodations, it failed to place him in a halfway house due to the additional accommodations it maintained he needed. Further, in the same footnote, the court noted that Decker also pleaded defendant’s conduct caused him to lose his liberty as well at the benefits of the Department of Corrections’s halfway house program.
- Decker may pursue monetary damages to compensate for his loss of expectation interest and similar breach of contract claims flowing from that placement delay.
IV
Thoughts/Takeaways
- The equal protection claim failed because of the comparators not being equivalent. That said, equal protection claims for people with disabilities are a very tough sell to begin with as the equal protection classification that people with disabilities fall into depends upon the specific factual circumstances. With respect to accessing the courts, people with disabilities per Tennessee v. Lane, are at least in the intermediate scrutiny classification if not higher. With respect to employment, per Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama v. Garrett, people with disabilities are in the rational basis class. For everything else, people with disabilities can fall in any equal protection class depending on the facts and circumstances. It is extraordinarily difficult for a plaintiff to win an equal protection claim if they are placed in the rational basis class, which this court seemed to have been inclined to do if its reasoning is any indication. See also this blog entry.
- This is another case illustrating how causation under the ADA and causation under the Rehabilitation Act are very different from each other. That is, “by reason of,” and “solely by reason of,” mean very different things. Not that readers of this blog entry are surprised by any of this because we noted that probability in this particular blog entry.
- Courts overwhelmingly hold, as did this court, that a program of a public entity is anything a public entity does. So, that gives a plaintiff wide latitude to define a program in the way most helpful to the plaintiff.
- For how how to go about proving deliberate indifference, the landmark case in that area is the one that we discussed in this blog entry.
- We do know from this blog entry that emotional distress damages are not available under §504 of the Rehabilitation Act. We also know that the jury so to speak is out with respect to whether that same principle applies to Title II of the ADA. There are courts holding that the same principle does apply to Title II cases. Plaintiff’s lawyers are trying workarounds to that. One of the workarounds is expectation interest damages. This court specifically notes that loss of expectation interest is something that Decker can pursue. Breach of contract being another cause of action available to him as well.
- The decision is not precedential.
- Unreasonable delay can be a viable cause of action as we discussed here.
- With the exception of a case from the 11th Circuit when it comes to retaliation by an employee of a nonfederal governmental entity, here, the courts are unanimous in holding that none of the titles of the ADA impose personal liability.