Tarovisky v. United States ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •           In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    No. 19-04C
    (E-Filed: December 1, 2020)
    )
    JUSTIN TAROVISKY, et al.,                )
    )      Motion to Dismiss; RCFC 12(b)(6);
    Plaintiffs,                 )      Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), 29
    )      U.S.C. §§ 201-19; Anti-Deficiency Act
    v.                                       )      (ADA), 
    31 U.S.C. §§ 1341-42
    ;
    )      Government Employees Fair
    THE UNITED STATES,                       )      Treatment Act of 2019 (GEFTA); Pub.
    )      L. No. 116-1, 
    133 Stat. 3
     (2019).
    Defendant.                  )
    )
    Heidi R. Burakiewicz, Washington, DC, for plaintiff. Robert Depriest, Michael
    Robinson, and Judith Galat, of counsel.
    Erin K. Murdock-Park, Trial Attorney, with whom were Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant
    Attorney General, Robert E. Kirschman, Jr., Director, Reginald T. Blades, Jr., Assistant
    Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of
    Justice, Washington, DC, for defendant. Ann C. Motto, of counsel.
    OPINION AND ORDER
    CAMPBELL-SMITH, Judge.
    Plaintiffs in this putative collective action allege that the government, through
    several agencies, violated the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), 
    29 U.S.C. §§ 201-19
    , by
    failing to timely pay their earned overtime and regular wages during the partial
    government shutdown and lapse of appropriations that began on December 22, 2018. See
    ECF No. 17 at 2-3 (second amended complaint, hereinafter referred to as the complaint).
    On May 3, 2019, defendant moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim on
    which relief can be granted, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Rules of the United States
    Court of Federal Claims (RCFC), on the basis that the Anti-Deficiency Act (ADA), 
    31 U.S.C. §§ 1341-42
    , prohibited the government from paying employees. See ECF No. 28.
    In analyzing defendant’s motion, the court has considered: (1) plaintiffs’
    complaint, ECF No. 17; (2) defendant’s motion to dismiss, ECF No. 28; (3) plaintiffs’
    response to defendant’s motion, ECF No. 31; (4) defendant’s reply in support of its
    motion, ECF No. 35; (5) defendant’s first supplemental brief in support of its motion,
    ECF No. 37; (6) plaintiffs’ response to defendant’s first supplemental brief, ECF No. 38;
    (7) defendant’s second supplemental brief in support of its motion, ECF No. 46; (8)
    plaintiffs’ response to defendant’s second supplemental brief, ECF No. 54; (9)
    defendant’s third supplemental brief in support of its motion, ECF No. 56; and (10)
    plaintiffs’ response to defendant’s third supplemental brief, ECF No. 57. The motion is
    now fully briefed and ripe for ruling. 1 The court has considered all of the arguments
    presented by the parties, and addresses the issues that are pertinent to the court’s ruling in
    this opinion. For the following reasons, defendant’s motion is DENIED.
    I.     Background
    Beginning at 12:01 a.m. on December 22, 2018, the federal government partially
    shut down due to a lack of appropriations. See ECF No. 17 at 2, 8. The named plaintiffs
    in this case were, at the time of the shutdown, employees of one of the following fourteen
    agencies: (1) the Bureau of Prisons; (2) the Federal Emergency Management Agency;
    (3) the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement; (4) Voice of America; (5)
    the National Park Service; (6) the National Weather Service; (7) the United States Secret
    Service; (8) the United States Customs and Border Protection; (9) the Federal Bureau of
    Investigation; (10) the Bureau Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives; (11) the
    Transportation Security Administration; (12) the Drug Enforcement Administration; (13)
    the Food Safety Inspection Service; and (14) the Indian Health Service. See 
    id. at 4-8
    .
    In their complaint, plaintiffs allege that they are “excepted employees,” a term
    which refers to “‘employees who are funded through annual appropriations who are
    nonetheless excepted from the furlough because they are performing work that by law,
    1
    Defendant moves for dismissal of plaintiffs’ complaint for only one reason—“for failure
    to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.” ECF No. 28 at 6. In one of its supplemental
    briefs, defendant suggests that a recent decision issued by the Supreme Court of the United
    States, Maine Community Health Options v. United States, 
    140 S. Ct. 1308
     (2020), a case that
    does not involve FLSA claims, indicates that this court lacks jurisdiction to hear this case
    because the FLSA “contains its own provision for judicial review.” ECF No. 56 at 2. In the
    same brief, defendant acknowledges binding precedent from the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit to the contrary. See 
    id.
     (citing Abbey v. United States, 
    745 F.3d 1363
    (Fed. Cir. 2014)). The court will not review this entirely new basis for dismissal, which was
    made for the first time in defendant’s third supplemental brief, and which defendant
    acknowledges contradicts binding precedent. If defendant believes this court lacks jurisdiction
    to continue exercising its authority in this case, it may file a motion properly raising the issue.
    See Rule 12(h)(3) of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims (RCFC) (“If the
    court determines at any time that it lacks subject-matter jurisdiction, the court must dismiss the
    action.”).
    2
    may continue to be performed during a lapse in appropriations.’” 
    Id. at 2
     (quoting the
    United States Office of Personnel Management Guidance for Government Furloughs,
    Section B.1 (Sept. 2015)). Plaintiffs also allege that, in addition to being excepted
    employees required to work during a shutdown, they were also “classified as non-exempt
    from the overtime requirements of the [FLSA].” 
    Id. at 2-3
    . As a result of being
    categorized as non-exempt, excepted employees, plaintiffs were required to work during
    the shutdown, but were not paid minimum or overtime wages on their regularly
    scheduled paydays in violation of the FLSA. See 
    id. at 2-3
    .
    According to plaintiffs, defendant’s failure to timely pay their minimum and
    overtime wages was “willful, and in conscious or reckless disregard of the requirements
    of the FLSA.” 
    Id. at 14, 15
    . In support of this allegation, plaintiffs cite this court’s
    decision in Martin v. United States, 
    130 Fed. Cl. 578
     (2017), and allege that “[u]pon
    information and belief, [d]efendant conducted no analyses to determine whether its
    failure to pay [e]xcepted [e]mployees on their regularly scheduled payday complied with
    the FLSA.” 
    Id. at 11
    . Plaintiffs now “seek payment of wages owed, liquidated damages,
    and all appropriate relief under the FLSA.” 
    Id. at 3
    .
    II.    Legal Standards
    When considering a motion to dismiss brought under RCFC 12(b)(6), the court
    “must presume that the facts are as alleged in the complaint, and make all reasonable
    inferences in favor of the plaintiff.” Cary v. United States, 
    552 F.3d 1373
    , 1376 (Fed.
    Cir. 2009) (citing Gould, Inc. v. United States, 
    935 F.2d 1271
    , 1274 (Fed. Cir. 1991)). It
    is well-settled that a complaint should be dismissed under RCFC 12(b)(6) “when the facts
    asserted by the claimant do not entitle him to a legal remedy.” Lindsay v. United States,
    
    295 F.3d 1252
    , 1257 (Fed. Cir. 2002). “To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must
    contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is
    plausible on its face.’” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678 (2009) (quoting Bell Atl.
    Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 570 (2007)).
    III.   Analysis
    A.    Relevant Statutes
    This case fundamentally concerns the intersection of two statutes, the ADA and
    the FLSA. The ADA states that “an officer or employee” of the federal government
    “may not . . . make or authorize an expenditure or obligation exceeding an amount
    available in an appropriation or fund for the expenditure or obligation.” 
    31 U.S.C. § 1341
    (a)(1)(A). In addition, the ADA dictates that “[a]n officer or employee of the
    United States Government or of the District of Columbia government may not accept
    voluntary services for either government or employ personal services exceeding that
    authorized by law except for emergencies involving the safety of human life or the
    3
    protection of property.” 
    31 U.S.C. § 1342
    . In 2019, Congress amended the ADA,
    adding, in relevant part, the following:
    [E]ach excepted employee who is required to perform work during a covered
    lapse in appropriations[2] shall be paid for such work, at the employee’s
    standard rate of pay, at the earliest date possible after the lapse in
    appropriations ends, regardless of scheduled pay dates, and subject to the
    enactment of appropriations Acts ending the lapse.
    
    31 U.S.C. § 1341
    (c)(2) (footnote added). The amendment is commonly referred to as the
    Government Employees Fair Treatment Act of 2019 (GEFTA), Pub. L. No. 116-1, 
    133 Stat. 3
     (2019). The knowing or willful violation of the ADA is punishable by a fine of
    “not more than $5,000” or imprisonment “for not more than 2 years, or both.” 
    31 U.S.C. § 1350
    . And federal employees who violate the ADA “shall be subject to appropriate
    administrative discipline including, when circumstances warrant, suspension from duty
    without pay or removal from office.” 
    31 U.S.C. § 1349
    (a).
    Defendant separately has obligations to its employees pursuant to the FLSA,
    which governs minimum wage and overtime wage compensation for certain employees. 3
    See 
    29 U.S.C. § 213
     (identifying categories of exempt employees). The FLSA requires
    that the government “pay to each of [its] employees” a minimum wage. 
    29 U.S.C. § 206
    (a). Pursuant to the FLSA, the government also must compensate employees for
    hours worked in excess of a forty-hour workweek “at a rate not less than one and one-half
    times the regular rate at which [they are] employed.” 
    29 U.S.C. § 207
    (a)(1). Although
    the text of the statute does not specify the date on which wages must be paid, courts have
    held that employers are required to pay these wages on the employee’s next regularly
    scheduled payday. See Brooklyn Sav. Bank v. O’Neil, 
    324 U.S. 697
    , 707 (1945); Biggs
    v. Wilson, 
    1 F.3d 1537
    , 1540 (9th Cir. 1993). If an employer violates the FLSA’s pay
    provisions, the employer is “liable to the . . . employees affected in the amount of their
    unpaid minimum wages, or their unpaid overtime compensation, as the case may be.” 
    29 U.S.C. § 216
    (b). The employer may also be liable “in an additional equal amount as
    liquidated damages,” 
    id.,
     unless “the employer shows to the satisfaction of the court that
    the act or omission . . . was in good faith, and that [the employer] had reasonable grounds
    for believing that his act or omission was not a violation of the [FLSA],” 
    29 U.S.C. § 260
    .
    2
    The statute defines “covered lapse in appropriations” to mean “any lapse in
    appropriations that begins on or after December 22, 2018.” 
    31 U.S.C. § 1341
    (c)(1)(A).
    3
    The FLSA initially applied only to the private sector when enacted in 1938, but was
    amended to cover public employees in 1974. See Fair Labor Standards Amendments of 1974,
    Pub. L. No. 93-259, 
    88 Stat. 55
     (1974).
    4
    B.     The Court’s Reasoning in Martin Applies
    In its motion to dismiss, defendant first argues that plaintiffs’ complaint should be
    dismissed for failure to state a claim because the agencies for which appropriations
    lapsed on December 22, 2018, were prohibited by the ADA from paying their
    employees—even excepted employees who were required to work. See ECF No. 28 at
    12-14. This mandate, in defendant’s view, means that defendant cannot be held liable for
    violating its obligations under the FLSA. See 
    id.
     Defendant argues:
    When Congress criminalized payments during an appropriations lapse, it
    plainly precluded payments on the schedule plaintiffs assert is required by
    the FLSA. Federal officials who comply with that criminal prohibition do
    not violate the FLSA, and Congress did not create a scheme under which
    compliance with the [ADA] would result in additional compensation as
    damages to federal employees.
    
    Id. at 13
    .
    The court has previously ruled on the intersection of the ADA and the FLSA in the
    context of a lapse in appropriations. See Martin, 
    130 Fed. Cl. 578
    . In Martin, plaintiffs
    were “current or former government employees who allege[d] that they were not timely
    compensated for work performed during the shutdown, in violation of the [FLSA].” 
    Id.
    at 580 (citing 
    29 U.S.C. § 201
     et seq.). The plaintiffs in Martin alleged the right to
    liquidated damages with regard to both the government’s failure to timely pay minimum
    wages and its failure to pay overtime wages. See 
    id.
     In its motion for summary
    judgment, the government argued that “it should avoid liability under the FLSA for its
    failure to [pay plaintiffs on their regularly scheduled pay days during the shutdown]
    because it was barred from making such payments pursuant to the ADA.” See 
    id. at 582
    .
    The government summarized its argument in Martin as follows:
    The FLSA and the Anti-Deficiency Act appear to impose two conflicting
    obligations upon Federal agencies: the FLSA mandates that the agencies
    “shall pay to each of [its] employees” a minimum wage, 
    29 U.S.C. § 206
    (a)
    (emphasis added), which has been interpreted by the courts to include a
    requirement that the minimum wage be paid on the employees’ next regularly
    scheduled pay day, see Brooklyn Savings Bank v. O’Neil, 
    324 U.S. 697
    , 707
    n.20 [
    65 S. Ct. 895
    , 
    89 L. Ed. 1296
    ] (1945); Biggs v. Wilson, 
    1 F.3d 1537
    ,
    1540 (9th Cir. 1993), and the [ADA] mandates that “[a]n officer or employee
    of the United States Government . . . may not . . . make or authorize an
    expenditure . . . exceeding an amount available in an appropriation or fund
    for the expenditure . . . .” 
    31 U.S.C. § 1341
    (A)(1)(A) (emphasis added).
    Thus, when Federal agencies are faced with a lapse in appropriations and
    5
    cannot pay excepted employees on their next regularly scheduled payday, the
    question arises of which statutory mandate controls.
    
    Id. at 582-83
     (quoting defendant’s motion for summary judgment) (alterations in
    original).
    After reviewing applicable precedent and persuasive authority, the court
    concluded that “the issue is more complex than simply a choice between whether the
    FLSA or the ADA controls.” 
    Id. at 583
    . In the court’s view:
    the appropriate way to reconcile the [ADA and the FLSA] is not to cancel
    defendant’s obligation to pay its employees in accordance with the manner
    in which the FLSA is commonly applied. Rather, the court would require
    that defendant demonstrate a good faith belief, based on reasonable grounds,
    that its actions were appropriate. As such, the court will proceed to analyze
    this case under the construct of the FLSA, and evaluate the existence and
    operation of the ADA as part of determining whether defendant met the
    statutory requirements to avoid liability for liquidated damages.
    
    Id. at 584
    .
    The court noted that plaintiffs’ claims survived a motion to dismiss because they
    had “alleged that defendant had failed to pay wages” on plaintiffs’ “next regularly
    scheduled payday.” 
    Id. at 584
    . On summary judgment, the court concluded that
    plaintiffs had proven this claim. See 
    id.
     The court then concluded that the evidence
    supported an award of liquidated damages because the government failed to satisfy the
    court that it acted in good faith and on reasonable grounds when it failed to make the
    payments required under the FLSA. 4 See 
    id. at 585-86
    .
    Both parties acknowledge that the plaintiffs in Martin were “situated similarly to
    plaintiffs here.” ECF No. 28 at 14 (defendant’s motion to dismiss); see also ECF No. 31
    at 15 (plaintiffs noting that “[i]t is undisputed that [p]laintiffs’ claims in this case are
    nearly identical to those raised in Martin v. United States, Case No. 13-8[34]C” 5). As
    4
    In Martin, the defendant also argued that it should avoid liability for liquidated damages
    with regard to overtime wages due to its inability to calculate the correct amounts due. See
    Martin v. United States, 
    130 Fed. Cl. 578
    , 586-87 (2017). This argument was based on a bulletin
    from the Department of Labor, and involves an issue that has not been raised in the present case.
    The absence of this argument, however, has no bearing on the application of the court’s
    reasoning in Martin with regard to the structure of the proper analysis in this case.
    5
    Plaintiffs cite to Martin v. United States as case number 13-843C. The court assumes
    that plaintiffs’ citation contained a typographical error; the correct case number is 13-834C.
    6
    plaintiffs outline in their response to defendant’s motion, “[a]s in Martin, the [p]laintiffs
    are federal employees who were designated ‘excepted’ and required to perform work
    during the government shutdown.” ECF No. 31 at 19. In addition, plaintiffs here, like
    the plaintiffs in Martin, have alleged that “[u]pon information and belief, [d]efendant
    conducted no analyses to determine whether its failure to pay [e]xcepted [e]mployees on
    their regularly scheduled payday complied with the FLSA.” ECF No. 17 at 11.
    In its motion to dismiss, defendant does not dispute plaintiffs’ allegations that they
    were required to work during the shutdown, or that the plaintiffs were not paid during
    that time due to the lapse in appropriations. See ECF No. 28. Defendant characterizes
    the issue now before the court as “whether plaintiffs have stated a claim for liquidated
    damages under the [FLSA] notwithstanding the provisions of the [ADA].” 
    Id. at 7
    . In
    arguing its position, defendant reiterates the arguments advanced in Martin, but does not
    present any meaningful distinction between the posture of the Martin plaintiffs and the
    plaintiffs here. Instead, it acknowledges that “[t]his Court in Martin v. United States
    concluded that plaintiffs situated similarly to plaintiffs here could recover liquidated
    damages under FLSA,” but states that it “respectfully disagree[s] with that holding.” 
    Id. at 14
    .
    Notwithstanding defendant’s disagreement, the court continues to believe that the
    framework it set out in Martin is appropriate and applies here. 6 As it did in Martin, “the
    court will proceed to analyze this case under the construct of the FLSA, and evaluate the
    existence and operation of the ADA as part of determining whether defendant met the
    statutory requirements to avoid liability for liquidated damages.” 
    7 Martin, 130
     Fed. Cl. at
    6
    Defendant also argues that its obligations under the FLSA are limited by the ADA
    because “a congressional payment instruction to an agency must be read in light of the [ADA].”
    ECF No. 28 at 16. In support of this argument, defendant cites to Highland Falls-Fort
    Montgomery Cent. Sch. Dist. v. United States, 
    48 F.3d 1166
    , 1171 (Fed. Cir. 1995). See 
    id.
     In
    Highland-Falls, plaintiffs challenged the Department of Education’s (DOE) method for
    allocating funds under the Impact Aid Act. Highland-Falls, 
    48 F.3d at 1171
    . The United States
    Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit found, however, that the DOE’s “approach was
    consistent with statutory requirements.” 
    Id.
     The case did not address FLSA claims, and found
    that the DOE’s approach “harmonized the requirements of the Impact Aid Act and the [ADA].”
    See 
    id.
     In the court’s view, the Federal Circuit’s decision in Highland-Falls does not alter the
    analysis in this case. The United States District Court for the District of Columbia’s combined
    decision in National Treasury Employees Union v. Trump, Case No. 19-cv-50 and Hardy v.
    Trump, Case No. 19-cv-51, 
    444 F. Supp. 3d 108
     (2020), discussed by defendant in one of its
    supplemental filings, see ECF No. 46, is likewise unhelpful. Although it involved facts that
    arose from the same 2018 lapse in appropriations, the decision focuses almost exclusively on an
    analysis of whether plaintiffs’ claims were moot, rather than on the operation of the ADA.
    7
    The parties both claim that the Supreme Court of the United States’ decision in Maine
    Community Health, 
    140 S. Ct. 1308
    , supports their position in this case. See ECF No. 56, ECF
    No. 57. Maine Community Health does not address the FLSA, and only includes a limited
    7
    584. The court will, of course, consider the GEFTA amendment to the ADA as part of its
    analysis.
    C.      Waiver of Sovereign Immunity
    Before analyzing the sufficiency of plaintiffs’ allegations, the court must address
    defendant’s contention that plaintiffs’ claims are barred by the doctrine of sovereign
    immunity. In its motion to dismiss, defendant correctly notes that “‘[a] waiver of the
    Federal Government’s sovereign immunity must be unequivocally expressed in statutory
    text, and will not be implied.’” ECF No. 28 at 18 (quoting Lane v. Pena, 
    518 U.S. 187
    ,
    192 (1996)). And that waiver “‘will be strictly construed, in terms of its scope, in favor
    of the sovereign.’” Id. at 19 (quoting Lane, 
    518 U.S. at 192
    ). Defendant concedes that
    the FLSA includes a waiver of sovereign immunity, but argues that the claims made by
    plaintiffs in this case fall outside the scope of that waiver. See id.; see also King v.
    United States, 
    112 Fed. Cl. 396
    , 399 (2013) (stating that “there is no question that
    sovereign immunity has been waived under the FLSA”).
    Defendant argues that the FLSA “does not require that employees be paid on their
    regularly scheduled pay date or make damages available when compensation is not
    received on a pay date.” ECF No. 28 at 19. As a result, defendant contends, the scope of
    the FLSA’s waiver of sovereign immunity does not extend to the category of claims
    alleging a FLSA violation because wages were not paid as scheduled, such as plaintiffs’
    claims in this case. See 
    id. at 19-21
    . According to defendant, the GEFTA confirms its
    long-standing belief that the government’s payment obligations under the FLSA are
    abrogated by a lack of appropriations:
    The [GEFTA] provides that “each excepted employee who is required to
    perform work during a . . . lapse in appropriations shall be paid for such
    work, at the employee’s standard rate of pay, at the earliest date possible after
    the lapse in appropriations ends, regardless of scheduled pay dates.” Pub. L.
    No. 116-1, 
    133 Stat. 3
    . Congress has thus spoken directly to the question of
    when compensation should be paid. There can be no basis for inferring that
    discussion of the ADA. See Maine Cmty. Health, 140 S. Ct. at 1321-22. Accordingly, the
    decision does not dictate the outcome here. To the extent that the case informs the present
    discussion, however, it tends to support plaintiffs. In the opinion, the Supreme Court held that
    “the [ADA] confirms that Congress can create obligations without contemporaneous funding
    sources,” and concludes that “the plain terms of the [statute at issue] created an obligation neither
    contingent on nor limited by the availability of appropriations or other funds.” Id. at 1322, 1323.
    Applied here, this conclusion suggests that the defendant can incur an obligation to pay plaintiffs
    pursuant to the normal operation of the FLSA even when funding is not available.
    8
    compensation made in accordance with that explicit directive subjects the
    United States to liquidated damages.
    Id. at 20-21.
    Defendant also asserts that the scope of its waiver of sovereign immunity for
    FLSA claims does not cover the claims asserted here. See ECF No. 35 at 13-14. It
    argues, without citation to any authority, that:
    a cause of action under the FLSA cannot per se accrue against the United
    States when federal agencies fail to pay employees on their regularly
    scheduled paydays during a lapse in appropriations because a federal statute
    expressly provides for when and at what rate federal employees will be paid
    under those circumstances.
    Id. at 14.
    The court disagrees. The claims brought by plaintiffs in this case are
    straightforward FLSA minimum wage and overtime claims under the FLSA. See ECF
    No. 31 at 16, 34-37; see also ECF No. 17 at 14-15. Because the FLSA does not specify
    when such claims arise, courts have interpreted the statute to include a requirement that
    employers make appropriate wage payments on the employee’s next regularly scheduled
    payday. See Brooklyn Sav. Bank, 
    324 U.S. at 707
    ; Biggs, 
    1 F.3d at 1540
    . Contrary to
    defendant’s suggestion, the court is unpersuaded that this judicially-imposed timing
    requirement transforms ordinary FLSA claims into something analytically distinct, and
    beyond the scope of the statute’s waiver of sovereign immunity.
    Accordingly, the court finds that defendant has waived sovereign immunity as to
    plaintiffs’ claims, as it has with all FLSA claims, and the court will review the
    sufficiency of plaintiffs’ allegations as it would in any other FLSA case.
    D.       Plaintiffs State a Claim for FLSA Violations
    As noted above, the FLSA requires that the government “pay to each of [its]
    employees” a minimum wage. 
    29 U.S.C. § 206
    (a). Pursuant to the FLSA, the
    government also must compensate employees for hours worked in excess of a forty-hour
    workweek “at a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which [they
    are] employed.” 
    29 U.S.C. § 207
    (a)(1). And although the text of the statute does not
    specify the date on which wages must be paid, courts have held that employers are
    required to pay these wages on the employee’s next regularly scheduled payday. See
    Brooklyn Sav. Bank, 
    324 U.S. at 707
    ; Biggs, 
    1 F.3d at 1540
    .
    9
    In their complaint, plaintiffs allege that during the lapse in appropriations, they
    and all putative class members: “(a) were classified by [d]efendant as ‘[e]xcepted
    [e]mployees,” (b) performed FLSA non-exempt work for [d]efendant . . . after 12:01 a.m.
    on December 22, 2018, 8 and (c) were not paid for such work on their [s]cheduled
    [p]ayday.” ECF No. 17 at 4. Plaintiffs allege specific facts demonstrating how the
    allegations apply to each named plaintiff. See id. at 4-8.
    Defendant does not contest any of these allegations, and in fact, concedes that
    “plaintiffs [were] employees of agencies affected by the lapse in appropriations,” and that
    “plaintiffs were paid at the earliest possible date after the lapse in appropriations ended.”
    ECF No. 28 at 12, 13. Defendant also admits that “[p]laintiffs are federal employees who
    performed excepted work during the most recent lapse in appropriations.” Id. at 15. In
    short, defendant does not claim that plaintiffs are not entitled to payment under the
    FLSA, but instead argues that it “fully complied with its statutory obligations to
    plaintiffs.” Id. at 16.
    The court finds that, presuming the facts as alleged in the complaint and drawing
    all reasonable inferences in their favor, plaintiffs have stated a claim for relief under the
    FLSA. See Cary, 
    552 F.3d at
    1376 (citing Gould, 
    935 F.2d at 1274
    ).
    8
    Defendant argues that “[t]o the extent that plaintiffs claim any FLSA violation for failing
    to pay FLSA minimum wages or overtime wages to [Transportation Security Officers], or to
    other FLSA-exempt employees, those claims must be dismissed.” ECF No. 28 at 15 n.3. In
    support of this statement, defendant cites to Jones v. United States, 
    88 Fed. Cl. 789
     (2009). See
    
    id.
     In Jones, the court stated: “The ‘precise question at issue’ is whether Section 111(d) of the
    [Aviation and Transportation Security Act] exempts [Transportation Security Administration
    (TSA)] from compliance with the FLSA when establishing overtime compensation for security
    screeners. Because we find that the plain language of Section 111(d) is unambiguous, we
    conclude that TSA need not comply with the FLSA.” 88 Fed. Cl. at 792 (emphasis added). This
    case is not binding precedent, and appears to be limited in application to security screeners.
    Plaintiffs, on the other hand, argue that the TSA’s handbook explicitly contemplates that some
    employees may be non-exempt from the FLSA. See ECF No. 31 at 37, 39-40 (quoting from the
    TSA handbook). In the complaint, plaintiffs allege that one named individual is a TSA
    employee, and assert that she is “classified as FLSA non-exempt,” but do not identify her
    specific job responsibilities. ECF No. 17 at 7. Because the court’s decision in Jones does not
    hold that all TSA employees are necessarily FLSA-exempt, and because plaintiffs have offered
    evidence to the contrary, the court will not dismiss the claims of all TSA employees at this time.
    Plaintiffs, however, ultimately bear the burden of proving that any TSA employees asserting
    claims in this case are, in fact, FLSA non-exempt in order for such employees to recover any
    damages that may be awarded.
    10
    E.     Liquidated Damages
    Defendant insists that its failure to pay plaintiffs was a decision made in good
    faith, in light of the ADA. See ECF No. 35 at 14-15. It further urges the court to find
    that its good faith is so clear that the recovery of liquidated damages should be barred at
    this stage in the litigation. See id. at 14-18. But as the court held in Martin:
    [I]t would be inappropriate to determine, on motion to dismiss, whether the
    government had reasonable grounds and good faith. It may well be that the
    government can establish these defenses, but its opportunity to do so will
    come later on summary judgment or at trial. Moreover, even if the court
    were to decide that a liquidated damages award is warranted, additional
    factual determinations remain to be made as to which employees, if any, are
    entitled to recover, and damages, if any, to which those employees would be
    entitled.
    Martin v. United States, 
    117 Fed. Cl. 611
    , 627 (2014). Accordingly, the court declines to
    rule at this time on the issue of whether defendant can establish a good faith defense
    against liability for liquidated damages in this case.
    IV.    Conclusion
    Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons:
    (1)    Defendant’s motion to dismiss, ECF No. 28, is DENIED;
    (2)    On or before January 29, 2021, defendant is directed to FILE an answer
    or otherwise respond to plaintiffs’ complaint; and
    (3)    On or before January 29, 2021, the parties are directed to CONFER and
    FILE a joint status report informing the court of their positions on the
    consolidation of this case with any other matters before the court.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    s/Patricia E. Campbell-Smith
    PATRICIA E. CAMPBELL-SMITH
    Judge
    11