Court Opinion

ID: 26437
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-04-25 08:52:22+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:55:25.668685
License: Public Domain

Revised January 18, 2002

                IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                        FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

                        _____________________

                            No. 00-20770
                        _____________________

     JUAN E. VELA; ET AL
                                     Plaintiffs

     PHILLIP E. DALEY; TIERA ANGELLE LEGER; RICHARD WAYNE
     MEDEIROS; CLINT HENDRIX
                                   Plaintiffs - Appellants -
                                   Cross-Appellees

          and

     CALVIN THAMES, ET AL
                                     Intervenor Plaintiffs

     CALVIN THAMES, ET AL
                                     Intervenor Plaintiffs-
                                     Appellants - Cross-Appellees
          v.

     THE CITY OF HOUSTON
                                     Defendant - Appellee - Cross-
                                     Appellant

     PHILIP E DALEY; TIERA ANGELLE LEGER; RICHARD WAYNE MEDEIROS;
     CLINT HENDRIX
                                   Plaintiffs – Appellants –
                                   Cross-Appellees
          v.

     CITY OF HOUSTON
                                   Defendant – Appellee – Cross-
                                   Appellant
_________________________________________________________________

           Appeal from the United States District Court
                for the Southern District of Texas
_________________________________________________________________
                         December 14, 2001
Before KING, Chief Judge, BARKSDALE, Circuit Judge, and NOWLIN,
District Judge.*

KING, Chief Judge:

         In district court, Plaintiffs-Appellants asserted claims

against Defendant-Appellee, the City of Houston, for overtime

compensation pursuant to the Fair Labor Standards Act, and they

now appeal from the district court’s grant of summary judgment in

favor of the City.   The City cross-appeals from, among other

things, the district court’s award of attorney’s fees in a

related case that was consolidated with this case.    For the

following reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s grant of

summary judgment in favor of the City and REMAND for entry of

judgment in favor of Plaintiffs-Appellants following a

determination of the amount of overtime compensation owed by the

City to Plaintiffs-Appellants.   Further, we AFFIRM the district

court’s award of attorney’s fees in the related case.

                I.   Factual and Procedural History

     Plaintiffs–Appellants (the “Daley Plaintiffs”) are

paramedics and emergency medical technicians (“EMTs”)

(collectively the “EMS workers” or “EMS employees”) employed by

the City of Houston Fire Department.   The Daley Plaintiffs are a

subset of a group of approximately 2,600 fire department

     *
        District Judge of the Western District of Texas, sitting
by designation.

                                 2
employees consisting of fire suppression,1 telemetry, dispatch,

and arson investigation personnel (the “Vela Plaintiffs”).     The

Vela Plaintiffs filed suit against the City of Houston (the

“City”) in state court on October 25, 1995 claiming they were

entitled to overtime pay under state law and under the Fair Labor

Standards Act (the “FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq. (1998).        On

October 17, 1997, the City removed the suit to the United States

District Court for the Southern District of Texas.     The district

court entered partial summary judgment in favor of the Vela

Plaintiffs on September 24, 1998.     The district court did not

award any specific amounts for unpaid overtime at that time, but

an Agreed Partial Summary Judgment, entered on May 28, 1999,

awarded $5,489,590.62 to the telemetry, dispatch, and arson

investigation personnel – i.e., all the Vela Plaintiffs except

the fire suppression personnel.   The fire suppression personnel

(including the Daley Plaintiffs) were later paid $4,436,819.12 as

a “settlement.”2

     On April 5, 1999, the Daley Plaintiffs filed a separate suit

in the district court claiming they were not fire protection

employees for purposes of the FLSA.     On August 5, 1999, this suit

was consolidated with the prior suit brought by the Vela

     1
        The paramedics and EMTs (including the Daley Plaintiffs)
were classified as fire suppression personnel in the Vela suit.
     2
        The City denies that there was a settlement but concedes
that payment was made.

                                  3
Plaintiffs.    The parties completed discovery with respect to the

claims raised by the Daley Plaintiffs on November 30, 1999.    The

City and the Daley Plaintiffs then filed cross-summary judgment

motions.    In their summary judgment motion, the Daley Plaintiffs

argued that as non-fire protection personnel, they are subject to

the standard forty-hour workweek under § 207(a)(1) of the FLSA,3

and thus entitled to overtime compensation in addition to that

awarded the Vela Plaintiffs under state law.4    The City countered

in its summary judgment motion that, pursuant to § 207(k) of the

FLSA,5 the Daley Plaintiffs are exempt from overtime compensation

     3
        Section 207(a)(1) of the FLSA states:
          Except as otherwise provided in this section,
          no employer shall employ any of his employees
          who in any workweek is engaged in commerce or
          in the production of goods for commerce, or
          is employed in an enterprise engaged in
          commerce or in the production of goods for
          commerce, for a workweek longer than forty
          hours unless such employee receives
          compensation for his employment in excess of
          the hours above specified at a rate not less
          than one and one-half times the regular rate
          at which he is employed.
29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1).
     4
        Under state law, as fire suppression personnel, the
Daley Plaintiffs were eligible for overtime only after working in
excess of 46.7 hours in a workweek. See Tex. Local Gov’t Code
Ann. § 142.0017(b) (Supp. 1999).
     5
           Section 207(k) states:
             No public agency shall be deemed to have
             violated subsection (a) of this section with
             respect to the employment of any employee in
             fire protection activities . . . if –
                  (1) in a work period of 28 consecutive
                  days the employee receives for tours of
                  duty which in the aggregate exceed the

                                  4
under the FLSA until they exceed an average of fifty-three hours

of work in a week.   See 29 C.F.R. § 553.201(a).6   Alternatively,

               lesser of (A) 216 hours, or (B) the
               average number of hours (as determined
               by the Secretary pursuant to section
               6(c)(3) of the Fair Labor Standards
               Amendments of 1974) in tours of duty of
               employees engaged in such activities in
               a work period of 28 consecutive days in
               calendar year 1975; or
               (2) in the case of such an employee to
               whom a work period of at least 7 but
               less than 28 days applies, in his work
               period the employee receives for tours
               of duty which in the aggregate exceed a
               number of hours which bears the same
               ratio to the number of consecutive days
               in his work period as 216 hours (or, if
               lower, the number of hours referred to
               in clause (b) of paragraph (1)) bears to
               28 days,
          compensation at a rate not less than one and
          one-half times the regular rate at which he
          is employed.
     6
        A Department of Labor regulation states:
          Section 7(k) of the [FLSA] provides a partial
          overtime pay exemption for fire protection
          . . . personnel . . . who are employed by
          public agencies on a work period basis. This
          section of the [FLSA] formerly permitted
          public agencies to pay overtime compensation
          to such employees in work periods of 28
          consecutive days only after 216 hours of
          work. . . . [T]he 216-hour standard has been
          replaced, pursuant to the study mandated by
          the statute, by 212 hours for fire protection
          employees . . . . In the case of
          such employees who have a work period of at
          least 7 but less that 28 consecutive days,
          overtime compensation is required when the
          ratio of the number of hours worked to the
          number of days in the work period exceeds the
          ratio of 212 . . . hours to 28 days.
29 C.F.R. § 553.201(a). In conjunction with § 207(k) of the
FLSA, this regulation establishes that fire protection employees

                                 5
the City argued that the Daley Plaintiffs are exempt from the

general rule providing overtime compensation for hours worked in

excess of the standard forty-hour workweek under either the

Learned Professional exemption7 or the Executive/Administrative

exemption.8

     What the City has not argued bears mention.   Although the

City contests whether there was in fact a settlement with the

Vela Plaintiffs, see infra Part V, conspicuously absent from the

City’s arguments in the district court and on appeal is an

alternative argument that the amount paid by the City to the Vela

Plaintiffs was intended to settle the Daley Plaintiffs’ claim for

overtime compensation under the FLSA.   In response to a specific

question at oral argument about the res judicata effect of any

settlement on the Daley Plaintiffs’ FLSA claim, the City

acknowledged that any such argument had been waived.

     The district court entered partial summary judgment in favor

of the City on March 22, 2000, finding that the Daley Plaintiffs

are fire protection employees under the FLSA and therefore not

are exempt from overtime compensation under the FLSA until they
exceed an average of fifty-three hours of work in a week.
     7
        The FLSA provides that any employee “employed in a bona
fide . . . professional capacity” is exempt from the general rule
requiring overtime compensation. 29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1) (1998)
(the “Learned Professional exemption”).
     8
        The FLSA provides that any employee “employed in a bona
fide executive [or] administrative . . . capacity” is exempt from
the general rule requiring overtime compensation. 29 U.S.C.
§ 213(a)(1) (the “Executive/Administrative exemption”).

                                6
eligible for additional overtime under § 207(a)(1).     Although the

parties’ motions for summary judgment address the Learned

Professional and Executive/Administrative exemptions, the

district court’s opinion was not required to, and did not, decide

whether the Daley Plaintiffs fall within those exemptions.    In

this appeal, the Daley Plaintiffs request that this court vacate

the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of

the City and render judgment in favor of the Daley Plaintiffs.

The City cross-appeals from the district court’s award of

attorney’s fees to the Vela Plaintiffs.   In addition, the City

cross-appeals three issues from the Vela Plaintiffs’ case:

(1) the district court’s order directing the City to pay damages

for wages between January 1, 1997 and May 28, 1997 to the fire

suppression personnel; (2) the district court’s conclusion that

overtime for the fire suppression personnel should be calculated

on an eighty-hour work cycle; and (3) the district court’s

conclusion that the City improperly worked dispatch and arson

personnel on an eight-day work cycle.

            II.   Summary Judgment Standard of Review

     We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the

same standard as the district court.    See Chaney v. New Orleans

Pub. Facility Mgmt., Inc., 179 F.3d 164, 167 (5th Cir. 1999).

Summary judgment is proper when “there is no genuine issue as to

                                7
any material fact and [] the moving party is entitled to a

judgment as a matter of law.”     FED. R. CIV. P. 56(c).   While we

view the evidence in a light most favorable to the non-movant,

see Coleman v. Houston Indep. Sch. Dist., 113 F.3d 528, 533 (5th

Cir. 1997), in order to avoid summary judgment, the non-movant

must go beyond the pleadings and come forward with specific facts

indicating a genuine issue for trial, see Celotex Corp. v.

Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 324 (1986).

       If the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return

a verdict for the non-movant, there is a genuine issue of

material fact.     Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242,

248 (1986).     However, if the non-movant fails to present facts

sufficient to support an essential element of his claim, summary

judgment is appropriate.     See Celotex, 477 U.S. at 322-23.

     III.   The Daley Plaintiffs’ Claims for Overtime Compensation

A.    The General Rule of the FLSA and its Exemptions

       The FLSA establishes the general rule that all employees

must receive overtime compensation for hours worked in excess of

forty hours during a seven-day workweek.9     See 29 U.S.C.

       9
        State and local government employers do not enjoy
constitutional immunity from the FLSA’s requirements. See Garcia
v. San Antonio Metro. Transit Auth., 469 U.S. 528 (1985). Garcia
overruled Nat’l League of Cities v. Usery, 426 U.S. 833 (1976), a
case which held that Congress lacked authority to impose the
requirements of the FLSA on state and local governments.

                                   8
§ 207(a)(1).10    Employees are entitled to overtime compensation

according to the general rule unless their employer proves that

one of the many exemptions applies.       The City asserts that, as

EMS workers, the Daley Plaintiffs are not entitled to overtime

compensation under the general rule because they fall within

three exemptions.     First, employees of a public agency that are

engaged in fire protection activities are exempt from the general

rule (the “§ 207(k) exemption”).       29 U.S.C. § 207(k).11   To

receive overtime compensation under the FLSA, fire protection

employees must work more than 212 hours during a work period of

28 consecutive days, equivalent to an average of 53 hours per

week.     See 29 U.S.C. § 207(k); 29 C.F.R. § 553.201(a).12     As part

of its argument that the Daley Plaintiffs fall within the

§ 207(k) exemption, the City asserts that § 203(y), a recently

enacted statute that defines “employee in fire protection

activities,” applies retroactively to bar the Daley Plaintiffs’

claims.     See 29 U.S.C. § 203(y) (Supp. 2001).     The second and

third exemptions that the City relies on are the Learned

Professional exemption and the Executive/Administrative

exemption.     We construe exemptions from the FLSA narrowly, see

Blackmon v. Brookshire Grocery Co., 835 F.2d 1135, 1137 (5th Cir.

     10
           See supra note 3 for the text of 29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1).
     11
           See supra note 5 for the text of 29 U.S.C. § 207(k).
     12
           See supra note 6 for the text of 29 C.F.R. § 553.201(a).

                                   9
1988), and the employer has the burden to prove that the employee

is exempt from the FLSA general rule, see Heidtman v. County of

El Paso, 171 F.3d 1038, 1042 (5th Cir. 1999).

     In this part of the opinion, we look first to the question

whether the Daley Plaintiffs fall within the § 207(k) exemption

as it existed at the time their claims accrued.   We then turn to

the question whether § 203(y) is retroactive.   Next, we determine

whether the Daley Plaintiffs fall within the Learned Professional

and Executive/Administrative exemptions.    Finally, we address the

City’s statute of limitations defense.

B.   Do the Daley Plaintiffs Fall Within the § 207(k) Exemption?

     The Daley Plaintiffs are employed by the City of Houston

Fire Department and undergo training with firefighters.    In fact,

some of the Daley Plaintiffs occasionally work as firefighters.

As EMS workers, however, they spend approximately 83% of their

time responding to what are purely medical calls, unassociated

with any firefighting or law enforcement activity.   The City’s

EMS employees are called to respond to less than 1% of the City’s

fires.   Nevertheless, the City argues that the Daley Plaintiffs

are exempt from the FLSA general rule providing overtime

compensation for hours worked in excess of the standard forty-

hour workweek because they are “employee[s] in fire protection

activities” under the § 207(k) exemption.   The Daley Plaintiffs

counter that they do not fall within the § 207(k) exemption

because they do not satisfy the requirements for that exemption

                                10
set out in the related Department of Labor (“DOL”) regulations.

The district court granted summary judgment to the City and found

that the Daley Plaintiffs fall within the § 207(k) exemption and

are therefore not entitled to overtime compensation for hours

worked in excess of the standard forty-hour workweek established

by the FLSA.

     We must decide whether the § 207(k) exemption covers the

City’s EMS employees.   To help in our determination, we turn to

the DOL regulations under the FLSA because they “constitute a

body of experience and informed judgment to which courts . . .

may properly resort for guidance.”   Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323

U.S. 134, 140 (1944).   This court must defer to these DOL

regulations if (as all parties implicitly concede) they are

“based on a permissible construction of the statute.”     Chevron

U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837,

842-43 (1984).

C.   The DOL Regulations

     In 1987, the DOL issued regulations concerning the

application of the FLSA to public employees, see 29 C.F.R. Part

553, and devoted a subpart to “Fire Protection and Law

Enforcement Employees of Public Agencies” and the nature of the

§ 207(k) exemption, id. at Subpart C.   The DOL regulations begin

by defining “employee . . . in fire protection activities” as:

           any employee (1) who is employed by an
           organized fire department or fire protection
           district; (2) who has been trained to the

                                11
          extent required by State statute or local
          ordinance; (3) who has the legal authority
          and responsibility to engage in the
          prevention, control or extinguishment of a
          fire of any type; and (4) who performs
          activities which are required for, and
          directly concerned with, the prevention,
          control or extinguishment of fires, including
          such incidental non-firefighting functions as
          housekeeping, equipment maintenance,
          lecturing, attending community fire drills
          and inspecting homes and schools for fire
          hazards. The term would include all such
          employees, regardless of their status as
          “trainee,” “probationary,” or “permanent,” or
          of their particular specialty or job title
          (e.g., firefighter, engineer, hose or ladder
          operator, fire specialist, fire inspector,
          lieutenant, captain, inspector, fire marshal,
          battalion chief, deputy chief, or chief), and
          regardless of their assignment to support
          activities of the type described in paragraph
          (c) of this section, whether or not such
          assignment is for training or familiarization
          purposes, or for reasons of illness, injury
          or infirmity. The term would also include
          rescue and ambulance service personnel if
          such personnel form an integral part of the
          public agency’s fire protection activities.
          See § 553.215.

29 C.F.R. § 553.210(a).   The first part of this regulation is

commonly referred to as the § 553.210(a) four-part test.13   The

     13
        On its face, at least, the four-part test applies to
standard firefighters rather than EMS workers. See Justice v.
Metro. Gov’t of Nashville, 4 F.3d 1387, 1394 (6th Cir. 1993)
(noting that the § 553.210(a) four-part test “describe[s] the
standard firefighter and do[es] not apply to rescue and ambulance
service personnel at all”).   A recent DOL letter opinion,
however, suggests that certain EMS workers are subject to the
§ 553.210(a) four-part test as well as the § 553.215 two-part
test:
          We have concluded that firefighters who are
          cross-trained as EMS employees qualify for
          exemption under [§ 207(k)] as fire protection
          employees where they are principally engaged

                                12
last full sentence of this regulation exempts EMS workers who

form an “integral part” of an agency’s fire protection activities

(the “integral part” test).    This sentence is followed by an

explicit cross-reference to § 553.215 of the regulations.

According to § 553.215:

          Ambulance and rescue service employees of a
          public agency other than a fire protection or
          law enforcement agency may be treated as
          employees engaged in fire protection or law
          enforcement activities . . . if their
          services are substantially related to
          firefighting or law enforcement activities in
          that (1) the ambulance and rescue service
          employees have received training in the
          rescue of fire, crime, and accident victims
          . . ., and (2) the ambulance and rescue
          service employees are regularly dispatched to
          fires, crime scenes, riots, natural disasters
          and accidents.

29 C.F.R. § 553.215.   This regulation is commonly referred to as

the § 553.215 two-part test.

          as firefighters meeting the four tests
          outlined in [§ 553.210(a)] and where the EMS
          functions they perform meet the tests
          described in [§ 553.215] for ambulance and
          rescue employees.
Wage & Hour Division, U.S. Department of Labor, Opinion Letter,
Feb. 13, 1995 (emphasis added). We must defer to the DOL’s
interpretation of its FLSA regulations unless the interpretation
is “plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation.” Auer
v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 461 (1997) (citations omitted).
However, because the § 553.215 two-part test determines the
outcome of this case, and because the DOL’s letter ruling
requires exempt dual-function EMS/firefighters to satisfy both
the § 553.210(a) four-part test and the § 553.215 two-part test,
we need not decide whether the four-part test applies and must be
satisfied here. The fact that the Daley Plaintiffs fail one
prong of the § 553.215 two-part test (see discussion infra Part
III(E)) is sufficient to establish that they do not fall within
the § 207(k) exemption.

                                 13
     We address first the relationship between the last sentence

of § 553.210(a), i.e., the “integral part” test, and the

§ 553.215 two-part test.   For reasons discussed below, we find

that the “integral part” standard of § 553.210 is best understood

by looking to the two-part test of § 553.215.    Next, we apply the

two-part test of § 553.215 to the Daley Plaintiffs.    Because we

conclude that the Daley Plaintiffs fail the § 553.215 two-part

test, we find that they do not fall within the § 207(k)

exemption.

D.   The § 553.210(a) “Integral Part” Test Versus The § 553.215

Two-Part Test

     The relationship between the last sentence of § 553.210(a),

i.e., the “integral part” standard, and § 553.215 is a point of

contention among circuit courts.     One circuit holds that either

the “integral part” test or the § 553.215 two-part test applies,

depending on the employment status of the EMS employee.    Other

circuits insist that the two tests are indistinguishable or that

the § 553.215 test is merely a definition of “integral part.”

The disagreement stems from the language at the beginning of

§ 553.215 stating that the section applies to “[a]mbulance and

rescue service employees of a public agency other than a fire

protection or law enforcement agency.”

     At first glance, the “integral part” standard appears to

apply to employees of an “organized fire department or fire

protection district,” while the two-part test applies only to

                                14
employees of a “public agency other than a fire protection . . .

agency.”   See 29 C.F.R. §§ 553.210(a) and 553.215.    The Eleventh

Circuit has adopted this reading of the regulations.     See Falken

v. Glynn County, 197 F.3d 1341, 1346-47 (11th Cir. 1999) (noting

the existence of two distinct standards, one for employees of the

fire department and the other for employees of an agency separate

from the fire department).    The Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth

Circuits, however, view the two-part test of § 553.215 as the

definition of the phrase “integral part” found in § 553.210(a).

See Justice, 4 F.3d at 1395 (holding that “‘integral part’ is

best understood by looking to the two-part test announced in

Section 553.215"); Alex v. City of Chicago, 29 F.3d 1235, 1241

(7th Cir. 1994) (holding that § 553.215 states the “one test for

the [§ 207(k)] exempt status of publicly employed emergency

medical personnel”); Lang v. City of Omaha, 186 F.3d 1035, 1037

n.3 (8th Cir. 1999) (holding that “section 553.215 can be applied

to paramedics employed by fire departments”).

     We now adopt the interpretation of the Sixth, Seventh, and

Eighth Circuits.    We find that the “integral part” standard of

§ 553.210(a) is best understood by looking to the two-part test

of § 553.215.    We do so, in part, because we are guided by this

court’s opinion in Bond v. City of Jackson.     939 F.2d 285 (5th

Cir. 1991).     Bond is the only Fifth Circuit case to address

whether EMS workers fall within the § 207(k) exemption.    In Bond,

EMS employees of a city fire department sued the city of Jackson

                                  15
for incorrectly classifying them as employees engaged in fire

protection activities within the meaning of the § 207(k)

exemption.   Because of the classification, the city of Jackson

refused to compensate the EMS employees for overtime for all

hours worked in excess of forty per week.   Although the court’s

opinion in Bond did not explicitly discuss the issue, the court

applied § 553.215 to determine whether EMS workers employed by a

fire department fell within the § 207(k) exemption.   939 F.2d at

287-88.   Because the EMS workers in Bond received the requisite

training, spent most of their time responding to accidents, and

co-responded with firefighters to 90% of the EMS calls, we found

that the EMS workers satisfied the § 553.215 two-part test.     Id.

The court’s analysis in Bond suggests that the “integral part”

standard of § 553.210(a) is best understood by looking to the

two-part test of § 553.215.

     The conclusion that the two-part test of § 553.215 is the

appropriate test for EMS workers from any public agency gives

meaning to the cross-reference to § 553.215 found in § 553.210(a)

and thereby avoids rendering the cross-reference superfluous or

meaningless.   For these reasons,14 we find that the regulations

     14
        Our conclusion finds some support in the scant
legislative history of the § 207(k) exemption, consisting of one
brief exchange on the floor of the House of Representatives,
which suggests that Congress intended no distinction between
personnel connected with a fire department and those connected
with some other department. Representative Quie states that this
exemption “is intended to cover those employees directly employed
by a public agency who are engaged in rescue or ambulance

                                16
announce only one test (outside of the possible application of

the four-part test of § 553.210(a)) for determining the exempt

status of publicly employed EMS workers: the two-part test of

§ 553.215.15

E.   Application of the § 553.215 Two-Part Test

     We turn, then, to the application of the § 553.215 two-part

test to the Daley Plaintiffs.    Under § 553.215, in order to be

exempt from the overtime compensation provisions of the FLSA, an

EMS employee: (1) must have “received training in the rescue of

fire, crime, and accident victims” and (2) must be “regularly

dispatched to fires, crime scenes, riots, natural disasters and

accidents.”    29 C.F.R. § 553.215.   We examine the second prong,

the regularity prong, first and find that the Daley Plaintiffs

are not “regularly dispatched” as required by § 553.215 and thus

do not fall within the § 207(k) exemption.

     The DOL states that “[t]here is no specific frequency of

occurrence which establishes ‘regularity’; it must be determined

on the basis of the facts of each case.”    Wage & Hour Division,

U.S. Department of Labor, Opinion Letter, Oct. 9, 1987

[hereinafter “DOL Op. Let., Oct. 9, 1987"].    This court has held

activities which are substantially related to fire protection or
law enforcement activities.” 120 CONG. REC. 8598 (1974). This
statement contains the “substantially related” language of
§ 553.215 and suggests that all EMS workers should be treated
similarly under the § 207(k) exemption.
     15
        We need not consider the application of the § 553.210(a)
four-part test to these facts. See supra note 13.

                                 17
that regularity is easily established when “the EMS ambulances

co-respond with one or more other units from the fire department”

in “over ninety percent of the EMS calls.”       Bond, 939 F.2d at

288.    In fact, the plaintiffs in Bond testified that they spent

most of their time responding to accidents, a type of § 553.215

emergency.    Id.   While Bond provides a clear example of

regularity required by the second prong of the § 553.215 test, no

Fifth Circuit case establishes the minimum requirements necessary

to satisfy that prong.

       In Roy v. County of Lexington, 141 F.3d 533 (4th Cir. 1998),

the Fourth Circuit construed “regularity” to require only “some

frequency.”    Id. at 541.     The Roy court recognized that this

flexible standard “provides only limited assistance to trial

courts” but felt constrained by “the flexible approach set forth

in the regulations.”     Id.    That court suggested that regularity

is best shown with “evidence that numerous EMS calls were

dispatched to § 553.215 emergencies and (or) evidence that many

fire or police dispatches include EMS teams.”       Id.

       The Eleventh Circuit takes a more rigorous approach and has

established specific guidelines for the regularity analysis.

According to Eleventh Circuit jurisprudence, when determining

whether dispatches to § 553.215 emergencies, i.e. fires, crimes,

riots, natural disasters, and car accidents, are regular, the

court should consider three factors: (1) the percentage of total

calls that are dispatches to § 553.215 emergencies, (2) the

                                    18
percentage of EMS man-hours spent responding to such dispatches,

and (3) the percentage of the total number of all calls involving

§ 553.215 emergencies to which the EMS is dispatched (the “O’Neal

factors”).   See O’Neal v. Barrow County Bd. of Comm’rs, 980 F.2d

674, 679 (11th Cir. 1993).   We agree with the Eleventh Circuit

that the regularity analysis should be guided by the three O’Neal

factors.   While evidence under all three O’Neal factors is

preferable, it is not required in every case.

     In this case, the Daley Plaintiffs present evidence

regarding regularity through deposition testimony from Wes

Warnke, Assistant Chief in charge of EMS, and William Barry, a

District Chief in the EMS Division.    This evidence shows that for

the years 1996, 1997, and 1998, only 17% of EMS dispatches were

related to § 553.215 emergencies.    The other 83% of EMS

dispatches corresponded to solely medical or health-related

incidents.   This evidence, called for by the first O’Neal factor,

suggests that the Daley Plaintiffs are not regularly dispatched

to § 553.215 emergencies.

     Unfortunately, neither party produces the evidence suggested

by the second and third O’Neal factors: the percentage of EMS

man-hours spent responding to dispatches to § 553.215 emergencies

and the percentage of the total number of all calls involving

§ 553.215 emergencies to which the EMS is dispatched.    The Daley

Plaintiffs establish that ambulances were dispatched to less than

                                19
1% of all fire calls in 1995, 1996, and 1997.16   This evidence is

relevant to our regularity analysis but not as helpful as

evidence establishing the percentage of all § 553.215 emergency

calls responded to by the Daley Plaintiffs.

     The City attempts to establish regularity with evidence

showing that from 1996 to 1999 EMS workers responded to 64,435

crime scenes (assaults, gunshot wounds, rapes, stab wounds,

hangings, overdoses, and other incidents) and 101,060 accidents

(motorcycle and motor vehicle incidents).   Although this evidence

constitutes one part of the calculation contemplated by the third

O’Neal factor, we find it unhelpful in the absence of evidence of

the total number of crime scenes and accidents.   The number of

EMS responses, standing alone, does not indicate regularity.   As

indicated by the third O’Neal factor, regularity is best

demonstrated by showing the number of responses relative to the

total number of incidents.

     Although we lack the evidence suggested by the second and

third O’Neal factors, we need not remand this case.   The parties

finished full discovery on these issues on November 30, 1999, and

neither party argues that this case presents any genuine issue of

material fact.   Rather, each party asserts that it is entitled to

     16
        According to Warnke’s deposition testimony, multiple
alarm fires are the only fire incidents to which EMS workers are
regularly dispatched. Because multiple alarm fires are very rare
relative to other fire incidents, ambulances were dispatched to
less than 1% of all fire calls in 1995, 1996, and 1997.

                                20
judgment on this record as a matter of law.   In circumstances

such as these where the factual record is effectively conceded to

be complete, remand is unnecessary.   We find that the evidence

presented under the first O’Neal factor, i.e., that only 17% of

EMS dispatches were related to § 553.215 emergencies, is

sufficient for us to determine on this record that the Daley

Plaintiffs are not regularly dispatched to § 553.215 emergencies

as a matter of law.17

     This conclusion is supported by other courts, which have

found a lack of sufficient regularity in circumstances of even

greater regularity than presented by this case.    For example, the

Sixth Circuit found that regularity had not been established in a

case brought by EMS workers employed by the city of Nashville.

Justice, 4 F.3d at 1387.   In Justice, the EMS workers transported

6,733 victims from accidents and responded to 120 fire calls,

1,650 crime scene calls, and 8,943 general medical illness calls

between March 15, 1990 and December 31, 1990.     Id. at 1398.

Thus, 48.7% of all EMS calls were to § 553.215 emergencies.      In

view of these facts, the district court concluded that the EMS

     17
        In situations involving cross-motions for summary
judgment and upon finding no genuine issues of material fact,
this court regularly reverses grants of summary judgment and
enters judgment for the opposite party. See, e.g., Owsley v. San
Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist., 187 F.3d 521 (5th Cir. 1999)
(concluding that athletic trainers are professionals and thus are
exempt from the FLSA’s overtime benefits requirements, reversing
summary judgment in favor of the trainers, and rendering judgment
in favor of their employer).

                                21
workers were regularly dispatched.     Id.    Nevertheless, the Sixth

Circuit reversed the district court’s decision and remanded for

further consideration after concluding that “these facts are

insufficient to resolve this [regularity] issue.”        Id.

     In Roy, EMS workers brought an action against Lexington

County for overtime compensation.     141 F.3d at 533.    In that

case, 25% of EMS calls were executed in conjunction with law

enforcement services and 5% were executed in conjunction with

fire protection services.   Id. at 541.      Thus, roughly 70% of EMS

calls were purely medical and only 30% of all calls were to

§ 553.215 emergencies.   Id.   Confronted with these facts, the

district court found a lack of regularity, and the Fourth Circuit

affirmed this determination.    Id. at 542.     In the instant case,

only 17% of all EMS calls were to § 553.215 emergencies during

the relevant time period, a percentage much lower than that

encountered in either Justice or Roy.

     Because the § 553.215 two-part test requires that employees

satisfy both prongs of the test in order to be exempt, and

because we find that the Daley Plaintiffs fail to satisfy the

regularity prong on this record as a matter of law, we need not

consider whether the EMS workers “have received training in the

rescue of fire, crime, and accident victims” sufficient to

satisfy the first prong of the test.     The failure to satisfy the

regularity prong ensures that the City’s employees are not exempt

                                 22
under § 207(k) from the general overtime provisions of the

FLSA.18

F.   The Retroactivity of § 203(y)

     As part of its argument that the Daley Plaintiffs fall

within the § 207(k) exemption, the City asserts that § 203(y), a

recently enacted statute that defines “employee in fire

protection activities,” applies retroactively to bar the Daley

Plaintiffs’ claims.   We disagree.

     On December 9, 1999, Congress amended the FLSA by adding a

definition of “employee in fire protection activities.”   Section

203(y) of the FLSA now states:

           “Employee in fire protection activities”
           means an employee, including a firefighter,
           paramedic, emergency medical technician,
           rescue worker, ambulance personnel, or
           hazardous materials worker, who–
           (1) is trained in fire suppression, has the
           legal authority and responsibility to engage
           in fire suppression, and is employed by a

     18
        Courts often consider 29 C.F.R. § 553.212 when resolving
disputes concerning the § 207(k) exemption. According to
§ 553.212, even if an EMS worker satisfies the § 553.215 two-part
test, he can still qualify for overtime compensation under the
forty-hour standard if he spends more than 20% of his working
time in nonexempt activities (the “80/20 Rule”). Several courts
have awarded overtime compensation to EMS workers based on the
80/20 Rule. See, e.g., West v. Anne Arundel County, 137 F.3d
752, 761 (4th Cir. 1998) (awarding overtime compensation to EMS
workers who spent more than 20% of their time performing medical
services); O’Neal, 980 F.2d at 681 (granting overtime
compensation because the majority of the employees’ working hours
were spent in nonexempt work such as responding to calls
unrelated to fire protection or law enforcement). Because we
have already determined that the Daley Plaintiffs fail the
§ 553.215 two-part test, we need not decide if they spend more
than 20% of their working time in nonexempt activities.

                                 23
          fire department of a municipality, county,
          fire district, or State; and
          (2) is engaged in the prevention, control,
          and extinguishment of fires or response to
          emergency situations where life, property, or
          the environment is at risk.

29 U.S.C. § 203(y) (Supp. 2001).      The Daley Plaintiffs’ claims

accrued before Congress enacted this definition.       Thus, we must

determine if this definition applies retroactively.

     Generally, we disfavor the retroactive application of new

laws.   See U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co. v. McKeithen, 226 F.3d 412, 418

(5th Cir. 2000).   Retroactive legislation can create “severe

problems of unfairness because it can upset legitimate

expectations and settled transactions.”      Id.    Although in many

situations a court should “apply the law in effect at the time it

renders its decision,” Bradley v. Sch. Bd. of the City of

Richmond, 416 U.S. 696, 711 (1974), those situations “generally

involve procedural changes to existing law, including statutes

which merely alter jurisdiction.” Hartford Cas. Ins. Co. v.

F.D.I.C., 21 F.3d 696, 700 (5th Cir. 1994).        This court follows

the two-part analysis governing the retroactivity of new statutes

delineated by the Supreme Court in Landgraf v. USI Film Prods.,

511 U.S. 244, 280 (1994).   See, e.g., Graham v. Johnson, 168 F.3d

762, 781-88 (5th Cir. 1999); United States v. Rocha, 109 F.3d

225, 228-29 (5th Cir. 1997).

     First, we ask “whether Congress has expressly prescribed the

statute’s proper reach.”    Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 280.      The stated

                                 24
purpose of § 203(y) is to “clarify the overtime exemption for

employees engaged in fire protection activities.”    Pub. L. No.

106-151, 113 Stat. 1731 (codified as amended at 29 U.S.C.

§ 203(y)) (the “Amendment”).    The text of the Amendment does not

mention retroactivity.    Furthermore, the legislative history of

§ 203(y) does not suggest that it was intended to apply

retroactively.    See 145 CONG. REC. H11,499-02 (daily ed. Nov. 4,

1999); H.R. REP. NO. 106-1040, at 102 (2001); S. REP. NO. 107-11,

at 18 (2001).    Therefore, we find that Congress has not expressly

made § 203(y) of the FLSA retroactive.

     The City argues that a portion of the legislative history,

consisting of a brief exchange on the floor of the House of

Representatives, clearly shows that § 203(y) was enacted to

specifically preclude such claims as the Daley Plaintiffs assert

in this case.    During congressional debates, Representative

Boehner observed:

               Many State and local governments employ
          EMS personnel who receive training and work
          schedules and maintain levels of preparedness
          which is very similar to that of
          firefighters. In the past, these types of
          employees fit within the 7(k) overtime
          exemption.
               In recent years, however, some courts
          have narrowly interpreted the 7(k) exemption
          and held that emergency medical services
          personnel do not come within the exemption
          because the bulk of their time is spent
          engaged in nonfire protection activities.
          These lawsuits have resulted in State and
          local governments being liable for millions
          of dollars in back pay, attorneys’ fees and
          court costs.

                                 25
               So there is a real need to modernize
          this area of the Fair Labor Standards Act and
          to clearly specify who can be considered a
          fire protection employee for purposes of the
          exemption.

145 CONG. REC. at *H11500 (statement of Rep. Boehner).    The

sponsor of the new § 203(y), Representative Ehlich, further

explained:

          [F]rom its inception, the Fair Labor
          Standards Act has exempted fire protection
          employees from the traditional 40-hour
          workweek. Historically, any emergency
          responder paid by a fire department was
          considered to be a fire protection employee.
          However, recent court interpretations of
          Federal labor statutes have rendered this
          definition unclear. [Section 203(y)] seeks to
          clarify the definition of a fire protection
          employee.

Id. (statement of Rep. Ehlich).    Contrary to the City’s

assertions, nothing in those statements makes clear a

congressional intent to impair rights that existed and accrued

prior to the passage of § 203(y).      The Supreme Court has

explained that inferences of retroactivity like those made by the

City are unreliable:

          It will frequently be true . . . that
          retroactive application of a new statute
          would vindicate its purpose more fully. That
          consideration, however, is not sufficient to
          rebut the presumption against retroactivity.
          Statutes are seldom crafted to pursue a
          single goal, and compromises necessary to
          their enactment may require adopting means
          other than those that would most effectively
          pursue the main goal. A legislator who
          supported a prospective statute might
          reasonably oppose retroactive application of
          the same statute.

                                  26
Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 285-86.   Thus, neither the language nor the

legislative history of § 203(y) expressly states that Congress

intended it to apply retroactively.

     According to Landgraf, next we ask whether § 203(y) “would

impair rights a party possessed when he acted, increase a party’s

liability for past conduct, or impose new duties with respect to

transactions already completed.”     511 U.S. at 280.   Unlike the

pre-amendment statutory scheme, § 203(y) explicitly covers a

broad class of employees, including paramedics, emergency medical

technicians, rescue workers, and ambulance personnel.     Moreover,

§ 203(y) dispenses with the rescue training and regularity

requirements for exemption of EMS workers under the pre-amendment

regulations.   Thus, under the current FLSA, more employees fall

within the § 207(k) exemption, and fewer employees are entitled

to overtime compensation pursuant to the FLSA general rule.     If

applied retroactively, this broadening of the exemption would

impair the Daley Plaintiffs’ rights to overtime compensation that

accrued before Congress enacted § 203(y).19    Because (1) Congress

did not expressly make § 203(y) retroactive, and (2) retroactive

application of § 203(y) here would impair the rights of the Daley

Plaintiffs, we refuse to give § 203(y) retroactive effect.

     19
        We need not determine whether the Daley Plaintiffs would
be exempt fire protection employees under § 203(y). It is enough
to note that the retroactive application of § 203(y) would impair
the Daley Plaintiffs’ rights by making it much more difficult for
them to prevail.

                                27
G.   The Learned Professional Exemption

     In addition to the § 207(k) exemption, the City argues that

the Daley Plaintiffs fall within the Learned Professional

exemption.20   The FLSA provides that any employee “employed in a

bona fide . . . professional capacity” is exempt from the general

rule requiring overtime compensation.     29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1).

DOL regulations define “employee employed in a bona fide . . .

professional capacity” as:

           any employee:
           (a) Whose primary duty consists of the
           performance of:
                (1) Work requiring knowledge of an
                advance type in a field of science or
                learning customarily acquired by a
                prolonged course of specialized
                intellectual instruction and study, as
                distinguished from a general academic
                education and from an apprenticeship,
                and from training in the performance of
                routine mental, manual, or physical
                processes, . . . and
           (b) Whose work requires the consistent
           exercise of discretion and judgment in its
           performance.

29 C.F.R. § 541.3.   This definition consists of two prongs: the

education prong and the discretion prong.     If an employer proves

that his employee satisfies both prongs, the employee is not

entitled to overtime compensation because he falls within the

     20
        Although the district court did not decide whether the
Daley Plaintiffs fall within either the Learned Professional
exemption or the Executive/Administrative exemption, the parties’
summary judgment motions raise the applicability of these
exemptions. Because the parties have finished discovery, and the
record on these issues is complete, we can decide the
applicability of these two exemptions.

                                 28
Learned Professional exemption.    The City fails to show that the

Daley Plaintiffs satisfy either prong of this exemption.

     First, the Daley Plaintiffs lack the educational background

to satisfy the education prong of the Learned Professional

exemption.    DOL regulations note that “[t]he typical symbol of

the [required] professional training and the best prima facie

evidence of its possession is, of course, the appropriate

academic degree.”    29 C.F.R. § 541.301(e)(1).   City regulations

do not require a college degree to qualify as a paramedic or EMT.

The Department requires EMTs to complete only 200 hours of

didactic training, clinical experience, and field internship and

requires paramedics to complete only 880 hours of specialized

training in didactic courses, clinical experience, and field

internship.    The only court to directly address this issue held

that requirements such as these were insufficient to meet the

education prong.    See Quirk v. Balt. County, 895 F. Supp. 773

(D.Md. 1995).    In Quirk, the court ruled that, unlike nurses who

must complete three academic years of study in an accredited

college plus a fourth year of professional course work in a

school of medical technology, paramedics, the highest level EMT,

did not have the necessary education to be “learned

professionals” under the regulations because they were only

required to achieve 600 hours of classroom and field training.

Id. at 785.

                                  29
     Although no Fifth Circuit case analyzes whether these

EMT/paramedic requirements satisfy the education prong of the

Learned Professional exemption, we applied the exemption in

Owsley v. San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist., 187 F.3d 521 (5th Cir.

1999).   The court held that athletic trainers are “learned

professionals” exempt from the FLSA overtime compensation

provisions.    Id. at 527.    The court found that the trainers

satisfied the education prong because they were required to

achieve, at a minimum, the following: (1) a bachelor’s degree in

any field; (2) 1800 hours apprenticeship over a three-year

period; (3) completion of five 3-hour credit college courses in

specific areas of study; and (4) a C.P.R. test.      Id. at 524-25.

The Owsley panel analogized the trainers’ educational training

and background to those of airline pilots who, while lacking the

requirement of a college degree, were required to “complete a

course of instruction to learn the regulations governing pilots,

basic aerodynamic and flight principles, and numerous airplane

operations.”    Id. at 525.    The court cited nurses, accountants,

and “actuarial computants,” as other examples of “learned

professionals.”    Id.   In this case, the EMT/paramedic educational

requirements are much less rigorous than those required for

athletic trainers.   Moreover, the educational backgrounds of EMS

workers are not as extensive as those of any of the professionals

cited as examples by the panel in Owsley.      For these reasons, we

                                   30
find that the Daley Plaintiffs do not satisfy the education prong

of the Learned Professional exemption.

     Second, the Daley Plaintiffs’ jobs lack the consistent

exercise of discretion and judgment required to satisfy the

discretion prong of the Learned Professional exemption.    In the

context of discussing the discretion exercised by trainers, the

Owsley panel noted that paramedics/EMTs did not exercise the same

type of discretionary judgment as trainers “because paramedics

work on a daily basis with their supervising physicians under the

expectation of physician intervention immediately following

emergency treatment.”   Owsley, 187 F.3d at 527.

     In his affidavit, Dr. David Persse, current Director of

Emergency Medical Services for the City of Houston, explains the

scope of the Daley Plaintiffs’ work.   Department EMS workers

follow either protocols or standing orders at all times.

Standing orders apply only when communication with a supervising

physician has not been established.    According to Persse, these

orders “strictly define the actions, techniques, or drug

administration that may be implemented” by the EMS workers.

Although an EMS employee uses some discretion when selecting

which particular standing order to apply, he is not permitted to

exercise discretion when acting under a particular standing

order.   Protocols, on the other hand, are applicable when

communication has been established with a supervising physician

so that the physician is providing on-line medical direction.

                                31
These protocols allow for more discretion but require physician

supervision to implement.   The medical director, not the EMS

workers, is responsible for establishing all protocols and

standing orders.   These “highly specific medical protocols” and

the direct physician supervision of the EMS workers formed the

basis for the distinction made by this court in Owsley when we

held that athletic trainers exercised discretion while EMS

workers did not.   187 F.3d at 527.

     We find that, although the Daley Plaintiffs use a small

amount of discretion in their jobs, this discretion is not

sufficient to establish “the consistent exercise of discretion

and judgment” required by the discretion prong of the Learned

Professional exemption.   Thus, the City failed to satisfy its

burden of proof on either prong of this exemption. We find that

the Daley Plaintiffs do not fall within the Learned Professional

exemption as a matter of law.

H.   The Executive/Administrative Exemption

     In addition to the § 207(k) exemption and the Learned

Professional exemption, the City argues that the Daley Plaintiffs

fall within the Executive/Administrative exemption.   The FLSA

provides that any employee “employed in a bona fide executive

[or] administrative . . . capacity” is exempt from the general

rule requiring overtime compensation.   29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1).   To

qualify as a bona fide executive, the employee must satisfy the

following requirements:

                                32
           (1) The employee is compensated on a salary
           basis at a rate of not less than $250 per
           week; and
           (2) The employee’s primary duty consists of
           management of the enterprise in which he is
           employed or of a customarily recognized
           department or subdivision thereof; and
           (3) The employee’s responsibilities include
           the customary and regular direction of the
           work of at least two or more other employees.

29 C.F.R. § 541.1(f).   Whether an employee’s “primary duty

consists of management” is a fact-sensitive inquiry, but “[i]n

the ordinary case it may be taken as a good rule of thumb that

primary duty means the major part, or over 50 percent of the

employee’s time.”   29 C.F.R. § 541.103.   Among other factors to

be considered are: (1) the relative importance of the managerial

duties as compared with other types of duties, (2) the frequency

with which the employee exercises discretionary powers, (3) the

employee’s relative freedom from supervision, and (4) the

relationship between the employee’s salary and the wages paid

other employees for the kind of nonexempt work performed by the

supervisor.   See Quirk, 895 F. Supp. at 786 (citing Shockley v.

City of Newport News, 997 F.2d 18, 25-26 (4th Cir. 1993)).

     To qualify as a bona fide administrative employee, the

employee’s primary duty must be the performance of office or non-

manual work directly related to management policies or general

business operations of his employer, including work requiring the

exercise of discretion and independent judgment.    See 29 C.F.R.

§ 541.2.   According to DOL regulations, “the exercise of

                                33
discretion and independent judgment involves the comparison and

the evaluation of possible courses of conduct and acting or

making a decision after the various possibilities have been

considered.”    29 C.F.R. § 541.207(a).

     The City argues that paramedics and EMTs who hold the rank

of captain or higher (collectively the “Managers”) are employed

in a bona fide executive or administrative capacity.    On this

record, we disagree.    The City presented no evidence of the

actual job functions of the Managers.     Instead, the City offered

the job descriptions for the captain, senior captain, district

chief, and deputy chief positions.    Each description contains a

disclaimer that states: “Any one position may not include all of

the tasks listed, nor do the examples necessarily include all of

the tasks performed.”    The City presents no affidavits,

testimony, or other evidence concerning the actual management

duties performed by employees in these three classifications or

the time spent on such management duties.    A generic job

description tells us nothing about the specific duties of each

Manager or what percentage of time was spent on management

activities.    Furthermore, a job description does not indicate

whether each Manager exercised discretion and if he did, to what

extent.

     We have previously held that firefighters holding the rank

of “district chief” and “battalion chief” were exempt

administrative employees.    See Smith v. City of Jackson, 954 F.2d

                                 34
296, 299 (5th Cir. 1992).     Similarly, the district court in Quirk

held employees holding the rank of “captain” to be exempt

executive employees.   Quirk, 895 F. Supp. 773, 787-88.     In both

of these cases, however, the evidence showed that those employees

had substantial management duties and exercised great discretion.

Here, we have no such evidence.    The title of “‘captain’ provides

no guidance on whether the administrative exemption applies;

rather, a fact-sensitive inquiry . . . is required.”      Dep’t of

Labor v. City of Sapulpa, 30 F.3d 1285, 1288 (10th Cir. 1994).

The evidence in this case does not satisfy the City’s burden of

proving the Executive/Administrative exemption.    On the contrary,

the utter lack of probative evidence precludes us from holding

that the Managers fall within the Executive/Administrative

exemption as a matter of law.

I.   Statute of Limitations

     The City’s final defense is that the Daley Plaintiffs’

claims under the FLSA are barred by the statute of limitations.

The City raised this issue for the first and last time in its

Original Answer, filed on May 21, 1999, by stating “[a]fter

discovery, Defendant may be able to show that part or all of

Plaintiffs’ claims may be barred by the applicable statute of

limitations.”   This vague statement does not specify the

particular statute under which the City planned to bring a

limitations defense.   Furthermore, the statement does not state

with certainty that the City would assert such a defense at all.

                                  35
According to a ruling made at a pre-trial conference held on

September 20, 1999, the parties completed discovery with respect

to the claims raised by the Daley Plaintiffs on November 30,

1999.     Soon thereafter, the Daley Plaintiffs filed for summary

judgment, arguing that they were entitled to overtime

compensation under the FLSA.     The City responded with its own

summary judgment motion asserting that the Daley Plaintiffs were

not entitled to overtime compensation because of the § 207(k)

exemption, the Learned Professional Exemption, and the

Executive/Administrative exemption.     The City never raised a

limitations defense in its motion for summary judgment.

Furthermore, on February, 9, 2000, the City filed a Supplemental

Answer.     This answer further developed two affirmative defenses

first asserted in the Original Answer: (1) the failure to state a

claim and (2) the exempt status of Plaintiffs under the FLSA.21

However, the Supplemental Answer did not elaborate on the City’s

assertion that Plaintiffs’ claims may be barred by a statute of

limitations.

     Generally, on appeal, we do not address issues that were not

raised in the lower court.     See United States v. Martinez, 228

F.3d 587, 589 n.3 (5th Cir. 2000).     Thus, we will not consider

the City’s statute of limitations defense here.     Moreover,

because we find that the City waived the limitations defense at

     21
        The Supplemental Answer also adds the affirmative
defense that Plaintiffs are not entitled to liquidated damages.

                                  36
the district court level, we need not remand the issue to the

district court for further proceedings.

     We have held that a party “‘in his opposition to a motion

for summary judgment cannot abandon an issue and then . . . by

drawing on the pleadings resurrect the abandoned issue.’”

Hargrave v. Fibreboard Corp., 710 F.2d 1154, 1164 (5th Cir. 1983)

(citing Edward B. Marks Music Corp. v. Continental Record Co.,

222 F.2d 488, 492 (2d Cir. 1955)).22   In Hargrave, the third-

party plaintiff, in its initial third-party complaint, asserted

three alternative grounds for recovery: alter ego liability,

successorship liability, and contribution/indemnity liability.

See 710 F.2d at 1163.   When the defendant moved for summary

judgment, the plaintiff never raised the theories of

successorship liability or contribution/indemnity.     See id. at

1163-64.   In fact, the plaintiff never mentioned before the trial

court “a single fact that would trigger a genuine issue on these

theories.”   Id.   Ultimately, this court found that the plaintiff

     22
        See also Stephens v. C.I.T. Group/Equip. Fin., Inc., 955
F.2d 1023, 1026 (5th Cir. 1992) (finding that the defendant
waived its limitations defense at the trial court level because
“aside from urging a general statute of limitations defense in
its answer, [the defendant] never mentioned limitations in the
trial court proceedings”). Cf. Teamsters’ Steel Haulers Local
Union No. 800 v. Lakeshore Motor Freight Co., 484 F. Supp. 925,
929-30 (W.D. Penn. 1979) (holding that “defendants do not waive
the statute of limitations defense where it is presented by the
pleadings even if excluded from a summary judgment motion). In
Teamsters’, the defendants avoided waiver by asserting the
limitations defense before the trial court in a petition for
reconsideration of the grant of summary judgment.

                                 37
“abandoned its alternative theories of recovery by failing to

present them to the trial court,” and we affirmed the trial

court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendant.      Id.

at 1164-65.

     The facts presented by this case resemble those of Hargrave.

The City weakly asserted a possible limitations defense in its

Original Answer.   When confronted with the Daley Plaintiffs’

motion for summary judgment, however, the City never re-asserted

its limitations defense.   Moreover, the City’s Supplemental

Answer omitted any mention of a limitations defense.    The vague

language in the City’s Original Answer coupled with the complete

absence of the issue in all subsequent documents filed with the

district court convinces us that the City abandoned its

limitations defense.    As the First Circuit noted in Violette v.

Smith & Nephew Dyonics, Inc., 62 F.3d 8 (1st Cir. 1995), it is

clear in this case that the City’s limitations defense “flickered

but once, dimly, on the radar screen of this litigation and then

disappeared forever.”   62 F.3d at 11.

I.   Conclusion of FLSA Issues

     We find that the Daley Plaintiffs are not exempt from the

overtime compensation provisions of the FLSA under the § 207(k)

exemption for fire protection employees, the Learned Professional

exemption, or the Executive/Administrative exemption.   We also

find that the City waived its statute of limitations defense.

Thus, the Daley Plaintiffs are entitled to overtime compensation

                                 38
for hours worked in excess of forty during a seven-day workweek.

See 29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1).   Accordingly, we REVERSE the district

court’s judgment and REMAND the case to the district court for a

determination of the amount of overtime compensation owed by the

City to the Daley Plaintiffs.

                       IV.   Attorney’s Fees

     On July 11, 2000, the district court awarded $2,800,000 in

attorney’s fees to Troy Blakeney, attorney for the Vela and Daley

Plaintiffs.   The City requests that this court reform the

attorney’s fees to $557,500.    This court reviews the district

court’s award of attorney’s fees for abuse of discretion and its

findings of fact supporting the award for clear error.    Strong v.

BellSouth Telecomms. Inc., 137 F.3d 844, 850 (5th Cir. 1998).

“Under the clearly erroneous standard, [this court] will reverse

only if [it has] a definite and firm conviction that a mistake

has been committed.”   Canal Barge Co., Inc. v. Torco Oil Co., 220

F.3d 370, 375 (5th Cir. 2000).    Both parties stipulate that the

Texas Supreme Court’s decision in Arthur Andersen & Co. v. Perry

Equip. Corp., 945 S.W.2d 812 (Tex. 1997), governs the award of

attorney’s fees in this case.23   In Arthur Andersen, the Texas

Supreme Court identified the following factors to be considered

     23
        We look to state law in this analysis of attorney’s fees
because the fees were awarded in the suit instituted by the Vela
Plaintiffs. In that case, the Vela Plaintiffs asserted state law
claims for overtime compensation.

                                  39
when determining the reasonableness of an award of attorney’s

fees:

                (1) the time and labor required, the
                novelty and difficulty of the questions
                involved, and the skill required to
                perform the legal service properly;
                (2) the likelihood . . . that the
                acceptance of the particular employment
                will preclude other employment by the
                lawyer;
                (3) the fee customarily charged in the
                locality for similar legal services;
                (4) the amount involved and the results
                obtained;
                (5) the time limitations imposed by the
                client or by the circumstances;
                (6) the nature and length of the
                professional relationship with the
                client;
                (7) the experience, reputation, and
                ability of the lawyer or lawyers
                performing the services; and
                (8) whether the fee is fixed or
                contingent on results obtained or
                uncertainty of collection before the
                legal services have been rendered.

945 S.W.2d at 818.

     Each party submitted an expert report to the district court

concerning the proper amount of attorney’s fees.   The court held

a hearing on the issue, and the transcript from that hearing

shows that the district court considered the Arthur Andersen

factors.24   Before applying the factors, the district court found

     24
        The district court described the factors as the Johnson
factors, referring to Johnson v. Ga. Highway Express, Inc., 488
F.2d 714, 717-19 (5th Cir. 1974). We have recently stated that
the Johnson factors are “comparable” to the Arthur Andersen
factors. See Mid-Continent Cas. Co. v. Chevron Pipe Line Co.,
205 F.3d 222, 232 (5th Cir. 2000).

                                 40
that “if a contingent fee were to be applied, it would be applied

to the approximate ten million dollars for the aggregate

recovery,” which includes overtime compensation as well as

corresponding pension contributions made by the City to

Plaintiffs’ individual pension accounts.    Regarding this

decision, the district judge stated that “[i]n most cases,

pension contributions are a substantial part of compensation, and

there’s no legal or economic logic in treating direct or indirect

compensation differently.”    While we find no binding authority on

point, the federal district court for the Southern District of

New York has included pension plan contributions as part of the

gross recovery subject to a contingency fee.    See Puerto v. Local

One, Amalgamated Lithographers, No. 87 CIV. 7681 (RWS), 1991 WL

33341, at *3 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 4, 1991).   That court reasoned that

“there is no apparent justification for excluding this portion of

the settlement, which clearly represented a financial gain for

[the plaintiff], from the gross recovery subject to the

contingency fee.”   Id.   We find the court’s reasoning in Puerto

persuasive.   Therefore, in this case, the district court’s

finding that the total recovery includes the pension

contributions made by the City to Plaintiffs’ individual pension

accounts is not clearly erroneous.

     The district court separately considered each Arthur

Andersen factor at the hearing on attorney’s fees.   When

considering the first factor, the district court stated that the

                                 41
“time required was substantial” because “the intricacies of each

worker’s situation had to be identified, specified and, on

occasion, clarified.”   The court found the novelty and difficulty

of the questions involved to be “moderate” and the skill required

to be “a high level of managerial lawyering.”   More specifically,

the district judge found that “[t]he skill in managing the

precise factual evaluation of 2600 cases and the skill that

[Blakeney] brought to the labyrinth of governmental employee

relations law was of the highest order required.”   In its brief,

the City argues that the legal issues in this case are not

complicated.   However, when requesting more money from the City

Council to fund the litigation, the City Attorney thrice

emphasized the complexity of the litigation “resulting from

claims under federal, state and local law, as well as the volume

of documents, the unforeseen magnitude of the mechanics of

computing the various components of each of the 2600 Plaintiffs’

claims and the number of issues involved.”

     Regarding the second Arthur Andersen factor, the trial court

noted that Blakeney was “unable to represent his principal client

by reason of his accepting this case.”   In the Plaintiffs’ fee

application, however, Blakeney states that “this factor does not

weigh for or against the fee award in this case.”   Because of the

conflicting evidence, we consider this factor to be a neutral

factor.   In applying the third factor, the district court found

that Blakeney’s 30% contingency fee “is a reasonable rate.”    In

                                42
fact, the court stated that “a 30 percent contingent fee in labor

litigation against the Government is on the low side,” and “the

customary contingency is likely to have been more like 35 to 40

percent.”    Pursuant to factor four, the district court considered

the large recovery awarded to Blakeney’s clients along with “the

significance of the dollars to the individuals separately and

aggregately.”

     The district court noted that factors five and six are

neutral in this case.    Regarding factor seven, the district court

stated that “Mr. Blakeney is extensively experienced in his

factual field and his legal field and has a reputation

commensurate with his experience and his high ability.”    This is

“reflected in what his customary hourly rate, actual or imputed,

would be.”    While considering factor eight, the district court

suggested that it is proper for a lawyer on a contingency fee

case to estimate his fee per hour to be higher than a lawyer on a

fixed fee case.    Blakeney’s estimate was approximately $100

higher than the fee paid by the City to its attorneys, but this

is justified given the risk of receiving no fee at all.

     Furthermore, the district court found that the paralegals’

work on the case “was of a more complex and tedious nature” than

usual.   Paralegal work can only be recovered as attorney’s fees

if the work is legal rather than clerical.    See Allen v. U.S.

Steel Corp., 665 F.2d 689, 697 (5th Cir. 1982).   After

considering the expert reports submitted by the parties and

                                 43
Blakeney’s testimony at the hearing on attorney’s fees, the

district court determined that the numerous hours of paralegal

work were legal in nature and recoverable as attorney’s fees.

Nothing in the record suggests that this finding was clearly

erroneous.   The district court entered an award of $2,800,000

(roughly 30% of the total recovery) as attorney’s fees.25

     The City contends that Blakeney’s application for attorney’s

fees is vague in that it does not “offer any support for the

reasonableness of the number of hours claimed by Blakeney for

himself, his associates, or for his paralegals and staff.”    The

district court, however, based its award of attorney’s fees on

the number of hours claimed in Blakeney’s fee application.    We

must accept the factual findings upon which the district court

bases its award of attorney’s fees, including the determination

of the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation,

unless they are clearly erroneous.     See La. Power & Light Co. v.

Kellstrom, 50 F.3d 319, 324 (5th Cir. 1995).    The district court

adopted many of the facts from the expert report on attorney’s

fees submitted by Plaintiffs.    The court’s decision not to adopt

facts from the City’s expert opinion does not make the court’s

findings clearly erroneous.     See Brady v. Fort Bend County, 145

F.3d 691, 716 (5th Cir. 1998) (finding no abuse of discretion in

     25
        This total award included: (1) $2,700,000 for actual
fees, calculated using an imputed hourly rate, and (2) $100,000
as a bonus for risk.

                                  44
setting fee award based, in part, on the district court’s

knowledge of the facts and familiarity with the case and quality

of attorneys’ work over several years).      Given the evidence

presented in this case, the district court’s findings of fact are

not clearly erroneous, and the award of attorney’s fees is not an

abuse of discretion.     Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s

award of $2,800,000 in attorney’s fees.

                    V.   Remaining Issues Are Moot

     On September 24, 1998, the district court entered partial

judgment in favor of the Vela Plaintiffs on several specific

issues relating to overtime compensation.      The parties contest

three of those issues: (1) the district court’s order directing

the City to pay damages for wages between January 1, 1997 and May

28, 1997 to the fire suppression personnel (“Issue 1"); (2) the

district court’s conclusion that overtime for the fire

suppression personnel should be calculated on an eighty-hour work

cycle (“Issue 2"); and (3) the district court’s conclusion that

the City improperly worked dispatch and arson personnel on an

eight-day work cycle (“Issue 3").      We find that these three

issues are moot because the parties have already settled the

underlying claim.

     Our jurisprudence dictates that our duty as a court is

limited to making decisions on actual controversies.      See Oil,

                                  45
Chem. & Atomic Workers Int’l Union v. Missouri, 361 U.S. 363, 367

(1960).    We have no power to “give opinions upon moot questions

or abstract propositions, or to declare principles or rules of

law which cannot affect the matter in issue in the case before

[us].”    Id. (quoting Mills v. Green, 159 U.S. 651, 653 (1895)).

Generally, settlement of a dispute renders moot any case growing

out of that dispute.    See ITT Rayonier Inc. v. United States, 651

F.2d 343, 345 (5th Cir. 1981).    In such a situation, we find the

claims moot “even if the parties remain at odds over the

particular issue they are litigating.”    Id.   We have repeatedly

recognized that settlement between the parties renders an appeal

moot and requires dismissal of the issues that have been settled.

See, e.g., Oxy USA, Inc. v. Babbitt, 122 F.3d 251, 258 n.12 (5th

Cir. 1997); In re Talbott Big Foot, Inc., 924 F.2d 85, 87-88 (5th

Cir. 1991).

     In this case, the record contains no final judgment ordering

the City to pay overtime to the fire suppression personnel.

Nonetheless, pursuant to City Council Motion No. 1999 1949, the

City paid fire suppression personnel overdue wages for 1997

(Issue 1) and overtime compensation based upon an eighty-hour

work cycle (Issue 2).    This Motion, approved and adopted on

November 9, 1999, states “MOTION by Council Member Boney that the

recommendation of the City Attorney, for settlement of the

overtime claims . . . be adopted, and settlement of these claims

in the total amount of $4,436,819.12 . . . [is] hereby approved

                                 46
by the City Council.”26   With respect to Issue 3, the district

court entered an Agreed Partial Summary Judgment, signed by both

parties and the judge, on May 28, 1999.   The judgment states that

upon payment of “an agreed upon sum” to the individual

plaintiffs, their claims would be dismissed with prejudice.    This

court has stated that it will not entertain an appeal by a party

from an order to which that party agreed.    See Tel-Phonic Servs.,

Inc. v. TBS Int’l, Inc., 975 F.2d 1134, 1137 (5th Cir. 1992).

Furthermore, a second City Council motion approved “settlement of

lawsuit . . . in the amount of $5,489,590.62 for overtime damages

. . . .” pursuant to the Agreed Partial Summary Judgment.    Thus,

the City paid the Vela Plaintiffs just under ten million dollars

(plus pension contributions and statutory interest attributable

to that amount) for overtime work.    Given this fact, we find the

City’s contention that there was no settlement implausible.    The

two City Council motions refer to a “settlement.”   The Agreed

Partial Summary Judgment strongly suggests a settlement.    For

these reasons, we find that Issues 1, 2 and 3 have been settled

     26
        The City objects to this court’s consideration of the
motion because it is unauthenticated and not in the appellate
record. This court has stated that it is appropriate for us to
take judicial notice of a city ordinance on appeal even if it was
not introduced into the trial records. See In re Weller Creek,
Ltd., 867 F.2d 228, 238 n.14 (5th Cir. 1989) (citing United
States v. City of Miami, 664 F.2d 435, 443 n.16 (5th Cir. 1981))
(“The power of a federal court to take judicial notice of
legislative facts is less constrained than its power to take
notice of adjudicative facts.”); see also ITT Rayonier, 651 F.2d
at 345 n.2 (noting that when a settlement and dismissal is not in
the record, the court may take judicial notice of it).

                                 47
by the parties.   Therefore, we have no jurisdiction to decide the

issues.   See In re Talbott Big Foot, Inc., 924 F.2d at 87-88.

                          VI.   Conclusion

     For all the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the district

court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the City and REMAND

for entry of judgment in favor of the Daley Plaintiffs following

a determination of the amount of overtime compensation owed by

the City to the Daley Plaintiffs.     We AFFIRM the district court’s

award of attorney’s fees to the Vela Plaintiffs.    The costs of

this appeal shall be borne by the City.

                                 48