Melland, Lee v. Napolitano, Janet et al
Filing
83
Redacted version of 79 ORDER granting 43 Motion for Summary Judgment. Signed by District Judge Barbara B. Crabb on 5/3/12. (krj)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
LEE A. MELLAND,
OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff,
10-cv-804-bbc
v.
JANET NAPOLITANO, Secretary,
Department of Homeland Security and
TRANSPORTATION SECURITY ADMINISTRATION,
Defendants.
Plaintiff Lee Melland worked as a security officer for defendant Transportation
Security Administration at the Dane County Regional Airport from September 2002 until
she was terminated in September 2009. In this civil action for monetary and injunctive
relief, plaintiff contends that the Transportation Security Administration violated Title VII
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 when it took several adverse employment actions against her
because of her gender and in retaliation for her complaints to the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission.
Defendants have moved for summary judgment on all of
plaintiff's claims; the motion is before the court for decision. Dkt. #43.
I am granting the motion because no reasonable jury could conclude that defendants
took any adverse action against plaintiff because of her gender or her protected activities;
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rather, the uncontradicted evidence shows that defendants reprimanded plaintiff and
ultimately terminated her because her supervisors believed that she was dishonest and that
she had violated defendants' security policies.
From the parties' proposed findings of fact, I find the following facts to be material
and undisputed.
UNDISPUTED FACTS
A. The Parties
Defendant Transportation Security Administration is an agency of the United States
Department of Homeland Security.
Defendant Janet Napolitano is Secretary of the
Department. (Napolitano has no personal role in this lawsuit. Thus, I will refer to the
Transportation Security Administration as "defendant. ").
Plaintiff Lee Melland worked for defendant as a supervisory transportation security
officer at Dane County Regional Airport in Madison, Wisconsin from November 2002 until
September 22, 2009. Her job duties included supervising other transportation security
officers, screening luggage and passengers, supervising security checkpoints and running
screening "plays." During the time plaintiff was employed at the airport, Jane Hemberger
was the federal security director at the airport and DavidAhlansberg was the assistant federal
security director. Both of them supervised plaintiff.
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B. Plaintiff's Interactions with Ahlansberg
I. 2004 and 2006 comments
Sometime in 2004, plaintiff was doing paperwork at a lectern and commented that
it was a crazy day. Ahlansberg responded by saying that she could not handle her day and
as a woman, she ought to stay home. Ahlansberg then laughed and said he was just joking.
Sometime in 2006, Ahlansberg laughed at plaintiff and said that if she were not a female she
would not have a problem lifting a heavy bag. (Ahlansberg denies making either comment.)
2. December 2007
In 2007, plaintiff applied for a position as a transportation security manager at Dane
County Regional Airport. She was not hired for the position. On December 17, 2007,
plaintiff saw Ahlansberg in the break room and asked whether he could provide her any
feedback on the interview. Ahlansberg responded that there was nothing to discuss because
he did not have the interview materials. (Plaintiff says that as they left the break room,
Ahlansberg accused her in a stern and loud voice of being upset that she did not get the
promotion. Ahlansberg denies this.) Plaintiff told him she understood that the person who
was chosen had more experience than she did. Plaintiff then told Ahlansberg that in March
2006, he had told her that she was going to be nothing more than a supervisor and trainer.
Plaintiff said that she had reported his comment to Hemberger and another manager.
Ahlansberg denied making the comment and told plaintiff she was lying. (Plaintiff says that
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Ahlansberg became upset, stomped his feet, clenched his fists, pointed and hollered at her,
started "swinging his arms," told plaintiff that this was "bullshit" and said that she was going
to regret this and her career was over. Ahlansberg denies this.)
On December 18,2007, Ahlansberg gave plaintiff a written memorandum recounting
their December 17 interaction. The document did not include a description of Ahlansberg's
alleged hostile behavior. He asked plaintiff to sign the document and she refused. (Plaintiff
says that on December 18, Ahlansberg told her that she needed to find the right man so she
did not have to come to work anymore. Ahlansberg denies saying this.)
A few months later, someone kicked plaintiff's chair while she was writing. Plaintiff
believes it was Ahlansberg because she saw him walking nearby. Ahlansberg denies kicking
her chair.
3. 2009 telephone conversation
On June 4,2009, plaintiff called Ahlansberg for permission to leave work early so she
could see a doctor about her back. Ahlansberg asked how many supervisors would be at the
airport if she left. He told her that if she really needed to go home she should do so.
(Plaintiff says Ahlansberg also told her she was overly accident prone, had been out too
much with previous injuries and needed to find a new job. Ahlansberg denies saying those
things.)
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C. January 2008 Smoking Investigation
On January 15,2008, plaintiff and Lynn Kalupa, a supervisory transportation security
officer from the La Crosse Municipal Airport, drove in a government vehicle from Madison
to Chicago for training. After the trip, Kalupa told the assistant federal security director in
La Crosse, Dave McMahon, that plaintiff had smoked four or five cigarettes in the car,
despite Kalupa's warning her that it was against defendant's policy to smoke in a government
vehicle. Kalupa also reported that plaintiff used a scented spray to disguise the smell.
McMahon called Ahlansberg at the Dane County Regional Airport and told him about
Kalupa's allegations. Ahlansberg reported the incident to Hemberger, the federal security
director at the airport.
Sometime after Hemberger was notified about the smoking allegation, she contacted
an employee who had used the same vehicle the day after plaintiff and Kalupa had returned
it and askedhim whether he had noticed any smell of smoke inside the vehicle. The
employee told Hemberger that the car did not smell like smoke, but did smell like someone
had sprayed scented air freshener in it. On January 21, Hemberger called plaintiff and asked
her about the incident. Plaintiff denied that she smoked inside the vehicle and suggested
that Kalupa was making up the allegation out of "meanness." Hemberger said she needed
to be able to trust her employees and encouraged plaintiff to tell the truth.
Hemberger assigned Richard Spencer to investigate the smoking allegations. Spencer
was a new transportation security manager who had started working at the Dane County
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Regional Airport on January 6, 2008. The investigation was one of his first assignments
upon arriving at the airport and his first work-related interaction with plaintiff.
On January 21, 2008, plaintiff prepared two separate statements for Spencer in
response to the smoking allegation. In the first statement, plaintiff stated that
At no time during the trip, did I smoke a cigarette within the confines of the
vehicle... Kalupa and I had several conversations during the trip and I do not
recall her once stating anything to me about regulations of not smoking within
the government vehicle. It was not one of our topics.
Dkt. #64-4. In the second statement, issued on the same day, plaintiff stated
I do not recall lighting up a cigarette during my drive .... If I did so, I am
very sorry. It was not my intent. .. But if Lynn states that I did it, I am not
going to rebut it... I truly don't remember lighting up a cigarette ... Again
if I did, I am not going to rebut it. I just don't remember doing it!!!"
Dkt. #64-3. In the second statement, plaintiff recalled several details about the trip to
Chicago and admitted that Kalupa made a comment about defendant's policy against
smoking inside the car. Plaintiff stated that she thought Kalupa made the comment because
smoke entered the car when plaintiff was smoking outside. Also, plaintiff admitted that she
told Kalupa that if the smell was bad, she would "try to fix it" with body spray that was in
her purse. Id.
On January 22,2008, Hemberger and Ahlansberg met with plaintiff in Hemberger's
office. At the meeting, plaintiff continued to assert that she could not remember whether
she smoked in the government vehicle. Both Ahlansberg and Hemberger told plaintiff that
they did not believe that she could remember several specific details about the trip but could
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not remember smoking inside the car four or five times. They told her she should tell the
truth and admit to the smoking policy violation. At some point, Hemberger incorrectly
accused plaintiff of smoking in a vehicle during a 2007 convention that plaintiff did not
attend. (The parties dispute whether Hemberger left her office for a brief period during the
meeting. Defendant says that both Ahlansberg and Hemberger were in the office during the
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entire meeting. Plaintiff says that at one point, Hemberger left the office for a phone call,
Ahlansberg pulled his chair next to hers, leaned toward her, pointed his finger toward her
face and told her to just admit smoking because it would make things easier for her. The
parties also dispute whether Hemberger and Ahlansberg told plaintiff during the meeting
that she would lose her training duties as an assistant training instructor if she did not admit
to smoking in the car.)
On January 23,2008, plaintiff provided another written statement to Spencer as part
of his investigation. Dkt. #64-2. Plaintiff stated that her memory of the Chicago trip was
impaired because of an accident. She stated that she respected Kalupa, had no ill will against
her and would not dispute her allegations.
Spencer concluded that plaintiff had smoked in the government vehicle after being
warned about defendant's policy and had attempted to cover up her misconduct by spraying
the inside of the vehicle and lying about her ability to remember whether she had smoked.
I
He believed plaintiff's behavior was particularly egregious because she had accused another
employee of fabricating the story. Spencer concluded that plaintiff should be formally
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reprimanded because as a supervisory security officer, she held a position that required her
to be honest, trustworthy and an example for her fellow and subordinate officers. Spencer
told Ahlansberg and Hemberger that he had decided to issue plaintiff a formal letter of
reprimand for violating defendant's policy by smoking in a government vehicle and for
failing to be forthcoming about her actions. They reviewed the investigative statements and
agreed with Spencer's decision. Spencer issued the letter on February 11, 2008.
D. Effects of the Smoking Incident and Letter of Reprimand
1. Supervisor of the year and advisory council
During December 2007, plaintiff received the highest number of votes from her
subordinates for Dane County Regional Airport's supervisor of the year award for her shift.
The awards ceremony was scheduled for January 24, 2008, during the investigation of the
smoking incident. Hemberger, who had final approval authority over all defendant's awards
at the airport, decided that plaintiff should not receive the supervisor of the year award
because she believed plaintiff was being dishonest about the smoking incident. The award
was given to the supervising officer who received the second highest number of votes.
The Dane County Regional Airport has an advisory council that advises management
on workplace issues. An employee who receives the supervisor of the year award can be a
member of the advisory counsel. Because plaintiff was denied the award, she did not qualify
for membership on the advisory council.
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2. Security training instructor position
At the time of the smoking incident, plaintiff and Kalupa had applied for a security
training instructor position at Dane County Regional Airport. Security training instructors
are responsible for training all of defendant's new hires. Hemberger and Ahlansberg decided
that they were not comfortable interviewing or hiring plaintiff for the position because of her
recent letter of reprimand and their belief that she had been dishonest.
In May 2008, Kalupa was hired for the position and assumed most training duties.
Plaintiff continued to be scheduled as a instructor for training sessions from March through
December 2008.
3. Plaintiff's annual evaluation
Security officers working for defendant receive a Performance Accountability and
Standards System evaluation every year consisting of various performance categories that
are scored either by supervisors and or standardized testing. The final evaluation results in
a score that affects potential raises and bonuses. No personnel at Dane County Regional
Airport has any involvement in setting the evaluation points system or monetary
compensation received by employees.
In 2007, plaintiff's evaluation was conducted by former transportation security
manager Jennifer Bennett. In 2007, plaintiff had not received any discipline and Bennett
awarded plaintiff 6 out of a possible 6 points in the "readiness for duty" category, which
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takes into consideration whether the employee has been on progressive discipline in the
proceeding year.
She scored 24.42 out of 29.97 possible points on the "technical
proficiency" category, which comprises a series of skill tests that are administered and
evaluated by outside contractors, not by any personnel from Dane County Regional Airport.
In 2008, plaintiff's evaluation was conducted by Spencer. Plaintiff's overall score in
2008 was lower than her 2007 score. Spencer gave plaintiff 2.08 points out of an available
6.25 points in the "readiness for duty" category because of the letter of reprimand she had
received after the smoking incident. With the exception of "readiness for duty," Spencer
gave plaintiff scores in every category that were equal to or higher than scores given by
Bennett in the 2007. The primary reason plaintiff's 2008 score was lower than her 2007
score was that she did not perform nearly as well on the technical proficiency portion of the
evaluation in 2008, scoring 16.66 out of 31.25 possible technical proficiency points.
After receiving her evaluation, plaintiff received a 1% increase in pay and a $1000
bonus. At the time Spencer rated plaintiff, he had no idea what level rating she would
receive and he did not have any information about corresponding pay raises or bonus
awards.
E. Plaintiff's Complaint to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
and Subsequent Interactions with Hemberger
Plaintiff initiated contact with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on
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February 12,2008. Defendant was notified of the contact on March 26,2008. She filed
a formal complaint with the commission on April 17, 2008, alleging gender discrimination,
retaliation for protected activity, hostile work environment and disability discrimination.
On October 15, 2008, plaintiff was at defendant's Dane County Regional Aiport
headquarters for training and Hemberger asked her to come into her office. (The parties
dispute what happened next. Plaintiff says that Hemberger asked her in a loud voice why
she was giving her the cold shoulder and why plaintiff hated everybody at the administrative
office. Plaintiff says that Hemberger asked plaintiff about her EEO complaint and told
plaintiff she should think about applying for other jobs or take a transfer. Defendant says
that Hemberger never mentioned plaintiff's EEO complaint and never told plaintiff she
should look for jobs outside the airport. According to Hemberger, she simply asked plaintiff
if everything was all right and told plaintiff she had seemed uncommunicative lately.)
In March 2009, Hemberger encouraged plaintiff to apply for an assistant federal
security director position at the Milwaukee General Mitchell International Airport. This
position did not exist at Dane County Regional Airport and would have been a promotion
for plaintiff.
F. Ahlansberg's Letter of Counseling
In October 2008, Ahlansberg received a non-disciplinary letter of counseling for
engaging in inappropriate and disrespectful conduct towards his employees. The letter cited
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several incidents in which Ahlansberg had allegedly behaved inappropriately at work,
including an occasion in February 2007, when he suggested to a female employee that her
babysitter was a child molester; in January 2008, Ahlansberg told a female employee that he
would cut her off at the knees for wearing hiking boots that were not part of the official
uniform; in February and March 2008, he yelled and pointed a finger in the face of male
em ployees during meetings; and in February 2008, Ahlansberg told a female employee to get
something to throw at another female employee who was not working to his satisfaction.
G. 2009 Letter of Counseling
In June 2009, Spencer became concerned that supervisory transportation security
officers were releasing their subordinate officers early from their work stations. Defendant
was legally responsible for personnel until they were off the clock, and Spencer did not want
baggage screening officers outside the airport while they were still on duty.
Also,
inconsistency in the release of officers had caused morale issues. On more than one occasion
during staff briefings, Spencer told evening shift supervisors not to release their officers from
their work duty locations any earlier than 6:50 p.m., which was ten minutes before the end
of the shift. Releasing the officers at 6:50 p.m. would allow the officers to go to the break
room, gather their belongings and exit the building no earlier than 7:00 p.m.
On June 15,2009, Spencer saw baggage screening officers that plaintiff supervised
leaving the airport before 6:50 p.m. Later that day, Spencer emailed all of the supervisory
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transportation security officers, reminding them not to release their officers from their work
duty locations more than ten minutes before the end of the shift.
Sometime between June 16 and June 24, 2009, supervisory transportation security
officer Dave Kruschke told Spencer that plaintiff was still releasing her officers early.
Kruschke asked Spencer whether he should write a report about it and Spencer said he
would investigate the matter himself. On June 24, Spencer went to the airport lobby to
observe the end of the evening shift. Spencer saw plaintiff and her baggage screening officers
exiting the lobby of the airport before 6:50 p.m. Plaintiff was one of the first officers to
leave and did not see Spencer. One of plaintiff's baggage screening officers, Callie Meis,
approached Spencer in the lobby and asked whether they were in trouble for leaving early.
Meis told Spencer that plaintiff had released them early so they thought they could leave.
When Spencer confronted plaintiff, she told him that she had held the employees in
baggage screening area 2 and they exited the airport from that location. She also said that
the clocks must not be synchronized and that could be why the officers were released early.
Spencer did not believe plaintiff's explanation because baggage screening area 2 was not
operational at that time, it was not a work duty location, he knew the employees had exited
from the breakroom and Meis had told Spencer that plaintiff said they could leave early. On
June 28, 2009, Spencer issued a letter of counseling to plaintiff for failing to follow his
directive not to release baggage screening officers early. A letter of counseling is not a formal
disciplinary action and does not affect an employee's pay, benefits or employment status.
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It is a written correction to place an employee on notice of unacceptable behavior.
H. Sexual Harassment Investigation
On June 16, 2009, plaintiff reported to Michael Franczek, the administrative officer
at Dane County Regional Airport, that she had overheard transportation security officers
Traci Bacon and Tamera Bruggeman discussing a sexual comment that another officer, Jeff
Winge, allegedly made to a female officer, Brennan Balistreri, in the terminal and in the
presence of passengers. Plaintiff told Franczek that lead transportation security officer Dave
Paddock was present when Winge made the comment and had repeated it to Bacon.
Franczek told Ahlansberg of the allegation and told plaintiff to tell Spencer about the
alleged comment.
Spencer met with plaintiff and told her he would be interviewing witnesses and that
she should not talk to anyone about the investigation. Spencer asked plaintiff to send
Winge to him so that he could interview him first. Winge denied that he made the alleged
comment and told Spencer that he could not recall the event. When Spencer called plaintiff
to send down another witness, plaintiff told Spencer that she had talked to Brueggeman
about the incident. (Plaintiff says she talked to Brueggeman before Spencer told her not to
talk to anyone about it; defendant says that Spencer had already instructed plaintiff not to
talk about the investigation at this point.)
On the evening of June 16, 2009, Paddock called plaintiff because Brueggeman told
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him that plaintiff had reported Winge for sexual harassment. Initially, plaintiff told Paddock
that she could not discuss the sexual harassment investigation. She then explained to
Paddock that she reported the comment because it was inappropriate regardless whether
anyone was offended. Paddock told plaintiff that he did not believe that he or Winge should
be punished so he was going to "come up with something." Plaintiff told him to tell the
truth.
On June 17, Paddock and Balistreri gave statements about the incident. Balistreri,
the alleged victim of Winge's harassing comment, could not recall the specific comment. She
reported that the statement had been made months before and she had taken no offense to
it. Paddock reported that the comment Winge had made was not the same as the comment
reported by plaintiff.
On June 18, Spencer contacted plaintiffwith followup questions about the conflicting
reports from plaintiff, Winge, Balistreri and Paddock. Plaintiff told Spencer that Paddock
was changing his story.
When Spencer asked plaintiff how she knew anything about
Paddock's story, plaintiff stated that she had spoken with Paddock on the phone. Spencer
told plaintiff she should have reported Paddock's statement to Spencer immediately.
After initially denying that he and plaintiff had talked, Paddock admitted calling
plaintiff and talking with her on the phone about Winge's comment. Paddock said that
plaintiff told him to deny that he had spoken with plaintiff if anyone asked.
On June 29, Bacon met with Spencer and told him that plaintiff was constantly
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attempting to discuss the "Winge issue." She said that plaintiff had sought her out while she
was walking in the parking ramp at the airport and showed Bacon her statement from the
investigation in an attempt to convince Bacon to believe plaintiff's version of the story.
When Hemberger heard about the status of the investigation and the varying stories
of the witnesses, she ordered Ahlansberg, Spencer and Melissa Bieri, the human resource
specialist, to call a meeting with Paddock, Brueggeman, Bacon and plaintiff to try to get a
clear understanding of their respective knowledge about the Winge comment. The meeting
was held on July 1,2009. Spencer told everyone present that the investigation should have
been handled differently. Brueggeman apologized for her conduct. Paddock submitted a
written statement to Spencer apologizing for his conduct. Plaintiff did not say anything
during the meeting.
Because it was Bacon's regular day off, she did not attend the meeting. Instead, she
met with Bieri and Ahlansberg the next day at Dane County Regional Airport headquarters.
Bacon told Bieri and Ahlansberg that plaintiff was behaving irrationally and had contacted
her numerous times about the sexual harassment investigation. On July 3, Bacon submitted
an email statement regarding the conduct that she reported to Bieri and Ahlansberg.
Spencer was frustrated with the investigation and believed that plaintiff had
disregarded his orders not to talk about it, thereby compromising the investigation. Spencer
also believed that plaintiff never intended to tell him about her conversations with the other
officers and believed that she had set a poor example for Bacon, Paddock and Brueggeman,
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whom she supervised.
Mter completing his investigation, Spencer issued Brueggeman a letter of counseling
and issued Paddock a letter of counseling and a two-day suspension from work. On July 22,
2009, Spencer issued plaintiff a proposed removal from federal service, citing plaintiffs
conduct during the sexual harassment investigation and the prior letter of reprimand for
lying about smoking inside the government vehicle.
I. Plaintiffs Failure to Screen High-Risk Flight
On July 21, 2009, plaintiff was assigned to conduct various playbook screening
exercises as part of her shift. The exercises, referred to as "plays," are specific assignments
for screening and observation in and around the airport and are chosen by defendant's
coordination center for each shift. At Dane County Regional Airport, the plays changed
each day, with the exception of
which
was considered the highest risk flight departing from the airport and was screened everyday.
On July 21, plaintiff and her playbook team were assigned to screen the
flight
as part of their playbook. A separate behavior detection observation team was assigned to
complete a different play on the flight. At the time plaintiff's team should have been at the
gate to screen the flight, it was outside doing observation on the parking ramp. Because
plaintiff's team was not at the gate and did not screen the flight, the behavior detection
observation team could not complete its play. Under defendant's policy, if a playbook team
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is unable to complete a play, it should notify the coordination center.
The behavior
detection observation team called the coordination center to report that it could not
com plete its play. Plaintiff never called the coordination center to explain why she had failed
to screen the
flight.
When she submitted her signed playbook schedule to the
coordination center, she did not note that she had failed to screen the
flight.
On the morning of July 22,2009, the coordination center supervisor notified Spencer
and Ahlansberg that, according to the behavior detection observation team, plaintiff had
failed to screen the
flight and had failed to notify the coordination center that she
missed the play. Spencer checked with the behavior detection observation team, who
confirmed that plaintiff's playbook team was not at the gate to screen passengers on the
flight. Plaintiff told Spencer that the reason she missed the play was because a gate agent
told her the flight was delayed, so she had moved on to the next play. (The flight was not
actually delayed.) Plaintiff admitted that defendant's protocol required her to remain at the
gate to complete the play, even if the flight was delayed, or to ask for instructions from the
coordination center.
J. Plaintiff's Termination
After Spencer learned of plaintiff's screening and reporting infractions, he issued her
a revised notice of proposed removal from federal service on July 27, 2009.
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Spencer
concluded that plaintiff presented a security risk because she did not follow rules and orders;
she was dishonest; and she repeatedly failed to take responsibility for her own misconduct.
Plaintiff could not be removed from federal service without Hemberger's approval.
Ahlansberg and Hemberger reviewed the proposed removal of plaintiff, relevant reports and
plaintiff's written responses. They agreed with Spencer that plaintiff was dishonest and
posed a security risk.
On September 22, 2009, defendant terminated plaintiff from her position at Dane
County Regional Airport for the following written reasons: (1) failure to conduct proper
screening procedures; (2) failure to accurately report; (3) unprofessional behavior; (4) lack
of candor; (5) failure to follow instructions; and (6) inappropriate behavior during an
investigation.
OPINION
Title VII, which applies to the federal government under 2 U.S.c. § 1311, prohibits
employment discrimination because of gender and retaliation for complaining about gender
discrimination. 42 U.S.c. § 2000e-2(a) (Title VII prohibits employment discrimination
because of an individual's "sex""); 42 U.S.c. § 2000e-3 (Title VII prohibits retaliating
against employee for "oppos[ing]" discrimination prohibited by statute or "because he has
made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in an investigation,
proceeding" with EEOC). Plaintiff contends that defendant retaliated and discriminated
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against her when, over the course of two years, defendant issued her a letter of reprimand
for smoking in a government vehicle; removed training duties from her; denied her a
supervisor of the year award and membership on an advisory council; denied her an
opportunity to interview for a security training instructor position; issued her an unfairly low
performance rating; issued her a letter of counseling; and ultimately, removed her from
federal service. Plaintiff also contends that the gender discrimination and retaliation she
experienced at the Dane County Regional Airport were sufficiently severe or pervasive to
create an abusive and hostile work environment.
Defendant has moved for summary judgment on all plaintiff's discrimination,
retaliation and hostile work environment claims.
A. Discrimination Claims
Plaintiff may prove discrimination either directly by presenting either direct or
circumstantial evidence of discrimination, or indirectly, using the burden-shifting approach
in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792 (1973).
Silverman v. Board of
Education of the City of Chicago, 637 F.3d 729, 733 (7th Cir. 2011). Under both methods,
the ultimate question is not whether the evidence "fit[s] into a set of pigeonholes," Carson
v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 82 F.3d 157, 159 (7th Cir. 1996), but simply whether a
reasonable jury could find that the defendant discriminated against the plaintiff because of
a characteristic protected by the statute, in this case her sex. Simple v. Walgreen Co., 511
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F.3d 668, 670-71 (7th Cir. 2007) ("[T]the straightforward question to be answered in
discrimination cases is whether the plaintiff has successfully demonstrated that she was the
victim of ... discrimination on the part of the employer.") (internal quotations omitted).
Plaintiff contends that she can prove her discrimination claims under both methods.
1. Direct method
Plaintiff contends that she has enough circumstantial evidence of discrimination to
defeat summary judgment using the direct method of proof. Her circumstantial evidence of
discrimination consists of" stray commen ts related to gender" made by Ahlansberg, Pit.'s Br.,
dkt. #66, at 4, including (1) his comment in 2004 that as a woman, plaintiff should stay
home; (2) his comment in 2006 that plaintiff would not have a problem lifting a bag if she
were not female; and (3) his comment on December 18,2007 that plaintiff needed to find
the right man so she did not have to come to work anymore. Additionally, plaintiff contends
that Ahlansberg's general attitude of hostility toward her and other female employees, as
evidenced by the letter of counseling he received in 2008, proves that he has a discriminatory
attitude toward women. Plaintiff contends that because Ahlansberg played some role in each
of the adverse actions taken against her, his disparaging comments about women are direct
evidence that the adverse actions were motivated by discriminatory intent.
A plaintiff can prevail under the direct method "by constructing a 'convincing mosaic'
of circumstantial evidence that 'allows a jury to infer intentional discrimination by the
21
decisionmaker.''' Rhodes v. Illinois Department of Transportation, 359 F.3d 498, 504 (7th
Cir. 2004) (quotation omitted). However, the circumstantial evidence '''must point directly
to a discriminatory reason for the employer'S action. '" Id. (quoting Adams v. Wal-Mart
Stores, Inc., 324 F.3d 935, 939 (7th Cir. 2003)). The court of appeals has stated on
numerous occasions that a plaintiff cannot prove her case with "stray remarks" or "isolated
comments" unless a decision maker made them "around the time of the decision" and "in
reference to the adverse employment action."
U' Petts v. Rockledge Furniture LLC, 534
F.3d 715, 721 (7th Cir. 2008); Hemsworth v. Quotesmith.Com, 476 F.3d 487,491 (7th
Cir. 2007); Steinhauer v. DeGolier, 359 F.3d 481, 487-88 (7th Cir. 2004).
The fact thatAhlansbergwas reprimanded for using inappropriate language with both
male and female employees is not evidence of discriminatory intent. Also, Ahlansberg's
alleged statements that plaintiff took too much time off and would not go far in the
company are not evidence that Ahlansberg discriminated against plaintiff because of her
gender. This is simply evidence ofAhlansberg's generally negative attitude and inappropriate
treatment of employees.
Plaintiff provides only vague descriptions and no context for the three discriminatory
remarks allegedly made by Ahlansberg in 2004, 2006 and 2007. Nonetheless, these remarks
are some evidence of Ahlansberg's attitude toward women. However, when considered in
conjunction with other facts in this case, these three discriminatory remarks alone are not
sufficient to establish that any of the adverse employment actions identified by plaintiff were
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motivated by discriminatory animus. First, Ahlansberg was not the decision maker with
respect to several of the adverse employment actions, including the denial of the supervisor
of the year award; her performance rating and the letter of counseling issued in 2009. In
fact, Ahlansberg was not the sole decision maker with respect to any of the adverse
employment actions and played a very minor role, if any, in plaintiff's ultimate termination.
Moreover, none of Ahlansberg's comments were made around the same time as any
of the adverse employment actions. Two of the remarks were made more than one year
before the letter of reprimand was issued in 2008 and the third was made approximately two
months before the letter. Petts, 534 F.3d at 721 (decision maker's comment made more
than one year before adverse action does not prove discrimination under direct method);
Hemsworth, 476 F.3d at 491 (concluding that president's comment that employee who had
suffered stroke looked tired and old was not sufficient to prove discrimination because
comment was made more than one year before employee's termination); Markel v. Board
of Regents of University of Wisconsin System, 276 F.3d 906, 910-11 (7th Cir. 2002)
(finding supervisors' statements made "nearly two months" before employee's termination
were not contemporaneous with termination and thus were not sufficient to prove
discrimination); Gleason v. Mesirow Financial, 118 F.3d 1134, 1140 n.7 (7th Cir. 1997)
(concluding that vice president's comment made "as much as three months" before
termination was not sufficient to prove discrimination). Additionally, plaintiff has not
shown that any of the comments were made in connection with any of the adverse
23
employment actions. Petts, 534 F.3d at 722 (plaintiff "has not shown any other connection
between the 'mother' comment and her termination.
Thus, the 'mother' comment is
insufficient to raise an inference of discrimination.").
In sum, plaintiff has failed to tie Ahlansberg's discriminatory statements to the
employment actions about which she complains. Thus, the comments alone do not support
the drawing of a reasonable inference of discriminatory intent with respect to the adverse
actions.
2. Indirect method
Under the "indirect method," the plaintiff must establish a prima facie case of
discrimination with evidence that: "(1) she is a member of a protected class, (2) her job
performance met [the employer's] legitimate expectations, (3) she suffered an adverse
employment action, and (4) another similarly situated individual who was not in the
protected class was treated more favorably than the plaintiff."
Burks v. Wisconsin
Department of Transportation, 464 F.3d 744, 750-51 (7th Cir. 2006). Once a prima facie
case is established, a presumption of discrimination is triggered. "The burden then must
shift to the employer to articulate some legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason" for its action.
McDonnell Douglas, 411 U.S. at 802; Burks, 464 F.3d at 751. When the employer does
so, the burden shifts back to the plaintiff, who must present evidence that the stated reason
is a "pretext," which in turn permits an inference of unlawful discrimination. McDonnell
24
Douglas, 411 U.S. at 804; Burks, 464 F.3d at 751.
Defendant has a number of arguments about why plaintiff cannot establish a prima
facie case of discrimination under the indirect method, such as that plaintiff was not meeting
defendant's legitimate expectations, some of the employment actions identified were not
sufficiently adverse and plaintiff cannot identify a similarly situated individual who was
treated more favorably. I need not address all of the parties' arguments on these issues,
however, because defendant has offered legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for taking
each of the adverse employment actions at issue. Scruggs v. Garst Seed Co., 587 F.3d 832,
838 (7th Cir. 2009) (court "can proceed directly to the pretext inquiry if the defendant
offers a nondiscriminatory reason for its action").
Several of the adverse employment actions are related to defendant's decision to issue
plaintiff the letter of reprimand for the smoking incident. Defendant has offered a legitimate
explanation for issuing the letter of reprimand and for taking the subsequent actions that
followed it. In particular, Spencer conducted an investigation, interviewed witnesses and
concluded that plaintiff had violated company policy and then lied to hide her actions. In
reaching his decision, Spencer was particularly disturbed that plaintiff changed her story
during the course of the investigation, initially suggesting that a fellow employee was lying,
and later claiming that she could not remember the events. After defendant issued the letter
of reprimand, Hemberger and Ahlansberg believed that it would be improper to give plaintiff
the supervisor of the year award and to interview her for a promotion. Because of the letter,
25
plaintiff could not be a member of the advisory council at the airport. Additionally, the
letter caused plaintiff to receive a lower score on her annual evaluation. None of these
explanations are related to plaintiff's gender.
If defendant issued the letter of reprimand and took the subsequent related adverse
employment actions against plaintiff because it "honestly believed" she had smoked in the
government vehicle and lied about it, plaintiff loses. Boumehdi v. Plastag Holdings, LLC,
489 F.3d 781,792 (7th Cir. 2007) ("If [defendant] honestly believed the reasons it gave,
however, [plaintiff] loses even if the reasons were foolish, trivial, or baseless."); Forrester v.
Rauland-Borg Corp., 453 F.3d 416,418 (7th Cir. 2006) ("If it is the true ground and not
a pretext, the case is over. "). Thus, to survive summary judgment, plaintiff must show that
defendant's proffered nondiscriminatory reasons for taking the adverse employment actions
are pretextual.
This means that she must "identify such weaknesses, implausibilities,
inconsistencies, or contradictions" in the asserted explanation such "that a reasonable person
could find [it] unworthy of credence." Boumehdi, 489 F.3d at 792.
Plaintiff makes little effort to show that defendant's reason for issuing the letter of
reprimand was anything other than its belief that plaintiff had smoked in a government
vehicle and lied about it. She argues only that Spencer's investigation of the smoking
incident was inadequate, that Hemberger and Ahlansberg were too swift to conclude that she
was being dishonest about her ability to remember smoking in the vehicle and that she was
punished too harshly.
However, she does not deny that she provided inconsistent
26
statements during the investigation and ultimately refused to contradict Kalupa's versions
of events. Plaintiff's belief that those involved in the investigation should have treated her
less harshly is not evidence that defendant's justification for reprimanding her was
pretextual. Atanus v. Perry, 520 F.3d 662, 674 (7th Cir. 2008) (plaintiff's "belief that her
conduct . . . did not warrant a ten-day suspension [is insufficient] to show that the
[employer] did not act honestly and in good faith"); Ineichen v. Ameritech, 410 F.3d 956,
961 (7th Cir. 2005) ("[I]t is not the court's concern that an employer may be wrong about
its employee's performance, or be too hard on its employee. Rather, the only question is
whether the employer's proffered reason was pretextual, meaning that it was a lie.")
(quotations and citation omitted).
Additionally, plaintiff has offered no evidence from which a reasonably jury could
conclude that defendant's proffered reasons for issuing plaintiff the low performance rating,
denying her membership on the advisory council and denying the supervisor of the year
award are pretextual. In fact, plaintiff has not responded to defendant's explanations for
these actions. By failing to respond to defendant's arguments, plaintiff has waived any
arguments in opposition and has failed to meet her burden at summary judgment of showing
that the proffered explanations are pretextual. Wojtas v. Capital Guardian Trust Co., 477
F.3d 924, 926 (7th Cir. 2007) ("A failure to oppose an argument permits an inference of
acquiescence and 'acquiescence operates as a waiver.''') (quoting Cincinnati Insurance Co.
v. East Atlantic Insurance Co., 260 F.3d 742,747 (7th Cir. 2001)).
27
Plaintiff makes a brief argument regarding defendant's refusal to interview her for the
security training instructor position, contending that defendant's "shifting explanation"
about whether it was Hemberger or Ahlansberg who decided plaintiff should not be
interviewed for the position is evidence of discrimination. Plt.'s Br., dkt. #66, at 10.
However, it is irrelevant whether it was Ahlansberg or Hemberger who made the final
decision about interviews because both Ahlansberg and Hemberger testified that plaintiff was
not interviewed because of her behavior during the smoking investigation. Thus, plaintiff's
task is to adduce evidence showing that this nondiscriminatory explanation is a lie. Plaintiff
has not carried out this task.
The only employment actions not directly related to the letter of reprimand and the
smoking incident are the letter of counseling plaintiff received related to releasing her
baggage screening officers early and her removal from federal service. Defendant has offered
legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for taking both of these actions. Defendant says that
it issued the letter of counseling after Spencer watched plaintiff release her baggage officers
early, despite having warned her recently about doing so. Plaintiff does not deny that
Spencer investigated the incident and legitimately believed that she had disregarded his
instructions. In fact, plaintiff sets out no argument in her opposition brief about why she
believes defendant's explanation for the letter of counseling is pretexual. Therefore, plaintiff
has waived any argument on this issue.
With respect to plaintiff's ultimate removal from federal service, defendant contends
28
that plaintiff's termination was prompted because of her behavior during the sexual
harassment investigation and her subsequent failure to screen the high risk flight from Dane
County Regional Airport to
failed
to
The evidence shows that plaintiff
follow Spencer's instructions to refrain from talking to other employees about the
sexual harassment investigation. Additionally, the evidence establishes that plaintiff failed
to screen a high risk flight and did not report her failure to defendant's coordination center,
as required by defendant's screening and playbook protocol. Plaintiff has not directed the
court to any evidence, direct or circumstantial, from which a jury could conclude that
defendant terminated her because of her gender and not her violations of company policies,
such as evidence that another employee in her position who violated the same or similar
policies or behaved the same way during an internal investigation was not terminated.
Moreover, plaintiff does not assert in her opposition brief that defendant's proffered reasons
for terminating her employment were pretextual. By failing to adduce any evidence or assert
any argument on this issue, plaintiff has failed to meet her summary judgment burden.
Accordingly, defendant is entitled to summary judgment on all of plaintiff's discrimination
claims.
B. Retaliation
There is some confusion in the briefs regarding the scope of plaintiff's retaliation
claims. Plaintiff alleges in her complaint that defendant retaliated against her after she filed
29
complaints about discrimination and assisted other employees in filing complaints.
However, plaintiff has adduced no evidence that she assisted other employees in filing
complaints about discrimination or that, if she did, Ahlansberg, Hemberger, Spencer or any
other managers at Dane County Regional Airport were aware of her assistance. Stephens v.
Erickson, 569 F.3d 779, 788 (7th Cir. 2009) ("[A] superior cannot retaliate against an
employee for a protected activity about which he has no knowledge.").
In her brief in opposition to defendant's motion for summary judgment, plaintiff
suggests that Ahlansberg retaliated against her because she reported comments he made in
2006 that she would be nothing more than a supervisor or a trainer. In particular, she states
that she told Hemberger, defendant's administrative officer Michael Franczek and
defendant's attorney Mark Rubic about Ahlansberg's comment, and then reminded
Ahlansberg of the comment in 2007. However, plaintiff cites to no evidence showing that
her objection to Ahlansberg's comment was a complaint about gender discrimination or any
other class protected by Title VII. Thus, her alleged complaints in 2006 about Ahlansberg
would not qualify as protected activity under Title VII. Gates v. Caterpillar, Inc., 513 F.3d
680, 687 (7th Cir. 2008) (""Although an employee need not use the magic words 'sex' or
'gender discrimination' to bring her speech within Title VII's retaliation protections, 'she has
to at least say something to indicate her [gender] is an issue."') (citing Sitar v. Indiana
Department of Transportation, 344 F.3d 720,727 (7th Cir. 2003».
This leaves plaintiffs claim that defendant took adverse employment actions against
30
her in retaliation for the complaint she made to the EEOC in February 2008. The evidence
shows that Hemberger, Ahlansberg and Spencer became aware of plaintiff's EEOC complaint
on March 26, 2008. This means that the only adverse employment actions relevant to
plaintiff's retaliation claims are those occurring after that date, namely, plaintiff's low
performance rating in 2008, the letter of counseling in 2009 and her ultimate termination.
Plaintiff's retaliation claims fail for the same reason that her discrimination claims
fail. In particular, plaintiff has failed to show that her EEOC complaints motivated Spencer
to give her a low performance rating, issue her a letter of counseling and propose that she be
removed from federal service. Leitgen v. Franciscan Skemp Healthcare, Inc., 630 F.3d 668,
673 (7th Cir. 2011) (to establish retaliation under Title VII, plaintiff must establish causal
connection between protected activity and adverse employment action). Additionally, she
has adduced no evidence to support her contention that her EEOC complaints motivated
Ahlansberg and Hemberger to terminate her employment.
Plaintiff suggests that
Hemberger's mention of plaintiff's EEOC activity during an October 15, 2008 conversation
is sufficient evidence that Hemberger terminated plaintiff because of her protected activity.
However, the October 2008 conversation occurred 11 months before plaintiff was
terminated and plaintiff has provided no evidence suggesting that she had a poor working
relationship with Hemberger after that conversation.
Moreover, as discussed above,
defendant has offered nondiscriminatory and non-retaliatory explanations for its actions and
plaintiff has failed to show that those explanations are untrue.
31
Vance v. Ball State
University, 646 F.3d 461,473 (7th Cir. 2011) (if employer establishes non-retaliatory
reason for action, burden shifts to plaintiff to show that defendant's reason was pretextual).
Therefore, defendant is entitled to summary judgment on plaintiff's retaliation claims.
C. Hostile Work Environment
Finally, plaintiff contends that the following actions taken by Spencer, Hemberger
and Ahlansberg subjected her to a hostile work environment in violation of Title VII:
•
In 2004, 2006 and 2007, Ahlansberg made disparaging comments about
plaintiff's gender and told her she would not advance in her career;
•
In December 2007, Ahlansberg stomped his feet, clenched his fists, pointed
at her, swung his arms and came in close proximity to her face;
•
In 2008, Hemberger and Ahlansberg treated plaintiff unfairly during the
smoking investigation and Ahlansberg pointed at her face and told her to
confess to smoking in the government vehicle;
•
In March 2008, Ahlansberg kicked plaintiff's chair;
•
In October 2008, Hemberger yelled at plaintiff and accused her of hating
management because she filed an EEOC claim;
•
In June 2009, Ahlansberg belittled plaintiff when she asked if she could leave
work early and told her to find a new job; and
•
At a July 1,2009 meeting at which plaintiff was present, Spencer said that the
sexual harassment investigation could have been handled differently.
To succeed on her hostile work environment claim, plaintiff must prove that (1) her
work environment was both objectively and subjectively offensive; (2) the harassment was
based on her gender or protected activities; (3) the conduct was either severe or pervasive;
32
and (4) there is a basis for employer liability. Vance, 646 F.3d at 469.
Plaintiff's hostile work environment claim fails.
First, the only incidents of
harassment that plaintiff has connected to her gender or her EEOC activity are Ahlansberg's
comments about plaintiff's gender and Hemberger's questioning of plaintiff regarding her
EEOC complaints in October 2008. These incidents of harassment do not rise to the level
of a hostile work environment, which requires "conduct [that is] sufficiently severe or
pervasive to alter the conditions of employment such that it creates an abusive working
environment." Scruggs, 587 F.3d at 840. Factors relevant to this inquiry include the
severity of the allegedly discriminatory or retaliatory conduct, its frequency, whether it is
physically threatening or humiliating or merely offensive and whether it unreasonably
interferes with an employee's work performance.
Id.
"Offhand comments, isolated
incidents, and simple teasing do not rise to the level of conduct that alters the terms and
conditions of employment." Id.
Hemberger's single incident of yelling and Ahlansberg's occasional inappropriate
comments, harsh tone and finger-pointing are more akin to "offhand comments" and
"isolated incidents" than to behavior that is severe or pervasive. Plaintiff has adduced no
evidence that the incidents were physically threatening or that they interfered unreasonably
with her work performance. Thus, although they may have been offensive, they were not
so offensive as to constitute a hostile work environment. Russell v. Board of Trustees of
University of Illinois at Chicago, 243 F.3d 336, 343-44 (7th Cir. 2001) (citing several court
33
of appeals' cases in which the court held that various statements "were not so offensive as
to constitute actionable conduct"); Adusumilli v. City of Chicago, 164 F.3d 353, 361 (7th
Cir. 1998) (ambiguous offhand comments, staring, attempts to make eye contact and four
isolated incidents of inappropriate touching were not sever or pervasive); Saxton v. AT &
T, 10 F.3d 526 (7th Cir. 1993) (holding that conduct "was not so severe or pervasive as to
create an objectively hostile work environment").
Accordingly, I will grant summary
judgment to defendant on plaintiff's hostile work environment claim.
ORDER
IT IS ORDERED that the motion for summary judgment filed by defendants Janet
Napolitano and Transportation Security Administration, dkt. #43, is GRANTED. The clerk
of court is directed to enter judgment for defendants and close this case.
Entered this 3d day of May, 2012.
BY THE COURT:
/s/
BARBARA B. CRABB
District Judge
34
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