Category: race discrimination

  • HR and the Courts — January 2024 – CUPA-HR

    HR and the Courts — January 2024 – CUPA-HR

    by CUPA-HR | January 10, 2024

    Each month, CUPA-HR General Counsel Ira Shepard provides an overview of several labor and employment law cases and regulatory actions with implications for the higher ed workplace. Here’s the latest from Ira.

    Medical School Surgeon Awarded $15 Million in Damages Resulting From Biased Harassment Investigation

    A federal trial court jury awarded a medical school surgeon $15 million in damages. The jury concluded that the Thomas Jefferson University Hospital medical school’s sex harassment investigation of the plaintiff, who was accused of harassment and sexually assaulting a female medical school resident, was biased against males (Abraham v. Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, et al (Case No. 2:20-cv-02967, E.D. Pa. 12/11/23)). The plaintiff claimed that prior to the incident, he had an “unblemished” reputation. He claimed that due to the medical school’s mishandling of the disciplinary proceeding, he had been labelled a “rapist,” had been ostracized by professional colleagues, and had suffered damages to his livelihood.

    The incident, subject to the lawsuit, involved a pool party at the plaintiff’s home in 2018. The plaintiff alleged that the medical resident became sexually aggressive toward him without his consent, and he was too intoxicated to resist. The plaintiff claims to have reported the incident to the hospital and found that the resident had filed a complaint against him, which resulted in the allegedly anti-male biased investigation and proceedings. Prior to the verdict, the medical school filed a motion for mistrial, alleging that the “belligerent” treatment of the court by the plaintiff’s counsel unduly influenced the jury. As of writing, there has been no action on the defendant’s motion.

    LSU Associate Athletic Director Claims Race and Sex Discrimination, Retaliation, and Hostile Work Environment in Lawsuit

    A federal district court judge granted partial summary judgement dismissing some charges brought against Louisiana State University by a terminated, former associate athletic director, but allowed some allegations of race and sex retaliatory discrimination and hostile work environment to move forward to a jury trial against the university’s board of supervisors (Lewis v. Board of Supervisors, Louisiana State University (2023 BL 437930, M.D. La., No. 3-21-cv-00198, Partial summary judgement, 12/1/23)).

    The university argued that the former associate athletic director was fired in a shake-up made by a new university football coach, which had nothing to do with the plaintiff’s race or sex. However, the new coach denied at deposition that he made the decision to fire the associate athletic director, creating a factual dispute that the court ruled should go to a jury. The federal judge concluded that the plaintiff’s allegations of a sexually hostile work environment should proceed to a jury trial as well as the allegations that she was denied a pay raise and ultimately fired because she is a Black woman.

    NCAA Proposes Plan to Allow Institutions to Pay Student-Athletes

    The NCAA proposed a plan in December 2023 to allow some institutions to invest at least $30,000 into an educational trust for at least half of their student-athletes to address the ongoing controversy over payments to student-athletes. Commentators point out that there will be many challenges to the new plan, including possibly running afoul of Title IX. Moreover, the plan will not make the pending Fair Labor Standards Act and National Labor Relations Act student-athlete claims go away.

    Commentators also point out that the proposal does not address the pending class action damage claim filed against the NCAA in the name, image and likeness (NIL) litigation, which is scheduled for trial in January 2025. Plaintiffs in that class action are claiming damages of $4.5 billion as a result of the NCAA’s past ban on NIL payments, which was overturned by the Supreme Court in NCAA v. Alston in August 2021 on anti-trust grounds.

    Federal Judge Rejects Religious Discrimination Claim Against Princeton

    A federal district court judge recently granted a motion to dismiss filed by Princeton University in a case brought by a former budget analyst who claims she was fired because of her religious beliefs when she refused to comply with COVID-19 protocols, including wearing a mask (McKinley . Princeton University (Case No. 3:22-cv-05069, D. N.J. 15/5/23)).

    The case was initially dismissed because the complaint did not mention any specific religion or set of beliefs. The court gave the plaintiff the opportunity to refile and correct that omission. The plaintiff’s amended complaint contained allegations that “my body is my temple” and “decries… any and all abuse against life.” In dismissing the case, the judge concluded that the plaintiff’s beliefs appear to be a collection of general moral commandments. The court found that the plaintiff’s personal moral code and beliefs do not constitute a comprehensive system of beliefs that could be called a religion.

    Appeals Court Reverses Dismissal of Former UMass Soccer Coach’s Age Discrimination Case

    A Massachusetts state appeals court reversed the dismissal of a former women’s soccer coach’s age discrimination complaint (Matz v. University of Massachusetts–Amherst (Mass App Ct No. 22-P-1162, 12/7/23)). The coach, who was 51 years old, filed the claim alleging that his termination was because the university wanted to hire a younger coach and that the stated reasons for his termination were a pretext.

    In dismissing the case, the university claimed the coach was terminated because of “an undisputed poor record” and “student criticism of his coaching abilities.” The appellate court recognized that the coach’s performance review concluded that he needed improvement and that there were student criticisms of his coaching abilities. Nonetheless, the appellate court held that the record contains “numerous positive reviews, inconsistent with the [2015 season] criticisms,” from which a jury could find he was terminated because of his age. The appellate court concluded that the plaintiff raised a claim by a member of a protected class, who was performing his job sufficiently, and his allegations could raise reasonable speculation about discrimination.

    California Jury Awards Nurse $41.5 million in Damages in Retaliatory Discharge, Whistleblower Case

    A neonatal intensive care nurse who was fired after 30 years of service to her employer was awarded a California jury verdict of $41.5 million in compensatory and punitive damages as a result of her discharge, which she claimed was in retaliation for raising safety issues. The California state court jury awarded the plaintiff $1.3 million in lost wages, $1.2 million in future lost wages, $1.5 million in past mental suffering, $7.5 million in future mental suffering, $15 million in punitive damages against the hospital, and $15 million in punitive damages against the Kaiser Foundation.

    According to the hospital, the plaintiff was fired after she was found reclining in the neonatal unit, talking on her personal phone with her feet resting on an isolette that had a neonatal infant inside. The plaintiff claimed that the stated reason for discharge was a pretext and that the real reason for her discharge was that she reported a supervisor who refused to report that the father of a patient was present in the hospital with a knife, creating an unsafe situation in the hospital (Gatchalian v. Kaiser Foundation Hospitals et. al. (Case No.  21STCV15300 Ca. Sup Ct. L.A. Cty. Jury Verdict 12/16/23)).



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  • HR and the Courts — February 2023 – CUPA-HR

    HR and the Courts — February 2023 – CUPA-HR

    by CUPA-HR | February 2, 2023

    Each month, CUPA-HR General Counsel Ira Shepard provides an overview of several labor and employment law cases and regulatory actions with implications for the higher ed workplace. Here’s the latest from Ira.

    Supreme Court May Consider the Propriety of the Court-Created “Adverse Employment Action” Rule, Limiting Title VII Complaints

    The Supreme Court has asked the U.S. government (the Department of Justice and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) to weigh in on whether it should hear two cases challenging the court-created “adverse employment action” rule, which limits consideration of Title VII complaints to those involving an “adverse employment action.”

    The first case involves a female police officer who alleged that she was transferred out of her department because of her sex. The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (covering Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska) affirmed the dismissal of the case because it found no adverse employment action where the transfer did not involve a loss of pay and rank or level of responsibilities. 

    The second case involves a former head of an Alabama legal services group who challenged the decision of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (covering Alabama, Georgia and Florida), which affirmed the dismissal of his case on “adverse employment action” grounds where the suspension challenged because of his race was a suspension with pay, and did not involve the loss of any wages or benefits.  

    Both plaintiffs claim that the “adverse employment action” requirement was court-created and not part of the actual Title VII statute. They both claim that the change in job status, which was the subject of their complaint, was involuntary, not to their liking, and based on their protected-class status. Therefore, they claim it should be actionable under terms of the Title VII statute. Both defendants oppose, claiming there is no conflict between the circuits.  

    Professor’s Bias Case Dismissed for Failure to Establish “Pervasive” Harassment, and HR Warning Not a “Substantial Adverse Employment Action”

    A Texas Court of Appeals recently overruled a trial court and dismissed a professor of Indian descent’s bias claims filed under the Texas state anti-discrimination statute. The appellate court concluded that the professor’s complaints of coworker comments reflecting negatively on his national origin did not rise to the level of “pervasive” harassment. Additionally, his complaint that he received a warning from HR about a complaint, which was previously closed, did not rise to the level of a “substantial adverse employment action,” and therefore was not actionable (Texas Southern University v. Nayer (Tex. App. 1st Dist. No. 01-21-00497-CV, 1/10/23)).

    The plaintiff, who is originally from India, was hired by the university in 2009 as an assistant professor in the administration of justice department. He was promoted to associate professor, received tenure and was appointed interim department chair in 2016. The professor alleged that coworkers used the term “you people” as a racial epithet to address him in emails and that he had received a warning from HR relating to a complaint which had been closed. While the trial court ruled he was entitled to a jury trial over his discrimination claims, the appellate court reversed the ruling and dismissed the case for failure to establish “pervasive” harassment and failure to raise a “substantial adverse employment action.   

    In 2022, U.S. Labor Unions Engaged in the Most Strikes Since 2007, With Education Service Employees the Majority of Employees Engaged in Strike Activity 

    More than 225,000 employees engaged in 314 strikes last year, more strikes than in any year since 2007. Education service employees accounted for three out of every five of those workers, according to an analysis report by Bloomberg News. The largest strike of the year was at the University of California, where approximately 48,000 graduate student workers were on strike for six weeks demanding increased wages and changes to working conditions. This strike was the largest strike occurring at any college or university since 1990, according to the Bloomberg database. The graduate student workers were represented by the United Auto Workers Union.  

    The American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association engaged in the second highest number of work stoppages during 2022, surpassed only by the Service Employees Union. Collectively, these two unions had the largest share of union members involved in strike activity in 2022. Analysts conclude that dual economic factors in 2022 led to the increase in strike activity. The factors noted were a very tight labor market and rising inflation. Union leaders also claim that many other contract negotiations narrowly avoided strike situations as a result of diligent negotiation activity on both sides of the table.  

    Nonetheless, overall union membership dropped to a historic low percentage of the U.S. workforce in 2023. The unionized percentage of the American workforce dropped to 10.1 percent, lower than the previous low of 10.3 percent, recorded in 2019. While union membership actually increased in 2022 by some 273,000 employees, it was not enough to keep pace with the even larger growth on non-union jobs in 2022. These numbers are a continuation of the long-term slide in union membership in America. In 1983, the first year the government began collecting these numbers, the percentage of overall union membership in the U.S. was over 20 percent of the total American workforce.  

    Professor’s Race Discrimination Claim Based on Disparate Treatment of Student Complaints Moves Forward

    A former medical professor’s lawsuit survived a motion for summary judgement filed by her former university employer following allegations that non-minority professors were not terminated following student complaints. In allowing the case to proceed to discovery, the federal court judge concluded that the plaintiff “barely” raised enough facts to allow the case to proceed (Miller-Sethi v. City University of New York et al (S.D.N.Y. No. 21- cv- 08591, I/26/23)).

    The medical school professor’s contract was not renewed following a complaint from a student that the professor criticized her following the student’s refusal to continue working at a site which she was not comfortable working in because of the racial makeup of the area. The university argued that the comparators had received complaints regarding course evaluation or teaching techniques, which were not comparable to plaintiff’s situation. The judge ordered further discovery on the issue. 



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  • HR and the Courts – December 2022 – CUPA-HR

    HR and the Courts – December 2022 – CUPA-HR

    by CUPA-HR | December 13, 2022

    Each month, CUPA-HR General Counsel Ira Shepard provides an overview of several labor and employment law cases and regulatory actions with implications for the higher ed workplace. Here’s the latest from Ira.

    University Wins Dismissal of “Deliberate Indifference” to Sex Harassment Claims on Statute of Limitations Grounds 

    A federal district court dismissed 12 counts of alleged indifference to sex harassment brought by six Jane Does, five of whom are current or former students and one of whom is a current professor. The case involves allegations against a male graduate student in French language studies who was arrested for rape of a student at another college in 2018. It is alleged that the university did not act on sex harassment allegations of inappropriate touching and “raunchy” texts following the incident at the other college.

    The graduate student allegedly raped Doe #1 in September 2020, and the university suspended him in November 2020 following an investigation for sexual harassment, endangerment and disorderly conduct. The graduate student fled the country for France in December 2020 and has not returned. The graduate student was indicted for rape stemming from the 2018 alleged assault in December 2021.

    The federal district court judge dismissed all the allegations on statute of limitations grounds (Doe #1 et al v. Board of Supervisors of Louisiana State University and Agriculture and Mechanical College et al ( M.D. La. No. 21-cv-00564, 11/3/22)). Louisiana has the shortest statute of limitations in the country at one year and the judge concluded that the majority of the claims were time barred, granting plaintiffs the ability to amend two of the 12 claims and refile them.

    Athletic Director Applicant Loses Reverse Discrimination Claim on the Basis of Interview Performance

    A white athletic director applicant who claimed superior qualifications for a senior athletic director position failed to show that the stated reason for his rejection (poor interview performance) in favor of a minority applicant was pretextual. The plaintiff was a long-time athletic director in the South Bend Indiana School district at the time he applied for a broader and more senior athletic director position. The judge ruled that while the plaintiff may have been more qualified “on paper alone” by a comparison of resumes with the minority applicant who was chosen for the job, the employer showed that a comparison of resumes was not the sole criteria for job selection (Groves v. South Bend Community School Corporation (2022 BL 347215, 7th Cir. No. 21-03336, 10/1922)).

    The judge went on to recognize that the minority applicant performed much better during his interview and convinced the interviewer that he would be much better able to mend the strained relationship the school district had with the State Athletic Association. The judge further observed that during the interview, the plaintiff stressed his experience in firing coaches and this was not helpful in the mind of the interviewer with regard to the State Athletic Association. The judge concluded that the facts supported the conclusion that interview performance was not a pretext to commit race discrimination. The judge’s conclusion was affirmed by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (covering Wisconsin, Illinois and Indiana).

    State of Florida Appeals Federal Judge’s Decision Blocking the Florida Law Restricting Employer Anti-Bias Training

    The state of Florida has appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, asking the appellate court to reverse a federal judge’s decision that barred enforcement of the controversial law’s provisions, which prohibited employers in the state of Florida from promoting various sex- and race-based anti-bias concepts as part of employee training.

    The federal district trial judge issued a preliminary injunction barring enforcement of much of the law based on a conclusion that it violated employers’ First Amendment free speech rights under the U.S. Constitution. The state of Florida argued in its appeal that the statute does not restrict employer free speech, rather it blocks employer conduct “conscripting employees against their will into the audience as a condition of their employment,” (Honeyfund.com Inc et al v. DeSantis et al (Case No. 13135, 11th Cir.)).

    The federal trial judge had concluded that Florida state lawmakers wrote a law that attempts to squelch viewpoints on race and sex bias that they do not like. CUPA-HR will follow this litigation as it develops.

    Department of Labor Proposes Self-Correction Program for Retirement Plans With Late Participant Contributions and Loan Repayments

    The Department of Labor is proposing a new self-correction component under its Voluntary Fiduciary Correction Program (VFCP) to allow plan administrators to self-correct certain plan violations without the need to file a formal application and no action request. Under the proposed rule, the plan would report the correction through an online portal. The VFCP allows plans to self-correct certain Employee Retirement Income Security Act violations and avoid civil penalties by identifying and correcting certain plan design and implementation errors. Under the proposal, plans with late participant contributions or loan repayments could use this alternative to self-correct these violations.

    Under the proposed rule, the self-correction must be made within 180 days of the withholding or receipt of funds and the lost earnings must not exceed $1,000. Publication of the proposed rule is expected to be made in late November/early December, and comments must be submitted within 60 days of publication of the proposed rule.

    Terminated Softball Coach Sues for First Amendment Speech and Religious Discrimination Allegedly Related to Her Offer to Adopt a Student’s Baby

    A former assistant softball coach has filed a lawsuit in federal court alleging that her former university discriminated against her in the exercise of her free speech rights and religious beliefs when she was discharged after she offered to adopt a student’s baby and refused to reveal the identity of the student (Wiggins v. Idaho State University et al (D. Idaho No. 22-cv-00474, complaint filed 11/17/22)).

    The complaint alleges that the university violated the former coach’s First Amendment speech and exercise of religion rights by “coercing” the coach to convince the birth mother to disclose the pregnancy and birth to her parents and to withdraw her offer to adopt the baby. The complaint alleges that the university discharged the coach after she refused to disclose the name of the birth mother to the athletic director and dean of students so they could contact the birth mother‘s parents. The plaintiff alleges that her offer to adopt the baby was an “exercise of” her Christian faith. The plaintiff also alleges that the loss of employment forced her to sell her home and move her family to Texas.



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