Tag: January

  • 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 – January 2023 – CUPA-HR

    HR and the Courts – January 2023 – CUPA-HR

    by CUPA-HR | January 18, 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.

    Divided Court of Appeals Rules That Separating Bathrooms By Biological Sex Does Not Violate the Constitution or Title IX — Transgender Student’s Discrimination Claim Denied

    The full 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (covering Florida, Alabama and Georgia) recently held in a sharply divided 7 to 4 decision that separating school bathrooms by biological sex is constitutional and does not violate Title IX. The majority decision is subject to multiple dissents (Adams v. School Board of St. Johns County, Florida (11th Cir. No. 18-13592, 12/30/22)). The case involved a St. Johns County, Florida, school board, which restricted bathroom use by biological sex, not allowing students who identified with a sex different from their biological sex to use the bathroom of their choice.   

    The majority decision rejected the transgender plaintiff’s reliance on the Supreme Court decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, which held that under federal job discrimination law, sex discrimination includes bias based on gender identity or sexual orientation. The majority decision pointed out that a school setting “is not the workplace,” and Bostock expressly decided not to tackle the issue of sex-segregated locker rooms or bathrooms. The majority concluded that the U.S. has a long history of separating sexes when it comes to the use of public bathrooms, and such sex-based classifications have never necessarily violated the Equal Protection Clause. It is likely that other circuits may decide this issue differently, setting up an ultimate decision on this issue by the Supreme Court.  

    NLRB Expands Damage Remedies Against Employers Who Commit Unfair Labor Practices

    The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), in a decision applicable to all private colleges and universities in America, recently ruled that it will award damages in addition to back pay and reinstatement to employees who are subject to unfair labor practices (Thryv Inc. (N.L.R.B. Case No. 20-CA-250250, 12/13/22)). The case was brought by the NLRB against Thryv Inc., a software and marketing company, which the NLRB alleged violated the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) by laying off employees without first bargaining with the union.  

    The NLRB ruled 3 to 2 (with two Republican member dissenters) that its “make-whole” remedies for employees affected by unfair labor practices will include damages that are the “direct and foreseeable pecuniary harm” resulting from an employer’s unfair labor practice, in addition to back pay and reinstatement. For example, this would include out of pocket costs for medical payments that would have been covered by an employer’s health insurance had the employee continued to be employed but for the unlawful termination. 

    Firefighter Loses First Amendment Religious Objection to Being Photographed for ID and Accountability Card

    A Christian firefighter from Bourne, Massachusetts, lost his First Amendment religious claim against his fire department after he was disciplined (suspended for 24 hours and ineligible for pay increases for at least six months) for refusing to be photographed for his ID card and accountability tag that would be attached to his firefighting gear and used at fire scenes (Swartz v. Sylvester (2022 BL 416412, 1st Cir., No. 2101568, 11/21/22)). The firefighter claimed that his religious beliefs precluded him from engaging in acts of self-promotion and that the photos might be used for promotional purposes. 

    The fire chief’s directive came after he became aware that some firefighters had worn ties and others wore t-shirts for their ID and authentication tag photos. The fire chief issued a directive that all firefighters would sit for their photos wearing their dress uniform for consistency. The photos would also be used in a display at the firehouse, be submitted to the media when a firefighter died in the line of duty and might be submitted to the media following a firefighter’s promotion.  

    In rejecting the plaintiff’s claim, the court concluded that the directive was applied uniformly, without exception, was facially neutral and was rationally related to the legitimate government purpose of publicizing the fire department and promoting the integrity of governmental institutions. 

    NLRB General Counsel Concludes That the NCAA Violated the NLRA By Failing to Treat Student-Athlete Basketball and Football Players as Employees

    The NLRB general counsel has concluded that the NCAA is violating the NLRA by failing to treat student-athlete basketball and football players as employees. The decision could eventually lead to the ability of these student-athletes to form labor unions. Absent settlement of the case, the NLRB Los Angeles Regional Office will issue a complaint against the NCAA and likely the Pac-12 Conference and the University of Southern California for failure to treat these student-athletes as employees. The case was brought to the NLRB by the National College Players Association, an advocacy group seeking to organize student-athletes. The final decision as to whether student-athletes are employees rests with the full NLRB, which will eventually address this matter. 

    New York Temporarily Abandons Statute of Limitations on State Law Sex Harassment Claims

    New York state has temporally done away with the statute of limitations on sex abuse claims, giving adult victims of sex abuse one year to file a claim against employers and offenders seeking financial compensation. The Adult Survivors Act, which became effective November 24, 2022, gives victims of alleged sex abuse a one year period to file a claim in New York no matter when the alleged abuse occurred. The new statute is intended to fill the gap left by 2019 legislation, which expanded New York’s statute of limitations on sex abuse cases from one year to 20 years, but did not do so retroactively.  

    Jury Awards Former Softball Coach $800,000 in Damages for Emotional Pain and Mental Anguish in Sex Discrimination Case

    A federal court jury has awarded a former university baseball coach $800,000 in damages for alleged emotional pain and mental anguish in a sex discrimination case in which the former coach alleged she was paid less than male comparators and was suspended from her position because of her sex. She had been suspended from her position following parental complaints about her coaching style. She alleged that a male coach who was the subject of similar parental complaints was treated less severely. The court dismissed her complaint with regard to salary discrimination, but allowed her discriminatory suspension allegations to proceed to a jury trial. The $800,000 jury award is subject to the university’s Motion for Judgment, not on the verdict likely to be filed after a final award is formalized by the federal district court judge (Hall v. Alabama State University (M.D. Ala. No. 16-cv-00593, 12/19/22)).  

    The jury trial proceeded for two days, and the jury concluded that the plaintiff’s gender was a motivating factor in the decision to suspend her.   

    Boston College Trustees Sued in Class-Action Lawsuit Claiming ERISA Violations in Allegedly Allowing “Above Market” Administrative Fees to Be Paid to Investment Adviser Without Competitive Bidding

    A federal district court judge recently denied the motion for summary judgement filed by defendants and allowed a class-action lawsuit to proceed against the trustees at Boston College who were sued for allegedly allowing “above market” record-keeping fees and “excessive” investment-management fees, which plaintiff’s claimed were not properly monitored or assessed through a competitive bidding process. In ruling the motion a “close call,” the judge allowed the lawsuit to proceed to discovery into the institution’s and trustees’ conduct (Sellers v. Trustees of Boston College (2022 BL 461759, D. Mass. No. 1:22-cv-10912, 12/27/22)).

    The plaintiffs also challenged the alleged inadequate performance of certain plan investments. The retirement plans in question cover approximately 3,000 employees and contain over $1.1 billion in assets. In allowing the case to proceed, the judge concluded that the plaintiffs are alleging more than poor performance during a limited time. The plaintiffs are alleging that the institution and trustees were not aware of the historical imprudence of certain investments or recent published court decisions regarding questionable fees and investments in this area.  



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