Andrew Bartlik v. United States Department of Labor and Tennessee Valley Authority
This text of 73 F.3d 100 (Andrew Bartlik v. United States Department of Labor and Tennessee Valley Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
KENNEDY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which NORRIS, J., joined. RYAN, J. (pp. 104-105), delivered a separate opinion concurring in the result.
Petitioner Andrew Bartlik appeals two decisions of the Secretary of Labor (the “Secretary”) that have been consolidated for the purposes of this appeal.1 Petitioner brought an action against Tennessee Valley Authority (“TVA”) under 42 U.S.C. § 5851 which prohibits nuclear licensees, such as TVA, from discriminating against an employee for raising safety concerns about nuclear facilities.2 Concluding that petitioner failed to carry his burden of proof of discrimination, the Secretary denied the claim. Because we find that plaintiff failed to prove his prima facie case, we AFFIRM the Secretary’s decision against him.
I.
Safety concerns caused the shutdown of TVA Sequoya nuclear power plant (“Sequoya”) in 1985. With a goal of the plant’s safe and prompt startup, TVA employed petitioner Andrew Bartlik, an engineer with expertise in fire protection at nuclear facilities, to analyze fire safety issues at Sequoya in January of 1987. Petitioner attended to Sequo-yah’s conformance with Appendix R, the fire safety regulations of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (“NRC”)3 until his contract expired and was not renewed on November 25, 1987.
Petitioner had been one of many engineers hired as a “staff augmentee.” As such, petitioner was nominally employed by American Technical Associates (“ATA”) but TVA bore supervisory responsibility over him. ATA was a “technical services firm,” which provided qualified engineers on an as-needed basis. However, throughout the latter half of 1987, TVA switched from the use of “staff augmen-tees” in its nuclear engineering program to “managed task contracts.” On account of this shift, of 1,000 staff augmentees working at Sequoyah in the last three months of 1987, only two engineers were approved as staff augmentees to work past December 31 of that year. Furthermore, because ATA could not provide engineering management, it was not suited to managed task contracts and TVA phased out its contracts with ATA as it shifted to the use of managed task contracts.
Two weeks after the expiration of petitioner’s staff augmentee contract, on December 7, 1987, the NRC announced a surprise inspection of Sequoyah on the following day to investigate Sequoyah’s Appendix R compliance. Lead Nuclear Engineer Henry Jones and engineers Edward Sheehy and David [102]*102Renfroe held an immediate emergency meeting during which they concluded that Sequo-yah was not in compliance with Appendix R. Late that evening, the three engineers met with Project Engineer John Hosmer to give him their findings. In answer to Hosmer’s further inquiry, the engineers recommended the immediate formation of a review team to consider Appendix R documentation and requirements. Conversation then shifted to the composition of such a team. In this context, after petitioner had been put forward as a possible candidate, Hosmer said, “I don’t want any contractors working on problems which they discovered.”
Petitioner argues that Hosmer’s statement, the occurrence of which neither the administrative law judge nor the Secretary questioned, constitutes direct evidence of retaliatory discrimination. The Secretary of Labor, however, implicitly found that Hos-mer’s statements were not direct evidence of discrimination. The Secretary found that petitioner could point to nothing more than Hosmer’s single remark from which an inference of discrimination might be drawn. Particularly in light of the considerable amount of countervailing evidence, this remark was deemed not to meet the requisite burden of proof of proscribed discrimination.4
II.
The scope of judicial review in this case is defined at 42 U.S.C. § 5851(c)(1) which refers the court to the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2). The court has the authority to set aside agency action found to be arbitrary, capricious, or unsupported by substantial evidence. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A) & (E).
As an initial matter, it must be noted that petitioner argues that TVA retaliated against petitioner with regard to several employment decisions. The Secretary found, however, that in all but one of these decisions, petitioner failed to prove that the decision-maker even knew of petitioner’s identity or activities. This finding is supported by substantial evidence. With regard to these claims, therefore, petitioner failed to prove his prima facie case, see infra note 6, and we affirm the Secretary’s decision as to these charges.
The Secretary was of the opinion that “[o]nly one part of the record might justify an inference” of retaliatory discrimination, JA at 43, referring to Project Engineer John Hosmer’s alleged statement, “I don’t want any contractors working on problems which they discovered.” Petitioner suggests that this is direct evidence of discrimination and points out that if there is direct evidence of discrimination, then the Secretary must shift the burden of proof to the employer who must produce evidence indicating that the adverse action was motivated by a non-discriminatory purpose. JA at 28 (Secretary of Labor’s Final Decision and Order (citing Blake v. Hatfield Elec. Co., Case No. 87-[103]*103ERA-4, Sec. Dec. Jan. 22, 1992, slip op. at 5-6)).
We think, however, that the proffered testimony was not direct evidence of retaliatory discrimination.5 In fact, we find that in the context of this employment action the testimony was insufficient by itself even to prove plaintiffs prima facie case. The elements of a prima facie case of retaliatory discrimination have been articulated in many eases with slight variation.6 We think the common thread is that plaintiff must set forth facts which justify an inference of retaliatory discrimination. See Brief of the Secretary of Labor at 27. The evidence offered in this case, taken as true, does not justify such an inference, however. Therefore, we agree with the Secretary when he argues on appeal that petitioner failed to prove his prima facie case. Brief of the Secretary of Labor at 28-29, 32.7
The record in this case simply affords no reason for inferring that John Hosmer’s decision not to hire the discoverer of an Appendix R problem at Sequoyah onto a review team whose job was to review all of Sequo-yah’s Appendix R problems was a matter of retaliation rather than the result of a légiti-mate and pragmatic policy determination. The goal of hiring a review team whose [104]*104members bring a new and fresh perspective to detected problems may be part of a policy untainted by unlawful discrimination. Plaintiff has adduced no evidence to belie this explanation. He has therefore offered no evidence which would justify an inference of retaliatory discrimination.
Having found that petitioner has failed to make a prima facie
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73 F.3d 100, 11 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 492, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-bartlik-v-united-states-department-of-labor-and-tennessee-valley-ca6-1996.