Ardito v. City of Providence

263 F. Supp. 2d 358, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1838, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8858, 2003 WL 21212557
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedMay 27, 2003
DocketC.A. 03-155T
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 263 F. Supp. 2d 358 (Ardito v. City of Providence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ardito v. City of Providence, 263 F. Supp. 2d 358, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1838, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8858, 2003 WL 21212557 (D.R.I. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

TORRES, Chief Judge.

Introduction

The plaintiffs are fourteen individuals who have applied for positions as Providence police officers and were selected to attend the 61st Providence Police Academy, successful completion of which is a prerequisite to being hired. The plaintiffs brought this action to enjoin city officials from, now, excluding them from the Academy and replacing them with other applicants chosen on the basis of changed selection criteria.

The matter is before the Court for consideration of the plaintiffs’ application for a preliminary injunction pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 65(a). For the reasons hereinafter stated, the plaintiffs’ application is granted and the defendants will be preliminarily enjoined from conducting the 61st Providence Police Academy unless the plaintiffs are included.

Facts

After observing the witnesses who testified during a four-day hearing and reviewing the exhibits, this Court finds the relevant facts to be as follows.

Sometime in 2001, the City of Providence (all defendants collectively referred to as “the City”) decided to begin hiring officers to fill existing vacancies in its Police Department (“the Department”) and additional vacancies that the City expected would result from anticipated retirements. Only individuals who graduate from a training academy conducted by the City are eligible to become Providence police officers. Accordingly, the City decided to conduct two consecutive training academies, the 60th and 61st Police Academies. The size of each Academy is based on the number of vacancies that the City expects will need to be filled. The size of previous Academies has ranged from as few as four applicants to as many as fifty-eight. Originally, the 60th and 61st Academies were each to consist of fifty applicants; but, because Academy personnel complained that a school of fifty was too large, the number to be admitted to the 61st Academy was reduced to forty.

In order to be admitted, to the Academy, an applicant must pass a series of tests and be deemed qualified by members of the Department who interview the applicant. Applicants are provided with a booklet describing the selection process and they complete an application form in which they acknowledge that although they may successfully complete all phases of the evaluation process and may be deemed qualified, they are not guaranteed acceptance into the Academy.

The selection criteria have varied slightly from, academy to academy;, but, generally, the process includes a physical agility test, a written examination, a background check and one or more interviews. The applicants deemed the most qualified, then, are tentatively selected to fill available slots in the Academy. At that point, a letter is sent informing those applicants that they have been selected to attend the Academy provided that they successfully complete a medical examination and psychological examination. Applicants ■ who pass both examinations, then, are admitted into the Academy.

Members of each Academy class are ranked based upon their performance; and, upon graduation, they are hired, in the order of their ranking, to fill available vacancies in the Department. If there are more graduates than job openings, the City may either hire all of the graduates *362 and temporarily lay off those not needed or the City may hire only those needed and put the others on a waiting list.

Before becoming permanent members of the Department, Academy graduates must serve a one-year probationary period during which they may be terminated even without cause. The collective bargaining agreement between the City and the police officer’s union provides that once the probationary period is completed, a police officer can be terminated only for cause. The collective bargaining agreement also provides for job assignments, post assignments, vacation choices, layoffs, shift assignments, and the like to be made on the basis of seniority. In addition, seniority plays a role in promotions. Seniority among members of the same academy class is determined on the basis of rank within the class.

At the time the decision was made to conduct the 60th and 61st Academies, the police chief was Colonel Richard Sullivan. Colonel Sullivan asked Major Dennis W. Simoneau to chair a Majors’ Board that would interview applicants as part of the selection process. Major Simoneau was chosen, at least in part, because evidence presented during a trial in which members of a previous administration were prosecuted for corruption (the “Plunderdome” trial) indicated that, when applicants were being selected for an earlier academy, Major Simoneau had opposed efforts to admit an applicant that Major Simoneau felt was unqualified and from whom it later was discovered a bribe had been solicited.

Major Simoneau agreed to chair the Majors’ Board provided that “ground rules” were established for selecting applicants. Colonel Sullivan agreed and the procedure that was adopted consisted of the following steps.

Applicants first had to pass a physical agility test and a written examination. Although the written examination was scored, an applicant’s score played no role in ranking that applicant for admission into the Academy because some community groups had expressed concern that the test was not fair to minority applicants. Accordingly, 70 was selected as a passing grade and applicants who attained a grade of 70 or more remained eligible for consideration.

The 391 applicants who passed both the physical agility test and the written examination, then, were interviewed by a Patrolmen’s Board that usually consisted of four patrolmen and a lieutenant. The members of that Board had a list of five questions and lists of the points that they felt should be included in a satisfactory answer to each question. The same five questions were asked of each applicant and each Board member graded an applicant based upon the applicant’s answers to the questions and the applicant’s answers to followup questions asked by the Board. In addition, Board members had discretion to award “bonus points” for specified factors such as ability to speak more than one language. An applicant’s score on the Patrolmen’s Board was the total of the points received from each Board member.

Lieutenant Kenneth M. Cohen, the head of the Human Resources Department, then ranked the applicants according to their scores on the Patrolmen’s Board and scheduled those with the highest scores for interviews by the Majors’ Board chaired by Major Simoneau. The applicants were not scheduled in any particular order and the majors did not know where an applicant ranked.

Before the Majors’ Board interviews were conducted, background checks were performed. The officer assigned to perform a background check submitted a brief report that included the officer’s recom *363 mendation as to whether the applicant should be considered for the Academy. The reports were reviewed by Lt. Cohen who was supposed to schedule Majors’ Board interviews only for those applicants receiving favorable recommendations.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Boyer v. Jeremiah
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
Int'l Ass'n of Firefighters v. Woonsocket
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2009

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 F. Supp. 2d 358, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1838, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8858, 2003 WL 21212557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ardito-v-city-of-providence-rid-2003.