Bell v. Wilkie

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedFebruary 17, 2022
Docket8:20-cv-01274
StatusUnknown

This text of Bell v. Wilkie (Bell v. Wilkie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. Wilkie, (M.D. Fla. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

MARECIA S. BELL,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 8:20-cv-1274-VMC-CPT DENIS McDONOUGH, Secretary, DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS,

Defendant. ______________________________/ ORDER This matter comes before the Court upon consideration of Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. # 46), filed on November 3, 2021. Plaintiff Marecia Bell responded on December 8, 2021 (Doc. # 52), and Defendant replied on December 21, 2021. (Doc. # 56). For the reasons that follow, the Motion is granted in part and denied in part. I. Background A. Bell is hired by the SCI Unit In October 2016, Bell was hired as an Assistant Nurse Manager (“ANM”) with the Spinal Cord Injury (“SCI”) unit at the James A. Haley VA Medical Center (the “Tampa VA” or “the VA”). (Doc. # 46 at 2, ¶ 1; Doc. # 52 at 14, ¶ 1). Specifically, Bell occupied the role of Assistant Nurse Manager, staffing coordinator. (Doc. # 46-2 at 552 (8:5-8)). Bell’s direct supervisor was Julia Lewis, the Assistant Chief Nurse for the SCI unit. (Id. at 156 (3:20-25)). One rung above Lewis was the position of Chief Nurse of the SCI unit. When Bell began with SCI, Kathy Michel was the interim Chief Nurse and Mary Alice Rippman became the Chief Nurse in January 2017. (Id. at 269 (5:15-21), 554 (15:3-9)). Lewis explained that the Assistant Nurse Manager,

staffing coordinator position “was intended to be the person who helped the chief nurse manage the human resources [of the department]. So that could include handling the movement of staff at different shift hours when there are call outs. In nursing we are required to provide safe numbers, so that person would help manage resources, meaning nurses, NAs, LPNs, and RNs to get the appropriate skill mix on the right unit at the right time to keep that safe mix.” (Id. at 553 (9:18-25)). Typically, an ANM like Bell would have reported to a Nurse Manager. (Id. at 192 (12:19-20)). But, as Laureen Doloresco – the Chief Nurse Executive at the Tampa VA –

explained, the situation in the SCI unit was “unique” because Bell was reporting directly to the Assistant Chief Nurse. (Id. at 191 (5:12-16), 192 (12:14-18), 307). Within a month of starting the ANM position, Bell was asked to be the direct supervisor of the Resource Pool. (Doc. # 46-2 at 5 (14:23-15:2)). As explained by Lewis, the Resource Pool was a group of staff members who would “float” to the various units and clinics in the SCI, Polytrauma, and Rehab units. (Id. at 165 (41:13-22); see also Id. at 192 (11:5-10) (Doloresco explaining that the SCI Resource Pool was a “float pool” of nurses internal to the SCI who would go to different units to provide patient care)). Bell’s job was to assign

these workers to various units. (Id. at 158 (11:13-16)). The Resource Pool had 9 to 15 employees during the relevant time frame. (Id. at 157 (9:19-21)). The Resource Pool announcement came as a “shock” to Bell because “that’s not what [she] was hired to do” and she had been told that she would not be supervising people in the ANM position. (Id. at 5 (16:12-25)). Bell testified that the two previous employees to supervise the Resource Pool were both Assistant Chief Nurses. (Id. at 6 (17:9-16)). Additionally, “there were no other Assistant Nurse Managers in the Tampa VA that were directly supervising[,] first line supervisor of

any staff.” (Id. at 6 (18:15-18)). According to Bell, “other nurses that were the . . . first line supervisor over staff were at minimum Nurse Managers and then Assistant Chief and Chief. . . . That was the policy.” (Id. at 6 (19:18-21)). Lewis confirmed that the three other people who have been responsible for the Resource Pool were all nurse managers. (Id. at 156 (4:14-5:7)). Lewis additionally confirmed that no other ANM had managed the Resource Pool prior to Bell and that decision “came out of [Lewis] being overwhelmed after [multiple] management people left.” (Id. at 173 (72:5-19)). According to Bell, shortly after that announcement was made, she asked her supervisors, Lewis and Michel, “were they

going to change [her] position to a nurse manager’s position and give [her] the pay for directly supervising staff.” (Id. at 5-6 (15:11-13, 17:1-4)). Bell testified that Lewis and Michel told her that this promotion and/or pay raise would happen, they just had to get Doloresco to “sign off” and “process the paperwork.” (Id. at 6 (17:5-8, 19:24-20:6)); see also (Doc. # 52-4 at 1-2 (Bell’s written declaration stating that in November 2016 Lewis and Michel told her that her position would be changed to that of a nurse manager and she would be paid on the nurse manager pay scale)). However, Lewis testified that it was not “within [her] power to make that

happen” because the VA’s “hiring system requires that it be a competitive position.” (Id. at 168 (51:18-52:7)). And Doloresco testified that she never had discussions with anyone about making Bell a nurse manager or converting her position to a nurse manager position. (Id. at 201 (47-49)). Overseeing the Resource Pool was not the only supervisory duty that Bell fulfilled while an ANM with the SCI unit. According to Lewis, Bell had the ability to certify employees’ time and attendance records, a duty normally reserved for “supervisors” or nurse managers. (Id. at 163 (31:15-20, 33:14-25)). Bell testified that, in her very first month on the job, she assisted Lewis with multiple

administrative tasks normally undertaken by the Assistant Chief Nurse. (Id. at 17 (63:1-4) (Bell testifying that Lewis “needed me to help her with leadership duties and to manage SCI Polytrauma and Rehab”)); see also (Id. at 115 (Lewis commenting in an email that she had previously been “overwhelmed” at work and needed Bell to help manage the SCI)). B. Bell begins experiencing issues in the SCI unit Bell stated that, beginning in December 2016, she was subjected to “hostility and unfair and vulgar behavior” by a co-worker, Wanda Soto-Hunter. (Doc. # 46-2 at 7 (24:1-4)).

Soto-Hunter would yell “unpleasant comments” to Bell at staff meetings, stating for example that the meetings were only for nurse managers. (Id. at 7 (24:6-25:3)). In February 2017, Bell sent Lewis, Michel, and Rippman an email complaining about Soto-Hunter’s “disrespectful [and] demeaning behavior” towards her. (Doc. # 46-2 at 95). Bell stated she was “not requesting intervention at this time.” (Id.). In April 2017, Bell sent another email about Soto-Hunter’s behavior to Lewis and Rippman, stating that Soto-Hunter “continues to be disrespectful, demeaning and unprofessional to me in a bullying and hostile manner.” (Id. at 103). According to the email, Soto-Hunter had yelled at Bell, undermined her work

staffing nurses, and continued to ridicule her for not being part of the management team. (Id.). Bell also noted in this email that she was planning to file a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). (Id.). Bell testified that Soto-Hunter’s behavior was racially motivated because she was the only African-American employee in SCI management at that time and Soto-Hunter did not treat the other employees badly. (Id. at 9 (32:16-25)). Based on Soto-Hunter’s behavior, Bell filed her first complaint with the EEOC in April 2017. (Id. at 13 (46:10-12), 264). In June or July of 2017, Bell was reassigned to work

night shifts several times a week, from 3:30 pm to midnight. (Id. at 15 (53:1-54:17); 160 (22:1-23:14)). As Lewis explained, Bell “worked the evening shift for a period of time over several months, and she was representative of the management team in that role in the evenings.” (Id. at 160 (20:24-21:2)). Rippman conceded that Bell was the only ANM who worked the late shift every day. (Id. at 372 (34:20-25)).

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Bell v. Wilkie, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-wilkie-flmd-2022.