Bryan Fischer v. G4S Secure Solutions Inc

614 F. App'x 87
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 2015
Docket14-3420
StatusUnpublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 614 F. App'x 87 (Bryan Fischer v. G4S Secure Solutions Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryan Fischer v. G4S Secure Solutions Inc, 614 F. App'x 87 (3d Cir. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION *

JORDAN, Circuit Judge.

Appellant Bryan Fischer asks us to reverse an order of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey granting summary judgment in favor of his former employer G4S Secure Solutions USA, Inc. (“G4S”), on his New Jersey Conscientious Employee Protection Act (“CEPA”) claim. N.J. Stat. Ann. 34:19-1, et seq. Because Fischer has failed to adduce evidence of a causal link between what he claims was protected whistle-blowing and his termination, we will affirm.

*89 I. Background 1

A. Factual Background

G4S hired Fischer in 2007 to be an armed security officer at the Salem-Hope Creek nuclear power facility for which G4S provides security services under a contract with PSEG Nuclear, LLC (“PSEG”). While there, Fischer joined a security officers’ union. During his tenure, he received training materials and attended numerous training sessions on safety, ethics, misconduct, and harassment in the workplace.

Between April 2008 and February 2010, Fischer reported three “safety concerns” to PSEG, provoking unfavorable responses from his co-workers. The first incident occurred in April 2008 when a manager in PSEG’s security department asked Fischer if he was aware of any unauthorized chairs on site in which security officers might sit without permission and he told the manager that there was a chair that was used to prop open the roof door. At the manager’s direction, Fischer and a coworker removed the chair. 2

The second incident occurred one year later when Fischer discovered that a visitor to the facility had a digital camera without a “camera pass” authorizing the carrying of a camera into a protected area of the facility. Fischer believed that a coworker, security officer Glasby, who had allowed the visitor to enter without a camera pass, had violated security protocol, prompting Fischer to tell the security team leader on duty. Several days later, Glasby confronted Fischer and asked: “What are you trying to [do,] jam me up?” (App. at 184.)

The third incident occurred on February 14, 2010, when Fischer smelled alcohol on the breath of another co-worker, security officer Crowell, and inquired whether Cro-well had been drinking. Crowell replied that he had had some drinks the night before but felt fine. Fischer believed that security officers were required to self-report if they were intoxicated or if they had been under the influence of alcohol within five hours of reporting for duty, and Fischer instructed Crowell to do so. Fischer then informed Terry Snyder, the union’s vice president, about the situation, and they both accompanied Crowell to the locker room to take a fitness-for-duty breathalyzer test. Crowell failed the test and was terminated that same day.

Some of Fischer’s co-workers expressed dissatisfaction with his behavior and Cro-well’s termination. For example, one showed him text messages that read, “Fischer is going to get his,” and “Fischer’s no good, why you talk to him?” (App. at 108.) . Another officer told Fischer that “he needed to stop reporting things” and that, if they were in the military, other officers “would pay him a visit at night.” (Id.) Fischer testified during his deposition that, when he entered the security officers’ break room, some union officers would leave the room. Fischer discussed with Snyder the possibility of contacting PSEG’s Employee Concerns Program about this treatment by his co-workers. The next day, the union president, Anthony Rizzo, said, “I hear you’re going to contact Employee Concerns.... Go ahead and contact Employee Concerns and see where that gets you.” (App. at 194.)

*90 After. Fischer contacted the manager of the Employee Concerns Program, Mike Headrick, Headrick called Fischer’s supervisor who, over the radio, relayed the message for Fischer to call “extension 2014,” the import of which Fischer feared his coworkers would recognize. Headrick later apologized for calling the supervisor, and arranged to meet Fischer that evening to discuss the work environment. Fischer met with Headrick twice and reported that his coworkers were treating him differently, prompting Headrick to tell him that he would investigate the matter and keep him apprised of any updates. Fischer also arranged meetings with Hunter Sawders, the project manager for G4S, and Brian Jacques, the PSEG security manager. Jacques suggested that Fischer be assigned to administrative work in the administration building, to separate him from his fellow union officers while the situation was under review. Although Fischer reported to work in the administration building at least twice, the union protested that its collective bargaining agreement did not allow officers to perform such work. Consequently, on May 24, 2010, Fischer was placed on administrative leave with pay, pending an investigation.

G4S retained an attorney, Arthur Dom-by, to investigate Fischer’s concerns. Domby spoke with Fischer several times throughout the investigation, and, as the investigation drew to a close in July 2010, Domby told Fischer that he believed the work environment was being corrected. Domby further reported that any disciplinary action against union co-workers would be up to Sawders and G4S. In August 2010, Fischer contacted a field examiner at the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) office in'Philadelphia about filing unfair labor practice charges against the union and G4S. The field examiner drafted charges, but Fischer ultimately decided not to sign or file them. Fischer maintains that he told members of G4S management, including Sawders, that he was considering filing NLRB charges, but G4S contends that, because he never actually did so, neither G4S nor the union ever received notice.

In September 2010, Fischer had a series of telephone conversations and in-person meetings with management of G4S and PSEG about whether and how he could return to work, all of which he surreptitiously recorded. In the conversations, management reassured Fischer that they were taking his concerns seriously and that they would take action against anyone who gave him trouble. Specifically, management informed Fischer — repeatedly— that it would have a “zero tolerance” policy on any harassment or bullying directed toward him. (See, e.g., App. at 226 (deposition testimony from Fischer in which he admits he was told there would be “zero tolerance” of harassment); App. at 440 (“Zero tolerance. For this case in particular, ... zero tolerance. Number one, I will not tolerate anybody giving you shit out there, period.”); App. at 456 (“I told you ... I’m an advocate. I’m your advocate. Somebody is out there giving you a hard time, you call me. All right? ... And I will call the president and we’ll call him and we’ll say you’re done. Get him off-site. Not — not you, but whoever is giving you a hard time. Because we have zero tolerance for that.”).) Management also informed Fischer that they were glad he had reported the misconduct and that he had done “exactly what everybody should [do].” (App. at 446.) They informed him that things would “be different” and that they would not tolerate any “union games.” (Id.)

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Bluebook (online)
614 F. App'x 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-fischer-v-g4s-secure-solutions-inc-ca3-2015.