Cheng v. Bureau of Labour Statistics

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 22, 2024
Docket8:21-cv-03282
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Cheng v. Bureau of Labour Statistics, (D. Md. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT... -., FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND . . . , 4 . SHYUEH-YUING ESTHER KATHE . CHENG, * Plaintiff, + □ □ . * Civil No. 21-03282-BAH U.S. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS et al., * Defendants, .. * x * * * x * x MEMORANDUM OPINION Pro se Plaintiff Shyueh-yuing Esther Kathe Cheng sued the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (“BLS”) and its employees Brittney Forbes, Julie Hatch Maxfield, Kayla Pinkleton, Kirk Muller,

_ Laura A. Kelter, Madison Lau, Melissa Malone, Victoria Battista,-and two defendants identified

on the docket only as Ganbari and Karla (collectively, the “Defendants”), alleging Ms. Cheng was

_ discriminated against and subjected toa hostile work environment on the basis of her race, color, sex, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, and disability, as well as in reprisal for past complaints of harassment. ECF 5, at 7.1 Pending before the Court is Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss or in the alternative for Partial Summary Judgment (the “Motion”), ECF 34. Ms. Cheng has not filed an opposition, and the time to do so has expired. See infra Section I.B. (describing

The Court references all filings by their respective ECF numbers and page numbers by the □□□□ . generated page numbers at the top of the page. Ms. Cheng’s complaint filed on December 27, □ 2021, lacked a signature and certain attachments. ECF 1. On January 18, 2021, the Court granted ‘Ms. Cheng 21 days to file a signed copy of the complaint, which Ms. Cheng filed.on February 1, 2022. ECF 4. Two days later, Ms. Cheng filed a Supplement to ECF 4. ECF 5. For purposes of this Motion, the Court construes ECF 5 as the operative complaint, as ECF 4 merely, referred to ECF 1 and ECF 5 includes-Ms. Cheng’s substantive allegations. . Do □

the notice and opportunity Ms. Cheng received to respond to the Motion). All filings include | memoranda of law and exhibits.2_ The Court has reviewed all relevant filings and finds that no hearing is necessary. See Loc. R. 105.6 (D. Md. 2023). Accordingly, for the reasons stated below, Defendants’ Motion is GRANTED. I. BACKGROUND Ms. Cheng filed this pro se federal employment discrimination case on December 27, 2021, based on events that allegedly occurred during Ms. Cheng’s one year of employment at the BLS in Washington, D.C. from August 24, 2014, to August 22, 2015. ECF 5; ECF 36-1, at 3. A. The Employment Discrimination Claim □ Ms. Cheng worked as an Economist for the BLS in Washington, D.C. ECF 36-1 (Final Agency Decision), at 3. BLS hired Ms. Cheng pursuant to the Department of Labor’s Recent Graduates Program. ECF 36-1, at 17; ECF 36-2 (Initial Decision from Administrative Judge Melissa Mehring), at 2. Appointments under the Recent Graduate program are probationary in nature and are typically limited to one year “unless the training requirements of the position warrant a longer and more structured training program.” See 5 C.F.R. § 362.301. Ms. Cheng’s . one-year appointment at the BLS as a Recent Graduate began on or around August 24, 2014, and . was scheduled to end on August 25, 2015. ECF 36-1, at 5; ECF 36-2, at 2-3. Ms. Cheng’s appointment was not converted to permanent employment, and she stopped working for BLS on August 22, 2015.2 Cf 5 CFR. § 362.306(b)(1) CTA] Recent Graduate appointment expires at the end of the agency prescribed period.”). □

2 Pursuant to a prior case management order, Defendants filed the exhibits for their Motion at the conclusion of briefing by separate docket entry. ECF 36. 3 Defendants do not provide explanation for the three-day disparity between Ms. Cheng’s scheduled end date and her final day of employment, though based on the nature of Ms. Cheng’s

yy

Ms. Cheng asserts that the decision not to convert her probationary employment into permanent employment was the result of discrimination and retaliation. ECF 36-2, at 2. Ms. Cheng cites a variety of incidents, including having her schedule changed, ECF 5, at 17, being told she was bothering another coworker, id, having the “personal pens and personal hand creams, hand sanitizers and chapsticks” in her cubicle stolen, id. at 12, being taunted because of her “purity,” id. at 20, and being subjected to “smears . ... of lesbianism, & also false accusations that [she] led a double life of promiscuity,” id. She also accused her officemates of intentionally pulling the drapes in her office cubicle down each weekend and then trying to convince. that the drapes fell to-the floor due to their proximity to an air conditioning vent. /d. at 21. On August 17, 2015, Ms. Cheng initiated the Equal Employment Opportunity (“EEO”) process by lodging an informal complaint. ECF 36-1, at 1. On November 13, 2015, after her one- year appointment concluded, Ms. Cheng filed a formal complaint with the Department of Labor’s Civil Rights Center (“CRC”). /d The four issues accepted for investigation were whether Ms. Cheng was subjected to unlawful disparate treatment and/or a hostile work environment due to her race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, color, national origin, genetic information, disability, and/or in reprisal for prior Equal Employment Opportunity activity when: lL. In September and October of 2014, no one took any action after she reported that some of her personal items had been stolen from her work space; 2. On February 27, 2015, no one took any action when she reported that a co- worker screamed, “Stupid” into her cubicle and called her a “homewrecker”; 3. On April 6, 2015, her supervisor told her to resign by Mid-May. This was done after she reported allegations-of sexual harassment by a male co-worker on April 1 and; 4. On August 21 or 22, 2015, she was terminated. ECF 36-1, at 1-2. □

complaint relating to the termination itself and not the ming of the termination, this disparity is immaterial. See ECF 36-1, at 2-3 (summarizing Ms. Cheng’s allegations of discrimination).

Regarding the sexual harassment incident, Ms. Cheng told the EEO investigator that she

reported-a co-worker’s alleged sexual harassment on April 1, 2015. + /d at 5. The alleged harassment involved an email which was described by Ms. Cheng’s Division Chief as a purported April Fools’ prank in which a member of the office “sent an email to everybody in the office asking if they could check to see if they had access to a particular file for which he sent a link.” Jd. at 8. The link, however, took anyone who clicked on it “to a video of Rick Astley’s performance of his song, ‘Never Gonna Give You Up.’” /d@. The Division Chief concluded that the employee who sent the email] had “successfully ‘RickRoll’d’ [the] office as an April Fools’ Day: joke”? Id. Ms. Cheng interpreted the email as making fun of her. Id.

4 Though credited with numerous hits including “Together-Forever” and a remake of the classic “When I Fall in Love,” English pop star Rick Astley is perhaps best known for the music: video for the song entitled “Never Gonna Give You Up” that eventually spawned the craze of Rickrolling. See Kitty Knowles, What the heck is... Rickroiling?, Forbes (February 2, 2016), https://www.forbes.com/sites/kittyknowles/2016/02/02/rickrolling-what-is-rick-rolling-rick- astley/?. The Division Chief correctly noted that “‘Rick[rJolling’ is an Internet meme where a disguised hyperlink is used to get people to click on it and get taken to” the music video for Astley’s 1987 pop hit. ECF 36-1, at 8. Now well-recognized as a light-hearted joke, few viewers make it past the iconic introductory electronic drum roll.

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Cheng v. Bureau of Labour Statistics, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheng-v-bureau-of-labour-statistics-mdd-2024.