Crews-Sanchez v. Frito-Lay, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 2022
Docket6:21-cv-00030
StatusUnknown

This text of Crews-Sanchez v. Frito-Lay, Inc. (Crews-Sanchez v. Frito-Lay, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crews-Sanchez v. Frito-Lay, Inc., (W.D. Va. 2022).

Opinion

Fad LT IWATE □□ FILED 7/15/2022 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT es WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA "DEPUTY CLERK LYNCHBURG DIVISION

JANUARY CREWS-SANCHEZ, CASE NO. 6:21-cv-00030 Plaintiff, Vv. MEMORANDUM OPINION FRITO-LAY, INC., JUDGE NORMAN K. Moon Defendant.

This matter is before the Court on Defendant Frito-Lay, Inc.’s motion for summary judgment on discrimination and retaliation claims filed by its former employee, Plaintiff January Crews-Sanchez. For the reasons set forth below, the Court concludes that Plaintiff has presented no genuine dispute of material fact that would preclude the Court from awarding summary judgment to Frito-Lay. The Court therefore will enter summary judgment in favor of Frito-Lay. Background The following facts are taken from the summary judgment record and are uncontested or viewed in the light most favorable to Plaintiff January Crews-Sanchez, as the non-movant. See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587-88 (1986). Plaintiff had worked for Frito-Lay since 2006, as an Environmental Health & Safety Manager (or “EHS Manager”). Dkt. 28-1 at 40:19 — 41:3 (“Pl’s Dep.”).! As EHS Manger, Plaintiff was responsible for, among other things, OSHA, EPA, and regulatory compliance at the Frito-Lay facility in Lynchburg. /d. at 47:8 — 48:9. Plaintiff testified that, generally, her

' Frito-Lay is a subsidiary of PepsiCo.

responsibility “was to maintain compliance,” and to ensure employees were following “all of the safety rules and regulations.” Id. at 47:8-19. Starting in March 2020, Plaintiff also became responsible for various COVID-19-related job duties. Id. at 58:1 – 60:17. “[A]t the beginning of the pandemic,” her responsibilities in this regard “were changing daily.” Id. at 58:4-5. Among other things, Plaintiff was responsible for

disseminating Frito-Lay’s COVID-19 procedures to its employees at the facility, managing supplies of personal protective equipment (or “PPE”) (including buying, distributing, and housing the PPE), putting up markers and barriers and organizing seats and furniture to ensure social distancing, handwashing and sanitizer stations, outside tents, finding and training “24- hour nurses” or others to operate temperature scanners, putting up posters, and other related tasks. Id. at 58:4 – 60:17. Plaintiff was also responsible for ensuring compliance with any mandates or CDC guidelines, id. at 60:18 – 61:2, overseeing compliance with masking, social distancing, contract tracing procedures, and ensuring that COVID-19 safety precautions were followed, id. at 61:14-16, 62:8-10. She explained that “it was a lot of physical labor because it was a lot of things you had to physically roll out,” id. at 60:7-9, and that all of that had to be

done on-site, id. at 61:12-13. Plaintiff’s responsibilities to ensure compliance with Frito-Lay’s COVID-19 safety precautions continued until July 2020. Id. at 63:13-21. Around March 22, 2020, Plaintiff submitted a letter from her doctor to Aubrey Wells (the Site Director of Frito-Lay’s Lynchburg facility) and Jessica Fowler (Human Resources Manager at Frito-Lay’s Lynchburg facility). Id. at 248:2 – 249:12. Plaintiff testified that she has “an immune deficiency disorder,” and “when COVID hit, my doctor sent a note saying that, if possible, I needed to be able to work from home,” rather than on-site. Id. at 173:16 – 17:14. The letter stated: To Whom It May Concern:

Ms. Crews-Sanchez is a patient under my care. She has an immunocompromising condition and should be allowed to work from home to maximize social distancing during the current COVID-19 pandemic. Please feel free to contact me with any questions.

Sincerely,

Stacy Park, MD Internal Medicine University of Virginia Health System

Dkt. 27-17. Plaintiff “never got a response from either one of them,” i.e., from Aubrey Wells or Jessica Fowler. Pl’s Dep. at 173:21 – 174:1. Three-and-a-half months later, on July 4, 2020, the Lynchburg minor league baseball team, the Lynchburg Hillcats, held a charity baseball game for senior high school baseball players. Id. at 66:1-14, 67:19 – 68:2. It was called the “Ronnie Roberts Senior Classic.” Dkt. 27- 8 at 1. One participant at that game was “C.D.”, who was also a Frito-Lay employee. Pl’s Dep. at 67:9 – 68:2. At the time of that game, Plaintiff testified that C.D. was “on quarantine for coming in contact with a [COVID-19] positive person.” Id. at 69:10-16. C.D.’s father, T.D., also worked at Frito-Lay at that time. Both father and son had been in “close, unmasked contact greater than 15 minutes with a … confirmed positive individual,” and so Plaintiff testified that “we at that time quarantined [C.D. and T.D.] … just to see if they ever showed any symptoms.” Id. at 80:8- 14. As Plaintiff described, “[w]e just quarantined them on that Friday,” and then “[C.D. and T.D.] went to that baseball game on Saturday ….” Id. at 80:11 – 81:5. The Lynchburg News & Advance newspaper carried a story about the Ronnie Roberts Classic, which included a photo of C.D. playing at that game. See Dkt. 27-8 at 5. The following Tuesday morning, July 7, 2020, Plaintiff emailed the President and General Manager of the Hillcats, Chris Jones, asking “Can someone please contact me regarding the Ronnie Roberts classic from this past weekend.” Dkt. 27-9 at 2. Mr. Jones responded, “Can I help you with something?” Id. Plaintiff followed up by asking simply, “Were the players asked to sign a COVID waiver before playing?” Id. Mr. Jones replied, “[w]e sent a Liability form to each coach to have each player or parent sign. Can I ask why you are asking?” Id. at 1. Plaintiff responded: “I am the environmental health and safety director for Frito-Lay and we recently

placed an employee on quarantine for COVID and he was observed playing in the game. If you would like to contact me my number is …” Id.2 Mr. Jones called Plaintiff and she explained to him that “[she] knew one of his players was on quarantine for having come in contact with a positive person.” Dkt. 27-10 at 1. He asked for the player’s name and Plaintiff told him it was C.D. (but using C.D.’s name). Id. Plaintiff did not name the person who had tested positive for COVID-19, with whom C.D. had been in close contact. Id. Mr. Jones called Plaintiff back a short time later, after he spoke with C.D.’s father, T.D. See Pl’s Dep. at 83:6-15, 85:6-17. T.D. had relayed to Mr. Jones that he and C.D. “were not on quarantine the weekend before” the game, and that T.D. “was upset.” Id. at 85:13-21; see also

Dkt. 27-10 at 1-2 (“Chris claimed that the coach had reached out to [T.D.] and today said he was quarantined for a different reason,” that it “was just a Frito-Lay thing,” and he said “something about his constitutional rights and HIPAA.”). Mr. Jones asked Plaintiff to give him the scenario that caused then to place the employee on quarantine. Plaintiff described the situation using a hypothetical “Employee A” who was the COVID-19 positive employee who had been coming into work, and that, based on contact tracing, they “quarantined [C.D.] because of his direct

2 While Plaintiff stated she was the Environmental Health and Safety Director for Frito- Lay, that was a position several rungs more senior than her position as EHS Manager. Dkt. 27-3 at 28:24 – 29:9 (“Wells Dep.”). contact observed with the positive person.” Id. at 2. Plaintiff also told Mr. Jones that C.D. had traveled recently to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, which was then a COVID-19 “hot spot.” Pl’s Dep. at 69:16 – 70:14. Plaintiff testified that she contacted Mr. Jones because she “felt [she] was responsible” for doing so, “[b]ecause the employee was supposed to be quarantining and was not

quarantining.” Id. at 70:15-21.

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