Crystal Gainey v. Genoa School District

2025 Ark. App. 330
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 28, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 330 (Crystal Gainey v. Genoa School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crystal Gainey v. Genoa School District, 2025 Ark. App. 330 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 330 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-24-633

CRYSTAL GAINEY Opinion Delivered May 28, 2025 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION V. COMMISSION

GENOA SCHOOL DISTRICT [NO. G804863] APPELLEE AFFIRMED

BART F. VIRDEN, Judge

Crystal Gainey appeals the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Commission’s finding

that she failed to prove she is permanently and totally disabled and that she is not entitled

to wage-loss disability benefits. We affirm.

I. Relevant Facts

On October 10, 2023, a hearing was held before an administrative law judge (ALJ) to

determine whether Crystal Gainey is permanently and totally disabled or entitled to wage-

loss disability benefits. Gainey testified that she is sixty-two years old and had completed the

tenth grade. On July 16, 2018, she and three coworkers were waxing and stripping the floors

at the school where she worked. The floor was slippery, and she fell on her tailbone and hit

the back of her head. As a result of the accident, Gainey experienced severe back pain,

headache, swollen ribs, and difficulty walking and breathing. Physical therapy did not help, and in October 2019, she underwent decompression and fusion surgery. From the time of

her accident in July 2018 until she had surgery in October 2019, Gainey continued to work

“light duty.” Gainey testified that her activity restrictions included not lifting anything over

ten pounds; taking breaks every thirty to forty minutes when driving; no walking on concrete;

no sitting or walking too long; and no twisting, reaching, stretching or bending. She stated

that every job she was given after her accident violated some or all those restrictions. For

example, Gainey was assigned the job of picking up trash while riding a “Gator” which is a

type of task utility vehicle. The Gator wrenched her back, and she testified that she told the

custodial supervisor, CiCi Burns, that it was causing her pain; however, she was not relieved

from this duty. Gainey was also assigned tasks such as cleaning windows and straightening

the classrooms, which violated her restrictions. Gainey recalled that she worked in the

cafeteria, which included scrubbing potatoes over a large sink, lifting boxes of food, helping

serve food, leaning over the sink to wash pots and pans, putting away the pots and pans, and

scrubbing the floors. She was assigned guard duty, which entailed standing in a ditch for an

hour in the afternoon. She testified that she was told if she did not do the work, she would

be fired. Gainey explained that there were jobs she could do, like helping teachers in their

classrooms, making copies, walking the students back and forth to the bathroom, and

helping with arts and crafts and holiday parties, “but the Superintendent couldn’t stand

seeing me do those kinds of things[.]” She testified that no job within her restrictions was

ever offered to her on a permanent basis. Three weeks after the October 2019 surgery while

she was still recovering at home, Burns called Gainey and informed her that if she did not

2 return to work, she would be fired. Gainey returned to work in November 2019 and worked

until February 2020 when she learned that her husband was going to have heart surgery in

early March and that he would have six weeks of recovery. Gainey spoke with Genoa School

District (GSD) Superintendent Debbie Huff about taking FMLA to care for her husband;

however, Gainey did not qualify. Huff told Gainey that she had to work or be fired, and she

recommended that if Gainey chose to leave work, she should resign because she would have

a better chance of being rehired. On February 26, Gainey submitted a written resignation

stating that she was leaving work to take care of her husband. She testified that during his

convalescence, she cooked for him and changed his bandages, but she was not required to

lift him. On April 15, Gainey underwent a functional capacity assessment and was assigned

permanent restrictions in the light-duty category. In September 2021, she was declared to

have reached maximum medical improvement and received an impairment rating of 25

percent to the body as a whole. At the time of the hearing, she had not applied for any jobs

with the GSD.

CiCi Burns testified that Gainey’s lifting, bending, and twisting restrictions after her

accident were accommodated, and her pay was not reduced. She stated that Gainey never

complained about her job duties. Burns testified that Gainey was assigned duties such as

wiping boards, and she was provided extension poles so that she would never have to lift her

arms above her waist. Gainey picked up the classroom trash bins that weighed less than ten

pounds and set them in the hallway, and she disinfected and wiped down tables and cabinets.

Burns testified that she modified Gainey’s duties as needed, and “they would get lighter every

3 time, so we were not making her do anything that she could not do.” Burns read from a

document that recorded Gainey’s job duties, listing her work as “monitoring kids exiting

and entering the building, cleaning windows, picking up trash, . . . putting food on trays

and handing trays to students.” Burns stated that she never threatened to fire Gainey except

when she informed Gainey that she had to return to work three weeks after her surgery or

be terminated.

Gainey’s friend Mattie Diane Watkins testified that she had known Gainey for thirty

years, and Gainey had worked for her for ten years cleaning her home. Before the accident,

Gainey was strong, “rambunctious,” and extremely mobile, climbing ladders, intensely

cleaning her home, etc. They traveled together on road trips before the accident. After

Gainey was injured in July 2018, Gainey could not ride in the car for any length of time and

had to stop frequently. Gainey was unable to do any cleaning, and Watkins testified that

Gainey moved “feebly” and “very slowly, very carefully.” She described Gainey as honest,

straightforward, and hardworking.

Gainey’s husband, Boyce, testified that before the accident, Gainey worked hard, did

chores in the house, and loved to garden. Since the accident, she had made “a 180-degree

turn.” Boyce testified that he took over the household chores, such as making the beds,

vacuuming, sweeping, washing dishes, and doing the laundry, and he accompanied her to

the grocery store because she was unable to go by herself. Boyce explained that Gainey could

no longer have cookouts with her grandkids. He stated that when she went back to work

4 after her injury, at the end of the workday, “she’d come home crying.” On cross-examination,

he testified that Gainey is able to drive him to doctor’s appointments in Little Rock.

GSD Superintendent Debbie Huff testified that she met Gainey in February 2020

when Gainey and Burns contacted her about possible FMLA for Gainey to care for her

husband. During their meeting, they determined that Gainey did not qualify for FMLA.

Huff testified that she suggested that Gainey consider resigning rather than being fired

because it would give her a better chance of being rehired. Gainey resigned and did not apply

for any jobs with the GSD, which were posted on the GSD website. Huff stated that there

were many jobs available; however, on cross-examination she conceded that many of the jobs

listed require a college degree or paraprofessional testing.

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2025 Ark. App. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crystal-gainey-v-genoa-school-district-arkctapp-2025.