Earnest McCowen v. Village of Lincoln Heights

624 F. App'x 380
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 21, 2015
Docket15-3040
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 624 F. App'x 380 (Earnest McCowen v. Village of Lincoln Heights) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earnest McCowen v. Village of Lincoln Heights, 624 F. App'x 380 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

When Earnest McCowen and Jamil Turner became part-time firefighters for the Village of Lincoln Heights, the Village told them to seek certification as Emergency Medical Technicians, otherwise known as EMTs. Ten months later, after they had failed to gain the required certification, the Village fired them. They sued their employer, alleging that their discharge violated Title VII’s anti-retaliation provision as well as a similar Ohio provision. The district court granted the Village’s motion for summary judgment because McCowen and Turner did not show that their employer’s stated reasons for firing them were pre-textual. We affirm.

The Lincoln Heights fire station has two types of workers: volunteers and part-timers. Part-time employees have regularly scheduled shifts and are paid by the hour. If the department needs assistance on a fire run, it calls in volunteers, who are (despite their title) paid by the run. The Lincoln Heights station also performs two types of work: It puts out fires, and it responds to eniergency-medieal calls. Anyone certified as a firefighter can participate'in fire runs; anyone certified as an EMT can serve on a medical run; and anyone with dual certification can do both. About ninety percent of the calls received by the Lincoln Heights fire department are emergency-medical calls. State law requires at least two EMTs to go on medical runs, Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 4765.43(D), and departmental policy requires three firefighters to respond to a fire call.

McCowen and Turner were familiar with these policies because they grew up in the Lincoln Heights fire station, where their fathers were firefighters. As children, they served as “fire cadets,” helping out around the station and cleaning the equipment. During this time, McCowen (and to a lesser extent Turner) grew close to another firefighter, Michael Solomon. Solomon described himself as a “mentor[ ]” to both of them. R. 10-3 at 14.

Following in their fathers’ footsteps, McCowen and Turner took a training course in high school and earned their firefighting certifications. As part of the course, both men received training to become EMTs. But Turner failed the final certification test, and McCowen declined to take it. Nonetheless, because they remained qualified firefighters, the station hired them as volunteers in 2006. McCowen and Turner tried once again to become EMTs in 2009, when the city paid for them to take a training class. They took the class but failed the state certification test.

In late 2011, Solomon, by then the department’s fire chief, sought funding to *382 hire two part-time employees. At the time, Solomon was scheduling two part-timers, both dual-certified, for each shift. Because it took a third firefighter to operate the truck, the part-timers had to call in a volunteer whenever they went on a fire run. Solomon hoped that hiring a few more part-time employees would enable the department to meet its staffing needs without routinely requesting volunteers. When he received approval from the city council, he promoted McCowen and Turner to part-time status, effective January 1, 2012.

One day before McCowen and Turner were to begin, the fire department held an officers’ meeting, at which the two new part-timers were not present. During the meeting, some firefighters expressed concern that McCowen and Turner would be paid at the same rate- as those who were dual-certified: Others complained that McCowen and Turner would get to wait back at the station during medical runs. Stephanie Dumas, the Village Manager, had a heated exchange with Solomon about his decision to promote the two young firefighters.

■ After this meeting, according to some witnesses, the officers decided that McCowen and Turner should try to obtain EMT certification, though they would not be required to do so. Others claim that dual certification was mandatory: If McCowen and Turner did not pass the state exam within a year, they would be demoted to volunteer status or fired. All agree that the officers wanted McCowen and Turner to obtain their certifications and that the Fire Department conveyed this desire to both firefighters. And McCowen and Turner both understood they needed to get the certification. During his deposition, McCowen confirmed that “our fire chiefs wanted us to try to get our EMT,” R. 10-1 at 30, adding later, “I took it if I wanted to do this job, I’ve got to get my EMT,” id. at 58. Turner was equally clear: “[The Assistant Chief] wants us to have — get our EMT — [Chief Solomon] wants us to get — wants us to get our EMT.” R. 10-2 at 39.

In January 2012, Solomon filed an internal complaint alleging that Dumas had sexually harassed him. The complaint escalated into a lawsuit, with the fire chief asserting that Dumas had retaliated against him in violation of state law.

At roughly the same time, McCowen and Turner started their jobs as part-time employees, but they declined to register for the first available EMT course, apparently because they could not pay the tuition. Although they tried to sign up for a certification course in June, that class was can-celled due to low enrollment, and they did not at that point sign up for another class elsewhere. They planned to register when the course was offered at the same place again in January 2013, but, before they could do so, Dumas intervened. In late October 2012, she learned that McCowen and Turner had not yet obtained dual certification and would be unable to do so before the end of the year. Citing their lack of certification, she asked Solomon to fire them, in what the fire chief later described as an attempt to “humiliate” him by making him discharge his two protégés. R. 12-2 at 11-12. On October 29, Solomon delivered the bad news to McCowen and Turner.

After exhausting their administrative remedies, the two firefighters filed this lawsuit against the Village of Lincoln Heights and Dumas. They alleged unlawful retaliation under Title VII and state law, claiming that the discharge of Solomon’s friends in the office was a means of punishing Solomon for his lawsuit. The district court granted summary judgment to Lincoln Heights and Dumas. The court *383 found that the two firefighters had set forth a prima facie case of retaliation but could not show that the Village’s asserted reason for their firing — their lack of dual certification — was pretextual. McCowen and Turner appeal.

Title VII prohibits employers from discriminating against an employee “becáusé he has opposed” an unlawful employment practice or “because he has made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing” about such a practice. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). Ohio’s Fair Employment Practices Act is similar. Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 4112.02(1). When plaintiffs allege retaliation under both laws and present circumstantial evidence to prove their case, as McCowen and Turner do here, we analyze the two claims under the same test. Imwalle v. Reliance Med. Prods., Inc., 515 F.3d 531

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Bluebook (online)
624 F. App'x 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earnest-mccowen-v-village-of-lincoln-heights-ca6-2015.