Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Rhode Island

549 F. Supp. 60, 26 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 737, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14637, 30 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 33,003, 32 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1734
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 12, 1982
DocketCiv. A. No. 77-0097
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 549 F. Supp. 60 (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Rhode Island) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Rhode Island, 549 F. Supp. 60, 26 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 737, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14637, 30 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 33,003, 32 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1734 (D.R.I. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

PETTINE, Senior District Judge.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission1 seeks to enjoin the defendants from violating the equal pay provision of Section 6(d)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended, 29 U.S.C. Section 206(FLSA) including the restraint of any withholding of payment of wages found by the Court to be due to employees under the Act, with interest from the date such wages were due and payable until paid, and costs. The plaintiff further alleges that the defendants acted willfully and thus seeks a three year back-wage recovery under Section 6 of the Portal to Portal Act.2 The [63]*63defendants deny coverage under the Act as well as any violation of the Equal Pay Act; they also affirmatively assert there was no willful violation and plead the statute of limitations.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The equal pay violations in controversy are alleged to exist solely between the all female “cleaners” and the all male “janitors” of the housekeeping staff for Rhode Island College located in the City of Providence. The college has twenty-three (23) buildings servicing eight thousand (8,000) students plus twenty-three hundred (2,300) other people, who serve as either administrators, educators, clerical or blue-collar workers.

The housekeeping staff consists of a supervisor, three (3) principal janitors, four (4) senior janitors, forty-two (42) janitors and seventeen (17) cleaners.

The duties performed by this staff to maintain the college buildings are no different than those being done each day, to some lesser or greater degree, in every home; these are: the cleaning of bathrooms including the mopping and/or washing of tile walls, floors and toilet bowls; dry mopping or washing of other floors; dusting furniture, which requires bending and stretching; sweeping floors and stairways or vacuum cleaning rugs and stair runners. Washing encompasses not only the foregoing, but also the windows, and certain tables used by students, who have a penchant for writing on them and the classroom blackboards. Other duties are cleaning up spillage as it may occur, cleaning a kitchen stove, carrying of supplies, and the emptying of waste paper baskets, together with the removal of general trash from the buildings to outside dumpsters.

The cleaners are not required to carry furniture though the testimony established they do move furniture as may be required in the performance of their other cleaning chores. Nor are cleaners required to carry cases of cleaning supplies, but they do carry some supplies from general storage to where it may be needed in their work. Further, cleaners do not use power equipment such as rug shampooers and buffing machines; indeed, there was no evidence that cleaners ever used such equipment. In addition, the evidence established that the janitors, who in the main, unlike the cleaners, worked the night shift, were assigned the responsibility to do all the stripping, waxing and buffing of the floors, washing of the blackboards, the wall-to-wall washing of stairways and emptying of the trash. However, the testimony also established that the janitors were less than diligent in the accomplishment of these tasks; consequently, the cleaning women, finding such work undone, tackled, with the exception of the waxing, buffing, and stripping, many of these jobs themselves. The defendants concede that on “some occasions” the janitors do not complete their work and that the cleaners then voluntarily do it though it is not part of their assigned duties. Post Trial Brief at 6.

The various tasks are not necessarily performed equally. Each cleaner is assigned a specific building or buildings. These differ in terms of cleaning needs; one may require a significant amount of dusting time as against another which may require more sweeping and picking up of trash. The same is true as to janitors; in one building he may have to spend a large part of his work day moving furniture and vacuum cleaning rugs while in another building a fellow worker may be engaged primarily in washing a tile floor.

It cannot be denied that though cleaners do not do certain heavy work, such as shampooing rugs, buffing floors or carrying cases of supplies, there is an overlapping of the tasks performed by cleaners and janitors.

The defendants contend there is no substantial equality in the work because janitors alone a) shampoo rugs, b) buff and wax [64]*64floors, and c) do larger areas where the work is similar, and that all this requires greater effort. They further argue that the janitors’ task of wall-to-wall cleaning requires empty classrooms, labs and corridors, and since some buildings are used for evening classes and activities the janitors are forced to work faster to compress their normal cleaning into the time period remaining between the close of the evening classes and activities at the end of the shift.

By agreement, the depositions of thirteen cleaners and thirty-eight janitors, presently employed at Rhode Island College, were introduced in evidence. The plaintiff’s and defendant’s summaries of these depositions do not differ in any material way. However, I accept the plaintiff’s summary as the more completely accurate of the two and incorporate the same as part of these findings of fact. These findings are—

“Cleaners and Janitors

1. All cleaners and janitors perform the same work each day in the bathroom areas to which they are assigned.

2. All cleaners and janitors vacuum their assigned carpeted areas from two to five times per week.

Cleaners

1. All cleaners dry mop floors each day.

2. All cleaners vacuum carpeted areas assigned to them two to five times per week, and when needed.

3. All cleaners wet-mop spills on tiled areas assigned to them. When cleaners are required to work floors, they must use a five-gallon bucket and carry it to their location for use. Also, the cleaners must hand wring their wet-mops.

4. Some cleaners wash floors in the tiled areas assigned to them. Those cleaners who wash floors do so on the average of one time per week, or when needed.

5. Three cleaners regularly remove trash collected from their assigned area to a dumpster located outside the building to which they are assigned. In addition to the removing of trash, the cleaners must pick, remove and bag it.

6. One cleaner only infrequently removes trash collected from her assigned area to a dumpster located outside the building to which she is assigned.

7. Nine cleaners remove trash to a hallway where it is picked up by a janitor.

8. All cleaners dust the areas assigned to them.

9. No cleaner buffs floors.

10. No cleaner shampoos rugs.

11. No cleaner strips floors.

12. No cleaner waxes floors.

13. All cleaners move furniture aside while cleaning in order to get under the furniture.

14. One cleaner moves furniture up to three feet while cleaning.

15. No cleaner moves furniture outside the room while cleaning.

16.

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Related

Carmody v. Rhode Island Conflict of Interest Commission
509 A.2d 453 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1986)
Brost v. Columbus Services International
761 F.2d 148 (Third Circuit, 1985)
Brobst v. Columbus Services International
761 F.2d 148 (Third Circuit, 1985)
EEOC v. State of RI
549 F. Supp. 60 (D. Rhode Island, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
549 F. Supp. 60, 26 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 737, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14637, 30 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 33,003, 32 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equal-employment-opportunity-commission-v-rhode-island-rid-1982.