GEBRE v. PHILADELPHIA WORKS, INC.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 6, 2024
Docket2:24-cv-00987
StatusUnknown

This text of GEBRE v. PHILADELPHIA WORKS, INC. (GEBRE v. PHILADELPHIA WORKS, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GEBRE v. PHILADELPHIA WORKS, INC., (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

MESERET GEBRE : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 24-987 : PHILADELPHIA WORKS, INC. :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. August 6, 2024 An employer adopted and mandated detailed procedures on employees’ communications with the employer’s vendors. The employer, for example, decided vendors did not need to provide documents supporting invoices for less than $500. An African American employee joined the company to review and process vendors’ invoices for the employer’s payment. She understood the employer’s decision. But the employee still challenged a vendor’s invoice for less than $500 without supporting documents believing the employee thought the vendor violated Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. She admits making the vendor feel “attacked” by accusing the vendor of fraud and embezzlement. The vendor complained about the new employee. The employer investigated and then fired her for the exact reason of her treatment of the vendor. The employee sued for wrongful discharge, whistleblower protections, and race discrimination claiming her employer fired her because she is African American. She admitted her employer fired her because she refused to process the vendor’s invoice and for no other reason. She offers no basis to find race-based discrimination. Her proffered comparator did not attack a vendor with fraud accusations contrary to policy. We grant the employer summary judgment on the race discrimination claims and decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the Pennsylvania whistleblower and wrongful termination claims. The employee may choose to pursue timely Pennsylvania claims in state court. I. Undisputed Facts1 Philadelphia Works, Inc. is a non-profit organization headquartered a couple blocks from Philadelphia’s City Hall “connecting employers to workforce talent and career seekers to jobs.”2 Philadelphia Works hired recent college graduate African American Meseret Gebre in September

2022 in a contract position where, after a three-month period, it could decide whether to extend Ms. Gebre an offer for full-time employment.3 Philadelphia Works offered Ms. Gebre a full-time position as an Account Liaison after the three month period.4 An Account Liaison is responsible for receiving and reviewing invoices from vendors, analyzing and processing invoices into an accounting software system, and communicating with vendors.5 She reported to Director of Contracts Sharon Robinson, an African American woman, upon her hire to full-time employment.6 Ms. Gebre then applied for a Program Specialist position at Philadelphia Works one month into her full-time position as an Account Liaison.7 Philadelphia Works’s Director Tyrone Hampton, an African American man, interviewed Ms. Gebre for the Program Specialist position.8 Ms. Gebre concedes the interview did not go well, she did not have the qualifications for the

position, she told Director Hampton the position is not a “good fit” and she wanted to withdraw from the interview process, and the “interview ended abruptly.”9 Director Hampton believed Ms. Gebre abruptly ended the interview by hanging up on him.10 Ms. Gebre contends the call dropped but she concedes she did not attempt to contact Director Hampton to explain the interview’s abrupt ending.11 Ms. Gebre also concedes she understands why Director Hampton found her behavior inappropriate and unprofessional.12 Ms. Gebre continued working in her position as an Account Liaison. Ms. Gebre’s March 2023 interaction with vendor Dimplez4Dayz. Philadelphia Works has “Cost Reimbursement Invoices Procedures” applicable to vendor invoices and reimbursements.13 Philadelphia Works maintained the Procedures on a shared drive accessible to Ms. Gebre.14 Ms. Gebre knew Philadelphia Works required her to familiarize herself and comply with the Procedures.15

Philadelphia Works, through the Procedures, required its vendors to submit supporting documents for invoices seeking reimbursement over $500; any invoice seeking reimbursement for less than $500 did not require supporting documents for reimbursement.16 Philadelphia Works trains its Account Liaisons to escalate issues to management if they are concerned a vendor’s submitted invoice seeks reimbursement for services it did not provide.17 Ms. Gebre began working with Philadelphia Works’s vendor Dimplez4Dayz as its Account Liaison in March 2023.18 Angela Richardson served as the vendor contact for Dimplez4Dayz.19 Ms. Gebre told Ms. Richardson on March 8, 2023 Dimplez4Dayz must provide supporting documentation for line items under $500.20 She made this statement knowing Philadelphia

Works’s Procedures did not require supporting documentation for invoices under $500. But Ms. Gebre believed Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”) required supporting documentation for an invoice or line item regardless of the amount.21 Ms. Gebre believed GAAP required supporting documentation for line items under $500 based on courses she took while an undergraduate student at Temple University.22 Ms. Gebre concedes Ms. Richardson felt as if Ms. Gebre “was talking to her like a child” and the call “ended with her [Ms. Richardson] feeling like I attacked her or something.”23 Ms. Richardson sent an email to Ms. Gebre and other Philadelphia Works personnel, including Ms. Gebre’s supervisor Director Robinson, complaining about her March 8, 2023 call with Ms. Gebre.24 Ms. Richardson reported Ms. Gebre’s tone “was utterly unprofessional” and requested her interactions with Philadelphia Works staff be conducted “in a respectful manner.”25 Ms. Richardson also requested a meeting to discuss the “new standard” to provide supporting documentation for items under $500.26

Ms. Gebre immediately responded to Ms. Richardson (without copying Director Robinson), denying an unprofessional tone and continuing to demand additional supporting documents before Ms. Gebre issued a reimbursement.27 Ms. Richardson responded to Ms. Gebre, copying Director Robinson and other Philadelphia Works personnel, telling her she (Ms. Richardson) would not allow Ms. Gebre to characterize their discussion and would not “go back and forth on emails” and requested a meeting to discuss the “changes as they are new to us.”28 One week later, on March 15, 2023, Ms. Gebre contacted Ms. Richardson to schedule a Teams call.29 Ms. Richardson, copying Director Robinson, responded she had been “informed that [she] would receive a new [Account] [L]iaison.”30 Ms. Gebre, without copying Director Robinson, challenged Ms. Richardson regarding a new Account Liaison and continued to demand supporting documentation.31 Ms. Richardson responded, copying Director Robinson, telling Ms. Gebre “this

… serve[s] as my formal request not to contact me anymore!” and “moving forward [t]he organization will not be working with you.”32 Ms. Gebre responded minutes later (without copying Director Robinson) telling Ms. Richardson “it seems like you knowingly sent [Philadelphia Works] a fraudulent invoice assuming it will be processed” and if another Account Liaison processed the invoice “knowing it’s wrong – then it’s embezzlement.”33 Ms. Richardson then emailed Director Robinson and other Philadelphia Works personnel reporting feeling “harassed” by Ms. Gebre and being accused by Ms. Gebre of submitting a fraudulent invoice as “over the top” and “[t]o be accused of fraud and embezzlement is a very hard smack in the face.”34 Director Robinson apologized to Ms. Richardson and told Ms. Gebre she reassigned Dimplez4Dayz to another Account Liaison.35 Ms. Gebre’s interaction with her manager regarding another vendor in March 2023.

Around the same time as her interaction with Ms. Richardson from Dimplez4Dayz, another vendor, Brett Shay, School Director of CareBridge Academy contacted Ms. Gebre with a question in March 2023.36 Ms. Gebre responded to Mr.

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GEBRE v. PHILADELPHIA WORKS, INC., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gebre-v-philadelphia-works-inc-paed-2024.