Gomez v. United States Postal Service

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedNovember 29, 2021
Docket1:20-cv-11861
StatusUnknown

This text of Gomez v. United States Postal Service (Gomez v. United States Postal Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gomez v. United States Postal Service, (D. Mass. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

CIVIL ACTION NO. 20-11861-RGS

DARWIN GOMEZ

v.

LOUIS DEJOY, POSTMASTER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

November 29, 2021

STEARNS, D.J. Plaintiff Darwin Gomez brought this action against Louis DeJoy, the Postmaster General of the United States, alleging that the United States Postal Service discriminated against him based on disability and national origin when it rejected his applications to become a postal employee. Gomez asserts three counts against Postmaster DeJoy: handicap discrimination (Count I) and failure to accommodate (Count II) under the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794; and national origin discrimination (Count III) under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. Postmaster DeJoy moves for summary judgment on all three counts. For the following reasons, the court will allow the motion. BACKGROUND In late 2018, Gomez began his quest for employment with the Postal

Service. Historically, the Postal Service offered alternative channels for the hiring of new carriers and clerks with disabilities. The first, which is still used by the Postal Service, is a competitive process that requires all applicants to submit an online application. Any apparently qualified

applicant is sent a link to a non-proctored Virtual Entry Assessment (VEA), the April 1, 2019 successor to the previous the two-part Battery 473 examination.1 An accommodations version of the postal exam is made

available to applicants with qualified disabilities. Applicants who pass the exam are placed on a register of eligible external hires. A disabled candidate is then invited to participate in an interactive interview to determine the reasonable accommodations the Postal Service could

implement if it offered the applicant a job. A second, noncompetitive hiring process, which is no longer in effect, involved collaboration between the Postal Service and state divisions of vocational rehabilitation (DVR) or veterans’ affairs (VA) organizations.2

1 The court refers to both exams as the “postal exam.”

2 Although the Postal Service has not hired through the noncompetitive process in at least ten years, the Postal Service’s Handbook 2 Any DVR or VA organization that wished to participate in the noncompetitive process was required to submit a certification package. If

approved, these organizations and agencies identified potential applicants to the Postal Service. If a postal position became available, the Postal Service would request that the recommending agency certify at least three names for the Postal Service’s consideration after conducting a worksite evaluation.

Gomez was born in Colombia and migrated to the United States approximately a decade ago. He has longstanding diagnoses of epilepsy, anxiety, depression, and a cognitive disorder that affect his ability to retain

employment. In June of 2011, Au Bon Pain, a bakery chain, hired Gomez to work as a guest services representative at one of its Boston, Massachusetts locations. Au Bon Pain dismissed Gomez in March of 2012, after he missed work following a series of seizures. In November of 2016, Gomez began

working as a food delivery driver for Grubhub Holdings, Inc. In 2018, he left Grubhub and began driving for rideshare companies Uber Technologies, Inc. and Lyft, Inc. Gomez stopped driving for Uber and Lyft upon the onset

EL-312, Employment and Placement, still describes the noncompetitive hiring process and states that it may be available to individuals with severe disabilities for whom “the competitive process is itself a barrier to employment” and who “would be able to perform at the normal standards of job performance.” Tayler Aff. Ex. 14 (Dkt # 18-14) at 60. 3 of the COVID-19 pandemic. On October 15, 2018, Gomez emailed Postal Service employee Nicolas

Francescucci inquiring about employment as a postal worker. In his email, Gomez asked how he could qualify for “a Noncompetitive selection.” Taylor Aff. Ex. 6 (Dkt. # 18-6) at 8. Postal Service Learning, Development, and Diversity Specialist Carmen Filleti reached out to Gomez by return email on

January 11, 2019. She explained that her job was to assist persons seeking employment with the Postal Service. Filleti asked Gomez for his telephone number and whether he intended to take the postal exam. Gomez replied

that he needed “to request and [sic] accommodation in the hiring process,” and asked Filleti “what documents [he] should submit to obtain a noncompetitive selection.” Id. at 15. Filleti forwarded Gomez’s email to Donna Pratt, the Manager of Human Resources in the Postal Service’s

Greater Boston District, who contacted Postal Service employee Angela Corbett regarding Gomez’s request. Corbett informed Pratt that Filetti was the proper person to assist Gomez in navigating the application process. In an email dated February 12, 2019, Pratt advised Gomez to submit a

formal application indicating that he required an accommodation. The Postal Service assigned employee Mario Lucas to guide Gomez after he

4 applied for the position of City Carrier Assistant in Brockton, Massachusetts. Gomez, however, did not take the postal exam, and, on February 19, 2019,

the Postal Service notified him that he would not be considered for the City Carrier Assistant position. It further informed Gomez that he could apply for a different vacancy after June 16, 2019. Undeterred, Gomez continued his pursuit of immediate employment

with the Postal Service. On February 22, 2019, he presented Lucas with two letters from his psychiatrist: one dated October 17, 2018, certifying that he suffers from conditions that affect his ability to perform on a test, and

another stating that he “suffers from medical conditions that create significant anxiety in the context of a job interview” and “would benefit from the interview being conducted in Spanish and from being given increased time for answering questions during the interview.” Taylor Aff. Ex. 24 (Dkt.

# 18-24) at 2–3. That same day, Gomez, with Lucas’s assistance, applied for a clerk’s position at post offices in North Easton and Abington, Massachusetts. On February 23, 2019, the Postal Service notified Gomez that he did not meet the “eligibility or suitability requirements” for either of

these positions. Taylor Aff. Ex. 3 (Dkt. # 18-3) at 41–42. On March 20, 2019, Gomez emailed Human Resources Manager

5 Pratt asking how, despite his being deemed ineligible for the positions he had sought, he could nonetheless continue with the application process. Pratt

sought guidance from others in the Postal Service’s Human Resources Department as to whether Gomez could be considered as a new hire without first completing the postal exam. On March 27, 2019, Gomez followed up with Pratt about continuing with the hiring process, stating his belief that he

was “exempt from taking the test.” Taylor Aff. Ex. 31 (Dkt. # 18-31) at 3. On April 4, 2019, Pratt informed Gomez that his application had been rejected “as you did not complete the test.” Id. at 1. Nonetheless, Pratt

told Gomez that she had asked her staff to continue providing him with assistance, and offered to schedule a meeting for Gomez with the Boston District’s Reasonable Accommodation Committee. She stated that she understood his request to be exempted from taking the postal exam as a

request to be hired noncompetitively, and continued: We mostly hire employees with disabilities from a competitive hiring register.

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