Harrison v. INTERN. ASS'N OF MACHINISTS & AEROSPACE
This text of 807 F. Supp. 1513 (Harrison v. INTERN. ASS'N OF MACHINISTS & AEROSPACE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Dessie HARRISON, Plaintiff,
v.
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MACHINISTS AND AEROSPACE WORKERS, a labor organization, and George Kourpias, Larry Downing, and James Johnston, individually, Defendants.
United States District Court, D. Oregon.
Gerri Sue Lent, Milwaukie, OR, for plaintiff.
Barrie J. Herbold, Robert D. Bulkley, Jr., Markowitz, Herbold, Glade & Mehlhaf, P.C., Portland, OR, for defendants.
OPINION
FRYE, Judge:
The matter before the court is the motion of the defendants for change of venue (# 9).
BACKGROUND
The plaintiff, Dessie Harrison, filed this action under the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq., against the defendants, International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM), George Kourpias, Larry Downing, and James Johnston, officials of the IAM, alleging claims for sex discrimination.
The IAM maintains its headquarters in the State of Maryland. There are approximately 1,500 local unions affiliated with the IAM located in approximately 120 districts. A district is comprised of two or more local unions. Harrison is a member of Local # 1432 of the IAM located in the State of Oregon, which is in District # 24. Harrison was elected president of Local # 1432 and to offices in District Lodge # 24 in Portland, Oregon prior to 1982.
In 1982, Harrison was hired as a representative of the IAM assigned to its organizing department. The organizing department of the IAM has its main offices in the State of Maryland. The home station of *1514 Harrison has always been and continues to be Milwaukee, Oregon. Harrison has organized membership drives for the IAM since 1986. From 1986 to the present, Harrison has lived in a number of states and is presently assigned to an organizing campaign in the State of South Carolina. The only time that Harrison actually worked in an organizing campaign close to her home station was from September, 1991 to January, 1992, when she was assigned to help organize the employees of Precision Castparts Corporation in Portland, Oregon.
The terms and conditions of Harrison's employment as a representative of the IAM are contained in a representative's agreement between the IAM and a union representing certain employees of the IAM, which is called the "IAM Representatives Association."
Pursuant to the terms and conditions of the representative's agreement, representatives of the IAM are typically assigned to work under a particular vice-president of the IAM. George Kourpias is the president and chief executive officer of the IAM. Larry Downing is the general vice president responsible for the work of the organizing department of the IAM, which seeks to organize workers throughout the United States. Kourpias and Downing work at the headquarters of the IAM in the State of Maryland and live in Washington, D.C. or its suburbs. James Johnston is a business agent for the IAM. His office is located in Portland, Oregon.
In her complaint, Harrison alleges that "[f]or most of her eleven year employment, [she] was one of two women Grand Lodge Representatives out of approximately 100 for the Union." Id. at para. 2. Harrison alleges claims for disparate impact and disparate treatment. In her claim for disparate impact, Harrison alleges that:
In September 1991, plaintiff was assigned by defendant Downing, to organize Precision Castparts Corporation, located in Portland, Multnomah and Clackamas counties, Oregon.
Plaintiff attempted to organize at Precision Castparts Corporation but was subjected to Union policies, procedures, and practices which had the effect of unlawfully discriminating against her on the basis of her sex.
Among those Union policies, procedures and practices that plaintiff suffered from were: 1) Failure to hire more women organizers to be organizing support for plaintiff; 2) Failure to utilize women, including plaintiff, in the same manner that male [Grand Lodge Representatives] were utilized; 3) Presentation of plaintiff to target female workers as a "model" Union staff member, knowing that plaintiff was a token; and 4) Failure to provide plaintiff with other women assistants, thereby isolating plaintiff in her onsite organizing job.
The Union, by failing to hire, promote and utilize women within the staff, and by engaging in the practices and procedures set out in [the above paragraph], injured plaintiff by placing her under far more stress than male [Grand Lodge Representatives], by giving her less employment opportunity, unequal pay, and by crediting her with unequal time for retirement, sick leave, and vacation purposes. Plaintiff has been passed over for promotion and has seen male [Grand Lodge Representatives] with less seniority and experience promoted or given pay increases instead.
To remedy her injury, plaintiff asks that she be appointed to the next available administrative assistant's (AA) position and that her name be placed upon the next slate of candidates for election to a general vice-presidency; an immediate upgrade to the beginning salary of an administrative assistant; interest upon the backpay she would have received if she had been promoted; the immediate Union hire of ten women staff members to be [Grand Lodge Representatives]; and correction of her vacation, sick leave and retirement credits to reflect her years of service to the Union....
Id. at paras. 5-9.
In support of her disparate treatment claim, Harrison adds the following allegations:
*1515 From September 1991 until March 1992, plaintiff tried to organize the workers at Precision Castparts Corporation in Portland, Oregon, and was subjected by the Union to an intentionally hostile working environment.
Among other things, most of those Union men who were assigned to help in the organizing campaign, consistently used sexual references, sexual innuendo and generally obscene language and engaged in other unprofessional conduct, all of which had the effect of undermining plaintiff's authority both within the Union and outside to the target audience. Defendant Johnston, who should have prevented such conduct, made no effort to stop it, and, in fact, participated in it. The obscene language and lewd gestures and remarks had the effect of degrading plaintiff personally and was a constant source of embarrassment to her while working with the Precision Castparts Corporation women workers, many of whom were on the organizing committee.
Plaintiff also experienced an intentional difference in treatment from male organizers, based upon her sex, by being, among other things, denied her own organizing office and the usual organizing assistance provided to male [Grand Lodge Representatives] during a major organizing effort by the Union during the Precision Castparts campaign.
After asking defendant Kourpias, the Union president, about the enforcement mechanism for the Union's anti-sexual harrassment policy, plaintiff was, in March 1992, abruptly removed from her organizing position in the Precision Castparts Corporation campaign. She was transferred to Stillwater, Oklahoma where she received no files and no instructions for ongoing organizing.
At the time of her transfer, plaintiff was ordered by Defendant Downing to have no further contact with any of the Precision Castparts organizing committee.
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807 F. Supp. 1513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-intern-assn-of-machinists-aerospace-ord-1992.