Henson v. Texas Southmost College District

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 2020
Docket1:18-cv-00174
StatusUnknown

This text of Henson v. Texas Southmost College District (Henson v. Texas Southmost College District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henson v. Texas Southmost College District, (S.D. Tex. 2020).

Opinion

January 30, 2020 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT David J. Bradley, Clerk SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS BROWNSVILLE DIVISION

RONILDA C. HENSON, § § Plaintiff, § VS. § CIVIL ACTION NO. 1:18-CV-174 § TEXAS SOUTHMOST COLLEGE DISTRICT, § § Defendant. § §

OPINION AND ORDER

After Defendant Texas Southmost College (TSC) did not renew Plaintiff Dr. Ronilda C. Henson’s employment contract with the institution, she filed this Title VII lawsuit alleging that due to her race and national origin, TSC discriminated against her and created a hostile work environment, and then retaliated when she filed a grievance. TSC moves for summary judgment as to all causes of action. (Motion, Doc. 22) For the following reasons, the Court finds the Motion well taken. I. Factual Background and Procedural History In January 2016, TSC hired Henson as a professor in the Child Development and Early Childhood (CDEC) program. (Motion, Doc. 22, ¶ 4; Compl., Doc. 1, ¶ 9) Throughout her employment with TSC, “Dr. Henson was the only Filipina in the CDEC program” and most of her colleagues and supervisors were “Hispanic females”. (TSC Inv. Report, Doc. 22-26, 3 (noting that Henson was “supervised by a group of Hispanic, female employees”)) TSC initially hired Henson to complete the remaining five months (January—May 2016) of a 9-month faculty appointment, and then renewed her appointment twice (August 2016—May 2017 and August 2017—May 2018). (April 2016 Letter of Employment, Doc. 22-8; April 2017 Letter of Employment, Doc. 22-9) In April 2017, Henson met with acting CDEC Department Chair, Beatriz Castillo, to discuss a number of complaints that students had filed against Henson. (May 2017 Memo, Doc. 22-10, 1) These complaints included that Henson changed her syllabus multiple times, gave ineffective instruction and last-minute assignments, and did not return graded assignments or lesson plans in a timely manner. (Id.; Spring 2017 Student Complaints, Doc. 22-11) Students also objected to Henson’s request that they only speak English, and not Spanish, while in her class. (May 2017 Memo, Doc. 22-10, 1; Henson Dep., Doc. 22-5, 71:5–71:22 (explaining that her English-only classroom policy is for the purpose of teaching professionalism)) After meeting with Henson, Castillo provided Henson a memo detailing the student complaints. (May 2017 Memo, Doc. 22-10) In October 2017, acting Dean Dr. Deborah Huerta issued Henson a “Notice of Warning— Poor Work Performance”. (Doc. 22-13) In this Notice, Huerta advised Henson that several students had reported “difficulties they are currently experiencing in your course(s).” (Id. at 1) The Notice explained that the students’ concerns were “the same complaints that were voiced during the Spring 2017 semester.” (Id. (including that Henson did not post grades in a timely manner, issued grades difficult to understand or calculate, and did not follow the course schedule and syllabus)) The Notice concluded by identifying four “directives” that TSC “expected” Henson to follow, or else face “disciplinary action up to and including termination.” (Id. at 2) About two weeks after receiving the Notice, Henson submitted a written response, disputing the complaints made against her. (Appeal Against Warning, Doc. 22-15) Henson presented her perspective of her discussions with Castillo in the spring of 2017, and her belief that the complaints had been resolved satisfactorily. Henson requested a meeting with Huerta to “formally discuss” the issues. (Id. at 4) In her Appeal, Henson did not suggest that she had suffered any hostility or unfair treatment based on her race or ethnicity. (Henson Dep., Doc. 22-5, 86:14–86:19) In January 2018, Sonia Treviño, acting Chair of the TSC Behavioral and Social Sciences Department, issued Henson a “Memo of Concerns”, explaining that the CDEC program suffered from a lack of communication and collaboration “with both faculty members”, which had led to several enumerated challenges. (Jan. 2018 Memo, Doc. 22-16 (including, as some of the identified challenges, student complaints, scheduling problems, and mixed messages to students and other departments)) Treviño requested that the CDEC faculty prepare and implement a departmental Program Improvement Plan (CDEC PIP). (Id.) After receiving the January 2018 Memo, Henson began working with her CDEC colleague, Leticia Diaz, to create and submit the CDEC PIP. (CDEC PIP, Doc. 22-17) The next month, Huerta issued Henson a “Notice of Warning—Unprofessional Conduct & Poor Work Performance”. (Doc. 22-18) In this document, Huerta explained that two students had recently raised concerns with Treviño about Henson’s unclear course requirements and scheduling changes. (Id. at 1) In addition, Huerta highlighted that the “lack of team work and collegiality” between Henson and Diaz was “continuing to create programmatic issues.” (Id.) The February 2018 Notice included several remediation steps that TSC expected Henson to undertake, including copying Treviño “on all work-related emails beginning today”. (Id.) Simultaneous with providing the February 2018 Notice, TSC placed both Henson and Diaz on individual Performance Improvement Plans. (Henson PIP, Doc. 22-19; Diaz PIP, Doc. 23-1) In late February, Henson submitted her “Response” to the February 2018 Notice. (Doc. 22-20) Henson responded in some detail to the raised concerns, defending her job performance and indicating that Diaz’s attitude and actions were causing most of the difficulties within the department. (Id. at 2–3) She expressed that she had developed a “point of view” that “there may be unfair distinctions among faculty (primarily Ms. Diaz and myself).” (Id. at 3) She explained that while she had defended herself on more than one occasion, she believed the college was responding to her “not on the basis of merit, but on the basis of some other attitude.” (Id.) She did not provide details regarding this belief, and requested a follow up meeting to “formally discuss this matter”. (Id.) The issues between Henson and TSC came to a head in May 2018. On May 2, Huerta received a Faculty Action Recommendation form for her consideration. (Faculty Action Form, Doc. 26-4; Huerta Dep., Doc. 26-2, 34:25–35:25 (“If I remember 5-2 is the date that I received the document.”)) On May 8th and 10th of 2018, Henson met with Huerta and Treviño to discuss her progress in completing her individual PIP and the CDEC PIP. (Huerta Aff., Doc. 22- 3, ¶ 3; Treviño Aff., Doc. 22-2, ¶ 3 ) After the May 10th meeting, Huerta and Treviño concluded that Henson had failed to successfully complete both the CDEC PIP and the individual PIP. (Huerta Aff., Doc. 22-3, ¶ 3; Treviño Aff., Doc. 22-2, ¶ 3; Frausto Aff., Doc. 22-6, ¶ 6) On May 11, Henson filed a Grievance Complaint with TSC expressly alleging discriminatory conduct: “Over the past year, Dr. Huerta and Ms. Trevino have engaged in a pattern of discriminatory and hostile conduct towards [her] that has created a hostile working environment.” (Grievance Compl., Doc. 26-5, 2) In the document, Henson expressed her disagreement with the allegations against her of poor job performance, and claimed that she “ha[d] been isolated from her Hispanic peers and treated with disdain and general lack of respect.” (Grievance Compl., Doc. 26-5, 3) She indicated that she had filed the complaint after receiving “her performance review for the 2018 academic school year” and “the final determination of her completion of the PIP” on May 9 and 10, respectively. (Id. at 4) She explained that these decisions had placed her “in extreme apprehension of a future negative employment decision.” (Id.) On May 12, Henson’s contract with TSC expired by its own terms. (April 2017 Letter of Employment, Doc. 22-9 (referencing contract term as “August 21, 2017 to May 12, 2018”)) Ten days later, Huerta “signed off” on the Faculty Action Recommendation Form, recommending the non-renewal of Henson’s contract. (Faculty Action Form, Doc.

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Henson v. Texas Southmost College District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henson-v-texas-southmost-college-district-txsd-2020.