Hill v. Pinkerton Security & Investigation Services, Inc.

977 F. Supp. 148, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14018, 1997 WL 569162
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 11, 1997
Docket3:96 CV 1045(GLG)
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 977 F. Supp. 148 (Hill v. Pinkerton Security & Investigation Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Pinkerton Security & Investigation Services, Inc., 977 F. Supp. 148, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14018, 1997 WL 569162 (D. Conn. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

GOETTEL, District Judge.

Plaintiff, ROSE HILL, has brought this state-law employment discrimination lawsuit against her employer PINKERTON SECURITY & INVESTIGATION SERVICES, INC., alleging violations of Connecticut’s antidiscrimination statutes, as well as several common-law causes of action. The defendant has moved for summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, defendant’s motion (doc. no. 21) is GRANTED as to all counts of plaintiffs complaint.

FACTS

The underlying facts in this action do not seem to be in dispute. 1 However, the conclusions to be drawn from the facts are disputed.

The plaintiff became employed by the defendant as a security officer in February of 1994, when defendant was awarded the contract to provide security services for ITT Hartford Insurance Group’s site in Hartford. She had previously worked there since 1988 for the prior security company, Ogden Security, Inc. From 1988 to 1992, plaintiff had worked for Ogden on a part-time basis, after which she worked full-time. Pinkerton offered employment to substantially all of the Ogden employees who had been working at that site, at approximately the same wage rate at which they had been paid by Ogden.

The plaintiff is black. Defendant’s supervisory framework is set up in a military-style chain of command, with security officers at the bottom rung. In June of 1995, plaintiffs immediate superior, a shift supervisor, and the operations manager were also black. The three other managers in her chain of command were white. 2

In May of 1995, the plaintiff learned that several other security officers employed at the site were earning 25 cents per hour more than she was. In her complaint, plaintiff does not indicate the race or sex of these individuals. Defendant, however, states that the two employees of which plaintiff complained were black, female security guards, which is confirmed by plaintiffs deposition testimony. In June the plaintiff first approached her shift supervisor about the pay difference. She then requested that the accounts manager reevaluate her wage rate because of this wage differential. At no time, however, did the plaintiff indicate to defendant that she believed the wage differential was related to her race or sex.

Plaintiffs starting pay with the defendant was $7.75 per hour which was increased to $7.95 per hour in February 1995 a few months before the issue of the wage differential arose. About 20% of the security officers *152 in Hartford earned a higher rate of pay than plaintiff and some of them were in supervisory positions. 3

After plaintiff discussed the pay differential with her account manager, the matter was investigated by her operations manager and accounts manager. They discovered that in 1989 Ogden Security had instituted a “Senior Security Officer” incentive program 4 under which certain officers who met designated service and performance standards were given a 25 cents per hour bonus. 5 This program was discontinued in late 1991 or early 1992, but those who had been receiving the bonus continued to do so. Because plaintiff was a part-time employee at the time this program was instituted, she was not eligible to participate. By the time she switched to full-time employment in 1992, the program no longer existed.

Plaintiff contends that almost immediately after she raised the question of the pay differential, several adverse steps were taken by defendant concerning her work situation. She complains that the time-keeping procedures were changed to deprive her of the fifteen-minute grace period for signing in, which she had previously enjoyed. At the time Pinkerton took over security operations for the ITT Hartford Insurance Group, plaintiff had another job as a clerk at the state library in Rocky Hill, which ended at the exact time that she was supposed to start her duties in Hartford. Plaintiffs account manager allowed her to arrive fifteen minutes late because of her second job, but she was allowed to clock in at the required 3:00 PM starting time and was paid for a full eight-hour shift. She states that after she complained of the pay differential, she was not given credit for the 15 minutes she was usually late for work and was paid only from the next nearest quarter hour.

Defendant asserts that the change in timekeeping was the result of an order issued on June 20, 1995, by the operations manager, who was black. This order applied to all security officers, not just plaintiff, and required them to sign in at the work site only when they were actually ready to report to work and at the nearest quarter hour to when they reported for duty. Defendant states that this order was the result of minor payroll discrepancies created by security officers’ signing in at different times to begin the same shift, and unauthorized overtime costs created when security officers arrived early and signed in before their shifts were scheduled to begin.

Plaintiff also claims that she was questioned about the length of time it took for her to complete a patrol of her assigned areas and about why she had refused to provide a break for a guard in another area. She also complains that she was not allowed to go into her supervisor’s office as she had been able to do before.

On June 26, 1995, plaintiffs work post at the ITT Hartford site and her break time were changed by management, according to defendant, in order to improve security coverage while reducing overtime costs. Other security officers were also assigned new work posts. The length of plaintiffs breaks and her compensation were not affected nor were her other benefits changed.

In July 1995, the plaintiff and her shift supervisor had a dispute over the plaintiffs refusal to sign removal passes (concerning removal of company property from the site) on two consecutive days, which she had refused to sign although given authorization to do so. A meeting was then held concerning her refusal to follow her shift supervisor’s directions. As a result of this meeting, a *153 decision was made by her supervisors to transfer plaintiff from the ITT-Hartford work site. She was temporarily assigned to defendant’s Wethersfield office on or about July 20, 1995. After a month she was then permanently assigned to defendant’s Gold Building site in Hartford, where she continues to work at the same rate of pay at this time.

Plaintiff filed her complaint of discrimination with the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities (“CCHRO”) on July 27,1995.

The defendant contends, and the plaintiff has not denied, that she was offered a promotion to shift sergeant at One Financial Plaza on April 26, 1996, but turned down the offer of promotion because she did not want the added responsibilities without an increase in pay. Plaintiff was already making more than the shift sergeant being replaced.

THE COMPLAINT

On June 11, 1996, plaintiff commenced this action in state court.

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Bluebook (online)
977 F. Supp. 148, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14018, 1997 WL 569162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-pinkerton-security-investigation-services-inc-ctd-1997.