INTERN. UNION, UAW v. State of Mich.

673 F. Supp. 893
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedNovember 18, 1987
DocketCiv. No. 87CV75483DT
StatusPublished

This text of 673 F. Supp. 893 (INTERN. UNION, UAW v. State of Mich.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
INTERN. UNION, UAW v. State of Mich., 673 F. Supp. 893 (E.D. Mich. 1987).

Opinion

673 F.Supp. 893 (1987)

INTERNATIONAL UNION, UNITED AUTOMOBILE, AEROSPACE AND AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT WORKERS OF AMERICA, et al., individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Plaintiffs,
v.
STATE OF MICHIGAN, et al., Defendants.

Civ. No. 87CV75483DT.

United States District Court, E.D. Michigan, S.D.

November 18, 1987.

Connye Y. Harper, Detroit, Mich., Winn Newman, Washington, D.C., for plaintiffs.

Deborah Devine, Lansing, Mich., for defendants.

MEMORANDUM

(FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW)

DeMASCIO, District Judge.

Plaintiffs filed this class action in November 1985 alleging sex based wage discrimination on behalf of all classified employees of the State of Michigan employed in predominantly female job classifications. The individual plaintiffs are classified employees of the State of Michigan in either the Human Services Service Group or the Clerical Service Group. Plaintiff UAW has been the certified representative of the Administrative Support Unit of the Human Services Group since November 17, 1985. Plaintiffs named as defendants the State of *894 Michigan and the Michigan Civil Service Commission, the agency responsible for classifying positions in the classified civil service and fixing the rates of compensation for all such classifications.[1]

Plaintiffs essentially claim that defendant's early classification system, the Position Comparison System, discriminated in basic compensation paid to predominantly female classifications and that the Benchmark System implemented thereafter incorporated those discriminatory wage rates; that defendant discriminated in the design of the service groups and assignment of classes to service groups within the Benchmark System; that defendants discriminated on the basis of sex in the assignment of pay ranges to predominantly female classes; and that defendant continues to pay discriminatory wages to incumbents in predominantly female classes.

The testimony and exhibits offered by plaintiffs traced only 3 of the state's 2500 post-conversion classes. In addition, plaintiffs introduced statistical and circumstantial evidence to establish that the state discriminatorily assigned lower wage rates for jobs in female dominated classes. Pursuant to the factual findings and conclusions that follow, we conclude that plaintiffs' evidence is insufficient to establish intentional discrimination and we dismiss plaintiffs' complaint.

Defendants, the Civil Service Commission and its Department of Civil Service, have the sole authority to establish a merit classification system and determine wage rates for classified workers.[2] Each individual department of the state has the authority to hire, fire, and promote their employees. Those departments are not parties to this action. Defendant established the Position Comparison System (PCS), its first civil service classification system, in 1938. Under PCS, 10 factors were evaluated to assign positions to classes and classes to levels. The Commission initially established 21 levels and 21 standard pay ranges under the PCS. By 1972, there were a total of 112 different pay ranges.

In the early 1970's, the Commission concluded that the PCS was no longer a workable classification system.[3] Mr. Heuni, the Director of the Department's Classification Division, testified that it had become cumbersome and difficult to manage and the state was under a great deal of pressure to change it. Heuni engaged Cresap, McCormick & Paget, a consulting firm, to study the PCS. Cresap recommended adoption of a factor ranking system. In October 1972, the Commission hired the firm of Public Administration Service (PAS) to assist it in revising its classification and compensation system. With the assistance of PAS, the Commission selected a Benchmark ranking system of classification modeled after the system described in the report "Job Evaluation and Pay Review Task Force of the United States Civil Service Commission" (Oliver Report). The model consisted of System I, which included all classes that did not require a college degree, System II, which included positions that did require a college degree, and System III which included all managerial employees.[4] Using the Oliver Report as a guide, the Classification and Compensation Bureau developed tentative factor guides and class specifications, and tested the system in several pilot studies. The Bureau then attempted to implement the system for all classified positions *895 at one time, a task that proved too difficult for staff to accomplish. The results of the pilot study are reported in the Interim Project Report on Recommended Classification System. In that report, PAS concluded that the Plan was feasible and workable and a significant improvement over PCS. The Bureau continued to attempt implementation after the report, but encountered difficulty with consistency in factoring the positions. The factoring and job evaluations were being performed by committees comprised of members of defendants' staff and employees of the individual departments. In 1974, John Heuni, then Director of the Classification and Compensation Bureau, assigned Martha Bibbs and John Hand to review the positions factored under Systems I and II to assure consistency in factoring. Bibbs and Hand testified that the major problems they encountered with the system were the inconsistencies between committees factoring similar jobs, the impracticality of attempting to implement a system for 70,000 employees at one time, staff shortages and turnover, and severe pressure to complete the project, which was now well beyond the one year target date for completion.

Late in 1974, Gordon Chamberlain, a personnel administrator in the Bureau, submitted a proposal recommending that the Benchmark System be modified by creating six occupational service groups. Mr. Heuni circulated the proposal to his staff and appointed a Select Committee to review the proposed modifications. The Committee recommended a revised Benchmark Factor Evaluation Plan comprised of several service groups, each with its own ranking system, to be implemented one by one over a period of time. The Bureau thereafter recommended such a plan to the Commission and the Commission adopted it on June 13, 1975.

The Bureau initially established 7 tentative occupational service groups. It eventually established and implemented 11 service groups over a period of 6 years. These groups for the most part parallel labor market occupational groups. Staff rewrote and revised class specifications and merged, abolished, and created classes within service groups. The process of assigning classes to groups was somewhat subjective, but intended to reflect duties and responsibilities of occupational families or separate labor markets. The factor evaluation grids were revised for each group, but all grids evaluated classes on the basis of five factors: knowledge requirements, nature of work, responsibility, personal relationships, and physical effort and work environment. Points were assigned for each of these factors. The Bureau developed guides for each service group which contained definitions, factors, grids, class specifications, and other information. Each guide was submitted to employees, unions, and the individual departments for review and comment before it was adopted. The guides were used to convert all positions from the old system to the new.

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