James Stefanski v. Saginaw County 911 Communications Center Auth

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 4, 2024
Docket364851
StatusUnpublished

This text of James Stefanski v. Saginaw County 911 Communications Center Auth (James Stefanski v. Saginaw County 911 Communications Center Auth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Stefanski v. Saginaw County 911 Communications Center Auth, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JAMES STEFANSKI, UNPUBLISHED January 4, 2024 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 364851 Saginaw Circuit Court SAGINAW COUNTY 911 COMMUNICATIONS LC No. 22-046428-NZ CENTER AUTHORITY,

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and MURRAY and M. J. KELLY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, James Stefanski, appeals as of right the trial court order granting summary disposition to defendant, the Saginaw County 911 Communications Center Authority, under MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (C)(10). At issue in this appeal is whether Stefanski’s alleged report of a violation of the common law (i.e. a report of gross negligence by a fellow employee) is an activity protected under the Whistleblowers’ Protection Act (WPA), MCL 15.369 et seq. For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm.

I. BASIC FACTS

In 2012, Stefanski began working for defendant as a 911 call taker/dispatcher. In November 2021, ostensibly due to a pattern of excessive nonscheduled absences (NSAs), he was suspended for 90-days without pay. Stefanski believed that the stated reasons for the discipline was pretextual and that the actual reason was his disagreement with his supervisors regarding a July 5, 2021 shooting on Burnham Street. He, therefore, resigned, and brought a suit against defendant, alleging that, in violation of the WPA, defendant had constructively discharged him in retaliation for his report to the director that the supervisor that had taken the Burnham call had been grossly negligent.

The underlying details of the July 5, 2021 call are undisputed. Supervisor Logan Bissell answered the call at approximately 4:25 a.m. The caller reported that she had heard three gunshots and that there was a female outside the house yelling for someone to call 9-1-1. The caller indicated that she believed the female had been shot and someone in the background of the call

-1- stated that he thought the female outside had said she had been shot. Despite that information, Bissell decided to code the call as a “1010J,” which indicated only that shots had been fired. If he had instead coded it as a “40J,” it would have indicated that someone was shot and would have required that emergency medical services be dispatched to the scene. Because of Bissell’s coding decision, no emergency medical services were sent. At approximately 5:50 a.m., the 9-1-1 caller placed another call. She stated that the female was laying on her porch and she did not know if she was breathing. The call taker who received the follow-up call, yelled to dispatch to get an update on the Burnham shooting. She was told that there was only a shots-fired incident on Burnham. Emergency medical services were dispatched to the scene. When they arrived, the female was in full cardiac arrest. She died from her injuries, and the code was changed to a Code 1, homicide.

Stefanski was not present when the initial 9-1-1 call came in. He was, however, present when the follow-up call was made. He testified that “the code obviously wasn’t correct.” He recalled looking at the call notes and trying to ascertain why the call could have been coded as shots-fired in light of someone stating that she the caller believed someone might have been shot. He stated and he and others pressured a supervisor into reviewing the audio. The supervisor stated that he did not hear anything out of the ordinary in the call. When questioned about his conclusion, he became angry, repeated that nothing out of the ordinary had occurred, and told Stefanski and others to “let it go.”

Stefanski did not let it go. In the following days, he and others continued asking questions because “nothing added up.” Eventually, Stefanski heard the audio from the initial 9-1-1 call. He concluded that Bissell had improperly coded the call as a shots-fired call, rather than a shooting. Stefanski testified that he believed the supervisors were covering for each other. He stated that, based on an internal investigation, it was determined that Bissell’s actions were not negligent and that his coding of the call was nothing more than a “judgment call.” Stefanski disagreed. He told two supervisors and the director, Daniel Weaver, that the call was improperly coded. It is his conversations with Weaver that form the basis for his WPA claim.

The first conversation occurred during the last week of July 2021. Stefanski had heard on the news that law enforcement was being publicly blamed for the incident, which upset him because that meant defendant was not going to do anything about the improper coding of the call which had resulted in a delayed response by law enforcement. He stated that he told Weaver:

[Y]ou’ve listened to it, I’ve listened to it, we’ve all listened to it, I don’t think there’s any ambiguity to it, there’s absolutely no way that you can get that there was not somebody shot on Burnham Street. I said that in the first couple seconds of the call you could tell that [Bissell] sounded tired. It was 4:30 in the morning. They had three or four shootings that night. He sounded tired. He sounds, yeah, right on par with dispatchers at that point being just exhausted, and it sounds to me like he was very dismissive at the beginning of the phone call.

So I asked him, I said, what’s going to happen here, because, you know, this is a supervisor, not—it would be different if it was just a lay person, you know, a dispatcher, but this is a supervisor, somebody who’s supposed to be there to make the right judgment call. So at that point he just became dismissive and again said,

-2- it’s a judgment call; from what I heard on it, it’s a judgment call and I’m not going to second guess his judgment, and that was it. That was—I mean, it was not a very long conversation to say the least but that was it.

Stefanski recalled also saying that “if that were one of us, I’d be written up or suspended or terminated, you know, but I mean, we’re not going to do anything about it at all, no retraining, no—you know, because I don’t think [Bissell] had really any training in his time there.”

Later, after Stefanski received his second NSA letter, he went to Weaver’s office to discuss the matter. During the conversation, he informed Weaver that he was having medical issues. Weaver advised that he did not want Stefanski to revert to his “old ways” regarding the accumulation of NSAs. Stefanski told Weaver that he was “having a lot of stress and anxiety due to the job,” including chest pain. He attributed his increased stress to the Burnham shooting and how it had been dismissed. Stefanski testified that during his conversation with Weaver, he said

[Y]ou know, number one, I said, what’s going on with [Bissell]. [Weaver] didn’t really want to talk about it. He was dismissive. I get it. It’s none of my business. Whatever. It’s fine, but, you know, when I look at my career and I look at the center, I want to make sure this doesn’t happen again.

And when you’ve got something going on where—I’m sorry, I feel like I would have been fired or suspended or retrained, written up, something documented somehow that this call was not handled properly, you know. I just don’t—I told him, I don’t understand why nothing is being done about [Bissell] messing up this call, a lady died on a porch because of us.

He looked at me and he said that he wasn’t going to talk with me any further about it. He said, it’s over and done with. I got upset, and I called the supervisor’s group a boys club, because that’s pretty much what it is, it’s a boys club. If you’re one of the boys, you’re in the supervisor club. I told him that things are getting serious on the floor with morale over this issue.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
James Stefanski v. Saginaw County 911 Communications Center Auth, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-stefanski-v-saginaw-county-911-communications-center-auth-michctapp-2024.