Jones v. District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedFebruary 18, 2016
DocketCivil Action No. 2012-1454
StatusPublished

This text of Jones v. District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority (Jones v. District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority, (D.D.C. 2016).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

DEREK A. JONES,

Plaintiff,

v. Civil Action No. 12-1454 (JEB) DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WATER AND SEWER AUTHORITY,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

For over a decade, Plaintiff Derek Jones, who is black, worked as a recruiter for the

District of Columbia’s water utility – the Water and Sewer Authority. He maintains that WASA

terminated him in 2011 in retaliation for speaking up about what he believed to be discriminatory

practices. The utility counters that Jones was fired for cause, pure and simple, and that his

employment file – replete with three years of middling performance reviews and a string of

documented reprimands – demonstrates the legitimate, non-retaliatory reasons for his removal.

In addition, WASA argues that the practices Jones opposed were not of a kind protected by the

civil-rights laws. In now considering Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment, the Court

agrees that Jones has failed to establish a genuine dispute of material fact sufficient to warrant a

trial.

I. Background

The facts here are set forth in the light most favorable to Plaintiff. WASA hired Jones as

a recruiter in 1999. See Def. Response to Plaintiff’s Statement of Material Facts (Resp. to

PSMF), ECF No. 73-1, ¶ 2; MSJ, Attach. 4 (Deposition of Derek Jones) at 11:19-12:2. From the

1 parties’ silence on the matter, the ensuing nine years were apparently uneventful. But in the

second half of 2008, right around the time when a new supervisor stepped in to oversee Jones,

circumstances began to change for the worse.

A. Plaintiff’s Disciplinary Record

In August 2008, WASA assigned Denyse Jeter-Williams, who is also black, to supervise

Jones in her capacity as Manager of Employment Services. See MSJ, Attach. 2 (Def. Statement

of Material Facts) (“DSMF”), ¶ 2; Jones Depo. at 57:15-16. During a staff meeting in October

2008, Jeter-Williams disciplined Jones for using the word “ass,” which she believed was profane,

and instructed him that it should not be used in the workplace. See DSMF, ¶ 4; MSJ, Attach. 11

(Note to File of Oct. 23, 2008) at 1; Jones Depo. at 272:2-7 (“I said -- just casually I said, ‘Man,

we need to get off our ass and just, you know, get busy.’ And that’s the content [sic] in what I

used it in. And she basically said, ‘Well, there will be no cursing in my staff meetings.’”). He

responded by disputing whether “ass” was, in fact, profanity, since “they use the word ass on the

TV, on the radio, on everything.” Jones Depo. at 272:9-10.

After that meeting and in short succession, Jeter-Williams placed three different

memoranda in Jones’s employment file documenting what she viewed as insubordinate behavior

and charging that he did not communicate effectively with his supervisors. She issued the first

memo in December 2008 and gave him a formal warning in January 2009. See DSMF, ¶¶ 5-6.

The same concerns were then echoed in her May 2009 mid-year performance evaluation of

Jones. See id., ¶ 8. He acknowledges that these were his evaluations, but disputes Jeter-

Williams’s characterization of his behavior and performance. See Plaintiff’s Resp. to DSMF,

ECF No. 67, ¶¶ 5-8.

At the end of 2009, Jeter-Williams gave Jones his end-of-year performance review. See

2 DSMF, ¶ 9. She rated his overall performance as “Level 2 – Meets Expectations” but graded his

work in the “Dependability and Responsiveness” category as “Level 1 – Fails to Meet

Expectations.” Id.

The following year’s performance review took on a slightly more positive tone. Jeter-

Williams again rated Plaintiff’s overall performance as “Level 2 – Meets Expectations,” though

she also noted that “Derek sometimes is not aware that he has information which could affect his

supervisors’ work. I encourage him to routinely provide his supervisor with updates on his work

to ensure that he keeps his supervisor informed.” ECF No. 70 (Opposition), Attach. 2

(Declaration of Daniel Linden), Exh. 3 (November 2010 Performance Evaluation) at ECF p. 10.

In April 2011, Jeter-Williams again documented, in a mid-year performance review, what

she viewed as two key shortcomings in Jones’s performance: (1) failing to convene “Staffing

Strategy Session[s]/Phone Conversation[s]” with WASA hiring managers when he is assigned a

new vacancy to fill, and (2) routinely failing to “provide [Jeter-Williams] with a copy of [the

monthly Budget/Recruitment report for Compensation] on a consistent basis, which is a primary

requirement of [his job].” MSJ, Attach. 16 (April 2011 Memorandum from Jeter-Williams to

Jones) at 2.

On the first issue, Jones’s deposition testimony corroborates Jeter-Williams’s assessment

that such meetings or conversations were part of his job obligations. See Jones Depo. at 323:14-

18 (agreeing that he was “required as part of [his] job duties to conduct a strategy meeting with

hiring managers when [he] began recruiting on a new posting”). But, in his view, it was

unnecessary to perform these tasks consistently. During his deposition, he recounted a

discussion he had with Jeter-Williams after reading his April 2011 performance review in which

he told her:

3 [L]ike I explained to you, some positions are repetitious, and they never change. And the hiring managers that I’ve been working with for several years, and we’ve already establish a rapport that they’re looking for. So in every case, a [meeting], . . . depending on the position, is not necessary at the request of the manager.

Id. at 326:2-9.

As to the second issue – the sending of the monthly budget report – a terse email

exchange between Jeter-Williams and Plaintiff several months after the April 2011 performance

review illustrated the source of her frustrations. On July 8, 2011, she wrote Jones to obtain his

portion of the monthly report: “Derek, Please forward me the June GM Report asap.” MSJ,

Attach. 6 (July 8, 2011, Email Chain). Ten minutes later, Jones responded. Instead of sending

her the report directly as requested, he informed her where she could locate it herself:

Denyse, This report is in the I Drive under Staffing, Report. It is titled as the subject of this email [Staffing Report-Budget Report 06- 30-11]. This is what you requested and I’ve continued on a monthly basis to save the report in this drive. Let me know if you have any questions.

Id. After thanking Jones for the report in response, Jeter-Williams then explained:

Please note that I also asked you to send me the report when you complete it. You save it to the “I” drive for future reference, but I need this report each month as soon as you complete it. Currently I am not aware when you’ve completed it which has created problems for me. We’ve discussed this several times.

Id. (emphasis added).

More reprimands followed. In August 2011, Jeter-Williams’s own supervisor, Arthur

Green (WASA’s Director of Human Capital Management), admonished Plaintiff by letter,

commenting that his “disrespect of [Jeter-Williams] has become . . . standard operating

procedure” and directing him to “start showing respect of your chain-of-command.” MSJ,

Attach. 17 (Aug. 9, 2011, Letter from Arthur Green to Derek Jones).

4 The next month, Jeter-Williams delivered yet another memorandum to Plaintiff

concerning “work habits” that she considered “unacceptable,” including “insubordination.” Id.,

Attach. 18 (Sept. 8, 2011, Memorandum).

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