Kettler v. Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedNovember 29, 2022
Docket4:22-cv-00500
StatusUnknown

This text of Kettler v. Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District (Kettler v. Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kettler v. Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District, (E.D. Mo. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

GERALD KETTLER, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 4:22-CV-500 SRW ) METROPOLITAN ST. LOUIS SEWER ) DISTRICT, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER This matter comes before the Court on Defendant Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ Complaint, or in the Alternative to Sever Plaintiff Catherine Politte’s Claim (ECF No. 10). Both parties have consented to the exercise of plenary authority by a United States Magistrate Judge under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c). For the reasons set forth below, the Motion to Dismiss is denied. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiffs Gerald Kettler, Dennis Boatwright, and Catherine Politte filed this action against Defendant Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District (“MSD”) alleging MSD violated 42 U.S.C. § 1981 when MSD fired Plaintiffs. The Court accepts the following facts as alleged in the Complaint as true: MSD employed Boatwright and Kettler in various hourly employee positions since 2003 and 2004, respectively. MSD employed Politte in various managerial positions since 2008. At the time of her discharge, Politte was Assistant Director of Operations. In March 2020, Kettler and Boatwright were employed as Collection System Technicians working out of MSD’s Grand Glaize Yard. Technicians are responsible for maintaining the collection system of MSD. They work a regular daytime schedule, with rotating standby for nights and weekends. All technicians are governed by the same rules for working and recording time, no matter the yard to which they are assigned. Bret Berthold is the Director of Operations for all of MSD, and he approves discipline for

employees at all yards to ensure it is consistent. A standby crew consists of a crew leader, known as the “Team Lead,” and two additional technicians. Standby assignments are made to the Team Lead, who assembles the standby crew, assigns tasks, and directs the reporting of hours for the entire team. MSD has a written standby policy requiring all members of the standby team to appear at all assignments and to report to the yard and use an MSD vehicle for any standby assignment. MSD is well aware there are accepted exceptions to this policy. During formal classroom training, MSD teaches technicians that the amount of time they submit on their timecards for standby work will be determined by the Team Lead, and each crew member’s time must match. Kettler and Boatwright were part of a standby team with Team Lead Greg Purnell for the

week of March 1-8, 2020. During that week, each member of their crew submitted a total of 28 hours of time for standby work performed on March 4, 8, and 9. On March 4, the crew handled the assignment as a three-person crew, using one MSD vehicle and Purnell’s personal vehicle. On March 7, the crew was called out again and used two MSD vehicles, one with Purnell and Boatwright, and one with Kettler. The same weekend, March 7-8, Purnell assigned the work of checking a pump, L52, to individual team members and told them they could use their personal vehicles. Purnell was an inexperienced Team Lead and did not submit a work order for checking the pump. MSD has standing orders to check pump L52 twice per day. Purnell directed Kettler and Boatwright to each record 28 hours of work for the work performed on March 4, 8, and 9. In April 2020, a supervisor at the Grand Glaize Yard discovered an apparent discrepancy on a timecard for an employee for standby duty. The employee’s standby team was crewed by Purnell. An investigation revealed a pattern of apparent

discrepancies for standby teams crewed by Purnell. On information and belief, employees indicated Purnell directed them to check a pump that was on a standing order to be checked, for only one crew member at a time to check a pump, to use the employee’s personal vehicle for standby work, and for each member of the crew to report as standby time the total time the crew spent performing standby work. The Assistant Director of Operations for the Grand Glaize Yard, Brian McGownd, considered these directions to constitute theft of time. On information and belief, McGownd and/or Berthold were unwilling to only discipline Purnell for this alleged theft, because Purnell is African American. On information and belief, in order to avoid the optics of firing solely an African American, MSD fired each of the crew members who worked with Purnell as Team Lead.

Berthold fired Boatwright and Kettler, both Caucasian men, on May 18 and 19, 2020, respectively, for falsification of a timecard. Previously, an African American team leader was caught stealing time by not reporting for any Saturday standby work, but recording it as though he had. The Director of Operations gave him a written warning, but did not suspend or fire him. Another African American technician only received a three-day suspension when he falsified his timecard by leaving ten minutes early per day for two weeks. In August 2020, MSD City Yard night foreman Kevin Mullen was caught systematically adding hours to his crew’s time. The crew members were not working the hours at all, and Mullen was intentionally padding the time for his crew. MSD corrected the time, but did not discipline Mullen, or any of his crew who were all African American. In April 2021, MSD, through Berthold and McGownd, issued a three-day suspension to an African American technician for “abuse of District time for personal use and false and fraudulent timekeeping” from January through March 2021. The amount of time allegedly stolen

was equivalent to the time MSD alleged Boatwright and Kettler took. Berthold also approves discipline for all management employees, and therefore is required to ensure that discipline is consistent across managerial employees. MSD’s long- standing operating procedure when hiring or promoting within Operations is to identify a hiring manager who puts together a three-person hiring panel and submits questions to Human Resources to ascertain technical competency and leadership. The panel is comprised of an HR representative and two managerial personnel with knowledge and expertise in the area of the hiring or promotion. HR screens the applicants for the position, presents the hiring panel with a group of finalists, and provides them with relevant information about the finalists. The panel interviews each finalist and privately ranks them. HR collects and tabulates the rankings and then

distributes the results to the panel, placing the finalists in order of ranking. The hiring manger then makes a recommendation to the Director of Operations, who makes the ultimate selection. Politte has been a hiring manager numerous times during her career with MSD and has participated on numerous panels for which she was not the hiring manager. In October 2021, she was part of a hiring panel for the position of Operations Supervisor of Maintenance, along with Rebecca Coyle, John McCarthy, and HR representative Steve Grass. Coyle was the hiring manager for the position. The finalists included two African American males, a white male, and a white female. The white male was objectively the best candidate. On information and belief, when HR distributed the results, all the members of the hiring panel were unanimous in their rankings of the candidates. The white male candidate was ranked first and was awarded the position by Berthold. Also in March 2021, there was an opening for Operations Supervisor of Operations at the Bissell Treatment plant. The hiring manager for the position was Robert Daly, and the remaining

panel members were HR representative Craig Ballantine and Chris Pfifer.

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Kettler v. Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kettler-v-metropolitan-st-louis-sewer-district-moed-2022.