Leskovisek v. Illinois Department of Transportation

CourtDistrict Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 11, 2020
Docket3:17-cv-03251
StatusUnknown

This text of Leskovisek v. Illinois Department of Transportation (Leskovisek v. Illinois Department of Transportation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leskovisek v. Illinois Department of Transportation, (C.D. Ill. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS URBANA DIVISION

NICHOLAS LESKOVISEK, ) by his next friend, LORI STANLEY, and ) CHAD UNDERWOOD, ) by his next friend, KIM UNDERWOOD, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) v. ) Case No. 17-cv-3251 ) ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF ) TRANSPORTATION and ILLINOIS ) DEPARTMENT OF CENTRAL ) MANAGEMENT SERVICES, ) ) Defendants. )

OPINION On January 29, 2018, Plaintiffs Nicholas Leskovisek and Chad Underwood (Nick and Chad) filed their First Amended Complaint (d/e 14) against Defendants, Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) and Illinois Department of Central Management Services (CMS). On April 28, 2020, Plaintiffs filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (d/e 48), and Defendants filed a Motion for Summary Judgement (d/e 54). For the reasons that follow, Plaintiffs= Motion (d/e 48) is DENIED, and Defendants= Motion (d/e 54) is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Defendants’ Motion is DENIED as to Counts I, II, IV, and V. Defendants’ Motion is GRANTED in part and DENIED

in part as to Count III. I. FACTS The facts are taken from the parties= statements of Undisputed

Material Facts and Additional Material Facts and from the documents submitted by the parties. The Court has only included facts which are material to the issues raised and adequately

supported by evidence in the record. A. Background on Plaintiffs, Nick Leskovisek and Chad Underwood

Nick Leskovisek and Chad Underwood are adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) who participated in the Student Professionals with Disabilities (SPWD) program. Nick is non-verbal and has significant deficits in expressive language. His primary form of communication is vocalization – such as soft sounds that are not words – and gestures – such as

pointing or giving high fives. He is largely unable to engage in written communication. He can write or use a communication board, but only for simple requests, such as a grocery list. Nick has substantial deficits in executive functioning. Executive functioning relates to the set of mental skills that include

working memory, flexible thinking and self-control, and skills used to learn, focus, handle emotions, and make decisions. These deficits impair Nick’s ability to plan, stay organized, and make

decisions. Chad is verbal, but his expressive language skills are significantly limited. While he is able to say words, he is unable to

have a conversation or put those words together into a cohesive sentence. He has echolalic tendencies, where, instead of answering a question, he repeats the last part of the question

asked. He is unable to answer complex questions either by speaking or by writing, and he has substantial deficits in executive functioning that impair his ability to plan, stay organized, and

make decisions. B. Plaintiffs’ Participation in the SPWD Program The SPWD program was administered by IDOT in collaboration with School District 186 and United Cerebral Palsy Land of Lincoln.

Page 3 of 51 The program was intended to provide job training and employment experience to individuals with disabilities, with the goal of

enabling them to obtain permanent, competitive employment. Under the program, IDOT would hire up to 10 students with disabilities into paid temporary positions for six-month sessions.

Prior to 2014, participants in the program were supposed to be eligible to work only a total of three six-month cycles for a maximum of eighteen months. However, some participants stayed

longer than eighteen months. After 2014, the time limit of eighteen months was changed “to unlimited or as long as it takes,” but with the program still “intended as developmental and transitional rather

than as permanent employment.” See Harmening Email, d/e 61- 17. SPWD program participants were listed as holding Technical Trainee (“Tech Trainee”) positions.

Through the SPWD program, Nick and Chad were assigned to work in IDOT’s Traffic Safety Division, Statistical Coding Unit (“Stats Unit”). They were placed in the Stats Unit based on their data entry skills. Nick entered the SPWD program in 2008, and he

began working in the Stats Unit in early 2011. Chad entered the Page 4 of 51 SPWD program in 2011, and he began working in the Stats Unit in August 2013. Nick and Chad earned $11.10 per hour. They did

not receive benefits, such as insurance or paid leave time. Their Tech Trainee positions were continually renewed until IDOT ended the SPWD program effective December 31, 2015.

Nick and Chad had a full-time job coach who observed them working. From approximately September 2014 until December 2015, Christina Benton was their job coach, employed by United

Cerebral Palsy. She described her role as training, supporting, and monitoring Plaintiffs, not doing their work. She provided them with interpretation or direction, periodically checking their work for

accuracy and guiding them by correcting mistakes, which Benton said did not happen often. Defendants dispute the role of the job coach, pointing to

testimony from Jessica Keldermans. Keldermans was the Bureau Chief of the Traffic Safety Division, and she oversaw the Stats Unit. She testified that, to prevent Nick from “pushing through” cases with errors in entry submissions, a job coach sat next to Nick

“watching him” and “checking everything” before “then pushing . . . Page 5 of 51 the button to . . . push the [data entry] case though.” See Keldermans Deposition, d/e 52-13, p. 131-32, 215. She stated

that Nick and Chad would “get a little upset when [the job coach] wasn=t there,” resulting in noise disturbances, and that “[w]ithout [a job coach] they can get very agitated.” Id. at 131, 215-16.

Keldermans filled out a Social Security Administration form about Plaintiffs’ abilities to successfully complete all of their Tech Trainee duties “without special assistance” and in “the same

amount of time as employees in similar position[s].” Id. at 148. She testified that she thought Nick and Chad “did a great job.” Id. at 175.

C. Plaintiffs Seek Permanent Employment in the Stats Unit The Stats Unit was responsible for entering data from vehicle crash reports submitted by law enforcement agencies across

Illinois. While Nick and Chad held temporary Tech Trainee positions through the SPWD program, they expressed a desire to be considered for permanent positions doing data entry at IDOT.

Page 6 of 51 1. Job Classifications and Descriptions Employment with the State of Illinois is, with some exceptions

not applicable here, governed by the Personnel Code, 20 Ill. Comp. Stat. 415/1 et seq. Positions within State employment are grouped into job title classifications which apply to all State agencies that

fall within CMS=s personnel administration. Two of the different job title classifications are Office Associate and Office Assistant. In 2014 and 2015, there were over 1500 employees across the various

State agencies within the classification of Office Associate, and about 800 employees within the classification of Office Assistant. Both of the Office Associate and Office Assistant job

classifications are covered by a collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (“AFSCME”). The CBA does not cover

temporary employees. The permanent positions in the Stats Unit are civil service positions subject to an “open competitive exam” including a computer-based “automated test” and a structured “Rutan”

interview. Page 7 of 51 Through Equip for Equality attorney Barry Lowy, Nick and Chad contacted AFSCME, corresponding with Frank Prochaska,

Staff Representative for AFSCME Council 31.

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