Mazus v. Department of Transportation of Pennsylvania

489 F. Supp. 376, 23 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 832, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11342
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 29, 1979
DocketCiv. 76-683
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 489 F. Supp. 376 (Mazus v. Department of Transportation of Pennsylvania) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mazus v. Department of Transportation of Pennsylvania, 489 F. Supp. 376, 23 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 832, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11342 (M.D. Pa. 1979).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

NEALON, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff, Carolyn Mazus, alleging discrimination in employment on the basis of her sex, seeks compensatory and punitive damages, as well as injunctive relief 1 from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and Leonard D. Coddington, Superintendent of the Milford Office of the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, and other Commonwealth officials, including the Governor, his Personnel Director, and the Secretary of Transportation. 2 A nonjury trial was held November 7, 8, 1977, and May 11, 1978, and after submission of Requests for Findings of Fact and appropriate briefs, the matter is now ripe for disposition. 3

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Carolyn Mazus is a female resident of Lords Valley, Hawley, Pennsylvania, a community located in Pike County.

2. The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (“PennDOT”) is the department of the Commonwealth of Pennsylva *379 nia responsible for construction and maintenance of state highways.

3. The Governor of Pennsylvania, Personnel Secretary to the Governor, and Secretary of PennDOT, are the State Officials alternately responsible for setting and implementing employment policies within PennDOT.

4. Leonard Coddington is the Superintendent of Maintenance for PennDOT operations in Pike County.

5. Ernest Gastmeyer was the Democratic County Chairman in Pike County.

6. In 1974 and prior thereto, the hiring of non-Civil Service employees, including highway maintenance workers for Penn-DOT county organizations, was considered political patronage and was not controlled by PennDOT. The first step, after learning of a vacancy from the County Superintendent, was for the PennDOT Personnel Office in Harrisburg to advise the Governor’s personnel representative of the vacancy. The Governor’s personnel representative would then notify the County Chairman of the Governor’s political party and forward a job application to him. The application would be delivered by the Chairman and/or his political associates to the chosen applicant or transmitted to the Milford Office for delivery and execution by the applicant, and only one application was given out for each vacancy. The patronage process was well known in Pike County and most applicants resorted to political connections in seeking employment. The County Superintendent would forward the executed application and other necessary paperwork to the PennDOT personnel bureau in Harrisburg, which had the authority to cancel the appointment made by the County Superintendent if the employee was deemed unsuitable for the job. The County Chairman would attempt to apportion job openings in the eleven townships and two boroughs in Pike County where the work would actually be performed and where it would be to political advantage.

7. Mr. Coddington, as Superintendent for Pike County, did not have any control over blank job application forms, which in Pike County were under the complete control of the County Chairman and his political subordinates. Further, he had no authority to put anyone on the payroll without a completed job application form. The County Chairman’s approval was necessary before he could hire anyone for a field position within PennDOT. There were no blank job application forms available at PennDOT’s District Office in Dunmore.

8. Information concerning vacancies for highway maintenance workers is also disseminated through the community by word of mouth by existing employees of Penn-DOT. The positions were not advertised.

9. From 1971 until the present, Penn-DOT had been operating under severe budgetary limitations. Therefore, when a person left his employment with PennDOT, that position was abolished and there existed no vacancy. A position could only be filled after the vacancy had been authorized and approved by the Governor’s office. This brought PennDOT’s employment from 22,000 in 1971 to 17,000 in November of 1977. Because of this freeze, very few people were hired as Highway Maintenance Workers in Pike County since 1971, although many were interested in these positions.

10. In July 1974, Jacob Kassab, Secretary of PennDOT, talked to Mr. Gastmeyer and told him that some highway maintenance workers could be hired “in the fall of that year.” Because there were very few openings since 1971, and there was a surplus of applicants, Mr. Gastmeyer had decided either who would receive them, or what political leader could submit an applicant, or in what area in the County the employee would be placed.

11. In October 1974, plaintiff’s husband, Daniel, a PennDOT highway employee, received with his paycheck a flyer styled “Benefit of the Month,” which promoted affirmative action by encouraging employees to suggest to minority and female acquaintances the idea of applying for Penn-DOT employment at the Department’s county and district offices.

12. Plaintiff, then unemployed, read the “Benefit" and requested her husband to obtain an application form for her to use in obtaining a highway maintenance position with PennDOT, Mr. Mazus asked County Superintendent Coddington for an application for. his wife in early November 1974. Coddington believed she was looking for a clerical position and said that there were no *380 vacancies but that he would try to get her an application. Subsequently, Coddington told him that he could not get an application form for Mrs. Mazus because he had contacted Gastmeyer but had been told that she would have to come to him personally.

13. On November 19, 1974, Mrs. Mazus went to the PennDOT district office at Dunmore, Pennsylvania and requested an application form for highway work. Her request was routed to the District Labor Relations Officer, Bert Davis, who attempted to dissuade her from seeking that type of employment. Both Mr. Davis and Mr. Reginald Knight, an Equal Opportunity Development Specialist with PennDOT at the Dunmore Office, informed Mrs. Mazus that there were not any job applications for non-Civil Service jobs at the District office and that she would have to obtain this application from the County Chairman. Individuals seeking non-Civil Service employment with PennDOT rarely seek job applications at the District Office.

14. On November 20, plaintiff telephoned Gastmeyer, who stated that at that time there were no openings for road workers in Pike County. Gastmeyer had previously been informed of approximately 8 job openings by Secretary Kassab but all had been committed to the various townships by October 1974. He had told Coddington this when Coddington called for an application for plaintiff. Mrs. Mazus asked that she be permitted to place an application on file should openings develop. Gastmeyer told her to be at his home at 5:00 P.M. that day. Mr. and Mrs. Mazus drove to Matamoras, where Gastmeyer lived, telephoning him en route for directions. Plaintiff arrived at Gastmeyer’s home at the appointed time, but no one was home.

15. Following her unsuccessful trip to Matamoras, plaintiff and her husband immediately drove to the PennDOT Pike County office at Milford, where she spoke to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
489 F. Supp. 376, 23 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 832, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mazus-v-department-of-transportation-of-pennsylvania-pamd-1979.