Militinska-Lake v. Kirnon

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 12, 2022
Docket1:20-cv-00443
StatusUnknown

This text of Militinska-Lake v. Kirnon (Militinska-Lake v. Kirnon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Militinska-Lake v. Kirnon, (N.D.N.Y. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ________________________________________ OLENA MILITINSKA-LAKE, Plaintiff, v. 1:20-CV-443 (TJM/CFH) STATE OF NEW YORK DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SERVICE, et al., Defendants. _________________________________________ THOMAS J. McAVOY, Sr. U. S. District Judge DECISION & ORDER Before the Court is Defendants’ motion to dismiss Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint. See dkt. # 54. The parties have briefed the issues and the Court has determined to resolve the matter without oral argument. I. BACKGROUND This pro se civil action arises out of Plaintiff Olena Militinska-Lake’s employment as a Senior Auditor with the New York State Department of Public Service (DPS). She worked in the Office of Accounting Audits and Finance (“OAAF”). The Court previously granted the Defendants’ motion to dismiss an earlier version of this action, but permitted Plaintiff to file a second Amended Complaint. See Second Amended Complaint (“Cmplt.”), dkt. # 33. After Plaintiff filed that Complaint, Defendants filed the instant motion. Plaintiff raises a variety of state and federal claims against her employer, DPS, and 1 various supervisors. She alleges that she faced discrimination because of her race and national origin. Cmplt. at | 6. She contends that the discrimination manifested itself in a failure to promote, unequal terms and conditions of employment, retaliation, suspension without pay, and harassment based on race and national origin. Id. at | 7. Plaintiff is an American citizen who was born in Ukraine. Id at 8. She naturalized in 2007. Id. While Plaintiff speaks fluent English, her native languages are Ukrainian and Russian. ld. Plaintiff has advanced degrees in accounting and taxation from the State University of New York at Albany (“SUNY-Albany”), as well as a Master of Science degree in economics and political economy from Kiev State University in Ukraine. Id. at 9. Plaintiff also did doctorate level work at SUNY-Albany. Id. Plaintiff received her appointment as a Senior Audior, salary grade 18, at DPS on April 23, 2009. Id. at { 10. During ten years of service to the State, Plaintiff received only satisfactory assessments. Id. at ]11. She received recognition as a valuable contributor and “one of the best auditors” by her employer. Id. Plaintiff received an award for ten years of dedicated service at a ceremony on November 8, 2019. Id. at 9] 12. At around 5 p.m. on the next day, Plaintiff received a notice of suspension from Defendant Thomas Congdon, Deputy Chair and Executive Deputy of the Public Service Commission. Id. at 13. Defendant Christine Balleau, DPS’s Director of Human Resources and non-defendant Roger Halbfinger, Associate Director of Human Resources for DPS, were also present. Id. The notice stated: “effective immediately, you are suspended without pay due to acts of discriminatory conduct and the use of racially discriminatory terms.” Id. Plaintiff's Second Amended Complaint narrates the background of Plaintiff's alleged

mistreatment in the workplace on the basis of her race and national origin. She alleges that on March 18, 2014, Shang (“Jerry”) Hongbing, a co-worker who had a higher pay grade and “supervisory responsibilities,” “committed a brutal harassing attack on Plaintiff based on her national origin.” Id. at [| 14. On that day, two days after Russia had annexed Crimea from Ukraine, Shang confronted Plaintiff in a hallway, “blocked her exit, and starting making T-signs (timeout) in front of Plaintiff's face,” nearly hitting her. Id. “Time out!” Shang stated, “No discussion! You are Ukrainian, you must not like what Putin did in Ukraine, don’t you?” Shang told Plaintiff that he liked the annexation, “because China supports Putin!” Id. Plaintiff said nothing, but simply tried to “escape” Shang. Id. Plaintiff reported this “attack” to the OAAF Director, as well as other “jokes” made by another employee, John Huang. Id. at 15. Plaintiff alleges that her employers failed to take the matter seriously, even after Shang continued his alleged “harassment.” Id. Plaintiff felt “deeply insulted personally by Mr. Shang’s aggressive gestures and even more insulted on behalf of all Ukranians, whose wound is very deep with that annexation and the following war.” Id. Plaintiff felt equally “insulted as a naturalized American, whose citizenship is also subjected to the Oath to America, its interests and constitution, not to China.” Id. Plaintiff “follows [that Oath] diligently.” Id. Plaintiff alleges that the subject of Russian actions in Ukraine in 2014 was a “touching” one for her, since “her entire family lived” in Ukraine at the time “and her youngsters, Doctors, were under potential total mobilization.” Id. at | 16. Shang’s alleged harassment on the matter and the “adverse positions and actions of Management towards Plaintiff’ led to “stess” and a “related life-threatening health condition.” Id. Plaintiff began suffering the condition in early June and received a diagnosis in September 2014. Id. at J

16. Plaintiff relates that she “was operated on 09/11/2014 and following [sic] treatment during the next 9 months. Id. at ]16n.1. “Because Plaintiff is not in any risk groups (alcohol, tobacco, drugs, obesity, etc.), the only cause of this health condition the doctors give is stress.” Id. Instead of responding to Plaintiff's complaints about Shang’s harassment, Plaintiff alleges that the OAAF Director sent a memorandum dated October 15, 2015 that cited Plaintiff for a “‘particularly hateful note apparently addressed at [Shang’s] Chinese roots .. . considered a form of harassment based on his ethnicity” that was “prohibited behavior” and an “indication of harassment” after “Plaintiff reminded [the] Director about the value of [the] Naturalization Oath, as a prerequisite for citizenship, and a citizenship as requirement for Government employment.” Id. at 17. Plaintiff complains that the OAAF Director did not follow workplace rules in investigating Shang’s harassment. Id. at 18. Instead, the “Director reprimanded Plaintiff at a counseling session with” Human Resources. Id. he placed a memo in Plaintiff's file, which Plaintiff contends served as retaliation and “inhibit[ed] Plaintiff's” ability to obtain promotions. Id. That action, Plaintiff claims, also “depriv[ed]” her of “the dignity of her respectful existence in OAAF and advancement of her career.” Id. Plaintiff contends that the actions of the Director and HR violated a variety of her rights under federal law, the United States constitution, and New York law. Id. at J 19. She contends that the discrimination she faced included the October 29, 2015 memo, and continues until the present day. Id. at 20. “After that event,” she claims, “the deterioration of [her] career and deprivation of dignity in the Office began and her position on the Organizational Chart was frozen at the bottom.” Id. In early 2015, Plaintiff “was

rotated out of” a “prestigious” job in the “major utility sector.” Id. at 9] 21. This rotation came even though Plaintiff engaged in “selfless work and” made “significant findings in major Utility’s Sandy Storm audit.” Id. The OAAF Deputy Director, Defendant John Scherer, “abusively rejected” those findings. Id. This rejection came at the same time that Plaintiff “fought for her life with [a] threatening health condition, being considered disabled.” Id. Plaintiff alleges that, during the period when she suffered from a disability—“second half of 2014-first half of 2015 and the next 3 years afterwards, per [the Americans with Disabilities Act]-she continued to work “fruitful[ly]” on various projects from 2015-2017. Id. at 7 22. At the same time, Defendants “were developing the destructive and defaming retaliating activity against” her. Id. This conduct, Plaintiff claims, “complicat[ed]” her “fight for life against [a] life-threatening health condition.” Id.

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Militinska-Lake v. Kirnon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/militinska-lake-v-kirnon-nynd-2022.