Nelson v. National Labor Relations Board

421 F. App'x 342
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 2011
Docket10-60762
StatusUnpublished

This text of 421 F. App'x 342 (Nelson v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. National Labor Relations Board, 421 F. App'x 342 (5th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Vevria Nelson challenges the National Labor Relations Board’s (“Board”) holding *343 that the Corrections Corporation of America (“Corporation”) did not violate the National Labor Relations Act (“Act”) when it terminated her. For the reasons set out below, we DENY Nelson’s petition.

I.Facts and Proceedings

The Corporation operates correctional facilities throughout the United States, including a facility in Tutwiler, Mississippi, where it employs approximately 610 employees. In 2007, the Corporation secured a contract with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to house California inmates at the Tutwiler facility (“California Contract”). The California Contract is the Tutwiler facility’s sole source of inmates and, due to litigation regarding deficient health care provided to California inmates, the facility is subject to a federal receivership appointed to monitor the delivery of health care to California inmates.

Nelson is a licensed practical nurse (“LPN”) who worked at the Tutwiler facility from January 24, 2007 until her termination on August 1, 2008. While employed at the Tutwiler facility, Nelson frequently clashed with her coworkers. From 2007 through early 2008, several Tutwiler staff members filed the following incident reports or complaints against Nelson:

1. In March 2007, a coworker filed an incident report alleging that Nelson yelled at her in a threatening manner.
2. In August 2007, a nurse’s assistant filed two separate reports alleging that Nelson shouted at her in a threatening manner on one occasion and threw away her personal property on another.
3. In October 2007, a nurse filed a complaint that Nelson snatched medication out of her hand in front of several other nurses.
4. Also in October 2007, two nurses filed complaints against Nelson, alleging that her “uncivil” and “rude, unprofessional” conduct created a “toxic work environment” and resulted in “low morale.”
5. In February 2008, Dr. Tankersley, a Tutwiler dentist, asked Nelson for some ibuprofen to give to an inmate. The conversation escalated into a shouting match and Registered Nurse (“RN”) supervisor Albert Maples intervened. After Tankersley left the room, Nelson continued to shout at Maples, and Maples told Nelson that if she did not calm down he would send her home. Tankers-ley and Maples submitted complaints against Nelson detailing the incident.
6. In April 2008, the Corporation conducted a training seminar where it asked Tutwiler medical staff to anonymously write down the name of any individual who was the source of conflict in the medical department. Thirteen of 16 employees put Nelson’s name alone. Two employees named Nelson and other employees.
7. In May 2008, a nurse filed an incident report against Nelson, alleging that Nelson shoved her and screamed at her during a confrontation.
8. In July 2008, RN Dorothy Strong filed an incident report against Nelson, alleging that Nelson had made disparaging remarks about Strong in front of other nurses. In the report, Strong also noted that Nelson routinely made ugly remarks to or about RNs.

All of these incident reports were brought to the attention of Warden Robert Adams, who had overall responsibility for managing the facility.

*344 In addition to the written complaints, Adams testified that he received numerous oral complaints about Nelson. Two departing RNs informed Adams that Nelson was one of the reasons they were leaving the Tutwiler facility. In April 2008, Maples told Adams that he was resigning due to stress and that Nelson had contributed to that stress. In June 2008, another RN, Deanna Hardin, stated to Adams that she was resigning “because of Nelson’s behavior” but that she would consider returning if Nelson left. Adams did not, however, discipline Nelson for any of her conduct. Furthermore, in a 2007 performance evaluation, Nelson received an “Exceeds Expectations” rating.

In April 2008, an inmate death at the Tutwiler facility led to an investigation by the federal receiver in charge of California inmates. The next month, the receiver issued a scathing report concluding that the Tutwiler medical department had failed to comply with the receiver’s rules and regulations. The report emphasized the Corporation’s need to maintain and increase its medical staff, particularly its RNs. The receiver warned the Corporation that if it did not “immediately correct” the deficiencies, he would remove the California inmates from the Tutwiler facility.

After the July 2008 incident between Nelson and Strong, Adams discussed the various incidents involving Nelson with Managing Director Jack Garner and Vice President Jimmy Turner and recommended that the Corporation terminate Nelson. Adams testified that he made his recommendation in light of the receiver’s warning because Nelson “was putting [the Corporation] in a position where [it] could lose [its] contract.” Garner and Turner agreed with Adams’s recommendation.

On August 1, 2008, Adams discharged Nelson. During the discharge meeting, Adams referred to prepared talking points and told Nelson: (1) that she “made complaints” and was “never satisfied with our answers”; (2) that Tutwiler staff, including some of her coworkers, had complained about her; (3) that the Corporation “was trying to secure the California contract”; and (4) that her “attitude” did not fit the environment the Corporation sought to maintain. Adams’s talking points also specifically noted that Nelson’s “behavior has contributed to or created difficult situations for [her] and others” and that “the quality of the medical care [the Tutwiler facility] is providing has been questioned by our California customer and we are facing a very challenging situation.”

On September 18, 2008, Nelson filed a charge against the Corporation before the Board alleging that she was terminated in retaliation for engaging in concerted activities protected by the Act. Over the course of 2008, Nelson performed three actions that could be considered concerted activities protected by the Act. In February 2008, Nelson filed an employee grievance against Maples, alleging discrimination based on race and sex. Three LPNs attached their own complaints about Maples to Nelson’s complaint. In May 2008, Nelson and fourteen LPNs mailed a letter to the Corporation’s Vice President of Health Services asking for a $5 per hour wage increase. In July 2008, Nelson and several LPNs spoke to human resources about bonuses.

After a hearing, an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) issued a decision in Nelson’s favor. On August 23, 2010, the Board reversed the ALJ’s decision. 1 The *345 Board found that the ALJ had failed to, among other things, (1) give proper weight to the fact that the Corporation’s California Contract was in jeopardy and (2) fully consider the impact that Nelson’s conduct had on the Corporation’s ability to employ RNs. The Board concluded that:

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421 F. App'x 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca5-2011.