Nigro v. Wright Patterson Air Force Base

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedMay 31, 2024
Docket3:21-cv-00337
StatusUnknown

This text of Nigro v. Wright Patterson Air Force Base (Nigro v. Wright Patterson Air Force Base) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nigro v. Wright Patterson Air Force Base, (S.D. Ohio 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

MELISSA NIGRO . Plaintiff, V. Case No. 3:21-CV-337-WHR WRIGHT PATTERSON AIR JUDGE WALTER H. RICE FORCE BASE, ET AL., Defendants.

DECISION AND ENTRY SUSTAINING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT, DOC. #32; JUDGMENT TO ENTER IN FAVOR OF DEFENDANTS AND AGAINST PLAINTIFF; TERMINATION ENTRY

This matter comes before the Court on a Motion for Summary Judgment by Defendants Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Frank Kendall, and the United States

Air Force (collectively, “Defendants”). Doc. #32. Plaintiff Melissa Nigro has filed a

Response in Opposition to the Motion for Summary Judgment. Doc. #36. Defendants filed their reply. Doc. #37. For the reasons below, Defendants’ Motion

for Summary Judgment is SUSTAINED.

l. Procedural Background Plaintiff Melissa Nigro (“Nigro” or “Plaintiff”) filed suit against Defendants on

December 16, 2021, asserting claims of Disability Discrimination (Count 1); Retaliation under the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”, Count II); hostile work

environment (Count Ill); Racial Discrimination (Count IV); and Sexual Discrimination (Count V). Doc. #1. After a protracted four-month delay in serving Defendants, see

Docs. ##4~9, service was eventually accomplished against all Defendants by May 16, 2022. See Docs. ##10-12. Following an extension, Defendants filed their

Answer on August 23, 2022, Doc. #16, and the Court held a preliminary pretrial conference on September 16, 2022. Doc. #17. The discovery deadline was originally set for March 31, 2023, /d., but, upon joint motion of the parties, Doc. #19, was extended to September 26, 2023. Doc. #20. After the discovery period, Defendants sought and received five extensions to

the deadline for summary judgment motions. See Docs. ##22, 26-28, 31. Ultimately, they filed their Motion for Summary Judgment a day late on January 16, 2024. Doc. #32. Nigro sought and received two extensions to file a response to the

motion, Docs. #33 & 35, before filing her Response in Opposition two days late on

March 23, 2024. Doc. #36. Defendants filed their reply on April 4, 2024. Doc. #37. The motion is ripe for review. Il. Factual Background Nigro is a white, Caucasian female born in 1965. Doc. #30-2, PagelD #248.

She suffers from gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and asthma, and experienced a shoulder injury during her employment on Wright Patterson Air Force Base (“WPAFB”). /d. at PagelD #351. In January 2018, Nigro began working on WPAFB for the United States Air

Force Life Cycle Management Center (“AFLCMC”), on a career conditional

appointment as an Operations Research Analyst in the Financial Management Division. Doc. #30-1, PagelD #347. Her first-level supervisor was Wilbur Jameson (“Jameson”). Doc. #30-2, PagelD #249. Jameson “was aware of [her] race/color,

sex, and age after she arrived in January 2018.” Doc. #24-6, PagelD #196-98; accord Doc. #29-4, PagelD ##255-56. Nigro’s coworkers were a mix of races and

sexes, which included her supervisor Jameson (a black male); Doc. #30-2, PagelD #349: an African American female named Alicia; Doc. #24, PagelD ##100-01; and

six (6) white individuals of both sexes. See Doc. #32, PagelD #365; see also Doc. #30-2, PagelD ##349-50 (stating that Nigro’s four fellow probationary employees, two male and two female, were white). Nigro does not recall any instances where

Jameson made derogatory comments about her race, sex, or age during her tenure with AFLCMC. Doc. #24, PagelD #110. There is some dispute over whether the Air Force, though its employee Jameson, “was aware[, through visual observation and personnel records,] of

[Nigro’s] gastronomical medical condition when she arrived in January 2018,... [and] her shoulder injury .. . in July 2019." Compare Doc. #30-2, PagelD #350 (detailing Nigro’s assertion of Jameson's knowledge of her conditions) with Doc.

#29-4, PagelD ##256-58. Regardless, neither Nigro’s second nor third-line supervisor was aware of her conditions, see Doc. #29-5, PagelD #267; Doc. #29-

1, PagelD #235, and she didn’t otherwise “notify the Air Force” about her preexisting disabilities until she “submitted . . . [Family and Medical Leave Act] paperwork... in 2019." Doc. #24, PagelD #111. Her Family and Medical Leave

Act (“FMLA”) request, Doc. #29-10, dated September 27, 2019, was roughly twenty (20) months into her conditional appointment and is the first documented

instance requesting an accommodation for her disabilities. Two months prior, Nigro informed Jameson of her shoulder injury and began requesting time off for physical therapy. Doc. #24-6, PagelD #196. Throughout her term of employment, Nigro dealt with incidents in the workplace resulting from the leave she took for all the aforementioned disabilities and family needs. Doc. #24, PagelD ##113-16. The specific incidents, purported to

be harassment or discrimination, cover a broad range of dates and actions. First, Jameson consistently refused to allow Nigro to either telework or participate in the office physical training program, but did not deny other coworkers of different ages, races, and sexes to do so. Doc. #30-2, PagelD #352. Second, Jameson repeatedly made comments to Nigro regarding her continued absences. This included

commentary on “how old her son would have to be before he could start taking care

of himself,” fd., and statements such as “oh, [Nigro’s] here today. [She] finally came into the office.” /d. at PagelD #355. Third, and finally, Nigro was required to sign in

and out of the office when her coworkers were not. Doc. #24, PagelD ##99-100. In 2019, Nigro was not at work for roughly one quarter of the calendar year. Doc. #29-16, PagelD #345. In total, Nigro was absent 470 hours in total, or approximately 58.75 workdays. /d. Excluding holidays, this was spread across 160.75 hours (~ 20 days) of annual leave, 140.75 hours (~ 17 days) of sick leave, and 168.5 hours (~ 21 days) of leave without pay. /d. On January 6, 2020, two

days before the end of her probationary period, Nigro was terminated for excessive

absenteeism. Doc. #29-14, PagelD #210. On January 4, 2021, Nigro filed a formal complaint of discrimination against the Air Force. Doc. #24-1: Doc. #29-14, PagelD #329. The complaint was

investigated by the Department of Defense Human Resources Activity. Doc. #29-

14, PagelD #329. On September 19, 2021, a Final Agency Decision (“FAD”) was

issued. See id. The FAD found that Nigro established that she had a disability, however she failed to show that she was harassed—via a hostile work environment—based on any of her protected classes, and that her termination for

cause was not pretextual “for discrimination based on race, color, sex, age or

disability.” /d. at PagelD #339. Nigro then brough the instant suit. Doc. #1. lil. Legal Standard Summary judgment must be entered “against a party who fails to make a

showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s

case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.” Celotex Corp.

v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322 (1986). The moving party always bears the initial responsibility of informing the court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those

portions of the record which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue

of material fact. /d. at 323; see also Boretti v. Wiscomb, 930 F.2d 1150

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