ONELY v. REDNER'S MARKETS, INC.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 11, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-04785
StatusUnknown

This text of ONELY v. REDNER'S MARKETS, INC. (ONELY v. REDNER'S MARKETS, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ONELY v. REDNER'S MARKETS, INC., (E.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

CONNIE ONELY, CIVIL ACTION Plaintiff,

v.

REDNER’S MARKETS, INC. NO. 21-4785 doing business as REDNER’S Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Plaintiff Connie Onely, a Black woman, has sued the company that fired her, Defendant Redner’s Markets, Inc. (“Redner’s”). She alleges that she was subjected to retaliation, a hostile work environment, and discrimination in violation the Civil Rights Act of 1866, 42 U.S.C. § 1981, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq., the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101, et seq., and the Pennsylvania Human Relations Act (“PHRA”), 42 Pa. C.S. § 951, et seq., because of her race, sex, and perceived disability. Defendant moves for summary judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 on all counts. For the reasons that follow, Defendant’s motion will be granted in part and denied in part. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The events underpinning her suit took place at the two locations at which she worked for Defendant—first in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, and then in Audubon, Pennsylvania. A. Plaintiff’s Work at the Lansdale Location At the Lansdale location, Plaintiff worked in the Meat Department, where she was the only female employee. According to Plaintiff, the men in the Lansdale Meat Department “stuck together.” Plaintiff testified that her supervisor, Nino Ciaccio, reprimanded her when expired meat had to be thrown out. She also testified that Ciaccio directed her to work late on certain days to clean the Meat Department after her male colleagues left, even though (as Defendant admits) every member of the Meat Department should have been involved in cleaning.

Plaintiff also worked with a man named David Goodman. Although the parties disagree about the particulars of their interactions, the record shows that Goodman regularly cursed at Plaintiff, calling her a “bitch” within earshot, and telling her that, in the context of the hierarchy in the store, she was “lower than the bottom of his shoe.” Goodman made clear to Plaintiff that he “would not have hired her.” He also called her “Celo,” apparently referring to a Black drug dealer from a movie who drove the same type of car that she did. She told Goodman that she did not appreciate being referred to by that name, after which he stopped doing it. Although Plaintiff does not recall if she reported Goodman’s uses of the nickname, she did report his other comments to the Lansdale store manager, Steve DiGiorgio, who met with her multiple times about her concerns and communicated them to Human Resources. She also

thought (and reported) that Goodman was mistreating her based on her gender. Goodman was not disciplined, although management concluded that he could have communicated more effectively with Plaintiff. B. Plaintiff Transfers to the Audubon Location Plaintiff was transferred at her request1 to a different Redner’s store—in Audubon—to work as a Seafood Associate within the store’s Meat Department, where she was the only Black employee. She soon began to experience difficulties at that location too.

1 The parties dispute whether Plaintiff requested the transfer because she was excited about the opportunity at the Audubon location or whether she simply no longer wanted to work with Goodman. First, seeking to expand her skillset, Plaintiff approached Marcos Mercon, her supervisor, about becoming a Meat Cutter Apprentice. Mercon told her that no open position was available at the store at the time. Plaintiff admits that Mercon did not say anything to her face that would lead her to believe that he denied her that opportunity because of her sex or race.

Second, while working at the Audubon location, Plaintiff told the store’s manager, Karl Michener, that she had been diagnosed with hypertension. She did not seek a change in her job duties connected with her diagnosis, nor did it, for the most part, interfere with her ability to do her job. She did, however (in May or June 2020), after blacking out in the women’s bathroom,2 ask Michener for time off to seek treatment. Michener talked to Alexis Foreman, the head of Human Resources who instructed him to discuss with Plaintiff the possibility of her taking leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”). Onely never requested FMLA leave or short-term disability. A few months after this incident, on August 11, 2020, Michener emailed Human Resources requesting a “fit for duty” assessment for Plaintiff . The third issue at the Audubon location arose out of Plaintiff’s interactions with Sandra

McGrory, a White woman who worked with Plaintiff in the Meat Department three days a week. Their conversations touched on personal matters, race being a common theme. Specifically: • On one occasion, Plaintiff told McGrory that she had been married to a white man, and McGrory asked her questions about their relationship that Plaintiff considered racially discriminatory. • McGrory made her opposition to the Black Lives Matter movement known. • McGrory called into question the facts behind instances of police violence towards Black people that led many to protest during the summer of 2020. When discussing the death of George Floyd, McGrory told Plaintiff that she did not believe that police had killed him. She implied to Plaintiff that Floyd was responsible for his own death, either because he was on drugs or failed to obey police officers’ instructions. And in a discussion about the killing of Breonna Taylor, McGrory expressed little concern given

2 She had suffered an episode of syncope, a medical event where the heart briefly stops beating. her belief that either Taylor or her boyfriend was a drug dealer. • Plaintiff further testified that McGrory expressed racial animus towards people of Asian descent. Nor was Plaintiff the only Black woman with whom McGrory had disagreements that year. Sometime during the summer of 2020, McGrory brought cashier Rachida Tou’s hair to a store manager’s attention. She testified that she found Tou’s purple braided hair “very offensive.” Defendant policy mandates employees have natural color hair. Store management concluded that Tou did not need to change her hair and told McGrory that it was not her responsibility to police other people’s hair or dress. Plaintiff’s firing arises out of at least one sexually explicit conversation between Plaintiff and McGrory in September 2020. The parties vigorously dispute the particulars of their discussion. After an investigation, Defendant concluded that Plaintiff had violated the company’s sexual harassment policy by bringing up sex toys in a conversation in the workplace. Plaintiff, on the other hand, testified that she believes that she and McGrory were at least equally culpable. As she tells it, on September 3, McGrory and Plaintiff were discussing the movie “50

Shades of Grey.” Although Plaintiff admits that she was the first one to bring up the movie, she denies that she mentioned using a sex toy in that first conversation. Instead, Plaintiff insists that it was McGrory who brought up using a sex toy for prurient purposes (they had been talking about pranking a male colleague by putting one in his coat), telling Plaintiff where to purchase and how to clean one in a subsequent conversation. The parties agree that, no matter who started discussing sex toys, having a conversation about this at work violated Defendant’s policy against sexual harassment.

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ONELY v. REDNER'S MARKETS, INC., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/onely-v-redners-markets-inc-paed-2023.