Pamela D. Tucker v. Department of Veterans Affairs

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 21, 2025
Docket1:23-cv-00804
StatusUnknown

This text of Pamela D. Tucker v. Department of Veterans Affairs (Pamela D. Tucker v. Department of Veterans Affairs) 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
Pamela D. Tucker v. Department of Veterans Affairs, (S.D. Ohio 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

PAMELA D. TUCKER,

Plaintiff, Case No. 1:23-cv-804 v. JUDGE DOUGLAS R. COLE DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS Magistrate Judge Litkovitz AFFAIRS,

Defendant.

OPINION AND ORDER In this mixed case,1 pro se plaintiff Pamela D. Tucker seeks review of an adverse Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) determination and various claims brought under the Rehabilitation Act against Defendant Department of Veterans Affairs (the VA). Two categories of matters are before the Court. First are Tucker’s various objections to two of the Magistrate Judge’s Orders, one of which denied Tucker’s motion to impose sanctions on the VA and to transfer the case to the Court’s Dayton Division, and the other of which denied “enforcement” of the MSPB’s earlier remand order. Because the Magistrate Judge did not err in her determinations, the Court OVERRULES Tucker’s Objections (Docs. 49, 50, 70).2 Second is the VA’s

1 The term “mixed case” is further defined below, but basically refers to a case in which a plaintiff is asserting both (1) a Civil Service Reform Act claim that is subject to Merits Systems Protect Board jurisdiction, and (2) a claim for violations of statutory rights that exist apart from the MSPB’s jurisdiction, such as a discrimination claim under an applicable federal anti-discrimination statute. 2 Tucker labeled one of her filings as a “Response” to the Magistrate Judge’s Order. (Doc. 49). The Court, however, construes that document as an objection. Likewise, Tucker labeled motion for summary judgment on all of Tucker’s claims. Because no genuine disputes of material fact remain, the Court GRANTS the VA’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 60), and in doing so AFFIRMS the decision of the MSPB.

BACKGROUND A. Factual Background This is an employment case. The Cincinnati VA Medical Center hired Tucker as a unit clerk in 2007. (Tucker Depo., Doc. 56-1, #2308). Then, a few years later, Tucker became an administrative support assistant. (Id. at #2312–15). In that role, she handled scheduling matters, took meeting minutes, and sometimes helped with

payroll. (Id. at #2317). And she worked out of an office in the medical center’s main hospital building. (Doc. 56-2, #2351). But, in Tucker’s view, that office had some problems—namely, mold and other allergens that were exacerbating her asthma and allergies. (Doc. 56-1, #2342, 2440; Doc. 56-2, #2531; Doc. 56-17, #2811–12). So in April 2011, she raised a complaint with the VA. (See Doc. 56-10, #2665–66; Doc. 56-11, #2673). The VA, in turn, temporarily assigned Tucker to a different workspace so it could inspect Tucker’s office. (See Doc. 56-10, #2665–66). A third-party company

conducted the inspection and ultimately determined that the office’s air quality both (1) fell within the recommended ranges for indoor air, and (2) complied with government regulations. (Id.; see also Doc. 56-12). So the VA instructed Tucker to return to her office or else provide a doctor’s note explaining why she could not do so. (Doc. 56-10, #2665–66). It appears that Tucker never supplied a doctor’s note.

another one of her filings as a “Motion for Reconsideration,” (Doc. 70), which the Court likewise construes as an objection. A little under a year later, on June 5, 2012, Tucker renewed her concerns about her office’s air quality and its impact on her health. (Doc. 56-17, #2811–14). And she requested an accommodation: a new office “with adequate ventilation and with no

asbestos and a tolerable amount of mold.” (Id. at #2812). One of the VA’s Reasonable Accommodation Committee members responded to that request, instructing Tucker to submit medical documentation of her alleged disability to support her request. (Id. at #2812–13; Doc. 57-13, #3043–44). But rather than submitting medical evidence of the asthma- or allergy-related disability concerns she had raised roughly a year earlier, Tucker apparently provided documentation concerning her service- connected3 heart and knee conditions. (See Doc. 33-1, #398; Doc. 57-13, #3046–47).

Tucker also submitted a letter from a VA nurse practitioner explaining that the nurse had evaluated Tucker for respiratory problems, and that Tucker’s asthma- and allergy-related symptoms, such as her nasal congestion, “appear[ed] to improve” when Tucker was assigned to a different workspace. (Doc. 34-2, #711). But the letter did not offer a specific diagnosis or find that Tucker’s symptoms were in fact related to her work environment. (See id.). So the Reasonable Accommodation Committee

requested additional medical documentation and information, (Doc. 57-13, #3045), which Tucker failed to provide, (id. at #3046–47). As a result, the committee did not grant the accommodation—a workspace change—that Tucker requested. (See id.). At some point during all that, Linda Smith, the former director of the Cincinnati VA Medical Center, offered Tucker an opportunity to return to her previous position in

3 “Service-connected conditions” refer to conditions that a person developed, or that worsened, in connection with that person’s military service. (See Doc. 56-1, #2280–83). her previous office (and still retain her higher salary), but Tucker declined that offer. (Doc. 56-1, #2388–89; Doc. 57-9, #2977–78). The committee’s denial of Tucker’s request prompted her to take matters into

her own hands. Rather than reporting to her assigned office, she began working out of alternative workspaces at the medical center. (See Doc. 56-17, #2856–58). Each time Tucker did so, one of Tucker’s supervisors, Sharon Rucker, marked Tucker absent without leave (AWOL). (Id.; see also Doc. 56-1, #2329–30, 2376). After Tucker failed to report to her assigned work area thirty-six times, on September 14, 2012, Dr. Gary Roselle—the physician for whom Tucker served as administrative support assistant—recommended her removal (in other words, her termination). (Doc. 56-1,

#2314–15; Doc. 56-15, #2763–66). The VA elected to impose a lesser sanction, suspending her for five days. (Doc. 56-16, #2761–62). And it suspended Tucker again, this time for fourteen days, after two more instances of non-reporting. (Id. at #2756– 60). But when Tucker again failed to report to her assigned work area five more times, Dr. Roselle again recommended her removal for failure to follow instructions. (Id. at #2749–50). This time the medical center agreed, removing Tucker, effective March

10, 2013. (Id. at #2745–47). B. Procedural Background Among all the back-and-forth about Tucker’s workspace, Tucker had filed a complaint with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) in May 2011, (Doc. 56-11, #2674–75), and an equal employment opportunity (EEO) complaint with the VA in June 2012, (Doc. 56-3 at #2576; see also Doc. 56-1, #2343). Separately, after the VA removed her, Tucker appealed the removal decision to the Merit System Protection Board (MSPB). (See Doc. 1-7, #75). After an administrative judge for the MSPB upheld the VA’s removal decision, (id. at #75–80), Tucker petitioned the MSPB

for review of the administrative judge’s decision, (see Doc. 1-6, #41–42). A panel for the MSPB then remanded so that an administrative judge could consider Tucker’s various affirmative defenses—failure to accommodate, disparate treatment disability discrimination, age discrimination, retaliation for EEO activity, and whistleblower reprisal—making this a “mixed case” (more on that below). (See id. at #48–60). After remand, a new decision from an administrative judge, and a new petition for MSPB panel review, the MSPB panel again affirmed the VA’s removal determination in a

final order on December 12, 2022. (Doc. 1-4, #23). That order gave Tucker the right to seek review of the MSPB’s determination in federal district court. (Id. at #31–35). In its final order, the MSPB made a few determinations.

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