Parks v. UPS Supply Chain Solutions, Inc.

607 F. App'x 508
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 2015
Docket14-5609
StatusUnpublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 607 F. App'x 508 (Parks v. UPS Supply Chain Solutions, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parks v. UPS Supply Chain Solutions, Inc., 607 F. App'x 508 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

STEEH, District Judge.

Plaintiff Gene Parks appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky’s grant of summary judgment in favor of his employer, defendant UPS Supply Chain Solutions (“UPS”). Parks filed this action alleging retaliation and interference theories under the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”) when he was terminated after requesting a leave of absence for neck surgery. Parks also alleges that UPS failed to accommodate his disability under the Kentucky Civil Rights Act (“KCRA”) by refusing to grant him leave to have surgery. The district court granted UPS’s motion for summary judgment and Parks, appeals. We AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment for UPS.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Mr. Parks was hired by UPS in February, 1999 to work at its Hebron, Kentucky campus as a material handler. Parks drove a forklift, moved boxes, picked products and controlled inventory. When a material handler puts a box away in the warehouse, the location must be accurately recorded in the computer system so “pickers” can easily find and retrieve that package later.

From 2003 through 2009, Parks requested and was approved for FMLA leave on six separate occasions. Most of these requests were for intermittent leave, were to care for his wife as opposed to being for his own health issues, and were at a time when Parks reported to a different supervisor. In 2009, Parks began reporting to Jennifer Valdez. At that time, Parks’s FMLA paperwork indicated that he may need surgery to address neck pain caused by a herniated disc. In February of 2010, Parks was approved for intermittent FMLA leave, which allowed him to take up to twelve weeks of leave per year to cope with flare-ups or to receive medical treatment related to his neck pain. His last FMLA certification, submitted in January 2011, also indicated that Parks would likely undergo surgery in the future, at which time he would require continuous leave to recover from the procedure.

Parks received two warnings for failure to meet productivity requirements in May of 2010, and claimed that his health conditions were preventing him from working as quickly as he should. That month, Parks submitted updated FMLA paperwork to HR reflecting his limited ability to drive a forklift, bend, stoop and lift. UPS approved this request and updated his FMLA status to reflect the new restrictions. ' A year later, on May 17, 2011, Parks received a written final warning for quality errors for putting boxes away upside down. In response, Parks explained to Valdez and Tony Lovelace, his other supervisor, that he was not as fast as he *511 used to be due to his neck condition. Both supervisors advised Parks that the FMLA approval only covers missed time, not performance errors, and recommended that he submit new FMLA paperwork if he felt he could not do his job. Parks did not submit such paperwork.

On May 27, 2011, the Friday before the Memorial Day weekend, Parks left work due to a flare-up of his medical condition. He returned to work after the holiday on Tuesday, May 31, and alleges he told his supervisors that he needed extended FMLA leave in order to have neck surgery which was scheduled by his doctor for June 16, 2011. Lovelace and Valdez did not recall being informed of the surgery that morning, although they acknowledged they were aware of his general need for surgery in the future. Parks was terminated from his employment one to two hours after he says he notified Lovelace and Parks of his need for FMLA leave, allegedly due to a performance issue. Along with his employment, Parks lost his health insurance and claims he was forced to cancel his surgery.

UPS’s “progressive discipline policy” addresses various categories of employee infractions, including sub-par performance, safety violations, misconduct, rules violations, tardiness and insubordination. Supervisors issue informal verbal warnings to first time offenders, then issue written first, second, third and final warnings for subsequent infractions. Warnings “roll-off’ the employee’s record after a given amount of time, usually one year, and do not carry over from one category to another.

Parks had a number of write ups over the course of his employment. Focusing only on the relevant time period of approximately one year prior to his termination on May 31, 2011, Parks had the following performance issues and corresponding discipline:

• May 17, 2010, Parks received a verbal performance warning for failure to meet productivity standards and for having large gaps of time between restocking tasks.
® May 27, 2010, Parks received a first written performance warning for failure to meet productivity standards.
• October 22, 2010, Parks received a final written warning for conduct/behavior arising out of an incident where he was considered to be insensitive in approaching co-workers from UPS’s Honeywell facility when the loss of that contract was announced.
• December 15, 2010, Parks received a first written performance warning for quality errors for putting cartons away on a shelf, but failing to log the location into the computer (a “Status 65” error).
• January 7, 2011, Parks received a second written performance warning for quality errors when an audit revealed he physically put away four boxes, but the system indicated the boxes still needed to be put away. This is referred to as a “Status 10,” and the warning indicated it was “one of several examples.”
• May 11, 2011, Parks received a third written performance warning for quality errors for putting six boxes away upside down.
• May 17, 2011, Parks received a final written performance warning for quality errors for putting seven boxes away upside down.
• During the week of May 23, 2011, Parks did not put a box in the location he entered into the computer system. The error was discovered by Valdez during the week of May 23, 2011, but *512 was not documented until May 31, 2011.
• May 31, 2011, Parks committed a “Status 65” error.

Each of the written warnings indicated that “future issues will result in discipline up to and including termination.” Most of Parks’ performance warnings were for quality errors, and according to Valdez, he declined all retraining opportunities that his supervisors offered to him.

On May 31, 2011, Valdez began the process of issuing Parks’s discipline for the two most recent performance quality errors. At this time, Valdez recognized that Parks was already on a final written warning for performance quality errors. After conferring with Lovelace, Valdez recommended to HR Representative Julie Welch that Parks’s employment be terminated. The decision to terminate was approved by HR Manager Michelle Chavez, who made the decision based on Parks’ discipline history. Chavez was not aware of Parks’s FMLA certification.

Parks was terminated at a meeting attended by Valdez, Lovelace and Welch. During the meeting, Parks requested that they continue to employ him until he had his surgery so he could receive benefits.

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607 F. App'x 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-ups-supply-chain-solutions-inc-ca6-2015.