Qihui Huang v. Pai

266 F. Supp. 3d 51
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedSeptember 15, 2017
DocketCivil Action No. 16-398 (JEB)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 266 F. Supp. 3d 51 (Qihui Huang v. Pai) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Qihui Huang v. Pai, 266 F. Supp. 3d 51 (D.D.C. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JAMES E. BOASBERG, United States District Judge

Plaintiff Qihui Huang is an “Asian American, foreign-born” woman over sixty years-old. See ECF No. 1 (Complaint) at 1, 6. After an almost 25-year career at Defendant Federal Communications Commission, Huang brought this pro se suit, alleging a host of discriminatory and retaliatory actions by her supervisors. Defendant previously .filed a Motion to Dismiss, which the Court granted except as to one claim: the Agency’s allegedly improper denial of Huang’s within-grade pay increase. See Huang v. Wheeler, 215 F.Supp.3d 100, 114 (D.D.C. 2016). The parties have now filed Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment on this remaining issue. Because the Court finds that Huang did not exhaust her administrative remedies — and would lose on the merits even if she had — it will grant Defendant’s Motion. >- ■

I. Background

As the prior Opinion thoroughly detailed the factual history of Plaintiffs tenure at the FCC, id. at 103 — 106, the Court here sets forth the facts (in the light most favorable to Huang) only as they relate to her pay-increase denial.

A. Factual History

Huang began at the FCC in 1991 as a GS-12 computer specialist. See Def. Opp., Exh. 1 (Response to PL Statement of Facts), ¶ 13. In 2004, after several promotions, she became a GS-15 senior electronics engineer in the Technical Analysis Branch of the Office of Engineering and Technology. See Def. MSJ, Exh. 2 (SOF), ¶ 2. GS-15 engineers are “considered senior expert consultants and subject matter experts in one or more areas of engineering or communications.” EOF No. 82 (Report of Investigation) at 203. They “con-duett ] the most difficult types of technical studies and/or direct[ ] special project teams on matters pertaining to various phases of electromagnetic wave propagation.” Id. at 215. Senior engineers, accordingly, must “exerciset ] a high degree of originality, initiative and sound judgment.” Id.

Huang’s first ten years as a GS-15 seem to have been smooth sailing; she received “pass” performance-review ratings every year and even performance awards in several years. See Def. Response to PI. SOF, ¶¶ 30-34. Robert Weller, TAB Chief, was Huang’s supervisor during much of this time. On April 21, 2014, he assigned her a wireless-microphone-study report, which would cause her great difficulty. The assignment tasked Huang with “identify[ing] current wireless microphone operating parameters and analyzing] several spectrum options for possible use by wireless microphones.” PL MSJ, Exh. E at 2 (Apr. 1, 2014, Mem. from Weller to Huang). Weller outlined nine specific areas that she was to research and analyze and requested that she “provide a type-written report with appropriate tables and charts ... by May 1, 2014.” Id. Plaintiff did not submit a first draft until July, which Weller reviewed page by page, providing a list of areas that needed clarification or improvement. He noted multiple “formatting!!,] ... spelling and grammar errors,” and he also had concerns regarding Huang’s analysis. Id. at 6. At some point, she submitted another draft, which Weller noted was “an improvement.” Id. at 4. He observed, however, that several areas still needed additional shoring up, including incorrect calculations and “gaps and inconsistencies in the data.” Id. at 5. Huang had not completed the report by the time Weller left the Agency in late July 2014.

When Weller departed, it appears he took the wind in Huang’s sails with him. Martin Doczkat, also a GS-15 senior engineer, became the new TAB Chief, and Huang sent him what she deemed the final version of the report on August 26, 2014. See ROI at 236. Like Weller, Doczkat was not satisfied with the report, but he was more direct in his criticism. On September 11, 2014, he returned the 31-page draft report to Huang with 83 comments. Id. at 40-70. In addition to critiquing the “numerous typos, some quantitative errors, lack of citations[, and] copyright issues,” id at 179, Doczkat noted that the report was incomplete “in that it seems to overlook many of the tasks initially assigned by” Weller. Id. at 235. He further noted that, “[a]s a GS-15 electronics engineer,” Huang was “expected to ... conduct difficult and highly complex technical analy-ses” as well as “conduct original studies.” Id. The draft report, by contrast, used simple models that appeared to have been copied from Wikipedia and heavily relied on other data sources without adjusting them to fit the task. The original May 1, 2014, deadline had “far since passed,” but Doczkat encouraged Huang to “keep at it, as there may be other opportunities in the future if th[e] paper can be sufficiently improved.” Id. He suggested an extended deadline one month in the future for Huang to complete her revisions and submit a final report and offered to meet with her “separately on a weekly basis if that may be helpful to work to a more complete and original quality work product.” Id.

The two emailed back and forth about the project through the end of September with reasonable civility. Shortly thereafter, however, the ship ran aground. Doczkat emailed Huang on October 2, 2014, in an attempt to schedule a meeting to discuss her progress, to which she replied that she preferred to' communicate through email rather than meet face to face. Id. at 262-63. Huang then responded to each of Docz-kat’s 83 comments and asked that he respond to her notes. Without that feedback, she told him, she was unable to work on the study. Id. at 284, 287. Although Docz-kat again reiterated his offer to discuss the project with her in advance of the fast-approaching deadline, id. at 283, communication between the two ceased, and Huang never submitted another draft of the report. See Pl. Opp., Exh. 1 (Opp. to Def. SOF), ¶26.

On November 20, Huang had a midterm-progress-review meeting with Docz-kat’s boss, Walter Johnston. (Johnston would not normally conduct these reviews, but Huang refused to meet with Doczkat in person.) In written follow-up comments provided to her after the-meeting, Johnston “reminded [her] that as a GS-15 engineer [she is] expected to work with minimal supervision on complex engineering matters,” and her submitted work product should be acceptable “with minimum modifications.” ROI at 222. In addition to the never-completed wireless-microphone-study report, Johnston also evaluated her refusal to work on an additional assignment involving a TV study. Id. at 162. Based on those ■ two reports — Plaintiffs only assignments during the review period — Johnston concluded that her “work was not accomplished in an effective' or efficient manner.” Id. at 226. He warned Huang that her work over the last 90 days did “not me[e]t our expectations for work performance at [her] grade level” and gave her 90 days to improve. Id. at 228. It was critical for Plaintiff to meet her performance expectations during this period because she would be eligible on February 26,- 2015, for a within-grade step increase from GS-15, Step 7 to GS-15, Step 8 only if her performance was “at an acceptable level of competence.” Def. MSJ, Exh. E (Basic Negotiated Agreement) at 58. In other words, she needed to. receive a “pass” level on her performance-rating form. On December 5,- 2014, Doczkat sent Huang a notice that it was possible she would not receive a pass rating. The notice outlined the areas in which he felt she was deficient and concluded that at that time her “overall performance [wa]s not at the Pass level.” Id. at 8.

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Bluebook (online)
266 F. Supp. 3d 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/qihui-huang-v-pai-dcd-2017.