Reach v. AlliedSignal, Inc.

184 F. Supp. 2d 932, 2000 WL 33658245
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedSeptember 18, 2000
Docket99-0542-CV-W-1
StatusPublished

This text of 184 F. Supp. 2d 932 (Reach v. AlliedSignal, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reach v. AlliedSignal, Inc., 184 F. Supp. 2d 932, 2000 WL 33658245 (W.D. Mo. 2000).

Opinion

ORDER

DEAN WHIPPLE, District Judge.

Pending before the Court is Defendant AlliedSignal Inc.’s (“AlliedSignal”) Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiff Charles D. Reach, Jr., (“Reach”) filed this employment-related action, alleging violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 (“FMLA”), and the Missouri Human Rights Act (“MHRA”). AlliedSignal has filed suggestions is support, Reach has filed suggestions in opposition, and Allied-Signal has filed a reply. The Court has considered carefully the arguments presented by the parties. For the following reasons, the Court GRANTS AlliedSignal’s Motion for Summary Judgment.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

AlliedSignal is a government contractor that manages and operates a facility owned by the United States Department of Energy (“DOE”) known as the Kansas City Plant. Because AlliedSignal’s operations are funded by the federal government through the DOE, employment levels at AlliedSignal are determined by the budget allocated to AlliedSignal by the DOE. Budget decisions made by the federal government have led to numerous reductions in force at AlliedSignal during the 1990s, which have reduced AlliedSignal’s employment level from nearly 8,500,in the 1980s to less than 3,000 in 1998.

AlliedSignal hired Reach in January of 1990. In February of 1994, Reach accepted a position working in the Condition Assessment Survey (“CAS”) group within AlliedSignal’s Facilities division, D/100. At *935 that time, Reach’s title was Engineer, Technical Support Staff, the classification he held until the termination of his employment with AlliedSignal in 1997.

In November of 1994, Reach suffered an acute dissection of the ascending aorta, a near fatal'event, which resulted in his hospitalization and open-heart surgery. As a result of the dissection, Reach suffers from diminished sight and peripheral vision and ongoing episodes of post-sternotomy pain syndrome. Reach’s vision problems affect his ability to read, write, work on a computer, drive, work with certain tools, participate in leisure activities, and perform certain household tasks. Since the original dissection, Reach underwent surgery to remove chest wires that were placed in him, which were causing him severe pain. Ongoing pain episodes also prohibit Reach from doing certain daily activities as he is required to cease all activity until the pain subsides.

Reach returned to work at AlliedSignal on a part-time basis in February 1995, and returned to full-time employment in June 1995. Upon Reach’s return to work, he reported to Bob Daniel (“Daniel”), who had become the supervisor over the CAS group in late 1994. Reach’s first recollection of Daniel was a visit Daniel paid to Reach while he was in the hospital. Daniel was kind, said a few words to Reach, and gave Reach a hand-crafted Methodist cross that he had made. Reach admits that while he worked for Daniel, he like Daniel very much and worked well under Daniel. He also agrees that he and Daniel had things in common, worked well together, tended to see eye-to-eye on things, and had a good relationship. Reach describes Daniel as a mild-mannered, jovial supervisor who tried to keep employees informed of what was going on in the plant. Reach testified that Daniel was sympathetic toward him with regard to his physical condition, was supportive of Reach’s efforts to return to work following his medical problems, was a very good supervisor, and never said or did anything to suggest that he no longer wished to supervise Reach.

In early 1997, the work of the CAS group began winding down because funding for CAS had changed. Many members of the CAS group were able to return to the positions they held before joining CAS, but Reach and others did not have positions to which they could return (a status Reach describes as “homeless”). At the time CAS was ending, Daniel and Reach discussed where Reach might “find a home” within the company. During that same time period, Daniel was promoted to manager of D/170, a managerial unit within the Facilities division, D/100. Daniel asked Reach to come with him and continue reporting to him in his new assignment. Reach agreed to do so.

In early 1997, Reach was working on several projects for Daniel, some of which were still related to CAS and other which were related to Daniel’s new assignment over facilities engineering services. The projects were as follows:

(1) the re-engineering of facilities maintenance services;
(2) a developmental plan for the re-engineering;
(3) the building 91 assessment;
(4) the building 15 assessment;
(5) the column settlement analysis;
(6) Six Sigma green belt training;
(7) the tipped machine project;
(8) the cost-cutting team; and
(9) the formation of a proactive safety team.

Reach admits that at the time of the reduction in force (“RIF”) in 1997, most of these assignments/projects were completed or effectively completed. Reach contends that the column settlement project was ongoing and the cost-cutting team was *936 still meeting. In addition, Reach claims to have just started work on a safety performance project at the time of the 1997 RIF.

On March 17, 1997, AlliedSignal’s president announced that cuts, in the budget being allocated to AlliedSignal by DOE necessitated a RIF of between 400 and 700 AlliedSignal employees. In June 1997, a voluntary reduction in force (“VRIF”) package was offered to nearly all Allied-Signal employees in order to minimize the number of employees to be affected involuntarily. The only employees who were ineligible for the VRIF were those thirty-seven employees whom management had determined to possess “unique skills”— skills that were so important to the business that if an employee with such skills were no longer employed, AlliedSignal would be required to immediately replace that employee from outside the company. The thirty-seven employees with “unique skills” were identified in June of 1997 and notified that they were ineligible for the VRIF and not subject to involuntary RIF.

Phil Neeter (“Neeter”), who had joined AlliedSignal in June of 1996 was the head of the Facilities division, D/100, the organization in which Reach worked at the time of the 1997 RIF. Neeter was responsible for determining which skills in Reach’s division constituted unique skills for purposes of exempting employees from both the voluntary and involuntary RIF. Neeter did not identify any skills within the Facilities division'as unique and exempt from RIF.

The VRIF resulted in the voluntary separation of 330 AlliedSignal employees. Another 39 employees were transferred to another nuclear weapons site. Following the VRIF, the involuntary RIF took place. Salaried employees were selected for the involuntary RIF according to the “Salaried Associated Reduction In Force Selection Process” (referred to as the “pyramid process”), which was published in the company’s internal newsletter on July 17, 1997. On July 31, 1997, the company announced in its internal newsletter what the “RIF units” would be for the upcoming RIF.

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184 F. Supp. 2d 932, 2000 WL 33658245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reach-v-alliedsignal-inc-mowd-2000.