Reed v. Procter & Gamble Manufacturing Co.

556 F. App'x 421
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 2014
Docket13-5797
StatusUnpublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 556 F. App'x 421 (Reed v. Procter & Gamble Manufacturing Co.) 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
Reed v. Procter & Gamble Manufacturing Co., 556 F. App'x 421 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

COLE, Circuit Judge.

Charles Reed, a longtime employee at Procter & Gamble’s Pringles plant in Ten *423 nessee, appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment on Reed’s employment discrimination claims under Title YI I, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and the Tennessee Human Rights Act, TenmCode. Ann. § 4-21-401 et seq. Specifically, Reed, who is African-American, alleges that he was subject to disparate treatment on the basis of his race, that he was removed from a particular position at the plant in retaliation for reporting discrimination, and that the plant fostered a hostile work environment. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on all of Reed’s claims.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Reed began working for Pringles as a Technician, Level 1 (“Tl”) in April of 1996. He remained employed with Pringles until Procter and Gamble (“P & G”) sold the plant in June of 2012. During his employment, Reed was twice promoted: first, to Technician Level 2 in 1997, and again to Technician Level 3 in 2003.

The structure of the Pringles plant necessitates some explanation. As P & G describes it, employees participated in a “high performance work system” that required them to “develop a broad range of skills and knowledge.” Most Pringles employees did not stay in one position within the plant permanently; instead, employees periodically rotated through different departments. However, employees in some positions — labeled “extended roles” — did not rotate regularly. Extended role positions typically required more training than regular positions, involved exposure to confidential information, or demanded knowledge of environmental or legal compliance requirements.

Reed’s allegations of discrimination stem from three primary sources: (1) management’s decision to remove him from an extended role position on or about October 24, 2008; (2) his inability to attain a promotion to Technician Level 4 (“T4”) status, and management’s alleged failure to offer him the coaching necessary for promotion; and (3) a variety of incidents in the workplace that, according to Reed, indicate the existence of a hostile work environment. Additionally, Reed alleges that he engaged in two forms of protected activity that prompted P & G’s management to retaliate against him by taking the above actions. First, he assisted a co-worker, Reginald Charles, in making internal complaints of racial discrimination at the plant, and second, Reed also personally complained of discriminatory treatment, by sending a letter to Kristen King, an employee in the human resources department, on October 5, 2008, and by speaking with King and Frank Napadek, Site Human Resources Manager, sometime thereafter. However, P & G disputes Reed’s assertion that the October 5 letter made any clear allegations of racially discriminatory treatment. Reed further claims that he spoke with Brandy Lennon, another employee in the plant’s human resources department, about racial discrimination prior to his conversations with King and Napadek.

Turning first to the change in Reed’s position, in October of 2008, Jeffrey Bruns, the Site Quality Manager, decided to eliminate two out of four particular extended role positions. Bruns reached this conclusion after consultation with several other members of management, including Stuart Massey, a T5 and Team Leader of a department then including Reed. All four of the individuals in the positions eligible for elimination were African-American. Reed and another technician were chosen for removal from extended roles, although Reed actually stayed in his extended role until January of 2010, over a year later.

*424 Reed alleges that management’s decision to eliminate his extended role position was retaliatory. P & G claims that it made a legitimate business decision after Napadek determined that “the regular rotation schedule ... had not been managed closely,” resulting in an excessive number of extended roles. Reed responds that the number of extended role positions, thirty-five, was not excessive given the size of the plant and its policy of placing up to 5% of technicians in extended roles. It is undisputed that Napadek played no role in determining which employees would be affected. Additionally, Reed agrees with P & G’s statement that “there was already ‘talk’ ” of reducing the number of extended roles as of October 5, 2008, the date of Reed’s letter to King.

Next, Reed alleges that he was denied a promotion from T3 to T4 status. The parties generally agree on the processes by which employees could become eligible for promotion. In Reed’s department, technicians would determine whether they wished to pursue a promotion and would then consult with their Team Leader, Massey, to develop a “work plan” aimed at meeting the requirements necessary for promotion. Ultimately, Bruns would decide whether a particular employee would be promoted. As can be gathered from the record, once an employee decided to pursue a promotion, he or she would then attend so-called “pre-gap” or “gap” meetings with management to discuss the employee’s qualifications for promotion. From 2005 to 2009, Massey approved Reed’s work plans, which included attaining T4 status as a goal. However, Reed maintains that Massey assisted employees with their promotional goals on a discriminatory basis: he alleges that Massey approached one White employee to ask if he wanted to attain T4 status, rather than waiting for the employee to come to him, and that he delayed Reed’s “T4 pre-gap assessment” while expediting those of White employees.

Reed complained of inequities in the promotion process in his letter to King, dated October 5, 2008. In particular, Reed stated, “I can not [sic] seem to get my coach or manager to support my promotional initiative,” and he posited that “some issues” pertaining to his qualifications “have been fabricated for the purpose of being discriminatory.” The letter also named three other T3 technicians seeking T4 status and alleged that management was not following its internal procedures but “predetermin[ing]” the individuals to be selected for promotion. Reed does not dispute that one of these three individuals, who is White, did not achieve the T4 promotion.

In response to the letter, Napadek arranged a pre-gap meeting for Reed, held on November 6, 2008. Napadek attended, along with Reed, Massey, and Lennon. Before the meeting, Reed provided Massey with an “action plan” that Reed used to evaluate his own progress toward fulfilling requirements for T4 status. Reed admitted in his deposition that he had not considered himself to have completed all the requirements and that he rated his progress as “poor versus [the] plan” in several areas, which Reed described as meaning that the requirement in question was “not at the completion stage.”

The parties agree that Reed’s pre-gap meeting lasted two hours, that the participants reviewed about half of the requirements for T4 promotion, and that Bruns concluded that Reed did not fulfill any of the requirements discussed in the meeting. Reed, however, alleges that the other attendees were dismissive and hostile toward him.

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556 F. App'x 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-procter-gamble-manufacturing-co-ca6-2014.