Schmeier v. Chicago Park District

703 N.E.2d 396, 301 Ill. App. 3d 17, 234 Ill. Dec. 535, 1998 Ill. App. LEXIS 695
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 30, 1998
Docket1-96-3054
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 703 N.E.2d 396 (Schmeier v. Chicago Park District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmeier v. Chicago Park District, 703 N.E.2d 396, 301 Ill. App. 3d 17, 234 Ill. Dec. 535, 1998 Ill. App. LEXIS 695 (Ill. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

JUSTICE GORDON

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendants Chicago Park District (the District) and Personnel Board of the Chicago Park District (the Board) appeal an order of the circuit court of Cook County reversing the decision of the Board and reinstating plaintiff Maureen Schmeier to her position with the District with full back pay.

The District hired Schmeier as a gymnastics instructor in August 1991. In September 1992 Schmeier filed a charge against the District with the Illinois Local Labor Relations Board, naming her supervisor, Jacquelyn White, and White’s assistant, Monte Kimes, as offenders. 1 Later in September Schmeier was suspended from employment because she had allowed her United States Gymnastics Federation (USGF) safety certification to lapse. Approximately three weeks after her suspension Schmeier became recertified and was reinstated in her position.

In November 1992 White brought disciplinary charges against Schmeier, asking for an immediate emergency suspension and recommending that she be terminated because she allegedly threatened violence against White and Kimes. Schmeier was suspended for approximately eight months for the purported threats pending a hearing. Additional charges (see below) were raised before a “presuspension” meeting in May 1993. Schmeier was terminated after that meeting, in June 1993. The acting Attorney General of the District sent Schmeier a “Statement of Charges Resulting in Termination” in June, which revealed she had been terminated for three types of misconduct:

“(1) Ms. Schmeier made verbal threats of physical violence against her supervisors during'her temporary assignment at Whitney Young in October/November, 1992.
(2) While employed in the gymnastics program, Ms. Schmeier repeatedly engaged in inappropriate conduct by making racially offensive and derogatory remarks to co-workers, which created a disruptive and discordant work environment and adversely affected staff morale and efficiency of program operations.
(3) Ms. Schmeier improperly destroyed Párk District property while assigned to the Sherman Park gymnastics center by cutting rolls of floor exercise matting without approval or authorization, thereby voiding the manufacturer’s product warranty and rendering the matting useless for its intended purpose.”

In July 1993 Schmeier requested a hearing and review of this decision. The matter was set for a hearing before a hearing officer 2 in April 1994. The charges considered at the hearing were both Schmeier’s lapsed USGF certification (which resulted in her suspension) and the three charges stated above (which were the basis for her termination).

At the hearing the District called eight witnesses. Its first witness was White. White testified that she had been with the District since 1955 and had been in charge of the gymnastics program since it was established in 1989. She stated that the program was instituted with the aim of making gymnastics accessible to the underprivileged in inner-city areas, and it had a large minority enrollment — approximately 60% to 65% African-American, plus a significant Hispanic population. White had supervisory control of the gymnastics instructors at all times Schmeier was employed by the District, as did her assistant, Monte Kimes, whose title with the District was “Program Coordinator.”

White stated that Schmeier’s regular assignment was Sherman Park, at 51st and Racine. White believed it would be classified as an inner-city area. The population was almost 100% African-American. White stated that Schmeier was informed during the interview process that she would be assigned to that location, because she was hired specifically to fill the vacancy created when Preston Knauf, the previous instructor at Sherman Park, left to become a stuntman at Disney World. Schmeier said she had worked with inner-city kids before, and there would be no problem.

White stated Schmeier’s performance was acceptable during the first six months of her employment, which was a probationary period for District employees. However, after the probationary period ended, Schmeier seemed constantly to complain. White gave the example of Schmeier’s concern about not having a working telephone in the building to which she was assigned, although there was one across the street, less than 30 feet away.

White stated that USGF certification was important both to keep instructors aware of how to keep the gym safe and also for insurance purposes. To be certified by the USGF an instructor had to take and pass a six- or nine-hour course and had to be recertified every four years. White believed Schmeier was USGF certified when she was first hired, but subsequently allowed her certification to lapse. The District discovered her certification had lapsed through Kimes, White’s assistant. Kimes was a safety certifier, and White said the instructors’ certifications were frequently checked. When it was discovered that Schmeier’s certification had lapsed, she was suspended until she became recertified. White was not aware that Schmeier ever offered to explain why her certification had lapsed.

White also was aware of an incident in which Schmeier allegedly made threats of physical violence, although she was not present when the threats were made. When White began to relate the details of the incident, counsel for Schmeier objected that her testimony was hearsay. Counsel for the District stated that the information was not being offered for the truth of the matter asserted but, rather, only to show “what the basis for her subsequent actions were, whether or not what she was told was true or false.” The hearing officer allowed White to testify, but only for this purpose.

White testified that another gymnastics instructor for the District, Hong Jiang, told her that Schmeier “had threatened some type of physical violence against her supervisors if she in fact got fired,” namely, that she would shoot White and Kimes. White took the alleged threat very seriously. It was because of Jiang’s information that White asked for the emergency suspension of Schmeier.

Disciplinary charges were also brought against Schmeier for making racially offensive or derogatory remarks. Again, when White began to discuss details, Schmeier’s attorney objected on hearsay grounds, and again the hearing officer allowed White to testify only for the purpose of establishing a foundation for her subsequent actions, not for the truth of what White had been told. White said her secretary, Barbara Collins (who is African-American), had told her that Schmeier had once referred to “gang bangers” as her (Collins’s) “brothers and sisters” in relation to an incident in which Schmeier’s husband was robbed. White believed Collins felt Schmeier had used “brothers and sisters” in a very derogatory manner, and White thought Collins felt Schmeier was a bigot and was very upset by the incident.

White testified she received similar complaints from other employees.

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Bluebook (online)
703 N.E.2d 396, 301 Ill. App. 3d 17, 234 Ill. Dec. 535, 1998 Ill. App. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmeier-v-chicago-park-district-illappct-1998.