Sims v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedDecember 10, 2019
Docket1:19-cv-00295
StatusUnknown

This text of Sims v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation (Sims v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sims v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation, (D. Md. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT □□ FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND © Faresha Sims * * ' - Vv. ** fo! Civil No, CCB-19-0295 . . 6 University of Maryland Medical System Corporation, et al. MEMORANDUM Dr. Faresha Sims worked as a certified registered nurse anesthetist (“CRNA”) at .

University of Maryland Medical Center (“UMMC”) from April 8, 2013, until August 17, 2015, and was supervised by Linda Goetz, Director of Nurse Anesthetists. ECF 1, Compl., J 4, 7. Sims alleges that she was discriminated against based on her race (black) and perceived disability, and that she was retaliated against based on her protected activity. Now pending are the University of Maryland Medical System Corporation (““UMMS”) and Linda Goetz’s (collectively, “defendants”)! motion to strike Exhibit 1 to the complaint (ECF 12) and partial motion to dismiss? (ECF 13). The motions are fully briefed and no oral argument is necessary. For the reasons stated below, the court will grant the motion to strike, and will deny the motion to dismiss. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Although Sims alleges ongoing discrimination and harassment dating back to the - beginning of her employment, the events immediately leading to this litigation began on June 18, 2015. On that day, Sims alleges that, while on approved vacation leave, she was told by her

' Sims also filed her complaint against defendant Lisa Rowen, Senior Vice President of Patient Care Services and ‘ Chief Nursing Officer at UMMC. Rowen did not join in the motion to dismiss as she had not yet been served. ECF 13, Mem. in Supp. of Defs. Partial Mot. to Dismiss (hereinafter “Partial Mot. to Dismiss”) at I n.t. Rowen has since been served and filed an answer to the complaint. ECF 20, _ ? The defendants seek to dismiss all counts of the complaint except for the claim of retaliation (Count V) against. Linda Goetz and Lisa Rowen. As to Sims’s Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”) claims (Count III and Count IV), the defendants do not address the substance of the claims, but rather argue that the claims should be dismissed because they are only alleged against UMMS, which is an improper party. i

supervisor, Linda Goetz, to immediately undergo a discriminatory fitness for duty (“FFD”) exam and drug testing. Compl. 26-29. Goetz told Sims that she needed to take a drug test because: her “behavior had changed” and that she would be fired if she refused. Jd. J] 28-29. Goetz did not provide any other explanation at the time, although according to Sims, Goetz later asserted that she believed that Sims was diverting drugs from the hospital because she “works _

frequently.” Ja. 36. Under threat of termination, Sims signed a form consenting to the FFD exam, and urinated in a plastic cup while being watched by an Employee Health Services staff member. /d. ff 30-31. ‘Dr. Melissa Frisch, the medical director at Employee Health Services, later declared Sims fit for duty, as the drug and alcohol tests were negative’ and there were no findings of impairment. Jd. 99 51-52.°

After the drug test on June 18, 2015, Sims filed a race discrimination complaint with the Executive Leadership office. Jd 35. She alleges that four days later, on June 22, 2015, she met with Employee Assistance Program counselor Jan Buxton, who advised Sims to quit “before they ruined Sims’s career in retaliation for her discrimination complaint.” Jd. 147. Then, on June 24, 2015, Sims met with Lisa Rowen, Senior Vice President of Patient Care Services and Chief Nursing Officer, who “scolded” her for filing a race discrimination complaint and threatened her that she would “experience adversity for bringing” the complaint. fa. 56-57. On June 27, 2015, Sims escalated her race discrimination complaint to Robert Chrencik, UMMS President and CEO. Id. § 60.

. A few days later, Sims spoke with Detective Walter Brown, a UMMC Investigator, on 3 According to Sims, on June 19, 2015, Lisa Rowen emailed Goetz telling her to make sure she had “perfect documentation” to justify requiring Sims to undergo the FFD exam and drug testing, as she had a feeling “your documentation will be viewed by a lot of internal people and external agencies.” Compl. 53-54. Sims alleges that this is evidence of an attempted cover-up of discrimination, and is also evidence of retaliation. ‘Tt is not clear from the complaint when Sims took an alcohol test. 5 Although the timeline is somewhat unclear from the complaint, it appears that Sims had previously met with Dr. Melissa Frisch on the day Sims took the drug test, and at this meeting Sims told Frisch that she believed that the FFD and drug test were discriminatory. Compl. 33. . 2

the phone, regarding “unusual things” “happening to her away from work” and forwarded him emails about her discrimination complaint. Jd. 61, 64. According to Sims, Brown falsely told her he was a police officer. Ja. 61-62. Brown later wrote a memorandum about the call, “falsely and maliciously attributing statements to Dr. Sims that purportedly caused UMMC to question Sims’s ability-to safely care for patients.” /d. 465. Sims alleges that Brown and/or UMMC fabricated the statements in the memorandum in retaliation for Sims filing a discrimination complaint, and that Brown was promoted to a higher position the same day that he. issued the memorandum. Jd. J] 67, 69. Based on the memorandum, UMMC suspended Sims from work, id. J 76, although Sims alleges that they did not take any of the steps they. should have taken, including reporting Sims to the Maryland Board of Nursing, if they actually had a “good-faith belief that Dr. Sims may have a mental impairment that might make her unable to safely care for patients.” /d. | 73. Sims alleged the suspension was retaliation and also a violation of the ADAAA “for regarding her as disabled.” Jd. { 71. According to Sims, she met with Human Resources personnel Neddra King and Nicole Leyba on July 8, 2018, and in the meeting, King conditioned Sims’s return to work on her withdrawing her discrimination complaint. Zé. ¢ 78, 82. UMMC referred Sims to the Employee Assistance Program (“EAP”) on July 10, 2015. Id. | 86. On July 13, 2015, Sims sent UMMS* an email informing them that the EAP referral was harassment and retaliation, and stating she would be “utilizing the assistance of EEOC.” Id. 88-89. According to Sims, the next day, she was changed from paid to unpaid suspension. Id. § 90. On August 9, 2015, Sims was terminated, as UMMC considered her refusal to go to EAP as a resignation, id. J 101-02, even though, according to Sims, UMMC policy provides that an employee can always refuse an EAP referral, id. 104. The termination was upheld by It is not clear from the complaint who at UMMS she emailed. □

. Vice President of Human Resources Paula Henderson, although she considered it fo be a “voluntary resignation.” id. J§ 113, 115. □ . Dr. Sims alleges that similarly situated CRNA’s were treated more favorably, than her. For example, a white male CRNA was allowed to keep working despite being observed sleeping on the job while administering anesthesia and having controlled drugs and needles in his locker, id, 125-32, and was only made to take an FFD exam after anesthesiologists reported that he seemed unsafe, id. § 131.’ Another CRNA, a white female, was reported by an anesthesiologist for mishandling narcotics and behaving unethically to hide the fact that drugs were missing, yet was not required to undergo an FFD or drug testing, and continued providing patient care. Jd. 1 150, In her complaint, Sims also alleges discriminatory failure to hire. According to Sims, she requested “prior to hiring and throughout her entire employment to be hired and trained in Shock Trauma, but it never happened” even though Goetz continued “hiring, transferring, and training non-black CRNAs to work in Shock Trauma.” Jd. Jf] 157-58.

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Sims v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-university-of-maryland-medical-system-corporation-mdd-2019.