Smith v. BHS Hospital Services, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJune 29, 2022
Docket1:20-cv-01062
StatusUnknown

This text of Smith v. BHS Hospital Services, Inc. (Smith v. BHS Hospital Services, Inc.) 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
Smith v. BHS Hospital Services, Inc., (D. Md. 2022).

Opinion

_ IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT oo. FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

TIARA SMITH . * Civil Action No. 20-cv-1062 * _BHS HOSPITAL SERVICES INC., et al. caneannneens . MEMORANDUM Pending before the court is a four-count employment discrimination and retaliation complaint filed by plaintiff Tiara Smith against defendants BHS Hospital Services, Inc. and Receivables Outsourcing, LLC. The defendants have filed a motion for summary judgement as well as two motions to strike two of the plaintiffs exhibits to her response in opposition to the summary judgment motion. The motions are fully briefed, and no oral argument is necessary, See Local Rule 105.6 (D. Md. 2021). For the reasons that follow, the court will grant in part and deny in part the motion for summary judgment and deny both motions to strike. BACKGROUND Hiring, Company Policies, and Inbound Collector Responsibilities On February 10, 2014, Ms. Tiara Smith, a black woman, began working for defendant Receivables Outsourcing, LLC RO") as an inbound bad-debt collector at their Collections Department in Timonium, Maryland. (ECF 45, Ex. 3, at ECF 46, Smith Personnel Action Form). In 2015, BHS Hospital Services, Inc., doing business as Bolder Healthcare Solutions (“BHS”), acquired RO and continued to operate RO’s debt collection services under RO’s name. (ECF 45-2, Ex. 1, Ripke Dep., 15:15-20; ECF 8, Answer, 4 11). BHS and RO jointly employed 1.

Ms. Smith. They have policies providing equal opportunities for and treatment of all employees regardless of race (ECF 46-2, Ex. 5, RO Employee Handbook, at BHS 8), and adhering to Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”) requirements to provide family and medical leave to qualifying employees (id. at BHS 36-40). BHS and RO additionally provide a “Standards and Conduct” policy which outlines conduct expectations for employees and the potential consequences of unsatisfactory performance. (/d. at BHS 15-16). There is also a confidentiality policy in place to protect Personal Identifying Information under the Health Insurance Portability and Accounting. Act (“HIPAA”). Ud. at BHS 32-33). □

In her role as an inbound collector, Ms. Smith earned bonuses, commissions, and cash awards based on the revenue she generated over pre-set monthly quotas known as her “budget.”

. (ECF 50-9, Ex. 9, Woodall Dep., 84:1-86:8; ECF 50-10, Ex. 10, Ripke Dep., 35:17-36:15).

‘Ms. Smith’s Job Performance and Promotion The parties dispute Ms. Smith’s success as an employee at RO. The defendants note that - Ms. Smith was disciplined three times in 2014 and 2015 for unauthorized internet use, failing to ask clients for alternate phone numbers, and incorrect follow-up on a payment issue. (ECF 45-13, Ex. 12, June 9, 2014, Corrective Action; ECF 45-14, Ex. 13, Aug. 18, 2015, Corrective Action; ECF 45-15, Ex. 14, Dec. 9, 2014, Corrective Action). At some point after these incidents, Ms. Smith requested to be transferred to the “self-pay” division; where Anita Shaffer served as her Team Leader (“Lead”) and Martin Woodall was Client Manager, another supervisor. (ECF 45-8, Ex. 7, Smith Dep., at 101:12-23). In April 2016, Ms. Shaffer reported that Ms. Smith made a rude comment to her and failed to complete a project priority that she was assigned, for which Ms. Shaffer recommended corrective action be taken. (ECF 45-16, Ex. 15, Shaffer Email (Apr. 13, 2017).

Ms. Smith, who was promoted to senior collector, contends that she excelled at her job, citing her June 2016 performance appraisal, where Mr. Woodall and her then-Team Lead Kris Brake found that she met or exceeded every RO performance measure. (ECF 52-6, Ex. 11, June 2016 Smith Performance). They praised Smith for “consistently” exceeding her budget, with a “friendly phone demeanor, and a solid cash collection approach,” giving her an overall rating of “Exceeds” performance standards, although they also identified several areas that needed improvement. (ECF 52-6 at 2-3). In November 2016, her new Team Lead Anita Shaffer gave Ms. Smith a 4 out of 5 review without comment, in connection with a potential staff reduction, higher than approximately half of all employees reviewed. (ECF 52-10, Ex. 18, Shaffer Staff Reduction Email (Nov. 22, 2016)). Ms. Smith exceeded her budget in ten of twelve months in 2016 and in all four months in 2017 during which she was employed by the defendants. (ECF 52-7, Ex. 12, Smith 2016 Collector Scorecard; ECF 52-9, Ex. 14, Smith 2017 Collector Scorecard).

FMLA Leave In June 2016, Ms. Smith applied for and received intermittent unpaid FMLA leave for anxiety that could be triggered as a result of her choice to stop taking her prescribed medication. (ECF 50-1 at 154:1-158:6). Ms. Smith first took FMLA leave in September 2016, which typically would entail late arrivals or brief breaks from work. (/d. at 159:18-25, 160:8-25, 162:17-163:22, 179:7-180:2). When she requested medical leave, Ms. Smith would send an e-mail or text a Team Lead to inform her supervisor that she would be using FMLA leave. (/d. at 160:8-25). In response, her Team Lead would typically respond with “okay” or “feel better.” (/d.) Ms. Smith was never prohibited from taking intermittent FMLA leave when she requested to do so. (1d.)

Assignment of Calls to Senior Collectors

RO’s Senior collectors made calls from a pre-assigned queue of accounts. (ECF 50-15, Ex. 15, Shaffer Dep. at 17:21-19:4). As accounts varied in value, RO assigned them “as fair[ly] as possible by going by alpha split,” where the IT department assigned each senior collector a portion of the alphabet to work what should include an approximately random distribution of accounts of varying values, (fd. at 17:21-19:4, 20:1-22:8). Additionally, each week, senior collectors were assigned a list of valuable “high dollar accounts” or “high dollar reports,” also assigned by alpha . split. (ECF 50-16, Ex. 16, Hunt Dep., at 38:18-40:20; ECF 50-1 at 209:22-210:3; ECF 50-15 at 107:4-7). High dollar accounts were scored as easier to collect than. other accounts and created more opportunity for senior collectors to earn commissions by generating revenue above their monthly budget. (ECF 50-15 at 37:9-38:7; ECF 50-16 at 39:4-17). As the high dollar accounts

were time sensitive, they were assigned manually, occasionally resulting In errors in assignment. (ECF 45-10, Ex, 9, Shaffer Dep., at 54:17-55:3, 56:3-5; ECF 45-3, Ex. 2, Woodall Dep., at 171:12- “172:16). Such accounts also were reassigned for various reasons, including meeting client deadlines. (ECF 45-3 at 158:12-159:1).

Alleged Discrimination First Complaint (December 2016 - January 2017) Ms. Smith claims that she became aware in December 2016 that Ms. Hunt had transferred some of her high dollar collection opportunities from the pre-assigned alpha split to Jennifer Sizemore, a white collector. (ECF 50-1 at 148:24-149:6, 220:2-8). Similar transfers allegedly resulted in white senior collectors Sizemore, Mare Goodman, Nicole Villa, and Laura Maloon receiving more valuable opportunities than Ms. Smith and Ms. McGill Watkins, the only other black senior collector working under Ms. Hunt. (ECF 50-1 at 196:2-19; 218:4-221-13). Despite receiving more high- and extremely-high-value accounts to work than Ms. Smith, Ms. Sizemore

and Ms. Maloon received lower performance scores and more frequently missed their budgets than Ms. Smith in 2016. (ECF 50-1, at 203:25-204:06, 219:10-22; ECF 52-10, Ex 18; ECF 52-11, Ex. 19, Sizemore Scorecard; ECF 52-12, Ex. 20, Maloon 2016 Scorecard; Ex. 9 at 104:6-21).

Ms. Smith raised a complaint regarding this alleged discrimination with Ms. Hunt and Mr. Woodall on December 21, 2016, telling him that “there was bias in the way that the work queues had been assigned.” (ECF 50-1 at 201:13-25; ECF 50-21, Ex. 21, Woodall Email to Smith (Dec. 21, 2016)). Specifically, Ms. Smith argued that Ms.

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