Stafford v. Duval County Public Schools

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 11, 2024
Docket3:21-cv-01007
StatusUnknown

This text of Stafford v. Duval County Public Schools (Stafford v. Duval County Public Schools) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stafford v. Duval County Public Schools, (M.D. Fla. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA JACKSONVILLE DIVISION

SPENCER STAFFORD,

Plaintiff, Case No. 3:21-cv-1007-TJC-LLL v.

DUVAL COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS,

Defendant.

ORDER Plaintiff Spencer Stafford is suing his employer, Duval County Public Schools (“DCPS”), for race discrimination, retaliation, and a hostile work environment, all under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Doc. 1. The claims are based on Stafford’s concerns with the promotional process, failure to promote him, poor interactions with his supervisor, and limited response to his complaints about these concerns. Id. This case is before the Court on DCPS’s Motion for Summary Judgment, Stafford’s opposition, and DCPS’s reply and all exhibits thereto. Docs. 44, 45, and 46 respectively. I. Facts1 A. Overview of Stafford’s Employment and the Promotional Process

Stafford, an African-American, started with DCPS in 1995 as a temporary carpenter and became a permanent carpenter a year later. Doc. 1 ¶10; Doc. 44- 4 at 123. DCPS is part of the City of Jacksonville consolidated government and therefore Jacksonville’s Civil Service and Personnel Rules and Regulations (“CS

Rules”) apply. 2 Doc. 44-15 ¶9. The CS Rules govern job description development, and job descriptions include promotional requirements determining eligibility for the job. Id. ¶10; Doc. 44-6 at 51-53. When the number of qualified applicants exceeds the number of available

positions, the CS Rules require a promotional exam, with positions awarded based on the highest passing score. Doc. 44-15 ¶12. If the number of openings and qualified applicants is the same, however, no promotional exam is required. Id. ¶11; Doc. 44-6 at 51-53 (citing CS Rule 4.03(1)(A)(3)).

Carpentry is one of several trade groups within Facilities Maintenance. See id. ¶¶13-14. In 2014, a Carpenter Lead Worker position was created,

1 These facts are construed in the light most favorable to Stafford. In some instances, citations include CM/ECF page references for clarity. Citations to condensed deposition transcripts are to the deposition page number. 2 Stafford’s employment with DCPS is also governed by a Collective Bargaining Agreement. See Doc. 44-4 at 125-26. responsible to assist the Carpenter Foreperson, Carlos Hendrix.3 Doc. 44-15 ¶¶5-6; see Doc. 44-4 at 124-25, 140. The promotional requirements for

Carpenter Lead were as follows: “[a]ll permanent employees who have served for one (1) year in the class of Carpenter and meet the open requirements may apply.” Doc. 44-4 Exh. 18. Of the seven carpenters taking the exam, Stafford had the highest passing score and became Carpenter Lead. Id. at 124-25; Doc.

44-15 ¶6. Other trade groups include Plumbing, Paint, HAR (Heat, Air, and Refrigeration), and Utilities. See Doc. 44-15 ¶¶13-14; Doc. 44-6 Exh. 3. Each of these trades has one or more foreperson4 roles and one or more lead roles to

assist a foreperson. See Doc. 44-6 at 32; Doc. 44-15 ¶14, Exh. D.5 Promotional requirements for Plumbing, Paint, HAR, and Carpenter Foreperson allow employees with one year of the appropriate trade experience, including as lead, to apply.6 Doc. 44-15 ¶14, Exh. D; see also Doc. 44-6 at 32. For Utilities,

3 Once Hendrix became foreperson in 2007, he supervised all carpenters, including Stafford. See Doc. 44-4 at 140; Doc. 44-11 ¶¶5-6; Doc. 44-9 ¶3. As Carpenter Foreperson, Hendrix was on the committee that created the promotional exam for the lead role. Doc. 44-15 ¶24; Doc. 44-1 at 32. 4 The Court references foreperson, but some documents use foreman. 5 Exhibit A to Doc. 44-15 is missing, causing later exhibits to be mislabeled. The document referenced as Exhibit B is labeled as Exhibit A, etc. Information in the missing Exhibit A is elsewhere in the record. 6 In 2016 the promotional requirements for Carpenter Foreperson were changed to the following: “[a]ll permanent employees who have served for a period of at least one (1) year in the class of Carpenter Lead Worker or promotion to foreperson requires experience in the lead role, and often results in an automatic promotion without an exam from lead to foreperson if the

foreperson role becomes available.7 See Doc. 44-15 ¶15; Doc. 44-6 at 18-19, 29- 30, 52-53. In 2020, Hendrix announced plans to retire. Doc. 44-15 ¶8; Doc. 44-13 ¶13. At that time, Stafford was the only African-American in a lead role for a

skilled trade. Doc. 1 ¶31. Anticipating there would be multiple qualified applicants, a committee of six people was formed to develop the promotional exam. See Doc. 44-15 ¶¶22-23. Four were from Facilities Maintenance: Hendrix; Guy Kuhl, Maintenance III Station Supervisor; Nerissa Hawkins (a/k/a

Pospychala), Director of Maintenance; and Tarek Ghandour, Executive Director, Plant Services.8 Doc. 44-15 ¶24; Doc. 44-5 at 4, 6; Doc. 44-13 ¶1; Doc.

Carpenter may apply.” Doc. 44-4 Exh. 19. The previous promotional requirements did not reference experience in the Carpenter Lead position. Compare id., with id. Exh. 1. 7 DCPS attributes the difference to the fact that Utilities involves more than a single discipline and covers a broad variety of work. Experience as lead provides exposure to the wide variety of tasks, which is necessary for the foreperson role. Doc. 44-15 ¶16; see also Doc. 44-6 at 21-23, 30-31. Another example of automatic promotion occurred in 2016, when the electronics lead, Michael Costley, was promoted to Electronics Foreperson without an exam. Doc. 44-6 at 12-16. Electronics was part of Facilities Maintenance until 2019. Doc. 44-15 ¶17. 8 Hendrix reported to Kuhl. Doc. 44-13 ¶¶1-2. Kuhl and Pospychala both reported to Ghandour. See id. ¶6; Doc. 44-9 ¶¶1-2; Doc. 44-5 at 7. Hendrix participated on the committee as a subject matter expert and had primary responsibility for math questions. Doc. 44-6 at 43; Doc. 44-1 at 28-31. 44-9 ¶1. The other two were Dawn Gaughan, District Staffing Supervisor; and Melissa Brandt, Support Technician, Civil Service Staffing; both of Human

Resources.9 Doc. 44-8 ¶¶1,3; Doc. 44-15 ¶¶23-24, Exh. G.10 The promotional exam included an interview and written exam. Doc. 44- 15 ¶32. The written exam was the same for all applicants. Doc. 44-8 ¶8. The interview had standard questions and a standard scoring matrix, with each

interview conducted by the same committee members.11 Id.; Doc. 44-9 ¶31; Doc. 44-11 ¶18; Doc. 44-13 ¶21. The exam was given to five employees in December 2020, but no one passed.12 Doc. 44-15 ¶32. Because no one passed, the committee was required

9 The level of participation in the committee for Brandt and Gaughan is unclear. Brandt stated she participated on the exam development committee, while Hendrix testified she only had responsibility to collect materials. Compare Doc. 44-1 at 37, with Doc. 44-8 ¶¶2-9. Multiple declarants state the committee had six members, including both Gaughan and Brandt, but Pospychala testified Gaughan only participated once to cover for Brandt. Compare Doc. 44-8 ¶3; Doc. 44-9 ¶21; and Doc. 44-13 ¶16; with Doc. 44-5 at 12- 14. Resolving any issue of participation for Gaughan or Brandt is not necessary for the Court’s ruling. 10 As noted supra, the declaration references the email as Exhibit H, but it is labeled Exhibit G. 11 The interview had seven questions and addressed topics such as identifying general safety rules, techniques to motivate employees, how to train and motivate employees about changes, how to deal with attendance problems, how to provide feedback, addressing employee resistance, and options to assess work needed if the workspace is not accessible. Doc. 44-1 Exh. 8. 12 Passing is 70 or higher. Doc. 44-15 ¶12. At Stafford’s deposition, counsel for DCPS showed him a log indicating he had reviewed the exam after to revise the exam, changing at least 25% of the questions. Doc. 44-9 ¶37; Doc. 44-11 ¶26.

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Stafford v. Duval County Public Schools, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stafford-v-duval-county-public-schools-flmd-2024.