Thanongsinh, Linh v. Bd Educ District U46

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 2006
Docket05-3002
StatusPublished

This text of Thanongsinh, Linh v. Bd Educ District U46 (Thanongsinh, Linh v. Bd Educ District U46) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thanongsinh, Linh v. Bd Educ District U46, (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 05-3002 LINH THANONGSINH, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

BOARD OF EDUCATION, DISTRICT U-46 and HANAN JAVETZ, individually and in his official capacity, Defendants-Appellees. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 03 C 8842—Samuel Der-Yeghiayan, Judge. ____________ ARGUED FEBRUARY 10, 2006—DECIDED SEPTEMBER 13, 2006 ____________

Before POSNER, RIPPLE and KANNE, Circuit Judges. RIPPLE, Circuit Judge. On December 8, 2003, Linh Thanongsinh, a custodian at Oakhill Elementary School, brought the present suit against his employer, School District U-46 (the “School District”), and his supervisor, Hanan Javetz, in his individual and official capacities. Mr. Thanongsinh alleges that he was demoted from Group V Head Custodian to Group II Building Custodian in violation of both Title VII, see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and 42 U.S.C. § 1981(a). The district court granted summary judgment in 2 No. 05-3002

favor of the defendants. The plaintiff now appeals. We affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the district court and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I BACKGROUND A. Facts Mr. Thanongsinh, an Asian-American of Chinese and Laotian descent, began working as a custodian for School District U-46 in 1991. He subsequently was promoted to the position of Group V Head Custodian and assigned to Oakhill Elementary School in Kane County, Illinois. His immediate supervisor at Oakhill was Hanan Javetz, the Director of Plant Operations for the School District. Mr. Thanongsinh received consistently favorable work performance evaluations while employed as a Group V Head Custodian at Oakhill. For example, in 2001, the principal of Oakhill, Carolyn O’Neal, ranked as “outstand- ing” or “exceptionally high” Mr. Thanongsinh’s job knowl- edge, quantity and quality of work, dependability, organiza- tion, flexibility and potential level of ability; Mr. Thanongsinh was given “excellent” or “high” marks in the remaining categories, attendance and cooperation. R.28, Ex.B at 4-5. O’Neal remarked in this evaluation that Mr. Thanongsinh is “fussy about things being done right. This was especially evident after our retrofitting project was completed,” id. at 4, and that “he can do many things in the way of repairs, and he does so,” id. at 6. Similarly, in 2002, O’Neal gave Mr. Thanongsinh the highest marks possible in the categories of job knowledge, No. 05-3002 3

quantity of work, dependability, organization, flexibility and potential level of ability. He received favorable marks in the other categories—quality of work, attendance and cooperation. O’Neal added the following comments: Linh has a wide variety of skills related to maintenance and upkeep of the physical plant, equipment and supplies. These skills are evidenced by the work he has done in the areas of plumbing, electricity, and HVAC, without assistance of those in the trades. Id. at 1. O’Neal concluded that Mr. Thanongsinh is fully “capable of handling more responsibility.” Id. at 2.1 The employment of School District custodians is governed by a collective bargaining agreement between the School District and the Education Support Services Organization, the union that represents School District employees. In late 2002, the School District and the union, due to budgetary constraints, agreed to phase out Group V custodians through the implementation of a two-part certification process. To remain a Group V custodian under the 2002- 2005 Collective Bargaining Agreement (the “Agreement”), the employee first was required to score at least 50 out of 100 on a written exam. If he scored below 50, he was

1 Mr. Thanongsinh also received an outstanding employee evaluation in 1999. He was given excellent marks for job knowl- edge, quantity and quality of work, cooperation, organization, flexibility and potential level of ability; he received an above average mark for dependability and attendance. The School District official performing the evaluation noted that Mr. Thanongsinh’s “most impressive characteristic is the pride and ownership he shows for Oakhill School. As a result, he takes the initiative to keep everything in good repair.” R.28, Ex.B at 8. 4 No. 05-3002

permitted to retest; if, however, after the second try, he did not pass the written exam, he would not be allowed to proceed to the second portion of the exam, which tested hands-on skills. By contrast, those who scored 50 or above on the written exam then were asked to perform tasks for which a Group V Head Custodian traditionally is respon- sible—for example, testing boiler water and performing asbestos and playground inspections.2 To obtain certifica- tion, the employee’s average score from the two portions of the test had to equal or exceed 70. See Collective Bargaining Agreement, R.24, Ex.G-1. Mr. Thanongsinh took the written portion of the test in November 2002. He received a score of 55. He proceeded to the hands-on portion of the exam, which was adminis- tered on March 14, 2003, by Mr. Javetz and Ron Dugo, the Maintenance Supervisor for the School District. He received a score of 66.62. The average of his written and hands-on scores was 60.81, which, under the terms of the Agreement, constituted a failing score. Pursuant to this Agreement, Mr. Thanongsinh was permitted to retake the test. He received a score of 46 on the written portion and did not advance to the hands-on portion of the exam. Effective July 1, 2003, the School District therefore demoted Mr. Thanongsinh to the position

2 The hands-on test covered ten topics: Change Electric Ballast, Switch or Outlet; Take Boiler or Cooling Tower Water Test; Test Low Water Cut-Off; Reset Security Alarm—Bypass Zone; What To Do In Full Fire Alarm During Occupied Hours; Asbestos Inspection; Rebuild Sloan Value or P-Trap; Playground Equip- ment Inspection; File on M.S.D.S. Sheets; and Change Schedule on EMS Time of Day/Holiday. See R.24, Ex.L. No. 05-3002 5

of Group II Building Custodian.3 As a Group V Head Custodian, Mr. Thanongsinh had earned $20.77 per hour; upon demotion, he suffered a pay loss of approximately $6 per hour. Although Mr. Thanongsinh remains employed as a custodian at Oakhill, numerous job responsibilities formerly performed by Mr. Thanongsinh were reassigned upon his demotion to a Group 9 employee, Mike DiGioia, who visits Oakhill once weekly. Shortly after Mr. Thanongsinh’s demotion, his union representative requested a grievance-based meeting with School District officials to discuss the reduction in pay associated with Mr. Thanongsinh’s demotion. The persons present at this meeting included Mr. Thanongsinh; his union representative; Catherine McNamara, a School District Supervisor; and Mr. Javetz. Mr. Thanongsinh expressed at the meeting his frustration with the difficulty of the test; Mr. Javetz’s response to Mr. Thanongsinh’s concerns is the subject of vigorous dispute between the parties. In his affidavit, Mr. Thanongsinh claimed: At the meeting, I began explaining my side of the story regarding the hands-on portion of the certification testing program. Mr. Javetz crossed his arms and said in an argumentative manner that he could not understand

3 The second written test had been administered prior to the exhaustion of six months following the conclusion of the first certification exam, in violation of the Memorandum of Under- standing between the union and the School District. Therefore, the School District agreed to allow Mr. Thanongsinh a third opportunity to take the certification exam after his demotion.

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