Tina Varlesi v. Wayne State University

643 F. App'x 507
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 2016
Docket14-1862
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 643 F. App'x 507 (Tina Varlesi v. Wayne State University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tina Varlesi v. Wayne State University, 643 F. App'x 507 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge.

Tina Varlesi was a graduate student in the School of Social Work at Wayne State University (WSU). After receiving a failing grade and being denied a degree from the social work program, she brought suit in federal court, against WSU, her faculty advisor, Carol Premo, the WSU Director of Field Education, Anwar Najor-Durack, and the Dean of the WSU School of Social Work, Phyllis Vroom, claiming, among other things, pregnancy discrimination in violation of Title IX and Michigan’s Elliott— Larson Civil Rights Act (ELCRA), and retaliation for her complaining about that discrimination. 1 A jury found the defendants liable, and awarded Varlesi $848,690 in damages. The defendants appeal the judgment and the denial of certain motions. We AFFIRM.

I.

In 2006, Tina Varlesi graduated from college with excellent grades, a degree in psychology, and aspirations of being a social worker. That fall, she enrolled at WSU to obtain an M.S. in Social Work, which is a two-year, graduate program with both classroom coursework and hands-on “field” work doing actual social work at an agency under the tutelage of a (purportedly) licensed, qualified social worker. She was not an employee, nor was she even a volunteer or an intern; she was a student paying WSU for this experience via tuition and fees.

Varlesi’s first year performance was outstanding: excellent grades in her classes and a “satisfactory” (the highest possible grade) in both of her field placements. *510 Apparently, one agency even offered her a job, to commence after she obtained her degree. But during the intervening summer, Varlesi became pregnant, although she was not married, and during her placement in the fall semester of her second year, the trouble started (though her classroom grades remained excellent).

That fall semester, beginning September 2007, Varlesi’s “faculty advisor,” Carol Premo, placed her at the Veteran’s Administration (VA) Hospital under a “field instructor” named Pamela Mackey, a placement that was problematic from the beginning, even before Varlesi discovered her pregnancy (circa September 24, 2007). 2 Varlesi did not like the placement at the VA and Mackey did not like Varle-si, complaining extensively to Premo and ultimately terminating the placement early. When Varlesi accused Mackey of pregnancy discrimination, Premo summarily rejected the accusation and did not investigate. But, despite Mackey’s scathing report, Premo did not fail Varlesi from that placement. Instead, Premo passed Varlesi and placed her at the Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation Center (an all-male rehabilitation center for ex-convicts, drug addicts, etc.) for the spring semester, under a field instructor named Joyce Ste-fanski, with the expectation that Varlesi would also make up the incomplete hours from the fall semester.

Varlesi began the spring semester, her final semester in the program, on January 7, 2008, at the Salvation Army placement and Stefanski addressed her obvious pregnancy immediately, ordering her not to drive after dark or in bad weather, questioning her marital status and living arrangements, and announcing that though she had “had relations” with someone, the men at the rehab “can look but they cannot touch.” Other students were present for this uncomfortable conversation. And, within days, Sefanski was complaining to Premo about Varlesi’s alleged underper-formance, poor attendance, and bad attitude. There was also a separate problem. On January 11, 2008, another student, Amber Bergin (one of three other students Premo had placed at the Salvation Army), sent a mass email critical of the placement experience and of Stefanski personally, pointing out, among other things, that Ste-fanski was not a licensed social worker, or even actually a social worker, as was required by the Manual. The email infuriated Stefanski and prompted a meeting on January 14, 2008, during which Stefanski told Premo she wanted to be rid of Varlesi, •and Varlesi requested to be reassigned. Premo refused. The placement continued.

Two weeks later, on January 27, 2008, there was another meeting, this one at Varlesi’s request, attended by Varlesi, Stefanski, Premo, and Najor-Durack (Premo’s boss, the Director of Field Education). During this meeting, Varlesi directly accused Stefanski of pregnancy discrimination. Stefanski denied any discrimination but said she had told Varlesi repeatedly to stop “rubbing her belly” *511 and to wear looser clothing, and said that the men at the facility were being “turned on by her pregnancy.” Neither Premo nor Najor-Durack considered any of that discriminatory. They considered it reasonable under the circumstances and told Varlesi to wear looser clothing. 3 They also told Varlesi that she could or should drop out of the program because of her pregnancy.

The January 27th meeting did not resolve or improve the situation. Stefanski continued to hound Varlesi, who complained to the WSU Office of Equal Opportunity, the WSU Ombudsman, and Najor-Durack. Varlesi also hired an attorney. Premo was angry at Varlesi for going over her head and scolded her about it. But Premo never criticized Varlesi’s performance or warned her that she was failing the placement. In fact, when Varlesi sent Premo an email that she thought things were improving, Premo responded (in her only email response to Varlesi’s many emails), on February 2, 2008, with: “You have no idea how much that pleases me. I knew I was backing a winner.” R. 196-1. Stefanski was still complaining to Premo, but neither ever put anything in writing.

But the situation had not actually improved, and Varlesi requested yet another meeting, which occurred on March 17, 2008, and comprised Varlesi, Stefanski, Premo, and Gary Gillow (Stefanski’s boss). Stefanski again complained about Varlesi’s rubbing her belly, wearing tight clothing, and stimulating the men with her pregnancy; Premo again supported Stefanski. When Varlesi again raised the pregnancy discrimination, and her complaints about it, Premo scolded her again and instructed her that she was not to talk to Najor-Durack or others about pregnancy discrimination. But no one criticized Varle-si’s work quality and, oddly, they even discussed where she wanted to work when she completed her degree. When Varlesi worried about Stefanski’s malevolence, Premo assured her that she (Varlesi) was “doing great,” that Stefanski had no authority to fail her, and in fact, Stefanski had, never given anyone a failing evaluation. Nonetheless, Stefanski continued to hound Varlesi about her belly, her eloth- *512 ing, and her pregnancy, and to threaten a failing evaluation.

On April 15, 2008, Stefanski gave Varlesi a failing evaluation. Moreover, as the district court noted, “WSU admitted] that Stefanski’s evaluation of [Varlesi] was the worst evaluation any WSU social worker student ha[d] ever received.” R. 81 at 9 n. 4. 4 Prior to and during the eventual trial, Varlesi’s attorney established that this evaluation was procedurally deficient and much of it was unsubstantiated, biased, and substantively untrue.

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Bluebook (online)
643 F. App'x 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tina-varlesi-v-wayne-state-university-ca6-2016.