United States v. Wattsburg Area School District

429 F. Supp. 1370, 15 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 731, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16329
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 18, 1977
DocketCiv. A. 76-101
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 429 F. Supp. 1370 (United States v. Wattsburg Area School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Wattsburg Area School District, 429 F. Supp. 1370, 15 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 731, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16329 (W.D. Pa. 1977).

Opinion

ADJUDICATION FINDINGS OF FACT, DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

KNOX, District Judge.

INTRODUCTION

This is a sex discrimination suit instituted by the United States alleging that Mary Schaaf an applicant for a teaching position in the defendant school district was refused employment because of sex. The action is brought under 42 U.S.C. § 2000e fet seq. the educational amendments to which effective March 24, 1972, made Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 applicable to local school districts and educational entities. The school district is subject to the act by virtue of the provisions of Sections 2000e(a), (b) and (h). Complaint having been made of refusal to hire to the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission, which found reasonable cause for the action, and the school district having refused to take action, suit was brought by the Attorney General pursuant to the provisions of 2000e-5(f)1.

The court hereby makes the following:

Specific Findings of Fact

1. The Wattsburg Area School District is an agency of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, organized under the laws of *1371 the Commonwealth, and is responsible for administering the Commonwealth’s system of public education in the Wattsburg Area.

2. Defendant William J. Gregg, as Superintendent, is the principal administrator for the defendant school district. In the area of employment of permanent professional staff the Superintendent has the final approval of proposed new hires and makes his recommendation to the school board, which has the sole authority to hire.

3. Lavern Floyd Hurlburt, as Assistant Superintendent, is second in command of defendant school district and has the principal responsibility for screening permanent professional employees and recommending their employment to the Superintendent.

4. Billy D. Haney, as Principal of the Wattsburg Area Middle School, makes recommendations to the Assistant Superintendent and the Superintendent for the employment of permanent professionals at that school.

5. The Wattsburg Area School District is comprised of five schools. For the 1974-75 school year the breakdown by sex of the professional staff of the Middle School involved in this case was as follows:

Wattsburg Area Middle School (grades 5-8)

Male Female

Principal 1 0

Classroom Teachers 11 20

6. Mary E. Schaaf received a bachelor’s degree from Mercyhurst College in 1968, with a major in elementary education and a minor in mathematics. Her overall grade point average was 3.46 on a 4.0 basis, and her class rank was 8 out of 131. Her undergraduate grades consisted of 22 A’s, 26 B’s, and her lowest grade, one C, in physical education. Her student teaching grade was A.

7. Although she had not yet graduated from Mercyhurst, Schaaf was employed in January, 1968, as a fourth grade teacher in the Wattsburg District, teaching a self-contained class during the day, while completing her last three credits at Mercyhurst at night. After her graduation in June, 1968, Schaaf was continued by the District in her fourth grade position from September 1968 until January 1969, when she resigned to accompany her husband to his assigned position in New Castle, Pennsylvania. When she resigned from Wattsburg in January 1969 to relocate in New Castle, Schaaf received a letter of acknowledgement from the then Wattsburg Superintendent, Charles Anderson, wishing her the “best” and thanking her “for a fine teaching job.” Schaaf’s teacher evaluation forms, required by the Commonwealth and signed by the County Superintendent, and the District Superintendent indicate that she performed satisfactorily as a teacher for Wattsburg during 1968-69 (Pl.Ex. 1, 2, 8).

8. After residing in New Castle, Pennsylvania, for almost two calendar years, during which time she substituted in the Nantic Area School District and Wilmington Area School District for an estimated average of four days a month, and in the New Castle High School as a ninth grade mathematics temporary substitute for two full months, Schaaf relocated in Wattsburg in December 1970. During her tenure in New Castle, Schaaf began her graduate work by completing six graduate hours at Slippery Rock State College in the summer of 1969.

9. Schaaf reapplied to the Wattsburg Area District for a teaching position for the fall of 1971, and she was hired to teach kindergarten at the Greenfield Elementary School for the 1971-72 term. Because she was caring for her new baby, born in February 1970, Schaaf did not apply for work during winter and spring of 1971.

10. At the end of the school year in June 1972, because she and her husband had bought a house in Erie, where baby-sitting arrangements for her baby were unsatisfactory, Mrs. Schaaf resigned her teaching position at Greenfield. The conditions under which Schaaf had taught kindergarten at Greenfield were unusual in that because of the District’s bus schedule restrictions, she taught two sections of kindergarten students simultaneously in a combined grouping in the school’s gymnasium from one o’clock to five p. m. There is in evidence *1372 (Pl.Ex. 5) one favorable evaluation by her principal of Mrs. Schaaf’s teaching performance during the 1971-72 school year concluding “Very well done, Mary!”

Upon her resignation, Schaff again received an acknowledgement from Superintendent Charles Anderson, who, with reference to her teaching conditions, concluded by saying, “It was difficult I know but many persons have expressed themselves favorably with your results. Many thanks.”

11. Although she frequently substituted in the District between 1972 and 1974, Mary Schaaf did not reapply for a permanent teaching position until the spring of 1974, when she found an acceptable day-care center for her four-year-old child.

12. On February 27, 1974, Mary Schaaf submitted to the District an application for a full-time teaching position for grades Kindergarten through 8 for the 1974-75 school year. Because of Mr. Spiegelhalter’s, principal at Green Elementary School, frequent reliance on her for substitute work, Schaaf requested Spiegelhalter’s permission to use him as a professional reference on her teacher application blank. Alice Bauman, the principal at Greenfield in 1971-72, who had praised her work there, was also listed as a reference. Schaaf also filed another application for the 5th Grade vacancy on May 8, 1975 (D X 6).

13. In August 1974, Schaaf was interviewed by Assistant Superintendent Hurlburt for both full-time and part-time vacancies at the elementary level. Because she wanted a permanent position, Schaaf rejected the offer Hurlburt made her of the part-time job, for September 1974 through January 1975. She was later informed by Hurlburt that the full-time job, a kindergarten position, was awarded to a person with a Master’s Degree being higher than her own.

14. In January 1975, there were five fifth-grade teachers at the Wattsburg Area Middle School.

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Bluebook (online)
429 F. Supp. 1370, 15 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 731, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wattsburg-area-school-district-pawd-1977.