Yolanda Arnold v. City of Columbus

515 F. App'x 524
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 20, 2013
Docket11-3459, 11-3468, 11-3815
StatusUnpublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 515 F. App'x 524 (Yolanda Arnold v. City of Columbus) 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
Yolanda Arnold v. City of Columbus, 515 F. App'x 524 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

SILER, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs, current and former employees of the City of Columbus’ Division of Fire (“CDF”), brought this action against the City, alleging discrimination, hostile work environment, and retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Ohio Civil Rights Act (“OCRA”), First Amendment retaliation and equal protection claims pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and a number of state law claims. The district court granted summary judgment to Columbus on the federal and OCRA claims and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims. For the following reasons, we affirm.

I.

Plaintiffs Yolanda Arnold, Eddie Arnold, Dayle Boyce, Terry Cornett, Melvin Houston, Tyrone Redmond, George Rickman, Robert Taylor, Robert Maxwell, and Virgil Moore are current and former members of CDF’s Inspections section, a component of the Fire Prevention Bureau (“FPB”), which is one of five bureaus in CDF. FPB and specifically the Inspections section work in conjunction with the civilian employees of Building Services to conduct building code and fire code inspections. Plaintiffs claim that Building Services is predominantly staffed with Caucasian employees while the Inspections section is almost exclusively black.

Yolanda Arnold, an African-American woman, is a Battalion Chief (“BC”) 1 who was transferred from FPB to Emergency Services in 2006. As BC of FPB, she was in charge of overseeing the daily activities of each of the FPB sections. She reported to AC Gregory Paxton, the head of FPB, until he was removed in 2005. She then reported to AC Kerry Ellis.

Plaintiffs Eddie Arnold, Boyce, Cornett, Houston, Redmond, Rickman, and Taylor are African-American employees of CDF who have worked in the Inspections section. Plaintiffs Maxwell and Moore are Caucasian CDF employees pursuing their civil rights claims on an association theory.

The claims in this case involve three investigations of FPB. The first investigation occurred in response to allegations that Inspections-section employees were failing to show up for inspections and were being paid for overtime not actually worked. In 2004, AC Paxton, who is Caucasian, learned of the allegations and informed EO Richard Braun. In response, Braun called for an investigation. The investigation into missed inspections was conducted internally by the Professional Standards Unit (“PSU”). The allegations of theft prompted Safety Director Brown to call for an investigation by the Columbus Police Department (“CPD”), which was conducted contemporaneously with the PSU investigation. Neither the CPD nor the PSU investigations found any specific wrongdoing on the part of Yolanda Arnold or the Inspections section, although EO Braun concluded that “[tjhere appears to have been a failure in the procedure to assign and follow-up on inspections.” At the conclusion of these investigations in *528 February and March 2005, AC Paxton was reassigned and was replaced by AC Ellis.

Around April 2005, Yolanda Arnold realized that certain inspections records were missing. She believed that Lieutenant Randall Daum, a Caucasian former FPB employee who, according to Arnold, had demonstrated racial animus in the past, was responsible for taking the records. During a PSU investigation into this matter, Yolanda Arnold stated that employees Rhonda Sipe and James Sawyers both said that Daum placed the records in a box and left with them. When interviewed, both Sipe and Sawyer denied seeing Daum take records and Sawyers denied telling Yolanda Arnold that he had witnessed Daum taking the records. Yolanda Arnold was subsequently charged with dishonesty, and, following a disciplinary hearing, Fire Chief Pettus, who is African-American, recommended an eighty-hour suspension. She appealed to the Civil Service Commission (“CSC”), which dismissed the dishonesty charge and instead found a “lack of diligence” on her part. Her suspension was reduced from eighty to forty hours. In the meantime, the local newspaper, the Columbus Dispatch, ran a number of negative stories about CDF and the Inspections section.

In May 2005, Yolanda Arnold sent a memo to Fire Chief Pettus with the subject line “Disparate Treatment and Policy Violations.” She also filed her first charge with the Ohio Civil Rights Commission (“OCRC”). In part due to her allegations of discrimination and the lingering questions and dysfunction surrounding FPB, Safety Director Brown ordered a third investigation. This investigation was conducted by a third party, attorney Pamela Krivda (“Krivda investigation”). Yolanda Arnold was allegedly interviewed eight times during the course of the Krivda investigation. Many of the Plaintiffs took issue with the presence of a union representative during their interviews with Krivda.

Krivda concluded her investigation and report in 2006, finding no purposeful wrongdoing on the part of Yolanda Arnold or anyone else at FPB or the Inspections section. She determined that the majority of missed inspections were the result of “a breakdown in communications” between Building Services and FPB or FPB’s failure to assign the inspection to an inspector. Krivda also addressed Yolanda Arnold’s claims of discrimination, finding them to be unsubstantiated.

At the conclusion of the Krivda investigation in 2006, Yolanda Arnold was removed from FPB based on the continuing problems there and her disciplinary suspension. She retained her salary and the title of BC, but she was moved to Emergency Services. She testified that, in her new position, she works on “administrative duties” and no longer manages a large staff like she had at FPB. In 2007, she filed an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) charge related to the three investigations and her suspension. The 2007 charges filed by Plaintiffs Eddie Arnold, Boyce, Cornett, Houston, Redmond, Rickman and Taylor related to the investigations, the presence of a union representative during interviews, the requirement to complete time sheets, and the loss of remote parking privileges.

Maxwell and Moore also filed their EEOC complaints in 2007. They assert that the investigations of FPB and the accompanying press coverage singled them out for “public and false allegations of ‘criminal’ wrongdoing” along with their African-American colleagues. Specifically, Moore’s picture was displayed on the front page of the local newspaper with the headline “City Fire Inspectors Often Fail To Show.” They also assert that other similar *529 ly-situated Caucasian FPB employees did not have their Krivda-investigation interviews tape-recorded or have a union representative present because they were not associated with the African-American employees, and that Krivda was more antagonistic in her interviews of Maxwell and Moore. Moore was also the subject of an investigation for back-timing and an additional investigation, for unknown purposes, that bore no result.

Plaintiffs filed suit in 2008. 2 The district court granted summary judgment for Columbus in each case.

II.

We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Profit Pet v. Arthur Dogswell, LLC,

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515 F. App'x 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yolanda-arnold-v-city-of-columbus-ca6-2013.