Case Information
*1 Before WILKINSON, Chief Judge, MICHAEL, Circuit Judge, and MACKENZIE, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded by published opin- ion. Judge Michael wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge Wilkin- son and Senior Judge MacKenzie joined. _________________________________________________________________ COUNSEL
ARGUED: Daniel F. Goldstein, BROWN, GOLDSTEIN & LEVY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellants. Henry Robbins Lord, PIPER & MARBURY, L.L.P., Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Joseph B. Espo, Lauren E. Willis, BROWN, GOLDSTEIN & LEVY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellants. Leonard E. Cohen, Ann L. Lamdin, PIPER & MARBURY, L.L.P., Baltimore, Maryland; Barbara L. Holtz, Acting County Attorney, Sean D. Wallace, Deputy County Attorney, PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND OFFICE OF LAW, Upper Marlboro, Maryland, for Appellees. _________________________________________________________________ OPINION
MICHAEL, Circuit Judge:
The plaintiffs are six white men and one white woman who sought employment as Prince George's County, Maryland, firefighters in 1993 and 1994. They sued fire department officials and the county under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 & 1983, alleging that the department's affir- mative action program impermissibly discriminates on the basis of race and sex, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Four- teenth Amendment. 1 The district court granted the defendants' motion The individual defendants and their positions and roles are as follows: M.H. (Jim) Estepp is the county's fire chief. Maureen Hennessey was an officer in the fire department's Administrative Services Division of the Management Services Command and played a key role in hiring new recruits. William F. Goddard, III, was the lieutenant colonel in charge of the Management Services Command and also played a key role in hiring. Yvonne R. Tyler, a civilian employee of the fire department, is the administrative assistant in charge of personnel and is the recruitment and examination board administrator. *3 for summary judgment and denied the plaintiffs' cross-motion for summary judgment.
We affirm in part the judgment of the district court, and we reverse in part. We hold that (1) the department's affirmative action program is invalid because it is not narrowly tailored to achieve its goals, (2) further proceedings are necessary to determine whether plaintiff Josh Reedy would have been hired but for the existence of the program, (3) the other plaintiffs were not denied employment because of their race or sex, and (4) the individual defendants have not established that they are entitled to qualified immunity. I.
Prince George's County chooses its firefighters in the following manner. Applicants must take a pass/fail performance examination and a written examination. Those who pass both are interviewed. Each applicant is scored based on his or her performance on the writ- ten examination and in the interview. The department then groups the applicants into three "bands"--"Outstanding," "Well Qualified," or "Qualified"--based on their combined scores. Within each band, applicants are ranked based on their "preference level." A county ordinance requires that within the same band (Outstanding, Well Qualified, or Qualified), firefighter applicants are to be hired in the following order:
(1) Current county employees seeking promotions; (2) Disabled military veterans; (3) Non-disabled veterans who were volunteer firefighters; (4) All other non-disabled veterans; (5) All other former volunteer firefighters; (6) Displaced homemakers not in any of the above catego- ries;
(7) County residents not in any of the above categories; *4 (8) All other persons.
Prince George's County Code § 16-162(d)(2)(i). The preferences for volunteer firefighters ((3) & (5)), however, may be eliminated if the county's personnel officer certifies in writing to the fire chief that continued use of the preference "will have a disparate impact on a protected class as defined by the guidelines of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission." Prince George's County Code § 16- 162(d)(4). Applicants within the same band who have the same pref- erence level are ranked on the basis of their combined examination and interview scores. The department maintains a list of the appli- cants and their total rank (based on band, preference, and score). This list is called the "Applicant Register," and it is continually updated as new applicants apply and existing applicants withdraw their applications. 2
The mechanics of the department's affirmative action program have never been committed to writing, but the record indicates that the program works in the following manner. Each recruiting season fire department officials set informal caps on the number of whites and the number of males who will be offered employment. 3 The department offers applicants employment in the order in which they are listed on the Applicant Register, but once a cap is reached (either for whites or for males), a lower ranking, uncapped applicant is offered employment instead of a higher ranking, capped applicant. The informal caps are imposed in an effort to meet affirmative action goals set (in percentages) by the county. In the past the coun- ty's goals have tracked Census data. In 1993 and 1994 the county set goals of having 18 percent of its workers female and 39 percent non- white or Hispanic. Currently, 16 percent of county protective services personnel (firefighters and paramedics) are female and 38 percent are 2 The district court correctly held that the Applicant Register was not inadmissible hearsay. The Applicant Register "set[ ] forth [ ] the activi- ties of" the fire department, namely, the ranking of applicants for employment. Fed. R. Evid. 803(8)(A). The parties dispute what these"caps" should be called. The plaintiffs have described them as quotas; the defendants call them flexible goals.
We believe the term "informal caps" is the most appropriate description. *5 non-white or Hispanic. County officials have said that they expect to increase the affirmative action percentage goals in order to track new Census data expected to show increases in the county's minority pop- ulation and in the percentage of female participation in the workforce. The plaintiffs complain specifically about the 1993 and 1994 hiring seasons. In 1993 the department offered employment to thirteen appli- cants. According to the Applicant Register, none of the plaintiffs ranked better than fourteenth in that hiring season. In 1994 the depart- ment offered employment to nine applicants. Plaintiffs Marc Alexan- der and Angela Moore received and accepted offers. 4 Five other applicants accepted offers of employment. Plaintiff Josh Reedy ran- ked eighth on the Applicant Register, but the department did not offer him a job. The remaining plaintiffs ranked lower than ninth. The plaintiffs sued seeking injunctive, declaratory, and monetary relief. The district court rejected all of their claims and entered sum- mary judgment in favor of the defendants. 5 II.
We believe that the department's affirmative action program, as it is currently structured, cannot pass constitutional scrutiny, even 4 Moore received an offer because of the existence of the affirmative action program. The district court held as a preliminary matter that all the plaintiffs
had standing, including those who would not have been hired even in the
absence of the department's affirmative action program. We affirm this
ruling. "The injury in cases of this kind is that a `discriminatory classifi-
cation prevent[s] the plaintiff from competing on an equal footing.' The
aggrieved party `need not establish that he would have obtained the ben-
efit but for the barrier in order to establish standing.'" Adarand Con-
structors, Inc. v. Pena,
All racial classifications--even those intended to benefit minority
groups--are subject to strict scrutiny. Id. at 2111 (racial classifica-
tions are "inherently suspect" and receive"a most searching examina-
tion") (citations omitted); see also City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson
Co.,
The county argues that its program is intended to benefit African Americans and women by serving, among others, the following goals: (1) redressing present effects of past and current incidents of discrimi- nation and harassment within the department, (2) sending a message that the department respects diversity and that discrimination and harassment will not be tolerated, (3) promoting more effective fire prevention and firefighting by fostering the trust of a diverse public, and (4) serving educational goals by providing children with racially and sexually diverse role models. The district court found that the first interest asserted was compelling. The court relied on (1) "extensive statistical evidence of discrimination" against African Americans and women, (2) evidence that discriminatory behavior and attitudes within volunteer fire departments carried over into the county fire department, 6 According to the defendants, at one time all volunteer fire depart- ments but one, Chapel Oaks, excluded African Americans from member- ship. Even though volunteer departments no longer formally exclude African Americans, the County claims that an atmosphere of racial intol- erance still pervades many volunteer departments, making African Americans feel unwelcome and less likely to join. In addition, many women have reported that they were sexually harassed while they were members of volunteer departments and that male members of the depart- ments made it known that women were not welcome. African Americans and women were not allowed to ride fire trucks in some volunteer depart- ments, for example, and were subject to hazing and offensive epithets. *7 and (3) anecdotal evidence of harassment of African American and female members of the county fire department. The plaintiffs chal- lenge these findings, primarily on the grounds that most acts of harassment and discrimination occurred long ago and that there is no present evidence of racial or sexual animus within the Prince George's County fire department. We need not resolve this dispute because even assuming, arguendo, that the asserted interests are com- pelling, the program is not narrowly tailored because the means cho- sen by the department are not related closely enough to the interests asserted.
The program is not narrowly tailored because means less drastic
than outright racial classification were available to department offi-
cials. In particular, the Prince George's County Code expressly pro-
vides that the fire department may eliminate its volunteer preference
in order to encourage diversity within the department. The department
did not, however, take that simple step. Indeed, if discriminatory atti-
tudes within the county fire department owe their origin to practices
within volunteer fire departments, as the defendants claim, then the
most logical solution is to deny volunteer firefighters the hiring pref-
erence they currently enjoy. If a governmental body finds itself linked
to a private entity that discriminates, the government should sever its
ties to the discriminating entity before resorting to reliance on a sus-
pect classification. "[E]xplicit racial preferences, if available at all,
must be only a `last resort' option." Hayes v. North State Law
Enforcement Officers Ass'n,
A.
None of the plaintiffs (except for Reedy, whose case we discuss
below) ranked high enough on the Applicant Register to have been
offered a job even in the absence of the fire department's affirmative
action program. Because the existence of the affirmative action pro-
gram did not cause them to be denied employment opportunity, the
plaintiffs (except Reedy) may not be awarded any personal relief. See
St. Mary's Honor Ctr. v. Hicks,
Reedy's case is different. He ranked eighth on the Applicant Regis- ter in a recruiting season when the department made nine offers. Three of those offers went to affirmative action candidates ranked lower than he. Thus it appears that Reedy would have received an offer of employment in the absence of the affirmative action program and that therefore he should be considered for relief. The defendants claim, however, that Reedy was not offered a job because other appli- cants refused their offers too close to the beginning of the depart- ment's training period for a job offer to have been made to Reedy.
The district court should have addressed the factual issue of whether Reedy would have been offered employment in the absence of the department's affirmative action program. 8 We therefore remand Reedy's personal claim to the district court for a new determination of whether he is personally entitled to relief. IV.
The district court also held that the individual defendants were enti- tled to qualified immunity. We disagree.
Government officials performing discretionary functions are
immune from civil liability unless "in the light of pre-existing law the
unlawfulness [of their conduct is] apparent." Anderson v. Creighton,
V.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. The case is remanded for fashioning of appropriate injunctive and declaratory relief, for consideration of whether plaintiff Reedy was denied an offer of employment because of his race or sex, and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED
