Carol Auguster appeals a summary judgment in favor of the Vermilion Parish School Board in his suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 and title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. Seeing no error, we affirm.
I.
After teaching and coaching football for many years, Auguster, a black male, was hired to teach sixth grade at J.H. Williams Middle School for the 1997-98 year. Pursuant to his contract, the district reserved the right to remove him for cause in accordance with the state’s tenure laws. 1 Auguster alleges that the superintendent, Dan Dartez, told him when he was hired of “a problem that they had with past black coaches, and if there was another problem, no matter what it was, that he would do his best to get rid of me, from day one.” In the same conversation, Auguster alleges, Dartez told him that “he had bad luck with black men working in Abbeville.” 2
In March 1998, Jonathon Williams, the principal, received a complaint that Auguster had improperly used corporal punishment to discipline students. After investigating the incident, Williams sent Auguster a reprimand letter informing him that he had violated the corporal punishment policy. Sometime later, Auguster showed an “R” rated movie to his class, an activity the school board considered unacceptable and for which Auguster received another reprimand.
In May 1998, Auguster received a written evaluation outlining his deficiencies in management and instruction and referencing the corporal punishment incident and the unacceptable movie. As a result of the evaluation, the board developed an “Intensive Assistance Plan,” pursuant to which Auguster received counseling and agreed to refrain from corporal punishment. Williams began personally to monitor Au *402 guster’s in-class performance to ensure compliance with school board policies.
On July 8, 1998, Auguster received notice that the board would consider a recommendation by Dartez not to renew his contract. The board held a hearing on July 22 but failed to adopt the recommendation. On August 6, however, Dartez notified Auguster that the board had decided not to renew his contract for the following year. Auguster’s position eventually was filled by a white female.
II.
The board argued that Auguster had failed to establish a viable claim of discrimination. The district court, analyzing the issue under the framework of
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
III.
We review a summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same standards as did the district court, while viewing all disputed facts ,and reasonable inferences “in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party....”
Duffy v. Leading Edge Prods.,
The district court analyzed Auguster’s title VII and § 1981 claims under the framework established by
McDonnell Douglas,
according to which a plaintiff must first establish a
piirna facie
case of discrimination, whereupon the burden of production shifts to the defendant to articulate a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for its action.
Shackelford v. Deloitte & Touche, LLP,
“Although intermediate evidentiary burdens shift back and forth under this framework, ‘[t]he ultimate burden of persuading the trier of fact that the defendant intentionally discriminated against the plaintiff remains at all times with the plaintiff.’ ”
Id.
at 143,
“Evidence that the proffered reason is unworthy of credence must be enough to support a reasonable inference that the proffered reason is false; a mere shadow of doubt is insufficient.” This court has consistently held that an employee’s “subjective belief of discrimination” alone is not sufficient to warrant judicial relief.
Bauer v. Albemarle Corp.,
Auguster undisputedly established a prima facie case: He is black, he suffered an adverse employment decision, and his former position was filled by a white woman. Likewise, the school board articulated a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for its decision not to rehire Auguster: his poor evaluation, as evidenced by his inappropriate use of corporal punishment and screening of an R-rated film. Auguster admits that the events occurred, and he cannot seriously dispute that they provide ample justification for the refusal to renew his contract. 4 His case depends on the contention that the articulated justification is merely pretext for discrimination.
As evidence of pretext, Auguster argues that Dartez unilaterally refused to renew his contract in contravention of the board’s mandate to rehire Auguster. 5 That allegation is not supported by the record, which reflects only that the board reached a stalemate when voting on Dartez’s recommendation not to rehire Auguster, not that the board affirmatively voted to renew his contract. The record does support an inference that Dartez acted without legal authority in refusing to renew Auguster’s contract, because there is no evidence that the board made any decision whatsoever regarding the renewal of the contract. 6
*404 Nonetheless, the fact that Dartez acted outside his statutory authority is not probative with respect to whether the board’s articulated justification is mere pretext. There is no evidence that he acted any differently from how he would have in any other situation; indeed, the board asserts that Dartez does in fact have the authority unilaterally to make employment decisions with respect to untenured teachers.
Although the school board’s view of state law may be wrong in this respect, it does indicate that Dartez’s failure to renew Auguster was not a maverick action, as Auguster asserts, which might be evidence that the board’s articulated justification is mere pretext. Instead, Dartez’s action merely represents the mistaken understanding of both Dartez and the board that he had unilateral authority to make employment decisions, at least with respect to untenured teachers.
That alone is insufficient to establish pretext. Thus, because Auguster failed to carry his burden of establishing pretext, the district court correctly concluded that his claim cannot survive under the McDonnell Douglas framework; Auguster therefore must prove discrimination without the benefit of McDonnell Douglas’s shifting burdens.
IV.
Auguster did present some direct evidence of discrimination: the comments by Dartez to the effect that the school had “a problem ... with past black coaches, and if there was another problem, no matter what it was, that he would do his best to get rid of me, from day one.” 7 Given the overwhelming evidence supporting the school board’s legitimate justification, however, Dartez’s comments can be viewed as no more than stray remarks, which are insufficient to survive summary judgment.
In
Russell,
We analyze stray remarks under
Brown v. CSC Logic, Inc.,
The fact that Dartez told Auguster that “if there was another problem, no matter what it was, that he would do his best to get rid of [him]” is insignificant in comparison to the evidence of Auguster’s unfitness as a teacher and thus is insufficient, on its own, to establish discrimination. 10 *406 Absent, any evidence that Dartez would have been more lenient of similar indiscretions by a white teacher or that Auguster did not in fact commit the .acts cited by the school board in his evaluation, we cannot conclude that Dartez’s statement, on its own, is sufficient to meet Auguster’s burden of establishing discriminatory motive for the refusal to renew his contract.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The school board contends — and Auguster does not dispute — that Auguster was a probationary teacher with no tenure rights.
. The school board disputes the statements, and the only evidence supporting the stale-ments is Auguster's testimony. Because we are reviewing a summary judgment, however, we must assume that Auguster’s testimony is correct. See infra.
.
Bauer
was decided before
Reeves,
which changed our jurisprudence on the evidentiary consequences of a successful showing of pretext. Nothing in
Reeves,
however, abrogates
Bauer's
requirement of substantial evidence to supporl a claim of pretext.
Cf. Reeves,
. At oral argument, Auguster alleged that white teachers who had committed similar offenses were not similarly punished. If taken as true, that allegation might be evidence of disparate impact sufficient to survive summary judgment. The issue has been abandoned, however, because Auguster failed to assert it in his brief.
See Strong v. BellSouth Telecomms. Inc.,
. Auguster also argues that the articulated justification must be pretext because he already had been reprimanded for the incidents in question before the decision not to rehire him. Thus, according to Auguster, the school board could not permissibly have revisited those incidents in deciding whether to renew his contract. That argument is meritless on its face.
.The parties stipulated that "the decision to not renew Carol Auguster’s contract of employment with the Vermilion Parish School Board was made by Dr. Daniel Dartez in his sole discretion as Superintendent of Vermilion Parish Schools.” The parties disagree, however, on the meaning of the stipulation.
Auguster contends that it means Dartez acted on his own, while the school board contends that the stipulation means Dartez was vested with discretion to make the decision. Under Louisiana law, the board's interpretation appears to be impermissible: Although the statutes do not refer specifically to contract renewals, they do expressly govern the hiring of teachers and the dismissal of probationary teachers, the combination of which presumably envelops contract renewals. See La.Rev.Stat. Ann. §§ 17:81, 17:442.
Both of those statutes provide for action by the school board on the superintendent's recommendation, but not for unilateral action by the superintendent. Furthermore, the Louisiana Attorney General has interpreted the stat *404 utes to preclude delegation of those functions to the sole discretion of the superintendent. See La. Att’y Gen. Op. No. 93-654 (1993) ("Th[e] power to hire, fire, demote, transfer and promote teachers is a discretionary power vested in the school board and may not be delegated.”); La. Att’y Gen. Op. No. 80-1103 (1980) ("[T]he legislature strongly intended that tire local school board should have the final selection authority and that this selection power should not be totally in the hands of the superintendent. It is therefore the opinion of this office that both the legislative intent and plain meaning of the statute dictate that the local school board must approve and select teachers to be hired....”). Thus, although we can infer that the board attempted to vest sole authority for the decision in Dar-tez, we cannot infer that it in fact did so.
. Auguster contends that, under the
McDonnell Douglas
framework, the comments establish that the school board's asserted justification is pretext. Although discriminatory comments can be evidence of pretext,
see Russell v. McKinney Hosp. Venture,
. In
Reeves,
the employer cited the employee's poor recordkeeping as justification for dismissing him, asserting that the recordkeeping affected union relations and cost the company overtime wages. The Court found, however, that the plaintiff had produced substantial evidence that the articulated justification was pretext by explaining in detail the alleged bookkeeping discrepancies and showing that títere had never been a union grievance filed because of them; nor had the employer ever
*405
even calculated the amount of the alleged overpayments resulting from the discrepancies.
Reeves,
Likewise, in
Russell,
.
Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc.,
. In
Rubinstein,
