MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff Michelle Bergman filed a claim in state court against Baptist Healthcare System, Inc. d/b/a Western Baptist Hospital (“WBH”) for pregnancy discrimination under Title VII and the Kentucky Civil Rights Act. WBH later removed to federal court and has moved for summary judgment. After reviewing the facts and law, the Court concludes that Bergman cannot make a proper claim under any cause of action. The Court will therefore dismiss all of Plaintiffs claims.
I.
On February 4, 2002, Plaintiff Bergman began working at WBH as a full-time infant teacher. Her duties included caring for, feeding, changing and lifting infants four to six months old. During a two-day orientation for new employees she received a copy of Baptist Healthcare’s Employee Handbook, which explained the at-will employment relationship and described various leave policies. 1 At the time the book was published in spring 2000, WBH extended the leave rights under the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq., to employees who had worked only three months for WBH and who needed a leave for their own serious health condition. Those employees were entitled to all leave and rights available under the FMLA, even though they had not worked the FMLA’s required 12 months. See 29 U.S.C. § 2611(2)(A). In September 2001, WBH changed that policy, reinstating the FMLA’s requirement that eligible employees must have worked 12 months for WBH before being entitled to FMLA leave.
At the same time, WBH created a new policy entitled the “Personal Illness Leave Policy.” Under this new policy, an employee who had worked three months at WBH would be eligible for a leave of absence for her own serious health condition. The employee would only be guaranteed a right to return to her position so long as she had not exhausted her paid time off (“PTO”) and accrued sick time while on leave. Once the employee on leave under this policy had used all of her PTO and accrued sick time, she would not be guaranteed a position to which to return. The maximum leave an employee could take under the policy was three months. In September 2001, WBH informed existing employees of the change by memoranda via the company intranet. WBH later distributed the new employee handbook incorporating the changes to new hires sometime in spring 2002 after Bergman attended orientation. 2
In early April 2002, Bergman learned that she was pregnant and soon began experiencing complications. On April 18, 2002, Bergman notified WBH that she would be unable to work until May 6, *1000 2002. Her supervisor, Pat Hayes, mistakenly allowed a two-week leave of absence even though Bergman had only worked at WBH a little over two months. Bergman returned to work, but with physical restrictions. Her doctor sent notes dated May 1 and May 22 stating that Bergman could not lift more than 20 pounds for the duration of her pregnancy. WBH’s policy allowed an employee to work with restrictions for no more than thirty days. Bergman’s due date was not until December 15, 2002, several months after the doctor ordered the restrictions. Nevertheless, WBH decided to accommodate the lifting restrictions. Hayes, her supervisor, determined that her duties need not be altered because only one infant in her room weighed around 20 pounds, and Bergman’s assistant teacher agreed to lift the heaviest infant. Bergman could lift the other infants who were smaller. Furthermore, Hayes told Bergman that she could change an infant on a mat on the floor if necessary.
In early August, Bergman suffered from additional pregnancy complications and experienced extreme pain. Her doctor determined she was in early labor and scheduled emergency surgery to help her carry her pregnancy to term. Without the surgery, Bergman believed that she would lose her baby. On August 6, Bergman informed WBH that she was having surgery in two days and would need a week to recover. Upon returning to work, she would then be physically limited to working only half days and “light duty only.” When Pat Hayes inquired what light duty meant, Bergman told her she would be unable to lift at all. Bergman alleges that Hayes promised her she could stay at WBH as a “breaker,” which is someone who substitutes for other teachers while they are on breaks.
On August 7, Bergman worked a half-day. That same day, Hayes spoke with Dick Thomas, WBH’s Executive Director of Human Resources, as well as Ann Croft, Employee Health Nurse, regarding Bergman’s new restrictions. They determined that no positions at the Child Care Center were available for Bergman with her new restrictions and that she would no longer be able to work for WBH. Even the breaker position required the employee to lift children when necessary. Hayes called Bergman at home the night of August 7 to tell her that they needed to talk prior to the surgery. The next day Hayes met with Bergman and terminated her. Bergman claims that Hayes stated Thomas did not want her to work and he was concerned Bergman would be “a risk.”
At the time of her termination, Bergman had 16 PTO hours and just under 17 hours of accrued sick time. Bergman was eligible for re-employment as a caregiver or infant assistant, but she never re-applied for those positions after childbirth. She has not applied for any other jobs in the childcare industry.
II.
Bergman alleges that she was terminated because of her pregnancy. Title VII and the Kentucky Civil Rights Act prohibit an employer from discriminating against an employee “because of sex,” which includes discrimination on the basis of pregnancy. 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e(k), 2000e-2(a); KRS 344.030(8), 344.040. One proves such a case by offering either direct or circumstantial evidence.
See Prebilich-Holland v. Gaylord Entm’t Co.,
A.
To establish a
prima facie
case of pregnancy discrimination, Bergman must show that “(1) she was pregnant, (2) she was qualified for her job, (3) she was subjected to an adverse employment decision, and (4) there is a nexus between her pregnancy and the adverse employment decision.”
Prebilich-Holland,
First, Bergman cannot show her qualification for the job because she cannot perform either the full-time infant teacher job or the “breaker” job. After her surgery, she was physically limited to working only half-days and no lifting for the four months remaining in her pregnancy. These restrictions would have precluded anyone, not just a pregnant employee, from working as a full-time infant teacher.
Second, the evidence does not suggest a nexus between her pregnancy and the termination of her employment. Initially, WBH accommodated Bergman’s restrictions ordered by her doctor at the outset of her pregnancy. Although Bergman was later found ineligible for leave in April, WBH still gave her several days off work in April and May to take care of pregnancy complications before asking her to return to work. And, even though WBH’s policy generally allowed only 30 days of restrictions, WBH permitted her to work with a twenty-pound lifting restriction for the several months remaining in her pregnancy. Not until Bergman stated that she would return from surgery in August with no-lifting and half-day restrictions, which made her incapable of doing her job, did WBH take more drastic action.
Bergman could show a nexus between her pregnancy and her termination by offering evidence that she was treated differently than a similarly situated employee outside the protected class, here defined by pregnancy.
See Mitchell v. Toledo Hosp.,
This sequence of events suggests that her termination was based on the fact that she physically could not perform her job duties, not her pregnancy status. None of this evidence tends to show discrimination. Bergman has therefore not established a prima facie case of pregnancy discrimination.
B.
Even if Bergman set forth a prima facie ease, WBH has offered a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for termination: Bergman could not perform the required duties of an infant teacher. Bergman was hired as a full-time infant teacher. In this position, she was required to lift infants and children at unexpected times throughout the day. WBH could not place her in a room with children and guarantee that she would not have to pick a child up or lift an object, such as a fallen toy or chair. Since WBH has offered a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for Bergman’s termination, she must now offer evidence from which a jury could conclude that this stated reason was a mere pretext.
Bergman can demonstrate pretext by “showing that the proffered reason (1) has no basis in fact, (2) did not actually motivate the defendant’s challenged conduct, or (3) was insufficient to warrant the challenged conduct.”
Seay v. Tenn. Valley Auth.,
The Supreme Court recently stated in
Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc.
that “an employer would be entitled to judgment as a matter of law if the record conclusively revealed some ... nondiscriminatory reason for the employer’s decision....”
III.
Bergman also alleges a claim for breach of express or implied contract. Bergman, however, cannot recover for breach of an employment contract because she was an at-will employee of WBH. Bergman had no written or verbal employment contract with WBH and could have been terminated at any time for any reason.
Firestone Textile Co. v. Meadows,
Nevertheless, Bergman claims that, under the doctrine of promissory estoppel, WBH is liable for terminating Bergman rather than allowing her to take a leave of absence after her surgery and to stay in her current job with the added restrictions. Under Kentucky law, the elements of promissory estoppel are: “(1) a promise; (2) which the promisor should reasonably expect to induce action or forbearance on the part of the promisee; (3) which does induce such action or forbearance; and (4) injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise.”
Res-Care, Inc. v. Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc.,
The only “promise” that appears in the record is Hayes’s statement about the “breaker” position. Arguably, Bergman may also have been under the impression that she would be permitted to take leave following surgery. Even assuming that both these facts amount to “promises,” the evidence simply cannot be stretched to suggest that such “promises” by WBH induced Bergman to follow a particular course of action to her detriment. Bergman scheduled her surgery before speaking with anyone at WBH, and WBH informed Bergman prior to her surgery that it could not accommodate her restrictions and would have to terminate her. In fact, Hayes called Bergman at home the evening of August 7 and told her that they needed to meet the next day before the surgery. The facts show that Bergman had already decided to have the surgery before speaking with WBH about her options. Thus, there is no evidence that WBH made any promises to Bergman that it could reasonably have expected to or that did in fact induce any action on her part.
Moreover, Bergman cannot show detrimental reliance. Bergman admitted that she would have had the surgery and followed the doctor’s restrictions regardless of what anyone at WBH told her. If she did not, she believed she would have lost her baby. She did not reconsider having her surgery when told that she would be terminated. The facts do not show that she was induced to have surgery by any statement of WBH, and she cannot now claim that injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the alleged “promise.” Bergman therefore cannot prove a claim of promissory estoppel.
The Court will enter an order consistent with this Memorandum Opinion.
ORDER
Defendant has moved Tor summary judgment. Being otherwise sufficiently advised,
*1004 IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendant’s motion for summary judgment is SUSTAINED and Plaintiffs claims are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
This is a final order.
Notes
. Bergman signed a receipt acknowledging she had received the handbook.
. WBH claims that, before the revised handbook was distributed in spring 2002, the company’s Benefits Coordinator, Blanche Hensley, verbally explained the new leave policy change to new hires, including Bergman, during the February 2002 orientation. Plaintiff does not recall this part of the presentation by Hensley. Regardless of which version of the facts is trae, Plaintiff's knowledge of the new policy change is not a material fact in the outcome of this case. Even assuming Bergman had not been informed of the new leave policy, she was still unable to perform her job as an infant teacher or “breaker” under her physical restrictions ordered post-surgery. Moreover, she still had not accumulated enough PTO and sick leave to take a week off after surgery and be assured she could return to the same job.
