MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs Kimberly and Paul Kolinek are the owners of plaintiff Blackout Sealcoat
I.
According to the complaint, the Kolineks own and operate Blackout, which has been a successful contractor since 1997, and which performed asphalt, concrete, and equipment leasing work for the CTA from approximately 2007, when it was awarded two contracts for this type of work (“CTA contract 552” and “CTA contract 343,”) until May of 2012. Plaintiffs allege that despite Blackout’s ongoing satisfactory performance of these contracts, the CTA sent Blackout a Notice of Intent to Debar in September of 2010, then sent an Amended Notice of Intent to Debar in March of 2011. Plaintiffs responded to both of these letters in writing. On May 8, 2012, defendants decided to debar plaintiffs and the following day sent them a letter informing them of that decision.
Plaintiffs’ debarment was subsequently posted on the CTA’s website, and Blackout’s contracts with the CTA terminated. On June 5, 2012, plaintiffs filed the instant action, claiming that defendants deprived them of their occupational liberty — that is, their right to pursue their chosen occupation — in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Plaintiffs seek both damages and injunctive relief.
n.
A motion to dismiss tests the sufficiency of a complaint, not its merits. Gibson v. Chicago,
A procedural due process claim mandates a two-part analysis. Pugel v. Board of Trustees of University of Illinois,
Plaintiffs do not survive the first hurdle. For the sake of economy, I address only a few of the complaint’s many flaws. To begin with, the factual material in the FAC cannot reasonably be read to situate plaintiffs’ claims within the narrow class of cases in which state action so thoroughly extinguishes an individual’s ability to pursue his or her chosen career as to threaten
The Fourteenth Amendment protects the right of individuals “to engage in any of the common occupations of life.” Board of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth,
Plaintiffs assert that their debarment “seriously threatens their ability to engage in their chosen profession,” FAC at ¶ 5, but the complaint does not substantiate this conclusory statement with the kind of factual material that would raise their right to relief “above the speculative level.” Twombly,
Nor, of course, do the referenced regulations have any bearing on plaintiffs’ ability to pursue gainful work in the private sector. Nothing in the complaint suggests that plaintiffs lack opportunities for pursuing their vocation through non-government contracts, or even that plaintiffs’ business has traditionally been focused on public-sector work. “[A] court should not simply assume, based on a plaintiffs assertions, that a wide variety of opportunities have been foreclosed.” Townsend v. Vallas,
In short, the factual allegations in the complaint are insufficient to support plaintiffs’ claim that they became “virtually unemployable” in their chosen field as a result of their debarment. Accordingly, they do not state a violation of plaintiffs’ constitutional liberty interest.
Even, however, if plaintiffs could, in good faith, amend their complaint to cure the foregoing defects, their claim would be doomed by a second problem: the complaint pleads no publication of stigmatizing information. To plead their claim properly, plaintiffs would have to allege that: “(1) [they were] stigmatized by the defendant’s conduct; (2) the stigmatizing
The allegedly stigmatizing information plaintiffs assert is: 1) the statement, published on the CTA website, that plaintiffs were debarred; and 2) the allegedly false underlying reasons for the debarment, which plaintiffs claim “are contained in the CTA’s files.” FAC at ¶¶ 63, 69. The first statement cannot be stigmatizing because, as all agree, it is true. “True but stigmatizing statements that preclude further government employment do not support” an occupational liberty claim. Strasburger v. Board of Educ., Hardin County,
For the foregoing reasons, I conclude that plaintiffs have not stated a violation of their liberty interest. Accordingly, I need not reach the issue of whether the process they were afforded with respect to their debarment was due. See McMahon v. Kindlarski,
III.
For the reasons discussed above, defendants’ motion to dismiss the First Amended Complaint is granted.
Notes
. The FAC includes allegations relating to the substance of these notices, plaintiffs’ responses to them, and the debarment proceedings. I need not address these allegations, however, because their relevance is to the adequacy of the process plaintiffs were allegedly afforded — an issue I do not reach in view of my threshold conclusion that the FAC does not articulate the deprivation of plaintiffs’ asserted constitutional right.
