MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This сase involves an alleged violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. (the Act). The defendant, National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) filed a motion for summary judgment on the ground that plaintiff, Ross Caldwell (Caldwell), failed to file a timely charge with the EEOC. Both parties have briefed the issues and oral argument was held on December 3, 1984. For the reasons that follow, dеfendant’s motion for summary judgment will be granted.
Summary judgment must be granted when the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions on file and any affidavits demonstrate that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). In reviewing the pleadings and supporting documents, they must be viewed in the light most favоrable to the non-moving party.
*373
Trulson v. Trane Co.,
Plaintiff was employed by the NAHB beginning on June 1, 1972 as an Assistant Director of the Association Services Department at the initial annual salary of $14,000.00. In that position, he was to function as the NAHB resident field representative in Division “F”. Throughout his employment with NAHB, the plaintiff served as Regional Representative. NAHB abolished the Regional Representative Program, in which Caldwell was employed in the Fall of 1981, to be effective October 31, 1981. Caldwell was informed of that decision by letter dated September 25, 1981 which also contained information with respect to severance pay that Caldwell would receive.
At the time the Regional Representatives Program was abolished, the Board of Directors оf NAHB created the Association Management Services Division (AMSD) which provided some of the services previously provided by the Regional Representative Program. The AMSD consisted of four employees as opposed to twelve positions authorized under the Regional Representatives Program.
After the announcement of the abolition of the Regional Representative Program at the 1981 Fall Board Meeting, several NAHB members and staff persons of local affiliates wrote to David Stahl requesting that plaintiff be retained as an employee of NAHB, either in the position of Regional Representative or in a new position. Plaintiff was temporarily reemployed by NAHB to continue perfоrming his duties as Regional Representative during the time AMSD was being staffed and organized. This temporary employment was effective January 4, 1982, and was originally supposed to last until March 21st. The March 21st date was later extended until July 2, 1982, which allowed plaintiff to obtain additional vested rights in the NAHB Pension Plan. Plaintiff was not informed by NAHB that his continuing performance on a temporary basis of the duties of a Regional Representative was any indication that his position as Regional Representative had not been abolished or that it had been reinstated. Plaintiff believed himself to be a victim of age discrimination by reason of the abolition of the Regional Representative Program in the Fall of 1981.
Staffing of the AMSD was done by James Chiswell, Staff Vice President for the AMSD after he was hired by Executive Vice President David E. Stahl. In addition to the position of Staff Vice President, three positions were open in the newly created AMSD for Assistant Directors. Applicants for these positions were invited from state and local officers of local chapters affiliated with NAHB. Applicants were sought who had a minimum of five years experience as an association manager, preferably in the home building industry, who could excel in all aspects of association management, who were interested in advising and providing educational programs for local and state leadership, and who could be creative innovators with high energy levels, flexible approaches to problem solving, good analytical skills, and capable of helping others do their jobs effectively. The qualifications expected of applicants for AMSD were disseminated at the 1981 Fall Board Meeting, and in a memorandum of Executive Vice President Stahl which Caldwell had seen in October 1981.
Plaintiff applied for all available positions within the AMSD, including not only the positions of Assistant Director but also that of Membership Director after the termination of Kip Orr from that position. His original application letter was written in late September or early October. He met with NAHB Executive Vice President Stahl sometime in the middle of October, and Caldwell was informed he would be considered. When the job of Membеrship Director in AMSD became open, Caldwell submitted a letter of application to Jim Chiswell for that position. Sometime in March or April, plaintiff met with Jim Chis-well and was told he was being considered *374 for Membership Director and for positions remaining open within the AMSD.
Plaintiff was not hired into any of these positions within AMSD. Two of those hired as Assistant Directors were Bill Carr and Bob MсPeck, both within the protected age group, and both having more years of experience as Regional Representatives with NAHB, and also having direct experience either in association management or in education. The only Assistant Director hired who was outside the protected age group, Cindi Warner, had twelve years experience in association management. James Chiswell, hired as Staff Vice President for AMSD, had several years experience in association management, including being an Executive Office of an NAHB affiliate state organization. James DeLizia, hired as Membership Director, had over ten years experience in association related work, as well as educational background and communication skills superior to Caldwell’s. James DeLizia is also outside the protected age group.
Plaintiff was informed by telephone on May 20,1982, that he had not been selected for the last available position within AMSD. Plaintiff filed a grievance with NAHB on May 24, 1982. Jim Chiswell called plaintiff in response to his grievance and explained thаt those hired were more qualified than plaintiff. This conversation was followed up with a letter responding to plaintiff’s grievance on June 9, 1982. NAHB did not misrepresent or fraudulently conceal from Caldwell the facts necessary to support his charge or induce him to delay filing his charge with the EEOC. Caldwell filed his charge of discrimination with the EEOC on August 9, 1982 and an amended charge оn August 20, 1982 alleging that he was discriminated against on the basis of age. Caldwell’s charge filed with the EEOC reads as follows:
I worked for the National Association of Home Builders for approximately ten years. I understand it to be a non-profit Illinois corporation headquartered in Washington, D.C. It is an educational and lobbying organization for home builders.
My job was as a regionаl representative. There were approximately 12 regional representatives in the employ of NAHB for the last several years. By the fall of 1981, almost all of the regional representatives were within the protected age classification of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. I am 59V2 years old. Apparently plans were developed in late 1981 and were implemented in 1982 to do away with the regional representatives and to open a new division entitled Association Management Services Division to carry on the same function as was carried on by the regional representatives. I and the vast majority of the regional representatives were terminated and the persons hired into the Association Management Services Division were, at least for the most part, in their 20’s and 30's. All of my evaluations by the NAHB were excellent and I was always told that I was an extremely beneficial asset of the Association. I believe that I have been discriminated against on the basis of my age. I was terminated finally on July 2, 1982.
I applied for the position of director of membership services as well as all positions within the Association Management Services Division. I was not hired in the position of director of membership services or in any position in the Association Management Services Division. I believe that three of the five persons holding the positions for which I applied are under the protected age rangе of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. Those three persons under the protected age range of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act were also not previously employees of the National Association of Home Builders.
I believe that I have also been discriminated against in terms and conditions of employment because the pay and bеnefits extended to me during my employment by the National Association of Home Builders was substantially less advantageous than those extended to per *375 sons now acting as director of the membership services and acting as members of the Association Management Services Division.
Section 7(d)(1) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 626(d)(1), requires that an individual file a charge alleging unlawful discrimination within 180 days after the claimed unlawful practice occurred. The 180 days period is controlling here since Indiana is not a deferral State for purpose of the ADEA.
Keitz v. Lever Bros. Co.,
The first step in determining the timeliness of a discrimination complaint is to identify precisely the “unlawful employment practice” alleged by the employee.
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
*376 The decision to terminate plaintiff, along with the other Regional Representatives, was made at the 1981 Fall Board Meeting of NAHB during September, communicated to the plaintiff at that meeting, and restated in a letter from the Executive Vice President of the NAHB to Caldwell on September 25, 1981. Therеfore, the time for plaintiff to file his charge of discrimination began to run no later than the latter part of September, at least by the time he received the termination letter dated September 25. However, even if the court would consider the date that plaintiff was terminated and received his severance pay, October 31, 1981, as the latest datе upon which the time period for filing began to run, Caldwell’s charge, which was filed August 6, 1982 was still untimely.
Plaintiff argues in his reply to defendant’s motion for summary judgment that his claim accrued on May 20, 1982 when he was informed that he had not been selected for the last remaining position with the AMSD because the NAHB had not followed its terms of employment in repositioning or rehiring plaintiff. Plaintiff did not howevеr state in his charge, or even imply, that he was basing an independent claim of age discrimination on any alleged promises in the NAHB Employee Handbook. It is a well established principle of employment discrimination litigation that claims which are not addressed in the charge of discrimination may not be raised in subsequent litigation, because of the statutory pоlicy expressed in both Title VII and the ADEA that potential defendants must become aware of the charges against them so that good faith negotiation and an appropriate opportunity by the EEOC to conciliate the charge is obtained.
See, e.g., Wippel v. Prudential Insurance Company,
33 FEP Cases 412, 413 (D.M.D.1982). The courts, including the Seventh Circuit, have held that, in order to be a basis for subsequent litigation, the plaintiff’s charge of discrimination must encompass the claims asserted.
Limongelli v. Postmaster General,
Further, the plaintiff has not satisfied the court that the filing deadline should be tolled for equitable reasоns. In
Wallace J. Vaught v. R.R. Donnelley & Sons Co.,
The facts of this case do not warrant a tolling of the 180 day time limitation imposed on plaintiff to file with the EEOC. The limitation period began running in September 1981 and plaintiff’s August 1982 filing was untimely. Accordingly, defendant’s motion for summary judgment is hereby GRANTED. SO ORDERED.
Notes
.
In his brief and argument, plaintiff argued that his case should be analyzed under
Hishon v. King & Spalding,
— U.S. —,
