Between 1984 and 2000, Chrissie Washington worked from 7 a.m. until 3 p.m. instead of the standard 9-to-5 schedule at the Illinois Department of Revenue. The earlier hours allowed her to care for her son, who has Down syndrome, when he arrived home. By 1995 Washington had been promoted to Executive Secretary I. Over the next few years some of her duties were reassigned to others. Believing that this was the result of race discrimination, she filed a formal charge with state and federal officials in June 1999. That charge, she maintains, led supervisors to rescind the flex-time schedule on which her son depended.
A senior manager demanded that she work from 9 to 5 and, when she refused, her position was abolished. She was assigned to another Executive Secretary I post with a different supervisor and required to apply anew for a flex-time schedule. When that accommodation was refused, she took vacation or sick leave each day from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. until those benefits were exhausted. In August 2000 she took an unpaid leave of absence that lasted until January 2001, when she returned to work for a different supervisor who allowed her to work a 7-to-3 schedule. She contends in this suit under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that the agency moved her to a 9-to-5 schedule in retaliation for her earlier charge of discrimination. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). The parties agreed to have a magistrate judge resolve their dispute. See 28 U.S.C. § 636(c). He granted summary judgment for the agency because, he concluded, Washington had not established even a
prima facie
case of retaliation. She could not do so, the judge ruled, because a change of work hours, while salary and duties remain the same, is not an “adverse employment action.” See
Grube v. Lau Industries, Inc.,
Washington wants us to hold that an “adverse employment action” is unnecessary in retaliation suits, though it is essential (she allows) in litigation asserting discrimination with respect to wages, hours, or conditions of employment. She relies on decisions saying that proof of an “adverse employment action” is unnecessary in litigation under § 2000e-3(a), which deals with retaliation, because that section is “broader” than § 2000e-2(a), which deals with discrimination in the terms and conditions of employment. See, e.g.,
Firestine v. Parkview Health System, Inc.,
The supposed conflict among panels of this circuit is illusory (though the conflict among other circuits may be real). Retaliation may take the form of acts outside the workplace. The state’s Department of Revenue might have audited Washington’s tax returns in response to her complaint to the EEOC, or hired a private detective to search for a disreputable tidbit that could be used to intimidate her into withdrawing the complaint. When the employer’s response does not affect a complainant’s terms and conditions of employment, it is vain to look for an adverse “employment” decision.
Section 2000e-3(a) is “broader” than § 2000e-2(a) in the sense that retaliation may take so many forms, while § 2000e-2(a) is limited to discrimination “with respect to [the worker’s] compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment”. This is why we said in
Hermreiter
and similar decisions that retaliation need not entail an adverse employment action.
Title VII does not define “discrimination,” the key term not only for § 2000e-2(a) but also for § 2000e-3(a), as the latter section treats retaliation as a form of discrimination. Lack of a definition leaves unresolved the question
how important
a difference must be to count as “discrimination.” Suppose a supervisor regularly smiles or nods when a member of his own religious faith walks by, but does not change expression when an adherent of another faith passes through the office. Does this difference in treatment violate Title VII’s prohibition on religious discrimination? Courts have resisted the idea that federal law regulates matters of attitude or other small affairs of daily life— not just because of the maxim
de minimis non curat lex
(the law does not bother with trifles), see
Wisconsin Department of Revenue v. William Wrigley, Jr., Co.,
Thus the Supreme Court has held that, although any “tangible employment action” — lower pay or another “significant change in employment status, such as hiring, firing, failing to promote, reassignment with significantly different responsibilities, or a decision causing a significant change in benefits”,
Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth,
These considerations underlie decisions such as
Williams
and
Grube,
which hold that a lateral transfer that does not affect pay (or significantly affect working conditions) cannot be called discriminatory. See also
Smart v. Ball State University,
Although the anti-retaliation rule in § 2000e-3(a) is broader than the anti-discrimination rule in § 2000e-2(a) in the sense that it extends beyond pay and other tangible employment actions, nothing in § 2000e-3(a) says or even hints that the significance or materiality requirement has been dispensed with. Retaliation is a
kind of
“discrimination” under Title VII, and the Supreme Court has treated materiality or significance as integral to “discrimination” rather than to anything that § 2000e-2(a) has and § 2000e-3(a) lacks.
Spearman v. Ford Motor Co.,
The materiality requirement is built into the word “discrimination” and thus
must
apply to the anti-retaliation rule in § 2000e-3(a), whether the supposedly retaliatory acts occur in or out of the workplace. Now “material” is one of those protean words that resists further definition. This holds open some potential to say that an act that would be immaterial in some situations is material in others. For example, suppose that the employee’s charge of discrimination is designed to obtain a $10,000 annual raise. Moving that employee in response from a 100-square-foot cubicle to a 70-square-foot one, or to one with a metal rather than a wooden desk, would not be a material change in the conditions of employment, because petty bureaucratic nastiness does not dissuade a reasonable person from seeking a substantial increase in income. If instead of seeking money for himself the employee supported a colleague’s charge of discrimi
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nation, however, this sort of response might induce the employee to withhold support; it takes less to deter an altruistic act than to deter a self-interested one. As we remarked in
Herrnreiter,
To recapitulate: “discrimination” entails a requirement that the employer’s challenged action would have been material to a reasonable employee, which means that the same requirement applies to § 2000e-3(a), the anti-retaliation clause, as well as the other provisions in Title VII that use the word “discrimination.” An employer’s action is not material under § 2000e-3(a) if it would not have dissuaded a reasonable worker from making or supporting a charge of discrimination. By and large a reassignment that does not affect pay or promotion opportunities lacks this potential to dissuade and thus is not actionable. But “by and large” differs from “never.”
Suppose an employer knows that a particular worker has a nervous condition or hearing problem that makes him miserable when exposed to music for extended periods. Many people find music soothing and welcome its addition to the workplace. But if an employer sought to retaliate for a charge of discrimination by exploiting this vulnerability, moving him from a quiet office to one where Muzak plays constantly, that could be a material change if not, indeed, a constructive discharge, even under the high standard of
Pennsylvania State Police v. Suders,
This record suggests that the Illinois Department of Revenue may have a Catbert in its management, seeking out devices that would be harmless to most people but do real damage to select targets. What Washington alleges — that her job was abolished and that she was then placed in a “new” Executive Secretary I position — would for most people be no different from a change of supervisors, a step that would not be discriminatory under Ellerth and the Supreme Court’s other decisions. But because Washington was assigned to a “new position” rather than just a new supervisor, she had to reapply for a flex-time schedule. The approval she had received in 1984 covered only her “old” position, and the Department insisted that she work a normal 9-to-5 schedule at her “new” job. What the Department effectively did, then, was assign her a new supervisor and change her hours. Again this would not be materially adverse for a normal employee — but Washington was not a normal employee, and Catbert knew it. She has a vulnerability: her son’s medical condition. Working 9-to-5 was a materially adverse change for her, even though it would not have been for 99% of the staff. In practical effect the change cut her wages by 25%, because it induced her to use leave for two hours per day (her salary remained the same, but her vacation and sick leave drained away, which is an effective reduction in salary). When her leave ran out, her pay fell to zero for five months, until she found a supervisor willing to let her go at 3.
At this stage of the litigation a court must indulge all reasonable inferences in
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Washington’s favor. A jury could find that the Department set out to exploit a known vulnerability and did so in a way that caused a significant (and hence an actionable) loss. To say this is not to say that Washington necessarily has a good claim. Perhaps she responded unreasonably to the change in hours; if she had other options to care for her son without an (effective) reduction in pay, then the change in working hours would not be material. Or perhaps the Department may be able to show that it had a non-retaliatory justification. Suppose, for example, that little work was available for Washington to do during the hours of 7 to 9 a.m., before others arrived, and that the time between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. (six hours less a lunch break) was not enough to handle the office’s business, so that Washington left work for others to finish. That would be a nondiscriminatory reason for moving Washington to a different post and changing her schedule. Perhaps other considerations supported the change; or perhaps whoever was responsible did not know of Washington’s family situation. (There is no statutory obligation to seek out idiosyncratic vulnerabilities and avoid taking steps that cause injury; § 2000e-3(a) is not an accommodation requirement. See
Brown,
