OPINION
In this age discrimination case, the plaintiff, Mary D. Croce, appeals from the Superior Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants (viz., “the State of Rhode Island, Office of Adjutant General” and “Major General Reginald Centracchio [as] Adjutant General”). The plaintiff contends that the Superior Court erred in granting summary judgment on statute of limitations grounds because (1) there was an allegedly continuing pattern of discriminatory conduct and (2) at least one of the allegedly discriminatory acts purportedly took place within the statute of limitations.
This case came before the Supreme Court fоr oral argument on February 1, 2005, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After hearing the arguments of counsel and examining the memoranda submitted by the parties, we are of the opinion that cause has not been shown and that this case should be summarily decided.
Facts and Travel
On September 15, 1995, when plaintiff was seventy-two years old, she was notified that she was to be laid off from her position as a fiscal clerk for the State of Rhode Island, Office of Adjutant General. *77 To avoid being laid off, plaintiff exercised her contractual right to “bump” into another (albeit lower paying) position within the same department in the Adjutant General’s office.
The plaintiff contends that a series of events that occurred after she assumed her new position constituted a continuing pattern of discriminatory conduct that related back to the layoff notice that she had received in September of 1995. According to plaintiff, from October 1995 to February 14, 1996, she performed the same duties in her new position as she had performed when she was a fiscal clerk, but she was compensated at a lower pay rate. Shе also alleges that it was necessary for her to climb stairs due to the fact that she was relocated to a fourth-floor office in a building that did not have an elevator. The plaintiff further points out that, on August 1, 1996, she was transferred to Camp Fo-garty in East Greenwich, which transfer required her to undertake a thirty-mile roundtrip daily commute. The plaintiff also alleges that, in March of 2000, she was not given a pay upgrade when the younger clerks in her department received one and that, when her coworkers received new computers, she received only an old computer, which was not installed. She further says that her coworkers were offered computer training, but that she did not receive any such offer.
The plaintiff commenced the instant action by filing a complaint on December 22, 1998 (the original complaint). 1 Count 1 of that complaint was brought under the federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. Count 2 alleged that plaintiff was a victim of age discrimination in violation of the Rhode Island Civil Rights Act of 1990 (RICRA). See G.L. 1956 chapter 112 of title 42. Count 3 contained an equal protection claim brought pursuant to the Rhode Island Constitution.
On April 5, 2000, a motion justice granted the state’s motion to dismiss with respect to counts 1 and 3 of thе original complaint. In October 2000, the state moved for summary judgment on count 2 of the original complaint.
On November 21, 2000 plaintiffs motion to amend her complaint was granted. In her amended complaint, plaintiff added Major General Reginald Centracchio in his official capacity as a defendant, and she asserted an additional claim of age discrimination under the State Fair Employment Practices Act (FEPA). See G.L. 1956 chapter 5 of title 28.
On January 23, 2001, a justice of the Superior Court conducted a hearing on the state’s motion for summary judgment. The motion justice found that none of the events alleged to have occurred after plaintiff received her layoff notice was facially discriminatory. She then granted summary judgment in favor of the state with respect to the RICRA claim on the grounds that the claim was barred by the statute of limitations. 2
Thereafter, defendants filed another motion for summary judgment with respect to the RICRA claim against Major General Centracchio and with respect to the FEPA claims against both defendants.
*78 In support of their motion for summary judgment, defendants submitted an affidavit indicating that plaintiffs entire unit had been transferred to Camp Fogarty to accommodate the space needs of the dеpartment. 3 On the issue of plaintiffs performance of her former duties, defendants pointed out that, once it was learned that plaintiff had been continuing to perform her old duties, those duties were reassigned. The defendants also indicated that plaintiff had admitted in her deposition testimony that her pursuit of a pay upgrade was not related to an increase in job duties or responsibility, but rather was centered on her wanting to get her old job back. With respect to computer usage, defendants pointed out that plaintiff had further admitted in her deposition testimony that she had no problem finishing her work or having to share a computer with another employee and that having the use of a computer for one or two hours a day was sufficient. The defendants further indicated that plaintiff had received a new computer and had been given computer training before she filed the amended complaint.
On June 21, 2002, a motion justice granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment in its entirety. Judgment was entered on July 2, 2002, and plaintiff timely appealed. 4
The plaintiff raises only one issue on appeal — namely, the appropriateness of the Superior Court’s having granted summary judgment on statute of limitations grounds with respect to her FEPA and RICRA claims.
Analysis
When we review the granting of summary judgment by the Superior Court, we do so on a
de novo
basis.
Kells v. Town of Lincoln,
The plaintiff asserts that the motion justice erred in granting summary judgment in favor of defendants. She asserts that her case was not time-barred because there was a pattern of continuing discriminatory acts and that at least one of those discriminatory acts occurred within statute of limitations period. 5
*79
The FEPA contains a one year statute of limitations. Section 28-5-17(a).
See Roadway Express, Inc. v. Rhode Island Commission for Human Rights,
However, with respect to the RICRA, we have never had occasion to hold what limitations period is applicable. In the case of
Rathbun v. Autozone, Inc.,
It is clear that the allegedly discriminatory act which lies at the core of plaintiffs сase occurred, if at all, more than three years before plaintiff filed the complaint.
The layoff of September 1995 constituted a discrete act. The limitations period began to run at that time, and plaintiff has failed to show why the continuing violation exception should be available to her in this case.
See Goldman v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
*80
This case has distinct similarities with the First Circuit case of
Jensen v. Frank,
“It is beside the point that [plaintiff! continued to feel the effects of the firing in 1984 and beyond. In general, Title VII’s temporal restrictions are measured from the occurrence of a triggering event; that the event’s sequelae linger does not coterminously extend the limitation period. In the rather modest garden where continuing violation jurisprudence may lawfully flourish, courts must be careful to differentiate between discriminatory acts and the ongoing injuries which are the natural, if bitter, fruit of such acts.” Id. at 523.
In Jensen, Circuit Judge Selya described at some length what a сontinuing violation is. He noted that there are two types of continuing violation — (1) a serial violation, which is “composed of a number of discriminatory acts emanating from the same discriminatory animus, each act constituting a separate wrong” id. at 522; 8 and (2) a systemic violation, which relates to a continuing “discriminatory policy or practiсe,” id. at 523. The layoff of September 1995 was a one-time event and therefore does not fall within the parameters of a serial violation. And neither can one perceive in the record evidence of a “discriminatory policy or practice,” as is required for there to be а systemic violation. It is clear to us that the layoff does not fall into either category. It was a onetime administrative act — not an act that was repeated over and over, and it was not the product of a discriminatory policy or practice.
In our judgment, the layoff of September 1995 was no longer actionable when the original complaint was filed in December of 1998. By that point, the statutes of limitations pertaining to the allegedly discriminatory nature of the layoff had forever run — and the “continuing violation” exception may not properly be invoked by one who claims tо have been wronged by a one-time business decision such as a layoff.
The other acts to which plaintiff points (e.g., the fact that she and the other members of her office were required to move from Providence to Camp Fogarty in East Greenwich) 9 bear no indicia of discriminatory animus. 10
*81 We emphasize that, even if plaintiffs claims concerning the various purported acts of discrimination that plaintiff alleges occurred within the statute of limitations were not properly dismissed pursuant to a Super.R.Civ.P. 56 motion (and we have held that they were), they still would not have served to revivify plaintiffs claim with respect to the September 1995 lаyoff. That claim ceased to be actionable no later than three years after the layoff — whereas plaintiff did not commence her legal action until December of 1998.
Conclusion
In view of the plaintiffs failure to have established a basis for the application of the “continuing violation” concept, we hold that the pertinent statutes of limitations control and that this action is time-barred to the extent that it relates to the layoff of September 1995; and we also hold that the non-time-barred counts alleging other discriminatory acts were properly dismissed by summary judgment.
Accordingly, we affirm thе judgment of the Superior Court. The record may be returned to that court.
Notes
. The plaintiff originally named only "the State of Rhode Island, Office of Adjutant General” as defendant. She later amended her complaint, however, to add Major General Reginald Centracchio, in his capacity as Adjutant General, as a named defendant.
. The Superior Court did not address the FEPA claim at that time because it was added after the state had filed its motion for summary judgment; and, therefore, the state did not present any argument concerning this issue at the hearing on January 23, 2001.
. In her deposition testimony, plaintiff acknowledged that her entire office, which was composed of several employees, was transferred to Camp Fogarty at the same time as she was.
. The judgment of July 2, 2002, from which plaintiff has appealed, expressly states that it was “entered in accordance with the Decision rendered on June 21, 2002 * *
.It is a basic principle in discrimination law that the “[p]laintiff bears the burden of demonstrating that at least one discriminatory act occurred within the limitations period.”
Muniz-Cabrero v. Ruiz,
. After acknowledging that this Court has not spoken on the subject of RICRA’s limitations period, the First Circuit in Rathbun engaged in an extended analysis in an attempt to determine what rule this Court most likely would adopt with respect to that subject.
Rathbun v. Autozone, Inc.,
While the First Circuit in
Rathbun
certainly presents cogent arguments in support of its conclusion, we should note that the First Circuit in that case reversed a tightly reasoned opinion by the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island, which held that thе limitations period for RICRA claims should be one year.
Rathbun v. Autozone, Inc.,
. It is widely recognized that statutes of limitations are “designed to keep stale claims out of court.”
Muniz-Cabrero,
. As an example of a serial viоlation, Judge Selya refers to an employee who is “passed over several times for promotion, based on the same (actionable) animus.”
Jensen v. Frank,
. The plaintiff's claim relative to the fact that her office unit was required to move from their former location in Providence to Camp Fogarty in East Greenwich may be revelatory of plaintiff's misunderstanding of what the antidiscrimination statutes are meant to address. Employers (including governmental employers) sometimes make decisions that cause inconvenience or discomfort for employees, but those decisions are actionable only if plaintiff can establish that they were motivated by a discriminatory animus.
The First Circuit well expressed this concept when it said: "Courts may not sit as super personnel departments, assessing the merits — or even the rationality — of employers' nondiscriminatoiy business decisions.”
Mesnick v. General Electric Co.,
.We have reviewed the materials submitted in support of the defendants' motion for summary judgment, and we believe that the motion justice correctly granted summary *81 judgment with respect to the other allegedly discriminatory acts.
