OPINION DENYING SUMMARY JUDGMENT
OPINION
Plaintiff James F. Curley sued his employer, defendant St. John’s University (“University”), claiming that his new assignment to teach undergraduate rather than graduate courses in the fall of 1996 constituted age discrimination in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., the New York State Human Rights Law (“State HRL”), N.Y.Exec.L. § 290 et seq., and the New York City Human Rights Ordinance (“City HRO”), N.Y. City Admin.Code § 8-101 et seq. The University moved for summary judgment under Fed.R.Civ.Proc. 56. The motion is denied because, for the reasons given below, a reasonable fact finder could conclude that the change in Dr. Cur-ley’s teaching assignment was a material adverse employment action and that age was a motivating factor in the University’s decision to take that action.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Undisputed Facts
Dr. James F. Curley is a tenured professor in the Department of Psychology (“Department”) in the University’s academic unit, St. John’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (“College”). As of July 28, 1998, Dr. Curley was 62 years old. Initially hired by the University as an Assistant Professor of Psychology in 1973, Dr. Curley was given tenure in 1978. Dr. Curley has not supervised a dissertation since 1988, has not requested any research grants recently, and with the exception of a two-page newsletter has not published since 1990. See Def.Ex. 5; Tr. Summ.J. Hr’g (hereinafter, “Tr.”) 53-56. All University faculty, except those at the law school, are represented by a labor organization, the St. John’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors — Faculty Association at St. John’s University (the “Faculty Union”), and have signed a collective bargaining agreement. See Def.Ex. 2.
Dr. Raymond DiGiuseppe is a tenured Department faculty member and is Director of the Graduate School Psychology Program (“Program”). The Progrаm now offers a Master of Science degree, having discontinued its doctoral program in or around 1984. Until September 1987, when Dr. DiGiuseppe was hired as a faculty member and Director of the Program, Dr. Curley was the only Department faculty member who had been assigned core School Psychology courses. In February 1996, the University submitted a proposal to the New York" State Education Department for approval of a Psy.D. doctoral degree program in School Psychology.
In the spring of 1996, Dr. Curley requested to teach three graduate courses in the fall 1996 semester: Psychology 715, Psychology 726, and Psychology 752. Each semester, the preliminary teaching schedule at the University is considered by the Personnel & Budget Committee (“P & B Committee”), a pеer review committee composed solely of the Department Chair and four elected faculty members. The P & B Committee recommends a teaching schedule to the Dean of the College. The graduate teaching schedule is also reviewed by the Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. The members of the P & B Committee in 1996 were Dr. Raymond DiGiuseppe (then age 47), Dr. Jeffrey Fagen (then age 47), Dr. John Hogan (then age 45), Dr. Jeffrey Nevid (then age 45), and Dr. Alice Powers (then age 52).
Dr. DiGiuseppe submitted to the P & B Committee a memorandum, dated June 13, 1996, summarizing complaints he reported that he received about Dr. Curley’s teaching and academic credentials. See Def.Ex. 13. On or about June 18, 1996, Dr. Curley received a copy of the memo and a cоpy of letters written by graduate students criticizing his graduate teaching. In response, Dr. Curley gave the P & B Committee his own memorandum, dated June 28, 1996. See Def .Ex. 16. On July 11, 1996, Dr. Curley spoke at the meeting of the P & B Committee and distributed to it a package consisting of the first page of articles Dr. Curley gave *184 students in his classes. See Def.Ex. 17. Dr. Curley did not mention age discrimination at the meeting.
On July 15, 1996, the P & B Committee unanimously recommended a teaching schedule to the Dean of the College that assigned Dr. Curley to teach only undergraduate classes in the fall 1996 semester. The Dean accepted this recommendation. Dr. Curley received notification of this decision by letter dated July 15, 1996 and did not file a grievance challenging it. In the fall 1996 semester, the faculty who taught the graduate courses Dr. Curley had requested, Psychology 715, Psychology 726, and Psychоlogy 752, were Dr. Lynne Thies (then age 46), Dr. Helen Stevens (then age 46), and Dr. Joseph Teta (then age 48), respectively.
In a memorandum dated June 27, 1996, Dr. James Fagen and Dr. DiGiuseppe wrote to the Dean of Faculty, Reverend David O’Connell, in order to “bring to [his] attention several serious concerns [they] had about the behavior of Dr. James Curley.” Pl.Ex. M. The Dean reports that he kept this letter in Dr. Curley’s file but did not otherwise act on it:
As you are undoubtedly aware, the Psychology Department Personnel & Budget Committee is currently reviewing several complaints against Dr. Curley from current and former students in the graduate program in school psychology, as well as from externship and internship supervisors connected with this program. These complaints deal with the ability of Dr. Curley to effectively teach graduate courses in school psychology, r The Committee intends to determine whether to continue to assign graduate courses to Dr. Curley. The material presented below is separate from that issue and, we believe, raises serious questions about whether Dr. Cur-ley should be permitted to continue as a faculty member at the University. We have grouped the instances of unprofessional behavior on the part of Dr. Curley into three categories: Unprofessional Conduct with Faculty, Unprofessional Conduct with Graduate Assistants, and Unprofessional Conduct with Other Graduate Students. Id.
B. Disputed Facts
1. The University’s Case
As evidence of Dr. Curley’s unsatisfactory performance, the University offers the following complaints about Dr. Curlеy. First, experts in the field from outside the University criticized his work. Academic experts evaluating the University’s prospects for approval of a doctoral program found his credentials substandard, writing that his “record of academic scholarship would be judged below expectations for faculty at his rank and years of experience.” Def.Ex. 12, at C1126. School psychologists from at least eight Nassau County schools who supervised Dr. Cur-ley’s graduate students complained that they had to teach those students basic skills that Dr. Curley should have taught them. See Def.Ex. 13, at C39-40.
Second, numerous graduate students voiced various criticisms of Dr. Curley’s teaching. In letters to Dr. DiGiuseppe, they complained that Dr. Curley: “arrived late to every single class session,” Def. Notice Mot. Summ.J., Bologna Aff., Ex. 1; “spent two hours filling us in on his opinion of current events” rather than cover syllabus material, id.; cut classes short and “warned his students not to complain” about it, Def. Notice Mot.Summ.J., Boyce Aff., Ex. 1; “rarely provided students with recent literature,” Def. Ex. 38, Casale Letter; and failed to teach students adequately how to administer, score, or interpret personality tests, see Def. Notice Mot.Summ.J., MaeEwan Aff., Ex. 1. There also were criticisms from graduate assistants, see Tr. 65, and undergraduate students, see Def.Ex. 14.
Third, faculty members complained that Dr. Curley’s was ineffective as a core course instructor, signed off on incorrect diagnoses prepared by his students, and allowed students to make errors in scoring tests in clinical settings. See Def.Exs. 7, 8, 13. In a letter to Dr. Curley informing him of the teaching assignment changе, Dr. Jeffrey Fa-gen, a professor who chaired the Department and served on the P & B Committee, closed by writing:
*185 You have played a major role in school psychology at St. John’s University for many years. The committee regrets having to take the action we have taken. However, we have concluded that the educational, ethical, and legal implications are so overpowering, we have no choice. Def. Ex. 18.
These shortcomings were legitimate grounds for action, the University contends, because the collective bargaining agreement requires Dr. Curley “to be an effective teacher and scholar.” Def.Ex. 2 ¶ 10.4(b). More specifically, the agreement provides that “[t]he faculty member recognizes that effective teaching requires continued research as well as continued improvement of pedagogical methods.” Id. ¶ 10.4(c). Alteration of Dr. Curley’s course load was an appropriate response to his failure to meet these standards adequately, the University asserts.
The allegedly discriminatory statements by Dr. DiGiuseppe, the University argues, are immaterial for two reasons. First, the statements do not reflect age animus. Rather, they are a combination of harmless comments and criticisms of Dr. Curley that focus on his shortcomings, not his age. Second, any discriminatory comments by Dr. DiGiu-seppe are mere stray remarks. A faculty peer of Dr. Curley with a very limited role in any University actions, Dr. DiGiuseppe is not enough of a decision-maker fоr his comments to show University motives. Rather, Dr. DiGiuseppe is only a “peer” of Dr. Curley, Tr. 31, while “the dean makes the final decision[, s]o it is the dean who is the decision-maker,” Tr. 63.
2. Dr. Curley’s Case
Dr. Curley argues that the change in his teaching assignments was adverse because “graduate professors are held in higher esteem, ... get better paying jobs,” and teach fewer and less favorable hours than undergraduate professors. Tr. 14. Dr. Sharon-ann Gopaul-McNicol, a full-time Assistant Professor of Psychology in the Program from 1993 to 1996, concurs:
There is no question that full time professional academicians, including myself, distinguish between teaching at the graduate level versus teaching at the undergraduate level. Professionally, when a faculty member teaches graduate cоurses, he/she is better recognized in the profession, which can lead to better career and consultation employment opportunities.... [RJemoving a faculty member from graduate courses and assigning him/her to exclusively teach undergraduate courses was considered as a disciplinary punishment. Pl.Ex. G ¶ 17.
The substance of the work also differs in a manner relevant to Dr. Curley’s field of expertise. “At St. John’s you can only teach ‘School Psychology’ at the graduate level.” Id.
As support for his allegation of age-based animus in the University’s decision-making, Dr. Curley offers his deposition and the'affidavit of Dr. Gopaul-McNicol. Dr. Curley stated in his deposition that Dr. DiGiuseppe asked whether Dr. Curley was going to “stick around” after his sixtieth birthday, queried “why would yоu want to stay around here after you are 60?,” and opined that “when you hit the big 60 you are over the hill.” Pl.Ex. I, at 338, 351, 353. Dr. Curley claims that age bias led the University to seek his retirement by worsening his schedule.
Dr. Gopaul-McNicol agreed with Dr. Cur-ley:
[T]here was age animosity directed toward older/senior faculty at the Psychology Department by the Administration. In 1994, the Chairman, Dr. Fagen, discouraged me from socializing with older/senior faculty. I observed that older faculty members were shunned by the Administration. On many occasions, Dr. DiGiuseppe would refer to Dr. Curley’s age, pointing out that he could write about the history of the School Psychology, since Dr. Curley was there from the beginning (The School Psychology Program was created over seventy years ago). Pl.Ex. G ¶ 13.
In discussing two job applicants with her over lunch in March 1996, Dr. DiGiusеppe said
that he wished that Dr. Curley was dead, so that he could offer the positions to both younger candidates_ On other occasions, Dr. DiGiuseppe told me that he *186 wished the ‘University’ had retirement age at 60, so Dr. Curley would retire. This would allow him to replace him with a younger faculty member. Pl.Ex, G ¶ 14.
Dr. Gopaul-McNicol further claimed that Dr. DiGiuseppe and others falsely asserted that she was a witness to unprofessional conduct by Dr. Curley. See Pl.Ex. G ¶ 16.
Dr. Curley argues that Dr. DiGiuseppe was a decision-maker whose views infected the decision-making process. While Dr. Di-Giuseppe was a faculty member covered by the same collective bargaining agreement as Dr. Curley, the University explained that under that agreement, “deans ... share their authority for administering the school with faculty peer review committees,” including the P & B Committee. Tr. 31-32. On the committee, Dr. DiGiuseppe served with Dr. Fagen, who was Dr. Curley’s “supervisor” as Department Chair. The University reported that it “has faculty chair people who, despite their cloak of managerial authority, are still members of the collective bargaining agreement. They are sort of quasi-managerial. But the chair is a faculty member with supervisory authority over ... course assignments.” Tr. 31.
Dr. Curley also defends his qualifications with Dr. Gopaul-McNicol’s evaluation:
I found Dr. Curley to be an experienced and a visionary faculty member, who was an effective teacher ... [and] competent as a Scientist and as a Practitioner. I was impressed to find that he was so up-to-date on the latest studies and documented research. In 1996, 1 reviewed his syllabus and found it to be updated with relevant school psychology literature. Pl.Ex. G ¶¶ 7, 9
Furthermore, Dr. Curley, unlike some Department faculty, was a licensed psychologist, a valued teaching criterion according to the American Psychology Association. See Pl. Ex. G ¶ 10.
Six students of Dr. Curley submitted affidavits defending his teaching. See Pl.Ex. H. Typical among the six is the praise of Dr. Curley’s teaching from Joseph DiPalo, a practicing school psychologist who took many classes from • Dr. Curley, including in fall 1995:
I found Dr. Curley to be well qualified to teach this course as well as all of his other courses. His teaching of Child Adolescent Personality Assessment I, has proven to be insightful and invaluable.... I found Dr. Curley to be well prepared for his classes. During class, Dr. Curley discussed up-to-date, important and relevant topics.... He always listened to his students’ concerns and attempted to accommodate their needs. Pl.Ex. H, Aff. Joseph DiPalo ¶¶ 2, 3.
Dr. Curley also drew positive evaluations of his work teaching students to conduct tests. See, e.g., id. ¶ 4. Two schools where Dr. Curley’s students tested children wrote to Dr. Curley to compliment his graduate students’ testing work; one requested that Dr. Curley have his students work for more of the school year in the future. See Pl.Ex. Q.
As for Dr. Curley’s scholarly work, Dr. Curley points to a May 1997 letter from Dr. P.B. Ammons, the editor of Perceptual & Motor Skills, an academic journal. See Pl. Ex. P. Dr. Ammons wrote to Dr. Curley that because he had published with them previously in 1990,
and because we note that you have been doing a good deal of reseаrch over a period of time, we would like to remind you that we agreed to allow you at some time in the future to publish a note.... We hope that you have some data which you would like to present. Id.
II. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
A. Applicable Legal Standards
1. Summary Judgment Standards
The basic rule in deciding on a Fed. R.Civ.P. 56 summary judgment motion is that “[uncertainty as to the true state of any material fact defeats the motion.”
Gibson v. Am. Broad. Co.,
In discrimination eases, because the issue of the employer’s hidden intent is so salient, the Second Circuit has emphasized that trial courts must be especially chary about disposing of claims on summary judgment.
See, e.g., Gallo,
2. Age Discrimination Standards
The same analysis applies to discrimination suits under Title VII, the ADEA, the State HRL, and the City HRO.
See Lightfoot v. Union Carbide Corp.,
a. “Pretext” Analysis
When plaintiffs attempt to prove the employer’s defense a pretext for discrimination, courts traditionally “use the familiar burden-shifting framework first articulated in
McDonnell Douglas.” Raskin,
Once plaintiff has established a prima facie case, defendant faces a burden of production “ ‘to articulate some legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the employee’s rejection.’ ”
Texas Dep’t of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
b. “Mixed-Motive” Analysis
In contrast, when plaintiffs argue a mix of disсriminatory and nondiscriminatory motives, courts traditionally “use the different analysis set out in
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins:
if the plaintiff established that a prohibited discriminatory factor played a ‘motivating part1 in a challenged employment decision, the burden shifts to the employer to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that it would have made the same decision anyway.”
Raskin,
The Civil Rights Act of 1991 (“1991 Act”) modified the basic
Price Waterhouse
analysis in critical ways. A pláintiff now must show only that discrimination was a motivating factor in, not the but-for cause of, the adverse decision. “[A]n unlawful employment practice is established when the complaining party demonstrates that [discrimination] ... was a motivating factor for any employment practice, even though other fаctors also motivated the practice.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(m);
see also, e.g., Fields v. N.Y. State Office of Mental Retardation & Developmental Disabilities,
c. “Motivating Factor” Analysis in All Cases
Overall, the 1991 Act has erased the key distinctions between parties’ burdens in “pretext” and “mixed-motive” analyses. In “pretext” analysis, a plaintiff now must prove only that discrimination was “a motivating factor” in the adverse action because the 1991 Act’s motivating factor standard applies to
all
discrimination cases, not just to cases in the judicially-created “mixed-motive” subcategory.
See Norton v. Sam’s Club, et al.,
In “mixed-motive” analysis, because the employer’s defense that it would have taken the adverse action for legitimate reasons only goes to relief, it no longer shifts the ultimate burden of persuasion. Also, because the motivating factor standard applies to all eases, “a plaintiff may carry his burden of proving that a forbidden factor was a motive in his termination through either direct or circumstantial evidence,” evеn if only some evidentiary showings merit spe
*189
cial mixed-motive jury instructions.
See Lightfoot v. Union Carbide Corp.,
The elimination of meaningful difference between “pretext” and “mixed-motive” has unified discrimination law analysis. In any case, plaintiff argues that discrimination motivated defendant; defendant counters that it had nondiscriminatory motivations. The fact finder has three options. First, it can find liability because plaintiff has proven that defendant’s asserted motivations are pretexts for its discriminatory true motives. Second, it can find liability because plaintiff has proven that defendant acted on both discriminatory and nondiscriminatory motivаtions. Third, it can find no liability because plaintiff has failed to prove that discrimination was at least a motivating factor in defendant’s action.
“Pretext” and “mixed-motive” thus are not two kinds of cases, but two kinds of liability findings based on two kinds of showings plaintiffs can attempt to make. Of course, sometimes the evidence only would support one of the two. Only a mix of motives is plausible if defendant clearly has some nondiscriminatory motivation; only pretext is plausible “where, on the particular evidence, no reasonable trier could find that two motives could have simultaneously coexisted.”
Fields,
Accordingly, the court’s inquiry on summary judgment is whether plaintiff presents competent evidence that could convince a reasonable fаct finder that discrimination on the basis of protected status played a motivating factor in a material adverse action. This inquiry includes all four traditional pri-ma facie case elements because if any are absent (e.g., no material adverse action), then no reasonable fact finder could find liability for discrimination.
B. Potential Barriers to Dr. Curley’s Case
Before evalúating Dr. Curley’s showing, the court must address the University’s contention that there are two threshold barriers to Dr. Curley’s case: first, that Dr. Curley’s lack of economic damages precludes an ADEA claim; second, that the change in teaching assignment was not a material adverse action sufficient to support an ADEA claim. Neither consideration is an absolute bar to a plaintiff’s verdict, sо neither is a ground for summary judgment.
1. Lack of Economic Damages
The University is correct that the ADEA does not permit damages for emotional pain and suffering.
See
29 U.S.C. § 626(b);
Johnson v. Al Tech Specialties Steel Corp.,
In any action brought to enforce this chapter the court shall have jurisdiction to grant such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to effectuate the purposes of this chapter, including without limitation judgments compelling employment, reinstatement or promotion.... Any person aggrieved may bring a civil action in any court of competent jurisdiction for such legal or equitable relief as will effectuate the purposes of this chapter. 29 U.S.C. § 626(b), (c)(1) (emphasis added).
In support of its argument that the ADEA addresses only discrimination featuring economic damages, the University provides an off-point citation from
Wanamaker v. Columbian Rope Co.,
The University’s contention that age discrimination is not actionable unless it produces economic loss is wholly unsupported by the two cases the University cites or any other cases. If Dr. Curley prevails at trial, he may win whatever package of relief the court deems appropriate. It is not fatal to his cause that his relief might include only equitable remedies.
2. Material Adverse Action
The existence of a material аdverse employment action is a close call. The decision to assign Dr. Curley only undergraduate courses did not change his compensation, benefits, nor tenure status. Dr. Curley argues, with support from Dr. Gopaul-McNicol, that his switch from being a graduate instructor to an undergraduate instructor was tantamount to a demotion or punishment. See Tr. 14; Pl.Ex. G, Gopaul-McNicol Aff. Dr. Curley’s evidence is sufficient to prove to a reasonable fact finder that at the University, graduate teaching is more prestigious and leads to more professional growth opportunity. His removal from graduate teaching then would be a material adverse change in the terms and conditions of his employment.
The definitions of “material” and “adverse” in this context arе broad enough to include non-eeonomic but significantly disadvantageous job changes like the University’s stripping of Dr. Curley’s graduate course load. Courts have found job changes materially adverse when they significantly reduce job prestige or higher-level duties without immediate financial impact.
See, e.g., Preda v. Nissho Iwai Am. Corp.,
The University argues that Dr. Curley’s failure to continue to fight the action weighs against finding it materially adverse. With the exception of a belated request in 1998, Dr. Curley has not requested to teach graduate courses after the fall of 1996 and has not taught a graduate course since the spring of 1996. Dr. Curley did oppose the decision actively before it was final, however, by attending the P & B Committee meeting and submitting a memorandum and a packet of course materials. See Def.Exs. 16,17.
Given the forcefulness of the University’s decision, see Def.Ex. 18, Fagen Letter (“we have concluded that the educational, ethical, and legal implications are so overpowering, we have no choice”), the fact finder could agree with Dr. Curley’s conclusion that the University’s rejection of his pleas meant that Dr. Curley would no longer teach graduate courses. The law does not require plaintiffs opposing advérse action, especially while trying to remain on the job, to continue tilting at windmills forever. Dr. Curley’s response to the action was not so passive as to bar him from challenging it now.
C. Dr. Curley’s Evidence of Pretext and Age Discrimination
Dr. Curley has presented sufficient evidence of his qualifications to leave a disputed question of fact as to the University’s assertion that it removed him from graduate teaching solely because of his shortcomings. See, e.g., Pl.Ex. G, Gopaul-McNicol Aff.; Pl. *191 Ex. H, Students’ Affs. Together with his evidence of age-based animus against him, he could prove that the University’s position is a pretext for at least partially discriminatory motives.
1. Evidence of Pretext in the University’s Rationales
The University has offered evidence that could convince a reasonable fact finder that it acted solely on Dr. Curley’s shortcomings as a teacher, scholar, graduate student supervisor, and grant-seeker. The complaints came from many sources, including non-parties, see, e.g., Defs Notice Mot. Summ. J., Students’ Affs, and outside experts, see, e.g., Def.Ex. 12, at C1126. The University’s efforts to build a doctoral program makes these shortcomings particularly important.
Dr. Curley’s defense of his performance, however, is sufficient as an initial showing and sufficient to call the University’s defense into question. While Dr. Curley might not defeat the mass of criticism entirely, such as the views of independent evaluators whose opinions mattered to the University in its quest for a doctoral program, that is not necessary for two reasons. First, quality of performance is a relative question: was Dr. Curley less qualified than those the University sought for his position? Even if Dr. Cur-ley is no an academic superstar, it is not clear that superstardom is the University’s true standard. The University can assert whatever standards it likes, but Dr. Curley can rebut the University’s claim that it truly applied those standards in its faculty decisions and found Dr. Curley to fall short. Aside from challenging the criticisms of him, Dr. Curley notes that he has qualifications that the Department did not demand of other faculty, such as his license to practice.
Second, quality of performance is a question of degree: was Dr. Curley so bad that his shortcomings truly were the University’s sole motivation? Even if Dr. Curley is less qualified than the University would like its professors to be, it remains unclear exactly how substandard the University truly found him. He cannot be totally incompetent as an educator if, as the University concedes, “he has been successfully teaching undergraduates and everybody is happy.” Tr. 48. Dr. Curley could prove that his performance was only minimally substandard or that it was good and inaccurately assessed by the outside evaluators and others. Such a showing could prove pretextual the University’s assertion that it stripped Dr. Curley’s graduate teaching assignments ■ solely because of performance concerns.
Apart from the question of job performance, Dr. Curley presents evidence that Dr. DiGiuseppe and others supported false misconduct chargеs against him. See Pl.Ex. G, Gopaul-McNicol Aff. ¶ 16. If Dr. Curley proves that those supporting these charges did not have a good-faith basis for doing so, that could help show that the University sought pretextual rationales for acting against him.
2. Evidence of Age Discrimination in the Decision-Making Process
Over age 60 at all relevant times, Dr. Curley is unquestionably a member of the ADEA-proteeted over-40 age class. Dr. Curley’s evidence of age-based animus directed against him could prove that the University’s asserted rationales are not just questionable in general but pretexts for age discrimination in particular.
See, e.g.,
Pl.Ex. I, Curley Dep.; Pl.Ex. G, Gopaul-McNicol Aff. At the least, Dr. Curley could prove that even if his shortcomings motivated the University, age was a motivating factor as well. That showing would render Dr. Curley a prevailing party. While the University then could prove that its legitimate performance concerns would have led to the same outcome, such a showing does not “avoid all liability,” but only “limits the relief to which the plaintiff is entitled.”
Fields,
a. Ambiguity in Dr. Curley’s Evidence of Age Bias
Dr. DiGiuseppe’s statements are evidence that he had age-básed bias against Dr. Cur-ley. The University argues that several of Dr. DiGiuseppe’s comments, including those referring to Dr. Curley as “dead wood” and “over the hill,” were simply reports of students’ views. See Def.Mem.Supp.Summ.J. 39-40. This defense finds support in Dr. *192 Curley’s deposition. See Curley Dep. 341, 353, 790. In light of the other evidence of age bias, however, a reasonable fact finder could agree with Dr. Curley that Dr. DiGiu-seppe was conveying his adherence to the views he attributed to students.
As tо other statements, the University plausibly may label them “ambiguous,” Def. Mem.Supp.Summ.J. 41, but may not preclude Dr. Curley’s interpretation. See, e.g., Curley Dep. 351 (recounting Dr. Giuseppe questioning Dr. Curley about his age and then asking, “Boy, what are you doing here, why are you still here?”). The ambiguity is sufficient to preclude summary judgment for Dr. Cur-ley, but insufficient to merit summary judgment for defendant. Interpretation of plausibly discriminatory ambiguous negative comments is a question for trial.
b. Tracing Evidence of Age Bias to the Decision-Making Process
As Director of the' Program and a voting member of the P & B Committee, Dr. DiGiu-seppe may have been enough of a decision-maker, and played enough of a role in the decision-making process, that his alleged age-based motivations infect the University’s decision to alter Dr. Curley’s teaching assignment. The University emphasizes that any such motivations are stray remarks unrelated to the decision-making process because Dr. DiGiuseppe and Dr. Fagen are peers of Dr. Curley and the dean makes the “final decision.” Tr. 63.
Yet even if Dr. DiGiuseppe and Dr. Fagen are Dr. Curley’s peers, they are peers with power to affect the terms and conditions of Dr. Curley’s employment in material adverse ways, such as by altering his course load. The presence of other decision-makers, from other P & B Committee members to the dean, is a defense for the University, but not a dispositive one, because diffusion of authority does not insulate decisions from ADEA liability. A plaintiff need not prove every one of the decision-makers biased in order to argue that the discriminatory motives of some of the decision-makers rendered the decision discriminatory.
c. Intra-Group Age Discrimination by Those Over Age 40
The University certainly can attempt to disprove age discrimination by noting that almost the entire cast of characters was over age 40, from the decision-makers to the other faculty teaching graduate courses. Yet the ADEA concept of age discrimination includes favoring a younger worker also over age 40.
See O’Connor v. Consol. Coin Caterers,
More broadly, the Supreme Court recently emphasized the plausibility of various forms of intra-group discrimination in
Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Svcs., Inc.,
— U.S. -, -,
Intra-group discrimination is especially plausible when group membership is not a simple binary variable, but a more continuous variable, whether because of degrees of membership, sub-groupings, of multi-group
*193
intersectionality.
See, e.g., St. Francis College v. Al-Khazraji,
Overall, a broad body of precedent recognizes that intra-group discrimination exists, especially against those with often-disfavored status within the group, such as the darkest-skinned among people of color or the oldest among middle-aged workers. In this light, a reasonable fact finder could conclude that the circumstances of Dr. Curley’s assignment warrant an inference of age discrimination by the younger over-40 workers who made the decision.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, defendant St. John’s University’s Fed.R.Civ.Proc. 56 motion for summary judgment against plaintiff James F. Curley is denied.
