Appellant brought a Title VII suit against his employer. The employer moved for summary judgment, asserting that appellant’s suit was barred because he had not timely exhausted his administrative remedy with the EEOC. Rejecting appellant’s contention that he had filed his EEOC complaint on time and his alternative argument that equitable principles should operate to toll the filing requirement, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the employer. We reverse in part and affirm in part.
I.
Appellant Paul Currier was hired as an independent contractor by appellee Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Inc., a non-profit Delaware corporation with primary operations in Prague, the Czech Republic. Appellant was to serve as a computer network engineer and systems analyst at the Prague location, and entered into a six-month contract with appellee to begin December 31, 1995 and to expire on June 30,1996. 1
*1365 In February or March 1996, Currier went to a restaurant in Prague after work. Candace O’Brien, appellee’s Director of Human Resources, was seated at a table with other coworkers. O’Brien, apparently inebriated, made disparaging comments regarding appellant’s sexual prowess. She then unbuttoned his pants, squeezed his penis, and exposed his testicles. The following day, O’Brien — a supervisory official who had authority to fire appellant — instructed him that “he had better get in line [with her version of what happened] or he would have a problem with her.” (O’Brien’s “official version” maintained that appellant had voluntarily exposed himself at the table.) O’Brien further threatened that if appellant discussed the actual incident, his employment contract would not be renewed and he would have problems during the remainder of his existing contract. Appellant took O’Brien’s threats seriously, and refrained from mentioning the incident. But O’Brien often recounted the “official version,” and when appellant was asked for his account by a eoworker in O’Brien’s presence, he disputed the “official version.” O’Brien warned appellant not to make such a mistake again.
Soon thereafter, Currier encountered one of the “problems” that O’Brien had promised. At a workplace social event, appellant had a heated discussion with a female co-worker about the definition of sexual harassment. The following day, he learned that O’Brien was investigating the incident and that he was suspected of sexual harassment against the female co-worker. Although the investigation was without basis in fact, he received a termination letter from O’Brien on May 14, 1996. He viewed this accusation as a pretext for retaliating against him because of his earlier opposition to O’Brien’s sexual harassment of him.
Less than a week after receiving O’Brien’s termination letter, Currier met with Robert Gillette, appellee’s Director of Broadcasting and a higher ranking management official than O’Brien. Appellant told Gillette that his previous encounters with O’Brien made it impossible for O’Brien to conduct a neutral investigation of appellant’s asserted sexual harassment of the female co-worker. Gillette promised to conduct a second investigation that would be fair and impartial, and assured Currier that there would be “no final determination” regarding his employment status until that second investigation was concluded.
Appellant stopped coming to work after receiving his termination letter, and his contract expired by its terms on June 30, 1996. But he did not give up his efforts to return to appellee’s employ. Rather, he inquired several times about the status of Gillette’s investigation. Shortly before Thanksgiving 1996, he met with his former supervisor, Tom Morgan, and Gillette. Appellant was told that the investigation was still continuing and had not yet been concluded. Gillette referred to Morgan as appellant’s present “boss” and said that Morgan “will always be your boss.”
Appellant filed an administrative complaint with the San Francisco office of the EEOC on March 28, 1997. The EEOC issued a notice of right to sue, and appellant brought suit against appellee in the district court under Title VII, contending, first, that O’Brien had sexually harassed him, and second, that she had retaliated against him for opposing her advances by terminating his employment. Appellee moved to dismiss the complaint, or in the alternative for summary judgment, on the ground that appellant had not filed his EEOC complaint in the time required by 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(l) (1994). Appellant argued' in opposition that it was improper to start the clock when he received the termination letter because that termination decision was not a final decision. Alternatively, he argued that one of appellee’s officials had misled him into believing that he would be rehired, and therefore that appellee should be equitably estopped from asserting the statutory deadline. The district court disagreed and granted summary judgment in favor of appellee.
*1366 II.
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(l) requires that “[a] charge ... shall be filed [with the EEOC] within one hundred and eighty days after the alleged unlawful unemployment practice occurred.”
2
Only after exhausting this administrative remedy can an aggrieved person bring suit in district court.
Jarrell v. United States Postal Serv.,
The parties disagree on when the unlawful employment practice occurred, and thus on when the statutory clock started ticking. Appellee argues that we should count from the date appellant received his termination letter, May 14, 1996; thus measured, appellant did not file his EEOC complaint for 328 days, which is too late. Appellant, while not offering a specific starting date, contends that the clock did not start ticking until long after May 14,1996, because the May 14 termination decision was not yet a final decision. Alternatively, he argues that appellee’s manager’s misleading assurances of reinstatement should equitably es-top appellee from asserting the statutory filing deadline. 3 Under either of appellant’s approaches, of course, he would not be deemed to have failed to exhaust his administrative remedy. 4
A.
We begin with the question of when (if ever) appellant had notice that the termination decision was final so as to start the clock on the EEOC filing deadline.
See Ricks,
But were the circumstances such that O’Brien’s decision was not actually final? Appellant claims that Gillette, a manager directly superior to O’Brien in appellee’s organizational hierarchy, assured him less than a week after May 14 that O’Brien’s decision was not a “final determination.” Gillette is claimed to have again told Currier around Thanksgiving that the investigation was still ongoing; Currier was not told that Gillette’s investigation had concluded by the time he filed his charges with the EEOC’s San Fran
*1367
cisco office the following March. Appellee reminds us that in
Ricks,
the Supreme Court was careful to point out that an employer that expresses an “official position” and simultaneously “indicate[s] a willingness to change its [official position]” based on the outcome of a pending grievance proceeding does not thereby render that “official position” a “tentative” decision.
Ricks,
It is true that the reconsideration of Currier’s termination would not alone render the initial decision “preliminary” rather than “final.” But we think appellant points to more than mere reconsideration in his effort to identify a later starting date for the statutory clock. He claims that a supervisor of the initial decision-maker informed him shortly after that initial decision that “there would be
no final determination ...
until the conclusion of his investigation.” In other words, an authoritative voice (Gillette) expressly disavowed the finality of the initial determination,
6
which implies a later starting date— though it remains unclear exactly when the decision became final — that could bring appellant’s EEOC complaint within the statutory time limit. Whether Gillette did indeed make such an assurance and whether, if he did, it was true, may well be contested.
7
At this juncture, however, appellant has created a genuine issue on this material fact.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
B.
Even if we viewed the May 14, 1996 letter as a final decision that started the statutory clock, we would still conclude that the district court improperly granted summary judgment in favor of appellee because appellant has pointed to sufficient facts in his affidavit to create a genuine issue as to whether equitable principles should toll the EEOC filing deadline.
Title VII’s time limit on filing a complaint with the EEOC is not jurisdictional and is subject to “estoppel[ ] and equitable tolling.”
Zipes v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
*1368
Again we begin with
Ricks.
There the Supreme Court reaffirmed that “the pen-dency of a grievance, or some other method of collateral review of an employment decision, does not toll the running of the limitations periods.”
Ricks,
We think, however, that an employer’s affirmatively misleading statements that a grievance will be resolved
in the employee’s favor
can establish an equitable estoppel.
See Miranda v. B & B Cash Grocery Store, Inc.,
Appellant has identified statements made by one of his supervisors from which he concluded not only that he was being reconsidered, but that he would be reinstated. Specifically, he asserted the following in his affidavit, describing a meeting shortly before Thanksgiving 1996, “Mr. Gillette referred to Mr. Morgan as ‘my boss.’ Mr. Gillette said that Mr. Morgan was my boss and would always be my boss,” which, in context, could be understood to mean that Currier would be triumphant. To be sure, it is a bit of a stretch for appellant to have inferred from these statements that appellee intended to continue to employ him. But we cannot say, at the summary judgment stage, that no reasonable factfinder could find that this inference was plausible and that appellant made the inference at the time.
See Anderson,
III.
Thus far we have discussed only appellant’s retaliation claim. Appellant also asserted in his complaint a claim of hostile work environment sexual harassment, and did not carefully explain to the district court or to us how the finality and equitable estop-pel arguments were applicable to his hostile environment theory.
Here we can be brief. As with his retaliation claim, appellant was obliged to file an EEOC complaint within 180 days of the “[precise] unlawful employment practice,”
Ricks,
Appellant’s finality and equitable estoppel arguments are inapposite to his hostile environment claim. Gillette’s assurance that O’Brien’s termination decision was not a *1369 final determination goes only to the allegedly retaliatory termination — the hostile environment occurred, and appellant had notice of it, when he was at work. Similarly, Gillette’s misleadingly optimistic statements suggesting that appellant would be rehired could not have been misleading as to appellee’s position toward the hostile environment allegedly created by O’Brien. Those statements could only lull appellant into believing that his retaliation claim would be remedied, not into believing that the already experienced harm from the episodes of hostile environment sexual harassment would somehow be cured. Accordingly, the district court correctly granted summary judgment in favor of ap-' pellee on the hostile environment claim.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s decision to grant summary judgment to appellee is reversed on appellant’s retaliation claim and affirmed on appellant’s hostile work environment claim.
So ordered.
Notes
. Of course we take the facts and all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to appellant, the nonmoving parly.
See, e.g., Taylor v. FDIC,
. A three-hundred-day time limit applies when the aggrieved person has initially instituted proceedings with a state or local agency with authority to grant or seek relief from the unlawful practice. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(l). The district court concluded that this longer time limit did not apply to appellant, because appellant never instituted proceedings with the District of Columbia Office of Human Rights and because that office would not have had subject matter jurisdiction over his charge in any event. Appellant does not challenge these conclusions on appeal.
. Appellant argues in his reply brief that appellee waived its right to assert the statute of limitations by raising that defense in its preanswer motion rather than in its answer — which has yet to be filed. This argument could not prevail because appellant asserted it for the first time on appeal.
See Singleton v. Wulff,
. Appellant focuses on the equitable estoppel argument in his brief and does not clearly articulate the finality argument as a separate issue. For ease of analysis, we treat the issues separately-
. That appellant's six-month contract expired by its own terms on June 30, 1996 does not have any relevance for the start date because appellant does not allege any continuing violation between May 14, 1996 and June 30, 1996.
See Ricks,
. We note that to our knowledge appellee did not have in place a formal direct or collateral review procedure for personnel decisions.
Cf. Harris,
. If Gillette’s description of O'Brien's decision as non-final were a falsehood, appellee might be equitably estopped,
see
Part II.B
infra,
from asserting Title VII’s EEOC filing deadline as an affirmative defense.
Cf. Ricks,
. Although appellant's contract would have expired by its terms on June 30, 1996 wholly apart from the May 14, 1996 termination decision, appellant had earlier been involved in negotiations with several of appellee’s managers regarding a contract renewal. Appellant thus might reasonably have inferred from Gillette's statements that, in addition to the grievance being resolved in his favor, a new contract was on the horizon.
