This is an appeal by Darlene Shidaker from an adverse judgment entered below in favor of Preston R. Tisch in his capacity as Postmaster General of the United States Postal Service. Shidaker, a postal employee, claims that the Postal Service denied her a promotion because she is a woman and then demoted her for challenging that promotion denial as discriminatory. In our original opinion, this panel reversed and remanded for further consideration the district court’s finding that Shidaker’s promotion denial was not discriminatory and we affirmed the district court’s finding that Shidaker’s demotion was not retaliatory.
Shidaker v. Carlin,
On April 6, 1987, the United States Supreme Court, — U.S. —,
I.
We will briefly summarize the relevant facts discussed in our previous decision. Shidaker was Acting Postmaster and then Postmaster of Kenilworth, Illinois from 1962 through 1982. In this position she was in pay scale category PES-18. In 1977, Shidaker applied for vacant PES-22 postmaster positions at offices in Glenview, Palatine, and Franklin Park, Illinois. The Postal Service follows a policy of promoting from within and ninety-two postal employees applied for the three vacant postmaster positions. Shidaker, the only female applicant, was not promoted to any of the positions.
In 1978, Shidaker filed an Equal Employment Opportunity (“EEO”) complaint alleging that she was denied promotion to the PES-22 postmaster positions on the basis of her sex. In 1980, an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Complaint Examiner held a hearing on Shidaker’s complaint. In September 1982, the Complaint Examiner issued a decision on the complaint finding that Shidaker was denied promotion on the basis of sex. In October 1982, the Postal Service’s Regional Director for Employment and Labor Relations Central Region notified Shidaker that the Postal Service was rejecting the Examiner’s decision.
Shidaker sued the Postal Service in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. Count I of her complaint alleged discriminatory failure to promote under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16 and 39 U.S.C. § 409. We consider this allegation on remand.
The district court found that Shidaker failed to establish a prima facie case of *630 disparate impact. The court found that Shidaker did establish a prima, facie showing of disparate treatment, but also found that the Postal Service demonstrated legitimate, nondiscriminatory, nonpretextual, reasons for not promoting Shidaker.
We agree with Shidaker that she made an adequate prima facie showing of disparate impact. We therefore reverse the district court and remand Shidaker’s disparate impact claim for further consideration.
II.
A.
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Johnson
arises out of facts and circumstances that differ from those involved in this case.
Johnson
was a reverse discrimination suit brought under Title VII by a white male who alleged that the promotion of an allegedly less qualified female pursuant to a voluntary affirmative action plan violated his rights under Title VII. In concluding that the affirmative action plan did not violate Title VII, the Supreme Court considered the degree to which statistical proof reflecting an underrepresentation of women in traditionally segregated jobs could justify an affirmative action plan.
The
Johnson
Court reiterated its earlier holding in
Hazelwood School District v. United States,
B.
Johnson’s relevance to the instant case is limited. Johnson is not a disparate impact case and it does not break new ground in this area of Title VII jurisprudence. Rather, Johnson briefly reaffirms the Supreme Court’s earlier holdings regarding the sufficiency and probative value of statistical proof under Title VII. The Johnson Court’s discussion of Hazelwood, however, is pertinent. Although Hazelwood was a disparate treatment pattern and practice case, its holding regarding the sufficiency of statistical proof has been applied in large part to the disparate impact area of Title VII.
To make a
prima facie
showing of discriminatory impact, Shidaker need only present evidence that the Postal Service’s promotional practices, although facially neutral, selects promotees “in a significantly discriminatory pattern”.
Dothard v. Rawlinson,
In both the disparate treatment and impact contexts,
Hazelwood
teaches that statistical evidence is probative when it compares the percentage of minorities or women in the employer’s work force with the percentage of minorities and women in the relevant labor market.
C.
Both Shidaker and the Postal Service agree that under
Hazelwood
and
Johnson,
Shidaker must compare the percentage of women in high level postmaster positions with the percentage of women in the qualified labor pool. They differ, however, in the application of this standard to this case. Shidaker argues that the statistics offered to the district court reflect a gross disparity between the number of women occupying low level postmaster positions as compared to the small number of women serving in the higher level postmaster grades. Shidaker argues further that because the postal service promotes from within, the
*632
relevant qualified labor group for comparison purposes is the lower level postmasters from which the promotees to the high level position are drawn. The Postal Service counters, and the district court held,
Shidaker v. Bolger,
The district court incorrectly found that Shidaker failed to make a prima facie showing of disparate impact. Once Shidaker proved that the Postal Service promotes from within and introduced statistical evidence showing a gross disparity between the percentage of women in lower level postmaster positions and those in upper level postmaster positions, she made a sufficient prima facie showing of disparate impact. She need not, as the district court apparently thought, make a further statistical showing regarding applicant flow.
D.
The district court found that the Postal Service had a policy of promoting from within.
6
Shidaker,
The district court also found a gross disparity between the percentage of women occupying low level postmaster positions (21.1%) and those occupying the higher level positions (5%). 8 Id. at 829-30. Specifically, the district court found that none of the women postmasters was rated higher than PES-20. 9
Once a plaintiff makes a
prima facie
showing with statistics of this nature, the burden shifts to the defendant to rebut the inference of discrimination raised by these statistics.
Washington v. Davis,
Thus, it is not up to Shidaker at this point to proffer evidence of lower level female postmaster employees qualifications or of the percentage of lower level female employees who applied for upper level positions. Although evidence of applicant flow may be relevant and probative,
Hazelwood,
433 U.S, at 308 n. 13,
[i]f [on remand] the Postal Service can come forward with evidence of a low percentage of female applicants for upper level jobs or evidence of the lack of qualifications of women in lower level positions, the Service might possibly rebut the inference of discrimination that arises from Shidaker’s prima facie statistical showing. The Service might also be able to show the job-relatedness of its promotion standards. These determinations are best left in the discretion of the district court on remand, Soria v. Ozinga Bros.,704 F.2d 990 , 995 n. 6 (7th Cir.1983), and are not properly before us for review.
III.
Despite characterizations by the Postal Service, this is not a case in which the plaintiff seeks to apply a lower standard for proving a prima facie case. Here, Shidaker has done more than demonstrate an “imbalance” between minority representation in the higher and lower levels of the Postal Service’s work force. Shidaker has proffered evidence which the district court found demonstrates a gross disparity between representation of women in the low level postmaster positions and the upper level postmaster positions. Because the lower level postmasters comprise the general pool from which high level postmasters are chosen, these statistics establish a prima facie case of disparate impact.
The judgment of the district court finding that Shidaker failed to make a prima facie showing of disparate impact is reversed, and Shidaker’s disparate impact claim is remanded for further consideration. On remand, Circuit Rule 36 will not apply. The district court’s judgment in all other respects is affirmed.
Notes
. We reinstate our earlier decision affirming the district court in all other respects.
.Although the Court did not expressly say so, when it discussed the
prima jade
standard under Title VII, it was referring to the disparate treatment theory, not disparate impact theory because the plaintiff in
Johnson
was alleging intentional discrimination based on a sex-conscious affirmative action plan.
.In order to establish a "manifest imbalance” sufficient to justify an affirmative action plan, the same comparison must be made, although the level of disparity may be less.
Johnson,
. We need not define the precise extent to which the prima fade standard differs in disparate treatment and disparate impact cases because, as we noted infra at 8, the district court found a gross disparity presented by Shidaker’s statistics.
. Two of the three men selected for the positions to which Shidaker applied were postmasters. One of these was a PES-18, the same level as Shi-daker. The third applicant was a Manager of Mail Processing, a PES-21 position.
. In response to one of Shidaker’s interrogatories sent to the Postal Service after this court’s prior remand regarding the qualifications for the higher level postmaster positions, the Postal Service stated:
Assuming that plaintiff means to inquire whether women at the North Suburban MSC at the time plaintiff applied for the position of postmaster were less qualified than men for positions at levels 16 and above, defendant does not so contend except in one respect. In the years before 1977, men tended to be found in proportionately greater numbers in supervisory and managerial positions than women. As a result, they would gain the experience necessary for advancement to higher-level positions in proportionately greater numbers than women.
Ans. to Interrogatory No. 3.
. The district court summarized Shidaker’s statistical evidence as follows:
The statistics presented to the Court are as follows: In November, 1974, women held 20.8% of the positions in the Postal Service workforce. The percentage had moved to 23.5% by November, 1980. Nationally, women held 11.5% of the positions at PES 15 and above in January, 1980.
In 1978, the year of Shidaker’s failed promotion, women occupied 23 of the 108 postmaster positions in the North Suburban MSC, or 21.1% of the total postmaster positions. However, none of the women postmasters were rated higher than PES 20 and 15 of them were at level PES 15 or lower. Additionally in 1977-78 a total of 2,008 women were employed in the North Suburban MSC, 29.4% of the entire Postal Service workforce in the area. Despite that overall percentage, only four women or 5% were rated in positions of PES 19 or higher. Grossly, the disparities could be significant.
Shidaker v. Bolger,
. Cf. Johnson,
