Plaintiff Geneva Butts appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Louis J. Freeh, Judge), dated July 7,1992, dismissing in its entirety Plaintiffs employment discrimination action brought against the City of New York Department of Housing Preservation and Development (the “City”) under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq. (“Title VII”), 42 U.S.C. § 1981, and state common law. Plaintiff, an African-American woman, alleges that the City denied her promotions and discriminated against her in the terms and conditions of her employment based on her race and sex.
The district court dismissed Plaintiffs complaint in its entirety pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and (6). Her various Title VII claims were dismissed on the grounds that they were either time-barred or had not been raised in her discrimination charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (the “EEOC”). The district court, relying on
Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
We affirm the district court’s decision that the Civil Rights Act of 1991 does not apply retroactively to Plaintiff’s § 1981 claims, and, thus, its dismissal of Plaintiff’s § 1981 claims for discrimination in the terms and conditions of her employment. However, since we believe Plaintiff’s complaint states a cause of action under Patterson as to her timely § 1981 promotion claims, we reverse their dismissal. We also reverse the dismissal of the two Title VII claims alleging that Butts was excluded from department reorganization meetings based on her race and sex, but affirm the dismissal of the remainder of her Title VII claims.
BACKGROUND
The City hired Geneva Butts in April, 1972 as a Computer Systems Manager and has continuously employed her ever since. On November 22, 1989, Butts filed a charge of discrimination with the EEOC. The charge alleged that starting in October, 1987, the City systematically discriminated against her because of her race and sex in the terms and conditions of her employment. This was done, she alleged, by excluding her from meetings and duties to which her position should have entitled her, cutting her off from her supervisors, defaming her, and by denying her promotional opportunities. She claimed that notwithstanding her promotion in April, 1987 to the title of Acting Deputy Director of the Computer Center, she was denied any increased authority; that though placed in charge of the Computer Center from June to September, 1987, she оnly had ten telephone conversations over that period with the Deputy Commissioner to whom she reported; that from 1987 to the present, she was excluded from department reorganization meetings in which she believed she should have been included; and that starting in October, 1987, she was discouraged from applying for higher positions in the Department and her work performance was unfairly criticized. She further alleged that in November, 1989, the same month in which she filed her charge, the City, in a measure designed to reduce the number of African-Americans in its employ, was undertaking to move her group from Harlem to a location in midtown Manhattan.
The EEOC investigated Plaintiff’s allegations and, on May 7, 1991, dismissed her charge. The EEOC found that the alleged relocation of the computer group from Harlem to midtown had not occurred. The EEOC also concluded that the rest of her allegations were time-barred, since they occurred in 1987, outside the 300-day limitatiоns period for filing EEOC charges applicable to claims arising in New York. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e).
Butts filed the present action on August 5, 1991, and her amended complaint on March 16, 1992. She claimed that from 1987 on the City denied her promotions and discriminated against her in the terms and conditions of her employment based on her race and sex. She specified five instances in which she allegedly was denied promotional opportunities. Two of these promotion denials allegedly occurred in 1987. The next incident is said to have occurred in 1989, when she inquired into the possibility of her promotion to the newly-created position of Director of Systems Architecture, “but was not given a clear response.” The fourth and fifth took place in May, 1990, and June, 1991, when, on each occasion, she applied for the vacant position of *1401 Deputy Commissioner of the Office of Management and Administration, was never granted an interview, and the position went to а Caucasian man.
Butts also alleged that she continually was deprived of the responsibility and power her position entailed. She claimed that from 1987 to the present she was repeatedly denied access to her supervisors; that in 1987, although she was promoted from Deputy Director to Director, persons formerly her subordinates were placed at her level of responsibility; and that, in 1988, the City eliminated her duty as Computer Training Liaison and excluded her from a study of ways to improve the efficiency of the Department’s information systems. Also, while dropping the earlier claim that the City was going to move her department from Harlem to midtown, she claimed that discrimination occurred when she was excluded from discussions about the proposed move.
The City moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and (6). On July 7, 1992, the district court granted Defendant’s motion in its entirety. The court ruled that the Title VII claims either were time-barred as ocсurring more than 300 days before the filing of the EEOC charge, or were absent from the charge entirely, thereby depriving the district court of jurisdiction to hear them. The district court dismissed Plaintiff’s § 1981 claims on the ground that they all involved issues of contract performance, which are not actionable under Patterson. The court also ruled that the 1991 Civil Rights Act, which would have made any timely contract performance claims actionable under § 1981, did not apply retroactively. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
I. The Title VII Claims
The district court dismissed Plaintiff’s Title VII claims on the grounds that a number of them were not filed within the 300-day period as required by 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e), and the remainder were not included in the EEOC charge and therefore the court was without jurisdiction over them.
When a plaintiff fails to file a timely charge with the EEOC, the claim is time-barred.
Gomes v. Avco Corp.,
A district court only has jurisdiction to hear Title VII claims that either are included in an EEOC charge or are based on conduct subsequent to the EEOC charge which is “reasonably related” to that alleged in the EEOC charge.
Stewart v. United States Immigration and Naturalization Service,
Three of the promotion claims in Plaintiffs civil action involve alleged acts of discrimination occurring in 1989 and 1990. Butts claims that in 1989, she was denied promotion to Director of Systems Architecture and that in May, 1990 and again in June, 1991, after she filed her EEOC charge, she was denied promotion to Deputy Commissioner of the Office of Management and Administration. However, the first promotion allegation was never raised in the November 22, 1989 EEOC charge and Butts did not file a second EEOC charge alleging either this or the two incidents she says occurred after she filed her charge. Since these charges were never presented to the EEOC, the district court was without jurisdiction to hear them. Similarly, her various terms and conditions claims either wеre not alleged in her EEOC charge or are time-barred.
Butts argues that the allegations that were not in her EEOC charge are “reasonably related” to the allegations that were in her EEOC charge and can be brought on that basis. We disagree as to all but two of her claims.
We have recognized three kinds of situations where claims not alleged in an EEOC charge are sufficiently related to the allegations in the charge that it would be unfair to civil rights plaintiffs to bar such claims in a civil, action. We have loosely referred to these claims as “reasonably related” to the allegations in the EEOC charge. While the three are each animated by the common notion of fairness to civil rights litigants, their “reasonableness” derives from separate rationales.
The first type of “reasonably related” claim we have recognized is essentially an allowance of loose pleading. Recognizing that EEOC charges frequently arе filled out by employees without the benefit of counsel and that their primary purpose is to alert the EEOC to the discrimination that a plaintiff claims she is suffering, we have allowed claims not raised in the charge to be brought in a civil action where the conduct complained of would fall within the “scope of the EEOC investigation which can reasonably be expected to grow out of the charge of discrimination.”
Smith v. American President Lines, Ltd.,
The second type of “reasonably related” claim is one alleging retaliation by an employer against an employee for filing an EEOC charge.
Malarkey v. Texaco, Inc.,
The third type of reasonably related claim is where a plaintiff alleges further
*1403
incidents of discriminаtion carried out in precisely the same manner alleged in the EEOC charge.
See Almendral,
In this case, the majority of Plaintiffs claims are not reasonably related to timely allegations in her EEOC charge under any of the three theories. Most of the allegations in her EEOC charge are time-barred and thus cannot serve as predicates for allegations in the complaint said to be reasonably related. Of the timely allegations in the charge, all but two are too vague to serve as predicates for allegations in the complaint. For example, Butts alleged in the charge that she had “consistently been the target of discriminatory practices and treatment” from “October of 1987 to [the] present.” While part of this claim relates to conduct occurring in 1989, which is within the limitations period, the allegation was insufficiently specific to enable the EEOC to investigate it. The same is true for Plaintiffs allegation that she was “denied promotional opportunities and consideration based on my race and sex.” Were we to perniit such vague, general allegations, quite incapable of inviting a meaningful EEOC response, to define the scope of the EEOC investigation and thereby predicate subsequent claims in the federal lawsuit, such allegations would become routine boilerplate and Title VIPs investigatory and mediation goals would be defeated.
See Rush v. McDonald’s Corp.,
However, two of Plaintiffs terms and conditions claims are reasonably related to allegations in her EEOC charge, under the first theory stated above. Plaintiff alleged in th¡e charge that “[ajfter October 1987, ... [Plaintiffs supervisor] held department reorganization meetings without informing me of the meetings or results.” In her complaint, she claims that “on or about 1988” she was excluded from discussions relating to her department’s participation in a city-wide study of ways to improve efficiency. She also alleges in her complaint that she was excluded from discussions about the proposed move of the department. We note parenthetically that when Plaintiff alleged the move itself in her EEOC charge as an act of discrimination, the EEOC upon investigation found that the move never took place, and Plaintiff has dropped the claim.
An EEOC investigation into the charge of exclusion from department reorganization meetings likely would have included an inquiry into her exclusion from the meetings set forth in her complaint. Exclusion from discussions about the departmental move and about potential changes to improve efficiency are closely enough related to exclusion from “department reorganization” meetings that it is reasonable to conclude that Plaintiff gave the EEOC notice of these'incidents. We therefore find these claims to be reasonably related to the one in her EEOC charge and that the district court erred in dismissing them.
We note, however, that Plaintiff’s EEOC charge was vague as to the’ dates of these incidents, merely stating that the exclusion from meetings took place “[a]fter October 1987.” Since the charge allegations were timely only as to acts occurring on or after a date 300 days before November 22, 1989, when Butts filed the charge, on'remand the *1404 district court only may hear the two claims insofar as they relate to acts occurring on or after this date.
Finally, Plaintiff argued before the district court that she should be permitted to bring her time-barred claims based on the “continuous violation” exception to the Title VII statute of limitations. She appears to have abandoned this argument on appeal. In any event, the continuous violation exception applies only where discrimination is accomplished through a specific official policy or mechanism, which is not alleged here.
See, e.g., Cook v. Pan American World Airways, Inc.,
We therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal of Plaintiffs Title VII claims as to all but the two claims discussed above.
II. Retroactivity of the Civil Rights Act of 1991
Plaintiff also alleges that the same acts of discrimination cited in her Title VII claim violated 42 U.S.C. § 1981. Section 1981 provides that “[a]ll persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall have the same right in every State and Territory to make and enforce contracts ... as is enjoyed by white citizens _” 42 U.S.C. § 1981(a). In
Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
While the 1989 decision in Patterson is the latest pronouncement by the Supreme Court on § 1981, it is not the end of the story. The Patterson decision was disfavored by some in Congress and prompted legislative efforts to overcome what was perceived to be Patterson’s limiting effect on private civil rights enforcement. In the 1991 Civil Rights Act, among other changes in the civil rights laws, Congress amended § 1981 to reach terms and conditions claims, including promotion claims. The Act, in a new definitions section, provided that the term “make and enforce contracts” in § 1981 “includes the making, performance, modification, and termination of contracts, and the enjoyment of all benefits, privileges, terms, and conditions of the contractual relationship.” 42 U.S.C. § 1981(b).
The Act took effect on November 21, 1991. The last act of discrimination alleged in Plaintiff’s complaint occurred in 1990. Not surprisingly, since Plaintiff’s complaint alleging discrimination in promotion and in the terms and conditions of her employment clearly would state a cause of action under the amended § 1981, shе argues that the 1991 Act applies retroactively. If it does, there is no need to inquire into whether Plaintiff’s promotion claims state a cause of action under Patterson.
The 1991 Act contains no express provision stating whether the Act as a whole is to be applied retroactively or prospectively only, although it does provide that two sections. unrelated to this case are to be applied only prospectively. Thus, to determine the retroactivity question, we must examine the Act’s language, its legislative history, the significance of the two sections where prospectivity is specified in relation to the Act as a whole, and view the Act in light of applicable presumptions.
See generally United States v. Thompson/Center Arms Co.,
— U.S. -,-,
A. Legislative History of the 1991 Civil Rights Act
No formal legislative history, in the form of committee reports or conference reports,' accompanies the 1991 Act, much less any agreed-upon statement of congressional intent on the retroactivity issue.
See Gersman v. Group Health Ass’n, Inc.,
The Congressional Record is replete with floor speeches by Senators and Representatives stating either that the bill is intended to apply prospectively only or that it was meant to apply retroactively. See cases collected in
Davis v. San Francisco,
A bit more enlightenment is possible from looking at the sequence of events that led to the 1991 Act's passage and the maneuvering of those on both sides of the retroactivity issue. In 1990, Congress presented President Bush with a civil rights bill, containing the same proscription against discrimination in the terms and conditions of employment as the 1991 version, that was expressly retroactive. The President vetoed the bill and criticized its “unfair retroactivity rules” in his veto message. Presidеnt’s Message to the Senate Returning Without Approval the Civil Rights Act of 1990, 26 Weekly Comp.Pres. Doc. 1632, 1634 (Oct. 22, 1990). When the 1991 bill was sent to the President, it did not contain a retroactivity provision. In his statement upon signing the 1991 Act, the President instructed “all officials in the executive branch” to follow “as authoritative interpretive guidance” memoranda of law inserted into the Congressional Record by Senator Dole which stated, among other things, that the 1991 Act should not be considered to be retroactive. Statement of President George Bush Upon Signing S1745, 1991 U.S.C.C.A.N. 768, 769 (Nov. 21, 1991) (adopting memoranda at 137 Cong.Rec. S15472 (daily ed. Oct. 30, 1991) and 137 Cong.Rec. S15953 (daily ed. Nov. 5, 1991)).
This sequence of events was sufficient to persuade the Eighth Circuit that the 1991 Act was intended to apply prospectively only.
Fray v. Omaha World Herald Co.,
*1406 While we would agree with the principle enunciated in Fray as a general matter, its application in this case is undermined by complicating facts. To be sure, Congress abandoned any attempt to make the Givil Rights Act explicitly retroactive in its final version. However, Congress also rejected numerous proposals by the President and allied Senators and Representatives explicitly to make the Act prospective only. See, e.g., 137 Cong.Rec. H3898 (daily ed. June 4, 1991) (proposal of Representative Michel containing prospective-only provision). As Judge Posner concluded after reviewing these circumstances:
It seems futile to search for a legislative intent, bearing in mind that the President is by virtue of the veto power a key participant in the legislative process. President Bush would probably have vetoed a statute that contained an express provision for retroactivity — he had done so the previous session and his veto had not been overridden — but the Democratic majority in both houses would equally have “vetoed” an express provision for prospective application. As so often happens, the contenders could not agree, so they dumped the question into the judiciary’s lap without guidance.
Luddington,
Every circuit except the Eighth that has considered the issue has held that the legislative history is ambiguous as to whether the 1991 Act should be applied retroactively.
Baynes v. AT & T Technologies, Inc.,
Plaintiff argués that the Act was intended to restore
pre-Patterson
law and that therefore a presumption of retroactivity is appropriate. She relies on our decision in
Leake v. Long Island Jewish Medical Center,
Leake
and
Tirozzi
do not establish a new rule of construction that restorative legislation is presumed to apply retroactively, as some district courts in this circuit have held.
See, e.g., Kemp v. Flygt Corp.,
In the present case, Congress deliberately deleted all “restore” language in drafting the 1991 version. Compare Civil Rights Act of 1990, printed in 136 Cong. Rec. S9966, S9966 (daily ed. July 18, 1990) (stating that purpose is to “respond to the Supreme Court’s recent decisions by restoring the civil rights protections that were dramatically limited by those decisions ...”), with Civil Rights Act of 1991, Pub.L. No. 102-166, 105 Stat. 1071, 1071 (1991) (purpose is “to respond to recent decisions of the Supreme Court by expanding the scope of relevant civil rights statutes ... ”). If anything, this tips the scale in favor of non-retroactivity. In any event, restorative purpose is irrelevant here since, as discussed above, the legislative history makes clear that Congress deliberately expressed no view as to the retroactivity of the Act.
B. The Two Prospectivity Exceptions
Plaintiff argues that two sections of the Act, which provide for prospective-only application to certain classes of defendants, require the inference that the rest of the Act was retroactive. The Ninth Circuit so held in
Reynolds v. Martin,
Section 402(b) provides that the 1991 Act will apply prospectively only to “any disparate impact case for which a complaint was filed before March 1, 1975, and for which an initial decision was rendered after October 30, 1983.” This narrowly-tailored provision was designed to benefit the defendant-petitioner in
Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio,
The second of the two provisions, § 109, extends the protection of Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act to United States citizens working overseas for United States companies. Subsection (c) provides that § 109 applies only to future conduct. This explicit prospective-only provision is uninformed by any legislative history.
In contrast to the Ninth Circuit in
Reynolds,
the Fifth, Seventh, and D.C. Circuits all have held that these two provisions are properly read as “insurance policies” against the possibility that a court would deem the entire Act to apply retroactively.
Gersman,
The Ninth Circuit in
Reynolds
argued that § 402(b) and § 109(c) must be read in conjunction with § 402(a), which provides that “[ejxcept as otherwise specifically provided, this Act and the amendments made by this Act shall- take effect upon enactment.” The panel, reasoning that the phrase “as otherwise specifically provided” referred to sections 402(b) and 109(c), concluded that the plаin meaning of “shall take effect upon enactment” must be that the rest of the Act applies retroactively.
Reynolds v. Martin,
We do agree with the Reynolds court, however, that it is the duty of reviewing courts to give effect to every clаuse and word of a statute where possible. We easily do so with respect to the phrase “[ejxcept as otherwise provided” since the Act, in various sections, requires certain things to take place in the future. Section 204(b), for example, states that the Glass Ceiling Commission established by § 203 shall present a report to the President and Congress “[n]ot later than 15 months after the date of the enactment of this Act.” Section 303(b)(4) states that the first Director of the Office of Senate Fair Employment Practices “shall be appointed and begin service within 90 days after the date of enactment of this Act.” Thus the better reading of § 402(a) is that the Act’s provisions will become law and will begin to be in force as of the date of enactment, but certain mandates of the Act need not be implemented until some later date. Whether the Act’s general provisions being in force means that they will be applied retroactively is a separаte question that is left unresolved by the Act’s language and its legislative history.
*1409 C. Applicable Retroactivity Presumption Absent Congressional Intent
Since neither the 1991 Act’s language nor its legislative history indicates whether it should be applied retroactively or prospectively only, we turn to certain presumptions the Supreme Court has established for courts to apply when a statute is silent as to retroactivity and Congress has failed otherwise to indicate its intention. In this endeavor we are, somewhat regrettably, faced with two lines of authority in apparent conflict. In
Bradley v. Richmond School Bd.,
While we tend to agree with Justice Scalia that the lines of cases are “in irreconcilable contradiction,” it is beyond our authority to choose one and disregard the other.
Cf. Rodriguez de Quijos v. Shearson/American Express, Inc.,
The principle of
Bowen,
that absent an explicit directive or legislative history to the contrary, a statute should be applied only prospectively, is the more established doctrine in our jurisprudence. In
United States v. Security Industrial Bank,
Against this jurisprudential background, reflected in Supreme Court case law, the Court handed down
Bradley.
In
Bradley,
after the district court had entered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in a school desegregation case and while the appeal
*1410
was pending, Congress enacted § 718 of the Educational Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. § 1617, which provided for the recovery of attorneys’ fees in school desegregation cases. The
Bradley
Court ruled that a new rule established in a statute should be applied to a case on appeal unless there is a statutory directive to the contrary, whether explicitly or in the legislative history, or if applying the statute retroactively would cause manifest injustice.
Thorpe
and
Bradley
cited prior Supreme Court cases in support, but every case cited either involved statutes in which the Court found clear retroactive language or intent, or dealt with changes in the law due to a
judicial
decision.
See Kaiser,
All of the circuits that have addressed the issue of which presumption ought to apply in the context of the 1991 Act have applied a presumption of prospectivity, and all have followed
Bowen,
except the Eleventh Circuit, which ruled that the Act should be applied prospectively only under either the
Bradley
or the
Bowen
test, since it found it would be “manifestly unjust” to the defendants to apply the Act retroactively.
Baynes,
In the Second Circuit we have sought to harmonize
Bradley
and
Bowen
along lines that Justice Scalia noted in his concurrence in
Kaiser, Thorpe, Bradley,
and the cases they cite, as well as
Bennett,
involved the specific situation where the legislative change occurred while the case was pending on appeal. Justice Scalia wrote: “It is doubtful ... whether the
Thorpe-Bradley
presumption of retroactivity survives at all. If it does, however, it
only
survives (as it was begotten) as a special rule applicable to changes in law after initial adjudication.”
Kaiser,
We do not understand Bradley to mean ... that the only cognizable basis for a construction against retroactivity is either exрlicit statutory language or unequivocal congressional intent. Determination of retroactivity remains a matter of statutory construction, albeit with a presumption in favor of retroactivity as to judgments pending on direct review, contrary to the normal presumption against retroactivity in other circumstances.
See also United States v. Target Rock Corp., No. 90 Civ. 4414 at 20, 1992 WL *1411 157677, 1992 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 9858 (E.D.N.Y. June 30, 1992).
While this court has cited
Bradley
since
Litton
was decided in cases that were not pending on appeal when the legislative change was enacted, in these cases we did not apply the
Bradley
presumption, but instead either found that congressional intent was unambiguous and only cited language from
Bradley
for the unremarkable proposition that congressional intent is dis-positive,
e.g., Taub, Hummel & Schnall v. Atlantic Container Line, Ltd.,
This distinction between eases pending on appeal and cases yet to be decided by the district court poses an obvious problеm. Under our interpretation of
Bradley,
the litigant whose claim has already been heard before the district court under the old statute but is pending on appeal will have the new statute presumptively applied, but a litigant whose case is yet to be decided by the district court will have the old statute presumptively applied. While we believe, notwithstanding
Bradley,
that
Bowen
and the overwhelming weight of Supreme Court precedent support the proposition that there should never be a presumption of retroactivity where congressional intent is ambiguous, if a presumption of retroactivity were to apply to only one of the above situations, it would seem that it should be the reverse of our
Bradley/Bowen
distinction: where a district court has already rendered a decision under the former statute when the new statute is passed, there is a lesser, not greater, reason to presume retroactivity. The Seventh Circuit and Justice Scalia also have notеd this anomaly.
See Kaiser,
III. Plaintiffs § 1981 claims under Patterson v. McLean Credit Union
Since the 1991 Act does not apply to Plaintiffs case, we must apply the law as it existed prior to the Act. Under
Patterson,
a claim of discrimination in promotions is actionable under § 1981 “[o]nly where the promotion rises to the level of an opportunity for a new and distinct relation between the employee and the employer_”
Patterson,
Patterson
held that § 1981 only provides a cause of action for discrimination in making and entering contracts, and not for discrimination in the performance of contracts.
Id.
at 176-178,
Promotions understood by the parties to be given routinely upon satisfactory job performance do not give rise to a new employment contract. Similarly, moving an employee from one position to another as part of a reallocation of personnel resources, not involving a substantial increase in status or responsibility, is apt to be implicit in the original contract and thus would not give rise to § 1981 liability under Patterson, even though the move might entail a salary increase or somewhat more responsibility. However, any promotion that creates a qualitatively different relation between the employer and employee, for example, a move from factory worker to foreman, foreman to foreman supervisor, or manager to officer, likely would create a new and distinct relation giving rise to a § 1981 action under Patterson.
The inquiry should not be confined to titles; it should examine actual changes in responsibility and status. It is also relevant to evaluate whether the promotion is the type of routine advancement for which only present employees typically qualify, or whether it is to a position that would be open to somebody outside the organization.
See Malhotra v. Cotter & Co.,
Plaintiff has three promotion claims under § 1981 that fall within the applicable three-year statute of limitations. In
Goodman v. Lukens Steel Co.,
Plaintiffs three timely promotion discrimination claims involve alleged denials of promotion from Computer System Manager on one occasion to Deputy Commissioner of the Office of Management and Administration and on two occasions to Director of Systems Architecture. The positions of Deputy Commissioner or Director of Systems Architecture could entail substantially different, and greater, supervisory and policy-making responsibilities and a corresponding change in status so as to amount to a new and distinct relаtion between Butts and the City. But this determination cannot be made simply by examining the complaint. We therefore find that the district court erred in dismissing under Patterson Plaintiffs three timely promotion claims and remand them for further consideration.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Plaintiffs Title VII claims, except for the two claims relating to her exclusion from reorganization meetings, as to which we reverse. We affirm the district court’s finding that the § 1981 amendments of the Civil Rights Act of 1991 do not apply retroactively, and affirm its dismissal of Plaintiff’s § 1981 claims for discrimination in the terms and conditions of her employment. We also affirm the district court’s *1413 dismissal of Plaintiffs untimely promotion discrimination claims under § 1981. However, we reverse the district court’s dismissal of Plaintiffs timely § 1981 promotion claims alleging the City’s failure to promote her to Deputy Commissioner of the Office of Management and Administration and Director of Systems Architecture. We remand the case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded. The parties shall bear their own costs.
