Kelly Hobbs, an African-American woman, was passed over for a promotion during her employment with the City of Chicago and claimed race and gender discrimination, retaliation, and the existence of a hostile work environment. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendants because Hobbs failed to show she was similarly or better qualified than the white male who received the promotion and because she cannot show she suffered retaliation or a hostile work environment as a result of her discrimination complaint.
I. BACKGROUND
Kelly Hobbs, an African-American woman, began working for the City in 1989 as a Motor Truck Driver in the City’s Department of Transportation (“DOT”) after attending the University of Illinois at Chicago for four and a half years. Although she no longer worked on truck duty, she retained the title of Motor Truck Driver. In 2000, Hobbs received the responsibilities of Lot Supervisor at the 103rd Street Lot. She served as the only African-American or female Lot Supervisor in the DOT. Many of Hobbs’s job duties as Lot Supervisor at the 103rd Street Lot, including preparing time sheets and dealing with Fleet Management, also were duties listed in the Foreman’s job description. She appeared to be the daily face of authority, but she was never paid as a foreman. No one ever complained about Hobbs’s job performance.
In 1997 and in 2000, Hobbs applied for and interviewed for the Foreman position, but both times a white male received the job. In 2000, Defendant Joseph Senese was chosen over Hobbs as Foreman. Then, in October 2004, Hobbs learned that Defendant Pat Quinn, also a white male, had received a promotion to Acting Foreman three months earlier.
Quinn began working as a Motor Truck Driver in 1986, and he worked as a Lot Supervisor on and off from 2002 to 2004. Quinn described himself as “computer illiterate,” while Hobbs claimed to be computer proficient. In 2004, after Senese said he needed help supervising on the street, the DOT’s new First Deputy Commissioner Brian Murphy appointed Quinn as Acting Foreman on Senese’s recommendation alone. Murphy did not consider Hobbs for the position. Senese and Quinn had known each other for thirteen years since their work together as Motor Truck Drivers. Senese knew Quinn’s work ethic and that Quinn had volunteered in the snow program for eight years. Hobbs had only driven a snow plow once. The DOT supervised the City’s Streets and Sanitation’s program coordinating snow removal.
*459 The City did not post the Acting Foreman position to which Quinn was promoted because an “acting” position is not considered a vacancy and need not be competitively bid. The City’s union contract requires the City to post a position after an individual is in the “acting” position for more than 90 days, but the position may be extended by mutual agreement of the parties. The federal monitor in Shakman v. Democratic Organization of Cook County, No. 69 C 2145 (N.D.Ill.), stated in a December 2007 report that the City has repeatedly taken advantage of the “acting” policy by allowing individuals to move up to and stay in higher pay grade positions for longer than 90 days, leading to unchecked politically connected appointments in violation of the Shakman decree, which bans the use of politics in City hiring. In December 2006, the federal monitor removed Quinn from the Acting Foreman position.
In January 2005, Hobbs filed a charge of discrimination against the DOT with the Illinois Department of Human Rights and the EEOC, alleging the City denied her a promotion to Foreman because of her race and gender. According to Hobbs, word spread about the filed charges. In April 2005, her supervisors reprimanded her for violating a City policy by swiping out early. Hobbs says other white male co-workers were not reprimanded for more serious infractions, such as cursing at Quinn and sleeping during work hours. On April 24, 2005, the same day Hobbs received a notice of her disciplinary hearing, Hobbs confronted Quinn about the swiping out early infraction, and an argument ensued during which Hobbs shouted at Quinn and alleged that he gave her permission to swipe out early to pick up her daughter from school. Quinn later testified in his deposition that no other employee had ever cursed or shouted at him and that the employee that slept on the job was disciplined. Quinn reported Hobbs for insubordination. Hobbs eventually received an oral reprimand for swiping out early, which was later rescinded. She also received a three-day suspension for shouting at Quinn. The deputy commissioner who presided over both of Hobbs’s disciplinary hearings did not know about her EEOC charge.
The day Hobbs received her disciplinary notice for swiping out early, she alleges someone vandalized her personal vehicle while it was parked in the secure DOT parking lot. Hobbs claims she saw Quinn and another white male employee standing next to her car twenty minutes before the vandalism occurred. Hobbs complained to Senese about the vandalism and accused Quinn, but Senese allegedly dismissed Hobbs’s allegations and did not investigate the complaint. Hobbs reported the vandalism to in-house Construction Deputy Commissioner William Cheaks, who told her he would look into it and get the “heat” off of her, but never did.
Hobbs complains she was assigned work duties to humiliate her and that Quinn and other white male co-workers congregated outside her office door, which intimidated her. Hobbs also alleges that her job duties changed when Quinn became Acting Foreman. She had been assigned to drive a truck only once from 1994 to 2002, but after November 2004, she received truck driving responsibilities twenty times. Quinn allegedly told others Hobbs had no authority to give drivers assignments. On Christmas Eve 2005, Hobbs was assigned to transport a truck across the city and then was told she had the wrong truck and had to repeat the trip that day. Quinn and Senese testified that they asked Hobbs to drive only when there was a shortage of Motor Truck Drivers and that driving is part of a Lot Supervisor’s duties. On February 8, 2006, Senese told Hobbs her commercial driver’s license was invalid, *460 and as a result, she lost a day of pay. But when she went to the Secretary of State to clear up the matter, she was told the state had never sent the City anything about her license and that it remained valid. During discovery, the City presented a Driver’s License Verification Action Status Report dated February 6, 2006, with Hobbs’s name on it.
On July 13, 2006, Hobbs filed the instant lawsuit alleging race and gender discrimination and retaliation claims in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981 against all defendants; race and gender discrimination and retaliation in violation of Title VII against the City; a hostile work environment claim against the City; and equal protection claims against all defendants pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court granted the City’s motion to dismiss the section 1981 race and retaliation claims and the section 1983 claim against the City. The remaining claims were Title VII race and gender discrimination and retaliation claims against the city, section 1981 race discrimination and retaliation claims and section 1983 equal protection claims against the individual defendants. Hobbs appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants on all of the claims except the equal protection ground.
II. ANALYSIS
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo and view the facts and draw all inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Winsley v. Cook County,
A. The district court properly granted summary judgment on Hobbs’s Title VII and section 1981 claims. 1
Hobbs argues she suffered race and gender discrimination because the City failed to promote her, or even consider her for promotion, to the position of Acting Foreman in 2004. She proceeds on the indirect, burden-shifting method set out in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Because the City does not contest the first three elements of the prima facie case, we focus on the fourth prong. Hobbs asserts she was similarly or better qualified for the position than Quinn because she had more experience as a Lot Supervi *461 sor, and she possessed computer skills and a college education that Quinn did not.
We agree with the district court that Hobbs failed to show that she was as qualified or more qualified than Quinn. Commissioner Murphy appointed Quinn on the recommendation of Senese, who knew Quinn and had worked with him in the past on the streets and was aware of Quinn’s work ethic because they had known each other for thirteen years. Senese also recommended Quinn for the job because of the latter’s experience in the City’s snow program. Quinn had volunteered with the snow program for years, while Hobbs had refused to do so. Moreover, Quinn had at least two more years experience than Hobbs as a Motor Truck Driver. Even though Hobbs had more experience as a Lot Supervisor, Senese was particularly interested in hiring someone who could help him on the streets. Hobbs further suggests that she was better qualified because she attended college and was computer proficient, while Quinn had neither qualification. That may be true, but it does not help Hobbs because college education and computer skills were not part of the job qualifications for Acting Foreman.
Hobbs posits that because the City deviated from its formal written procedures of posting the Acting Foreman position as a vacancy, a prima facie case of discrimination must be presumed. Hobbs relies on
Loyd v. Phillips Bros., Inc., 25
F.3d 518 (7th Cir.1994), for the proposition that since the City deviated from its policy, she must show only that “but for such a practice she likely would have been approached” and that if approached, she would have accepted the position.
Loyd, 25
F.3d at 523. But Hobbs’s reliance on
Loyd
is misplaced because
Loyd
instructs that if an employer disregards an application process, the employer cannot defeat a plaintiffs prima facie case by arguing that the plaintiff did not apply for a position. The employee must still meet the fourth prong of the prima facie case and prove her superior qualifications.
See id.; see also Fischer v. Avanade, Inc.,
Even if Hobbs satisfied the prima facie case, the City has offered nondiscriminatory reasons for promoting Quinn, which Hobbs failed to show are pretextual. “Pretext is a ‘lie, specifically a phony reason for some action.’ ”
Sublett v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,
Hobbs did not show that the City lied about its reasons for promoting Quinn. As evidence, Hobbs asserts that the Department of Streets and Sanitation, not the DOT, runs the snow program 2 and that *462 Senese never said he needed help on the streets prior to promoting Quinn. But Hobbs is mistaken on both counts. Quinn volunteered to work the snow program, while Hobbs refused to do so, which demonstrated to Senese Quinn’s willingness to work on the streets — one of the qualities Senese was looking for in an Acting Foreman. The City refuted Hobbs’s contention that Senese lied about needing more help when it showed that in the summer of 2004, Murphy questioned Senese about why he was not completing certain tasks and Senese explained he needed help. Hobbs also asserts that Murphy acted as Senese’s cat’s paw when he appointed Quinn, but we fail to see how that assertion proves pretext.
Hobbs further argues that the district court erred because it improperly required her to demonstrate both pretext and discriminatory animus. Hobbs is incorrect. Our recent Title VII cases explain that a plaintiff demonstrates pretext by showing the employer’s proffered nondiscriminatory reason is a lie and the real reason is based on discriminatory intent.
See, e.g., Fischer,
Moreover, Hobbs has not shown that the City’s real reason for picking Quinn was race or gender discrimination. Hobbs maintains there are no African-American or female Foremen — while a City supervisor testified that there were three African-American General Foremen — but she did not support her contention with admissible evidence.
See Sublett,
Hobbs also put forth no personal knowledge of racial or sexist statements or conduct in her attempt to demonstrate pretext.
Rabinovitz v. Pena,
Although the process through which Quinn received his promotion might be questionable, it does not prove gender or race discrimination. It might suggest favoritism on some other basis, and in fact, the federal monitor removed him from the Acting Foreman position. That Hobbs did not believe Quinn deserved the job is not enough to survive summary judgment.
See Blise v. Antaramian,
B. Hobbs’s retaliation claim fails.
Hobbs further argues she proved through the direct method that the City took adverse actions against her in retaliation for her discrimination complaints with the EEOC and the Illinois Department of Human Rights.
Title VII protects employees from retaliation as a result of their discrimination complaints.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). Under the direct method of proof, the only method at issue here, a plaintiff must show that: (1) she engaged in statutorily protected activity; (2) she suffered a materially adverse action taken by the employer; and (3) there was a causal connection between the two.
Humphries v. CBOCS West, Inc.,
Hobbs offers several grounds for her retaliation claim. First, Hobbs says she was orally reprimanded and suspended for three days following two disciplinary hearings, but she has failed to establish a causal connection because the commissioner who disciplined her did not know Hobbs filed the EEOC charge.
See Tomanovich v. City of Indianapolis,
Hobbs also argues she was stripped of the authority she had enjoyed as Lot Supervisor and was given undesirable assignments, such as driving on twenty different occasions when she had been given a driving assignment only once in the ten years prior to her complaints. Therefore, her only argument concerns assignments that were clearly within her job duties. She did not point to any evidence that she suffered loss of a job title or received less pay.
3
A materially adverse action must be “more disruptive than a mere inconvenience or an alteration of job
*464
responsibilities.”
Nagle v. Vill. of Calumet Park,
Hobbs also suggests that she suffered intimidation when several white male co-workers congregated outside her office to talk. She also takes issue with the City requiring proof of a valid commercial driver’s license. Neither of these qualify as adverse actions. Workers were allowed to be in the area outside her office, which she shared with about five other people. Also, the City requires proof of a valid commercial driver’s license for all Motor Truck Drivers. During discovery, the City provided the document that showed Hobbs was listed as one of the driver’s whose license needed to be verified.
Hobbs’s final basis for her retaliation claim — the failure to investigate her car vandalism — is more troubling. Damaging one’s property is a serious allegation, and Hobbs argues Senese told her he could not talk to her about the vandalism because of her discrimination complaint. However, Senese knew he was named in the charge and his own conduct was being investigated by the EEOC. It would have been odd for Senese — the very person Hobbs was complaining about — to investigate her allegation. Hobbs then went to Commissioner Cheaks, who also did not investigate her accusation. However, Hobbs presented no evidence that Cheaks actually knew about her EEOC charge.
See Tomanovich,
C. Hobbs’s hostile work environment claim also fails.
Finally, Hobbs argues she suffered a hostile work environment, based on the same facts she set out for her retaliation claim. The conduct complained of must be severe or pervasive “so as to alter the conditions of [the employee’s] environment and create a hostile and abusive working environment.”
Winsley,
Here, the facts do not rise to the level of the severe or pervasive threshold.
See Walker v. Mueller Indus., Inc.,
The district court properly granted summary judgment on Hobbs’s hostile environment claim.
III. CONCLUSION
Therefore, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants.
Notes
. We analyze Hobbs’s section 1981 and Title VII claims together because they both require the plaintiff to prove the same prima facie elements.
See Antonetti v. Abbott Labs.,
. Hobbs also asserts that the timing of Quinn's promotion shows the City’s snow program explanation is a lie. Quinn was appointed in August, and if the City had fol *462 lowed the 90-day rule regarding appointments to Acting positions, his appointment would have ended in November, before the beginning of the winter season. This argument fails because the City's Union Contract allowed for the extension of the 90-day period by mutual agreement of the parties.
. Hobbs retained the title of Motor Truck Driver, but was one of the Motor Truck Drivers in her yard that also had the extra duty of being a Lot Supervisor. Lot Supervisors do not receive extra pay, but perform supervisory duties, such as relaying daily work assignments, checking equipment and driving a truck when needed.
