MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff William Hopkins filed this lawsuit against the Director of the Office of Personnel Management (“OPM”) alleging that OPM discriminated against him based on his national origin in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and based on his age in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., by not scoring Hopkins as high as he believed he should have been scored on the certificate of eligibles that accompanied Hopkins’ application for a position of Russian interpreter with the United States Department of State. Hopkins also claims that defendant’s selection process has a disparate impact upon people of advanced age and people who share his national origin. OPM moves for summary judgment on the claims of national origin and age discrimination in scoring because the State Department withdrew the vacancy announcement and did not hire anyone to fill the position Hopkins sought, and moves to dismiss the disparate impact claim arguing that Hopkins failed to exhaust his administrative remedies. Because Hopkins neither presents a prima facie case of discrimination nor rebuts as pretextual OPM’s neutral rationale for not manually adjusting Hopkins’ score, and because Hopkins did not satisfy administrative prerequisites with respect to his disparate impact claim, the defendant’s motion to dismiss and for summary judgment will be granted.
BACKGROUND
Hopkins, a U.S. native, was a resident of the District of Columbia who was approximately 60 years of age when the events at issue occurred. (Compl. at ¶¶ 5, 6.) As of July 2002, Hopkins had interpreted Russian for nine years in consecutive and simultaneous nodes for Presidents and Secretaries of State. In addition, for 20 years before that, Hopkins interpreted Russian for various United States arms negotiators, and he was the personal interpreter of the United States ambassador in Moscow for two years. (Compl. at ¶ 6.)
In July 2002, the State Department asked OPM to refer eligible applications for four Interpreter positions in languages including French, German, Russian, and Spanish. (Def.’s Stmt, of Material Facts Not in Dispute (“Def.’s Stmt.”) at ¶ 1.) Hopkins received an e-mail from an employee of the State Department’s Office of Language Services stating that the Office of Language Services was recruiting a staff Russian interpreter, and inviting Hopkins to apply for the position. (Compl. at ¶ 9.) Hopkins replied to the e-mail, and shortly thereafter received an official announcement via fax. (Compl. at ¶ 10.) The announcement included a questionnaire containing 17 questions. Hopkins applied for the position at both the grade GS-13 and grade GS-14 levels, and OPM confirmed that it had received Hopkins’ application. OPM’s automated staffing system evaluated applicants’ questionnaire responses and generated a numeric rating for the applicants. (Def.’s Stmt, at ¶ 3.) OPM staff examined the top scoring applicants’ application materials and compared them to objective benchmarks to ensure the accuracy of the automated staffing systems’ rankings, and to ensure that the applicants’ self-assessments about their ability to interpret Russian were substanti
Hopkins was one of 29 applicants to apply for the Russian Interpreter position (Def.’s Stmt, at ¶ 5), and one of 11 candidates whose application materials OPM forwarded to the State Department. His score was 92 out of 100, which fell in the category of well-qualified. (Def.’s Stmt, at ¶ 7.) However, Hopkins was not interviewed for the position because the State Department decided to interview only the top four scoring candidates applying for the position at the GS-13 grade, and his name was not listed as one of the top four scoring candidates. (PL’s Resp. to Def.’s Mot. (“PL’s Resp.”) Ex. 3, Sprague Aff. at 1-2, April 15, 2003.) In December 2002, OPM informed Hopkins that his application “was among those referred to the selecting official.... However, no selection was made from those referred.” (Compl. at ¶ 16; Def.’s Stmt, at ¶ 12.) According to Brenda Saunders Sprague, the Director of the Office of Language Services, the vacancy announcement was withdrawn “due in large part to a changed workload and resulting lack of work for Russian interpreters.” (Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss and for Summ. J. (“Def.’s Mot.”), Ex. 9, Sprague Aff. ¶ 4, October 27, 2005.)
Hopkins alleges that he was the most qualified applicant based upon objective standards used among language professionals. However, Hopkins alleges that he was given a lower rating and ranking on the OPM certificate of eligibles than he should have been given because the OPM examiner favored applicants whose national origin suggested that their native language was Russian. (Compl. at ¶ 17.) Hopkins contends that the extent and quality of his qualifications were superior to that of the other identified candidates, yet were underrated by the automated computer ranking and scoring system. According to Hopkins, the OPM examiner who reviewed his application should have realized that the computer generated ratings for other applicants were over-inflated. He also claims that the OPM examiner made subjective determinations that had a disproportionate impact on people who were not native Russian speakers because the reviewing official subjectively over-inflated the scores for native Russian speakers. As a result, he says, two thirds of the top-ranking candidates were people who had been educated in the Soviet Union. (Compl. at ¶¶ 18-19, 22.) According to Hopkins, the OPM examiner should have changed or adjusted the rankings when he reviewed the top scoring applicants’ application materials to account for Hopkins’ superior qualifications, but did not do so. Hopkins also alleges that he was considerably older than the applicants that OPM rated as the top three scorers. (Compl. at ¶ 20.)
Plaintiff filed an administrative complaint of discrimination, and OPM ultimately issued a final order denying the complaint. (Compl. at ¶ 22.) Hopkins then filed this action, and OPM moved for summary judgment on the claims of national origin and age discrimination in scoring in the complaint’s first and second causes of action, and dismissal of the disparate impact claim in the complaint’s third cause of action.
DISCUSSION
I. DISCRIMINATORY SCORING
“Summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings and the evidence dem
“In deciding whether there is a genuine issue of material fact, the court must assume the truth of all statements proffered by the non-movant except for conclusory allegations lacking any factual basis in the record.”
Hines,
In general, a prima facie claim of discrimination requires a plaintiff to establish that he is a member of a protected class and that he was subjected to an adverse employment action which gives rise to an inference of discrimination.
See Mastro v. Potomac Elec. Power Co.,
In deciding summary judgment motions on Title VII and ADEA claims, courts apply the burden-shifting framework announced in
McDonnell Douglas,
Hopkins fails to establish a prima facie case of discrimination against OPM. As an initial matter, OPM did refer Hopkins’ application to the State Department and assigned it a score of 92, reflecting that he was well qualified for the position Hopkins sought. (Def.’s Stmt. ¶¶ 7, 10.) This negates Hopkins’ implication that OPM constructively prevented him from being referred to the State Department for an interview.
(See, e.g.,
Pl.’s Stmt, of Genuine Issues, ¶¶ a(7), b(1).) While Hopkins alleges that he would have been given the position if he had been granted an interview with the State Department, the vacancy announcement was withdrawn “due in large part to a changed workload and resulting lack of work for Russian interpreters.” (Sprague Aff. ¶ 4, October 27, 2005.) It was the State Department that chose not to interview all qualified applicants, cancelled the vacancy announcement, and chose not to hire anyone for the position Hopkins sought.
(See id.
¶ 3.) “When a government agency cancels a vacancy announcement and no one outside the protected class is hired to fill the position, the plaintiff cannot establish her prima facie case.”
Bowie v. Ashcroft,
OPM acknowledged that the top scorers and Hopkins were experienced and well qualified. For the court to be asked to judge whether Hopkins’ credentials were starkly superior to those of the other well-qualified candidates who received higher scores would likely thrust the court into a role disfavored by
Jackson.
However, Hopkins’ evidence reflects a demonstrable absence of discriminatory motive. While OPM staff may have had discretion to subjectively alter the candidates’ scores when reviewing the top scoring applicants’ application materials, the questionnaire that the applicants completed contained no questions seeking the applicants’ national origin or age, and Hopkins only speculates as to how OPM would deduce that information.
2
(See Def.’s Mot., Ex. 2; Pl.’s Resp. at 13.) Although the plaintiff asserts that John T. Mays, the OPM Human Resource Specialist who reviewed the candidates’ materials, was clearly aware of several imperfect proxies for the applicants’ national origin, such as where the applicants were educated or whether the applicants were native Russian speakers, Mays testified in his deposition that he was not aware of those proxies, in part because he “didn’t really look at education,” and instead focused on other fac
II. DISPARATE IMPACT
OPM moves under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) to dismiss Hopkins’ Title VII and ADEA disparate impact claims contained in the third cause of action in Hopkins’ complaint, arguing that Hopkins failed to satisfy the jurisdictional prerequisite of exhausting his administrative remedies. However, “motions to dismiss for failure to exhaust administrative remedies are more appropriately analyzed under Rule 12(b)(6)[,]” which involves failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted.
Marshall v. Honeywell Tech. Solutions, Inc.,
A disparate impact claim is distinct from the disparate treatment claims Hopkins has alleged, and requires distinct elements of proof. Disparate impact claims arise from employment practices that are facially neutral in their treatment of different groups, but that fall more severely on one statutorily protected group than another in practice, and which a defendant cannot justify by business necessity.
Smith v. City of Jackson,
Assuming that a disparate impact claim under the ADEA against a federal employer is legally cognizable, 3 Hopkins did not comply with the administrative requirements under the ADEA or Title VII before filing a lawsuit alleging disparate impact. Hopkins’ administrative complaint of discrimination did not raise a disparate impact claim against the OPM’s employment policies, and there was no discussion of a disparate impact claim in the counselor’s report or the investigative record. Hopkins’ administrative complaint, filed with OPM on December 31, 2002 states:
It is my position that I should have been selected and employed for one of the two positions for which I applied. Because I was discriminated against in the selection process, I contend I should be compensated with back pay and other economic losses I suffered as a result of the discriminatory conduct in the selection process. I also seek compensatory damages for injury to my professional reputation and for psychological and emotional distress I have suffered. In the alternative, I should be ranked and listed among the top 3 candidates on a new referral to the Department of State and compensated with back pay and other economic losses I have suffered as a result of the discriminatory conduct by OPM. Prior to such a determination, I also seek an explanation of and the criteria used for assigning each candidate’s certification ranking, as well as the ranking of the candidates as to the two positions.
(See Def.’s Mot., Ex. 15B.) Specificity in a charge is not a “mere technicality” and compliance with all administrative procedures and deadlines is mandatory.
Park v. Howard Univ.,
CONCLUSION
Hopkins does not present a prima facie case that OPM scored his application dis
Notes
. While the questionnaire asked for the applicants’ citizenship, citizenship and national origin are distinct concepts. “Title VII forbids discrimination on the basis of national origin, not of citizenship.”
Nyunt v. Tomlinson,
.
See Aliotta v. Bair,
