Thomas Huels claims his employer, Exxon Coal, and its parent, Exxon Corporation (we’ll refer to both as Exxon), discriminated against him on the basis of his alcoholism in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101 et seq. The district court granted summary judgment for Exxon, concluding part of Huels’ suit predated the ADA and the remainder was barred by Huels’ failure to file a timely complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. This appeal followed.
At all times relevant to this appeal, Exxon’s unincorporated Monterey division operated two mines, creatively dubbed “No. 1” and “No. 2,” in southern Illinois. In 1978 Exxon hired Huels to work at No. 2, and in 1985 he was promoted to the level of production foreman. Exxon evaluated and ranked its workers, including Huels, annually. First, in late spring, each employee’s supervisor prepared a written assessment of the employee’s performance during the preceding year. After the assessment was reviewed with the employee, the supervisors met and used the assessments to rank the employees in relation to one another. Finally, the initial rankings list was passed on to the mine superintendent, who had the last word on the list’s contents.
Huels scored quite well in many of the evaluations following his promotion. For example, in 1989 he ranked 28th out of 106 “first-line supervisors.” He did even better in 1990 and 1991, ranking 21st out of 129 and 12th out of 112, respectively. In late 1991, however, Huels’ performance slipped. Although Exxon says his work was so shoddy that it gave him a “final warning” to shape up or find a pink slip in his locker, we view the facts in the light most favorable to Huels, who admits only that he was having trouble keeping a positive attitude and that his supervisors were not pleased when he occasionally arrived late for work or called in “sick” just a few minutes before his shift was slated to start.
In January 1992 Huels told Exxon he had an alcohol problem and planned to seek treatment. After completing an inpatient program, Huels reported back to work in February 1992. However, because the position of production foreman fell within the reach of a corporate policy (adopted in the wake of the Exxon-Valdez oil spill) which prohibited employees with a history of substance abuse problems from holding certain safety-sensitive jobs, Huels was transferred to a position as a support foreman. Although Huels was aware of the transfer policy before seeking treatment and knew that as a support foreman he would still be considered a first-line supervisor and receive the same salary (roughly $54,000 a year plus benefits), he wasn’t happy with the move. He immediately asked to be reassigned, complaining his new position forced him to perform “trivial and demeaning” tasks and left him with diminished responsibility.
A few months later, in June 1992, a new set of evaluations was released. This time Huels took a nose dive. In fact, he could hardly have fared worse. He was ranked dead last — 51st out of 51 — among first-line supervisors at No. 2 and second from the bottom — 72nd out of 73 — among foremen at both mines. Despite the low scores, which Huels attributes to his decision to seek alcohol treatment and not to his superiors’ dissatisfaction with his job performance in 1991, Huels received a substantial raise.
Although Huels was not keen on his new job, he continued to work as a support foreman until March 1993, when a contractual dispute with No. 2’s sole customer forced Exxon to shut down the mine and lay off most of its employees. In all, 350 employees, including 35 first-line supervisors, were sent home. The only supervisors kept on were those ranked near the top of the evaluation list. Because Huels was much closer to the other end of that list, he was laid off. To soften the blow, he was awarded a little over $31,000 in severance pay.
In April 1994 Huels filed a complaint with the EEOC, claiming Exxon had violated the ADA by discriminating against him on the basis of his disability, alcoholism. The complaint focused on four discriminatory “acts”: his 1992 transfer, his continued employment as a support foreman, his March 1993 layoff, and Exxon’s failure to bring him back on board in October 1993. After receiving the green light from the EEOC, Huels filed this suit in district court. In response, Exxon moved for summary judgment, arguing Huels’ cause of action accrued prior to the ADA’s July 1992 effective date and that his EEOC complaint was filed too late. Huels countered that his suit survived the effective date of the ADA and was timely because it involved a “continuing violation” which ran from his transfer until Exxon failed to recall him in October 1993.
The district court sided with Exxon, reasoning any claim based upon Huels’ transfer to support foreman predated the ADA and that, to the extent a “continuing violation” was at issue, Huels’ EEOC complaint was untimely because it was filed more than 300 days after the first negative consequence of Exxon’s alleged discrimination — the March 1993 layoffs. We review the district court’s decision de novo. Harmon v. OKI Sys.,
Although the ADA was enacted in 1990, it did not become effective until July 26, 1992. See 42 U.S.C. § 12111 note — Effective Date. Because the Act was not retroactive, Huels can only escape summary judgment if he can show that he was a victim of disability discrimination on or after the ADA’s effective date. See Graehling v. Village of Lombard,
Huels hit upon what he believed to be a winning theory. He alleged that his transfer, layoff, and Exxon’s failure to recall him amounted to a continuing violation of the ADA. As Huels discovered in the district court, however, his theory was far from airtight. For if the March 1993 layoffs were in fact discriminatory, Huels’ claim would have accrued at that point even if he later experienced additional painful consequences of that layoff. See e.g., Graehling,
We have little trouble concluding that Exxon’s failure to recall Huels was not a fresh act of disability discrimination. Exxon claimed that competitive market forces and uncertainty about the price its purchaser would be obligated to pay under its contract for No. 2’s coal forced it to reorganize and recall fewer workers than it had laid off. Huels has failed to point to any evidence suggesting those reasons were simply pretext for getting rid of alcoholic employees. See Russell v. Acme-Evans Co.,
However, even if Huels could show that he would have been recalled had he not been transferred, any claim based upon his allegedly discriminatory position on the list would have accrued when he was assigned that ranking. In Lorance v. AT & T Technologies, Inc.,
We reached a similar result in Kennedy v. Chemical Waste Management, Inc.,
Although Lorance and Kennedy were statute of limitations cases and did not deal directly with the effect of a newly operative law, their reasoning applies with equal force here. See Graehling,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although Lorance s specific holding has been abrogated by statute — 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(2) now gives employees injured by the application of a seniority system which has been “adopted for an intentionally discriminatory purpose in violation of" Title VII the option of measuring the limitations period from the date of that application — its reasoning remains persuasive outside of the Title VII/intentionally discriminatory seniority system context. See Knight v. City of Columbus,
