Garnetta L. Hunt (Hunt), formerly a correctional officer with the rank of Sergeant with the District of Columbia Department of Corrections (DOC), filed suit alleging that she had not been provided with a reasonable accommodation for a disability — mainly psychological — that she sustained after being attacked by a jail inmate. Hunt claimed discrimination based on her disability, in violation of the District of Columbia Human Rights Act (DCHRA), D.C.Code § 2-1401 et seq. (2001), intentional interference with contractual relations, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The Superior Court (Bartnoff, J.) granted summary judgment to the District of Columbia and two named DOC officials on all of the claims. On appeal, Hunt argues primarily that triable issues of fact precluded summary judgment on whether DOC had reasonably accommodated her disability either by changes to her job at the Jail
I.
The following facts, drawn from depositions and other proffered materials, are not disputed. On March 23, 2004, while on duty at the Jail, Hunt suffered- head, neck, and shoulder injuries from an attack by an inmate. She was hospitalized for these injuries and also diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), for which she received treatment from a psychiatrist and other mental health professionals. After a prolonged absence during which she was treated and received worker’s compensation, she returned to work on April 18, 2006. At that time, her treating psychiatrist stated in a letter that she could work, on a trial basis, but only if the position she were assigned to had limited contact with inmates. DOC therefore assigned her to a post at the staff entrance to the Jail, where she would not regularly come into contact with inmates; and, to further insulate her from such contact, it no longer required her to attend roll call.
Nevertheless, Hunt experienced three succeeding panic attacks. The first two occurred after she had incidental contact with inmates while going from one place to another within the facility. The third, on September 26, 2006, occurred when she heard inmates in a nearby hallway pounding on a secure door to which she controlled access. As a result, Hunt was placed on administrative leave until November 29, 2006, when (after her pay was terminated because she had failed to furnish a “medical evaluation”) she obtained a note from a treating therapist that she could resume work if assigned to a post where she had no direct contact with inmates. As this had not proved feasible, she remained on leave without pay.
More than a year later, a DOC official (Captain Watford) again talked to Hunt about possible positions at the jail involving limited contact with inmates. One was in the motor pool, the other in the records office, but both locations, although “outside the perimeter of the jail setting,” entailed some “limited contact with inmates.”
II.
To prevail on a motion for summary judgment, the moving party must demonstrate that there is no genuine issue with regard to any material fact and, therefore,
III.
The DCHRA makes it an “unlawful discriminatory practice” for an employer, with respect to compensation or the terms of employment, to discharge or otherwise discriminate against an employee “based upon [a] ... disability....” D.C.Code § 2-1402.11(a)(1) (2006 Supp.). For purposes of summary judgment, Judge Bartnoff assumed that Hunt suffered from a “disability,” ie., PTSD that prevented her from working as a correctional officer who had contact with inmates.
Our decisions under the DCHRA regarding whether an employee was discriminated against because of a “disability” effectively incorporate judicial construction of related anti-discrimination provisions of the Americans with Disability Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12102 et seq. (2006). See, e.g., Strass v. Kaiser Found. Health Plan,
We look first at the position Hunt occupied, a correctional officer at the Jail. In determining the essential functions of a position,, courts “generally give substantial weight to the employer’s view of job requirements,” Ward v. Massachusetts Health Research Inst.,
Hunt’s principal argument focuses on DOC’s alleged twofold failure to make reasonable accommodation for her disability. The District, as it must, acknowledges an employer’s duty under the ADA (hence under the DCHRA) to “make reasonable accommodation to the known physical or mental limitations of [a disabled] ... employee ... unless the [employer] can demonstrate that the accommodation would impose an undue hardship on the operation of its program.” Carr,
Even so, Hunt argues first that a reasonable accommodation she asked DOC to make, but which it rejected, was the fairly simple one of allowing her, at the onset of any panic attack, “to take a break to get herself together” before returning to her post. Reply Br. for Appellant at 4 (quoting Hunt’s deposition testimony that “[w]hen I had the relapse ... [after] the inmates had come down and were banging on the door ... I had just asked for time to get myself together ... because I did fine otherwise”).
Hunt focuses at greater length on the case law establishing that an employer’s obligation to make reasonable accommodations may include reassignment of a disabled employee, on request, to a different job if it is vacant and she is qualified for it. As the court stated in Aka v. Washington Hosp. Ctr.,
[The ADA] defines an “otherwise qualified individual with a disability” to mean someone who “with or without reasonable accommodation, can perform the essential functions of the employment position that such individual holds or desires.” 42 U.S.C. § 12111(8).... Anemployee seeking reassignment to a vacant position is thus within the definition if, with or without reasonable accommodation, she can perform the essential functions of the employment position to which she seeks reassignment.
Id. at 272-73,
On the subject of reassignment as a reasonable accommodation, federal courts have extensively discussed the relation between a plaintiff-employee’s burden of proof in ADA litigation and the employer’s contemporaneous duty to engage in an interactive process. The widely prevailing view is that “[a]n ADA plaintiff ... must demonstrate the existence, at or around the time when accommodation was sought, of an existing vacant position to which she could have been reassigned [and] ... for which she was qualified.” McBride v. BIC Consumer Products Mfg. Co., Inc.,
We need not, however, trace the contours of this relationship further because, for two combined reasons, Hunt has not raised a triable issue of whether DOC failed to accommodate her by transfer to a job away from the jail setting. As already pointed out, DOC worked with Hunt, at her request, to restructure her job at the jail to limit inmate contact as far as possible. But, as Judge Bartnoff determined,
Moreover, when we move to considering the job openings Hunt identified after her suit was filed, and to which she allegedly could have been transferred at the time, her case fares no better. Even if Hunt did not bear the burden of proof on that issue,
IY.
Hunt’s challenge to summary judgment on her remaining claims — intentional interference with contractual relations and intentional infliction of emotional distress — may be dealt with briefly. As to the first, she alleged that DOC had interfered with her rights under the Collective Bargaining Agreement between the Union of which she was a member and the District government. But “the tort of interference with contractual relations does not lie when the defendant itself is a party to the contract.” Farmland Indus., Inc. v. Grain Bd. of Iraq,
The additional cause of action, for intentional infliction of emotional distress, likewise failed as a matter of law. “We have been exacting as to the proof required to sustain such claims in an employment context.” Futrell v. Dep’t of Labor Fed. Credit Union,
[Hunt] alleges that [Deputy Director] Britton repeatedly told her that she “did not fit the mold of a corrections officer” and ... should resign.... Although [Britton’s] comments ... may have been difficult for [Hunt] to accept and may have been perceived as harsh or unkind, [Hunt] hardly can claim that those comments were outrageous or intolerable. To the contrary, [Hunt] had shown hei’-self unable to perform essential functions of the job, even when she was placed in [a] post where she did not have direct contact with inmates, and her psychiatrist eventually advised DOC that she was unable to work in the environment of a jail and likely never would be able to work in a correctional environment. [Hunt] cannot make the showing required to establish intentional infliction of emotional distress, when her complaint is that the defendants did not assign her to a position she had shown herself to be unable to perform and her supervisor then stated that she was unable to do the job she admittedly was unable to do.[10 ]
Affirmed.
Notes
. By "the Jail” we refer to the Central Detention Facility where Hunt was employed.
. The affidavit of DOC Warden Simon Wainwright explained that "[tjhere are no jobs, assignment or positions for D.C. Correctional officers that do not involve at least some minimal contact or interaction with inmates,” particularly "in the event of an emergency.”
. Resolution of whether Hunt was disabled, the judge concluded, "turns on factual questions that cannot properly be resolved on summary judgment.” For purposes of this appeal, the District does not dispute the fact of Hunt's disability.
. The issue of whether Hunt "suffered an adverse employment action” was not litigated below and is not before us.
. The trial judge found that this request was "untimely,” i.e., not expressly made to DOC at the time — an issue we need not pursue.
. That allocation of burden of proof reflects the ADA’s basic incorporation of the burden-shifting analysis framed by McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
. The judge correctly explained that
there is nothing in the record [indicating] that the plaintiff ever requested such an accommodation at any time. It was not the subject of any discussions she had with DOC representatives while she was on paid administrative leave, nor did she make any such request when the paid administrative leave ended in November 2006. The letter from the psychiatrist in July 2008 was a report on her inability to work in a correctional facility, but at most it stated that there was a “possibility” that she could be employed in another field with proper training. That letter cannot fairly be construed as a request for a reasonable accommodation from DOC.
. But see Jackan v. New York State Dep't of Labor,
. Nor does Hunt demonstrate error in Judge Bartnoffs conclusion that her claim that DOC "disregarded the procedures that must be followed” under the labor agreement, Compl. ¶ 35, was barred by the Comprehensive Merit Personnel Act (CMPA), D.C.Code § 1-601 et seq. (2001), requiring that District employee claims of wrongful personnel action be adjudicated first by the Public Employee Relations Board. See Cooper v. AFSCME, Local 1033,
. We therefore do not reach the District's point that this claim, too, based as it was on conduct underlying an employment dispute, was subject to CMPA preemption.
