This appeal is from the district court’s rejection of appellant James Knight’s claims that the Nassau County Civil Service Commission racially discriminated against him in his employment, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e to 2000e-17, and the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Specifically, Knight argued that both the Commission’s failure to promote him from the position of Personnel Specialist III to Personnel Specialist IV, despite the fact that he had done well on promotional examinations, and his transfer from the Commission’s Test Development Division to the Recruitment Division for the purpose • of recruiting minority applicants were impermissibly based on racial factors. After a nonjury trial, Judge George C. Pratt of the United States District Court for the Eastern Distriсt of New York found for the Commission on both claims.
We agree with the district court that the Commission adequately rebutted Knight’s prima facie case under Title VII on the failure to promote claim, and that Knight did not establish the intentional racial discrimination that would givе rise to a violation of equal protection. Accordingly, we affirm Judge Pratt’s dismissal of this ground for relief. We reverse on the assignment to minority recruitment claim, however, finding that the assignment constituted an impermissible classification based on race in violаtion of both Title VII and the equal protection clause.
FACTS
Appellant Knight, a black man, has been employed by the Nassau County Civil Service Commission since 1968 in the position of Personnel Specialist III. From 1968 until 1973, Knight worked in the Test Development Division, preparing civil service examinations for the Commission under the supervision of Charles Teubner, who was a Personnel Specialist IV. Although Knight did well on promotional examinations taken in 1969 and 1973, i. e., he was among the top three on each examination and therefоre was eligible for promotion, he was not promoted to Personnel Specialist IV. Instead, between 1969 and 1974, four white applicants, who also were eligible for promotion based on the two examinations, were promoted to level IV pоsitions. Appellee Commission presented evidence below, however, and the district court found, that the latter two promotions (those in 1973 and 1974) were a matter of reclassifications and budget increases catching up with reality, for *160 the two promoted employees had in fact been doing Personnel Specialist IV work for some time. 1 Knight also complained that he was not promoted to fill Teubner’s position when the latter retired in April of 1973. Instead, Florence Caddie, a co-worker of Knight’s in the Test Development Division, who was already a Personnel Specialist IV, had been working for the Commission since 1966, had previously worked as a psychologist for the Air Force Test Development Division, and had been working independently and with little supervision from Tеubner, took over as head of the Division when Teubner left.
Rather than being promoted within the Test Development Division, Knight was transferred in September of 1973 to the Commission’s Recruitment Division, with the expectation that he would participate in a program to encourage more members of minority groups to apply for Civil Service jobs. Knight claimed that both the failure to appoint him to Personnel Specialist IV positions 2 and the reassignment to minority recruitment were based on his race and therefore violated Title VII and the equal protection guarantee of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Commission admitted that Knight’s race was a significant factor in the decision to assign him to minority recruitment. 3 With respect to the failure to promote claim, however, the Commission argued and the court below found that in recent years the Nassau County Civil Service Commission has increasingly relied upon examinations prepared by the New York State Civil Service Commission, and therefore the County’s needs for test development personnel have declined significantly. 4 In addition, in the early 1970s employment qualification testing problems became more complex, with greater test reliability and validity required, and Knight, unlike Caddie, had no background in the field of psychometrics. Most importantly, Knight’s work in test development had been of unacceptable quality. Based on statistics from the years 1968 through 1977, the district court found that Knight had prepared significantly fewer examinations than had either Teubner or Caddie, and his tests had resulted in a much greater number of complaints and corrections. There was also evidence that Knight took an inordinately long time to do his work and that the product was often convoluted and unsatisfactory.
Judge Pratt, after a bench trial on Knight’s employment discrimination claims under Title VII and 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983, found for the Commission.
DISCUSSION
I. The Failure to Promote Claim
Judge Pratt held that Knight had made out a prima facie case of discriminatory treatment under Title VII, by showing that he was black, had applied for Personnel Specialist IV positions, had done well on promotional examinations, and was passed over in favor of white applicants.
See McDonnell Douglas Corp.
v.
Green,
Here the reasons presented to the Commission for not promoting Knight to fill Teubner’s position (which seems to have been the crux of Knight’s failure to promote claim) were that the County’s test preparation needs had declined, Knight did not have the proper training to prepare the new kinds of tests that were required, and, most importantly, Knight did not do much work and the work that he did was unsatisfactory. Judge Pratt’s findings that Caddie was better qualified for the position, did better work, and was more efficient are not clearly erroneous,
see
Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), and certainly satisfy the Commission’s burden of production.
See
Burdine,-U.S. at-,
Knight contends, however, that the Commission failed to carry its burden of production because it presented no “objective competent evidence,” but rather only “subjective” evaluations by his superiors. It is true that an employer may not use wholly subjеctive and unarticulated standards to judge employee performance for purposes of promotion.
See Crawford v. Western Electric Co.,
In failing to prove disparate treatment for a Title VII claim based on the failure to promote,
see International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. United States,
II. The Assignment to Minority Recruitment Claim
The Commission’s assignment of Knight to minority recruitment, unlike its failure to promote him, was clearly based in significant part on his race. The Commission apparently thought that Knight would develop a better rapport than would a white person with the members of minority groups whom the Commission was trying to recruit. Although his salary and benefits remained unchanged, Knight claims that the assignment was racist and demeaning.
It is true that Title VII allows employees to be classified on the basis of their religion, sex, or national origin if such a classification “is a bona fide occupational qualification reasonably necessary to the normal operation” of a particular business. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(e);
see
Note,
Race as an Employment Qualification to Meet Police Department Operational Needs,
54 N.Y. U.L.Rev. 413, 435-38 (1979). However, Congress specifically excluded race from the list of permissible bona fide occupational qualifications.
See id.
at 436 & n. 98;
Detroit Police Officers Association v. Young,
Concededly, it is permissible, both constitutionally and under Title VII, to take race into account-for the purpose of remedying past racial discrimination. Thus, for example, the Supreme Court in
United Steelworkers v. Weber,
The Commission’s assignment of Knight to minority recruitment based on his race is also a violation of equal protection, remediable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The Commission conceded racially-based discriminatory intent, the requirement for аn equal protection claim,
see Washington v. Davis,
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed and remanded in part.
Notes
. Municipalities became subject to Title VII only in 1972 (pursuant to the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972 amendments to Title VII, Pub.L.No.92-261, 86 Stat. 103), so allegedly discriminatory acts prior to 1972 cannot form the basis for Title VII claims. The promotion of the two white applicants based on the 1969 examination, therefore, is not remediable in this suit.
. In the Recruitment Division, Knight is still a Personnel Specialist III.
. The Commission also suggested other factors for the assignment, including Knight’s familiarity with testing procedures, which would help him in counseling potential applicants for Civil Service jobs, his residence in the Hempstead area, where the minority recruitmеnt effort was focused, and the decrease in the amount of work to be done in the Testing Division.
. In fact, Caddie is now the only employee remaining in the County Commission’s Test Development Division; neither of the vacancies created by Teubner’s retirement and Knight’s transfer has been filled.
