This case examines whether a Title VII plaintiff who is wrongly terminated should be foreclosed from pursuing her claims where her employer eventually reinstates her with back pay. Plaintiff Laura Phelan brought this suit against her employer and eight co-workers and supervisors under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq., and 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging sexual harassment, gender discrimination, race discrimination, and retaliation. Phelan also brought state law claims of assault, battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress against three of her co-workers. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on all of the federal claims, and then declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state claims. Primarily because the district court erroneously found that Phelan was not subject to an adverse employment action, we reverse the grant of summary judgment with regard to all but one of Phelan’s Title VII claims and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on Phelan’s Section 1983 Claims.
I. BACKGROUND
Laura Phelan began working as a mechanical assistant in the boiler room (also known as the “Powerhouse”) of Cook County Hospital on March 1, 1999. The boiler room is part of Cook County’s Buildings and Grounds Department. Cook County did not provide Phelan, a Caucasian woman, with either an orientation packet or a copy of the hospital’s sexual harassment policy at the start of her employment.
Phelan’s co-workers in the boiler room began subjecting her to various abusive behaviors immediately after she began working there. She was the target of sexually offensive comments and solicitations, sexually offensive touching and displays of pornography. On multiple occasions, Phelan’s co-workers told her that, in order to survive in the department, she would need to perform sexual acts.
On April 15, 1999, after Phelan complained to her supervisor, Jack Callaghan, *777 about this behavior, Callaghan contacted Lucia Kelly-Freeman in Cook County’s Department of Human Resources. Kelly-Freeman was responsible for investigating complaints of sexual harassment. On April 20, 1999, Phelan and Kelly-Freeman met to discuss Phelan’s complaints. Phe-lan informed Kelly-Freeman that she had been the target of sexually abusive actions. Kelly-Freeman instructed Phelan to create a log of the incidents and to report back to her. However, Phelan did not immediately do so because Callaghan told her that she should not have further contact with Kelly-Freeman.
On July 14, 1999, Phelan again met with Kelly-Freeman to discuss the harassment. Kelly-Freeman had taken no action with regard to Phelan’s case since the first meeting, stating that she had been waiting for Phelan to report back to her with further details. At this second meeting, Phelan showed Kelly-Freeman a bruise on her thigh, which she said was the result of a July 9, 1999 incident in which two of her co-workers physically assaulted her. Kelly-Freeman notified her supervisor of the incident and directed Phelan to file an incident report and receive medical treatment. Phelan subsequently met with members of the Cook County Hospital Police Department and the Chicago Police Department. She identified co-workers Ronald Jotzat and John Hussak in a photo-lineup prepared by the Cook County Hospital Police and signed criminal complaints against them. Phelan was notified by the Cook County Hospital police that she needed to file a report with the Chicago Police Department to further the prosecution of her case, but, after speaking with the CPD officers, she did not file a report. The two hospital employees who assaulted Phelan were suspended without pay while the matter was investigated. Phelan was directed not to report back to work until a suitable resolution was determined and she was notified that she would be paid while the hospital sought to resolve the situation.
On August 5, 1999, Phelan met with Claudette Giles, one of the hospital’s human resources supervisors, and Paris Par-tee, an assistant administrator at the hospital who was second in command in the human resources department. In the course of this meeting, Giles and Partee told her that she could either accept a transfer to the hospital’s CORE Center, where she would work as a medical assistant, or she would be terminated. The CORE Center was also part of the Buildings and Grounds Department. Phelan claims that the two women, who are African American, made derogatory references to her race and gender during this meeting, including referring to her as a “stupid white woman.” Phelan ultimately signed a memorandum acknowledging her acceptance of a transfer to the CORE Center.
Phelan’s problems with co-workers continued after her transfer to the CORE Center. At one point, one of Phelan’s CORE Center supervisors, Ronald Silva, 1 placed Phelan in a headlock. Phelan states that she informed Callaghan of this incident and that he stated he would address it. Callaghan denies making these statements. The next day, Phelan encountered Silva in an elevator, and he again put Phelan in a headlock. One of Phelan’s supervisors at the CORE Center, Chuck Gunther, witnessed the second attack and forced Silva to remove Phelan from the *778 headlock. Employees at the CORE Center also subjected Phelan to gender-related verbal abuse and other offensive conduct. Phelan reported these incidents to the human resources department, but she did not file a formal complaint.
In July of 2000, Phelan did not report for work and called in sick. The reason for her non-attendance was distress over the treatment she had received from, her co-workers and the inadequate response from human resources and management. She began seeing a psychiatrist, who diagnosed her as suffering from major depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.
As a result of these psychological and emotional problems, in August of 2000, Phelan applied for a medical leave of absence. Cook County denied the request. On September 20, 2000, Callaghan sent Phelan a letter notifying her of an impending pre-disciplinary hearing to determine whether Phelan’s absence from work necessitated her termination. On October 11, 2.000, after Phelan had been absent from work for 58 days, Cook County held the hearing, which Phelan attended. After being selected by Callaghan, Partee acted as the hearing officer. At the conclusion of the hearing, Partee concluded that Phelan should be terminated, and Cook County terminated Phelan’s employment. Phelan later appealed the result of the hearing.
On February 7, 2001, Phelan filed a Charge of Discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Illinois Department of Human Rights. On February 9, 2001, Cook County reversed its decision to terminate Phelan, at which point Phelan was reinstated to her job at the CORE Center and awarded back pay. On April 25, 2001, Phelan received a notice of right to sue on the basis of her EEOC Charge. Phelan filed her Complaint in the instant case on May 17, 2001.
After discovery was completed, the district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to the federal claims, and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims. This appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
Our review of the district court’s grant of summary judgment is de novo, and we must construe all facts and reasonable inferences in favor of Phelan.
See Telemark Dev. Group, Inc. v. Mengelt,
B. Statute of Limitations
The defendants first argue that Phelan’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations because she failed to timely file her EEOC Charge, and because her complaint was filed too late for her to pursue her Section 1983 claims. We have held that “the scope of the subsequent judicial proceedings is limited by the nature of the charges filed with the EEOC.”
Rush v. McDonald’s Corp.,
Nothing in the EEOC Charge or the Complaint’s Section 1983 paragraphs limits Phelan’s allegations to the Powerhouse; the Complaint references “gender discrimination within the Buildings and Grounds Department of the Hospital.” Complaint ¶ 23. It is undisputed that both the Powerhouse and the CORE Center are within the Buildings and Grounds Department. The EEOC Charge references discriminatory actions taken up until and including her termination. See EEOC Charge at 12 (“As a direct and proximate result of the Respondents’ gender discrimination, sexual harassment, racial discrimination, and retaliation against Phelan and the continued complaints she made in connection with said conduct, Phelan was terminated from her position at Cook County on October 11, 2000.”). The Complaint explicitly refers to incidents that occurred after the transfer to the CORE Center. See Complaint ¶ 30 (“In July 2000, Phelan was put into a headlock by Defendant Silva. In July 2000, Phelan was cornered in an elevator by Defendant Silva who was attempting to physically choke Phelan with his hands.”); Complaint ¶ 46 (“The Defendants retaliated against the Plaintiff by denying her medical leave of absence and by terminating the Plaintiffs employment on October 11, 2000.”). The EEOC Charge also specifically refers to the actions taken by Silva in July of 2000. See EEOC Charge at 9 (“Phelan was put into á head-lock by a male worker”). Thus, the defendants’ argument that “[h]ere, like Phelan’s Title VII Claims, all of Phelan’s Section 1983 Claims are pled to involve only those alleged discriminatory actions that occurred while she worked at the Powerhouse and before her transfer to the CORE Center on August 5, 1999,” is invalid. See Appellee’s Br. at 21. Since it is clear that the allegations of the EEOC Charge and the Complaint are sufficient to defeat the defendants’ statute of limitations arguments, we need not address Phe-lan’s argument that the defendants waived these arguments by failing to raise them in either the motion to dismiss or the motion for summary judgment:
C. Gender Discrimination
Phelan’s Title VII gender discrimination claim should have gone to a jury. A Title VII gender discrimination claim can survive summary judgment if the plaintiff presents either direct or circumstantial evidence of discrimination (the “direct method”) or indirect evidence that satisfies the three-part, burden shifting test outlined in the Supreme Court’s decision in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
1. Direct Method of Proof
Phelan’s claim should have survived summary judgment because, relying on the direct method of proof, she provided sufficient circumstantial evidence of discrimination to meet the requirements for a Title VII claim.
2
While the typical direct method situation is an admission of discriminatory animus by the employer, we have stated that “[a] plaintiff can also prevail under the direct method of proof by constructing a convincing mosaic of circumstantial evidence that allows a jury to infer intentional discrimination by the deci-
*780
sionmaker.”
Rhodes v. Ill. Dep’t of Transp.,
Phelan’s four-month termination, beginning on October 11, 2000, constituted an adverse employment action. That Phelan was reinstated to her position in February of 2001 does not negate the fact that her termination constituted an adverse employment action. It is undisputed that Phelan was terminated in October of 2000, and, were we to disregard her subsequent reinstatement, this termination would unquestionably constitute an adverse employment action, as a member of the class of “[cjases in which the employee’s compensation, fringe benefits, or other financial terms of employment are diminished.”
See Herrnreiter v. Chicago Hous. Auth.,
We find persuasive the reasoning of the Second and Sixth Circuits, which have concluded that the reinstatement of an employee after a lengthy suspension from work does not prevent the employee from pursuing Title VII claims, even where back pay was awarded.
See White v. Burlington Northern & Santa Fe R. Co.,
Having addressed this prerequisite, we find that a reasonable trier of fact, examining the mosaic of evidence in this case, could infer that Phelan’s termination was motivated by intentional discrimination. This court has observed that there are three means by which a plaintiff can defeat summary judgment using circumstantial evidence under the direct method.
See Rudin v. Lincoln Land Cmty. Coll.,
Phelan has produced an abundant body of evidence sufficient to establish a question of material fact under the first circumstantial evidence method described in Rudin; the record contains numerous gender-related comments from supervisors and co-workers. There is undisputed evidence that Phelan was physically assaulted by multiple employees, including one of her supervisors, and evidence that their motivations were gender-related.
*782
In
Volovsek v. Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade, and Consumer Protection,
Here, Phelan has introduced evidence that she was body-slammed into her desk by two men, repeatedly placed in a headlock by another, and instructed repeatedly that her workplace was “no place for a woman.” There is also evidence that when Phelan complained on multiple occasions to her supervisors and to Human Resources, she was rebuffed and even insulted. Phe-lan testified in her deposition that Callaghan instructed her to stop contacting Human Resources regarding the harassment from her co-workers; a reasonable factfin-der could construe this as an attempt by Phelan’s direct supervisor to prevent Phe-lan’s harassment from coming to light. Callaghan also told Phelan that her problems stemmed from the fact that she was trying to work “in a man’s world,” and stated that “[i]f you leave right now, it will make a better life for you.” To the extent that the discriminatory nature of either of these statements is ambiguous, we note that “the task of disambiguating ambiguous utterances is for trial, not for summary judgment.”
See Shager v. Upjohn Co.,
D. Hostile Work Environment
Phelan also contends that the district court erred in granting summary judgment on her Title VII hostile work environment claim. Title VII prohibits “discrimination] against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l). One of the implications of this provision is that employers can become liable if an employee’s work environment is discriminatorily hostile or
*783
abusive.
See Velez v. City of Chicago,
(1) she was subjected to unwelcome sexual harassment in the form of sexual advances, requests for sexual favors or other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature; (2) the harassment was based on her sex; (3) the sexual harassment had the effect of unreasonably interfering with her work performance in creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment that seriously affected her psychological well-being; and (4) a basis for employer liability exists. Durkin,341 F.3d at 611 . The only question in this appeal relates to the fourth prong of the test— whether a “basis for employer liability exists.”
1. Strict Liability for Sexual Harassment
“Harassment by a supervisor of the plaintiff triggers strict liability, subject to the possibility of an affirmative defense in the event the plaintiff suffered no tangible employment action.”
Rhodes,
In Rhodes, we concluded that the plaintiff could not demonstrate that her alleged harassers were Title VII supervisors where the harassers “managed Rhodes’ work assignments, investigated complaints and disputes, and made recommendations concerning sanctions for rule violations to the Department Administrative Services Manager.” Id. at 506. Neither of the alleged harassers “had authority to make any decisions affecting the terms and conditions of Rhodes’ employment, i.e., the authority to hire, fire, promote, demote, discipline or transfer Rhodes.” Id.
The situation is different here. Phelan argues that either Callaghan or Partee, both alleged harassers, constituted a Title VII supervisor. 4 Callaghan supervised all of Phelan’s work at Cook County. He testified at his deposition that he was directly responsible for Phelan’s performance evaluations. He held the power to call for a disciplinary hearing, a power which he exercised in Phelan’s situation. There is evidence that Callaghan was at least partially responsible for the selection of the hearing officer. Ultimately, because *784 of Cook County’s system for handling terminations, Callaghan did not have the final say as to whether Phelan was terminated, but we do not believe that he should avoid being a supervisor for Title VII purposes simply because Cook County employed a final administrative step involving the Human Resources Department. This is particularly true here since Callaghan triggered the termination hearing, selected the hearing officer, and provided information critical to the termination decision.
Partee might also be considered a Title VII supervisor since, as a Human Resources Officer and as Phelan’s hearing officer, she appears to have had what amounts to ultimate authority to fire Phelan.
See Rhodes,
Ultimately, we leave for another day the question of whether strict liability is appropriate in this situation. The record is insufficiently developed for a complete assessment of Callaghan and Partee’s supervisory roles. And as discussed below, Phelan has produced sufficient evidence to defeat summary judgment under a negligence theory.
2. Negligent Liability for Sexual Harassment
Phelan’s sexual harassment claims should have survived summary judgment under a negligence theory. Under such a theory, Phelan can defeat summary judgment by introducing “competent evidence that [her employer] was negligent either in discovering or remedying the harassment directed at her.”
Rhodes,
With regard to remedying the harassment, the district court ruled that Phelan’s hostile work environment claim could not succeed because “[t]he evidence presented shows that Cook County upheld its legal duty to investigate and take remedial actions when presented with allegations of sexual harassment.”
Phelan v. Cook County, et al.,
No. 01-C-3638,
We find that the district court erred in applying the
Faragher
defense here because, as discussed above, Phelan’s termination constituted an adverse employment action.
See id.
at 808,
First, we cannot accept defendants’ argument that we should focus only on the harassment that took place after Phelan’s transfer to the CORE Center. The district court observed that “Cook County, for the purpose of summary judgment, does not deny that Phelan was sexually harassed in her original assignment.However, Cook County contends that it took remedial actions by removing Phelan from the original hostile work environment and that it did not have sufficient notice of the recent incidents of sexual harassment.”
Phelan,
The transfer to the CORE Center did not make irrelevant the harassment that occurred in the boiler room. The question regarding remedial steps taken by Cook County is whether it took steps to stop the harassing activity as a whole; the. transfer to the CORE Center is simply one measure taken by the defendants in an arguable attempt to stop the harassment. The district court split the hostile work environment issue into two inquiries, and then concluded that the inquiry regarding the boiler room harassment was sufficiently answered by the fact that Cook County transferred Phelan to the CORE Center. Phelan presented substantial evidence that she was subjected to harassing language and physical contact in the boiler room. A question of fact remained as to whether the transfer to the CORE Center constituted a sufficient remedial measure, particularly since there was substantial evidence that. the harassment continued in the CORE Center.
Even looking at Phelan’s time at the CORE Center in a vacuum, there is sufficient evidence for Phelan’s hostile work environment claim to survive summary
*786
judgment. Phelan produced evidence that Silva had repeatedly placed her in a headlock, as well as evidence that he, along with other co-workers, had subjected her to extensive, gender-related, verbal abuse, including statements that she needed to perform various sexual acts to appease her co-workers. The record also contains evidence that Phelan complained about this abuse to her superiors to no avail. All of this goes far beyond the situations in other cases in which we have concluded that the plaintiff produced sufficient evidence to defeat summary judgment.
See, e.g., Hostet-ler v. Quality Dining, Inc.,
In granting summary judgment for defendants, the district court relied exclusively on the fact that Phelan did not file a formal complaint after the events in the CORE Center. We find, however, that Phelan was not required to file a formal complaint regarding the harassment in the CORE Center. It is undisputed that Phe-lan filed a formal complaint regarding the harassment that she experienced in the boiler room, and Phelan offered evidence that, after the problem was not solved by her transfer to the CORE Center, she verbally complained to her supervisors and to Cook County’s Human Resources Department.
This is a very different situation from that of the plaintiff in
Durkin,
cited by the district court, where we stated “[a]n employer is not liable for co-employee sexual harassment when a mechanism to report the harassment exists, but the victim fails to utilize it.”
Durkin,
Because an issue of material fact remains on the question of Cook County’s negligence in discovering and remedying Phelan’s co-worker harassment, we reverse the grant of summary judgment on Phelan’s hostile work environment claim.
E. Race Discrimination
We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants on Phelan’s Title VII race discrimination claim. Phelan’s race discrimination claim is entirely based on her allegations that Partee and Giles made offensive references to her race during the *787 meeting which culminated in her transfer to the CORE Center. Specifically, Phelan alleges that Partee and Giles referred to her as a “stupid white woman” during the meeting in which her CORE Center transfer was finalized. These statements are localized around the CORE Center transfer, and Phelan based her opposition to the motion for summary judgment on the argument that these statements are direct evidence of discriminatory animus in the transfer decision. Because Phelan has not established, and indeed does not continue to argue on appeal, that the transfer to the CORE Center constituted an actionable adverse employment action, summary judgment was appropriate. The statements made by Partee and Giles are temporally disconnected from the broader web of sex discrimination that creates a material question of fact with regard to Phelan’s gender discrimination claim, and thus cannot be rationally connected to the adverse employment action in this case — Phelan’s termination.
F. Retaliation — Title VII
Phelan also argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants on her Title VII retaliation claim. We agree. The Supreme Court recently addressed Title VIPs retaliation provision and concluded that the range of conduct prohibited under this provision is broader than Title VII’s discrimination provision.
See White,
We jettisoned the “causal link” analysis in favor of a two-method system of assessing Title VII retaliation claims, described in our decision in
Stone v. City of Indianapolis Public Utilities Division,
In
Culver,
we concluded that the plaintiff could succeed under the direct method in part because she produced evidence that she had received favorable performance reviews shortly before her firing, and also because she alleged her immediate supervisor attempted to dissuade her from complaining to higher-ups about the supervisor’s discriminatory actions.
G. Section 1983 Claims
The district court offered two reasons for granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants on Phelan’s Section 1983 claims against Cook County: (1) Cook County had sufficiently demonstrated that it is intolerant of acts of sexual harassment through its sexual harassment policy; and (2) Cook County had sufficiently responded in investigating Phelan’s original complaint and in attempting to transfer her to a less hostile work environment.
Phelan,
1. Sexual Harassment
The defendants challenge Phelan’s Section 1983 sexual harassment claim
*789
against Cook County, contending that Phelan cannot present evidence establishing that a person with final policy-making authority caused or ratified any harassment. They further argue that Phelan cannot demonstrate that the harassment she suffered was part of a widespread practice. Municipal entities cannot be held vicariously liable for the acts of their employees under Section 1983 on a
respondeat superior
theory.
See Auriemma v. Rice,
Phelan focuses on the second means of establishing
Monell
liability, arguing that the evidence of knowledge and condoning of her harassment on the part of various supervisory officials demonstrates the existence of a widespread practice constituting custom or usage. “If the same problem has arisen many times and the municipality has acquiesced in the outcome, it is possible (though not necessary) to infer that there is a policy at work.”
Calhoun v. Ramsey,
Cook County implicitly argued that this question must be answered in the negative when it asserted, in its motion for summary judgment, that Phelan had failed to “identify] any comparable cases within Cook County d/b/a Cook County Hospital which would allow for the conclusion that there was a widespread practice of harassment based on sex.” The rule urged by Cook County seems to impose a potentially unreasonable burden on a plaintiff like Phelan. The record reflects that there were almost no women working in a similar capacity to Phelan or in her department; 8 Phelan’s supervisor, John Callaghan, testified that in the twelve years that he had been in charge of the department, Phelan was the only woman to work under him as a mechanical assistant. In such a situation, identifying numerous individuals who have received treatment similar to the plaintiff is impossible. Yet this is potentially the situation in which there is the greatest likelihood that a plaintiff will be subject to actionable discrimination.
Generally speaking, we do not believe that a plaintiff should be foreclosed from
*790
pursuing Section 1983 claims where she can demonstrate that repeated actions directed at her truly evince the existence of a policy. But we are mindful of the Supreme Court’s admonition that “the word ‘policy' generally implies a course of action consciously chosen from among various alternatives.”
See City of Oklahoma City v. Tuttle,
Phelan falls short of this mark. Although she has presented evidence that multiple Cook County employees subjected her to sexual harassment and gender discrimination, she has failed to weave these separate incidents together into a cognizable policy. The incidents in this case are insufficient to conclude that the practice of ignoring sexual harassment had the “permanent and well-settled” quality required by our precedents.
See Roach,
2. Retaliation
The defendants also argue that Phelan’s Section 1983 retaliation claim fails because Phelan’s protests regarding her harassment do not speak to matters of public concern. A Section 1983 claim that alleges the defendants retaliated in response to the plaintiffs proper exercise of her First Amendment rights must satisfy a three-step test in order to survive summary judgment.
See Kokkinis v. Ivkovich,
To determine whether Phelan’s speech is constitutionally protected, we must employ the two-part test derived from the
*791
Supreme Court’s rulings in
Connick v. Myers,
In
Connick,
the Supreme Court found that a terminated assistant district attorney’s expressive activity did not involve a matter of public concern where she disseminated a questionnaire to her eo-work-ers soliciting their views on office morale and dynamics, including whether theyr felt pressure to work in political campaigns.
See Connick,
Here, we conclude that Phelan’s speech does not address a matter of public concern. “The fact that an employee has a personal stake in the subject matter of the speech does not necessarily remove the speech from the scope of public concern.”
Button v. Kibby-Brown,
*792 III. CONCLUSION
This matter is Affirmed in part, Reversed in part, and Remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Phelan's appellate brief repeatedly refers to Silva as a "supervisor.'' Appellees do not contest this labeling in their responsive brief, and Silva's deposition testimony seems to support Phelan's description, at least in the generic sense of the word "supervisor.” See Deposition of Ronald Silva (Silva Dep.) at 13. We address the question of whether any of Phelan's harassers were supervisors for the purposes of Title VII later in this opinion.
. Because Phelan produced sufficient evidence under the direct method, we need not address whether she should have also prevailed under the indirect method.
. The Supreme Court recently rendered its opinion in
White,
affirming the Sixth Circuit and defining the appropriate test for Title VII retaliation claims. While the Sixth Circuit’s discussion of "adverse employment action’’ addressed this concept for the purposes of both discrimination and retaliation claims, the Supreme Court specifically limited its analysis to retaliation claims, drawing a distinction between the “materially adverse” action required to sustain a retaliation claim and the action required to sustain a discrimination claim.
See White,
. Phelan's brief refers to Silva as a "supervisor” and Cook County has failed to contest the supervisory status of Silva, the most egregious harasser. However, Phelan has not pressed the inquiry into Silva's Title VII supervisory status in her briefs, and the record is insufficient for us to conclude that he is a supervisor for Title VII purposes. We therefore do not consider him in our assessment of whether Cook County should be subject to strict liability.
. In this circuit, we have generally used the terms "adverse employment action” and “tangible employment action” interchangeably.
See, e.g., Herrnreiter,
. This point is underscored by the district court's recitation of the facts in its opinion granting summary judgment, where the court stated that, after Phelan had been transferred to the CORE Center, ''[a]t one point, Callaghan called HR and informed Broussard that Phelan had been crying because the men were yelling at her.”
Phelan,
. That Stone uses the term “adverse employment action” in this context, as opposed to the term “materially adverse action,” used by the Supreme Court in White, is irrelevant. Stone addresses the proper test for determining whether there is sufficient evidence of retaliatory motive, and this analysis is unaltered by White. Going forward, of course, a court adjudicating a retaliation claim on summary judgment must ask whether a reasonable employee would have found the challenged action "materially adverse.”
. The record reflects that one other woman worked in the Buildings and Grounds Department during the relevant time period, out of 150 employees.
