ORDER
Shahram Malekpour works as an aerospace engineer for the Federal Aviation Administration (an agency within the Department of Transportation). These consolidated appeals arise from a pair of overlapping lawsuits (which, for simplicity, we treat as one) in which he claims that the FAA violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(c). Malekpour alleged that he suffered discrimination because he is Muslim and was born in Iran. He also alleged that the agency retaliated after he complained to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The district court granted summary judgment for the FAA, reasoning that a jury could not permissibly find that a brief suspension without pay—the only harm sufficiently adverse to be actionable—was discriminatory or retaliatory. We agree with this analysis.
In analyzing Malekpour’s claims of discrimination and retaliation, the district court first asked if any action taken against him, standing alone, was “materially adverse” or, if viewed collectively, the actions attributable to the agency created a hostile work environment. See Alexander v. Casino Queen, Inc.,
But three events on Malekpour’s list merit discussion. First, taking away Malekpouris oversight of the aircraft-safety directive might have been materially adverse if certain conditions were present. Job reassignments are sometimes significant enough to be actionable, but only if they affect the employee’s “work hours, compensation, or career prospects.” Stephens,
Second, Malekpour asserts that his manager’s threat of “consequences” followed his refusal to attend a meeting that he believed would involve mediating his ongoing complaints of discrimination (the FAA insists this was not the purpose of the meeting). Malekpour makes much of the fact that the EEOC agreed with him that this threat was retaliatory (the EEOC awarded, him $3,000 in “non-peeuniary, compensatory damages” after concluding that the threat would “dissuade a reasonable worker” from pursuing relief under Title VII). Had we been asked to review the EEOC’s finding, we would be hard-pressed to agree that the threat was “materially adverse.” See Poullard,
The third item meriting comment from Malekpour’s list is also the only one the district court deemed “materially adverse”: the ten-day suspension without pay. Although acknowledging that this suspension was sufficiently adverse to be actionable, the district court reasoned that Malekpour’s evidence of an underlying discriminatory or retaliatory motive is too thin to survive summary judgment. The “critical question” here is whether a reasonable jury could infer the existence of discrimination or retaliation. Cole v. Bd. of Trs. of N. Ill. Univ.,
It changes nothing for Malekpour to assert, as he does, that his list of unfavorable actions evidences a hostile work environment (which is a form of discrimination, Alexander,
Thus the district court correctly granted summary judgment for the FAA on Ma-lekpour’s Title VII claims. We observe, however, that in the district court (and again here) Malekpour has contended that the FAA violated the First Amendment and the Whistleblower Protection Act. See 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(8)(A). But we see no other claims lurking in Malekpour’s allegations; all along he has said that his religion and Iranian heritage explain the adverse actions about which he complains, and for federal employees claiming discrimination on the basis of religion and national origin (as well as reprisal for complaining about discrimination), Title VII is the exclusive judicial remedy. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16; Brown v. Gen. Servs. Admin.,
Finally, we address Malekpour’s contention that District Judge Zagel should have recruited counsel for him. When Malekpour asked Judge Zagel to find him a lawyer, he already had fired one team of lawyers recruited for him earlier in the litigation by a different district judge. Judge Zagel declined to recruit new counsel, pointing out that Malekpour’s application to proceed in forma pauperis showed he is not indigent. Courts need not recruit counsel for those who can pay, see 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e), so this ruling was proper, see Henderson v. Ghosh,
Malekpour also challenges a number of Judge Zagel’s procedural rulings and takes issue with how the FAA conducted his deposition. We have considered these additional arguments, and none has merit. The judgments of the district court are
AFFIRMED.
