Nаncy Mae Reddick Kratzer sued Rockwell Collins, Dave Bellendier, and Eugene Nedved for disability discrimination, sex discrimination, and retaliation in violation of the ■Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Iowa Civil Rights Act. The district court 1 granted summary judgment to the defendants on all claims. Jurisdiction being proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, this court affirms.
This court reviews de novo a grant of summary judgment.
Carter v. St. Louis University,
I.
A. Disability Discrimination
In 1994, while employed at Rockwell, Kratzer suffered a workplace injury limiting her ability to use a foot pedal or sit for more than one hour. As an accommodation, Rockwell permitted the use of an adjustable chair, and an electrical cart for her travel between workstations.
Kratzer’s job classifiсation was 407B, sheet metal straightener. Membership in the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) entitled Kratzer to seek training and testing for the 408B classification. Testing for 408B included a written and a four-part mechanical test— *1044 producing sheet metal on four different machines.
In April 2000, Kratzer passed the written test. In May she requested to take the mechanical test. A meeting was held that month to assess potential accommodations. At the meeting, a Rockwell occupational ergonomics therapist suggested modifying a foot pedal to knee level so Kratzer could operate it without using her foot. Kratzer opposed the modification because she had additional physical limitations needing accommodations. Rockwell and Kratzer agreed that she would obtain an updated restrictions evaluation from her doctor before any testing.
On June 6, 2000, defendant Bellendier told Kratzer she had to pick a machine and test that day. She refused. On July 5, 2000, IBEW and a Rockwell human resources manager told her she had 2 options: test for the 408B classification with the accommodations documented in her file, or obtain an updated restrictions evaluation and test accordingly. Kratzer did not provide an updated evaluation until over two years later.
B. Gender Discrimination
Six female Rockwell employees complained of derogatory name-calling, staring, glaring, intimidating speech, or gesturing by male co-employees. After the women’s complaints, management verbally warned the harassers. In July 2000, Kratzer learned that a male co-employee had called her vulgar names (“bitch” “whore”) and stated that, “they better not give her that labor grade 8.” Three other women testified that male co-employees sabotaged women’s training and testing by subjecting them to different rules оr unfairly altering written tests. A former IBEW business manager believed that vacancy announcements for promotions “disappeared” when the most qualified was a female, but conceded this had never been proved. Finally, six other females stated they experienced unfair treatment: males were allowed to take breaks while females werе reprimanded, females were “farmed out” to other departments, and females were refused time on different machines.
C. Retaliation
Kratzer complained to the Iowa Civil Rights Commission in September 2000. A company-wide reduction-in-workforce in January 2002 demoted Kratzer two pay grades, out of the sheet metal fabrication department. Kratzer amended her complaint in September 2002 to include a claim for retaliation.
II.
A. ADA
In the absence of evidence of direct discrimination, ADA claims are evaluated by the burden-shifting framework of
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Kratzer does not meet the prerequisites of the 408B job. To satisfy the 408B criteria, Kratzer needed to train on a sheet-metal-producing mаchine, then demonstrate the training by passing the 408B mechanical test. Kratzer, however, never passed the 408B test. Because she did not satisfy the prerequisites for 408B classification, she was not qualified.
Kratzer claims she did not train or pass the 408B test, because Rockwell impeded the interactive process when Bellendier demanded she take thе 408B test on June 6, 2000, without an accommodation. The interactive process is informal and flexible, enabling both employer and employee to identify the employee’s limitations and accommodations. 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(o)(3). If the employee needs an accommodation, the employer must engage in an interactive process.
Burchett v. Target Corp.,
Contrary to Kratzer’s assertion, the breakdown in the interactive process was due to her failure to provide an updated evaluation, not Rockwell’s refusal to provide an accommodation. The “predicate requirement” triggering the interactive process is the employee’s request for the accommodation.
Id.
A mere assertion that an accommodation needed is insufficient; the employee must inform the employer of the accommodation needed.
Mole v. Buckhorn Rubber Products, Inc.,
Rockwell and Kratzer agreed she would obtain an updated physical evaluation in order to determine the accommodation needed in the tеsting. Kratzer did schedule an appointment with her doctor, yet failed to go. By not obtaining the evaluation, Kratzer did not request accommodations beyond those documented in her file. Her statement that she wanted to see her doctor was insufficient; she needed to follow-up with the appointment. Without the updated evaluation, Rockwell сould not provide an appropriate accommodation. Thus, Kratzer did not test and show her training for 408B, a prerequisite for the classification. An analysis of Rockwell’s good faith is unnecessary as Kratzer failed to request an accommodation.
See Phoenixville Sch. Dist.,
Kratzer did not establish a prima facie ease of disability discrimination, and summary judgment was thus prоper.’
B. Sex Discrimination and Harassment
i.
Plaintiffs may prove discrimination in Title VII claims in two ways: with direct evidence as in the
Price Waterhouse
approach, or with indirect evidence as in the
McDonnell Douglas
analysis.
Griffith v. City of Des Moines,
Kratzer рresented no direct evidence that Rockwell failed to test her based on gender. If a plaintiff lacks direct evidence, the
McDonnell Douglas
framework applies.
Id.
at 736;
McDonnell Douglas,
Under
McDonnell Douglas,
Kratzer must establish a prima facie case оf sex discrimination.
Id.
at 682. She must show: membership in a protected group; qualification and application for an available position; rejection; and promotion of an employee similarly situated but not a member of the protected group.
Id., citing Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
The district court assumed Kratzer met her prima facie case, holding that there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether she was qualified. Pursuant to McDonnell Douglas, the court then focused on Rockwell’s reason for not testing Kratzer, concluding it was nondiscriminatory. The district court determined Krat-zer failed to rebut the reason аs pretextual.
The district court did not need to apply the full burden-shifting analysis of
McDonnell Douglas. See Habib,
At the prima facie stage of a sex discrimination case, the employee must demonstrate objective qualifications.
Legrand v. Trustees of University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff,
Kratzer was not qualified, as she could not objectively perform the functions оf the 408B test. Aside from education, the minimum objective criteria requires the physical ability to train and perform the 408B test. There is no dispute that Krat-zer could not physically accomplish the 408B test. Kratzer failed to demonstrate that she was objectively qualified.
Kratzer asserts she satisfied the prima facie burden by reiterating that but for Rockwell’s refusal to give her the aceonu modation, she was qualified. While the district court (inconsistently) indulged this assertion for purposes of the sex discrimination claim, this court finds the argument ineffective. Kratzer presented insufficient evidence that she was denied taking the 408B test due to her sex. When asked whether gender was the reason Rockwell refused to allow her to test for 408B, Krat-zer responded, “I was not allowed to continue my test because the machines were not fixed, modified for me.” She did not state that Rockwell refused to test her or modify the machines because of her gender. Kratzer’s conclusory allegations, are insufficient to satisfy a prima facie case.
See Helfter v. United Parcel Service, Inc.,
ii.
Kratzer also asserts Rockwell fоstered a hostile work environment. To establish a prima facie case of sexual harassment, Kratzer must show: membership in a protected group; unwelcome harassment; harassment was based on sex; the harassment affected a term, condition, or privilege of employment; and Rockwell knew or should have known of the harassment and failed to take proper remedial action.
Erenberg v. Methodist Hosp.,
At issue here is the fourth element — whether the complained-of conduct altered a term, condition, or privilege of her employment. This is a twofold inquiry. First, the harassment must be sufficiently severe or pervasive to create an “objectively hostile” work environment.
Henthorn v. Capitol Communications, Inc.,
Kratzer’s hostile work environment claim fails because she stated that she did not subjectively feel harassed. Though Kratzer cited several instances of offensive conduct— male employees made derogatory comments; she was called “bitch” and “whore;” men received preferable treatment; and male workers stared at the females while they worked— an employee’s admission that it was not abusive is
*1048
fatal to the employee’s Title VII sexual harassment claim.
Montandon v. Farmland Ind., Inc.,
As Kratzer did not subjectively believe that her working conditions were altered, she did not establish a prima facie case of hostile work environment; thus summary judgment was proper.
C. Retaliation
The
McDonnell Douglas
framework governs the order and allocation of proof for retaliation claims.
Womack v. Munson,
Kratzer has not established a prima fa-cie case of retaliation. She engaged in a statutorily protected activity — filing a complaint with the Iowa Civil Rights Commission in September 2000. There is, however, no evidence Rockwell took adverse employment actions due to the complaint. Kratzer asserts two claims of adverse employment action: refusal to test her for the 408B classification, and an offer to test in return for dropping the ICRA complaint. Kratzer does not directly allege that the reduction-in-workforce was retaliatory, but rather that her demotion was a result of Rockwell’s decision not to test her for 408B, a classification exempt from the workforce reduction in 2000.
Neither of Kratzer’s claims demonstrates an adverse employment action. First, Kratzer presented no evidence that Rockwell’s refusal to test was related to her ICRA complaint, rather than her failure to provide the updated evaluation. Second, Rockwell made a settlement offer, the opportunity to test in exchange for dismissing the ICRA complaint. Generally, evidence of an offer of “valuable consideration in compromising or attempting to compromise a claim which was disputed as to either validity or amount, is not admissible.... ” Fed.R.Evid. 408. Rockwell’s proposal was an offer of valuable consideration, the opportunity to train and test, in order to settle a disputed claim. Contrary to Kratzer’s assertion, her IBEW membership did not entitle her to test for 408B, as she was not qualified nor had the 407B classification at the time of the settlement discussion. Kratzer did not establish a prima faciе case of retaliation.
D. State Claim
Because the Iowa Civil Rights Act mirrors federal law, the analysis above also disposes of the ICRA claims.
Mercer v.
*1049
City of Cedar Rapids,
III.
Kratzer did not establish a prima facie case of disability or gender discrimination, as she was not qualified. Her hostile work environment fails, because she admitted the co-employees’ conduct was not subjectivеly severe. Kratzer’s retaliation claim also fails, as there was no evidence of adverse employment actions casually related to her ICRA claim. The district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable John A. Jarvey, United States Magistrate Judge, for the Northern District of Iowa, to whom the case was referred for decision by consent of the parties pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c) (2002).
