MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER REGARDING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION..........................................................783
A. Factual Bаckground...................................................783
B. Procedural Background................................................788
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS........................................................790
A. Standards For Summary Judgment.....................................790
B. Individual Liability...................................................792
C. Sexual Harassment ...................................................793
1. Arguments of the parties...........................................793
a. The defendants’ initial argument ...............................793
b. Parada’s response.............................................794
c. The defendants’reply..........................................794
d. The parties’ oral arguments ....................................795
2. Analysis..........................................................798
а. Elements of the claim..........................................798
б. Harassment by Warntjes and Herbst............................799
i. “Unwelcome” harassment..................................799
*783 ii. “Severe” harassment......................................801
D. Sexual Discrimination.................................................804
1. Arguments of the parties...........................................804
a. The defendants’ initial argument...............................804
b. Parada’s response.............................. 804
c. The defendants’reply........................... 805
2. Analysis..........................................................805
a. Prohibitions and analytical process.............................805
b. Parada’s prima facie case......................................806
i. The “qualification!meeting legitimate expectations” element................................................ 806
ii. The “similarly situated male/inference of discrimination” element.................................807
c. The defendants’ leyitimate reasons..............................808
d. Pretext and discriminatory animus .............................810
E. Retaliation...........................................................811
1. Arguments of the parties...........................................811
a. The defendants’initial argument ...............................811
b. Parada’s response.............................................812
c. The defendants’ reply.......... 812
d. Parada’s oral argument........................................812
2. Analysis..........................................................813
a. Parada’s prima facie case......................................813
i. Protected activity.........................................813
ii. Causal connection.........................................813
b. Legitimate reason and pretext..................................814
F. Unequal Pay .........................................................815
1. Arguments of the parties...........................................815
a. The defendants’ initial argument ...............................815
b. Parada’s response.............................................816
c. The defendants’reply..........................................816
2. Analysis..................................................... 816
a. Prohibitions and applicable standards ..........................816
b. Parada’s prima facie case......................................818
III. CONCLUSION............................................................819
A female “service writer” for a company that sells and services diesel trucks alleges that she was subjected to sexual harassment, sexual discrimination, and retaliation in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and the Iowa Civil Rights Act, Iowa Code Ch. 216, and unequal pay in violation of the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d). The defendants — the company, one of its owners, and two of its managers — have moved tor summary judgment on all of the plaintiffs claims. Thus, the court must determine which, if any, of the plaintiffs claims should go to a jury.
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Factual Background
The court will not attempt here an exhaustive dissertation on the undisputed and disputed facts in this case. Rather, the court will set forth sufficient of the facts, both undisputed and disputed, to put in context the parties’ arguments concerning the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. 1
*784 The parties agree that plaintiff Jennifer Parada applied for an advertised position as a diesel technician with defendant Great Plains International Of Sioux City, Inc. (GPI), in March 2004, shortly after completing a diesel technician and service management course at a technical school in Wyoming. GPI is a diesel sales, service, and repair facility in Sioux City, Iowa. Defendant Robert Bye is the president of GPI and one of its shareholders. 2 Defendant Arnold Warntjes is the service manager for GPI and defendant Larry Herbst is the body shop manager. The defendants contend that, during the time that Parada worked at GPI, GPI employed in the service department a day lead person, a night lead person, a warranty clerk, and eight to twelve diesel technicians/mechanics. Parada disputes that all of these positions were filled continuously during her tenure and disputes the number of diesel technicians employed by GPI. The defendants also assert that diesel technicians were paid between $8.50 and $17.50 per hour, depending upon experience, longevity, and duties. Parada does not dispute that contention.
Instead of hiring Parada for the advertised diesel technician position, however, GPI offered Parada a newly-created position as a “service writer,” because the hiring manager noted that Parada had some service management training. GPI managers hoped that the new service writer would improve customer satisfaction, because the service writer would take over some of the duties formerly performed by GPI’s “lead” mechanics and a warranty clerk, as well as other duties that the comрany’s managers felt were not being performed adequately. The defendants describe the service writer position as “experimental,” but Parada denies that characterization. She does, however, admit that she knew that GPI had not had a service writer before, so that she would be the first service writer at GPL Parada accepted the service writer job. The parties agree that Parada was paid $11.50 per hour, which the defendants assert was well above what she would have received as a *785 starting diesel technician. The defendants also point out that Parada had no experience as a diesel technician. Parada counters that she had experience through training. Parada started working for GPI as GPI’s service writer in April 2004.
Although there are no written job descriptions for positions at GPI, the parties agree that Parada’s duties as the service writer consisted of the following: greeting customers, writing up work orders; scheduling and assigning work to be done by the technicians; estimating completion time for the customer; obtaining information about the vehicles brought in for repair; keeping customers advised about the progress of their repairs; handling warranty parts; interacting with technicians; completing information on repair orders, including the customer’s complaint, the cause identified by the diesel technician, and the correction made; establishing the customer’s method of payment; interacting with customers to be sure that they were satisfied with service and repairs; and performing some vehicle repairs. Parada asserts that, in addition, the duties of the service writer included doing some of the work formerly done by the day lead person, although she does not specify what work; keeping the diesel technicians advised of service bulletins; making sure that the diesel technicians did their “stories” on hard cards; picking up and returning customer trucks; and operating a forklift.
The defendants contend that the duties of the lead person included the following: performing work on repair orders; diagnosing the cause of reported malfunctions; examining trucks to see if additional safety or service work was needed; documenting the work performed; reviewing and understanding technical bulletins; test driving and shuttling vehicles; training and supervising all technician’s work; assisting technicians when needed; assigning work to technicians; preparing estimates; administering housekeeping and safety procedures; using a forklift properly; reviewing “hard cards” turned in by technicians to assure that assigned work had been performed; handling customer complaints and service technician problems; advising the credit department of jobs that exceeded the initial estimate; being responsible for repairs needed to shop equipment and supplies; welding parts on trucks if needed; approving the diagnoses made by technicians and the parts required for repairs; and documenting the mechanics’ work. Parada asserts, however, that the lead person did not have any “express” duties.
The day lead person quit shortly after Parada was hired. Parada contends that, from the time that the day lead person quit until she was terminated, she was not just the “service writer,” but actually served as the “service writer/lead person” for the day shift. In September 2004, the night lead person also quit. Parada contends that, prior to the hiring of a new night lead person, and for a period of about a month beginning in December 2004, when the new night lead person was off work recovering from a car accident, she served as the night lead person two nights a week in rotation with the service manager (Warntjes) and the body shop manager (Herbst). Although the defendants admit that Parada covered some of the day lead person’s duties, they contend that she was unable to cover all of the duties formerly performed by the day lead person. The defendants also admit that Parada occasionally covered for the night lead person, before a new night lead person was hired and during the time the newly-hired night lead person was off work because of a car accident, but they dispute that Parada performed or could perform all of the same duties that were regularly performed by the night lead person.
*786 The parties agree that William J.R. Riecks, the new night lead person hired in October 2004 — with whom Parada compares herself for purposes of her unequal pay claim — had more than twenty years of experience as a diesel mechanic, but they disagree about the extent to which he had prior supervisory experience. The defendants contend that Parada has admitted that she did not know what Riecks’s experience was or precisely what duties Riecks performed, and that she did not and could not perform all of the same duties he performed, even when she covered for him during his absence. In contrast, Parada contends that Riecks had no “express” duties as the night lead person, and that, in any event, she performed his duties in his absence.
Parada also contends that, because of restrictions from prior injuries, Riecks did not perform much actual repair work and, instead, was restricted to light work, such as changing light bulbs. Parada also contends that Riecks did not even have his own tools at GPI, so that he borrowed tools from a subordinate. As the defendants point out, the page of her appendix that Parada cites for this contention, page 48a, does not exist, nor is there any such statement on any of the four deposition pages that appear at page 48 of Parada’s Appendix. Moreover, Riecks testified in his deposition that he did have his own tools at GPI, see Defendants’ Supplemental Appendix at 1; see also Plaintiffs Appendix at 43, and that he performed other tasks, besides changing light bulbs. See Plaintiffs Appendix at 45.
The parties agree that Riecks was paid $16.00 per hour, which the defendants contend included a $1.50 per hour “night shift differential.” Parada contends that she was not paid a “night shift differential” when she covered Riecks’s duties in his absence, but the defendants point out that neither was anyone else who substituted on the night shift. The parties agree that Riecks had a commercial drivers license (CDL), but Parada did not. The defendants contend that the ability to test drive and shuttle vehicles was a desirable ability for diesel repair work, which is why a CDL was a desirable qualification for a lead person or diesel technician. Parada disputes any contention that a CDL was required to test drive or shuttle vehicles, and contends that she actually performed such work. She also contends that, if a CDL had been required for her position, she could have obtained one. Parada also disputes the defendants’ contention that she was less able than Riecks to train or assist other diesel mechanics, despite the obvious disparity in their years of experience as diesel mechanics.
Shawn Holler was a diesel technician at GPI with whom Parada apparently had frequent conflicts. Holler was required to take work assignments from Parada, but Parada reported to Warntjes and Bye, on numerous occasions, that Holler would not do the work that she assigned him and made comments about her, her qualifications, and her competence.
More specifically, Parada alleges that, at one point during the week of December 13, 2004, Holler was swearing so badly about Parada that Bye overhead him and went into Warntjes office to talk with him about it. She also alleges that, on January 24, 2005, Holler would not do what Parada told him to do, told other employees not to listen to her, called her a bitch behind her back, and flaunted her authority by doing unassigned and unauthorized work on a customer’s truck, despite a warning from Warntjes, and that Parada eventually called Bye, who told Holler that Parada was in charge. Holler purportedly then told Parada, “We’ll see who still has a job tomorrow,” and with a hammer in his hand and looking in her direction said, “You *787 know whose head I would like to bash in with this?” According to Parada, this incident was sufficiently severe that other employees at GPI recommended that she seek assistance in leaving at the end of the shift, and she had to call her spouse to take her home. Next, Parada alleges that, on February 9, 2005, Holler made a comment to another diesel technician in her presence that it “seems anymore that people that come out of school don’t know anything,” and later that same day, made a comment about a work order that Parada had written stating that the brakes on a vehicle were grabbing, suggesting that the order made no sense, because brakes are supposed to grab. Parada also alleges that, on February 11, 2005, Holler interrupted her while she was talking to a customer on the telephone, then complained to her supervisor when she turned her back on him to try to continue the telephone conversation, and later that same day, refused a work order that she gave him, prompting her to complain to Warntjes about Holler’s attitude towards her. Parada alleges, next, that on February 14, 2005, Holler stated to a co-employee in her presence, “I wonder about the qualifications of a lot of people here.” On February 17, 2005, Holler allegedly went, unassigned, to a customer lot. On February 18, 2005, Holler allegedly stated to a co-worker, “Notice the transmission person is not doing any of the transmission work,” referring to Parada, who was known as the “transmission person,” because she had attended “transmission school.” On February 28, 2005, Holler allegedly told co-workers, in Parada’s presence, that “she’s not my boss.” Also, during the last week of February 2005, Holler allegedly told Herbst, in Parada’s presence, “Some people they hire here,” “Arnie [Warntjes] was really scraping the bottom of the bowl when he hired these people,” and “it puts stress on the rest of us technicians that know how to do our jobs.” Finally, Parada alleges that Holler kept parking in her parking place. Parada admits that Holler’s comments and conduct were not sexual or impliedly sexual and that none of her complaints about Holler to management were about sexual harassment.
The parties agree that, on one occasion, Parada called Bye twice during one shift to complain that Hollеr was not following her directions, and that Bye then came to the shop, told Holler that he had to do the work assigned to him by Parada, and sent Holler home for the rest of the shift. Par-ada also admits that when she complained to Warntjes about Holler’s refusal to do assigned work and other insubordinate behavior, Warntjes supported her and spoke to Holler. However, Parada also contends that Warntjes did not do anything that resulted in correcting Holler’s behavior and, instead, that he exacerbated the problem by assigning her and Holler to the same shifts. Parada also contends that, on one occasion, Warntjes turned his back on her, supposedly in the same way that she had responded to Holler when he interrupted her on the telephone, and said something to the effect that she could see how rude treatment was given back to her. Parada also alleges that, on at least one occasion, Warntjes stood outside the service department door, pointed at her and then at Holler, and shook his head up and down, apparently suggesting that there was a relationship between them.
Parada also alleges that Warntjes, her direct supervisor, and Herbst, the body shop manager, made sexually offensive comments to her, usually in the service office while Parada was taking breaks. Parada contends that the conduct of Warntjes in question consisted of the following: telling her that a bald spot on the top of her head was caused by hitting her head on the bed post, presumably suggest *788 ing that she had been having sex at the time; asking her if she had rug burns on her face; asking her on two occasions if she wanted anything from Victoria’s Secret, and on one of those occasions, asking if she wanted “motion lotion”; asking if her husband was waiting for her wearing a bathrobe, cigar, and bubbles, and whether they did something, which he indicated by whistles or gestures, presumably indicating sexual activity; asking her if she had had wild, passionate, unrestrained monkey loving; asking her what happened to her chin and if she was going through puberty; asking her to talk about sex; asking her, on perhaps as many as fifty occasions, what she had done on the preceding weekend, purportedly indicating by whistles or gestures that he was asking about sexual activity; and asking her on a few occasions what she had for dinner the night before, again purportedly indicating by whistles or gestures that he was suggesting something sexual. Parada asserts that most of Herbst’s allegedly harassing behavior consisted of laughing at Warntjes’s comments. Parada also contends that, on a weekly basis, Warntjеs and Herbst ogled her and stared at her buttocks when she was sweeping the floor or cleaning other areas and that they made sure that she was aware that they were doing so.
Parada admits that she did not stop taking breaks in the service office or start taking breaks in the break room in the basement, despite the allegedly offensive comments and conduct by Warntjes and Herbst. Parada also admits that she did not ever tell Warntjes or Herbst to stop making comments, or complain to Bye about any actions of Warntjes or Herbst, even though she saw Bye almost every day and knew that Bye had the power to discipline Warntjes and Herbst.
The defendants contend that, in October 2004, GPI managers began to receive complaints from customers specifically about Parada and that, eventually, at least five different customers, including GPI’s most important customers, made complaints, often repeated complaints, about her. The gist of the complaints allegedly was that Parada did not communicate effectively with the customers, did not keep them informed as to the status of their repairs, and did not schedule the work satisfactorily. According to Bye, one customer even refused to speak with Parada again, because of his frustration with her. Parada, however, contends that few, if any, complaints were brought to her attention and that Warntjes admitted that some of the complaints about her were about things that were not her fault. In any event, the defendants contend that, in late February, Warntjes and Bye decided that the position of service writer was not working out, because complaints indicated that customer satisfaction was actually deteriorating, rather than improving. Warntjes and Bye, therefore, decided to discontinue the service writer position and, instead, to offer Parada a diesel technician job, the job for which she had originally applied, at the same rate of pay that she was getting as a service writer.
On March 2, 2005, Parada contends that Warntjes told her that she was “fired” as the service writer, but could continue as a diesel technician at the same rate of pay. The parties agree that Parada turned down the offer to change to a diesel technician position, in whatever manner that offer was presented to her, and that she was, consequently, terminated. Parada denies that customer satisfaction was deteriorating and contends that she was terminated after she complained repeatedly about Holler’s conduct.
B. Procedural Background
On March 18, 2005, Parada filеd an administrative complaint against GPI with the Iowa Civil Rights Commission, which *789 was cross-filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, alleging sex and marital status discrimination based on conduct by Bye, Wartnjes, and Holler, sex and marital status harassment based on conduct of Holler, Warntjes, and Herbst, and unequal pay as compared to Riecks, the night lead person. Parada did not mark the box for “retaliation,” however. See Defendants’ Appendix, Exhibit 20. By letter from counsel dated September 29, 2005, Parada attempted to amend her administrative complaint to include retaliation based on her exercise of her rights to complain to her supervisors about the creation of a sexually hostile environment and subsequent discharge for exercising such rights. Counsel requested that the amendment relate back to the date of the filing of Parada’s original administrative complaint. See Defendants’ Appendix, Exhibit 28. Parada contends that she exhausted the administrative process for all of her claims by receiving right-to-sue letters.
On January 6, 2006, Parada filed her Complaint in this action (docket no. 1), naming as defendants GPI, Bye, Warntjes, and Herbst. In her “First Cause of Action,” Parada alleges “discriminatory actions of the Defendants” in violation of Title VII; in her “Second Cause of Action,” she alleges “discriminatory actions of the Defendants” in violation of the Iowa Civil Rights Act (ICRA); in her “Third Cause of Action,” she alleges “retaliatory actions of the Defendants” in violation of Title VII; in her “Fourth Cause of Action,” she again alleges “retaliatory actions of the Defendants” in violation of Title VII, although she probably meant to allege such actions in violation of the ICRA, and the defendants appear to have understood that to be her claim; and in her “Fifth Cause of Action,” Parada alleges unequal pay, but does not state whether such unequal pay violates federal or state law. As relief, Parada seeks declaratory judgment “that the acts and practices complained of herein are in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Iowa Civil Rights Act, and the Equal Pay Act”; back pay, unpaid wages, and actual and compensatory damages; future wages and future compensatory damages; punitive damages; liquidated damages; costs, interest, and attorney fees; and such other relief as is appropriate. Parada also demanded a jury trial. The defendants filed a joint Answer (docket no. 5) on February 27, 2006, then filed an Amended Answer (docket no. 7) on March 20, 2006, then filed a Second Amended Answer (docket no. 14) on August 22, 2006. In its current form, the defendants’ Answer denies Para-da’s claims and asserts vаrious affirmative defenses. Trial in this matter is set to begin on Mary 14, 2007.
On January 11, 2007, however, the defendants filed their Motions [sic] For Summary Judgment (docket no. 19) now before the court, seeking summary judgment on all of Parada’s claims. Parada filed her Resistance To Motion For Summary Judgment (docket no. 23) on February 23, 2007. The defendants then filed a Reply (docket no. 28) on March 9, 2007. On March 29, 2007, the court discovered that Parada had requested oral arguments on the defendants’ Motion For Summary Judgment, although not in the manner required by applicable local rules, and set oral arguments on the defendants’ motion for April 5, 2007. The oral arguments were subsequently rescheduled to April 6, 2007, owing to conflicts in the parties’ schedules.
At the oral arguments, plaintiff Jennifer Jean Parada was represented by Blake Parker of the Blake Parker Law Office in Fort Dodge, Iowa. The defendants were represented by Margaret M. Prahl of Heidman, Redmond, Fredregill, Patterson, Plaza, Dykstra & Prahl, L.L.P., in Sioux *790 City, Iowa. This matter is now fully submitted.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. Standards For Summary Judgment
Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that a defending party may move, at any time, for summary judgment in that party’s favor “as to all or any part” of the claims against that party. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(b). “The judgment sought shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). As this court has explained on a number of occasions, applying the standards of Rule 56, the judge’s function at the summary judgment stage of the proceedings is not to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter, but to determine whether there are genuine issues for trial.
Bunda v. Potter,
Procedurally, the moving party bears “the initial responsibility of informing the district court of the basis for its motion and identifying those portions of the record which show a lack of a genuine issue.”
Hartnagel v. Norman,
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has cautioned that “summary judgment should seldom be used in employment discrimination cases.”
See Crawford v. Runyon,
However, the court must first observe that stating the legal principles of summary judgment in employment discrimination cases is a simple task. Applying those principles to the paper record that forms the judicial crucible that decides which plaintiffs may proceed to trial and which get dismissed is far more daunting. Missing in the standard incantation of summary judgment principles is the role of experience. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote, “The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience.” Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Common Law 1 (1881). Thus, experience teaches that thoughtful deliberation of summary judgment in employment discrimination cases is grounded in the consideration of each case through a lens filtered by the following observations. Employment discrimination and retaliation, except in the rarest cases, is difficult to prove. It is perhaps more difficult to prove such cases today than during the early evolution of federal and state anti-discrimination and anti-retaliation laws. Today’s employers, even those with only a scintilla of sophistication, will neither admit discriminatory or retaliatory intent, nor leave a well-developed trail demonstrating it.
See, e.g., Riordan v. Kempiners,
The court will consider, in turn, whether summary judgment is appropriate on each kind of claim that Parada asserts. 3 The court must first, however, settle questions concerning individual liability.
B. Individual Liability
The individual defendants first seek summary judgment on Parada’s Title VII claims for harassment, discrimination, and retaliation in her First and Third Causes of Action. They contend that the law in this Circuit is well-settled that individuals cannot be held liable under Title VII. Although Parada otherwise resists the defendants’ Motions For Summary Judgment, she concedes that there is no individual liability under Title VII, so that claims under the First and Third Causes of Action should be dismissed as to the individual defendants.
As this court has recently observed,
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has repeatedly held that supervisory employees ... cannot be held individually liable under Title VII. See, e.g., Schoffstall v. Henderson,223 F.3d 818 , 821 n. 2 (8th Cir.2000); Bales v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,143 F.3d 1103 , 1111 (8th Cir.1998); Bonomolo-Hagen v. Clay Central-Everly Community Sch. Dist.,121 F.3d 446 , 447 (8th Cir.1997); Spencer v. Ripley County State Bank,123 F.3d 690 , 691-92 (8th Cir.1997).... Where supervisory employees cannot be individually liable on Title VII claims, there is no basis whatsoever to name them as defendants on such claims. Therefore, the individual defendants here ... are entitled to dismissal of the Title VII claims against them in [the plaintiffs Complaint],
Habben v. City of Fort Dodge,
In contrast, this court has noted, “It is clear that individual supervisory employees
may
be held liable for discriminatory employment actions under the ICRA, even though Title VII does not authorize such a claim.”
Habben,
472 F.Supp.2d at
*793
1156 (emphasis in the original) (citing
Vivian v. Madison,
C. Sexual Harassment
In her First and Second Causes of Action, Parada alleges “discriminatory actions of the Defendants” in violation of Title VII and the ICRA, respectively. It appears from both Parada’s administrative complaint and her Resistance to the defendants’ Motions For Summary Judgment that she asserts that the “discriminatory actions” in question constituted both “sexual harassment” and “disparate treatment.” It is equally clear from their motion for summary judgment that the defendants have understood Parada’s “sexual discrimination” claims to include “sexual harassment” claims. Therefore, the court will consider the “sexual harassment” portion of Parada’s First and Second Causes Of Action separately from the “disparate treatment” portion of those claims. Analysis of the “sexual harassment” portion of Parada’s claims begins with the arguments of the parties. The arguments of the parties concerning the sexual harassment claims at the oral arguments differed considerably from — not just “clarified” — the arguments presented in their briefs. The court has taken the parties’ oral arguments as the “final word” on what they are alleging or arguing in this case, where there is a difference between their oral arguments and their written arguments.
1. Arguments of the parties
a. The defendants’ initial argument
In their initial brief in support of their motion for summary judgment, the defendants contended that the comments attributed to Warntjes and Herbst, if made, which they deny, were not objectively offensive or sufficiently severe or pervasive to be actionable. They pointed out that none of the conduct by Warntjes or Herbst (or for that matter, Holler) allegedly involved touching, an implication that any individual wanted to have sex with her, or a suggestion that Parada could improve her situation by having sex with them. They also argued that Parada has not alleged that she was called derogatory names or subjected to lewd and lascivious actions, gestures, or conversations. Indeed, they pointed out that Parada did not even tell Warntjes or Herbst to stop their conduct or complain about their conduct to Bye, nor did she stop taking breaks in the service office, all of which they contend undermines Parada’s assertions of severity and unwelcomeness оf the conduct in question.
In their brief, the defendants also contended (or at least, the court read their brief to contend) that Holler’s behavior does not come within the ambit of recovery under Title VII or the ICRA, because Holler was Parada’s subordinate and, as such, could not harass her as a matter of law, even if his conduct was sufficiently severe or offensive, which they deny. 4 They contended, further, that Parada has admitted that Holler’s comments and conduct were not sexual or impliedly sexual and that she never complained about Hol *794 ler’s conduct as sexual harassment. Thus, they contended that Parada has admitted that Holler’s conduct was not sexual harassment.
b. Parada’s response
Parada argued in her brief that the harassment by Warntjes and Herbst was harassment by supervisors that was “totally sexual.” She also contended that the environment that their comments created was both objectively and subjectively hostile. She contended that the harassment was the more hostile and offensive, because it was done by supervisors and, in the totality of the circumstances, it demonstrated the harassers’ bigotry, their power to make her embarrassed and uncomfortable, and their power and desire to make her know her place in the organization. Parada contended that the court must accept as true her contention that conduct by Warntjes and Herbst was also unwelcome and that she subjectively found it to be hostile.
As to harassment by Holler, whom Par-ada identifies as a co-worker, Parada argued in her brief that even conduct that is not overtly sex-based can, nevertheless, constitute sexual harassment, if the conduct was done because the victim was female, and that is the situation here as to Holler’s conduct. She contended that, at the very least, the record generates a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Holler’s disrespectful conduct was directed at her because she was the lone female in the service area and because of his resentment towards a female in a supervisory role. She also contended that Holler used a sex-based epithet, bitch, toward her, and even used physically threatening behavior and verbal threats of physical violence. She also contended that Holler’s conduct created or contributed to an oppressive work environment. Moreover, she contended that such conduct was unwelcome, because she complained about it constantly to her supervisors. Finally, she contended that GPI and her supеrvisors certainly knew of Holler’s conduct, because she complained about it frequently, but they did nothing effective to end or prevent such conduct.
c. The defendants’reply
In their Reply in further support of this part of their motion for summary judgment, the defendants argued that Parada has admitted that nothing Holler did or said was sexual harassment and that, during her deposition, her attorney stated that the Complaint was in error when it alleged that Holler’s conduct was “sex harassment” because it should have said “sex discrimination.” Therefore, the defendants requested summary judgment in their favor on any claim of sexual harassment relating to Holler, based on Parada’s admissions and those of her counsel. The defendants also reiterated (or at least the court understood them to reiterate) that the claim fails as to Holler, because his conduct was not based on sex and because he was Parada’s subordinate. 5 They also argued that Holler’s conduct clearly arose *795 from his resistance to following the directives of a person whom he considered less qualified than he was, so that no reasonable jury could conclude that Holler’s conduct was based on sex. They contended that Parada has only secondhand knowledge of Holler calling her a bitch, because she did not hear him call her that, and only secondhand knowledge that Holler had accused another employee of having a relationship with Parada, which she considered harassment, because she only learned of that accusation from the other employee, not from Holler. The defendants apparently suggested that conduct of which Parada had only secondhand knowledge could not be harassing. The defendants also contended that the record here is devoid of evidence that Holler made any comments or engaged in any conduct about which Parada complains because she was a woman and there are no comments suggesting that Holler thought Parada’s job was not a “woman’s job” or that women had no place in the workplace. They contended that the “tone of bigotry,” on which Parada relies, is not supported by any evidence in the record. Finally, the defendants reiterated that Holler was Par-ada’s subordinate, not a co-worker or supervisor, so that the logic of this court’s reasoning, in a decision in a prior case, that the status of the harasser matters to the severity of the harassment suggests that Holler’s conduct was not sufficiently severe to be actionable.
The defendants did not reply to Parada’s arguments concerning sufficiency of the evidenсe of harassment by Warntjes and Herbst to generate jury questions.
d. The parties’ oral arguments
As mentioned above, the parties’ oral arguments concerning whether or not Holler sexually harassed Parada were either quite different from their written arguments or, at least, were quite different from what the court had understood the parties to be arguing in their briefs. Therefore, the court will also summarize the parties’ oral arguments on the sexual harassment claim.
In the course of oral arguments, the court took defendants’ counsel to task on what the court had taken to be the defendants’ assertion that only someone in higher authority has the power to sexually harass someone. In response, defendants’ counsel asserted that she was trying to make a distinction between sexual harassment by a subordinate and sexual discrimination by a subordinate, and to argue that the latter is not possible, because a subordinate has no power to affect a term of the alleged victim’s employment. Similarly, when the court stated that it had understood the defendants to argue in their briefs that, as a matter of law, Holler could not have engaged in sexual harassment of a supervisor because he was a subordinate, defendants’ counsel expressly stated that she “didn’t mean to say that.” Instead, defendant’s counsel explained as follows:
[DEFENDANTS’ COUNSEL:] I intended to make the distinction between sex discrimination and sex harassment, and I understand that sexual harassment is a form of discrimination. But yes, I do not intend to argue that a coworker or a subordinate can’t harass someone. But without power to- affect her employment, he cannot discriminate against her. He cannot—
THE COURT: Because he doesn’t have any power over a term and condition of employment.
[DEFENDANTS’ COUNSEL]: Yes.
Realtime Transcript of Oral Arguments on April 6, 2007.
Parada’s counsel also attempted to clarify precisely what Parada is alleging with *796 regard to the conduct of Shawn Holler. Counsel stated the following:
[PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL:] Let me try and explain the Shawn Holler situation. The pleadings did say sex harassment. That was a mistake that I made. It should have been just sex discrimination. The complaint with Shawn Holler—
THE COURT: And you corrected that at the deposition, didn’t you?
[PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL]: Yes.
THE COURT: Why didn’t you go ahead and then amend your pleadings to correct that?
[PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL]: Good question, Judge. It should be reflected in the pleadings that it’s sex discrimination. It should be there in the pleadings.
The claim with Shawn Holler, though, is a retaliation claim. It’s not a sex discrimination complaint about Shawn Holler. It’s what happened with respect to Shawn Holler. When Ms. Parada began to make her complaints about what Shawn Holler was doing to her— and she believеs and perceives that that was all based on the fact that he was a man, she was a woman, and he refused to work for her — she began to make those complaints to her supervisors, and the result is she was discharged for it. So that aspect of the case is a retaliation complaint....
Realtime Transcript of Oral Arguments on April 6, 2007. In light of Parada’s counsel’s representations at oral arguments, the court must conclude that Parada is not now alleging that conduct of Shawn Holler was, itself, either actionable sexual harassment or actionable sexual discrimination, but was, instead, only the basis for Para-da’s retaliation claim.
More specifically still, Parada’s sexual harassment claim, as it now stands, is based only on the conduct of Warntjes and Herbst, her supervisors, and the court will not reach the interesting question of whether an employee can be sexually harassed by someone who is nominally that employee’s subordinate. 6
*798 2. Analysis
a. Elements of the claim
Title VII prohibits an employer from discriminating “against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of ... sex.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l). As the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has explained, “[Discrimination based on sex that creates a hostile or abusive work environment violates Title VII.”
Nitsche v. CEO of Osage Valley Elec. Co-op.,
The elements of a claim of hostile environment sexual harassment differ somewhat, depending upon whether the alleged harasser is a co-worker or a supervisor.
Cheshewalla v. Rand & Son Constr. Co.,
b. Harassment by Warntjes and Herbst
For the reasons explained above, Parada’s sexual harassment claim is now based exclusively on the conduct of two of her supervisors, Warntjes and Herbst. The court finds that the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on this claim puts at issue only some of the common elements of a sexual harassment claim, whether that claim is based on sexual harassment by a co-worker or a supervisor. Specifically, the defendants have moved for summary judgment on Parada’s sexual harassment claim based on the conduct of Warntjes and Herbst on the grounds that their conduct was not “unwelcome” nor sufficiently “severe.”
See Gordon,
i.
“Unwelcome” harassment.
“Unwelcomeness” of the alleged sexual harassment is the second element of a sexual harassment claim, whether based on the conduct of a co-worker or a supervisor.
See Nitsche,
*800
The defendants point out that Parada did not tell Warntjes or Herbst to stop their conduct or complain about their conduct to Bye, nor did she stop taking breaks in the service office. Parada’s failure to do any of these things, they contend, undermines her assertions of “unwel-comeness” of the condúct in question (and, they contend, also undermines any inference of the “severity” of that conduct, as well). The court agrees that there is no evidence that- Parada ever complained to anyone about conduct by Warntjes or Herbst. The court finds, further, that the weakness of the record on the “unwel-comeness” element is emphasized by evidence that Parada certainly knew how to complain and to whom when she was upset by Holler’s conduct; evidence that she also knew that Bye, who had responded to her complaints about Holler, could discipline Warntjes and Herbst; evidence that she 'acknowledges that she found Bye approachable; and evidence that she saw Bye almost daily. Thus, because the question on this element is “whether the plaintiff indicated, by her conduct, that the alleged harassment was unwelcome,”
Hocevar,
Moreover, there can be little refuge in the general principle that “unwelcomeness” is a question of fact for the jury,
see id.
at 729, or in the further contention that the court must accept as true Parada’s contention that conduct by Warntjes and Herbst was unwelcome, if there is no
evidence
giving rise to a genuine issue of material fact that the conduct was “unwelcome.”
See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co.,
Parada asserted at oral arguments that the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth,
Parada does rely on more than the factual nature of the “unwelcomeness” element, the court’s supposed duty to accept her allegations as true, and the lack of any requirement that she complain about the harassment to support her contention that the “unwelcomeness” element is a jury question in this case. She also points to evidence that Bye failed to do anything effective to stop objectionable conduct by Holler. Although the inferences are, perhaps, tenuous, the court finds that there are inferences that Parada’s failure to complain to Bye about a hostile work environment allegedly created by Warntjes and Herbst was excused by Bye’s failure to deal effectively with Holler’s conduct, because that failure arguably created and condoned objectionable treatment towards Parada, which may have left Parada with a reasonable belief that complaints by a female employee about objectionable conduct by male employees at GPI were futile.
Cf. Delph v. Dr. Pepper Bottling Co.,
ii.
“Severe” harassment.
The court is less uneasy about declining to grant summary judgment on Parada’s claim of harassment by her supervisors on the “severity” element.
See Gordon,
More specifically,
[The plaintiff] must clear a high threshold to demonstrate actionable harm, for “complaints attacking the ordinary tribulations of the workplace, such as the sporadic use of abusive language, gender-related jokes, and occasional teasing” obtain no remedy. See Faragher v. City of Boca Raton,524 U.S. 775 , 788,118 S.Ct. 2275 ,141 L.Ed.2d 662 (1998) (internal quotation omitted). “[A] sexually objectionable environment must be both objectively and subjectively offensive, one that a reasonable person would find hostile or abusive, and one that the victim in fact did perceive to be so.” Id. at 787,524 U.S. 775 ,118 S.Ct. 2275 ,141 L.Ed.2d 662 (citation omitted). To be actionable, the conduct complained of must be extreme in nature and not merely rude or unpleasant. LeGrand,394 F.3d at 1101 (citation omitted). Allegations of a few isolated or sporadic incidents will not suffice; rather, the plaintiff must demonstrate the alleged harassment was “so intimidating, offensive, or hostile that it poisoned the work environment.” Tuggle v. Mangan,348 F.3d 714 , 720 (8th Cir.2003) (quoting Scusa v. Nestle U.S.A. Co.,181 F.3d 958 , 967 (8th Cir.1999)). Such standards are demanding, for “Title VII does not prohibit all verbal or physical harassment” and is not “a general civility code for the American workplace.” Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Servs., Inc.,523 U.S. 75 , 80,118 S.Ct. 998 ,140 L.Ed.2d 201 (1998). In determining whether a work environment was sufficiently hostile or abusive, we examine the totality of the circumstances, including whether the discriminatory conduct was frequent and severe; whether it was physically threatening or humiliating, as opposed to merely an offensive utterance; and whether it unreasonably interfered with the employee’s work performance. Harris,510 U.S. at 23 ,114 S.Ct. 367 ,126 L.Ed.2d 295 .
Nitsche,
There is little doubt that the conduct that Parada attributes tо Warntjes and Herbst — if it occurred — was “rude and unpleasant,” not to mention “boorish, chauvinistic, and decidedly immature,” but the defendants contend that it was nothing more, and as such, it is not enough, standing alone, to create a hostile work environment.
See Nitsche,
The incidents in question were not merely rare, isolated, or sporadic, but routine — according to Parada’s testimony,
*803
such conduct occurred at least weekly during her eleven months of employment with GPI.
See Nitsche,
More specifically, as this court noted in
Steck v. Francis,
Therefore, the court declines to hold that conduct by Warntjes and Herbst does not, as a matter of law, constitute actionable harassment based on sex, in light of inferences that a reasonable juror could draw from the record.
Bunda,
D. Sexual Discrimination
Parada has also asserted sexual discrimination claims in the sense of disparate treatment, as well as sexual harassment, in violation of Title VII and the ICRA. The defendants have likewise moved for summary judgment on these claims. Once again, the court’s analysis of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on these claims begins with a summary of the arguments of the parties. On this claim, the parties’ written and oral arguments were, for the most part, consistent.
1. Arguments of the parties
a. The defendants’ initial argument
The defendants admit that they are uncertain what, precisely, is the basis for Parada’s sexual discrimination claim. They read the claim to allege that Parada’s position as the service writer was ehminat-ed because she was a woman. The defendants contend that Parada cannot generate a prima facie ease on such a claim, however, because Parada cannot demonstrate or generate genuine issues of material fact that she was performing her job satisfactorily to meet her employer’s legitimate job expectations or that similarly situated male employees were treated differently. As to both points, the defendants contend that Parada cannot show that any other employee had recеived multiple complaints from customers, to the point where customers were taking their business elsewhere. Thus, they contend that termination of the service writer position, which had been intended to improve customer satisfaction not to cause it to deteriorate, was a legitimate business decision that had nothing to do with Parada’s gender. The lack of discriminatory intent, they argue, is apparent from their offer to Parada to continue working for GPI as a diesel technician, the position for which she had originally applied, at the same rate of pay she was receiving as the service writer.
b. Parada’s response
For her part, Parada disputes that there were multiple complaints about her performance, because the truck repair business is always fraught with customer complaints. After all, she contends, the reason that customers bring in a truck is that they have a complaint about something that needs to be fixed. Moreover, she argues that it is not uncommon that a repair does not correct the exact thing that a customer expected to change. Parada also points out that she never worked on trucks, so that customers could not have been complaining very much about her work. Parada also argues that she was not just a service writer, because shortly after she started working for GPI, her position “morphed” into the day lead person with service writer responsibilities. Thus, she contends that, even if the service writer position was eliminated, the day lead person position was not, and after her termination, the day lead person position was filled by a male, Larry Herbst. Next, Parada contends that customers had also made complaints about male employees, including a complaint that Herbst had used a customer’s truck without permission to tow another customer’s truck, but he suffered no disciplinary action.
*805 Parada also argues that the defendants’ legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for their actions, supposed customer complaints about Parada, is an affirmative defense that the defendants must plead, but that they have not done so. Regardless of their failure to plead such a legitimate reason, Parada contends that whether or not there were complaints from customers is a contested fact, because no such complaints were brought to her attention during the time that she was employed at GPI. Moreover, in light of the failure of GPI to bring such complaints to her attention, she contends that the supposed customer complaints are “a ruse” to legitimize a discriminatory discharge, if it is appropriate to consider in litigation supposed customer complaints that were not a factor prior to her discharge. 10
c. The defendants’reply
In reply in further support of this part of their motion for summary judgment, the defendants argue that Parada has failed to identify any similarly situated male employee, that is, one with multiple complaints from customers, who was subjected to different treatment than she was. One complaint against Larry Herbst in all his years of employment with GPI, they assert, falls far short of making him similarly situated to Parada, who was the subject of multiple customer complaints within a few months. The defendants assert that, on the present record, no reasonable juror could conclude that the customer complaints about Parada did not occur or that Herbst and Parada were similarly situated. The defendants also contend that Parada’s assertion that a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the employer’s actions is an affirmative defense is contrary to applicable law. Instead, they contend that they need only produce such a reason and that they have done so. Moreover, they contend that Parada has produced nothing to rebut the legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason that they offer for eliminating the service writer position. Specifically, they contend that Parada’s assertion that nobody spoke to her about customer complaints simply does not rebut the existence of such complaints, as described, for example, by Bye in his deposition, or the sufficiency of those complaints as a justification to eliminate the service writer position.
2. Analysis
a. Prohibitions and analytical process
Title VII prevents an employer from making employment decisions that are based on an employee’s sex or gender.
In re Union Pac. R.R. Employment Practices Litig.,
In the absence of direct evidence of sexual discrimination- — and no party contends that there is any direct evidence here — the plaintiffs claim is analyzed under the familiar
McDonnell Douglas
burden-shifting analysis.
See, e.g., Wells v. SCI Mgmt., L.P.,
b. Parada’s prima facie case
To establish a
prima facie
case of disparate treatment based on sex, a plaintiff must show the following: (1) she was a member of a protected group; (2) she was qualified to perform her job; (3) she suffered an adverse employment action; and (4) she was treated differently from similarly situated males.
Tenge v. Phillips Modem Ag Co.,
i. The “qualiñcation/meeting legitimate expectations” element. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals recently explained the “qualification/meeting legitimate expectations” element of the plaintiffs prima facie case of sex discrimination as follows:
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,821 F.2d 478 , 481 (8th Cir.1987). An employee must *807 show that her qualifications are equivalent to the minimum objective criteria. Wexler v. White’s Fine Furniture, Inc.,317 F.3d 564 , 575 (6th Cir.2003). The threshold criteria are the plaintiffs physical ability, education, experience in the relevant industry, and the required general skills. Whitley v. Peer Review Systems, Inc.,221 F.3d 1053 , 1055 (8th Cir.2000) (physical ability); Wexler,317 F.3d at 576 (education, experience, and general skills). These qualifications are demonstrated when the employee “actually performs her job at a level that [meets her] employer’s legitimate еxpectations.” Whitley,221 F.3d at 1055 ; see also Miller v. Citizens Sec. Group,116 F.3d 343 , 346 (8th Cir.1997).
Kratzer v. Rockwell Collins, Inc.,
The parties have not put at issue Parada’s qualification in terms of education or training. See id. Rather, the defendants contend that Parada cannot generate a genuine issue of material fact on this element of her prima facie case, as to elimination of her service writer position and, presumably, as to termination of her lead person duties, because the frequent complaints from customers about her performance demonstrate that she was not actually performing her job at a level that met her employer’s legitimate expectations. See id. (stating a “legitimate expectation” standard for “qualification”). Those complaints, the defendants contend, included a flat out refusal of one customer to speak with Parada and threats by other customers to take their business elsewhere rather than work with her. The court agrees that Parada has failed to generate any genuine issues of material fact that there were, in fact, no such customer complaints. Moreover, the court concludes that employers can legitimately expect an employee’s performance not to engender customer complaints. This is particularly true when the whole purpose of the employee’s position, such as the service writer position at GPI, was to improve customer satisfaction. Here, the record shows beyond dispute that Parada was not meeting that legitimate expectation, where there is evidence of serious customer complaints against her and no evidence, whatsoever, that the complaints did not occur. Therefore, Parada has failed to generate genuine issues of material fact on the “qualification/meeting legitimate expectations” element of her prima facie case of disparate treatment sexual discrimination.
Nevertheless, the court will consider Parada’s ability to generate genuine issues of material fact on other elements of her prima facie case and, indeed, at other steps in the burden-shifting analysis.
ii.
The “similarly situated male/inference of discrimination” element.
The defendants also challenge Par-ada’s ability to generate genuine issues of material fact on the “similarly situated male” element of her
prima facie
case of sexual discrimination.
See Tenge,
The fourth element can also be met “if the employee provides ‘some other evidence that would give rise to an inference of unlawful discrimination.’ ”
Turner,
In short, the court finds that Parada has failed to generate genuine issues of material fact on the challenged elements of her
prima facie
case of sexual discrimination in the elimination of her service writer position and termination of her lead person duties, and thе defendants are, consequently, entitled to summary judgment on that claim.
Celotex Corp.,
c. The defendants’ legitimate reasons
The second stage of the burden-shifting analysis — assuming that the plaintiff has generated a
prima facie
case of discrimination — considers whether the defendants have a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for the allegedly discriminatory conduct.
See, e.g., Wells,
As the defendants assert, Parada’s contention that the employer’s legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for its actions is an affirmative defense that must be pleaded and proved by the employer is simply wrong. An employer is only required
to articulate
or
to produce
a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for its actions.
See, e.g., Tenge,
*810
More to the point, customer complaints
are
legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for an employer’s adverse actions towards an employee.
See Anderson v. Stauffer Chem. Co.,
d. Pretext and discriminatory animus
If the employer states a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for its actions, the court must consider whether the plaintiff has both discredited the employer’s asserted reasons for adverse action and shown that the circumstances permit drawing the reasonable inference that the real reason for that adverse action was the plaintiffs protected characteristic.
See Twymon,
The court agrees with the defendants. It might have been better business practice, or simply more generous, for the defendants to inform Parada of the complaints and to give her the opportunity to attempt to improve her performance before eliminating her service writer duties and terminating her lead person duties, but the court is not to sit in judgment of an employer’s business practices, so long as those practices are not discriminatory.
See, e.g., Arraleh v. County of Ramsey,
The defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Parada’s sexual discrimination claim, because Parada cannot generate genuine issues of material fact on the essential elements of such a claim.
Celotex Corp.,
E. Retaliation
Parada contends that she was retaliated against for her complaints about Holler. The defendants also seek summary judgment on this claim. As always, the court’s analysis of this part of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment begins with a summary of the parties’ arguments.
1. Arguments of the parties
a. The defendants’ initial argument
In support of their contention that they are entitled to summary judgment on Par-ada’s retaliation claim, the defendants contend, first, that Parada has not exhausted administrative remedies on the state-law version of this claim, because she did not timely amend her administrative complaint to assert such a claim under Iowa law. Turning to the merits, the defendants contend that Parada cannot generate genuine issues of material fact on the “protected activity” or “causal connection” elements of her prima facie case. More specifically, they contend that Parada’s retaliation claim fails, because none of the conduct upon which she bases her sexual harassment claim actually constitutes sexual *812 harassment, so that she did not engage in any protected activity by complaining about such conduct. Next, they point out that Parada complained about Holler’s conduct, but did not identify it as sexual in nature or as sexual harassment, and never complained at all about the conduct by Warntjes or Herbst that she now asserts was sexually harassing, so that there is no causal connection between any complaints about sexual harassment and her discharge. Moreover, they contend that Par-ada was not even able to articulate what conduct she alleges was in retaliation for complaints about Holler’s or anyone else’s conduct. Even assuming that Parada did engage in protected activity, and assuming that the basis for her retaliation claim is the elimination of her service writer position and termination of her lead person duties, the defendants argue that they have asserted legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons — customer complaints — for elimination of the service writer position and termination of Parada’s lead person duties, breaking the causal chain between allegedly рrotected activity and allegedly retaliatory conduct. They also contend that Parada has failed to rebut the proffered legitimate reasons for elimination of or changes in her duties.
b.Parada’s response
In response, Parada argues that she did complain about Holler’s conduct and that such conduct did constitute or could reasonably have been believed to constitute sexual harassment. Moreover, she contends that Holler began what she describes as “his insidious attack” on her during the time that she was working as the lead person on his shift, because he wanted her position. She contends that Holler’s “antics” continued for months, to the point where it was clear that something had to be done. She contends that the something that was eventually done was retaliatory elimination of her position. She contends that the pretextual nature of the elimination of the service writer position is shown by evidence that the lead person duties that she was also performing were not eliminated — instead, Larry Herbst took them over. She also contends that the defendants do not even proffer a reason for discharging her from her lead person duties. In response to the defendants’ timeliness arguments, Parada contends that she properly amended her administrative complaint to assert a retaliation claim and that such an amendment related back to the original filing of her administrative complaint.
c. The defendants’reply
The defendants’ reply is concise: They contend that Parada has not come forward with any evidence that would cast even an inferential doubt on their reasons for eliminating her service writer position.
d. Parada’s oral argument
As explained above, in reference to Par-ada’s sexual harassment claim, Parada clarified the import of Holler’s conduct for purposes of this litigation by explaining that “[t]he claim with Shawn Holler ... is a retaliation claim.... It’s what happened with respect to Shawn Holler. When Ms. Parada began to make her complaints about what Shawn Holler was doing to her — and she believes and perceives that that was all based on the fact that he was a man, she was a woman, and he refused to work for her — she began to make those complaints to her supervisors, and the result is she was discharged for it. So that aspect of the case is a retaliation complaint....” Realtime Transcript of Oral Arguments on April 6, 2007. Thus, contrary to all prior characterizations, it appears that Parada’s retaliation claim is now based exclusively on the contention that Parada was retaliated against for *813 complaining about discrimination by Holler, not for complaining about harassment by Holler.
2. Analysis
In addition to its prohibitions on creation of a sexually hostile work environment and sexually discriminatory treatment, Title VII prohibits an employer from retaliating against an employee “because [s]he has opposed any practice made an unlawful employment practice by this subchapter, or because [s]he has made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing under this subchapter.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). On the other hand, “ ‘[f]iling a complaint [of discrimination] does not clothe [the plaintiff] with immunity for past and present inadequacies.’ ”
Wells v. SCI Mgmt., L.P.,
a. Parada’s prima facie case
To establish a
prima facie
case of retaliation, Parada must demonstrate the following: (1) that she engaged in statutorily protected activity; (2) that she suffered an adverse employment action; and (3) that there was a causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse employment action.
Wells,
i.
Protected activity.
To constitute protected activity, as the basis for the first element of a retaliation claim, the plaintiffs complaint must have been about conduct that a reasonable person could have found violated Title VII, that is, conduct that could reasonably be found to be sexual discrimination or could reasonably be found to be sexual harassment,
i.e.,
so severe or pervasive as to alter a term or condition of employment.
See Clark County Sch. Dist. v. Breeden,
ii. Causal connection. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appеals very recently explained the requirements to prove the “causal connection” element, the third element of a prima facie case of retaliation, as follows:
*814 To prove a causal connection, [the plaintiff] must demonstrate the defendants’ “retaliatory motive played a part in the adverse employment action.” Kipp v. Mo. Highway & Transp. Comm’n,280 F.3d 893 , 896-97 (8th Cir.2002) (quotation omitted). Evidence giving rise to an inference of retaliatory motive on the part of the employer is sufficient to establish the requisite causal link. Id. at 897. “An inference of a causal connection between [protected conduct] and [an adverse employment action] can be drawn from the timing of the two events, but in general more than a temporal connection is required to present a genuine factual issue on retaliation.” Wallace v. DTG Operations, Inc.,442 F.3d 1112 , 1119 (8th Cir.2006) (citation omitted).
Thomas v. Corwin,
It is on this “causal connection” element that Parada’s
prima facie
case of retaliation collapses. Whatever inference of causal connection might arise from proximity between Parada’s complaints about Holler’s conduct and the elimination of her service writer position and termination of her lead person duties is considerably dissipated by the fact that the defendants took no adverse employment action against Parada for
months
while she was complaining about Holler.
Cf. Thomas,
Therefore, the court finds that the defendants are entitlеd to summary judgment on Parada’s retaliation claim, because Parada cannot generate genuine issues of material fact on an essential element of her
prima facie
case.
Celotex Corp.,
b. Legitimate reason and pretext
Even assuming, for the sake of argument, that Parada could establish a
prima facie
case of retaliation, however, her claim may still fail if the defendants produce, and Parada fails to rebut, a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for the allegedly retaliatory action.
See Thomas,
Therefore, the defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Parada’s retaliation claim.
F. Unequal Pay
Parada’s final claim is a claim of unequal pay on the basis of gender in violation of the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d). The defendants also seek summary judgment on this claim. The court’s analysis of this claim also begins with a summary of the parties’ arguments.
1. Arguments of the parties
a. The defendants’ initial argument
In support of their contention that they are entitled to summary judgment on Par-ada’s unequal pay claim, the defendants contend that Parada cannot generate genuine issues of material fact on either the “equal work” or “equal skill” elements of her claim. The defendants acknowledge that Parada has identified William J.R. Riecks, the night lead person, as the necessary comparator, but they contend that the service writer position, filled only by Parada, was not the same job as the night lead position, filled by Riecks, and that the positions involved different duties, not “equal work.” Moreover, even to the extent that Parada was the day lead person, the defendants contend that her duties were not the same as Riecks’s, because she could not perform some of the duties, such as training, assisting, or supervising other diesel technicians and performing actual repairs, that were part of the regular duties of a lead person. Indeed, they point out that Parada has admitted that she has no idea what duties Riecks actually performed as night lead person. As to the “equal skill” element, the defendants point out that it is undisputed that Riecks had more than twenty years of experience as a diesel mechanic, teacher, and supervisor, while Parada was a recent graduate of a technical school with no work experience *816 as a diesel mechanic. They also point out that Riecks had, and Parada lacked, a CDL, which limited her ability to test drive and shuttle trucks.
b. Parada’s response
Parada contends that it is undisputed that she was paid only $11.50 per hour, whether she was working as a day or night lead person, while Riecks was paid $16.00 per hour, which supposedly included a “night shift differential.” Thus, she contends that the burden is on the defendants to demonstrate that the difference between her rate of pay and Riecks’s was based on something other than sex. She also contends that she was a “service writer” only for a few weeks, but thereafter was a combined “service writer and lead person,” and that she performed the same duties as Riecks, because she frequently covered the night lead person position before Riecks was hired and while he was off work as the result of a car accident. She acknowledges, as she must, that her level of experience was different from Riecks’s, but she nevertheless contends that Riecks was physically incapable of performing most of the tasks that he had performed in the past owing to medical restrictions. Thus, she contends that Riecks was only a diesel mechanic “in spirit,” but not in practice. She also contends that the jobs compared need not be identical, merely substantially equal in skill, effort, and responsibility, and that her position meets these requirements in comparison to Riecks’s position. 12
c. The defendants’reply
In reply, the defendants contend that Parada’s affidavit, which seeks to add numerous duties to the list of her duties that she gave in her deposition, cannot generate an issue of fact on the similarity between her position and Riecks’s position. Moreover, the defendants contend that Parada cannot legitimately assert that she had more experience or ability than her male comparator. Thus, even if Parada’s list of duties could be considered, the defendants contend that it is clear that Para-da did not teach or assist other diesel technicians as effectively as did Riecks, with his twenty-some years of experience as a diesel mechanic.
2. Analysis
a. Prohibitions and applicable standards
In
Younts v. Fremont County, Iowa,
The EPA prohibits an employer from paying employees of one sex less than employees of the opposite sex “for equal work on jobs the performance of which requires equal skill, effort, and responsibility, and which are performed under similar working conditions.” 29 U.S.C. § 206(d)(1). The plaintiffs have the burden to prove their employer paid them less than male employees for substantially equal work. Lawrence v. CNF Transp., Inc.,340 F.3d 486 , 491 (8th Cir.2003). Whether employees perform substantially equal work “requires a practical judgment on the basis of all the facts and circumstances of a particular case, including factors such as level of experience, training, education, ability, effort, and responsibility.” Id. at 492 (citation omitted). This analysis does *817 not depend “on job titles or classifiea-tions[,] but on the actual requirements and performance of the job.” Id. (citation omitted). We are required to “compare the jobs in question in light of the full factual situation and the [EPA’s] broad remedial purpose.” Id. (citation omitted). When evaluating the amount of effort required to perform a job, we consider “the physical or mental exertion necessary to the performance of a job,” and when evaluating the amount of responsibility a job entails, we consider “the degree of accountability required in performing a job.” Berg v. Norand Corp.,169 F.3d 1140 , 1146 (8th Cir.1999) (citation omitted). We are not particularly interested in a plaintiffs conclusory allegations about which jobs are equal. See id. (Holding conclusory affidavit testimony that two jobs are equal does not establish a prima facie case under the EPA). Instead, we review the actual requirements and performance of the jobs in question.
Younts,
*818
It is clear that the jobs of the plaintiff and the comparator “ ‘need not be identical to be considered “equal” under the EPA; they need only be substantially equal.’ ”
Simpson v. Merchants & Planters Bank,
The inquiry as to whether two jobs are equal is a factual one:
Whether two jobs entail equal skill, equal effort, or equal responsibility requires a practical judgment on the basis of all the facts and circumstances of a particular case. Skill includes such considerations as experience, training, education, and ability. Effort refers to the physical or mental exertion necessary to the performance of a job. Responsibility concerns the degree of accountability required in performing a job. Application of the Equal Pay Act depends not on job titles or classifications but on the actual requirements and performance of the job. In all cases, therefore, a court must compare the jobs in question in light of the full factual situation and the broad remedial purpose of the statute. EEOC v. Universal Underwriters Ins. Co.,653 F.2d 1243 , 1245 (8th Cir.1981) (citing 29 C.F.R. §§ 800.114-.132). Thus, whether [the plaintiff] and [the comparator] had equal jobs is a factual inquiry, dependent on their job requirements, not their job titles, and anchored around skill, effort, and responsibility.
Simpson,
b. Parada’s prima facie case
Here, there is no dispute that Par-ada was paid less than her male comparator, Riecks, because she was paid $11.50 per hour, while Riecks was paid $16.00 per hour.
See Younts,
As the court explained above, Parada’s contentions that Riecks could and did perform only limited work, such as changing light bulbs, and did not even have his own set of tools at GPI are not supported by and, in fact, are contradicted by the record. Even if Riecks was physically limited in the work that he could do himself, Riecks’s superior experience gave him a vastly greater ability to assist, supervise, evaluate, and approve the work of other diesel mechanics than Parada possessed. Moreover, even assuming that Parada’s and Riecks’s positions required substantially equal “effort,”
see id.
(“effort” is a relevant criterion for comparison), their “responsibilities” were not the same,
id.
(“responsibility” is another relevant criterion), because Parada attempts to compare responsibilities that she had occasionally, as the service writer/day lead person and sometime substitute night lead person, with responsibilities that Riecks had all the time as night lead person. Indeed, even though Parada sometimes covered for Riecks, that undisputed fact fails to generate a genuine issue of material fact that she performed the same responsibilities as Riecks where she admits that she did not even know what responsibilities he routinely performed.
See Younts,
Thus, Parada has failed to generate genuine issues of material fact on essential elements of her unequal pay claim; consequently, the defendants are entitled to summary judgment on that claim.
Celotex Corp.,
III. CONCLUSION
After applying an experienced eye to Parada’s various claims,
see
Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Common Law 1 (1881) (“The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience.”), and recognizing that the court must not weigh the evidence, but may only determine whether there are genuine issues for trial,
see Bunda,
THEREFORE, the defendants’ January 11, 2007, Motions [sic] For Summary Judgment (docket no. 19), is granted in part and denied in part, as follows:
1. The motion is denied as to Parada’s claims of sexual harassment in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and the Iowa Civil Rights Act (ICRA), Iowa Code Ch. 216 in her First and Second Causes of Action, respectively.
*820 2. The motion is granted as to Para-da’s claim of sexual discrimination in violation of Title VII and the ICRA in her First аnd Second Causes of Action, respectively.
3. The motion is granted as to Para-da’s claim of retaliation for complaining about sexual harassment in violation of Title VII and the ICRA in her Third and Fourth Causes of Action, respectively.
4. The motion is granted as to Para-da’s claim of unequal pay in violation of the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d) in her Fifth Cause of Action.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The court has been hampered in its efforts to verify the parties' statements of fact, because neither party complied with the local rule for summary judgment motions, which, inter alia, requires consecutive page numbering of appendices and identification of deposition excerpts. See N.D. Ia. L.R. 56.1(e). The pages of the parties’ appendices either are not consecutively numbered or are numbered in the wrong location, so that the page numbering is overlaid with and obscured by other *784 information on the page, or both. In addition to improper page numbering, some citations to pages of the appendices in support of certain facts identify pages that apparently do not exist in the appendix cited or that do not contain the information for which the pages were cited. In some of these instances, the court was unable to find any other portion of the appendices that contained the stated information. Some deposition excerpts not only were not identified in the manner required by the local rule, but were not identified at all. In at least one instance, excerpts of one person's deposition were interpolated into excerpts of another person's deposition, presumably inadvertently, but certainly without proper identification of the deponent for the excerpts. Finally, the court notes that many of the parties' key factual allegations appear nowhere in any of their statements of fact and, instead, appear only in their briefs, sometimes with adequate citations to their appendices, and sometimes without adequate citations. See N.D. Ia. L.R. 56.1(a)(3) & (b)(3).
The court understands that attorneys who practice in numerous jurisdictions, state, federal, or both, may be frustrated by the general proliferation of court rules. Nevertheless, this court's local rule for summary judgment motions has been developed and refined over several years, based on the experience of the court and attorneys, with the intention of making it easier for the parties to respond to each other’s factual assertions and arguments, as well as to aid the court in the prompt and efficiеnt disposition of summary judgment motions. Compliance with the rule, thus, helps everyone. Failure to comply with the applicable local rule for summary judgment motions in this case, in contrast, has made the parties' submissions confusing and the disposition of the motion unnecessarily laborious.
. The same or an overlapping group of shareholders, including Bye, also owns a South Dakota corporation with a similar name in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
. Parada's Title VII and ICRA claims are determined according to essentially the same standards.
See Vivian v. Madison,
. For example, the defendants argued in their brief, inter alia, “It cannot be disputed that Holler was not in a position of authority, and any comments he made to her about her competence as a matter of law do not amount to sexual harassment. Further, he had no authority to discriminate against her, and his comments, unrelated to sex, are therefore not actionable under Title VII.” Defendants' Brief In Support Of Motion For Summary Judgment (docket no. 19) at 13.
. The defendants argued, "The claim that Holler’s conduct was sexual harassment should be dismissed for the additional reason that conduct was not based on sex and that the alleged harasser was the plaintiff's subordinate.” Defendants' Reply (docket no. 28) at 2. The defendants also argued,
[I]t is undisputed that Holler was Plaintiff’s subordinate, not a co-worker or a supervisor. The logic this court has followed in determining that the status of the alleged harasser is relevant to whether the harassment was sufficiently severe to affect a term or condition of employment should be applied to determine that alleged harassment by a subordinate is not actionable. Using that logic, one concludes that a plaintiff who complains of harassment by a subordinate can have no fear of personal, social or professional consequences.
*795 Id. at 3-4 (citations omitted).
. The court would not find persuasive an argument that a nominal “subordinate” cannot, as a matter of law, sexually harass a nominal “superior.” First, the court has found no decision of the Eighth Circuit Court of Aрpeals or any other court, and when they appeared to assert such an argument the defendants have cited none, holding that, as a matter of law, a nominal "supervisor” cannot be harassed by a nominal "subordinate.” Indeed, the only decision squarely confronting that question that the court has found rejected such a contention. More than two decades ago, in
Moffett v. Gene B. Glick Co., Inc.,
This court agrees with the conclusion of the court in
Moffett
that the status of the alleged harasser in the company hierarchy may determine the nature of the proof required to establish employer liability, but does
not
determine, by itself, the potential for liability of the employer. In the intervening decades since the decision in
Moffett,
the Supreme Court has clarified the standards for determining when an employer is liable for harassment by a co-worker or a supervisor.
See See Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth,
Second, as
Moffett
suggests, an argument that a "subordinate” cannot, as a matter of law, harass a "supervisor” ignores the nature of the actual relationship between the alleged harasser and the alleged victim in the company’s hierarchy, and in particular, the authority that the alleged victim actually had over the alleged harasser.
See Moffett,
Third, an argument that a "subordinate” cannot harass a "supervisor” as a matter of law ignores the effect of any evidence that those with supervisory authority over both the plaintiff and the alleged harasser acquiesced in, condoned, permitted, ratified, or joined in the harassment of the plaintiff.
See, e.g.,
*798
Steck v. Francis,
Finally, whether a hostile environment has been created must be determined in light of the totality of the circumstances.
Nitsche,
446 F.3d 3t 845-46;
Baker,
. The first element, that the plaintiff belongs to a protected class, is not in dispute here, because the plaintiff is female.
See id..; see also
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1) (prohibiting discrimination "because of ... sex”). Nor is the third element, whether the conduct was "because of” or “based on” sex, at issue here,
see Gordon,
. The court notes that the defendants have not asserted the
Ellerth/Faragher
affirmative defense to employer liability for sexual harassment by supervisors as a basis for summary judgment. Therefore, the court will not address Parada’s contention that harassment by Warntjes and Herbst led to or resulted in a "tangible employment action.” Furthermore, the court will not address any contention about whether, in the absence of any "tangible employment action,” Parada can generate genuine issues of material fact to defeat the defendants’
Ellerth/Faragher
affirmative defense, where the record could be read to show that Parada unreasonably failed to take advantage of any preventive or corrective opportunities provided by the employer or to avoid harm otherwise,
see Gordon,
. The parties raised in the context of Parada's sexual harassment claim the sufficiency of the defendants’ contention that Parada was the subject of numerous customer complaints to defeat the sexual harassment claim. The court will not address in the context of Para- *804 da's sexual harassment claim whether customer complaints constituted a legitimate, non-disсriminatory reason for the employer's conduct, because customer complaints cannot possibly serve as legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for alleged sexual discrimination in the form of a sexually hostile work environment.
. Although Parada's counsel asserted at oral arguments that Holler’s conduct was "sex discrimination,” not “sexual harassment,” he explained that Parada’s theory was not that Holler’s discriminatory conduct was, itself, actionable, but that her complaints about bad behavior of a male employee by a female employee that resulted in termination of the female employee were the basis for her retaliation claim. Thus, Parada has not shifted the focus of her sexual discrimination claim away from the elimination or termination of her position, although she focuses on termination of both her service writer and lead person duties.
. At oral arguments, Parada asserted that this court’s decision in
Griffiths v. Winnebago Industries, Inc.,
In her brief, in support of her "waiver” argument, Parada cites
Salz v. Stellar Industries, Inc.,
. Parada also challenges the sufficiency of some of the affirmative defenses that the defendants have pleaded to the unequal pay claim, but the defendants did not put those defenses at issue in their motion for summary judgment, so the court will not consider them here.
. If a plaintiff establishes a
prima facie
case of unequal pay, “the burden shifts to the defendant to prove one of the affirmative defenses set forth under the EPA.”
Taylor v.
White,
