MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The Court has before it the January 10, 2000 motion of the defendant, the City of Huntsville, Alabama, for summary judgment. Pursuant to the Court’s January 11, 2000 order, as amended by the Court’s January 26, 2000 order, the motion was deemed submitted, without oral argument, on February 22, 2000.
I. Procedural History
Plaintiff Michael Joel Pennington commenced this action on July 27, 1998 by filing a pro se complaint 1 alleging racial discrimination and also alleging religious retaliation. (See Compl. 4-5.) An amended complaint was filed on October 20,1999. The amended complaint also alleged employment discrimination on the basis of race and retaliation based upon prior requests and grievances concerning religious accommodation, and sought to raise claims under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 1981, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and the equal protection and due process clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. 2 (See Am. Compl. passim.) More specifically, the amended complaint stated that the plaintiff initially had been denied a promotion and that plaintiff later had been offered a promotion but on different terms than an employee of another race, both as a result of discrimination and retaliation. (See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 8-19.) In response, defendant’s January 10, 2000 motion for summary judgment asserts that no genuine issues of material fact exist and that the defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. (See Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. 1.)
The parties have each filed briefs and submitted copious evidence in support of their respective positions concerning the pending motion for summary judgment. On February 1, 2000, the defendant submitted evidence 3 in support of its motion, and on February 8, 2000, the defendant filed a supporting brief. On February 15, *1205 2000, the plaintiff submitted evidence 4 in opposition to the defendant’s motion. The plaintiff supplemented his evidentiary submissions on February 17, 2000. 5 Finally, plaintiff filed an opposing brief on March 14, 2000. The issues having been thoroughly briefed, the defendant’s motion for summary judgment is now ripe for decision.
II. Standards for Evaluating a Summary Judgment Motion
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c), summary judgment is proper “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.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The appropriate substantive law will guide the determination of which facts are material and which are simply irrelevant.
See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
The method used by the party moving for summary judgment to discharge its initial burden depends on whether that party bears the burden of proof on the issue at trial.
See Fitzpatrick,
If the moving party does not bear the burden of proof at trial, it can satisfy its initial burden on summary judgment in either of two ways. See id. First, the moving party may produce affirmative evidence negating a material fact, thus showing that the opposing party will be not be able to meet the necessary elements of its case at trial. See id. at 1116. Once the moving party satisfies its burden using this method, the non-moving party must counter with enough positive evidence to overcome a trial motion for a directed verdict. See id.
The second method by which the moving party who does not bear the burden of proof at trial can satisfy its initial burden on summary judgment is to
affirmatively
show the absence of evidence in the record to support a judgment for the non-moving party on the issue in question.
See id.
at 1115-16. This method requires more than a simple statement that the non-moving party cannot meet its burden at trial but does not require evidence negating the non-movant’s claim; it simply requires the movant to notify the court that sufficient evidence to support the non-moving party’s case is lacking.
See Fitzpatrick,
*1207 III. Relevant Undisputed Facts
As part of a proposed pretrial order, the parties submitted to the Court an agreed summary of the case. At the February 22, 2000 pretrial conference, both parties again reviewed and concurred in the agreed summary, which was incorporated into the Court’s pretrial order. (See Feb. 22, 2000 Order 2-3.) Because the parties’ summary is a fair and succinct recital of the undisputed facts of the case, the Court will set forth a somewhat condensed version of the relevant portions.
The plaintiff is a black male employed by the defendant City of Huntsville. Since 1988, the plaintiff has worked as a recreational aide, first on a part-time basis and later on a full-time basis. Until the winter of 1995, the plaintiff was assigned to the defendant’s Scruggs Center. In 1994, however, the plaintiff filed a grievance seeking a religious accommodation and was then transferred to the Westside Center. (See Feb. 22, 2000 Order 2.)
The plaintiff later applied for a position as a neighborhood services programmer with the defendant in March of 1996. Five people, including the plaintiff, were certified to be interviewed for the opening. Following the interviews, Joey Flanders, a white male, was chosen to fill the position. Plaintiff then filed a grievance, on June 19, 1996, alleging that he had been denied the promotion because of retaliation and because of racial discrimination. The defendant’s own Equal Employment Officer concluded that the plaintiffs prior request for a religious accommodation had been improperly considered in filling the neighborhood services programmer position. (See Feb. 22, 2000 Order 2.)
Following the Equal Employment Officer’s findings, the job offer to Flanders was rescinded. (See Feb. 22, 2000 Order 2.) Richard Liles, who headed the Parks and Recreation Department, then conducted new interviews for the position. (See Feb. 22, 2000 Order 2-3.) After the new interviews, Flanders was again offered a job as a neighborhood services programmer at the Scruggs Center, but, this time, the plaintiff was also offered a position as a neighborhood services programmer at another center. However, the plaintiffs offer was subject to conditions not imposed upon the offer extended to Flanders. (See Feb. 22, 2000 Order 3.) Although not mentioned in the parties’ summary, it is also undisputed that Liles eventually requested that the plaintiff indicate his acceptance of the offer, with all attached conditions, in writing and that the plaintiff responded that he would accept only when the defendant placed the conditions attached to the job offer in writing. (See Aug. 19, 1996 Liles Mem.; Aug. 23, 1996 Pennington Mem.) Neither the plaintiff nor the defendant ever supplied the other with the requested documents.
IV. Applicable Substantive Law and Analysis
As noted previously, plaintiffs amended complaint asserts employment discrimination claims under Title VII, under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 as enforced through 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and under the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as enforced through 42 U.S.C. § 1983. All of the plaintiffs claims are premised, essentially, upon two incidents from the late spring and summer of 1996: the defendant’s initial decision not to promote plaintiff to the position of neighborhood services programmer 6 and the defendant’s *1208 later decision to extend a conditional offer of promotion to the same position. Because plaintiffs various theories of recovery all relate to the same incidents, the Court will, for the sake of clarity, discuss only the Title YII claims, but notes that the outcome is the same for the corresponding section 1981 and section 1983 claims. 7 The Court will address plaintiffs claims in reverse chronological order, starting with the conditional promotion. First, however, a discussion of the appropriate analytical framework is necessary.
The analysis of the plaintiffs claims will be determined not only by the nature of the allegations but also by the quality of the evidence offered in support of those claims.
See Standard v. A.B.E.L. Servs., Inc.,
Here, the plaintiff asserts that he has direct evidence of discrimination and of retaliation. The plaintiff offers that the decision-makers were aware of his prior requests and complaints concerning his religious accommodation; that Richard Liles testified that Betty Smith, the Recreation Services Manager, seemed annoyed when informed that the plaintiff was to be given
*1209
a religious accommodation; that Richard Liles testified that he would have expected Tony Hughes, the Recreation Services Zone Coordinator, to be more annoyed than Smith as Hughes was quick-tempered; that the plaintiffs scores on the initial screening measure were higher than those of Joey Flanders, who was initially offered a position as a neighborhood services programmer; that Hughes found what he considered to be negative information when reviewing the plaintiffs personnel file; that Mia Puckett, the defendant’s Equal Employment Officer, believed that retaliation based on the plaintiffs prior religious accommodation (but not racial discrimination) had influenced the initial decision regarding the programmer position; that Liles was aware. of and even involved in the prior dispute over religious accommodation; and that Liles placed conditions on the plaintiffs promotion and also proposed an assignment to the Calvary Hills Center rather than to the Scruggs Center.
(See
Pl.’s Br. 23-25.) A mere cursory review of the plaintiffs supposedly direct evidence reveals that it is no more than indirect or circumstantial evidence of discrimination and retaliation, as “courts have found only the most blatant remarks, whose intent could be nothing other than to discriminate on the basis of [an illegal criterion], to constitute direct evidence of discrimination.”
Carter,
First, simple consciousness of prior complaints by the employee alone is not direct evidence of a retaliatory or discriminatory intent; indeed, basic knowledge of prior protected activities is most relevant to a circumstantial showing of retaliation.
See, e.g., Raney v. Vinson Guard Serv., Inc.,
Plaintiff also argues that the alleged statements by Hughes that Puckett noted in the course of her investigation and that formed a basis for her conclusions are direct evidence of retaliation. Hughes supposedly told Puckett that the plaintiffs personnel file contained some negative information and that a review of the file revived unpleasant memories concerning the plaintiffs reaction to a prior transfer, which was made as part of an attempt to provide the plaintiff with a requested religious accommodation.
(See
Puckett Notes (Docs.000782-83); Puckett Dep. 74-77.) Although Puckett concluded that Hughes’s statements revealed an unintentional but impermissible bias, her role, in keeping with the spirit of her position as an Equal Employment Officer, was basically that of a zealous advocate for the complaining employee; when viewed by a more detached observer but still taking the facts, as a whole, in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, Hughes’s alleged statement is not the type of unmistakably discriminatory utterance that constitutes direct evidence.
9
See Carter v. City of Miami,
That leaves plaintiffs evidence that he had higher scores on the initial screening device than did Flanders and that Liles placed certain conditions on the plaintiffs promotion not placed on Flanders’s promotion and decided to assign the plaintiff to a center other than the plaintiffs first choice. Again, none of the plaintiffs evidence rises to the requisite level of “the most blatant remarks, whose intent could be nothing other than to discriminate on the basis of [some improper factor] ....”
Carter,
Having considered the type of evidence presented and having concluded that the plaintiff has offered only circumstantial evidence, the Court must now address the type of claims presented. Plaintiffs Title VII claims involve allegations of illegal discrimination and retaliation. Title VII provides generally that an employer shall not “discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s
race,
color, religion, sex, or national origin ....” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l) (1994) (emphasis supplied). In addition, certain forms of retaliation are also prohibited. Specifically, Title VII prohibits covered employers from retaliating against any employee who “has opposed any practice made an unlawful employment practice by this subchapter [which includes 42 U.S.C.2000e-2(a)(l) ], or because 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) (1994). Essentially the same analytical framework is applied to Title VII claims premised on circumstantial evidence of retaliation as to Title VII claims based on circumstantial evidence of disparate treatment, although the articulation of certain elements differs.
Compare Olmsted v. Taco Bell Corp.,
“In evaluating Title VII claims supported by circumstantial evidence, [the courts of this circuit] use the now-familiar framework established by the United States Supreme Court in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Once the plaintiff has shown a prima facie case and, thereby, has raised the presumption of discrimination, the burden of production shifts to the employer to proffer a legitimate and nondiscriminatory reason for its actions.
See Combs,
Having determined the proper framework for analysis, the Court now turns to a consideration of the plaintiffs claims. Here, the claims are better considered in reverse order. The Court, therefore, begins with those allegations relating to the defendant’s conditional offer of promotion.
A. The Conditional Offer of Promotion
Both parties agree that following new interviews after the defendant’s initial decision not to promote the plaintiff, the defendant did offer the plaintiff a position as a neighborhood services programmer, subject to certain conditions, which were not placed upon the neighborhood services *1213 programmer offer made to Joey Flanders, who is white. (See Feb. 22, 2000 Order 2- 3.) The offer was contingent upon an agreement by the plaintiff to submit to additional reviews to be conducted by Richard Liles at three and six months and to participate in a writing skills class or program to be selected by the plaintiff but for which the defendant would pay. {See Liles Dep. 102-15; Puckett Dep. 107-08, 113.) The parties disagree over the purpose and the effect of these conditions. Basically, the plaintiff argues that the conditions imposed upon the offer as well as his proposed assignment to the Calvary Hills Center rather than to his preferred post at the Scruggs Center were motivated by racial animus and by retaliation for prior grievances (including a request for religious accommodation in scheduling) and were illegal under Title VII. However, the defendant argues that the plaintiff cannot meet his prima facie case for either his race or retaliation claim, and that even if he could, the defendant’s decisions were motivated by legitimate concerns, which plaintiff has not shown to be pretexts for discrimination. The Court will consider the race claim and the retaliation claim separately.
1. The Race Claim
The plaintiff claims that race played a part in the conditions placed upon the promotion offered him and in his proposed assignment to the Calvary Hills Center instead of the Scruggs Center. Ordinarily, when one complains of discrimination in promotion, a prima facie case requires evidence of the following four elements: (1) the plaintiff was a member of a protected class; (2) the plaintiff was actually qualified for the position sought; (3) the plaintiff was rejected for the promotion; and (4) the position was filled by someone outside the plaintiffs class.
See Standard v. A.B.E.L. Servs., Inc.,
Even with the elements more closely tailored for the plaintiffs situation, the Court is not convinced that the plaintiff has met his prima facie case. The Court accepts that the plaintiff belongs to a protected class and that he was at least minimally qualified for the position; indeed, the defendant has not sought to contest those two elements. However, the third and the fourth requirements are troubling.
Under
McDonnell Douglas,
the plaintiff must be subject to an adverse employment action.
See id.
Certainly, an outright denial of a promotion would qualify.
See Standard v. A.B.E.L. Servs., Inc.,
Two conditions were placed upon the plaintiff: that he participate in a writing skills program, selected by him but funded by the defendant, and that Richard Liles evaluate the plaintiff at three months and at six months, in addition to the normal six month and one year reviews by the plaintiffs more immediate superiors.
(See
Liles Dep. 103-04; Puckett Dep. 107-08.) The writing program was envisioned as a short-term, one-on-one course of private tutoring designed to help the plaintiff improve his written communication skills, which skills are listed as a requirement for the programmer position (along with the ability to prepare reports from a variety of sources) and which skills plaintiff has admitted are used in the job, after Liles found the plaintiffs writing to lack detail.
(See
Liles Dep. 113-15, 121-23; Pennington Handwritten Notes (Doc. 000320); Pennington Dep. 90-91; Neighborhood Services Programmer Position Class Specification 2.) Many employers condition promotion on the completion of a course designed to improve necessary job skills, and no reasonable employee would view such a
*1215
.requirement as objectively adverse.
Cf. Doe,
Furthermore, the plaintiffs proposed assignment to the Calvary Hills Center rather than to his preferred location, the Scruggs Center, to which a white comparator (Joey Flanders) was assigned, did not make the offer an adverse employment action. The only arguments that the plaintiff has even remotely raised to suggest that the Calvary Hills assignment was adverse are that he had not previously worked at that center; that he had worked at the Scruggs Center; that he applied for the promotion in order to work at Scruggs; that the Calvary Hills center had more rowdy patrons; that had he not been assigned to Calvary Hills, which had some different programs than did Scruggs, the conditions placed on his promotion, supposedly, would not have been necessary; and that no reason prevented Flanders’s assignment to Calvary Hills rather than to Scruggs. Although the plaintiff attacks the wisdom of the defendant’s business judgment regarding its employee assignments, which courts rightfully will not normally review,
11
he makés no showing that would support a finding of an objectively adverse action. No evidence suggests that a promotion to a position at the Calvary Hills Center would have entailed less pay or prestige or fewer benefits than an assignment elsewhere or that, because of the different programs or the presence of more rowdy patrons, the duties required of the programmer at Calvary Hills would have been more demeaning or even more demanding than at Scruggs.
Cf. Manicia,
In addition to not presenting any evidence of an adverse employment
*1216
action associated with the conditional offer of promotion, the plaintiff has failed to satisfy the fourth element of his prima facie case, which requires some showing that an otherwise similarly situated employee outside the plaintiffs class was treated dissimilarly.
See McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Every employment decision involves discrimination. An employer, when deciding who to hire, who to promote, and who to fire, must discriminate among persons. Permissible bases for discrimination include education, experience, and references.... Thus, in an employment discrimination suit, the key question usually is: On what basis did the employer discriminate?
Wright v. Southland Corp.,
Even granting that the plaintiff established an at-best-weak prima facie case of race-based disparate treatment, the defendants have articulated legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for placing conditions on the plaintiffs promotion and for assigning him to the Calvary Hills Center rather than to the Scruggs Center, but the plaintiff has failed to offer any significant evidence from which a rational trier of fact could choose to disbelieve all of the defendant’s explanations as mere pretext.
See Combs v. Plantation Patterns,
2. The Retaliation Claim
Plaintiff, apparently, attempts to assert a separate Title VII claim of retaliation for prior complaints regarding religious accommodation, which claim also allegedly arises from the defendant’s conditional offer of promotion to the neighborhood services programmer position.
13
“To establish a prima facie case of retaliation under Title VII, a plaintiff must show that (1) he engaged in statutorily protected expression; (2) he suffered an adverse employment action; and (3) there is some causal relation between the two events.”
Olmsted v. Taco Bell Corp.,
In addition, were plaintiff subjected to an adverse employment action, he still has not satisfied the remaining element of a causal link. First, the defendant or its relevant agent must be aware of the protected activity at the time of the decision.
See Raney v. Vinson Guard Serv., Inc.,
Furthermore, even assuming a prima facie case of retaliation under Title VII, the defendant has offered several legiti
*1219
mate, nondiscriminatory reasons for its decisions, which reasons have not been rebutted by the plaintiff. The defendant’s explanations for its decisions have been discussed at great length in the immediately preceding section and need not be repeated here. Again, plaintiff more or less has questioned the soundness of the conditions placed on his promotion and the planned assignment to the Calvary Hills Center but has failed to offer any significant evidence of pretext (not already discussed in the previous section) from which a rational trier of fact could find an improper motivation on the part of the defendant.
Cf. Combs v. Plantation Patterns,
B. The Initial Failure to Promote
Now the Court turns to the remainder of the plaintiffs case. Apart from the claims already analyzed, plaintiff has brought two additional Title VII claims based upon the defendant’s initial decision not to offer plaintiff a promotion to the position of neighborhood services programmer in June of 1996. He alleges both retaliation for his previous grievances concerning religious accommodation and disparate treatment because of race. The Court will consider the retaliation theory first.
1. The Retaliation Claim
Initially, plaintiff must establish a prima facie case of retaliation; here, plaintiff has failed to do so. Generally, to establish a prima facie case of retaliation, a Title VII plaintiff must present some evidence tending to show each of the following: (1) that the plaintiff engaged in a protected activity; (2) that subsequent to that participation, the plaintiff suffered an adverse employment action; and (3) that a causal nexus existed between the protected activity and the adverse employment action.
See Raney v. Vinson Guard Serv.,
Inc.,
Determining whether the plaintiff actually suffered an adverse employment action presents the more difficult question. Although the defendant’s initial decision was not to offer plaintiff a promotion, that decision was swiftly reversed following the plaintiffs complaints to the defendant’s Equal Employment Officer, Mia Puckett, and he was soon offered a promotion to the position originally sought. The Court’s natural inclination is to find no adverse employment action as the plaintiff was quickly offered the desired promotion. The Court recognizes, though, that it must be guided not by its intuition but by the Eleventh Circuit’s recent decision in
Wideman v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
In analyzing whether plaintiff actually suffered an adverse employment action despite the fact that the initial decision not to offer him a promotion was quickly re
*1220
versed, this Court considers not only
Wideman
and similar cases contemplating the concept of adverse employment action but also the purpose and spirit of employer-maintained Equal Employment Opportunity programs, such as the one to which plaintiff complained upon learning of the defendant’s short-lived first decision. Starting with the case law, the Court finds no support for an adverse employment action. The facts of
Wideman
itself are egregious; the plaintiff was given undeserved reprimands, she was required to work without lunch and to work on days on which she was not scheduled, fellow employees were canvassed for negative comments about the plaintiff, the defendant improperly delayed in authorizing needed emergency medical treatment for the plaintiff, and an assistant manager threatened to shoot plaintiff.
See id.
at 1455. Clearly, the facts of the instant case do not even suggest the level of adversity suffered by the plaintiff in
Wideman.
Much more analogous to the present matter is
Blalock v. Dale County Bd. of Educ.,
Most analogous is
Shabat v. Blue
Cross
Blue Shield,
The Court’s finding of no adverse employment action is further bolstered by a consideration of the purpose behind independent, employer-maintained Equal Opportunity Offices, such as the program run by the defendant. The obvious idea is to provide an early forum to which employees may turn with their concerns so that potentially impermissible practices may be addressed before any injury occurs. That system worked precisely as designed in the case at bar: plaintiff voiced his concerns over the defendant’s initial decision, that decision was quickly reversed, and the plaintiff was offered the position he had sought. In short, the goal of equal employment was served in the plaintiffs case. A finding of an adverse employment action would violate the spirit of Title YII and would vitiate an important component of the intended enforcement system.
See, e.g., McCarthney v. Griffin-Spalding County Bd. of Educ.,
Additionally, plaintiff has failed to show a causal link between his protected activity
*1221
and the defendant’s actions. As discussed in the previous section;, the amount of time that elapsed between the plaintiffs complaints concerning his requested religious accommodation in 1994 and the defendant’s decisions regarding the neighborhood services programmer position in 1996 is simply too great to support a causal nexus between the two events.
See Maniccia v. Brown,
2. The Race Claim
Little need be said about plaintiffs remaining claim. In general, a prima facie case of disparate treatment in failing to promote requires the plaintiff to show the following elements: (1) that the plaintiff belonged to a protected class; (2) that the plaintiff was qualified for the desired promotion; (3) that the plaintiff was rejected; and (4) that the position was filled with a person outside the relevant protected class.
See Standard v. A.B.E.L. Servs., Inc.,
V. Conclusion
In conclusion, the Court holds that no material issues of fact remain and that defendant City of Huntsville is entitled to judgment as a matter of law as to all of the plaintiffs claims. A separate order consistent with the findings detailed in the memorandum of opinion will be entered.
Notes
. The plaintiff also sought permission to proceed without paying filing fees.
. Plaintiff has now withdrawn his claims under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. (See PL’s Br. 3 n. 1.) Therefore, any due process aspects of the instant case need not and will not be discussed further.
. The defendant submitted the December 1, 1999 deposition of plaintiff Michael Joel Pennington; the plaintiff’s application for employment with the defendant; excerpts from the plaintiff’s personnel file (Documents 0000162-63); the defendant's personnel manual; an undated class specifications for the position of neighborhood services programmer; a May 1999 class specification for the position of neighborhood services programmer; a June 1995 promotional procedure for the position of neighborhood services programmer; an April 16, 1996 memorandum from Charles E. Perry to Betty Smith; a document headed “Interview Questions Recreation Programmer June 10, 1999”; a July 2, 1996 memorandum from Mia L. Puckett to Richard Liles (Documents 002179-80); a July 11, 1996 letter from Mia L. Puckett to the plaintiff; a July 17, 1996 memorandum from Richard Liles to Terry Hatfield (Document 000797); handwritten notes of Mia L. Puck *1205 ett; handwritten notes of Joey Flanders; an August 19, 1996 memorandum from Richard Liles to the plaintiff; an August 23, 1996 memorandum from the plaintiff to Richard Liles; a November 22, 1996 memorandum from Terry Hatfield to the plaintiff; a transcript of the plaintiff's January 9, 1997 show cause hearing with attached additional documents; a January 23, 1997 memorandum from the defendant's Personnel Committee to the plaintiff; the plaintiff's August 21, 1996 EEOC charge; the defendant's September 20, 1996 response to the notice of plaintiff's EEOC charge; the January 4, 2000 deposition of Richard Liles; the December 8, 1999 deposition of Mia Puckett; the December 7, 1999 deposition of Ralph Stone; and the December 7, 1999 deposition of Tony Hughes.
. The plaintiff submitted the defendant's "Promotion, Demotion, Transfer” policy; a list of the defendant's employee grievance hearings since January 1, 1994; undated class specifications for the positions of recreation aide and neighborhood services programmer; May 1999 class specifications for the positions of recreation aide and neighborhood services programmer; an August 23, 1994 memorandum from Tony Hughes to Betty Smith; an August 23, 1994 memorandum from Tony Hughes to the plaintiff; an October 5, 1994 memorandum from Betty Smith to Richard Liles; an October 25, 1994 memorandum from the defendant's Personnel Committee to the plaintiff; a November 1, 1994 memorandum from Mia L. Puckett to Betty Smith; a November 2, 1994 memorandum from Charles Perry to Jim Putnum; a November 3, 1994 memorandum from Betty Smith to Mia L. Puckett; a December 16, 1994 memorandum from Richard Liles to Betty Smith; a* December 21, 1994 memorandum from the defendant’s Personnel Committee to the plaintiff; a December 22, 1994 memorandum from John W. Laughinghouse to Richard Liles; a December 22, 1994 memorandum from Tony Hughes to Richard Liles; a June 6, 1995 document headed "Promotional Procedure for Position of Neighborhood Services Programmer”; a July 5, 1995 memorandum from Charles Perry to the plaintiff; March 1996 applications for the position of neighborhood services programmer; an April 16, 1996 memorandum from Betty Smith to Charles Perry; a document labeled "Interview Questions Recreation Programmer June 10, 1996”; a June 11, 1996 memorandum from Tony Hughes to John Mayes; the plaintiff’s June 19, 1996 grievance; a June 26, 1996 memorandum from Betty Smith to the plaintiff; a July 2, 1996 memorandum from Mia L. Puckett to Richard Liles; a July 11, 1996 letter from Mia L. Puckett to the plaintiff; an August 19, 1996 memorandum from Richard Liles to the plaintiff; an August 19, 1996 memorandum from Betty Smith to Richard Liles; the plaintiff's August 21, 1996 EEOC charge; an April 9, 1997 letter from defendant’s City Council to the plaintiff; an August 23, 1996 memorandum from the plaintiff to Richard Liles; the transcript of the plaintiff's August 29, 1996 show cause hearing; an October 4, 1996 memorandum from Mia L. Puckett to Richard Liles; the August 20, 1997 meeting agenda for the Scruggs Community Center; notes discussing Tony Hughes (Documents 000782-84); notes discussing neighborhood services programmer applicants’ objective qualifications (Documents 001041-42); the plaintiff's November 14, 1996 grievance appeal form; and Documents 000729-30, 000741-45, 000753-54, 000756-60, 000763-70, 000772, 000778, 000782-85, and 000795-97.
. The Plaintiff filed the second page of a December 22, 1994 memorandum from Tony Hughes to Richard Liles and a July 17, 1996 memorandum from Betty Smith to Claudia Anderson.
. The Court notes that the plaintiff's section 1981 and 1983 claims relating to the initial failure to promote appear to be time barred as the selection of plaintiff's comparator occurred no later than the middle of June of 1996 but plaintiff’s initial complaint was not filed until July 27, 1998, and his amended complaint was not filed until October 20, 1998, both dates being more than two years after the incident.
See
Ala.Code § 6-2-38(Z) (1993) (providing for a two-year statute of limitation for personal injury actions);
Goodman v. Lukens Steel Co.,
. The elements and evaluation of section 1981 and section 1983 claims are identical to the elements and evaluative structure found in Title VII cases.
See Standard v. A.B.E.L. Servs., Inc.,
. As the plaintiff has convincingly argued, Hughes was the de facto decision-maker in regard to the initial decision not to promote the plaintiff, as he selected Flanders for the positions and Smith merely 'rubber-stamped'’ his choice. (See Pl.'s Br. 14; July 2, 1996 Puckett Mem.) Smith and tire rest of her staff were excluded completely from the later decision, by Liles, to offer the plaintiff a conditional promotion. (See Aug. 19, 1996 Smith Mem.)
. Although not necessary to the outcome of the present matter, the Court notes that Puckett's conclusions almost certainly would not be admissible at trial under Federal Rule of Evidence 403. See Fed.R.Evid. 403 ("Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of lime, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.”). Her findings are but marginally probative given her detachment from the actual decision-making process, yet they are highly prejudicial because of her then-position as the defendant's own Equal Employment Officer and patently unfair because the nature of her position virtually mandated that she advance the interests of the purportedly aggrieved employee over those of her own employer, the defendant. The Court is also concerned that allowing Puckett's conclusions into evidence would have a chilling effect on employer's willingness to establish and maintain independent Equal Employment Officers to assist in the laudable goal of promoting a workplace free from illegal employment practices.
. Plaintiff argues that he was denied a promotion, because he claims that he applied for the neighborhood services programmer position at the Scruggs Center, to which his comparator, Joey Flanders, was assigned. (See Pl.’s Br. 39.) Although the programmer position at Scruggs was vacant when the plaintiff applied for a promotion, the uncontroverted evidence establishes that the position was not site specific and that applicants were not guaranteed assignment to a particular center. (See Hughes Dep. 15-16; Position Class Specification for Neighborhood Services Programmer (Doc. 000806); Nov. 22, 1996 Hatfield Mem. 1.) The evidence also establishes that two programmer positions were open; the initial decision had been to fill only one of the openings, but upon re-interviewing the candidates, Richard Liles decided to fill both jobs. (See Liles Dep. 75.) In short, the plaintiff was competing not for the Scruggs Center position but simply for a position as a neighborhood services programmer, which he was offered.
. In a slightly different context, the Eleventh Circuit has written that an employer’s "decision ... may seem to some to be bad business judgment, and to others to be good business judgment, but federal courts do not sit to second-guess the business judgments of employers.”
Combs v. Plantation Patterns,
. The plaintiff has attacked the subjectiveness of Richard Liles's evaluation of the writing samples and the criteria used to match programmers to recreation centers, but the use of subjective components in making personnel decisions is not per se impermissible,
*1217
and plaintiff has failed to make any significant showing that the decision-maker used race or another prohibited factor in making his evaluations of the candidates for the positions.
See McCarthney v. Griffin-Spalding County Bd. of Educ.,
. At various times, the plaintiff has suggested additional protected activities as bases for retaliation but has not argued or even developed the evidence of those other, possible grounds.
. Although not required to decide this case, the Court notes that the defendants did have legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for initially selecting plaintiff's comparator, Joey Flanders, for promotion. According to the de facto decision-maker, Tony Hughes, the initial decision was based on his limited personal knowledge of the candidates, their responses to interview questions, and the contents of their personnel files. (See Hughes Dep. 45-46.) Hughes was particularly impressed with Flanders because he had received highly favorable evaluations from two different supervisors. (See Hughes Dep. 46.) In contrast, the plaintiff's personnel file contained two reprimands, one for taking leave without approval and one for tardiness to and sleeping during a mandatory training session. (See Docs. 0000162-63.)
