MEMORANDUM OPINION
Pro se Plaintiffs are current and formér employees of the United 'States Government Printing Office. They allege in this Title VII suit that, after filing race-based pay-discrimination complaints with the Equal Opportunity Office, their supervisors retaliated against them and subjected them to a hostile-work environment. The Court previously dismissed their Amended Complaint for failing to set but their retaliation and hostile-work-environment counts with sufficient specificity, but did so without prejudice so as to give them a chance to cure those defects. Now that Plaintiffs have taken that opportunity and filed a Sеcond Amended Complaint, Defendants GPG and Public Printer Davita Vanee-Cooks renew their Motion to Dismiss on several grounds, most notably that Plaintiffs failed to exhaust their administrative remedies. Largely agreeing -on this points', the Court will grant Defendants’ Motion.
I. Background
As it must at this stage, the Court treats all of the facts in Plaintiffs’ operative Complaint as true. Sparrow v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
Plaintiffs are fifteen current or recent African-American employees of the GPO and the estate of a sixteenth such individual who died during the course of this litigation. See ECF No. 48 ,(Second Amended Complaint) at 2. They work or worked in the GPO’s Digital Print Center, the. staff of which is “exclusively African-American.” Id. at 6. In July 2008, they contacted the GPO’s Equal Oppоrtunity Office and subsequently filed several EEO complaints in which they alleged that “they were paid less than Caucasian employees of the GPO doing the • same work because of their race.” Id. at 5; see ECF No. 51-2 (EEOC Appeal Decision,. Oct. 6, 2014) at 2. More specifically, the problem was that DPC employees, were classified for pay-scale purposes as printing-plant workers — a lower-paid non-craft position — rather-than journeymen bookbinders — a higher-paid craft position — even though their responsibilities, training, and expertise had evolvеd alongside advancements in technology such that “they performed the same work as higher-paid workers, more efficiently.” SAC at 6-7. “[T]he GPO refused to establish performance standards and update [its] antiqu[ated] job descriptions,” which Plaintiffs contend was based on race. Id at 7-8.
Shortly after Plaintiffs filed their pay-discrimination - EEO complaints, they began to experience what they argue was retaliatory harassment at work. Id. at 8-10. Around October 2008, four Plaintiffs heard Robert Tapella, the former Public Printer — ie., the head of the GPO — describe the group as “my slaves” while conducting a VIP tour of the DPC,.Id. at 8-9. He further stated that they had become .the “poor stepchild” of the GPO and referred to them as “the blacks” or “that black group.” Id. at 9. Then, in April 2009, two printers — a Xerox iGen3 color printer and a Canon OCE 800 high-speed printer — were “taken from [Plaintiffs’] section and transferred to higher, salaried employees in another department.” Id. The GPO’s Director of Labor Relations explained at the time that the iGen3 was transferred as “a necessary step in the Agency’s plan to respond to customer demand for a wide variety оf color products” and an effort “to consolidate nearly all of the production of color products in one area,” id. at 94 (Letter from Michael Frazier, GPO Labor Relations Director, to Arthur Anderson, GCC/IBT Local 713-S President, Apr. 6, 2009), but Plaintiffs allege that removing the equipment was “a strategic move in response to the claim-.that their job descriptions did. not adequately describe the work they do” and “was intended to weaken their disparate pay argument.” Id. at 9.
In addition, “[w]hen employees left the section, they were not replaced for months.” Id. “At one point, only two thirds of the approved jobs were filled.” Id. As a result, one operator may have had “to operate two or three machines simultaneously.” Id. Plaintiffs also were not paid overtime and thus were “not compensated for the additional work pressure.” Id Finally, “[n]ominations for awards were ignored,” “[t]he salary scale for Graphic Processor Operator was lowered without explanation,” and “[r]outine equipment servicing was stopped.” Id. at 9-10.
Plaintiffs filed multiple EEO complaints alleging that they were subjected to “a hostilе work environment with respect to issues related to their working conditions.” EEOC Appeal at 2. They complained,
inter
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission accepted Plaintiffs’ race-based pay-discrimination and hostile-work-environment claims for investigation in November 2009. See ECF No. 51-1 (EEOC Dismissal of Complaint, May 20, 2013) at 1 & n.4. In October 2010, Plaintiffs, acting through counsel (they did not proceed pro se through the administrative process), expressly withdrew their hostile-work-environment claim, leaving only the discriminatory-pay claim before the Commission. See ECF No. 35-2, Exh. 4 (Letter from Kerrie Riggs to Gladys Collazo, EEOC Supervisory Administrative Judge, Oct. 7, 2010) (Withdrawal Letter); EEOC Dismissal at 1 n.4; EEOC Appeal at 2. In' May 2013, after undertaking a formal investigation, the Administrative Judge assigned to the matter concluded that the remaining pay claim was actually a collateral attack on the collective-bargaining process. As Plaintiffs were unable to obtain higher wages via this route, the AJ dismissed the complaint for. failure to state a claim. See EEOC Dismissal at 6-7. Plaintiffs appealed the pay-discrimination decision, and the Commission affirmed. See EEOC Appeal at 5. It then denied Plaintiffs’ request for reconsideration. See ECF No. 51-3 (EEOC Reconsideration Denial, Mar. 23, 2015) at 3.
Now acting
pro se,
Plaintiffs responded by filing this action on June 15, 2015, in the- United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, which, transferred it to this Court on September 29, 2015. See Complaint; ECF No. 14 at 3. After Plaintiffs filed an Amended Complaint, see ECF No. 25, Defendants GPO and Davita Vance-Cooks, the current Public Printer,' moved to dismiss. See ECF No. 35. Although Defendants offered multiple arguments for dismissal, the Court focused on whether Plaintiffs had adequately stated retaliation and hostile-work-environment counts. See Poole v. United States Gov’t Publ’g Office (Poole I),
Plaintiffs so filed and therein stated two causes of action under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964: retaliation and hostile'work environment. See SAC at 10. In their’Opposition, they make clear that the latter claim is alleged as a form of retaliation, rather than, say, a form of race discrimination. .See ECF No. 55 (Opposition) at 5. Plaintiffs seek damages for emotional injuries and injunctive relief directing Defendants to write new job descriptions and performance standards that “accurately reflect[]” Plaintiffs’ work “as the basis for a review with the union of their pay grade” and to cease “their racial slurs and retaliation.” SAC at 11. Defendants now renew their Motion to Dismiss.
II. Legal Standard
In evaluating Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, the Court “must treat the. complaint’s factual allegations as true .... and must grant plaintiff ‘the benefit of all in
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) provides for the dismissal of an action where a complaint fails to “state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” Although the notice-pleading rules are “not meant to impose a great burden on a plaintiff,” Dura Pharm., Inc. v. Broudo,
III. Analysis
Defendants rely on three arguments to support their Motion to Dismiss. They first contend that the Second Amended Complaint is fatally defective because Plaintiffs failed to exhaust administrative remedies with respect to their retaliation and hostile-work-environment claims. See ECF No. 51 (Motion) at 2, Second, they argue that Plaintiffs have not pled sufficient factual allegations to permit a reasonable factfinder to conclude that Defendants engaged in discrimination and retaliation in violation of Title VII. Id. And third, they assert that three Plaintiffs — Derik Shannon, Joseph Warren, and Howard Gil-berts — should be dismissed because they did not sign the Second Amended Complaint and thus failed to comply with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11(a). Id. at 2-3.-Because the Court largely agrees with the first, it only briefly touches on the second and ignores the third. In explaining its .reasoning, the Court begins with the law of exhaustion and the parties’ positions, next examines the trеatment of continuing violations, and concludes with an application of the doctrines to the facts here.
A. Exhaustion
Title VII’s anti-discrimination provision makes it unlawful for an employer “to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise to 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). Its
Prior to filing a Title VII lawsuit in federal court, individuals must timely exhaust the administrative processes established by the EEOC. See- 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(c); Niskey v. Kelly,
Exhaustion is “an essential element” of Title VII. Fowlkes v. Ironworkers Local 40,
Here, Defendants maintain that Plaintiffs never brought a retaliatiоn claim “at any point during the EEO proceedings.” Mot. at 12. As proof, they attach the EEOC’s three decisions on Plaintiffs’ complaints, none of . which mentions — let alone decides — a retaliation claim of any form. As to hostile work environment, Defendants point to. the letter from Plaintiffs’ counsel withdrawing that claim from the EEOC’s consideration. Id. at 11.
In response, Plaintiffs do not argue that they presented allegations of discrete retaliatory acts to the EEOC. They do, however, rejoin that, “it is not possible to pin down” from “the record currently before the [C]ourt” whether their EEO hostile-work-environment charges “were related to race discrimination” or were “the consequence of retaliation.” Opp. at 6. In other words, they imply that they did raise retaliatory hostile-work-environment allegations before the EEOC. Even if this dubious assertion were true, however, the record makes clear that no hostile-work-environment claim proceeded through the administrative process.
In withdrawing their hostile-work-environment claim from the agency’s consideration, Plaintiffs’ counsel stated: “Please be advised that the Complainants ... are withdrawing their claim of a hostile work environment on the basis of race. Complainants are still pursuing their remaining claim of disparate treatment and disparate
In an attempt to obtain a reprieve from their clear failure to exhaust either cause of action asserted here, Plaintiffs argue that they had no obligation to do so' because those claims were sufficiently related to the pay-discrimination claim they did exhaust.- See Opp. at 6-8. The Court cannot agree, and its reasons for so deciding require a bit of explanation.
B. Development of Law
■In 2002, the Supreme Court sought to clarify the application of Title VIPs timely filing requirements to continuing viola
tions
— ie,, a series of related acts or a discriminatory policy or system-maintained over time — like the ones alleged here. The case of National Railroad Passenger Corporation v. Morgan,
Morgan first held that discrete discriminatory or retaliatory acts were not actionable if not timely filed, even if they were “related to acts alleged in timely filed charges.” Id. at 113,
As the attentive reader surely noticеd, Morgan dealt with timeliness rather than exhaustion, and “with a factual scenario involving allegations of discrete-discriminatory acts that. had occurred before the
Before Morgan, courts generally did not require fеderal employees to separately exhaust their administrative remedies for claims that arose after the- filing of an administrative complaint if the unfiled claims were ‘“like or reasonably related to’ [the] claims they did file- with their agencies.” Payne v. Salazar,
The D.C. Circuit has thus far declined to take a position on this question. See Payne,
This Court need not choose between the two interpretations here, as Plaintiffs’ claims fail regardless of the approach used. First, they did not administratively exhaust hostile-work-environment or retaliation charges, as required under the D.D.C.-majority approach. Second, most of their current claims plainly are not “like or reasonably related to” the pay-discrimination charge they administratively filеd and fully pursued, as required under the D.D.C.-minority approach. . Those that come close are not pled at a sufficiently specific level to state a claim of hostile work environment or retaliation. As the first conclusion is self-evident from the facts regarding Plaintiffs’ EEO complaints discussed above — i.e., their failure to file an EEO discrete-acts retaliation claim and their withdrawal of their EEO hostile-work-environment claim — the Court need only discuss the second.
C. Application
For a Title VII claim “to be regarded as ‘reasonably related’ to a filed [EEOC] charge ..., it must ‘[a]t a minimum ... arise from the administrative investigation that can reasonably be expected to follow the charge of discrimination.’ ” Payne,
Several discrimination and retaliation cases from this district help illuminate the differences between those claims that warrant application of the exhaustion-requirement bar and those that do not. See, e.g., Mount,
In light of these analogous cases, most of Plaintiffs’ retaliation and hostile-work-environment claims plainly do not satisfy the “like or reasonably related” test when compared to the targeted pay-discrimination allegations set forth (and not withdrawn) in their EEO complaint. Specifically, the allegations that Defendants made disparaging statements related to Plaintiffs’ race and “activism,” failed to timely fill open’ positions, ignored award nominations, and did not'routinely service equipment, see SAC at 8-10, are not sufficiently similar to,' nor could they reasonably be expected to arise from the administrative investigation of, the pay-discrimination allegations, which focused bn Defendants’ refusal to establish performance standards and update outdated job descriptions, and thus to pay Plaintiffs a wage commensurate with their work. Id. at 5-8; see also EEOC Dismissal at .3-5; EEOC Appeal.Decision at 2-4. These retaliation and hostile-work-environment claims, accordingly, cannot survive even under the interpretation of Morgan adopted by the minority of courts in this district.
Allegations that Defendants removed two printers to limit Plaintiffs’ job responsibilities and' lowered the salary scale for Graphic Processor Operator, see SAC at 9-10, are arguably more closely tied to the pay-discrimination allegations. But even if the Court were to consider them as exceptions to the exhaustion requirement, they are not sufficiently pled to state a plаusible claim to relief. Iqbal,
IV. Conclusion.
' For the foregoing reasons, the Court will grant Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss without prejudice for failure to exhaust administrative remedies and to state claims upon which relief can be granted. A contemporaneous Order so stating will issue this day.
