In October 2007, Richard S. Rahlf, Frank Stelter and Scott W. Johnson were terminated by their employer, Mo-Tech Corporation. They sued for age discrimination in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) and the Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA). *636 The district court 1 granted summary judgment to Mo-Tech. Having jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, this court affirms.
Mo-Tech, a privately-held corporation, manufactures molds for the automotive, medical, consumer-products, and computer industries. Before Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson were laid off, Mo-Tech employed 14 mold-makers, classified by skill level. Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson were Class A manual mold-makers, the most skilled. Class A manual mold-makers build, restore, alter and service complex molds.
In the 1980s, when Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson began working, molds were made manually. Mold-makers then read a two-dimensional blueprint from which they produced the finished, three-dimensional mold. In the early 1990s, Mo-Tech began using a Computer Numerical Control machine (CNC) to help make the molds. A CNC machine is programmed by a mold-maker to the product specifications and directs the production of the mold. The CNC technology makes the process easier and faster.
The popularity of CNC technology has steadily increased. Clients often design parts for CNC-generated models. Consequently, there is greater need for mold-makers proficient in this technology as opposed to traditional manual mold-making. Despite the growing popularity of CNC, Mo-Tech did not require or provide its employees with formal training on it. Instead, employees were trained on the job when CNC machines were available. Rahlf practiced on the CNC machines at work; Stelter and Johnson each attended CNC training in the 1990s.
Mo-Tech’s employees are managed by Thomas J. Nielsen, the President; Thomas Pickar, the Operations Manager; and Timothy E. Pickar, the Tooling Manager. In September 2007, these three determined that a reduction-in-force (RIF) was necessary, due to a change in client needs, as well as anticipated reductions in workload and profitability. To determine which mold-makers to let go, Nielsen, Pickar and Pickar ranked the mold-makers based on several factors, including CNC proficiency, general mold-making efficiency, and their own observations of each employee’s work. The three managers agreed that Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson should be laid off.
The three employees contend they were terminated because of their age, in violation of the ADEA and MHRA. The district court granted summary judgment to Mo-Tech. Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson appeal.
This court reviews de novo a grant of summary judgment.
See EEOC v. Liberal R-II Sch. Dist.,
The ADEA prohibits discrimination against employees, age 40 and over, because of their age.
2
29 U.S.C.
*637
§ 623(a)(1), 631(a). Under the ADEA, a plaintiff may prove age discrimination based on disparate treatment. When, as here, a plaintiff relies on circumstantial rather than direct evidence of age discrimination, the case is considered under the burden-shifting framework of
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
The first and third elements of a prima facie case are undisputed: Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson were over forty and were laid off. Mo-Tech also does not contest that Stelter and Johnson satisfy the second element: both were qualified for a position at the company after the RIF. Mo-Tech does, however, argue that Rahlf was not qualified for any position existing after the RIF because he was not skilled with CNC technology. As summary judgment mandates making all inferences for the nonmoving party, and because Rahlf offers some evidence that there was still work for manual mold-makers, Rahlf satisfies the second element of the prima facie case.
See Arnold v. Nursing & Rehab. Ctr. at Good Shepherd, LLC,
Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson claim that because they were the oldest full-time mold-makers terminated, age was a factor in terminating them. Without direct evidence of age discrimination, Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson may satisfy their burden “by presenting either statistical evidence (such as a pattern of forced early retirement or failure to promote older employees) or ‘circumstantial’ evidence (such as comments and practices that suggest a preference for younger employees.)”
Chambers,
Before Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson’s termination, Mo-Tech employed eleven Class A mold-makers. Rahlf, Stelter
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and Johnson (and one other employee not party to this suit) were the only Class A mold-makers terminated, and were the oldest full-time Class A mold-makers. Though not determinative of age discrimination, this fact is sufficient to make a prima facie ease.
See Lewis v. Aerospace Cmty. Credit Union,
Mo-Tech explains that the RIF was necessary because of shifting (and reduced) customer needs as well as concerns about continued profitability. The company’s stated goal “was to shift the work that remained to the more efficient and less labor intensive CNC mold making process while reducing the total number of Class A manual mold makers employed to reflect the anticipated decrease in its workload.” This is a legitimate, nondiscriminatory justification for Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson’s termination.
See Floyd v. Mo. Dep’t of Social Servs., Div. of Family Servs.,
“When an employer articulates a nondiscriminatory reason for an employee’s discharge ... 'the factual inquiry proceeds to a new level of specificity.’ ”
Dammen v. UniMed Med. Ctr.,
Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson claim Mo-Tech’s stated reason is pretextual on five grounds: (1) there was no need for a RIF; (2) Mo-Tech failed to review their performance evaluations; (3) Mo-Tech did not follow its own termination criteria; (4) Mo-Tech destroyed the evidence relied upon to make the decision; and (5) Mo-Tech changed its reasons for the termination.
Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson argue that a RIF was not necessary. They point out that within a year after they were fired, Mo-Tech hired new employees and its sales increased. True, Mo-Tech did hire five new employees after Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson were laid off. None of the new employees, however, were Class A mold-makers (the position previously held by the three men). Instead, the new employees filled positions that required either significantly less skill or CNC-specific skills. Mo-Tech hired one part-time shop assistant (who was replaced shortly after starting work), one Class B CNC machinist, one part-time Class D CNC machinist, and rehired one employee as a Class B CNC machinist. Contrary to Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson’s assertion, the fact that the remaining mold-makers were busy and that Mo-Tech’s sales increased after they were terminated does not support an infer
*639
ence that the RIF itself was pretextual. “[W]hen a company exercises its business judgment in deciding to reduce its work force, ‘it need not provide evidence of financial distress to make it a ‘legitimate’ RIF.’ ”
Regel,
Next, Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson attack the methods Mo-Tech used to determine which employees to terminate. They assert a failure to review performance evaluations, failure to follow the employee handbook criteria, and destruction of the evidence supporting the termination decision.
“In the past, [this court has] looked to an employer’s method of determining which employees to discharge for evidence of possible discriminatory intent.”
Hardin v. Hussmann Corp.,
Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson further allege that Mo-Tech did not follow its own employee handbook, which outlines criteria for termination decisions. “An employer’s failure to follow its own policies may support an inference of pretext.”
Floyd,
Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson claim that Mo-Tech’s destruction of the rankings and other supporting evidence demonstrates pretext. True, Mo-Tech discarded the specific rankings used to make its decision. However, the objective data used was easily accessible or reproducible, and the managers testified how they reached their ultimate decision. There is no indication that the evidence was destroyed in an attempt to conceal the truth.
Cf. Stevenson v. Union Pac. R.R. Co.,
Finally, Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson assert that Mo-Tech provided inconsistent rationales for its termination decision, which could permit a fact finder to find pretext. “Pretext may be shown with evidence that the employer’s reason for the termination has changed substantially over time.”
Loeb v. Best Buy Co., Inc.,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable David S. Doty, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. Like the ADEA, the MHRA prohibits discrimination against an employee based on age. "In analyzing cases under the MHRA, the state courts apply the principles developed in the adjudication of claims under Title VII because of the substantial similarities between the two statutes.”
Hanenburg v. Principal Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
. Rahlf, Stelter and Johnson argue that increasing sales allow the inference that a RIF was pretextual, citing
Hillebrand
v.
M-Tron Indus., Inc.,
