Appellant Robinson, an employee of the District of Columbia government, seeks to sue the District for certain work-related common-law torts. In general, redress for such torts must be sought exclusively thrоugh the provisions of the District’s Comprehensive Merit Personnel Act (CMPA). D.C.Code §§ 1-601.1 et seq. (1999). Appellant argues that his claims are related to claims of sexual harassment and thus fall within the exception to this rule. We disagree and accordingly affirm the decision of the trial court dismissing appellant’s claims for want of jurisdiction.
I.
Appellant’s complaint contained the following factual allegations. On Nоvember 16, 1995, appellant, an employee of the D.C. Department of Corrections (DOC), filed an internal complaint against his coworker Charlene Smith, alleging sexual harassment. Apparently in rеtaliation, similar complaints were filed by Smith against Robinson in turn. In addition, Smith filed a criminal complaint against appellant in Prince George’s County, Maryland. In direct response to the criminal charges filed against Robinson, his superiors transferred him from the DOC facility in Southeast Washington to the Lorton, Virginia, facility on November 29, 1995. An internal memo, detailing the charges against him and the reasons for his transfer, mistakеnly received wide circulation at the Lorton facility. By January 1996, Robinson had been fully exonerated of any wrongdoing by the DOC. The Operations Commander at the DOC and an independent fact-finding committee found Smith’s charges against appellant meritless and recommended Robinson’s immediate return to the Southeast Washington facility. 1 Appellant was not transferred back to his original post, however, until May 1996. In August 1996, the criminal charges against Robinson were officially dropped when the Maryland State Attorney nolle prosequied the claim.
On November 28, 1996 appellant sued the District of Columbia, the Director of the DOC, the Executivе Director of the *411 DOC, the Deputy Director for Operations at the DOC, and the Deputy Director for Institutions at the DOC, as well as Smith. 2 The complaint alleged defamation, publication of private facts, false light, negligence, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. 3 The claims stemmed from Smith’s false reports, DOC’s improper publication of confidential documents, and the Department’s fаilure to promptly act on the recommendations of its own fact-finding committee and officers. In the complaint, Robinson did not seek any direct relief for sexual harassment or discrimination from any of the defendants, including Smith.
Prior to trial on September 16, 1998, the trial court granted a renewed motion to dismiss as to the District. The court ruled that appellant’s claims against the District were governеd exclusively by the District’s Comprehensive Merit Personnel Act, and thus had to be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The case proceeded to a bench trial against Smith alone, and appellant was awarded $11,762.54 in damages. Appellant now appeals the dismissal of his claims against the District.
II.
With few exceptions, the CMPA is the exclusive remedy for a District of Columbia public employee who has a work-related complaint of any kind.
Stockard v. Moss,
“Nonetheless, it remains the case that government employees only lose common law rights of recovery if the statute provides redress for the wrongs they assert.”
Newman v. District of Columbia,
We built on this concept in Kidd to fashion a narrow exception to the exclusivity provision of the CMPA for common-law claims that were “premisеd on, and fundamentally related to” a sexual harassment claim:
“[Pjublic employees do not lose then-common law rights to sue for the[ir] injuries ... [when] neither those injuries nor their consequences trigger” the exclusive provisions of the CMPA. Newman, [supra,]518 A.2d at 705 . Because there is no evidence that the Council of the District of Columbia in *412 tended to divest the Superior Court of its preexisting jurisdiction to hear intentional infliction оf emotional distress claims arising out of allegations of government workplace sexual harassment and subsequent retaliation, ... the Superior Court had jurisdiction to hear both Kidd’s sexual harassment сlaim and her interrelated or “pendent” tort claim.
Kidd,
Appellant here seeks to bring his action within this
Kidd
exception. We agree with the trial court that it is inapplicable to the present case. In
Kidd,
the harassment claim against the co-employee formed a necessary postulate for the tort claim against the supеrvisors to survive — ■ to wit, “sexual harassment” was the “foundation” for the claim of emotional distress.
Kidd,
The situation as presented by appellant’s complaint is fundamentally different. As the trial court noted, it contains no claim of sexual harassment or discrimination as such. Rather, the relief that appellant seeks is based on his grievances with the District’s handling of the sexual harassment allegations and the publicity given to them. Thus there is no primary claim of sexual harassment to which his claims could evеn arguably be deemed pendent.
Furthermore, appellant’s claims cannot be characterized as “premised on and fundamentally related to” any underlying allegation of sexual harassment, within the meaning of
Kidd.
In
Kidd,
proof of the claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress, held pendent to the sexual harassment claim, depended upon proof of sexual harassment. By сomparison, in
Stockard,
Accordingly, the order of the trial court dismissing thе complaint against the District for want of jurisdiction is
Affirmed.
Notes
. The same committee also found probable cause to believe Robinson’s claims against Smith, and recommended that she be disciplined аnd charged.
. Appellant subsequently dismissed all the defendants with the exception of the District and Smith.
. Appellant also sued for malicious prosecution, for which Smith was the only named defendant.
. For this reason, appellant’s argument that CMPA's "exhaustion” requirement should be set aside due to the slowness of administrative proceedings is misplaced. The statute is jurisdictional and provides the exclusivе remedy for almost all claims against public employers, with an opportunity to appeal to the Superior Court.
King v. Kidd,
. Notably, the jury found the co-employee in
Kidd
liable for sexual harassment.
Kidd, supra,
. An examination of the claims make clear that plaintiff's common law tort claims would succeed or fail irrespective of whether Smith's actions constituted sexual harassment. For example, had Smith’s actions not risen to that level, the District may still have violated a duty of care by allowing the memo-randa detailing the charges against Robinson to circulate at the Lorton facility.
