MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Greta Semsroth, Kim Warehime and Sara Voyles bring suit against the City of Wichita, Kansas alleging retaliation on the basis of sex in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. 1 This matter comes before the Court on Defendant’s Motion For Summary Judgment (Doc. # 84) filed January 11, 2008. For reasons stated below, the Court sustains the motion.
Legal Standards
Summary judgment is appropriate if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
accord Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
The moving party bears the initial burden of showing the absence of any genuine issue of material fact.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The Court must view the record in a light most favorable to the parties opposing the motion for summary judgment.
Deepwater Invs., Ltd. v. Jackson Hole Ski Corp.,
Factual Background
The following material facts are uncon-troverted, deemed admitted or, where disputed, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the nonmoving party:
The City of Wichita, Kansas (the “City”) is a municipality formed under the laws of the State of Kansas. Plaintiffs are females, and at all times relevant to this action, were commissioned police оfficers in the Wichita Police Department (the “Department”). On July 28, 2004, plaintiffs filed suit against the City alleging (in part) discrimination on basis of sex in violation of Title VIL
See Semsroth v. City of Wichita,
No. 04-1245-MLB,
I. Plaintiff Semsroth
In July of 2005, Semsroth requested a break from her normal duties as a patrol officer. At the time of this request, Sems-roth was highly stressed and emotional; she had been seeing a counselor for post-traumatic stress disorder related to a robbery suspect who had shot himself in her presence. Semsroth’s request to work as the “badge on the floor” was granted. 3
On July 9, 2005, Sergeant Jamеs Pine-gar contacted Lieutenant John Bannister to report that Semsroth was working as the badge on the floor at her request. Pinegar told Bannister that Semsroth’s “head was not in the game” and that she did not want to ride patrol or respond to 911 calls.
On July 10, 2005, Bannister contacted Captain Michael Allred and they decided that because Semsroth had no performance problems, she would not be required *1207 to see a Department psychologist. 4 They agreed, however, that the psychologists would be available to Semsroth at her discretion, free of charge. After speaking with Aired, Bannister met with Semsroth to discuss her well being. Bannister advised Semsroth thаt Department psychologists were available to counsel her if she chose. Bannister explained to Semsroth that she was not required to visit any doctor and that if she did, her visit would be kept confidential. Semsroth asked Bannister to arrange an appointment with Dr. Bowman. 5
On July 11, 2005 Aired spoke with Semsroth and informed her that she would be allowed to work as the badge on the floor until she felt comfortable returning to patrol duty. Aired informed Semsroth of the City’s employee assistance program and reminded her that department psychologists were available to help. Sems-roth indicated to Aired that she might seе Dr. Bowman. Aired confirmed that her visit with Dr. Bowman would be confidential because the Department had not ordered her to seek counseling. Semsroth indicated that she understood this confidentiality. Later that day, Aired spoke with Bannister and learned that Semsroth had asked Bannister to make her an appointment with Dr. Bowman. Aired told Bannister to let Dr. Bowman know that the appointment was not mandatory and that the City did not want any feedback concerning the appointment. The same day, Bannister made the appointment with Dr. Bowman. Bannister told Dr. Bowman that the appointment was not mandatory and that he was аssisting Semsroth in scheduling her appointment because she had been suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.
On July 12, 2005, Semsroth voluntarily met with Dr. Bowman. During the meeting, Dr. Bowman told Semsroth that he had learned from Bannister that she was involved in a lawsuit against the City. Dr. Bowman also told Semsroth that Bannister had requested that he examine her fitness for duty. Ater meeting with Semsroth, Dr. Bowman called Bannister and informed him that Semsroth was having severe emotional problems and was not fit for duty. Dr. Bowman suggested that Semsroth might take a leave of absence. Bannister reported Dr. Bowman’s opinion to Aired, who told Bannister that Sems-roth’s work assignment would not be chаnged because of Dr. Bowman’s opinion.
On July 14, 2005, Bannister received a letter from Dr. Bowman confirming his opinion that Semsroth was not fit for duty. Bannister gave this letter to Aired. Shortly thereafter, Semsroth met with Bannister and expressed her concern that her meeting with Dr. Bowman would have a negative impact on her service record. Bannister assured her that the meeting was confidential and would have no effect on her record. Semsroth then told Bannister that she wanted to return to patrol duty and would handle future counseling on her own. She indicated that she would not be requesting leave because she had not accumulated enough paid leave and could not afford to take unpaid leave.
On July 14, 2005, Aired received a letter from Dr. Bowman which indicated that Semsroth was not fit for duty. He did not make any change in Semroth’s assigned duties, however, as a result of this letter. *1208 Within a few days after July 14, 2005, Bannister told Allred that Semsroth wanted to return to patrol duty. Allred told Bannister that Semsroth could do so. On July 18, 2005, Bannister received a second letter from Dr. Bowman which indicated that Semsroth was not fit for duty in a traffic assignment. That same day, Sems-roth was given a traffic assignment and returned to patrol duty. The City did not take action against Semsroth as a result of her visits with Dr. Bоwman or the letters which Dr. Bowman sent to Bannister and Allred. Her annual performance evaluations, performance file and personnel file contain no reference to the fitness for duty examination or any of Dr. Bowman’s letters.
Semsroth alleges that the City retaliated against her for filing Semsroth I by requiring her to submit to the fitness for duty examination when she had no record of deficient performance.
II. Plaintiff Warehime
On August 14, 2004, Warehime transferred to Mayberry Middle School to become a school resource officer. On June 6, 2005, Captain John Speer advertised an opening for a school resource officer at Hamilton Middle School. On June 10, 2005, Warehime applied for that position.
Under department policy, “[i]t is recommended that all members serve one (1) year in a new assignment before applying for another transfer/rotation.” Historically, an officer is not permitted to transfer from a specialty assignment before serving at least one year in that position. Because Warehime had been the school resource officer at Mayberry for only ten months when she applied for the Hamilton position, Speer told Deputy Chief Tom Stolz that she should not be considered for the job. Stolz determinеd that the Hamilton position could be filled at the beginning of the school year (i.e., August) and that Wa-rehime should not be disqualified. 6 Some time before June 21, 2005, Captain Terry Nelson and Sergeant Jerry Quick told Wa-rehime that she would receive the Hamilton position.
In a written complaint dated June 21, 2005, Warehime claimed that Detective Bob Gulliver had begun a community policing project which was almost identical to a project which she had tried to initiate. Her complaint stated that “[t]his is second time this week I have read in the paper that a male officer has proceeded with projects that I have suggested and have been turned down or put off.” The complaint further stated that “[t]his is an example of discrimination by the Wichita Police Department to female officers who approach supervisors with ideas and projects which are not respected.” Warehime gave the complaint to Quick. She intended for her complaint to highlight the fact that the department stopped women from developing projects. She filed the complaint to promote cooperation between herself and Gulliver. She did not believe that Gulliver knew of her project or that hе had taken credit for it.
The City received Warehime’s complaint on June 29, 2005. The next day, Nelson called Warehime into his office and told her that she would not be transferred to the Hamilton position. Warehime contacted the fraternal order of police to grieve that decision. On August 13, 2005, the Department transferred Warehime to the Hamilton school resource officer position. This transfer coincided with the beginning *1209 of the school year and occurred at the same time as all other school resource officer transfers. The transfer also marked Warehime’s one year annivеrsary of service at Mayberry.
Warehime alleges that the City retaliated against her for filing the discrimination complaint on June 21, 2005, by revoking her transfer approval and returning it to her only after she contacted the fraternal order of police.
III. Plaintiff Voyles
In late June of 2005, Voyles contacted Lieutenant Jeffrey Easter to inquire whether his gang unit had an opening for a light duty assignment, which she desired because she was pregnant. In response, Easter said that he had a light duty assignment which would become available in early July and that if she was allowed to, she could come to his unit and work juvenile cases. Easter was nоt Voyles’ supervisor, and she understood that he could not promise her an assignment in his gang unit. 7
After speaking with Easter, Voyles met with Allred — her supervisor — to discuss her pregnancy and the need for a light duty assignment. Voyles told Allred that she had talked to Easter and that he would have an opening in his gang unit in early July. Allred told Voyles that if he could find her a light duty position in the field, she would be used in that capacity and would not be transferred to the gang unit. Allred explained that he would prefer to assign Voyles to a badge on the floor position, which would free up a non-light duty officer to patrol the streets. 8 Allred also indicated that he did nоt want to transfer Voyles to Easter’s gang unit on the sixth floor because in Semsroth I she had complained of another officer on the sixth floor — Lieutenant James Bohannon. 9 Although Bohannon worked in the robbery unit, Allred expressed concern with Voyles working anywhere on the sixth floor.
Because Allred’s patrol did not have a light duty opening, he emailed other captains regarding available light duty positions. Speer responded that he had a badge on the floor opening in his patrol, and the Department assigned Voyles to light duty work as the badge on the floor in that patrol. Voyles worked as the badge on the flоor until late August or early September of 2005, when she accepted a community policing position in the same patrol. 10 Voyles continued on light duty until January of 2006. Her light duty assignments did not affect her pay or the hours she worked.
Voyles alleges that the City retaliated against her for filing Semsroth I by denying her the opportunity to transfer into the gang unit.
Analysis
Title VII’s anti-retaliation provision prohibits an employer from discrimi
*1210
nating against an employee “because [s]he has opposed any practice made an unlawful employment practice by [Title VII], or because [s]he has made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing under [Title VII].” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). To prevail on a Title VII retaliation claim, a plaintiff must establish that retaliation played a part in the employment decision and may choose to satisfy this burden under a mixed-motive theory or a pretext theory.
See Fye v. Okla. Corp. Comm’n,
I. Plaintiff Semsroth
As noted above, Semsroth alleges that in retaliation for filing
Semsroth I,
the City required her to submit to a fitness for duty examination when she had no record of deficient performance. Under the burden-shifting framework of
McDonnell Douglas,
a plaintiff must first establish a prima facie case of discrimination.
To establish a prima facie case of retaliation, Semsroth must show that (1) she engaged in protected opposition to discrimination, (2) a reasonable employee would have found the challenged action materially adverse, and (3) a causal connection existed between the protected activity and the material adverse action.
See Argo v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Kan.,
A. Adverse Action
The City argues that Semsroth has not suffered materially adverse action because she understood that her appointment with Dr. Bowman was voluntary. Title VII protects individuals from retaliation that produces an injury or harm.
Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. v. White,
*1211
Semsroth argues that she suffered materially adverse action because no employee would want to be subjected to an unnecessary fitness for duty examination. She does not cite any authority, however, for the proposition that the examination which Dr. Bowman administered might dissuade a reasonable person from filing a discrimination charge. Generally, courts have rejected the argument that a fitness for duty examinаtion, by itself, constitutes materially adverse action.
See Nichols v. S. Ill. Univ.-Edwardsville,
Here, the record contains evidence that before Semsroth visited Dr. Bowman, two of her suрervisors told her that any appointment was voluntary and confidential. Semsroth admits that she understood this. The record also contains evidence the Dr. Bowman was aware of the voluntary nature of the appointment. These facts clearly establish that Semsroth met with Dr. Bowman at her own discretion. During the appointment, Semsroth apparently learned that her lieutenant had instructed Dr. Bowman to administer a fitness for duty examination, but the record contains no evidence that the appointment was ever mandatory or that Semsroth was formally required to submit to a fitness for duty examination.
Two days aftеr the examination, Sems-roth’s lieutenant reaffirmed the confidential nature of the appointment. When Semsroth asked to return to patrol duty, her captain accommodated the request. The uncontroverted evidence demonstrates that the Department took no action toward Semsroth as a result of her visit with Dr. Bowman or any fitness for duty examination which he administered. The fact that the examination never became a part of Semsroth’s performance evaluations and personnel file reflects the confidential nature of the examination. Under these circumstances, no reasonable jury would find that the administration of a fitness for duty examination in the context of a voluntary appointment would dissuade a reasonable person from making a discrimination complaint, particularly because the City took no action as a result of the examination.
B. Causal Connection
The City further argues that Semsroth has not established a causal connection between the filing of
Semsroth I
and the fitness for duty examination. To establish a sufficient causal connection, plaintiff must show that defendant was motivated to commit the challenged conduct by a desire to retaliate against her proteсted activity.
See Hinds v. Sprint/United Mgmt. Co.,
As evidence of a pattern of discrimination, Semsroth identifies (1) three disciplinary actions filed against Plush, and (2) the revocation of Warehime’s school resource officer position at Hamilton middle school.
11
Semsroth does not suggest that the City engaged in a pattern of discrimination
against her.
Even assuming that evidence of discrimination against Plush and Warehime may establish causation with respect to Semsroth,
see Sprint/United Mgmt. v. Mendelsohn,
— U.S. —,
Further, even if the alleged retaliatory acts could be attributed to the filing of Semsroth I, the record does not support the argument that they fill the gap in time between the filing of Semsroth I (in July of 2004) and Semsroth’s fitness for duty examination (in July of 2005). The record does not reveal when the investigations against Plush occurred. The City’s revocation of Warehime’s position in June of 2005 — eleven months after the filing of Semsroth I — lacks sufficient temporal proximity to support the alleged pattern of retaliation. See Hinds, 523 F.3d, at *1202-03 (acts beginning pattern of retaliation must share close temporal proximity with protected activity). Even viewed in the light most favorable to Semsroth, this evidence does not suрport the causation element of her prima facie case.
On this record, the Court finds that Semsroth has not presented evidence suffi *1213 cient to establish the adverse action and causation elements of her prima facie retaliation case. She has therefore failed to meet her initial burden under the McDonnell Douglas framework and the City is entitled to summary judgment on her claim.
11. Plaintiff Warehime
As noted above, Warehime alleges that because she filed a discrimination complaint on June 21, 2005, the City revoked her transfer to Hamilton middle school. Warehime’s retaliation claim is analyzed under the McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting framework, desсribed above. The City argues in part that Warehime cannot establish a prima facie case of retaliation because she did not suffer materially adverse action.
A materially adverse action is one which may dissuade a reasonable person from making a discrimination complaint.
See Burlington N.,
Because the record evidence is insufficient as a matter of law to establish that Warehime suffered materially adverse action, she has not met her initial burden under McDonnell Douglas and the City is entitled to summary judgment on her claim.
III. Plaintiff Voyles
As noted above, Voyles alleges that because she filed
Semsroth I,
the City denied her the opportunity to transfer into the gang unit. Voyles argues her retaliation claim under a mixed-motive framework.
12
Under the mixed-motive theory,
*1214
plaintiff must directly show that retaliatory animus played a motivating part in the employment decision.
Fye,
For purposes of a mixed-motive analysis, direct evidence of discrimination includes evidence of “oral or written statements on the part of a defendant showing a discriminatory motivation.”
Cuenca v. Univ. of Kan.,
Assuming that Voyles has produced direct evidence of discrimination, the City argues that it is nonetheless entitled to summary judgment because Voyles did not suffer adverse action. Regardless whether plaintiff asserts her retaliation claim under a mixed-motive or pretext theory, adverse action is a fundamental component of the claim.
Wright,
545 F.Supp.2d —,
Voyles argues that she suffered adverse action because Allred denied her request to transfer to the gang unit. As discussed above, the denial of а transfer constitutes a materially adverse action only if the employee presents some evidence beyond her subjective desire for the position.
McGowan,
On this record, the Court finds no evidence that Voyles suffered materially adverse action when Allred denied her request to transfer to the gang unit. Although Allred may have denied the transfer because Voyles had complained of a particular officer in Semsroth I, the fact that she suffered no materially adverse *1215 action is fatal to her claim. The Court therefore finds that the City is entitled to summary judgment.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Defendant’s Motion For Summary Judgment (Doc. # 84) filed January 11, 2008 be and hereby is SUSTAINED. The Clerk of the Court is directed to enter judgment in favor оf defendant in this matter.
Notes
. On December 27, 2007, the Court dismissed the claims of Heather Plush as a sanction for her failure to comply with discovery procedures. See Memorandum And Order (Doc. #78).
. Although Heather Plush is no longer a plaintiff in this action, plaintiffs submit an excerpt of her deposition testimony which highlights alleged acts of retaliation against her. Specifically, she testified as follows:
Q. Okay. You also said that you thought you were investigated in retaliation for complaining of discrimination to Captain Tabor. When did that occur?
A. The first investigation occurred — I got served on August 30th.
Q. And are there more than one?
A. Yes.
Q. How many are there?
A. Three.
Deposition Of Heather Plush, attached as Exhibit 8 to Plaintiffs' Response To Defendant’s Motion For Summary Judgment ("Plaintiffs’ Response ”) (Doc. # 91) filed March 10, 2008.
. "Badgе on the floor" refers to an officer who is assigned to work the front desk of a substation. The badge on the floor answers telephone calls, makes police reports and handles walk-ins. The record does not reveal who granted Semsroth’s request to work as the badge on the floor.
. An officer may be required to undergo a fitness for duty test when he or she performs deficiently. With regard to Semsroth, officers within the department had no discussion whether she should be given a fitness for duty examination.
. The record does not reveal Dr. Bowman's first name.
. Generally, school resource officer positions are filled in August to coincide with the beginning of the schoоl year.
. Officers are not allowed to pick their own light duty assignments. Under normal procedure, an officer's request for light duty assignment is considered by his or her captain or direct supervisor. Voyles' decision to directly contact another supervising officer was atypical. In fact, Easter had never received such an inquiry from an officer.
. Because officers on light duly can accomplish badge on the floor duties, the Department commonly designates such officers as badges on the floor. This practice saves the department from restricting otherwise full duty officers to desk responsibilities.
. Voyles’ complaint against Bohannon concerned comments he had made about her during a previous pregnancy.
. Voyles had previously requested a community policing position. Although the record is not clear, this position is apparently also a light duty assignment.
. As additional evidence of a pattern of retaliation, Semsroth claims that a supervisor said that he wished "the bitches would just die.” This statement is not supported in her statement of uncontroverted facts, and the record does not indicate when the supervisor made the statement. Semsroth also claims that she was banished to Bеat 39 in December of 2003 because she complained of discrimination. This action pre-dates the filing of
Semsroth I.
Moreover, the Honorable Monti L. Belot has previously determined as a matter of law that the City had a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for the transfer.
See Semsroth v. City of Wichita,
No. 04-1245-MLB,
Although the record contains evidence that Bannister told Dr. Bowman that Semsroth was a plaintiff in the prior lawsuit, Semsroth does not argue that this evidence somehow establishes a sufficient casuаl connection between the filing of Semsroth I and her fitness for duty examination. She has presented no evidence which suggests that Bannister told Dr. Bowman to perform the fitness for duty examination because she was a plaintiff in Semsroth I.
. Citing
Fox v. Wichita State University,
. Here, Voyles received a light duty assignment which she required given her pregnancy, but complains that it was not the one she wanted.
