MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
/. INTRODUCTION. to 00
A. Procedural Background. CO 00
B. Disputed and Undisputed Facts. ÍO 00
II. STANDARDS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT. .987
III. LEGAL ANALYSIS. OO QO (05
A. Simonson’s Disability Claims. CO 00 05
1. Perceived disability claim: 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(C) O 05 (05
2. Record of disability . CO Oí 05
B. Simonson’s ADEA Claim. CO C5 05
C. Discharye in Violation of Public Policy Claim . uj 05 05
IV. CONCLUSION .999
*984 This matter is before the court on the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment filed on July 9, 2002. Plaintiff complains she was discriminated against in the terms, conditions, and compensation of her employment with the defendants and in violation of state public policy. Specifically, the plaintiff alleges the defendants discriminated against her, and subsequently discharged her, as well as failed to transfer or rehire her because of her age; a perceived disability or record of such an impairment; and in retaliation for her seeking workers’ compensation benefits in violation of Iowa public policy. The defendants dispute these allegations and contend that judgment should be entered in their favor as a matter of law and against the plaintiff for the following reasons: (1) the plaintiff does not establish that age was a factor in her discharge or that defendants filled plaintiffs position with younger employees after her position was eliminated due to a reduction-in-force; (2) the plaintiff is not disabled within the meaning of the American with Disabilities Act, nor did the defendants regard plaintiff as disabled; and (3) there was no causal connection between plaintiffs pursuit of her workers’ compensation rights and defendants’ reduction-in-force and the consequent elimination of plaintiffs positions with defendants, but for legitimate business reasons.
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Procedural Background
On August 18, 2000, the plaintiff, Eileen Simonson (“Simonson”), filed a complaint against her former employer, Trinity Regional Health System and Trinity Regional Hospital of Fort Dodge, Iowa (hereinafter “Trinity”), alleging violations of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 623, et seq., the Americans With Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., the Iowa Civil Rights Act (“ICRA”), chapter 216 of the Iowa Code, and Iowa public policy. Si-monson’s state law claims are properly before the court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367 (supplemental jurisdiction). Prior to bringing this action in federal court, Simonson exhausted her administrative remedies by filing a charge with the Iowa Civil Rights Commission (“ICRC”), which was cross-filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”), and received right-to-sue letters. Pl.’s Comp., at 2.
A trial in this matter is presently scheduled for October 21, 2002. Ms. Simonson is represented by Michael Carroll of Coppola, Sandre, McConville & Carroll P.C., West Des Moines, Iowa. Trinity is represented by Stuart Cochrane of Johnson, Erb, Rice, Kramer, Good & Mulholland, P.C., Fort Dodge, Iowa.
B. Disputed and Undisputed Facts
The following is a summary of Simon-son’s work history with Trinity and the events allegedly giving rise to her termination and the present lawsuit. Simonson worked for Trinity from approximately January 1972 until her employment was terminated on September 29, 1999. During her tenure with Trinity, Simonson worked primarily as a full-time, registered nurse. However, a series of work-related injuries caused Simonson to be placed under work restrictions prescribed by a physician, and in turn required Trinity to accommodate Simonson.
In January 1994, Simonson sustained an injury to her shoulder that required surgery in April 1994. Trinity modified Si-monson’s work responsibilities and Simon-son’s physician permitted her to return to work part-time, with restrictions, and eventually in July 1994, authorized her to work on Trinity’s Two North hospital wing-conducting new employee orientation and *985 engaging in limited physical activity. Def.’s App., at 070. When Simonson’s physician refused to release her to regular full-time duty in October 1994, Trinity nurse manager, Peg Stoolman, and Human Resources Manager, Ted Vaughn, asked Simonson to work full-time on a computer project called PHAMIS. Simonson and Trinity agree this was not a demotion, and Trinity continued to compensate Simonson at the same rate as it had previously, when Simonson was assigned to Two North. Def.’s App., at 070. Simonson continued work on the PHAMIS project until its completion in September or October 1997, at which time she was offered a part-time nursing position in skilled care (Two West). Def.’s App., at 066. However, Si-monson was not under physician’s restrictions, rather Trinity asserts there were no full-time job positions available in Two North at the time dnd Simonson acknowledges that there were no full-time job postings for nursing positions in Two North, but contends that when she accepted the PHAMIS position, Ted Vaughn assured her that Trinity’s intent was to return her to Two North at the completion of the PHAMIS project. Def.’s App., at 070.
In April 1998, while working in skilled care as a nurse, Simonson alleges she injured her back and was diagnosed with sciatica, but continued working without restriction. However, due to continued pain, Simonson was placed on a twenty-five pound lifting restriction in May 1998, until June 12, 1998, when she returned to regular duty. The next incident, Simonson alleges, took place on June 24, 1998, when she injured her left arm at work and was diagnosed with left lateral epicondylitis. Simonson’s physician placed her on a fifteen pound lifting restriction which was eventually decreased to ten pounds, and Simonson finally returned to regular duty on August 29,1998.
Trinity and Simonson agree that while Simonson was moving a patient in September 1998, Simonson suffered an upper back strain and consequently was diagnosed with a shoulder impingement. After attempting to work without restriction, Si-monson was placed on a ten pound lifting restriction that was increased to thirty-five pounds in December 1998. The physician released Simonson to regular full-time duty in January 1999. 1 After returning to work from a leave of absence to care for her husband, Simonson claims she learned that Two West was closing. Thereafter, Trinity employed Simonson in a temporary position as an IDX patient registration clerk, until her termination in September of 1999. Even as a temporary employee, Simonson continued to be compensated at the same rate as she had been when she worked as a nurse in Two West.
Simonson does not complain that Trinity acted in a discriminatory manner or targeted her when it closed Two West, when it eliminated her job on Two West, or when her temporary employment position with IDX was eliminated. Def.’s App., at 073. Simonson concedes that Trinity took these steps for legitimate business reasons. Def.’s App., at 070. In addition, Simonson does not claim that Trinity failed to accommodate her physical restrictions, and to the contrary, acknowledges that Trinity made every effort to follow the physician’s suggestions and recommendations. Def.’s App., at 073. Simonson also concedes that Trinity never disciplined her *986 as a result of any work-related injury that she sustained or with regard to her application for and receipt of worker’s compensation benefits for her injuries. Def.’s App., at 072.
In contrast, Simonson alleges that because of her history of work-related injuries, she meets the definition of “disabled” under the ADA either because she has a record of impairment or she was regarded by Trinity as having such an impairment. However, Simonson does not contend that she suffers from a physical impairment that substantially limits her ability to perform any major life activity. Further, Si-monson asserts that after Two West closed, Trinity reassigned all seventeen Two West employees except for Simonson and Simonson’s co-worker, Betty Berning. Trinity maintains that all Two West employees were terminated and subsequently rehired, if at all, only after they made application and interviewed for job openings. Simonson contends that Trinity has a history of reassigning people within the hospital and chose not to reassign her because of her age, despite the fact that there were twelve job openings at the time of Simonson’s termination. Moreover, Si-monson argues that Trinity’s purported reason not to rehire her was not the result of a reduction-in-force (RIF) and she should not be held to a higher standard of proof.
Yates v. Rexton, Inc.,
While Trinity does not dispute Simon-son’s allegations regarding her physical limitations for purposes of this motion, Trinity contends that Simonson’s restrictions fail to meet the definition of a disability and thus, no record of impairment can exist because Simonson’s injuries were temporary in nature, and permanent injuries, if any, were slight. Trinity points to the fact that Simonson is currently employed in three separate nursing-related positions as proof that she is not limited in a major life activity. In addition, Trinity avers that Simonson fails to produce evidence establishing that Trinity perceived her as having such an impairment. Instead, Trinity argues that the only evidence on record indicates that Simonson was not under any physical restrictions or suffering a physical malady at the time of her termination, and in Trinity’s opinion, “There is a distinction between being regarded as an individual unqualified for a particular job because of a limiting physical impairment and being regarded as ‘disabled’ within the meaning of the ADA.”
Conant v. City of Hibbing,
Trinity disputes Simonson’s allegations that her employment was terminated because of her age in violation of the ADEA and argues that Simonson fails to prove Trinity acted with discriminatory animus when it eliminated both her positions in Two West and IDX and declined to rehire her in another capacity. There is evidence in the record that Trinity managers, who interviewed Simonson, declined to make her a job offer, because they were told by Simonson’s former managers and co-workers that she was lazy, had a high absenteeism rate, was not dependable, and not a team player. Def.’s App., at 98, 113, 123. Trinity alleges that Simonson offered no evidence that it hired younger persons to fill Simonson’s former positions, and alternatively, that Simonson’s termination was the result of a reduction-in-force which requires Simonson to produce additional evidence that age was a factor in Trinity’s *987 decision to terminate her. Finally, Trinity contends that it did not rehire Simonson for legitimate business reasons, specifically financial reasons rather than in retaliation for pursuing a workers’ compensation claim. Def.’s App., Aff. of Ted Vaughn, at 136. Trinity points out that at the time it terminated Simonson’s employment, she was not under any physician’s restrictions, pursuing any worker’s compensation claims, nor did Trinity have any knowledge of an intent on Simonson’s part to pursue such claims in the future.
II. STANDARDS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Summary judgment is appropriate when the court after viewing all of the facts, and inferences drawn from those facts, in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, and giving that party the benefit of all reasonable inferences that can be drawn from the facts, concludes there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
See Dropinski v. Douglas County, Neb.,
According to Rule 56(e), once the moving party files a properly supported motion for summary judgment, the burden shifts to the nonmoving party to point out genuine issues of material fact that would preclude judgment as a matter of law for the moving party.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e);
Bennett v. Dr Pepper/Seven Up, Inc.,
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has cautioned that “summary judgment should seldom be used in employment discrimination cases.”
See Crawford v. Runyon,
III. LEGAL ANALYSIS A. Simonson’s Disability Claims
As a preliminary matter, it should be noted that in considering Simonson’s discrimination claims, the court will generally make no distinction between claims based on federal law and comparable claims based on state law. This is appropriate because the Iowa Supreme Court has recognized that federal precedent is applicable to discrimination claims under the ICRA, Iowa Code Ch. 216.
See Fuller v. Iowa Dep’t of Human Servs.,
The ADA affords protection from discrimination to any “qualified individual with a disability.” 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a). The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that a plaintiff who raises a claim of disability discrimination based on indirect evidence bears the initial burden of establishing a
prima facie
case of discrimination before the burden of proof shifts to the employer to present evidence of a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason.
Yates,
The ADA defines a “disability” as: “(A) a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of the major life activities of such individual; (B) a record of such an impairment; or (C) being regarded as having such an impairment.” 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2). The recent Supreme Court case
Toyota Motor Manufacturing v. Williams,
1. Perceived disability claim: 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(C)
Although Simonson does not allege that she is actually disabled within the meaning of the ADA, she argues that Trinity regarded her as disabled as a result of the work-related injuries that left her physically impaired for periods of time. Simonson may pursue such a claim against Trinity without proving she suffers from an “actual” disability because “individuals who are ‘regarded as’ having a disability, but who are not actually disabled, can still fall within the protection of the ADA.”
Conant,
In Brunko v. Mercy Hospital, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendant on the ground that the plaintiff failed to establish she was disabled within the meaning of the ADA. Id. at 942. In that case, the plaintiff worked as a staff nurse for the defendant and injured her back in a work-related accident that required her to undergo surgery. Id. at 941. The plaintiff returned to work without restriction, but after experiencing pain in her lower back and left leg, her physician prescribed a permanent lifting restriction not to exceed forty pounds. Id. The plaintiff contended that she was substantially limited in the major life activity of working because of the lifting restriction and that the defendant perceived her as disabled because of her physical impairment. Id. at 941-42.
In affirming the district court, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that “a general lifting restriction without more is insufficient to constitute a disability within the meaning of the ADA.”
Id.
at 941 (citing
Gutridge v. Clure,
After engaging in a similar analysis in
Conant v. City of Ribbing,
and arriving at the same conclusion — a lifting restriction does not constitute a disability — the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals explained, “It logically follows then that being regarded as having a limiting but not disabling restriction also cannot be a disability within the meaning of the ADA.”
Conant,
The facts of Brunko are similar to the facts of the present litigation. Like Brunko, Simonson worked as a nurse and sustained her injuries in work-related accidents. Both Brunko’s and Simonson’s injuries caused their respective physicians to prescribe lifting restrictions. The facts diverge, but not significantly, in that Si-monson admits that her injuries were temporary, whereas Brunko was released back to work with a permanent lifting restriction. There is no indication in the record that Simonson’s injuries have not healed completely and she does not allege that the symptoms continue to manifest themselves. Pl.’s Resistance to Def.’s Mot. for Summary Judgment, at 11. Moreover, the court in Brunko held that even with a permanent lifting restriction, Brunko was not disabled or regarded as disabled within the meaning of the ADA. Id. at 941-M2. While the court recognizes that the pain Simonson endured during the months when she sustained her injuries was severe and limited her ability to perform the full range of her job responsibilities, there is no evidence in the record that Simonson’s injuries produced any long-term or permanent disability that would substantially impact her ability to obtain employment of any kind. In fact, both Simonson and Brunko held nursing positions at several nursing companies since leaving their respective employers. Simonson admits that she is currently employed as a registered nurse for Nurse *992 Finders of Mason City which provides temporary nursing services; as a registered nurse for Medical Oncology and Hematology Associates of Des Moines; and as an independently contracted nurse examiner for Portamedic of Des Moines. See Def.’s Stmt, of Undisputed Material Facts, No. 25, 26; Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Stmt, of Undisputed Material Facts, No. 25, 26.
Simonson has not presented evidence and has offered absolutely no argument with respect to any substantial limitations on any major life activities caused by her injuries.
See Toyota Motor Mfg.,
534 U.S. at -,
Simonson’s alleged evidence of Trinity’s mistaken belief that she had a physical impairment or an actual, nonlimiting impairment that substantially limited one or more of her major life activities, is a statement made by Simonson’s former nurse manager, Peg Stoolman.
See
PL’s Resistance to Def.’s Mot. for Summary Judgment, at 12. Simonson asserts that when asked whether she would be considered for one of the available job positions within Trinity, Stoolman responded, “I’m not sure if that’s physically a good choice for you.” Def.’s App., at 76. However, during this same exchange, Stoolman told Simonson that she had done a good job and subsequently, after her termination and at Si-monson’s request, Stoolman wrote a glowing letter of recommendation for Simonson which stated, “She [Simonson] possesses the skills and knowledge base to provide excellent patient care.” PL’s App., at 48. There is no indication anywhere in the letter that Simonson was physically incapable of performing nursing work. Moreover, the record is devoid of any mention, by Stoolman, of this statement to any Trinity decision-makers. Rather, the record indicates that Simonson’s former co-workers regarded her as lazy, not dependable, and not a team player. Def.’s App., at 98, 113, 123. In light of this record, Stool-man’s statement amounts to no more than a stray remark.
See Kunzman v. Enron Corp., 941
F.Supp. 853, 865-66 (N.D.Iowa 1996) (stating court looks to relationship between the remarks and the decisional process, substance of the statements, “the specificity of the statements both with regard to the actual employment decision at issue such as hiring, promotion, or termination, as well as the relationship between the remark and the plaintiffs situation, and remoteness in time to the personnel decision”). Therefore, Simonson’s “regarded as” claim ultimately must fail because she has adduced no evidence indicating that Trinity perceived her as having an impairment that significantly restricted her ability to perform any major life activities.
See Murphy,
*993 2. Record of disability
Next, Simonson contends she is disabled under the ADA because her work-related accidents created a record of a substantially limiting physical impairment. The EEOC regulations state that “a record of such impairment” means “a history of ... a mental or physical impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities.”
Gutridge,
B. Simonson’s ADEA Claim
According to the ADEA, it is unlawful for an employer to “fail to hire or to discharge any individual or otherwise discriminate against any individual ... because of such individual’s age.” 29 U.S.C. § 623(a)(1). In considering an age discrimination claim brought under Iowa Code Ch. 216, the court looks to the ADEA and applicable federal law.
See Fisher v. Pharmacia & Upjohn,
Simonson alleges in her complaint that Trinity terminated her because of her age in violation of the ADEA. Pl.’s Compl., at 6. However, Simonson concedes that Trinity did not act with discriminatory animus or target her when it closed Two West, when it eliminated her job on Two West, or when her temporary employment position with IDX was eliminated because of restructuring of the business office. Def.’s App., at 073. Simonson acknowledges that Trinity took these steps for legitimate business reasons. Def.’s App., at 070. Therefore, the court construes Simonson’s argument in her resistance to Trinity’s motion for summary judgment, as well as her deposition testimony, to state a claim for failure to rehire or transfer in violation of the ADEA.
See
Def.’s App., at 073. In
Schlitz v. Burlington Northern R.R.,
The ADEA explicitly protects individuals who are forty years of age or older. 29 U.S.C. § 631(a). Simonson was forty-six years old at the time Trinity terminated her employment, or failed to rehire her, and thus falls under the ADEA’s protection. Trinity does not contest Simonson’s ability to satisfy the first three elements of her
prima facie
case and therefore, the court assumes, without deciding, that Simonson can establish the first three elements of her
prima facie
case. Trinity maintains that Simonson cannot establish the fourth element of her
prima facie
case — that Trinity replaced her with or filled the job positions Simon-son applied for with a younger person. In the alternative, Trinity argues that Simon-son’s termination was the result of a RIF, for legitimate business reasons, which requires Simonson to produce additional evidence that age was a factor in her termination, even after satisfying the elements of an ADEA case involving failure to rehire or transfer.
Spencer,
First, the court points out that it went to great lengths to plumb the record before it in order to find evidence of Simonson’s stated claim of age discrimination.
See Barge v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc.,
87 F.3d
*995
256, 259-60 (8th Cir.1996) (“A district court is not required to speculate on which portion of the record the nonmoving party relies, nor is it obligated to wade through and search the entire record for some specific facts that might support the non-moving party’s claim.”) (quoting
White v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
Even after considering the entire record, the court finds that Simonson has failed to establish specific facts that create a genuine issue of material fact for a jury on her ADEA claim. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e);
Celotex Corp.,
C. Discharge in Violation of Public Policy Claim
Simonson also asserts a state-law claim of wrongful discharge in violation of
*996
public policy. In particular, Simonson contends in her complaint that she was terminated for filing a workers’ compensation claim. PL’s Compl., at 8-9. Iowa courts recognize a cause of action for common-law retaliatory discharge.
See, e.g., Smith v. Smithway Motor Xpress, Inc.,
In its unpublished opinion in McMahon, the Iowa Court of Appeals, while acknowledging that Iowa has not recognized a cause of action for wrongful failure to rehire an employee in retaliation for seeking workers’ compensation benefits, declined to decide the issue because it found that the plaintiff had “not presented substantial evidence tending to prove his protected activity-was a determining factor” in the defendant’s decision not to rehire the plaintiff. Id. at *5. In McMahon, the plaintiff, an ironworker and welder, suffered a work-related injury which resulted in his return to work with physician prescribed lifting restrictions, and he subsequently filed a claim for workers’ compensation benefits against the defendant. Id. at *1. Approximately four months later, in light of the fact that the defendants had run short of work for welders, plaintiff took a voluntary layoff until the defendants had more work. Id. The plaintiff had taken voluntary layoffs on two prior occasions and both times he was rehired after he contacted a superintendent about work. Id. at *2. However, on this occasion, plaintiff was not rehired after he made inquiries to defendant’s superintendents. Id. The plaintiffs purported evidence of the defendant’s alleged retaliation in McMahon were statements employees made to the plaintiff claiming that they heard he was not rehired because he filed a workers’ compensation claim; co-employees asked if plaintiff needed assistance after his injury; plaintiffs supervisor complained about having “all of the injured workers assigned to his crew;” and plaintiff alleges “other construction workers with similar skills to his own were hired or *997 rehired during the time he [plaintiff] was looking to return.” Id. at *5.
In analyzing whether there was a casual connection between the plaintiffs filing a workers’ compensation claim and the defendant’s refusal to rehire the plaintiff, the Iowa Court of Appeals in
McMahon
confirmed that the plaintiff has “the burden to produce
stibstantial evidence
his [McMahon’s] protected conduct of seeking workers’ compensation benefits was a
determining factor
in Mid-America’s [defendant’s] refusal to rehire him.”
Id.
at *3 (emphasis added) (citing
Weinzetl v. Ruan Single Source Transportation Co.,
Simonson’s present claim for failure to rehire in violation of Iowa public policy is remarkably similar to the plaintiffs case in McMahon. Both Simonson and the plaintiff in McMahon suffered work-related injuries that necessitated surgery and subsequent lifting restrictions. Simonson filed a workers’ compensation claim based on one work-related injury she endured, like that of the plaintiff in McMahon. In support of her claim, Simonson alleges she was treated differently after she filed her workers’ compensation claim based on Peg Stoolman’s statements that Simonson was a good worker “when you [Simonson] were here ... you were gone a lot.” Def.’s App., at 076. In addition, Simonson asserts, despite Trinity’s fully accommodating her work restrictions, that Stoolman harbored “ill-will or negative assumptions” towards Simonson because of the health history established by her workers’ compensation claim, in light of Stoolman’s response to whether or not Simonson would be considered for a position' — “I’m not sure if that’s physically a good choice for you.” Def.’s App., at 076. Moreover, Simonson points out that other workers with similar skills to her own were hired or rehired during the time Simonson worked as a temporary employee in IDX and was pursuing permanent positions with Trinity.
In this case, Trinity and Simonson agree that Simonson made a claim for workers’ compensation benefits in connection with her 1994 work-related injury to her right shoulder, which is protected activity under
Springer v. Weeks & Leo Co.
and its progeny. Def.’s App., at 069;
See Springer,
*998
With regard to Stoolman’s statement about Simonson being gone a lot, there is no factual basis in the record to suggest that Stoolman’s statements were motivated by retaliatory animus. Simonson filed her workers’ compensation claim in 1994, but continued her employment with Trinity, with accommodation, until her termination in September 1999. Although Simonson did not settle her workers’ compensation claim against Trinity until approximately December 1998, Stoolman was not Simon-son’s exclusive supervisor during this time, but supervised Simonson when she worked in Two North and Two West. Furthermore, Simonson admits that she and Stool-man had a good relationship. Def.’s App., at 071. Stoolman gave Simonson a glowing letter of recommendation at Simon-son’s request. Thus, Stoolman may have served as a reference for Simonson, but did not play a role beyond this in Trinity’s department managers’ decision not to rehire Simonson. Simonson’s allegations concerning Stoolman’s statement are more akin to a wrongful termination claim based on “absenteeism occasioned by a work-related injury.”
See Weinzetl v. Ruan Single Source Transp. Co.,
In
Weinzetl,
the Iowa Court of Appeals was faced with the question of whether a wrongful discharge claim based on absenteeism because of a work-related injury violated public policy in Iowa.
Id.
at 812. The plaintiffs asserted that the defendant’s application of the company’s leave of absence policy to them was not neutrally applied, but with a retaliatory motive, despite the fact that at the time of their termination, the plaintiffs could not physically perform their loading and unloading duties.
Id.
at 811. The Iowa Court of Appeals agreed with the district court’s findings and adopted the district court’s reasoning in its decision to pronounce that such a claim does not violate the public policy of Iowa.
Id.
at 812 (making no distinction. between private and public employees) (citing
Yockey,
Therefore, even if Simonson had pled or raised a wrongful termination claim based on absenteeism occasioned by a work-related injury, under Iowa law, Simonson’s termination would not violate public policy. Id. (addressing plaintiffs’ theory of wrongful termination based on absenteeism because of work-related injury, notwithstand *999 ing plaintiffs’ failure to plead the claim, because plaintiffs raised the issue in their resistance to defendant’s motion for summary judgment). Thus, the court determines that a reasonable jury could not find Stoolman’s comment regarding Simonson’s absenteeism to be substantial evidence tending to demonstrate that Simonson’s protected activity was a determining factor in Trinity’s decision not to rehire her. Furthermore, the court concludes that Stoohnan’s other statement concerning Si-monson’s health history is more appropriately characterized as alleged evidence of Simonson’s claim of discrimination in violation of the ADA.
Simonson’s assertion that all of the other nurses found work within Trinity after them positions were eliminated when Two West closed, with the exception of Simon-son and Betty Berning, does not create an inference that Trinity’s decision not to rehire Simonson was because of her workers’ compensation claim. According to Simon-son, before Two West closed, all of the nurses in Two West, including herself, were told to begin checking the boards and start applying for jobs. Def.’s App., at 070. Stoolman, the acting Nurse Manager of Two West at the time it closed, confirms this rehiring process in her deposition stating, “They [everyone at the unit meeting] could all apply for them [positions on the board] and interview with the appropriate managers for the positions that were available.” Def.’s App., at 096. Simonson alleges that she left messages with department managers for those positions she was interested in and was called down to Sue Hanlon’s office the last day Two West was open. Def.’s App., at 070-71. Hanlon offered Simonson the IDX job at the same rate of compensation Simonson received in her position on Two West. Def.’s App., at 071.
Thus, Trinity did in fact rehire Simon-son after Two West closed. Simonson admits that at the time Hanlon offered her the job, Hanlon informed Simonson that it was a temporary position.
Id.
Thereafter, when Ted Vaughn advised Simonson that Trinity was eliminating her job and she would have to apply for other positions within Trinity, Simonson was in the same position as those persons making application externally with Trinity, not all of which received offers from Trinity. The court finds that Simonson’s alleged evidence of failure to rehire is really her reliance on her twenty years of service with Trinity which is not enough to make out a
prima facie
claim. Even when the court construes the facts in the light most favorable to Simonson, and assumes that Trinity rehired all of the other nurses from Two West, the court cannot conclude that such evidence “tips the scales decisively one way or the other,” because Trinity rehired Simonson, but only as a temporary employee.
Smith,
IV. CONCLUSION
Simonson admits, and the court concludes as a matter of law, that Simonson is not actually disabled within the meaning of the ADA. Moreover, Simonson has failed to adduce evidence indicating that Trinity perceived her as having an impairment that significantly restricted her ability to perform any major life activities, and the court finds Simonson’s “regarded as” claim must fail as does Simonson’s claim that her work-related accidents created a record of a substantially limiting physical impairment, because while Simonson’s injuries were evidence of a history of an impairment, they did not tend to prove that she had a history of a disability. In addition, the court finds that Simonson has not presented any evidence from which it could reasonably be inferred that her age played a role in her failure to secure other employment with Trinity. Finally, the court finds that Simonson has not presented *1000 substantial evidence tending to prove her filing of a workers’ compensation claim was a determining factor in Trinity’s decision not to rehire her. For these reasons, the court grants defendants’ motion for summary judgment on all counts. This case is dismissed in its entirety.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Simonson slates in her Resistance to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment that her physician increased her lifting restriction to a maximum of ten to twenty pounds, Pl.’s Resistance to Summary Judgment, at 4, but Simonson's response to Trinity's Statement of Undisputed Material Facts No. 6, admits that her physician placed her on a thirty-five pound lifting restriction.
. Trinity asserts in its motion for summary judgment that the sole adverse employment action alleged by Simonson, as a basis for her public policy claim, is Trinity’s failure to rehire her after her positions in Two West and IDX were eliminated for legitimate business reasons.
. The Iowa Supreme Court has warned against "transform[ing] the public policy exception into a ‘good faith and fair dealing' exception, a standard we have repeatedly rejected,” and insist on proceeding cautiously in contemplating the declaration of public policy to support an exception to the at-will doctrine.
Fitzgerald v. Salsbury Chem., Inc.,
