JOHN D. BATES, United States District Judge
BACKGROUND
Stoe has worked in DOJ's Office of Justice Programs ("OJP") since 1998. Pl.'s Ex. 16 [ECF No. 18-2] at 627-28.
George "Chris" Tillery has been the GS-15
Shortly after her rejection from the Division Director position, Stoe informed Tillery that she believed she was performing GS-15-level work in her GS-14 Physical Scientist role. Id. at 515 ¶ 7. After Tillery agreed but did not take action to rectify the pay grade discrepancy, Stoe raised the issue with Hart (then her first-line supervisor) in January 2011. Id. He agreed that she was performing GS-15-level work, and Stoe, Tillery, and Hart assembled a "desk audit" package to advocate for a re-classification of Stoe's position to GS-15. Id. ¶¶ 7-8. The desk audit explained that Stoe had "received 'exceeds expectations' " on her last two annual evaluations "as a GS-14 doing GS-15 work." Pl.'s Ex. 9-11 ("Desk Audit Request") at 531. Tillery recalled that, after the official submission of the desk audit in May 2012, then-NIJ director Dr. John Laub decided not to proceed with the audit because he believed that NIJ already had too many non-supervisory GS-15 employees. Def.'s SMF ¶ 11.
In March 2014, Hart left DOJ and the Division Director position re-opened. Def.'s SMF ¶ 16. Tillery updated the position description (now called "GS-15 Supervisory Program Manager") before announcing the vacancy and accepting applications in April 2014. Id. ¶¶ 17-19. The updated description identified four equally-weighted groups of duties: supervisory and/or managerial responsibilities, program planning and management, business process analyses for program planning and management, and program advice and guidance. See Pl.'s Ex. 17 ("Position Description") at 630-33; Def.'s SMF ¶ 18. Tillery testified that some of these duties were GS-15-level work that Stoe had been performing, see Def.'s Ex. 5 [ECF No. 16-8] at 53:1-10; for example, Tillery added that the Division Director must "be one of the two alternate standards executives" on DOJ's Interagency Council on Standards Policy (ICSP), after he determined that it was a duty which had to be removed from Stoe's GS-14 role. Def.'s SMF ¶ 17. The vacancy announcement also identified five knowledge, skills, and abilities ("KSAs") required for the role: "(1) ability to develop and promote a diverse workforce; (2) ability to supervise; (3) ability to analyze organizational and operational problems and develop solutions; (4) knowledge of program management principles; and (5) ability to provide advice and guidance on business and program management issues." Def.'s SMF ¶ 20.
After reviewing all applications for the position, the Human Resources Division ("HR") sent Tillery four lists of "best qualified" candidates; none of the three finalists for the position (Stoe, Greene, and Kathleen Higgins) appeared on the lists. Id. ¶¶ 28-32; Pl.'s Ex. 14 at 546. Tillery replied to HR expressing disappointment with the lists of candidates. Def.'s SMF ¶ 33. He specifically complained that many of the listed candidates had little or no experience in "conformity assessment (standards and testing)," which he wrote "bodes ill for their ability to replace [Stoe] as [DOJ's] alternate Standard's Executive." Def.'s Ex. 21 [ECF No. 16-24] at 1. In response to his concerns, HR generated an expanded list of "best qualified" applicants that included the three finalists. Def.'s SMF ¶ 36; Pl.'s SMF ¶ 36.
Tillery divided the applications among himself, Gillerman, and Swineford to determine who should be invited to interview. Def.'s SMF ¶ 40. Swineford, who was tasked with reviewing Stoe's application, initially recommended that the panel not interview Stoe. Id. ¶ 44. Swineford stated in her deposition that she did not recommend Stoe because Stoe's application did not demonstrate sufficient supervisory experience. Pl.'s Ex. 4 ("Swineford Dep.") at 36:5-12.
The panel interviewed finalists on July 11 and July 16, 2014. Id. ¶ 49. All candidates answered the same five questions, with some variations in follow-up. Id. Each panelist assigned scores-calculated based on a score between one and five for each of the five questions-and shared them with the other panelists by email. Id. ¶¶ 50-52, 54, 56. Tillery scored Greene and Higgins highest, Swineford scored Greene highest, and Gillerman scored Stoe and Greene highest. Id. ¶ 59. After combining and averaging each candidate's scores, Greene finished with a final score of 21.33, Stoe with 19.00, and Higgins with 18.67. Id. Tillery selected Greene for the position over Stoe. Id. ¶ 60. In an email to Ridgeway on July 21, 2014, Tillery stated that although Stoe had a more detailed understanding of DOJ's standards strategy, Greene demonstrated a sufficient grasp on standards strategy and a more detailed
On August 22, 2014, Stoe contacted OJP's Equal Employment Opportunity Office. Answer [ECF No. 8] ¶ 15. She filed a formal EEO complaint on October 22, 2014. Id. After exhausting her administrative remedies, Stoe filed a complaint in this Court on August 10, 2016. Compl. [ECF No. 1] ¶ 15. The government moved for summary judgment on October 27, 2017. Def.'s. Mot. for Summ. J. [ECF No. 16]. That motion is now fully briefed and ripe for decision.
LEGAL STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings and the evidence demonstrate that "there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The party seeking summary judgment bears the initial responsibility of demonstrating the absence of a genuine dispute of material fact. See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
ANALYSIS
Stoe alleges that she was not promoted to Division Director in 2014 because Tillery discriminated against her based on her gender and age, in violation of Title VII and the ADEA. Title VII states that "[a]ll personnel actions affecting employees or applicants for employment ... in executive agencies ... shall be made free from any discrimination based on ... sex ...." 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(a). Similarly, the ADEA states that "[a]ll personnel actions affecting employees or applicants for employment who are at least 40 years of age ... in executive agencies ... shall be made free from any discrimination based on age." 29 U.S.C. § 633a(a).
As Stoe has not put forward direct evidence of gender or age discrimination, the Court must apply the burden-shifting framework of McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
In this case, OST has provided a nondiscriminatory reason for failing to promote Stoe: it chose the new Division Director based on the applicants' interview scores, and Greene received the highest score. See Def.'s SMF ¶¶ 59-60. Therefore, the Court "need not-and should not-decide whether [Stoe] actually made out a prima facie case under McDonnell Douglas." Brady v. Office of Sergeant at Arms,
Because this case is before the Court on defendant's motion for summary judgment, rather than before a jury at trial, Stoe need not prove that her case is stronger than OST's to meet that burden. Rather, Stoe must "produce[ ] sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that [OST's] asserted non-discriminatory reason was not the actual reason and that [OST] intentionally discriminated against [her] on the basis of ... sex." Brady,
I. STOE'S CASE
Stoe's evidence falls roughly into four buckets: (1) her prima facie case; (2) evidence about hers and Greene's relative qualifications; (3) evidence about the selection process itself; and (4) evidence regarding Tillery's prior behavior. The Court will examine each in turn.
While Stoe no longer needs to establish a prima facie case to proceed with her suit, the facts underlying that case remain relevant to her discrimination claims. To state a prima facie case of discrimination, a plaintiff must provide evidence that "(1) she is a member of a protected class; (2) she suffered an adverse employment action; and (3) the unfavorable action gives rise to an inference of discrimination." Stella v. Mineta,
As for the third factor, Stoe has shown that "she was treated differently from [a] similarly situated employee[ ]" who is "not part of the protected class[es]." George v. Leavitt,
B. Qualifications Evidence
Perhaps Stoe's strongest evidence is the comparison of her qualifications with Greene's. Stoe's experience with significant aspects of the position for which she applied is highly relevant. "If a factfinder can conclude that a reasonable employer would have found the plaintiff to be significantly better qualified for the job, but this employer did not, the factfinder can legitimately infer that the employer consciously selected a less-qualified candidate"-which in turn allows the factfinder to assume that discrimination has entered the picture. Aka,
Neither party disputes that both Greene and Stoe had qualifications relevant to the position. At the time of the interview, they both were serving in GS-14 positions. Def.'s SMF ¶¶ 1, 3, 85. Stoe had been working at the GS-14 level since 2004, and Greene since 2012.
Laying out these qualifications side by side, Stoe appears to have some advantage. She had eight more years' experience at the GS-14 level than Greene when they applied for the Divison Director position. At the time of the hiring decision at issue, Stoe had held a GS-14 position for ten years, while Greene had only been promoted to that level two years previously. She
However, the difference in qualifications is not so stark as to permit an inference of discrimination. For one thing, Greene had a good deal of experience with grant-making and other business-related aspects of OST's work, which was weighted equally to program management in importance for the position. See Position Description at 631-32. Relatedly, all three panelists gave Greene higher marks than Stoe for his interview response to the question related to "[a]bility to provide advice and guidance on business and program management issues." Def.'s SMF at ¶ 50 n.4; see ¶¶ 53, 55, 57. Greene also had a Ph.D., while Stoe did not. Tillery wrote contemporaneously to Ridgeway that Greene won out due to "his detailed understanding of the OJP grants processes and their issues and his ability to provide guidance on technology policy," along with "a solid grasp" of OST's "standards strategy sufficient to the task." Pl.'s Ex. 38 at 802. The Division Director position simply had a different mix of duties than Stoe's position did. Accordingly, OST reasonably could prefer someone with a balance of experiences other than Stoe's for the job.
Nor are Stoe's program management qualifications-impressive as they are-so far beyond Greene's as to permit an inference of discrimination under this Circuit's precedents. In Aka, for instance, the court found that a jury reasonably could infer discrimination when the plaintiff-who was denied a pharmacy technician job-"had nineteen years of experience as a hospital assistant as well as bachelor's and master's degrees," while "the other applicant had no college education, had worked in the hospital laundry for slightly over a year, and had spent only two months as a pharmacy volunteer." Holcomb,
Nor does the fact that Stoe got her interview on the merits suffice to show that the ultimate choice of Greene was based on discrimination. Even after Swineford raised Stoe's initial score, for instance, Stoe remained tied with Greene at 18. See Def.'s Ex. 33 [ECF No. 16-37] at 3. Greene was not considered an interview candidate based on one perceived deficiency: his application did not demonstrate "the requisite skills to serve as one of the two alternate DOJ Standards Executives." Mem. for Record at 792-93. Greene showed his mettle at the interview, however, "demonstrat[ing] a far greater understanding of conformity assessment and standards and testing than was indicated in his application package." Id. at 793. "An employer may of course select a candidate who on paper is less qualified for other reasons, such as subjective reactions that emerge in the interview." Aka,
Beyond comparing her qualifications with the selectee's, a plaintiff "may seek to expose other flaws in the employer's explanation, including, inter alia, showing the employer has misstated her qualifications." Holcomb,
During the interview, Tillery wrote that Stoe was a "problem solver but not in the grants process area" and gave her a raw score of 2-3. Def.'s Ex. 34 [ECF No. 16-38] at 22. Tillery gave Greene a raw score of 3-5 for the same question, but did not add any notes to his interview rubric. Def.'s Ex. 35 [ECF No. 16-39] at 5. Gillerman gave Stoe a raw score of 4 on the question involving grants management, and gave Greene a raw score of 5 with the note "involved in tech [management] of complex grant[s]." Def.'s Ex. 37 [ECF No 16-41] at 138; Def.'s Ex. 38 [ECF No. 16-42] at 131. Swineford similarly rated Greene higher on the grants management question: she gave Stoe a raw score of 3 and gave Greene a raw score of 4. See Def.'s Ex. 40 [ECF No. 16-44] at 115; Def.'s Ex. 41 [ECF No. 16-45] at 83. Although Swineford testified that she "was impressed that [Ms. Stoe] was able to navigate a manual [grants] process" before the system was automated, Swineford Dep. at 256:21-257:1, Greene still received an average interview score higher than Stoe's based on his knowledge of the current, electronic grants management process. Thus, the evidence shows that the selecting officials did not "misstate[ ] her qualifications," Holcomb,
C. The Selection Process
Aside from the qualifications evidence, Stoe points to several aspects of the selection process itself that she claims illustrate that OST's proffered rationale is pretextual. But "discerning pretext is highly contextual,"
1. Intent to deny Stoe the position
To begin with, Stoe claims that "Tillery neither intended to select [her] for the position, nor gave her fair consideration." Pl.'s Opp'n at 33. Such evidence is highly relevant, as it would suggest "the selection process was geared not to finding the best person for the position, but rather to keeping [the plaintiff] from advancing." Salazar v. Wash. Metro. Transit Auth.,
The third document Stoe puts forward is an email from Tillery to Ridgeway, sent after the interviews had been conducted but before any decision had been made. In that email, Tillery told Ridgeway: "We are done except for a final conference call on Monday. It[']s between Mark Greene and Kathy Higgins." Pl.'s Ex. 38 at 808. This email was not sent to Gillerman or Swineford, see
2. Alleged infirmities with the interview process
Next, Stoe attacks on several fronts the interview process itself. She claims, for instance, that the interviews varied in length in a manner that disadvantaged her. See Pl.'s Opp'n at 44. But there is no credible evidence of this. Stoe said of her interview: "I think it was a little short." Pl.'s Ex. 3 ("Stoe Dep.") at 103:13. There is no evidence that her interview actually lasted less than the allotted thirty minutes. Nor did Greene's statement that his interview had lasted "[t]o the best of [his] recollection, not longer than an hour," indicate that his interview in fact lasted an hour or was appreciably longer than Stoe's. Greene Dep. at 149:15-16. And while Stoe claims that Greene was asked follow-up questions while she was not, Pl.'s Opp'n at 44, Greene could not remember whether he was asked any follow-up questions, Greene Dep. at 152:4-10, while Tillery believed that he had asked follow-up "questions that ... would have allowed Ms. Stoe to elaborate on specific experience in regard to the interview questions," Def.'s Ex. 54 [ECF No. 21-4] at 98:5-8. Even reading this evidence in the light most favorable to Stoe, natural variations in interview length that result from the applicants' answers and the follow-up questions such answers may generate do not support a finding of discrimination. If they did, it would be a rare hiring process that could not be challenged.
Stoe also finds fault with the fact that the interview questions "were worded to ask for one single example" rather than asking "about overall background and experience." Pl.'s Opp'n at 43. But employers must have the leeway to structure their interview questions in the way they feel will give them the substantive information needed to make a decision. There is no evidence that the questions as framed favored one candidate over others. "[T]he key question in this context 'is not the correctness or desirability of the reasons offered but whether the employer honestly believes in the reasons it offers.' " Hairston v. Vance-Cooks,
Stoe's third complaint about the interview was that Tillery chose to ask a question about grants management, and include Swineford on the panel, "when he knew that grants management was being phased out of the Division Director's responsibilities." Pl.'s Opp'n at 43. She claims that this suggests pretext because Greene's superior scores on the grants question helped lead to his selection.
The last of Stoe's interview-related concerns is her perception that Tillery shook his head as she was responding to a question, which Stoe says "could reasonably be interpreted as signaling to the other panelists that he had no intention of selecting" her. Pl.'s Opp'n at 41. The available evidence is that neither Swineford nor Gillerman noticed this behavior-and, if they did, that it did not influence them. See Def.'s Ex. 55 at 268:7-14, 268:21-269:7; Def.'s Ex. 56 [ECF No. 21-6] at 264:3-7. Even assuming that Tillery did shake his head, and that the other panelists saw it, a reasonable jury could not infer discriminatory intent from that action. There is no evidence that any head-shaking was connected to a desire to torpedo older or female applicants, or that he engaged in this activity during the interviews of any of the other such applicants. Other than her concern about the head-shaking, which was not discriminatory, Stoe testified that she "think[s] the interview was appropriate." Stoe Dep. at 103:12. The evidence backs up that assessment.
3. Interview as basis for selection
In addition to the alleged irregularities in the interview process, Stoe challenges as overly subjective-and hence discriminatory-the decision to use the interview as the sole basis for selecting the Division Director. See Pl.'s Opp'n at 34-36.
Stoe nevertheless argues that the use of interview scores to make a final selection was discriminatory in this instance. In particular, she asserts that such heavy reliance on interviews is fishy since "Greene's written application materials showed he wasn't sufficiently qualified." Pl.'s Opp'n at 35. However, Greene made the certification list of the "best qualified" applicants, Def.'s SMF ¶¶ 35-36; Def.'s Ex. 24 [ECF No. 16-28] at 3, which establishes that he was qualified for the position. Although it was an OJP policy rather than his application alone that led Greene to receive an interview, Stoe does not challenge that policy as discriminatory. Nor does the fact that Gillerman did not initially consider Greene worthy of an interview render the use of interview scores suspect. The interviews did not focus on " 'highly subjective' criteria, such as 'interpersonal skills,' " Aka,
Stoe also claims that the decision to use only interview scores departed from OST's normal selection procedures, because Tillery appeared to base his selection procedure for Division Director in 2010 solely on qualifications. See Pl.'s Opp'n at 35. Generally, "departure from internal hiring procedures is a factor that the trier of fact may deem probative." Johnson v. Lehman,
In conclusory fashion, Stoe disputes the "legitimacy" of this scoring. Pl.'s SMF ¶ 59. However, as the evidence does not show that Tillery influenced the other panelists or that the interview process itself was discriminatory, there is no genuine dispute that the panelists' scores are legitimate. The Court finds that "the presence of the other panelists and the near parity between their scoring and [Tillery's] scoring weakens"-considerably-"the likelihood that a jury could find pretext." Salazar,
4. Alleged shifting explanations
A factfinder may infer discrimination from " 'changes and inconsistencies' in the employer's given reasons for the decision," since "it is often reasonable to think that an employer who lies or obviously bluffs about or shifts its rationale for challenged action is culpable of the charged discrimination." Allen v. Johnson,
Finally, Stoe presents several pieces of independent evidence meant to show that Tillery harbors bias against female employees. None is more than marginally helpful to Stoe's case. Hence, this evidence is not sufficient for a reasonable jury to conclude that OST discriminated against Stoe.
First, Stoe puts forward a declaration from her office-mate and fellow NIJ employee, Christine Crossland. See Pl.'s Ex. 7 ("Crossland Decl."). Crossland, who does not work in OST but who has "personally observed many conversations and interactions between" Tillery and Stoe, id. at 509 ¶¶ 4-5, asserts that Tillery "has created and promotes a male-dominated workplace culture that is hostile to women," id. at 510 ¶ 6. Stoe makes similar allegations in her own declaration. See Stoe Decl. at 517 ¶ 15. Stoe argues that these statements are "highly probative, and raise[ ] an inference that Tillery's gender bias infected the 2014 selection." Pl.'s Opp'n at 39. The government urges the Court to discount Crossland's declaration entirely, and asserts that neither woman's allegations of gender bias aid Stoe at all. See Reply in Supp. of Def.'s Mot. ("Reply") [ECF No. 21] at 21-22. As is often the case, the truth is somewhere in the middle.
Generally, "affidavits containing nothing more than unsubstantiated rumors, conclusory allegations, and subjective beliefs are wholly insufficient to establish an inference of discrimination." Glass v. Lahood,
Crossland states that Tillery "frequently speaks to [Stoe] as if he thinks she does not know what she is talking about-even though she clearly does"; that she has "heard [Tillery] interrupt, undermine, and insult [Stoe] in meetings"; and that she has "never observed [Tillery] speak to a male colleague in the dismissive way he frequently speaks to [Stoe]." Crossland Decl. at 510 ¶ 8. She also alleges that Tillery told OST staffers "to ignore [Crossland's] guidance" on a project related to her "area of expertise," and that Tillery responded to Crossland's complaints to management by complaining to Crossland's supervisor about her "interference."
This information is more than unsubstantiated, subjective conclusions. The sort of soft sexism alleged in these declarations, practiced over a period of years, is no less pernicious than the overt kind. And the Court must assume the allegations to be true at this stage. However, Stoe has not brought a hostile work environment claim; she is complaining about a particular failure to promote her. As discussed above, Tillery was not the sole decision-maker in the 2014 hiring process, and there is no material evidence that gender or age bias infected the other selecting officials or the decision as a whole. In the end, the declarations do not provide the sort of details that would show that the allegations they contain are "closely related ... to [Stoe's] circumstances and theory of the case." Glass,
Second, Stoe asserts that "Tillery's gender bias was further evident when he declined to appoint [her] as the Acting Division Director" after Hart left the position in 2014. Pl.'s Opp'n at 40.
Third, Crossland and Stoe point out that Stoe has long been "the only female scientist at OST." Stoe Decl. at 514 ¶ 4; Crossland Decl. at 510 ¶ 7. Allegations that members of a protected class are underrepresented in an employer's workforce are "relevant" to individual disparate treatment, but are "less significant" than in pattern or practice cases because general statistics are less probative of intent as to a particular employment decision. Krodel v. Young,
II. DEFENDANT'S ADDITIONAL ARGUMENTS
In addition to the evidence it has put forward to rebut Stoe's affirmative case, the government also makes two arguments of its own: that Tillery's favoritism toward Higgins shows he did not discriminate, and that any inference of discrimination is undercut by the fact that Tillery and Swineford shared protected characteristics with Stoe. The first of these arguments helps the government's case still more, while the latter factors minimally, at most, into the Court's decision.
The government first claims that Tillery favored Higgins, another woman who was older than Stoe, and that his decision to give Higgins the same interview score as Greene " 'seriously undermines' [Stoe's] claim that Tillery's decision not to select [Stoe] was discriminatory." Def.'s Mem. at 24. While the government overstates the importance of this evidence, it does cut mildly against Stoe's claims. As the government acknowledges, see
More helpful for the government's case is Tillery's request to expand the pool of candidates for Division Director after the initial certified list proved unsatisfactory. In his email making the request, Tillery noted that a candidate with "no experience in conformity assessment" or technology policy, and with "minimal" grant management experience, scored highly enough to be certified. See Def.'s Ex. 21 at 1. Tillery lamented that Higgins, by contrast, had not been certified, despite being "an almost ideal candidate from the perspective of conformity assessment and technology policy," whose experience managing a $50
B. Decision-Makers Sharing Stoe's Characteristics
The government also argues that "any discriminatory inference is ... weakened by the fact that" Tillery "is approximately the same age as" Stoe and Swineford is "the same sex." Def.'s Mem. at 25. The Supreme Court and the D.C. Circuit have hinted-but have not held outright-that the fact that a selector shares a relevant protected characteristic with a plaintiff might weigh against a finding of discrimination. See St. Mary's Honor Ctr. v. Hicks,
Yet even assuming that the selecting officials' immutable characteristics are relevant to the question of discrimination, their probative value is weak. The argument for considering such evidence proceeds from the untested assumption that people only discriminate against those who are (superficially) different from themselves. But this is rather thin gruel. Take sex discrimination as an example. "Evidence shows that men can exercise gendered expectations toward other men," and that "[w]omen also exercise similar gender bias toward other women." Vicki Schultz, Taking Sex Discrimination Seriously,
Therefore, to assume that men will discriminate against women, but that other women will not, defies reality. "There are many reasons why women ... might tolerate discrimination against members of their own class, or why they might participate in discriminatory acts themselves."
Looking at the evidence as a whole, the Court finds that it is insufficient to convince a reasonable jury to rule in Stoe's favor. Stoe puts forward some peripheral evidence to suggest that she has not been sufficiently recognized for her work over the years, and that the 2014 promotion process was somewhat haphazard-even, perhaps, that it gave her short shrift. But "[e]ven if a court suspects that a job applicant 'was victimized by poor selection procedures' it may not 'second-guess an employer's personnel decision absent demonstrably discriminatory motive.' " Fischbach,
CONCLUSION
By all accounts, Debra Stoe is a credit to OST and to the government. As her supervisors stated in their 2012 request for a desk audit, "[h]er leadership and revolutionary transformation of a moribund program has demonstrated capabilities that the agency never before experienced and has obtained previously unattainable goals and objectives." Desk Audit Request at 524. This is the sort of work that is often rewarded with a raise or promotion. But it is not this Court's job to tell employers how to do theirs. The Court's role is limited to policing discrimination. And here, Stoe's evidence for gender or age discrimination is insufficient to reach a jury. For the foregoing reasons, then, the government's motion for summary judgment will be granted. A separate order will be issued on this date.
Jefferson B. Sessions has been substituted for Loretta E. Lynch as the Attorney General of the United States pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 25(d).
All facts stated in this opinion are undisputed unless otherwise noted.
All citations to Stoe's exhibits refer to ECF No. 18-2. Since the exhibits appear in a single document, citations to those exhibits use the page numbers of the PDF, except for deposition transcripts, which use the page and line numbers of the relevant deposition.
GS-14 is the fourteenth pay grade in the General Schedule pay scale, which is used to determine the salaries of most civilian government employees. See GS-14 Pay Scale - General Schedule 2014, FederalPay.org (last visited August 22, 2018), https://www.federalpay.org/gs/2014/GS-14. GS-14 is "generally reserved for top-level positions such as supervisors, high-level technical specialists, and top professionals holding advanced degrees."
GS-15 is the fifteenth pay grade in the General Schedule pay scale. See GS-15 Pay Scale - General Schedule 2015, FederalPay.Org (last visited August 22, 2018), https://www.federalpay.org/gs/2014/GS-15. GS-15 is reserved for "high-level executive positions" and includes the government's "more renowned researchers."
Stoe disputes that Laub made this decision. See Pl.'s Am. Statement of Genuine Issues ("Pl.'s SMF") [ECF No. 22-1] ¶¶ 11-12. However, she does not dispute that this is what Tillery recalled in his deposition and in a 2014 email regarding the desk audit. See Pl.'s Ex. 5 ("Tillery Dep.") at 52:18-22; Def.'s Ex. 8 [ECF No. 16-11] at 27.
At this time, Stoe had: completed eighty hours of Supervisory Management Training, Pl.'s Ex. 15 at 573; been the Acting Director of a DOJ program in 2002,
While claims by federal employees are governed by different provisions of Title VII and the ADEA than are those of private employees, such claims "are analyzed in the same way as ... claims against private employers." Johnson,
Stoe disputes this explanation, claiming that "Swineford did not recommend [Stoe] for an interview because Tillery had already signaled to her and Gillerman that he did not intend to select" her. Pl.'s SMF ¶ 44. However, the email to which Stoe points to support this argument does not create a genuine issue of fact, as no reasonable jury would make the inference from it that Stoe does. See Holcomb,
Stoe also claims that Tillery awarded Greene the same score as Higgins, despite admitting in his deposition that Stoe had outperformed Higgins-and therefore, by inference, had outperformed Greene. See Pl.'s Opp'n at 36. However, Tillery did not say that Stoe had done better than Higgins overall; rather, he said that Stoe performed better in terms of her presentation and communications skills, while Higgins performed better in terms of the substance of her answers. See Pl.'s Tillery Dep. at 130:21-132:11. It is not suspect to choose substance over style when deciding who to hire for a policymaking position.
Tillery initially suggested using an average of the panelists' interview scores to select the winner. See Pl.'s Ex. 38 at 807. He also said, however, that he was "[m]ore than willing to entertain alternate approaches."
Stoe asserts that Tillery "referred to Greene's 'background' and not to his actual interview performance" in the memorandum explaining the panel's choice. Pl.'s Opp'n at 35. That is not the case. As part of a paragraph explaining why the interview changed the panel's assessment of Greene, Tillery stated that, "during the interview," Greene "demonstrated a stronger background in grants management than did" Stoe. Mem. for Record at 793. It is too clear for argument what Tillery's words meant: Greene's interview performance brought out evidence of his qualifications that was not apparent in his written application. This is a perfectly acceptable rationale for making a hiring decision.
The government mistakenly believed that Stoe was referring to Tillery's decision not to promote her to Division Director back in 2010. See Reply at 23. Though this is not the case, a brief word on the 2010 promotion is in order. As the government points out, Stoe never challenged this decision as discriminatory and it is now time-barred, see Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Morgan,
The only available evidence in the record suggests that during the time period at issue, OST had a staff of fifteen, fewer than ten of whom were scientists. See Pl.'s Ex. 37 at 795.
Stoe also puts forward evidence that she claims shows that Tillery "slow-walked the preparation of a formal request for a desk audit" in 2011-2012, and continued to make empty promises to Stoe about regrading her position as a GS-15 even after he knew this would not happen. Pl.'s Opp'n at 13. But Stoe never argues in her opposition to the government's summary judgment motion that this evidence supports a finding of discrimination; the desk audit information appears only in the facts section of her opposition brief.
Stoe also noted that Tillery was working on a reorganization of the office at the same time. Stoe Dep. at 27:21-24. As Stoe acknowledged, Tillery revisited her desk audit with Ridgeway in 2013 and/or 2014, at her request. See Def.'s Ex. 1 at 53:9-18. Tillery did this by attempting to fold Stoe's promotion to GS-15 into the reorganization of OST. See Def.'s Ex. 8 at -27 to -28. In March 2014, after Hart had left OST, Tillery recommended to Ridgeway that Stoe's position be regraded to GS-15, because the proposed reorganization split up Hart's division into "a Standards and Testing Team led by notionally [Stoe] and a Grants Management Team" led by a potential GS-14 supervisor. Id. at -27. Because the plan eliminated Hart's position, Stoe could be promoted without adding to the number of GS-15 positions in OST, id., which had been Laub and Ridgeway's main concern. Tillery noted that Ridgeway "has the authority to create the new position and move [Stoe] into it," or that the position could otherwise be advertised for "5 or 10 days." Id. In the end, Ridgeway-not Tillery-settled on the competitive process about which Stoe now brings suit. See Def.'s Ex. 9 [ECF No. 16-12].
