MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Before the court is Defendant’s Motion For Summary Judgment, which was filed July 18, 2001. Plaintiff filed a Response August 7, and Defendant issued a Reply August 13. After careful consideration of the arguments of counsel, the relevant law, and the record аs a whole, the court finds that the motion is due to be granted.
I. JURISDICTION AND VENUE
The court exercises, subject matter jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331 (federal question jurisdic *1263 tion). The parties do not contest personal jurisdiction оr venue.
II.SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
The court reviews the record and makes factual inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
III.FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The Montgomery County Board of Education 1 hired Frank J. Tarrance 2 as an unskilled wоrker in May 1985. Tarrance, who is black, was classified as Laborer I, 3 and he held various jobs with the glass crew, the locksmiths, and the grass mowing crew. Tarrance is not certified in a trade or craft and has never attended a trade school or taken any vocational courses. 4 For a couple years, however, Tarrance did some side work at his cousin’s auto body shop, where he helped rebuild cars or install glass. 5 Between Nоvember 1998 and May 2000, Tarrance sought three promotions to Maintenance/Repair Worker III, Repair Worker/Locksmith IV, and Mechanic/Glazing III. Tarrance was passed over each time.
IV.DISCUSSION
A. Failure to Promote
Because Tarrаnce’s case rests entirely on circumstantial evidence, the
McDonnell Douglas
framework applies.
6
The ultimate question in failure-to-promote cases is whether the employer acted with discriminatory intent. The Maintenance III position went to а qualified black applicant,
7
so Tarrance’s claim necessarily fails.
See Hawkins v. Ceco Corp.,
Employers have the freеdom to make unwise, unsound, or even irrational decisions, and courts do not sit as super-personnel boards.
See Smith v. Alabama DPS,
Tarrance’s weaker claim involves the Locksmith IV position. MCBOE considered Tarrance’s qualificatiоns and hired another man because, among other things, the man had supervisory experience.
8
Tarrance never supervised any employees,
9
and, therefore, he cannot prove discrimination.
See Chapman,
Tarrance’s marginally stronger claim implicates the Mechanic III position, which, when posted, said that “at least five years of successful experience working in the window and door glazing field” is required and that “experience installing automobile glass is highly desirable.” 10 Tar-rance helped do auto glass work for his cousin, and for at leаst eight years he also periodically installed and repaired glass for Defendant. Tarrance complains that the interview committee never asked whether he had such experience. Tar-rance also objects because the Mechanic III position went to Nathan Finch, who was not a school district employee at the time. 11
The court finds this evidence insufficient as a matter of law. Although MCBOE gave the job to Finсh, MCBOE read Tarrance’s resume, looked through his personnel file, gave him an interview, and solicited the opinion of his boss, Tim Whetstone.
12
Whetstone recommended Finch, and the interview committee felt that Tarrance’s sporadic glass experience was insubstantial. Moreover, school board policy does not prohibit MCBOE from hiring better-qualified candidates from outside the district,
13
and while Finch did not have the requisite five years of glazing еxperience, Finch nevertheless had worked extensively with automobile glass at a private firm for three years. Put another way, there is insufficient evidence that MCBOE, on prior occasions, has not filled similar positions with candidates who have not met all of its posted criteria. Therefore, the court cannot find that MCBOE applied its criteria for Mechanic III positions in a disparate manner with invidious intent.
See Mitchell v. USBI Co.,
*1265
Tarrance’s evidenсe merely goes to the candidates’ disparate qualifications but is not sufficiently probative of pretext. Tarrance must show that MCBOE did not truly believe in the merits of its decision, and that its decision was, in fact, motivated by race.
See St. Mary’s Honor Ctr. v. Hicks,
B. Other Workplace Occurrences
1. EEOC charge
The court now turns to three other matters raised in Tarrance’s Complaint but not in his EEOC charge. Tarrance sent EEOC an unverified charge April 26, 1999.
15
Tarrance provided EEOC with more information in another unvеrified statement September 9, 1999. Then, he filed a signed, verified charge September 14, 1999.
16
The verified charge relates back and cures the defects in the original charge.
See Malone v. K-Mart Corp.,
A judicial complaint is limited to events “like or related tо allegations contained in the charge and growing out of such allegations during the pendency of the case before the commission. In other words, the ‘scope’ of the judicial complaint is limited to the ‘scоpe’ of the EEOC investigation which can reasonably be expected to grow out of the charge of discrimination.”
Turner v. Orr,
None of Tarrance’s charges complain of anything besides Tarrance’s non-promotion to Mechanic III, nor do they аllege repeated violations of Title VII. Because the charges were prepared with the assistance of counsel, they need not be given a
*1266
liberal construction.
See Blalock v. Dale Cty. Bd. of Educ.,
2. Adverse employment actions
Moreover, none of these actions can be the basis of a Title VII claim. “A tangible employment action constitutes a significant сhange in employment status, such as hiring, firing, failing to promote, reassignment with significantly different responsibilities, or a decision causing a significant change in benefits.”
Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth,
The court finds, first, that Tarrance was not reassigned to a position with significantly different responsibilities when his job switched from one type of manual labor to another. He suffered no change in benefits, salary, or rank, and he is not precluded from applying for future reassignments.
See Wright v. Department of Corr,
The court also finds that Tarrance suffered no significant change in benefits from MCBOE’s alleged choice not to place him on call to work overtime. Becаuse Tarrance has never signed up for overtime within his own work crew, the court finds that he does not subjectively perceive the availability of overtime to be a material term or condition of employment.
17
Moreover, although Tarrance’s Response brief identifies several employees who have worked overtime, Tarrance’s designated facts shed light on the number of hours worked by only one employee. This pеrson has been called for extra work a mere ten times during thirty months.
18
On these facts, the court finds that the ability to work overtime is not material.
See Joiner v. Ohio DOT,
Finally, the court finds that an employer does not take an adverse employment action by refusing to divulge the reasons for its employment decisions. “An employer need never justify the wisdom of [its] business decisions to a disgruntled employee.”
Dowell v. Prime Healthcare Corp.,
C. Motion To Amend
Tarrance pleads a Section 1981 claim, but not a Section 1983 claim. Sec
*1267
tion 1983 is the exclusive federal remedy for violation of the rights guaranteed in Section 1981 by state governmental units.
See Malone v. Parker,
V. CONCLUSION
Although summary judgment is due to be granted, the court commends Plaintiffs counsel for her zealous advocacy, professionalism, and conscientiousness. “Devoted civil rights attorneys are often all that protect workers from economic lynching, particularly in non-union shops. But the court cannot bend the law; litigation is not this state’s surrogate for the lotto.”
Hooks v. Cohen,
VI. ORDER
It is CONSIDERED аnd ORDERED that Defendant’s Motion For Summary Judgment be and the same is hereby GRANTED. The Clerk of Court shall close this case.
Notes
. "MCBOE” or "Defendant.”
. "Tarrance” or "Plaintiff.”
. A Level I employee is the lowest paid employee in his job classification.
. Tarrance's Dep. at 10.
. Resp. at 2-3.
.
See Texas Dep’t of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
. Resp. at 27.
. Perkins Aff. ¶¶ 5, 7.
. Tarrance's Dep. at 20.
. Tarrance’s Dep.Ex. 6.
. Resp. at 15-16, 23-24; Mot. at 6.
. Mot. at 6-7.
. Duck's Dep. at 22; Hendrix’s Dep. at 35, 74; Mot. at 24-26.
. Resp. at 33-38.
. Tarrance’s Dep.Ex. 8.
.Doc. No. 17 Ex. B, D.
. Chumley's Dep. at 29; Mot. at 16; Reply at 13.
. Resp. at 32-33; Finch’s Dep. at 17-18.
. Resp. at 10.
