ORDER
This action arises out of the termination of Plaintiff resulting from the elimination of Plaintiffs job as Assistant Food & Beverage Director and Director of Restaurants at the Myrtle Beach Hilton (“Hotel”).
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The following factual background is based on the current record before the court for purposes of summary judgment drawing all permissible inferences from the record in the light most favorable to Plaintiff.
Plaintiff was initially hired as a cocktail waitress at the Hotel in the summer of 1976. Plaintiff was employed at the Hotel until April 15, 1991, when she was informed that her job had been eliminated for economic rеasons and that Defendants no longer needed her services. At the time she was terminated, Plaintiff held the title of Assistant Food & Beverage Director and Director of Restaurants. In her position, Plaintiff reported to Jim Ruedinger, Food and Beverage Director at the Myrtle Beach Hilton. Mr. Ruedinger was responsible for all food аnd beverage operations at the Hotel, including the restaurants, the bars, the pool, the golf course, and catering. Mr. Ruedinger reported to the General Manager of the Hotel, Syed Abbas.
Plaintiffs duties included numerous tasks. Plaintiff was involved in the “back-end” responsibilities of computing payroll and overtime. She also pеrformed all the secretarial work of the Food and Beverage Department. Plaintiffs “front-end” duties included the managerial responsibility of Alfredo’s restaurant and Another World bar. She also was responsible for the operation of the coffee shop, the veranda bar, and the golf course. Plaintiff was one of thrеe salaried employees of the 150 employees in the Food and Beverage Department. At the time of her termination, Plaintiffs annual salary was $26,442 with four weeks of paid vacation.
In the beginning of 1991, Mr. Ruedinger and Syed Abbas met to discuss how to make the Food and Beverage Department more profitable. At this meeting, they discussed eliminating salary management positions. Mr. Ruedinger recommended eliminating the position of Assistant Food and Beverage Director in order to reduce the payroll. As part of this plan, the Hotel would rely more on the managers of the individual operations and Mr. Ruedinger would assume the “back-end” tasks of doing the scheduling and the payroll.
On March 31, 1991, Plaintiff told Mr.
On April 15, 1994, the date of Plaintiffs termination, Plaintiff met Ron Spiegel in the main kitchen of the Hotel. He introduced himself as the new manager of Alfredo’s and Another World. Mr. Spiegel wаs hired to serve as manager for the Comedy Zone nightclub for three nights a week and Assistant Manager of Alfredo’s for two nights a week. Mr. Spiegel was paid $7.00 an hour and received one week paid vacation after a year.
After meeting Mr. Spiegel, Plaintiff sought out Mr. Ruedinger. When she found him in the personnel office, he told her they would talk later. Plaintiff returned to her office and did some paperwork. Later, Mr. Rued-inger requested that Plaintiff return to the personnel office. At the meeting with Mr. Ruedinger was Connie Clifton, Personnel Director at the Hotel. Plaintiff was informed that her job and salary were eliminated because of economic reasons. Mr. Ruedinger assured Plaintiff that she had done a wonderful job and that no one could do her job better. While picking up her last paycheck from Ms. Clifton several days later, Plaintiff discussed the possibility of working a different job. Ms. Clifton said she thought it would be too demeaning to offer Plaintiff a lower job. Plaintiff never spoke with Mr. Ruedinger about the possibility оf working a different job.
After Plaintiff was terminated, Ron Spie-gel supervised the Comedy Zone and substituted as manager at Alfredo’s twice a week. The managers of the individual Food and Beverage outlets assumed more responsibility for their operations. After Plaintiffs termination, managers at the individual Food and Beverage opеrations made between $6 and $7 an hour. Fourteen months after Plaintiffs termination, Deborah Lunsford was hired to work as Restaurant Manager at the Hotel. Ms. Lunsford was responsible for the management of all the restaurants at the hotel, but not all the Food and Beverage outlets. Her salary at the Hotel was $19,-000.00.
III. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
In deciding a summary judgment motion, the court must look beyond the pleadings and determine whether there is a genuine need for trial. Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587,
In other words, summary judgment should be granted in those cases in which it is perfectly clear that no genuine issue of material fact remains unresolved and inquiry into the facts is unnecessary to clarify the application of the law. McKinney v. Bd. of Trustees,
With these standards in mind, the court now focuses its attention on whether summary judgment is appropriate for Plaintiffs cause of action for employment discrimination.
IV. DISCUSSION: TITLE VII DISCRIMINATION
Title VII prohibits an employer from, among other things, “fail[ing] or refusing] to hire or ... discharging] any individual, or otherwise ... discriminating] against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l). Title VII has been amended by the Pregnancy Discrimination Act to clarify that the prohibition against disсrimination on the basis of sex extends to discrimination on account of pregnancy: “Women affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions shall be treated the same for all employment-related purposes ... as other persons not so affected but similar in them ability or inability to work.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(k).
The Suprеme Court has established a now-familiar scheme for resolving employment discrimination cases under Title VII. McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792,
Summary judgment in favor of a Title VII defendant may be appropriate at either the first or third stages of the analysis if Plaintiff fails to offer sufficient evidence to meet her burdens. Ballinger v. North Carolina Agric. Extension Serv.,
Plaintiff attempts to establish a prima facie case of discrimination by meeting the four-part test first articulated in McDonnell Douglas Corp. This test, modified for pregnancy discriminаtion, requires Plaintiff to show: (1) Plaintiff is a member of a protected class; (2) Plaintiff was qualified for the job from which she was discharged; (3) Plaintiff was discharged; (4) Employer filled her position with a non-pregnant person. See LaFleur v. Westridge Consultants,
Plaintiff clearly meets the first three requirements. First, she was pregnant at the time of the termination. Second, Defendants agree that Plaintiff was qualified and performed her job in a satisfactory manner. Third, Plaintiff was terminated.
Plaintiff, however, fails to meet the final part of the McDonnell Douglas Corp. test. It is clear from the evidence of record that Plaintiffs job was eliminated. Plaintiff has produced no evidence that her position was ever reestablished. Therefore, Plaintiff cannot meet the fourth part of the McDonnell Douglas Corp. test becаuse she was never replaced. Her job duties were assumed by the individual restaurant managers and Mr. Ruedinger. It is clear from the record that no one was hired to assume Plaintiffs job responsibilities. Nor was anyone given a compensation package similar to Plaintiff.
In an attempt to create an issue of fact on this point, Plaintiff points to deposition testimony of Mr. Spiegel in which he states that he was told he would have Plaintiffs job and her responsibilities but could not be given Plaintiffs job title because of potential liability in this action. This testimony does not create an issue of fact for two reasons. First, Mr. Spiegel never worked with Plaintiff and, thereforе, does not know what Plaintiffs job entailed. Second, Mr. Spiegel’s testimony demonstrates he had neither the same job nor the same responsibilities as Plaintiff. Mr. Spiegel testified that he was paid $7 an hour and had only “front-end” responsibilities, not any “back-end” paperwork responsibilities.
Plaintiff also alleges that Deborah Luns-ford was hirеd to perform the same duties as Plaintiff. This claim also is without merit. Ms. Lunsford was hired fourteen months after Plaintiffs termination. She was hired as Restaurant Manager at the Hotel. Unlike Plaintiff who was responsible for all Food and Beverage operations, Ms. Lunsford was only responsible for the management of the restaurants at the hotel, not all the Food and Beverage outlets. Also, Ms. Lunsford’s salary at the Hotel, $19,000.00, was $7500.00 less than Plaintiff.
Plaintiff relies on the testimony of a former employee at the Hotel, Pamela Penny, to infer a pattern of discrimination against pregnancy. Ms. Penny was a full-time bartender at the Hotel in 1991. Ms. Penny took leave when she was pregnant. Ms. Penny alleges that Mr. Ruedinger promised she could have her job back when she returned from her pregnancy. When she returned she was given part-time work. Shortly after her return, Ms. Penny quit.
The record shows, however, that Ms. Penny was treated in accordance with the collective bargaining agreement that governed her employment. This agreement required that employees returning from leave would be returned to their job or a similar job, subject to availability. Ms. Penny admitted that she had to be replaced while she went on leave and that her job was filled when she returned. Ms. Penny was given alternative employment, but she did not like it. Ms. Penny did admit that she never had a problem taking maternity leave. This evidence does not allow the court to infer a pattern of discrimination against pregnancy nor does it show a violation of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act. In fact, the existence of a maternity leave policy further supports Defendants’ contention that they did not discriminate based upon pregnancy. See Troupe v. May Department Stores Co.,
One additional fact supporting the conclusion that Plaintiff was not terminated because of her pregnancy is the timing of the decision to eliminate her job. It is undisputed that in the beginning of 1991 Mr. Rued-inger and Syed Abbas met to discuss how to make the Food and Beverage Department more profitable. At this meeting, they decided to eliminate the position of Assistant Food and Beverage Director to reduce the payroll. This decision was made before March 31, 1991 — the date Plaintiff claims she told Mr. Ruedinger that she was pregnant. Because Mr. Ruedinger did not knоw Plaintiff was pregnant until after he decided to eliminate her job, no rational trier of fact could infer that she was the victim of pregnancy discrimination.
V. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the court orders that summary judgment be granted in favor of Defendants.
Notes
. At the time of the alleged discrimination, Defendant Motel Equity Venture Limited Partnership owned thе hotel and Defendant Inn Development and Management, Inc. managed the hotel.
. Mr. Ruedinger claims that he never knew of Plaintiff's pregnancy until after Plaintiff was terminated. For purposes of this motion, however, the court assumes that Mr. Ruedinger knew Plaintiff was pregnant at the time she was terminated.
. This was the second time Plaintiff was prеgnant while working at the Hotel. In the summer of 1988, Plaintiff took medical leave from her job as Beverage Director at the Hotel for the birth of her first child. She was one of nineteen other female employees at the Hotel who worked while pregnant or took leave and returned to work after their pregnancy. Upоn her return, Plaintiff was promoted to the position of Assistant Food and Beverage Director and received a $5000.00 raise. The Food and Beverage Director during Plaintiff’s first pregnancy, however, was not Mr. Ruedinger.
. A prima facie case may also be established through the production of direct evidence of discriminatiоn. In this case, there is no direct evidence of discrimination. Plaintiff produced an affidavit from Connie Clifton stating that Mr. Ruedinger had a consistent pattern of firing female employees and replacing them with male employees. This affidavit is conclusory in nature and does not set forth specific facts upon which it is based. Such an affidavit does not meet the requirements of Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e). More significantly, the affidavit fails to address the issue raised in this action — that Plaintiff was terminated because of her pregnancy.
