MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Ella Wade alleges age discrimination and retaliation under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act and under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-l et seq. The defendant moves for summary judgment. For the following reasons, the motion is granted in favor of the defendant.
I. Background,
Plaintiff Ella Wade (“Ms. Wade”) was an employee of defendant Lerner New York, Inc. (“Lerner”) for approximately nineteen years until being terminated on April 27, 1997 at the age of 52. From October 1996 to April of 1997, Ms. Wade alleges that her employer subjected her to discrimination based on her age and because she filed a discrimination complaint.
Ms. Wade alleges that she frequently requested a promotion to the position of Co-Manager or Assistant Manager, including three times during the fourth quarter of 1996. Instead, four younger employees were promoted. Ms. Wade further alleges that she requested but was denied the training defendant claims was necessary to receive a promotion.
On November 21,1996, Ms. Wade claims she arrived for work at Lerner on time and was granted permission by her supervisor to take a brief break to settle her stomach. Nonetheless, her supervisor reported to the store manager that Ms. Wade had falsified her time sheet. Ms. Wade denied this but was disciplined via a written warning. On December 5, 1996, Ms. Wade filed an age discrimination complaint with the Illinois Human Rights Commission which included claims of discriminatory discipline and failure to promote.
Ms. Wade claims that in response to her complaint of discrimination, Lerner retaliated by reducing her hours. Ms. Wade then filed an additional complaint with the Illinois Human Rights Commission for retaliation on April 23, 1997. Ms. Wade was fired on April 27, 1997 for insubordination, complaining and being discourteous to customers, and for grabbing her supervisor by the wrist. The events which occurred on April 26, 1997 are vigorously disputed by the parties. Although several witnesses, including customers, wrote statements corroborating at least one of these reasons, Ms. Wade claims the events were fabricated and denies them all. Ms. Wade claims that she simply reminded her supervisors of her medical condition and requested a minor accommodation; she denies raising her voice, being discourteous to anyone, or touching Ms. Stovall, and claims that the customers who complained were induced to make up their statements because they were friends of her supervisor based on conversations she overheard between them.
*884 Both the discrimination and retaliation complaint were cross filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”), which issued a right-to-sue letter on June 25, 1998 on both charges. Defendant moves for summary judgment on all claims.
II. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is appropriate where there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Lexington Ins. Co. v. Rugg & Knopp,
III. ADEA Discrimination Claims
Under the ADEA, employers are prohibited from discriminating on the basis of age against employees who are at least forty years old.
See
29 U.S.C. §§ 623(a), 631(a). The plaintiff may prove her case using direct evidence or via the indirect burden-shifting method of
McDonnell Douglas v. Green,
A.
To support her discriminatory discipline claim, Ms. Wade first has the burden of establishing a prima facie case of age discrimination by showing she was: (1) in the protected age group of 40 or older; (2) performing her job satisfactorily; (3) subjected to a materially adverse employment action; and (4) treated less favorably than younger employees.
Taylor v. Canteen Corp.,
For purposes of this motion, I accept that on November 21, 1996, Ms. Wade arrived at work on time but took a brief break after being granted permission by her supervisor; arguably, this is not an infraction of Lerner’s rules. Nonetheless, Ms. Wade’s supervisor, Ms. Stovall, informed the store manager, Ms. Shines-Wilson, that Ms. Wade falsified her time card and did not request permission for a short break. Ms. Shines-Wilson then issued a special performance review (“SPR”), essentially a written reprimand. Ms. Wade admits that Stovall did not see her at the store until 8:19, apparently because she was in the stock room rather than on the sales floor. This seems to be a reasonable explanation, but could also give Ms. Stovall cause to believe that Ms. Wade had just arrived and was indeed late to work. Even if Stovall lied about allowing Ms. Wade to take a break when she felt ill, it is not unreasonable for the store manag
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er to believe a supervisor instead of an employee and discipline that employee accordingly. Even if this reliance was wrong, there is no evidence that it was discriminatory or dishonest. An employer’s honest belief in an erroneous decision cannot support a claim of discrimination.
Kariotis v. Navistar Int’l Transp. Corp.,
B.
Ms. Wade also alleges that she was denied a promotion due to her age. To meet her prima facie case, Ms. Wade must establish that: (1) she was a member of the protected class; (2) she applied and was qualified for the position sought; (3) she was rejected for the position; and (4) someone younger than she was given the position.
Sample v. Aldi Inc.,
Ms. Wade is over forty so within the ambit of the ADEA’s protection, and, although Lerner contends that Ms. Wade never “applied” for a manager position, I must accept her sworn testimony that she did so — in which case, she was rejected since she was never made a manager. In addition, four employees significantly younger than she were promoted to managerial positions. Lerner argues that Ms. Wade does not meet her prima facie case because she was not qualified to become a manager. However, a candidate need only be minimally qualified, not possess superi-. or qualifications; furthermore, Lerner admits that it does not employ a definitive list of required qualifications for promotion decisions. The Seventh Circuit eschews a mechanical application of the burden shifting approach, so I proceed to consider Ms. Wade’s qualifications in the context of whether she meets her burden of showing pretext.
Fuka,
Lerner argues that Ms. Wade was not promoted for the following legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons: (1) she was disciplined for falsifying her time records, (2) others were more qualified than she, specifically in operating a cash register or demonstrating aptitude to operate a cash register; and (3) she had a record of attendance problems. With respect to Ms. Wade’s SRM for falsifying time, Ms. Wade alleges she first requested a promotion in October; because the timecard incident did not occur until late November, it cannot be considered as a factor against her promotion prior to that time. Lerner also claims that Ms. Wade lacked the ability or aptitude to operate a cash register, a supposed prerequisite for a managerial position. Ms. Wade contends that she specifically requested but was denied the opportunity to receive any substantial training using the new cash registers. Her only exposure was a few minutes during which she did not have the opportunity to learn or demonstrate her aptitude. Lerner’s promotion policy is admittedly subjective and left to the discretion of the employee’s immediate supervisors, as is the decision as to which employees to train in new skills. Lerner controlled the means by which its employees could “qualify” for managerial positions, and a fact finder could therefore reasonably believe that Ms. Wade was purposefully denied the opportunity to learn the new cash register system because of an impermissible bias or attitude about older workers, e.g. that they lack the skills to learn new technologies.
Lerner’s final reason for the failure to promote Ms. Wade due to attendance problems is more persuasive. Ms. Wade admits that she has been written up for tardiness on three occasions, and since she fails to show that those promoted also had attendance issues, she cannot refute this legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason. In fact, Lerner claims that none of those promoted during the time period in question had any disciplinary issues, and the plaintiff — despite full discovery — offers no evidence to the contrary. Lerner has a large number of employees and potential managerial candidates. I cannot sit as a “su-
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perpersonnel department” and dictate that Lerner may not favor employees with a clean attendance record over those with a record of tardiness for promotion opportunities.
Jackson v. E.J. Brack Corporation,
IV. Retaliation
Under the ADEA, it is unlawful for an employer to discharge or otherwise discriminate against an employee because that employee has brought a charge under the ADEA. See 29 U.S.C. § 623(d). Retaliation cases are analyzed under the
McDonnell Douglas
framework.
See Alexander v. Gerhardt Enter., Inc.,
Ms. Wade alleges Lerner reduced her hours, then concocted grounds to terminate her in retaliation for filing a discrimination claim. Ms. Wade has met the first two factors of her prima facie case because she engaged in a protected activity, the filing of a discrimination complaint, and suffered adverse employment consequences after she filed the complaint. Ms. Wade claims that her supervisor, Ms. Sto-vall-who was involved in the incidents leading to her discharge-made frequent references to her discrimination claim and told her on several occasions between December of 1996 and April of 1997 that Lerner wanted to terminate her because of it but did not yet have a reason to do so. Ms. Wade filed her original complaint with the Illinois Human Rights Commission on December 5, 1996, and alleges her hours decreased shortly thereafter. Ms. Wade filed her second complaint on April 23, 1997, and the events which the defendant claims caused her termination occurred on April 26, 1997. Ms. Wade thus argues that the causal link is established by Ms. Stovall’s statements about her discrimination claim and the close temporal proximity between her complaint and the adverse consequences which followed.
The time line between Ms. Wade’s initial complaint, coupled with the statements of Ms. Stovall, her direct supervisor, are sufficient to establish the necessary causal link to her claim of reduced hours. Lerner, whose employees are not guaranteed a specific number hours, offers a satisfactory explanation why Ms. Wade’s hours decreased in the short term: the holiday season rush was over. In addition, Lerner has provided evidence that Ms. Wade’s average hours for the period before her complaint was comparable to her hours after the complaint.
The causal link to her termination is much more tenuous. Although Ms. Wade filed her second discrimination claim the day before the events which ultimately led to her termination, she offers no evidence that Lerner was actually aware of her retaliation claim, so it cannot form the basis for the causal link. Ms. Wade was fired nearly five months after she filed her first EEOC complaint,
see Hughes v. Derwinski,
Summary judgment is GRANTED on all counts in favor of the defendant.
