MEMORANDUM ORDER
Before the court is a defense motion [# 22] to dismiss some but not all counts of a multi-count employment discrimination complaint. The motion is granted in part: Count 1, charging discriminatory failures to promote, is untimely; Count 6, charging retaliatory removal, was waived; and because the plaintiff failed to exhaust her administrative remedies, the court lacks jurisdiction over Count 9, charging unlawful seizure of wages, and those parts of Count 2 that charge seizure of wages and work product disparagement. The motion to dismiss Count 8, which charges discriminatory assignment to training opportunities, is denied. The reasons for this order are set forth below.
Count 1 (Discriminatory Failures to Promote)
Count 1, charging discriminatory failures to promote, purports to cover the period November 1, 1995 to September 10, 1999, but its specific allegation is that non-African American co-workers (with no more experience or education than plaintiff had) received two grade increases between November 1995 and July 1997, while plaintiff received none.
A timely administrative charge is a prerequisite to initiation of a Title VII action.
Jarrell v. United States Postal Service,
A plaintiff seeking to establish a continuing violation must show “[i] a series of related acts, one or more of which falls within the limitations period, or [ii] the maintenance of a discriminatory system both before and during the limitations period.”
McKenzie v. Sawyer,
Nor is this an appropriate case for equitable tolling under 29 C.F.R. § 1614.105(a)(2). The D.C. Circuit has allowed equitable tolling where the plaintiff failed to contact an EEO counselor in reliance on the advice of a government official,
Jarrell v. USPS,
Count 6 (Retaliatory Removal)
After her removal from federal service on June 25, 1999, Ms. Williams was advised that her options were to file an internal grievance or to file a complaint with the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB). 2 She elected to file with the MSPB, alleging that she had been removed in retaliation for making certain disclosures protected by the Whistleblower Protection Act (WPA). In her MSPB appeal, she also claimed that her removal was in retaliation for her EEO activities. She then withdrew the claim of retaliation for her EEO activities, allegedly at the suggestion and encouragement of the MSPB administrative judge. When she later attempted to assert that claim before the agency EEO office, it was dismissed because her claim of retaliation for whis-tleblower activities was pending before the MSPB.
A mixed-case complaint may be filed with an agency EEO department or with the MSPB, but not in both places at once.
See
5 U.S.C. § 7702; 29 C.F.R. § 1614.302(b). A plaintiff is required to exhaust her claims in the forum she has chosen before filing a civil action.
See McAdams v. Reno,
Her first argument is that if she had received notice of her right to appeal to the EEO office she would have taken that route. Defendant was not required to inform her of her right to appeal to the EEO office, however, because she had not by that time. 29 C.F.R. § 1614.302(b).
Plaintiffs second argument is that she should not be penalized for relying on the erroneous advice of the administrative judge that she could bring her EEO claim separately. This estoppel argument fails. Even if Ms. Williams’ version of events is credited fully,
3
she was represented by counsel at the time, a fact that seriously weakens her reliance claim.
McAdams,
the only case plaintiff cites in support of this argument, found that misinformation alone is not enough to support a waiver of the exhaustion requirement.
Count 8 (Racial Discrimination in Professional Training)
Ms. Williams’ claim of discrimination in the denial of her request for professional training is pleaded without great detail, and may be in considerable jeopardy if it is later made to appear, on undisputed facts, that the alleged denial of training had no “materially adverse consequences affecting ... her future employment opportunities” and was therefore not “adverse action.”
See Brown v. Brody,
Count 9 and, Parts of Count 2 (Seizure of Wages, Work Product Disparagement)
Ms. Williams alleges, in Count 9 and in Count 2, that OPIC withheld money from her wages that should have been paid to her, and she alleges in Count 2 that her work product was disparaged at OPIC. The EEOC dismissed these strange claims pursuant to 29 C.F.R. §§ 1614.107(a) and (b) for plaintiffs failure to respond adequately to a request for more information. Such a failure constitutes failure to exhaust administrative remedies,
Wilson v. Pena,
Notes
. She alleges that promotions are approved on an ad-hoc basis.
. Defendant slates that he did not inform plaintiff of her right to file with the EEO office because claims under the WPA are exclusively within the jurisdiction of the MSPB. Def.’s Reply to Pl.'s Opp’n to Def.'s Mot. for Partial J. on the Pleadings at 3.
But see Robinson v. Rubin,
. No record was made of the colloquy with the administrative judge.
