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Public Employee Press
Sex bias firing: Laborer wins new hearing
Court says city human rights
agency “buried” union member’s complaint
“It’s unfortunate that women who work
non-traditional jobs still meet with discrimination.”
— Local 924 President Kyle Simmons
By DIANE S. WILLIAMS
The scales of justice tipped toward Vanessa David when a Manhattan Supreme
Court judge slapped down a decision by the New York City Human Rights
Commission last year and ordered a “full and fair” investigation
of her 1999 gender discrimination complaint.
The court ruling will help Ms. David and Local 924 fight to correct a
double wrong — her unjustified firing and the HRC’s total mishandling
of her charge that she was axed because she was a woman doing a “man’s
job.”
Ms. David is a former City Laborer and Local 924 member who was dismissed
in 1999 after seven months at the Dept. of Education’s Division of
School Facilities. When she turned to the HRC for justice, they buried
her case for over four years and didn’t rule on it until 2003.
The African American former construction worker stands 6 feet one inch
tall. She had been hired by the DOE as a temporary Laborer in 1995. When
a permanent position opened up three years later and a Queens supervisor
called Ms. David for the job, she became the only woman Laborer in the
division. She had no problem lifting heavy boxes of floor tiles or hauling
4-by-8-foot panels of sheetrock up stairs — first as a competency
test and later as part of her daily duties. After six months on the job,
Ms. David received a letter of commendation from the principal of Springfield
Gardens High School 59.
Humiliation
One month later, the Local 924 member was called into a manager’s
office and fired without warning. She had never received the required
interim evaluation. “I was hurt,” Ms. David said. “I felt
humiliated and worthless. I know I worked as hard as any other Laborer.
I just cried and told my shop steward, ‘I can’t believe they
fired me.’”
The supervisor charged that Ms. David “worked slowly, required a
great deal of supervision, showed little initiative and took little responsibility.”
Although no one in her crew ever complained about her work, the DOE also
claimed she had problems working with others. But, 17 co-workers signed
a petition saying Ms. David was “a conscientious worker who handled
the job as well as all the other Laborers.”
According to union reps, some men did not want to work with a woman. Still
others objected to her sexual orientation. Ms. David said she was the
object of daily derogatory comments from her immediate supervisor. She
said his remarks made her recoil, “I didn’t talk, I tried to
make myself invisible and just do my job.”
“It’s unfortunate that women who work non-traditional jobs still
meet with discrimination, and many are discouraged from even applying,”
said Local 924 President Kyle Simmons. “Our local will continue to
fight so our members — male and female — are treated fairly.”
“My plans for a bright future, a house, retirement are gone,”
Ms. David said. She is unable to find a steady job that pays a Laborers’
$42,000 a year. Today she takes construction or security jobs that pay
between $8 and $10 per hour with no health benefits or union protections.
The fight to win back her job dragged on as DOE cowed the Human Rights
Commission into removing its initial investigator from the case and then
let the paperwork languish on a desk for two years.
“Sham investigation”
The court decision pointed out that HRC never visited the job site, despite
requests from Local 924 Vice President John Powers, and never interviewed
Ms. David, Mr. Powers or the BOE supervisor before finding no probable
cause to believe the firing was discriminatory.
“The HRC bungled the investigation plain and simple,” said Powers,
who closely followed Ms. David’s case. “It was a sham at our
member’s expense.”
The state Supreme Court reviewed the HRC’s ruling and concluded Ms.
David was discriminated against twice — first by her BOE supervisor
and then by the very commission set up to protect her rights. In April
the Court annulled the HRC ruling and remanded the case for a new investigation.
“The Human Rights Commission is not willing to reinvestigate, but
wants to rely on the old evidence,” said Ms. David’s lawyer,
Edward G. Bailey. “I’m working to get my job back,” Ms.
David said. “It’s depressing to have to relive this.” “We
want the HRC to interview everyone and do what they failed to do when
Vanessa first came to them for help,” said Mr. Powers. “We want
justice for Vanessa. We won a little bit this round.” The division
has hired no women since it fired Ms. David. Mr. Simmons urges members
who feel they have been discriminated against to contact Local 924 at
212-815-1924.
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