CHERYL L. LEVITT, Complainant,
VS.
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, and JOHN CRIST, Respondents.
FINDINGS OF FACT
1. The Complainant, Cheryl
Levitt, timely filed verified complainant CP# 09-85-13488 with
the Iowa Civil Rights Commission on September 3, 1985, alleging
a violation of Iowa Code section 601A.6, discrimination in employment
on the basis of sex (pregnancy) in that Respondents failed
to hire her on or about August 20, 1985.
2. The complaint was served
on the Respondents, General Electric Company of Burlington, Iowa
and Fairfield, Connecticut and John Crist on September 20, 1985.
3. The complaint was investigated,
probable cause found, conciliation unsuccessfully attempted and
Notice of Hearing issued on December 31, 1986.
4. Complainant had been
a utility operator for General Electric from October 1980 to July
1982. The last six months of that period she was a publication
clerk. She was laid off and her right to recall expired in July
of 1983. In 1985, she heard that General Electric was recalling
prior employees. She called the office to talk with Crist. He
was on vacation, so she talked with the secretary, Cathy Garrison.
This was around August 3, 1985. Garrison agreed to leave a message
for Crist who was to return around August 18. On August 19, Levitt
called Crist and discussed returning to work for General Electric.
Crist made an appointment for a physical examination of Levitt
with the nurse, Dora Horn, for August 20.
5. Levitt kept her appointment
with Nurse Horn who then examined her. Levitt was pregnant at
the time. The nurse asked her due date. Levitt said it was October
12, 1985.
6. Levitt also was given
an appointment with the plant doctor for the 21st at 2:00 p.m.
7. Before she could keep
her appointment with the plant doctor, Crist called Levitt and
informed her that he had not realized she was pregnant and if
he had known he would not have offered her the position. Crist
canceled her appointment with the plant doctor and did not hire
Levitt.
8. At this time, Levitt
was employed at the Summer Street Road Animal Clinic as a secretary-receptionist.
She performed a variety of tasks with no restrictions. She wanted
to work at General Electric because the pay and benefits were
better. She continued to work at the Clinic after General Electric
failed to hire her.
9. Levitt delivered her
baby on October 23, 1985. She was released to work in November
with no restrictions. She was off work approximately four weeks.
10. The end of January 1986,
Crist called Levitt and offered her a job. She started working
for General Electric on February 3, 1986, at a rate of $10.60
per hour. She worked on the second shift, as a utility operator,
the same position she held in her earlier employment with General
Electric. Levitt required no retraining in order to assume these
duties. She was laid off again approximately August 15, 1986.
11. General Electric provided
disability insurance immediately upon hire for its employees for
up to 26 weeks. The rate was 60% of weekly pay up to $225.00 a
week maximum. Benefits started on the 8th day of disability or
first day of either hospitalization as a bed patient or surgery
performed in an approved ambulatory surgical facility, whichever
was earlier. Benefits for disability caused by pregnancy or complications
of pregnancy were the same. (See Complainant's Exhibit 2).
12. General Electric also
had an Individual Development Program (IDP) under which they reimbursed
tuition expense for approved courses. Eligibility occurred when
a full-time employee completed at least six months of service
at the time the course started, or when an employee was laid off,
but retained recall rights. (See Complainant's Exhibit 3).
13. Levitt did attend Southeastern
Community College beginning August 19, 1986. The tuition paid
was $858.00. She was laid off August 15, 1986, and did not have
recall rights. She did not apply for the program while working.
14. Levitt retained Attorney
Goddard to assist her with this Complaint. His fees amounted to
$270.00 (See Complainant's Exhibit 5).
15. The probable starting
date had Levitt been hired was September 3, 1985.
16. Levitt earned $653.63
at the Animal Clinic in 1986 prior to starting with General Electric.
She was earning $5.25 an hour. During the period September 3,
1985 through December 31, 1985, she earned $2,912.5 1. She worked
less than full-time for about a month prior to delivery, in order
to train her replacement on the job and was off work for four
weeks after delivery.
17. Mark Miller, a prior
General Electric employee (1974- 1977), was hired on September
22, 1985, as a temporary employee and worked until August of 1986.
He does not recall Crist asking him specifically if he would be
available for the entire temporary period.
18. Daniel Wood who was
on lay off from the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant (IAAP) was hired
by General Electric for temporary employment. During this period
he was recalled and quit his job with General Electric to return
to the IAAP. He doesn't remember whether Crist asked him specifically
as to his continued availability. He required no training for
the temporary work. [Tr. R. 60]
19. Steven Hill, another
employee of IAAP on lay off, applied and was hired for a temporary
position with General Electric. He started approximately the last
week in October and left the last week in November when he was
recalled by IAAP. Hill had worked for General Electric 8 years
ago. He required no training for his temporary work. [Tr. R.
88]
20. The Burlington operation of General Electric, since 1961, was the manufacturing of switch gears, an electrical distribution business. In 1983, as a result of economic conditions, they undertook a study which resulted in reorganization. Layoffs resulted. In January 1984, the business was restructured and a vacuum interrupter operation was brought into the Burlington plant from Philadelphia. In January 1985, the low voltage product line was transferred from North Carolina to Burlington and the Burlington switchboard product line of about 200 employees transferred to Philadelphia. This transition necessitated hiring temporary employees. Crist was requested to consider first individuals with recall rights, then individuals with General Electric experience but no recall rights and next people with manufacturing experience. This order was to minimize retraining. The temporary jobs were expected to last through December 1985.
21. Respondents state that their failure to hire Levitt was not
based on her pregnancy, but was based on the fact that she would
not be available to work during the entire period of the temporary
employment.
22. Respondents also state
that they would not have hired anyone who either indicated, or
the company learned, would not be available. However the G.E.
employee relations specialist did not ask applicants about continued
availability (Tr.pp. 197-198), and none of the applicants who
were hired could recall the Crist asked them about availability.
(Tr.pp.49,79,87,140) .
23. Respondents further
state that had Levitt's due date been
after December 31, 1985,
she would have been hired.
24. One-hundred sixteen
(116) temporary employees were hired during this transition time.
Prior to that, 88 employees were recalled. The last temporary
employee hired in 1985 was hired on November 18, 1985. All but
3 completed their temporary term of employment.
25. Ellen Halton-Dean, a
former employee, was called back to work. She held another full-time
job and Crist expressed his concern for her ability to handle
both jobs. She continued working until August 1986. She testified
that the length of training required depended upon the person
and task. The training could last for a couple hours to a couple
of weeks.
26. Dora L. Horn, Plant
Nurse, has been employed by Respondents for 18 years. She interviewed
Levitt on August 20, 1985. When Horn found out Levitt was pregnant
and that her expected delivery date was October 12, she told Crist.
From her experience, Horn believed the average time off because
of childbirth was six weeks. She did not discuss the amount of
time off with Levitt.
27. Dolhancyk, employee
relations manager for General Electric, testified that if Levitt
had been applying for a permanent position the unavailability
because of pregnancy would not have made a difference.
28. John Crist was a specialist
in employee relations for General Electric during the time at
issue. After he was informed by Horn that Levitt was pregnant
and her delivery date was in October, he assumed she would be
unavailable for work for possibly six weeks and that under those
circumstances it would not be feasible to hire her.
29. To qualify for the IDP program, it was necessary to be a full-time employee for six or more months or to have recall rights. To have recall rights, the employee was required to have 52 consecutive weeks of employment prior to lay off. It was also required that employees absent for more than two weeks during the 52 consecutive weeks have the excess of two weeks deducted from their total number of weeks.
30. The utility operators' area of work included a variety of
jobs.
31. Crist testified that
during this period of time he posted jobs on almost a daily basis
and that it was difficult to fill some jobs because employees
did not want to transfer into a temporary job. He said that in
a few cases he even hired off the street.
32. Levitt did not again
contact Crist. The next contact was when Crist called her in January
1986 to see if she was available to start work in February.
33. The rate of pay for
employees starting in September 1985 was $9.655, for first shift
work.
34. The temporary employees hired in 1985 were covered by the company's insurance policy.