PER CURIAM.
In this Title VII action Susan Engler claims that her former employer, Harris Corporation ("Harris"), discharged her as part of a reduction in force ("RIF") because she complained to Harris management about gender discrimination in the workplace. The district court entered summary judgment in Harris's favor, concluding that Engler failed to present sufficient evidence to establish that Harris's legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for dismissing her were pretextual. Finding no error, we affirm.
On September 5, 2006, Engler began working for Harris as a first-level contracts manager in Harris's Columbia, Maryland office. Harris is a defense contractor and communications and information technology company headquartered in Rochester, New York. Harris hired Engler to support the Communications Security Products ("CSP") group within the company's RF Communications Division ("RFCD"). Engler is the only contracts manager ever employed in the Columbia office. Harris created the position anticipating an increase in CSP business from U.S. Department of Defense contracts.
During the first year of her employment, Engler created an informal meeting group called "Women in Business." The organization served as a support system for female employees seeking career advancement within the company. In August 2008, several women in the group asked Engler to speak with RFCD's president Dana Mehnert about "mistreatment by the male employees." J.A. 1116-17. Engler relayed the grievance to her immediate supervisor Paul Wilson, who subsequently brought the issue to Mehnert's attention. Mehnert ordered an internal investigation of the matter in March 2009.
Meanwhile, CSP's anticipated surge in Defense Department business failed to materialize. RFCD reported a thirty-seven percent drop in sales for the first three quarters of 2009. From January 2009 to March 2009, RFCD decreased its projected revenue for the upcoming fiscal year by nearly $200 million. In May 2009, RFCD forecast a $230 million reduction in revenue from Department of Defense contracts. J.A. 198.
In light of these economic challenges, Harris executives determined that "significant restructuring" through the use of a RIF was necessary. J.A. 199. Harris considered 1,900 RFCD employees for inclusion in the RIF. To evaluate those individuals, Harris utilized a process known as Banding Analysis, which organized employees according to job function and assigned scores associated with a number of criteria: customer and program experience, job performance, skill criticality and versatility, technical and professional knowledge, leadership skills, and anticipated contributions. J.A. 627. After the Banding Analysis identified the layoff selections, Harris conducted an additional statistical investigation known as Adverse Impact Analysis to confirm that the Banding Analysis did not have a disproportionate effect on a protected class.
Harris considered two RFCD contracts managers for inclusion in the RIF — Engler and a male senior contracts manager from the Rochester office. Harris executives believed it economically imprudent to retain both positions; other personnel were capable of absorbing any work that could not be accomplished by a single manager. The contracts manager in Rochester held a position one level senior to Engler, received a higher Banding Analysis score, and had at least two more years of experience.
Ultimately, Harris dismissed a total of 179 employees as a result of the RIF. Ninety-seven of those employees were involuntarily released — seventy-one men and twenty-six women. Engler was one of six people, four men and two women, discharged from the Columbia office. J.A. 628.
In her Title VII suit Engler pressed claims of age and gender discrimination as well as retaliation on the part of Harris for Engler's complaints to her immediate supervisor about gender discrimination in the Columbia office. The district court granted summary judgment to Harris on all counts. On appeal, Engler challenges only the district court's decision to award summary judgment to Harris on her retaliation claim. We review a district court's grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing all facts and reasonable inferences therefrom "in the light most favorable to the party opposing summary judgment."
Title VII prohibits an employer from "discriminat[ing] against any of [its] employees . . . because [the employee] has opposed any practice made an unlawful employment practice by [Title VII]." 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a) (2012). Plaintiffs can prove Title VII violations either through direct or circumstantial evidence of retaliatory animus. The basic proof schemes for discriminatory and retaliatory animus are much the same.
Even assuming
Engler asserts that she was terminated because she raised concerns about gender discrimination in the Columbia office. This bare assertion fails to create an issue of triable fact. As the district court noted, "the CSP group, for which Engler was hired to provide support, was experiencing a downward trend in projected revenue and profit."
Moreover, "Engler's declining performance in the months preceding the RIF is well documented in various email communications."
Furthermore, "Engler offers no evidence to establish that the Banding Analysis was not consistently employed as to all employees considered for the RIF."
Finally, "Harris employees located in the Rochester office absorbed Engler's duties, and no contracts manager has been hired or assigned to the Columbia office since the RIF."
Based substantially on the reasons given in the district court's opinion, we affirm the judgment entered in favor of Harris on Engler's Title VII retaliation claim.