Oroville Mercury-Register

Justices consider hearing case on ‘most offensive word’

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON >> Robert Collier says that during the seven years he worked as an operating room aide at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, white nurses called him and other Black employees “boy.” Management ignored two large swastikas painted on a storage room wall. And for six months, he regularly rode an elevator with the N-word carved into a wall.

Collier ultimately sued the hospital, but lower courts dismissed his case. Now, however, beginning with a private conference that was scheduled for Thursday, the Supreme Court is considerin­g for the first time whether to hear the case. (Although the court did not comment, the case remained on its calendar, which likely means it was discussed Thursday.)

Focusing on the elevator graffiti, Collier is asking the justices to decide whether a single use of the N-word in the workplace can create a hostile work environmen­t, giving an employee the ability to pursue a case under Title VII of the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Already, the court’s two newest members, both appointed by President Donald Trump, are on record with seemingly different views. The case is also a test of whether the justices are willing to wade into the ongoing, complex conversati­ons about race happening nationwide. The public could learn as soon as Monday whether the court will take Collier’s case.

Jennifer A. Holmes, a lawyer with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund, which has urged the court to take the case, says she hopes the conversati­ons taking place nationally will push the justices in that direction.

Doing so gives the court an “opportunit­y to show that they’re not insensitiv­e to issues of race,” Holmes said. And courts are “all the time” confrontin­g workplace discrimina­tion claims involving use of the N-word, she said. The question for the justices, she said, is just whether someone who experience­s an isolated instance of the N-word can “advance their case beyond the beginning stage.”

Two of the court’s nine justices have experience with similar cases.

In 2019, as a judge on the U. S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote an opinion for a panel of three judges who unanimousl­y ruled against a Black man who sued over alleged discrimina­tion and had his case dismissed at an early stage. Among other things, he claimed a former supervisor at the Illinois Department of Transporta­tion called him the N-word.

“The n-word is an egregious racial epithet,” she wrote. But she said previous cases have made clear that an employee can’t win his case “simply by proving that the word was uttered.” He also must prove that “use of this word altered the conditions of his employment and created a hostile or abusive working environmen­t.”

Barrett’s colleague, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, has said he sees things differentl­y.

In 2013, as a judge on the U. S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, Kavanaugh was a part of a threejudge panel including nowAttorne­y General Merrick Garland that sided with a Black former Fannie Mae employee who sued alleging racial discrimina­tion. The judges ruled that the man, who said he was called the N-word by a supervisor, shouldn’t have had his case dismissed at an early stage.

Kavanaugh wrote separately about “probably the most offensive word in English.” His view, he said, is that the word’s use in the workplace by a supervisor “suffices by itself to establish a racially hostile work environmen­t.”

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