Chicago Sun-Times

WATER MANAGEMENT DEPT. EMPLOYEES FILE FEDERAL SUIT

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel has ordered additional training and an outside review of city policies to insulate himself from discrimina­tion claims and lawsuits tied to the email scandal that forced a highlevel shake- up in the city Department of Water Management.

The pre- emptive strike didn’t work.

On Thursday, four current and two former Water Management employees filed a federal lawsuit against the city and the department at the center of the Hired Truck and city hiring scandals.

The lawsuit accuses the city and top Water Management officials of “a hostile and abusive work environmen­t based on race that includes violence, intimidati­on, retaliatio­n, constructi­ve discharge against the plaintiffs and the class of similarly situated former and current” employees.

It seeks “unpaid wages, liquidated damages, attorneys fees and declarator­y and injunctive relief.”

Plaintiffs in the class- action lawsuit include: current employees Derrick Edmond, Katherin Ealy, Craig Robinson, Eddie Cooper Jr. and Robert T. Laws Jr.; and former employees Vicki Hill and Adebola Fegbemi.

All six are AfricanAme­rican, and according to the lawsuit, all faced “deliberate acts of discrimina­tion during their employment based on their race.” Indeed, the suit claims the on- thejob actions against the plaintiffs “weave a tapestry of hostility that dominates every aspect” of their job.

That tapestry includes getting less- desirable shifts and work assignment­s and being denied pro- motions, transfers, overtime and training opportunit­ies.

Black women were routinely referred to as “b------ and whores,” the suit contends. Those who dared complain were also punished with “unfair, arbitrary and capricious” discipline, plaintiffs claim.

And in spite of a shake- up touched off by the offensive emails that has already swept out five high- level managers, the city has “done nothing to remedy” the toxic environmen­t, the suit contends.

The city was accused of failing to “train, supervise and discipline” Water Management supervisor­s who violate civil rights.

“This lack of training, supervisio­n and discipline fosters a climate in the ranks … that, if an individual’s rights are violated, they do not have to report it, can look the other way and maintain a code of silence,” the lawsuit states, repeating a term more frequently used in the Chicago Police Department.

“This comfort, along with the persistent and defiant code of silence, motivate and bolsters the open and notorious, hostile and abusive work environmen­t based on race and sex created and proliferat­ed in the department.”

Law Department spokesman Bill McCaffrey refused to comment on the specific allegation­s made in the lawsuit.

He issued a statement that the city has “no tolerance for discrimina­tion of employees in any form” and does not “take any allegation­s of this nature lightly.”

Emanuel is committed to giving newly appointed Water Management Commission­er Randy Conner “the support and resources necessary to implement changes and address issues” at the Department of Water Management, he said.

At his confirmati­on hearing earlier this week, Conner assured sympatheti­c aldermen that he would “change the culture” in a department with a history of intoleranc­e and scandal.

 ?? | SUN- TIMES FILE ?? A group of employees have filed a class- action lawsuit over workplace conditions at the city’s Department of Water Management.
| SUN- TIMES FILE A group of employees have filed a class- action lawsuit over workplace conditions at the city’s Department of Water Management.
 ??  ?? Mayor Emanuel
Mayor Emanuel

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