Cheryl Vandehey, Complainant
Batzner Pest Management, Respondent
The decision of the
administrative law judge (copy attached) is modified and, as modified, is
affirmed.
Accordingly, the complaint of discrimination is dismissed.
Dated and mailed September 16, 2016
746
BY THE COMMISSION:
/s/ Laurie R. McCallum, Chairperson
/s/ C. William Jordahl, Commissioner
/s/ David B. Falstad, Commissioner
Procedural Posture
This case is before the
commission to consider the question of whether the complainant's complaint was
properly dismissed based upon her failure to respond within 20 days to
correspondence from the department concerning the complaint sent by certified
mail to her last known address. An
administrative law judge for the Equal Rights Division issued a decision in this
matter, and a timely petition for commission review was filed.
The commission has considered the
petition and the positions of the parties, and has reviewed the evidence before
it. Based on its review, the commission
agrees with the decision of the administrative law judge, and it adopts the
findings and conclusion in that decision as its own,
except that it makes the following:
Modification
The first full paragraph on page 3 of
the administrative law judge's decision is deleted.
In her petition for
commission review the complainant argues that the reason she did not respond to
the letter from the Equal Rights Division by the deadline is that the documents
attached were the response to her discrimination complaint and she did not
realize this was for her retaliation case.
This argument fails. In the
first place, department records indicate that the complainant had already
requested an independent investigation of her underlying discrimination
complaint (ERD Case No. CR201402109), so her assertion that she believed the
department was asking her if she wanted it to conduct an independent
investigation of that complaint is not credible.
Further, and more importantly, the statute mandates dismissal of a
complaint where there is a failure to respond within 20 days to correspondence
from the department concerning the complaint that is sent by certified mail to
the complainant at her last known address. See, Wis. Stat. § 111.39(3).
The law does not provide for any exceptions, even where the complainant
had a good reason for failing to respond.[2]
Mohr v. Kohler, ERD Case No.
CR200002906 (LIRC Dec. 27, 2001), Reed v. Innovative Health and Fitness, ERD Case No. CR2000403483
(LIRC July 15, 2005). The dismissal
of the complaint is, therefore, affirmed.
cc: |
[1]
Appeal
Rights:
See
the green enclosure for the time limit and
procedures for obtaining judicial review of this
decision. If
you seek judicial review, you
must
name the Labor and Industry Review Commission as
a respondent in the petition for judicial
review.
Appeal rights and answers to frequently
asked questions about appealing a fair
employment decision to circuit court are also
available on the commission's website at
http://lirc.wisconsin.gov.
[2]The
administrative law judge found that the
complainant did not establish it was beyond her
control to respond to the correspondence from
the department within 20 days.
However, the statute mandates dismissal
where no timely response is received to the
department's certified correspondence, and does
not provide an exception where a party can show
that the failure to respond in a timely manner
was for a reason beyond the party's control.
uploaded 2017/01/12