2/11/2015
A trial date could be set as soon as Friday, according to court officials. Court records give the following account of the case:
The discussion proceeded. The word was not used on the broadcast that night.
Asked on Tuesday if she had a comment about the case, Joyce Evans said “I have absolutely none.”
According to the suit, Evans told him, “Because you’re white you can
never understand what it’s like to be called a n----- and … you cannot
use the word n------.” Evans has denied using the word in her
conversation with Burlington, according to court papers.
Burlington said he attempted to mend bridges by apologizing
personally to several African American station employees. But according
to the suit, the apologies weren’t enough for Evans, who was out to get
Burlington fired.
Burlington was summoned to speak with the station’s Department of
Human Resources, Ameena Ali, who is black, and was asked to give his
side of the story. Burlington repeated the conversation from the staff
meeting, including the epithet he had used.
Surrick wrote in last month’s memorandum that an African American
employee who was likewise asked to give an account of the staff meeting
“used the epithet several times in the email that he sent” to the
station’s management. “He was not disciplined.”
But soon after, the station’s management began to receive requests
from employees that they not be assigned to work with Burlington, saying
they were concerned for their safety if they were seen on the street
with him.
Evans contacted the station's Department of Human Resources to say
she was hearing comments from “people talking to [her] on the street”
and said she had concerns about her on-air chemistry with Burlington
after his use of the N-word.
On July 12, 2007, management told Burlington his contract would not
be renewed. Burlington told the the station’s management that it would
ruin his career if they terminated him.
Burlington never returned to the station. He was paid through the end of his contract, which expired on Feb 19, 2008.
Burlington’s attorney, reached Monday, sounded relieved that the case might soon be heard by a jury.
“[T]his appears to be a case in which management simply rubberstamped
the desire of some of Plaintiff’s coworkers [of whom Evans was the most
visible] to see him terminated,” Surrick wrote in October.
source
A
racial-discrimination suit that involves use of the N-word filed by a
white, former Philadelphia news anchor may finally be heading to a
federal courtroom.
The case has been delayed multiple times. Days before it was supposed
to go to trial in January 2011, attorneys for Fox successfully argued
that the case should wait until the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on a
similar case. The court ruled in favor of that plaintiff two months
later, but Burlington’s suit continued to languish for four more years.
Tom Burlington, an award-winning TV reporter, claims he was
fired by Fox29 for using the N-word -- without malice -- during a
newsroom meeting, while black employees were not punished for using the
same word at the station.
U.S. District Judge R. Barclay Surrick, noting the case had
been stalled long enough, wrote last month in a memorandum that “[w]e
will not further delay its resolution by permitting ‘piecemeal review
and its attendant delays and waste of time.’ ”
A trial date could be set as soon as Friday, according to court officials. Court records give the following account of the case:
Burlington used the reviled word in a June 23, 2007 staff
meeting as Fox reporters and producers discussed a story about the
symbolic burial of the very same N-word by the Philadelphia Youth
Council of the NAACP. During the mock funeral -- complete with
pallbearers, a casket, and a eulogy -- the epithet reportedly was spoken
at least 100 times.
During the discussion about the story, Burlington, who was
scheduled to co-anchor the evening news that night, asked the question
that would destroy his career.
“Does this mean we can finally say the word n-----?”
Burlington asked. One of the show’s producers, who is black, exclaimed,
“I can’t believe you just said that!”
But gossip that Burlington had uttered the word during the
meeting immediately rippled through the station. His co-anchor, Joyce
Evans, who is black and had not attended the staff meeting, confronted
Burlington.
Evans remains the anchor of the weekend “Fox 29 News at
Six.” The year after Burlington was fired, The Philadelphia Association
of Black Journalists named her “Broadcast Journalist of the Year.”
The next day Evans called the home of the station’s
Assistant News Director, Leslie Tyler, who is black. Evans told her
about the staff meeting and said that employees were upset over
Burlington’s words. Tyler then called the reporters and producers who
had been in the meeting but did not call Burlington, according to court
papers.
She allegedly encouraged fellow employees to denounce
Burlington to management. Evans tried to enlist a white coworker to
complain because “[t]he only people who have complained so far have been
black people,” according to a deposition cited by Judge Surrick.
“Tom, you’re still saying the word; why are you doing
that?” Ali responded, according to court papers. This brought the
meeting to an immediate end, and Burlington was suspended.
On July 3, 2007, Burlington was given a stern warning in
writing, informing him that his “behavior was unacceptable and will not
be tolerated. You will not be warned again.” The letter ordered
Burlington to attend racial-sensitivity training. Burlington immediately
scheduled a session.
After attending the racial-sensitivity session on July 6,
2007, Burlington said the company’s counselor told him she did not
believe that he “had racial bias or related issues” and declared him fit
to return to work. That was not to last.
Surrick, in a memorandum published in October, wrote that
“[t]he evidence suggests that when Evans intervened, the investigation
was largely complete and the final determination made that Plaintiff
would be put back on the air.”
According to court papers, the station’s news director,
Philip Metlin, who is white, told Burlington that he would “come
through this without any problems.” The station’s General Manager, Mike
Renda, who is white, told Burlington that their concern for Burlington’s
safety was the basis for the decision.
Despite 20 years in the business and a resume that includes
an Edward R. Murrow Award, he has not been able to find another job in
TV news. Burlington now sells real estate on the Main Line.
“We are very much looking forward to this trial,” said Laura Mattiacci. “We’ve been waiting many years.”
Representatives for Fox29 could not be reached immediately for comment.
When Burlington filed suit in May 2009, he named as defendants News
Corporation, Fox Television Stations, Inc. and Fox Television Stations
of Philadelphia. The suit seeks unspecified damages.
In his October memorandum, Surrick concluded that there was
a “genuine issue” whether FOX Television Stations had been negligent in
permitting “its employees’ discriminatory acts” to cause Burlington’s
termination.
source
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