Manchester Journal Inquirer
Former EB Worker Gets $750,000
By Alex Wood
May 15, 2000
A federal jury on Friday awarded a Glastonbury woman $750,000 in a
sexual-harassment lawsuit against Electric Boat, ruling the company failed to take
"prompt, remedial action" against the conduct by her male co-workers on a
nuclear project in Windsor.
But Senior Judge Gerard L. Goettel, who presided over Judith
Dobrich's lawsuit against EB in U.S. District Court in Waterbury, appears almost certain
to reduce the award to $300,000 because of a cap in federal law.
Dobrich, 56, alleged a series of harassing acts by her male
co-workers, which included lewd drawings and displays in the workplace, use of bad
language and insulting remarks, and three instances of unwanted touching by one co-worker.
She argued that the harassment included an incident in which her
wrist was injured when another worker kicked a chair at her. In a separate incident, she
said, her chair was slashed while she was away from the job in what she believed was an
attempt to terrorize her.
EB, a division of General Dynamics Corp., argued that its managers
responded appropriately when Dobrich complained about misconduct by co-workers.
The company's lawyer and its witnesses stressed, for example, that
the worker involved in the touching incidents was given a final written warning, meaning
that one more incident could have led to his firing.
And they contended that Dobrich didn't report a number of the
incidents.
They stressed, for example, that her original written report on
the wrist injury said she had tried to prevent a chair from falling on her.
But the jury of seven men and two women felt the company's
response was too little, too late.
"They could have stopped it before it went any further,
basically," said one of about a half-dozen male jurors who gathered in the sun
outside the courthouse after the 12:30 p.m. verdict.
Another juror said the company should have made a strong response
to the first incident, either by circulating a memo or calling a meeting of workers.
Dobrich was the sole woman in a union trade job on the Windsor
site, where EB was decommissioning a prototype nuclear reactor dating from the 1950s for
the Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory. "They didn't do anything about it until they were
already in trouble," the juror said.
Dobrich filed at least two complaints with the state Commission on
Human Rights and Opportunities while working at EB from June 1994 to January 1996.
The jury awarded Dobrich $650,000 in compensatory damages, as well
as $100,000 in punitive damages.
Dobrich was tearful after court but they weren't tears of joy.
Immediately after the jury was excused, the lawyers and the judge
discussed the likely reduction in the award to adhere to the $300,000 cap in the law.
Dobrich made clear she was unhappy about that. "All I wanted
was what the jury said for me to get," she said. "And now it's not going to
happen that way ... . I feel this is taking away my trial by jury."
Dobrich also was unhappy that she wasn't allowed to present all
her evidence to the jury.
She argues that the company retaliated against her for calling the
FBI and Windsor police about the chair-slashing incident.
Just a few minutes after she made the complaint to police from a
guard shack at the Windsor site, she was written up for being away from her work location.
And she was written up again a half-hour later when she returned to the guard shack in
response to a page, she says.
But she couldn't present evidence about those incidents to the
jury because Goettel threw out her retaliation claims before trial on grounds of
insufficient evidence.
Dobrich's lawyer, Robert B. Muchinsky of Hartford, was more upbeat
about the outcome than she.
"That's a very nice win, the way the juries have been
lately," he said.
As an example of how bad the situation was, Muchinsky cited the
company's need to write a memo instructing male employees not to use the bathroom when
Dobrich was cleaning it.
Dobrich was a member of the Laborers union, and most of the
employees involved in the decommissioning and demolition of the old nuclear plant were
members of construction trade unions.
She said she hopes the verdict will encourage others to stand up
against workplace harassment.
"I'm a 56-year-old woman," she said. "Can't
somebody else stand up with me? When these things happen, we need to stand."
EB's lawyer, Neal McNamara of Providence, said in court that he
plans to file a motion to overturn the verdict. If that fails, the company can appeal.
As Dobrich left the courthouse, she waved to the group of jurors standing outside and thanked them briefly. Justice was served," one of the men replied.*L
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