Black Workers File Racial Bias Suit Against Signature Flight Support Corp - $10 Million
Originally published in The San Francisco Chronicle FEBRUARY 9, 2005
Copyright 2005 The Chronicle Publishing Co.
By: Bob Egelko
African American
employees have filed a $10 million discrimination suit against the San
Francisco branch of Signature Flight Support Corp., the world's largest
service company for private planes and executive jets, claiming unfair
treatment in pay, promotions and firings.
One plaintiff in the proposed class-action suit, filed last week in
U.S. District Court, said he had been told by the general manager at a
2003 meeting that he had two drawbacks as a supervisor: "You're black,
and you have a stammering problem."
The
remark to Donald Hamilton showed both race and disability
discrimination, the lawsuit said. Another plaintiff claimed sex
discrimination, saying she was subjected to lewd comments and unwanted
touching and sexual advances. Two of the four plaintiffs said they had
been fired for made-up reasons when they complained.
"Not only are there a few racists,
obviously, on the ground, but higher-ups at the corporation have known
about the problem and failed to take any action," Louise Renne, the
former San Francisco city attorney who represents the plaintiffs, said
Tuesday.
Signature, a U.S. subsidiary of
the British company BBA Group, has 1,700 employees at more than 40 U.S.
airports, the suit said. Renne said she didn't know how many African Americans worked for the company in San Francisco.
An inquiry to Signature was referred to a spokesman at its national
headquarters in Orlando, Fla. The spokesman did not return a telephone
call. Hamilton, the lead plaintiff, worked for nearly seven years
servicing aircraft without a promotion despite continual
recommendations by his supervisors, the suit said. He was promoted to
supervisor in 2003 by general manager Steve True, who commented on his
race and stammering at his first supervisors' meeting, according to the
suit. True then undercut Hamilton's authority, the suit said, by
refusing to announce his promotion or enforce disciplinary actions
Hamilton proposed against other staffers.
True demoted Hamilton for an alleged violation that had not been used
to discipline others, but reinstated him last November after a federal
civil rights agency found reasonable grounds for his discrimination
claims, the suit said.
Another plaintiff, Bobby Jones, said that after he complained to an official from company headquarters about racial
slurs and disparities in pay, he was assaulted by a man who identified
himself as a friend of True, and was fired after reporting that
incident. Plaintiff Aljarice Sanders said she had been subjected to racial
and sexual name-calling and harassment, complained to a federal agency
and was fired less than two weeks later.E-mail Bob Egelko at
begelko@sfchronicle.com.