McNeill v. United States Department of Labor ( 2007 )


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  •                NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 07a0452n.06
    Filed: June 27, 2007
    No. 05-4190
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    MICHAEL McNEILL,                       )
    )
    Petitioner,                      )
    )
    v.                                     )                ON PETITION FOR REVIEW
    )                OF AN ORDER OF THE
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT               )                ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW
    OF LABOR,                              )                BOARD
    )
    Respondent,                      )
    )                       OPINION
    CRANE NUCLEAR, INC.; LIBERTY           )
    TECHNOLOGIES, INC.,                    )
    )
    Intervenors.                     )
    _______________________________________)
    Before: MOORE and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges; McKINLEY,* District Judge.
    KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. Petitioner Michael McNeill (“McNeill”)
    petitions for review of the Administrative Review Board’s (“ARB”) Final Decision and Order and
    its Order Denying Reconsideration both of which denied McNeill’s complaint filed pursuant to the
    Energy Reorganization Act (“ERA”), 
    42 U.S.C. § 5851.1
     McNeill’s complaint alleged that his
    *
    The Honorable Joseph H. McKinley, Jr., United States District Judge for the Western
    District of Kentucky, sitting by designation.
    1
    The Secretary of Labor has delegated authority to the Administrative Review Board to
    review an ALJ’s decision in cases arising under the ERA. 
    29 C.F.R. § 24.8
    (a) (2006). Accordingly,
    we review the ARB decision as the decision of the Secretary of Labor.
    employer, Crane Nuclear, Inc. (“Crane”), violated the whistleblower provision of the ERA by
    retaliating against him for engaging in activity protected by the statute. Because the ARB’s
    determination that McNeill was not terminated is supported by substantial evidence, we DENY
    McNeill’s petition for review.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In February 1999, McNeill worked as a pump mechanic for Crane at the D.C. Cook nuclear
    power station (“Cook”) in Bridgman, Michigan. Crane was operating under a contract with the
    power-station owner, American Electric Power (“AEP”).2            Crane’s employees performed
    assignments pursuant to written work instructions (“work packages”), and employees had the right
    to refuse to perform an assignment if they reasonably believed that the work package was
    incomplete.
    On February 10, 1999, McNeill and his co-worker, Paul Pappalardo (“Pappalardo”), refused
    to perform an assignment, believing the work package was deficient. When Pappalardo informed
    Crane supervisor Woody Hall (“Hall”) that he and McNeill would not work the assignment as
    written, Hall said, “Paul, if you don’t want to do the job, go home. I don’t need you here.” Joint
    Appendix (“J.A.”) at 471 (Pappalardo Dep. at 30). A few months earlier, Hall had sent the pump
    crew home, including McNeill and Pappalardo, because the crew had become angry and Hall thought
    they were too upset to work safely. At that time, McNeill did not interpret Hall as firing McNeill.
    2
    As the ARB explained in its Final Decision and Order, “In 1997, Liberty Technologies, Inc.,
    (Liberty) contracted with AEP to repair pumps. Liberty hired McNeill in 1998 to work on the pump
    crew at D.C. Cook. Crane later purchased Liberty, made Liberty a division of Crane, and took over
    Liberty’s contract with AEP.” J.A. at 123 (Final Decision and Order at 2 n.2). Because “Crane
    retained Liberty’s pump crew at D.C. Cook, and Crane managers assumed management
    responsibility for them,” 
    id.,
     the ARB referred to the two companies interchangeably as “Crane.”
    We do the same here.
    2
    However, this time, when Pappalardo relayed Hall’s words to McNeill, both men interpreted Hall’s
    words to mean they were fired.
    McNeill and Pappalardo went to the on-site Nuclear Regulatory Commission inspector to
    complain that they had been fired for exercising their right to refuse to work with a deficient work
    package. Hall reported the incident to AEP’s maintenance supervisor, John Boesch (“Boesch”).
    Boesch, in turn, contacted Marcus Boggs (“Boggs”), the Crane manager responsible for the AEP
    contract, to explain the situation.
    At some point between 11:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., AEP suspended Hall, Pappalardo, and
    McNeill’s unescorted access to the restricted area. McNeill needed unescorted access at Cook in
    order to perform his job.
    At around 12:45 p.m., Boggs, who was in Seattle at the time, talked to McNeill on the
    telephone, and told McNeill that he was not fired, and that he was still on Crane’s payroll. Boggs
    also told McNeill that he would come to Michigan the next day to find out what happened.
    The next day, Thursday, February, 11, Boggs was back in Michigan. He contacted McNeill
    and reiterated that McNeill was not fired, that Hall did not have the authority to fire him, and that
    McNeill’s clearance would be reactivated.
    On February 15, Boggs replaced Hall with a new project coordinator, Larry Ricks (“Ricks”).
    Boggs also organized a meeting with all Crane employees at Cook so that they understood their right
    to make safety complaints and to highlight Crane’s policy against “retaliation, harassment, or
    discrimination against persons raising safety or other concerns about operations or quality within”
    the nuclear power station. In addition, Boggs took action to ensure that the supervisors reviewed
    their limits of authority and proper channels of communication.
    3
    Ricks contacted McNeill and told McNeill that he should report to work on Monday,
    February 15. Over the course of Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, pump crew supervisor, Tom
    Brown (“Brown”), Boggs, and Ricks all called McNeill to tell McNeill that Crane was behind him,
    that Crane had replaced Hall, and that McNeill should report to work. Pappalardo reported back to
    work and, after completing some forms, he was restored fully to his unescorted access. McNeill
    decided not to return to work, but instead contacted an attorney.
    McNeill filed a complaint with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration; the
    agency determined that McNeill’s complaint lacked merit based on its finding that Crane did not
    terminate McNeill on February 10, and that McNeill’s refusal to complete the work package was not
    safety related. McNeill requested a hearing pursuant to 
    29 C.F.R. § 24.4
    (d)(3). After a formal
    hearing, the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) issued a Recommended Order and Decision
    concluding that Crane violated the ERA by firing McNeill for engaging in protected activity.
    Crane appealed to the ARB which issued its Final Decision and Order on July 29, 2005,
    reversing the ALJ and denying McNeill’s complaint. On September 10, 2005, McNeill filed a
    motion for reconsideration; while that motion was pending McNeill filed a petition for review in this
    court. We placed McNeill’s petition for review in abeyance pending the ARB’s decision on the
    motion for reconsideration. The ARB denied McNeill’s motion on August 25, 2006. We now
    review the ARB’s Final Decision and Order and its Order Denying Reconsideration.3
    We have jurisdiction pursuant to 
    42 U.S.C. § 5851
    (c)(1) which provides that “[a]ny person
    adversely affected or aggrieved” by the ARB’s final decision in an ERA case may obtain review in
    the United States Court of Appeals where the alleged violation occurred. 
    42 U.S.C. § 5851
    (c)(1).
    3
    Crane also appears before us as an intervenor.
    4
    II. ANALYSIS
    McNeill argues that we should reverse both the ARB’s Final Decision and Order and the
    ARB’s Order Denying Reconsideration. We examine each claim in turn.
    A. Final Decision and Order
    1. Standard of Review
    We follow the same standard of review under the ERA as that set forth in the Administrative
    Procedure Act (“APA”), 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    . 
    42 U.S.C. § 5851
    (c)(1). We will set aside the ARB’s
    findings of fact only if they are unsupported by substantial evidence. 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(E); Am.
    Nuclear Res., Inc. v. United States Dep’t of Labor, 
    134 F.3d 1292
    , 1294 (6th Cir. 1998).
    “Substantial evidence is ‘such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to
    support a conclusion.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Moon v. Transp. Drivers, Inc., 
    836 F.2d 226
    , 229 (6th
    Cir.1987)). We also uphold the agency’s application of law to fact if it is supported by substantial
    evidence. 
    Id.
    The agency’s legal conclusions are reviewed de novo, “although we defer somewhat to the
    agency because it is charged with administering the statute.” 
    Id.
     When “Congress has not directly
    addressed the precise question at issue,” we uphold the agency’s statutory interpretation so long as
    it “is based on a permissible construction of the statute.” Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def.
    Council, Inc., 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 843 (1984).
    2. The ERA and the ARB Decision
    Under the ERA, “[n]o employer may discharge any employee or otherwise discriminate
    against any employee with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of
    employment because the employee” engaged in an activity protected by the statute. 42 U.S.C.
    5
    § 5851(a)(1). In its Final Decision and Order, the ARB stated that once the complainant reaches the
    hearing stage of the ERA litigation process, he “must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that
    he engaged in activity the Act protects, that [the employer] knew about the activity, that [the
    employer] discharged or otherwise discriminated against him, and that his protected activity was a
    contributing factor in the adverse action” taken by the employer. J.A. at 126 (Final Decision at 5).
    Later in the Final Decision and Order, the ARB stated that:
    A complainant seeking relief under § 5851 must prove that his employer took
    an unfavorable personnel action against him in retaliation for his involvement in
    protected safety activity. A personnel action pertains to the employee’s
    compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment. An unfavorable or
    adverse personnel action means a tangible adverse employment action such as a
    significant change in employment status, such as hiring, firing, failing to promote,
    reassignment with significantly different responsibilities, or a decision causing a
    significant change in benefits. As we have already indicated, to prevail, McNeill
    must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Crane took a tangible adverse
    action against him.
    J.A. at 134 (Final Decision at 13) (internal quotation marks, citations, and footnote omitted). The
    ARB denied McNeill’s complaint because it determined that McNeill failed to establish by a
    preponderance of the evidence that he was “terminated” and that, even if he was “terminated,” this
    action was not materially adverse. J.A. at 139 (Final Decision at 18). Harmonizing the language in
    the statute with the ARB’s language in this case, we infer that the ARB interprets the language
    “discharged or otherwise discriminated against” as requiring that the complainant demonstrate by
    a preponderance of the evidence that he suffered a “tangible adverse employment action.”4
    4
    Although we have no occasion directly to address the issue today, we are puzzled by the
    ARB’s interpretation of the statute. The ERA prohibits employers from “discharg[ing] any employee
    or otherwise discriminat[ing] against any employee.” 
    42 U.S.C. § 5851
    (a)(1) (emphasis supplied).
    Based on the plain language of the statute, it appears that the materially adverse employment action
    inquiry is only relevant to whether an employer’s action was “otherwise discriminat[ing],” and that
    if one is “discharged,” the agency may not inquire further into whether the discharge constitutes a
    6
    3. Materially Adverse Employment Action5
    McNeill argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in Burlington Northern & Santa Fe
    Railway Co. v. White, - - U.S. - -, 
    126 S. Ct. 2405
     (2006), applies to ERA claims and that under
    White, the actions taken against him were materially adverse.6 Both Crane and the Department of
    Labor correctly argue that, even assuming White applies, McNeill has not demonstrated that he has
    suffered a materially adverse employment action. For purposes of this case, we assume that White
    applies.
    In White, the Supreme Court held that to demonstrate that an action taken by an employer
    constitutes retaliation prohibited by Title VII, “a plaintiff must show that a reasonable employee
    would have found the challenged action materially adverse, which in this context means it well might
    have dissuaded a reasonable worker from making or supporting a charge of discrimination.” White,
    
    126 S. Ct. at 2415
     (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court required that the adversity be
    material because “it is important to separate significant from trivial harms.” 
    Id.
     In applying this test,
    materially adverse employment action. Here, the ARB interpretation appears to require that the
    petitioner show not only that he was terminated, but that the termination constituted a tangible
    adverse employment action.
    5
    The ARB speaks of a “tangible adverse employment action.” J.A. at 134 (Final Decision
    and Order at 13). In Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. White, - - U.S. - -, 
    126 S. Ct. 2405
     (2006), involving the anti-retaliation provision of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a), the
    Supreme Court discusses employment actions that are “materially adverse.” Id. at 2409, 2414-18.
    For purposes of this opinion, we use these terms interchangeably.
    6
    McNeill also argues that he was engaging in protected activity as defined under the ERA.
    In its Final Order and Decision, the ARB assumed without deciding that McNeill was engaged in
    protected activity. In addition, McNeill makes arguments about the ALJ’s findings that
    reinstatement was not an appropriate remedy and that an award of monetary damages was correct.
    The ARB never discussed these findings by the ALJ, because the ARB determined that there was
    no harm to remedy. Because we accept the ARB’s reasoning and deny McNeill’s petition for the
    reasons set forth by the ARB, we have no occasion to analyze these arguments.
    7
    the White decision made clear that “[c]ontext matters,” and an act that would not dissuade a worker
    from engaging in protected activity in one context may dissuade another worker in a different set of
    circumstances. Id.
    Applying this test to the facts in White, the Court concluded that the plaintiff, who was
    suspended without pay for thirty-seven days, had experienced retaliation, because, inter alia, a
    reasonable worker would be dissuaded from making a discrimination claim when it meant surviving
    for thirty-seven days with no paycheck and with no way of knowing when or if she would be
    reinstated. Id. at 2417. The fact that the plaintiff was eventually reinstated with backpay did not
    rectify the stress and financial hardship endured during that period. “[A]n indefinite suspension
    without pay could well act as a deterrent, even if the suspended employee eventually received
    backpay.” Id.
    In this case, McNeill argues that the materially adverse employment actions taken against him
    were as follows: (1) he was terminated and his unescorted access at Cook was denied; (2) he has to
    report this fact to potential, future employers; and (3) the act of sending him home on February 10,
    1999, discourages other employees from refusing to work with defective work packages.7
    7
    At oral argument, McNeill asserted that he did not receive his paycheck in a timely manner
    and that the delay in receiving his paycheck also constitutes a materially adverse employment action.
    This assertion appeared nowhere in McNeill’s briefs to this court, and the ARB decision does not
    mention that McNeill experienced a delay in receiving his paycheck. McNeill does not support this
    allegation with citation to the record. Having examined the Casual Hours and Expense Reports in
    the Joint Appendix, we conclude that McNeill was paid at the same time as his co-workers.
    Since oral argument, Crane filed a motion requesting leave to file a supplemental brief to
    address McNeill’s argument that he did not timely receive his paycheck. Because we find that
    McNeill’s argument lacks merit, there is no need for supplemental briefing on the matter, and we
    therefore deny Crane’s motion.
    8
    a. Whether McNeill Was Terminated and His Unescorted Access Was Denied
    McNeill asserts that he was subjected to a materially adverse employment action because he
    was terminated and his unescorted access was denied. According to the ARB, on February 10,
    McNeill’s access was placed on a routine administrative hold, and he was told both that he would
    remain on the payroll and that he was not terminated. The ARB found that McNeill was not actually
    terminated from Crane until effective February 15, when he refused to return to work. Based on the
    ARB’s conclusions, it follows that Crane’s actions on February 10th would not have dissuaded a
    reasonable employee from blowing the whistle. Therefore, the question is whether the ARB’s
    finding of fact is supported by substantial evidence in the record. We answer that question in the
    affirmative.
    The ARB determined that on February 10, McNeill’s unescorted access was placed on
    administrative hold, as opposed to being denied. An administrative hold blocks access into restricted
    areas of a nuclear facility; it is a temporary and routine measure employed when employees are
    involved in an “incident.” J.A. at 689, 719 (Tr. at 727, 823).
    McNeill argues that the ARB was incorrect in concluding that McNeill’s access was only on
    administrative hold on February 10. McNeill reasons that because he was terminated on February
    10, and because terminated employees are denied unescorted access, his access must have been
    denied on February 10th. This argument hinges on the assumption that McNeill was, in fact,
    terminated on February 10, an assumption not shared by the ARB. The ARB determined that
    McNeill was not terminated until effective February 15, when he refused to return to work.
    Therefore, McNeill cannot prevail unless he can demonstrate that the ARB’s decision regarding
    McNeill’s termination is unsupported by substantial evidence. The ARB determined that McNeill
    9
    did not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Crane terminated his employment, because,
    inter alia, Hall did not have the authority to terminate McNeill, and Boggs told McNeill that he was
    not terminated.
    McNeill argues that the ARB erred in finding that Hall did not have the authority to terminate
    McNeill. McNeill’s main argument on this point is that there are two memoranda written by Boggs
    that prove that Hall did, in fact, terminate McNeill. On February 17, Boggs sent a memorandum to
    Boesch explicating all of the actions that Boggs had taken to remedy the matter. In this
    memorandum, Boggs wrote that Hall had “terminated” McNeill and Pappalardo but that Crane had
    kept both men on the payroll and that “the termination was rescinded.” J.A. at 319-20 (CX13).
    On February 22, Boggs wrote a memorandum to Wayne Prokop, Crane’s Director of
    Operations (“Prokop”), explaining the current status with respect to the situation between McNeill,
    Pappalardo, and Crane, and referring to the matter as a “termination.” J.A. at 321 (CX 14). Boggs
    later explained that he described the event as a “termination” in these memoranda because that was
    the word that everyone at Cook was using and he did not want “to introduce any new phrase or
    terminology into trying to describe the incident.” J.A. at 701 (Tr. at 745).
    The ARB determined that the word “termination” in these memoranda was not used literally,
    and that it did not contradict other evidence demonstrating that Hall lacked the authority to terminate
    McNeill. The ARB supported its finding that Hall did not have the authority to terminate McNeill
    with the testimony of Boggs, Hall, and Prokop, who all testified that Crane employees could not be
    fired without Prokop’s clearance and without input by Human Resources. J.A. at 136 (Final Order
    and Decision at 15). This testimony was corroborated by documentary evidence showing that when
    McNeill was eventually terminated the decision was made by Crane’s corporate office in Georgia.
    10
    The ARB also relied on the fact that McNeill “remained in pay status” and that Boggs told him
    “early and often” that he was not fired. J.A. at 136 (Final Decision at 15).
    Beyond the Boggs memoranda, McNeill’s other evidence that Hall had the authority to
    terminate McNeill consists of the following: (1) that Hall asserted that Boggs never told Hall that
    he had exceeded his authority with respect to McNeill; (2) that Hall issued work packages to the
    technicians and oversaw their work; (3) that the word “superintendent” appeared on Hall’s hat; (4)
    that Hall was the superior person representing Crane on site; (5) that Hall asserted that he had
    authority to make recommendations for termination; and (6) that Hall asserted that he had authority
    to “give [employees] the rest of the day off or two days off” after reporting an incident to Boggs or
    Tom Burkey (“Burkey”). J.A. at 500 (Hall Dep. at 27).
    Some of this evidence fails on its own terms. The fact that Hall asserted that he had authority
    to give employees a day off pending the decision of Boggs or Burkey, or that Hall had the authority
    to recommend termination, actually cuts against the conclusion that Hall had the power to terminate.
    In addition, the fact that Hall issued work packages tells us nothing about his power to terminate.
    Hall’s assertion that Boggs never told him that he exceeded his authority is belied by the fact that
    Boggs relieved Hall of his duties on February 15 because of the manner in which Hall handled the
    situation with McNeill. What is left of McNeill’s argument is that Hall oversaw McNeill’s work and
    that Hall was the highest ranking person representing Crane on site.
    Although the Boggs memoranda do appear amenable to different interpretations, we conclude
    that the ARB has pointed to substantial evidence in the record to support its determination that Hall
    did not have the power to terminate McNeill. A reasonable mind looking at this evidence, could
    easily conclude that Hall did not have the authority to terminate McNeill. None of McNeill’s
    11
    counter-evidence demonstrates that the ARB reached an unreasonable conclusion. Because
    McNeill’s argument that his unescorted access was denied hinged on his argument that he was
    terminated on February 10, we will not modify the ARB’s fact finding on the access issue either.
    Finally, to the extent that McNeill argues that his being sent home on February 10, by itself,
    constitutes a materially adverse employment action, we reject this position as well. The essence of
    this argument is that there was a materially adverse employment action based on the fact that
    McNeill’s access was restricted during a two-and-a-half-day period, during which time he was paid
    and was not required to work. Except for a period of, at most, a few hours, during which McNeill
    may have believed that he was terminated, McNeill was clearly notified, through his telephone
    conversation with Boggs, that he was not terminated and that he would not lose any income.
    Applying White, we conclude that a reasonable worker would not be dissuaded from blowing the
    whistle under these circumstances. Thus, we must uphold the ARB’s determination.
    b. Whether McNeill Was Required to Report His Termination & Loss of
    Access to Potential Future Employers
    McNeill argues that he is required to report to any future nuclear-power-plant employers the
    fact that “he was terminated from employment and his unescorted access to Cook denied.” McNeill
    Br. at 28. He further argues that this required disclosure on future job applications constitutes a
    materially adverse employment action. In light of our conclusion that substantial evidence supports
    the ARB’s finding that McNeill’s access was merely on an administrative hold and that McNeill was
    not terminated until effective February 15 when he refused to return to work, there is no basis for
    McNeill’s assertion that he must report to future employers that he lost his unescorted access or that
    12
    he was terminated as the result of the events on February 10. Accordingly, McNeill can not prevail
    on this theory.
    c. Whether Other Employees Were Discouraged From Working Defective
    Packages
    McNeill also argues that Crane’s actions towards him created a chilling effect that would
    reasonably cause other workers to refrain from engaging in protected activity. In support of his
    argument, McNeill states that after McNeill was “fired,” employee Jason Delashmette
    (“Delashmette”) believed his job was in jeopardy if he did not work the deficient work package.
    Delashmette’s affidavit alleged that after McNeill and Pappalardo were “fired,” Brown approached
    Delashmette and said that he was to work the package as written or he would also be fired. J.A. at
    317 (Delashmette Aff. at ¶ 5).
    The problem with this argument is that it focuses only on whether Delashmette suffered a
    materially adverse employment action. In this case, our concern is with whether the petitioner,
    McNeill, suffered a materially adverse employment action. In White, the Supreme Court explained
    that courts were to determine whether the “challenged action” is materially adverse. White, 
    126 S. Ct. at 2415
    . In this case, the challenged action is that Crane allegedly terminated McNeill and denied
    him unescorted access to Cook. We have already concluded that the ARB’s finding that McNeill
    was not terminated and that his access was not denied is supported by substantial evidence. Under
    these circumstances, whether Delashmette may have been negatively affected by hearing that
    McNeill was terminated is irrelevant.
    Further, as we have pointed out earlier in this opinion, the record establishes that Crane acted
    swiftly and thoroughly to assuage any potential notion that employees could not safely engage in
    13
    activity protected by the ERA. Accordingly, McNeill has not established that Crane’s actions created
    a chilling effect.
    d. Conclusion
    Assuming, without deciding, that the standards announced by the Supreme Court in White
    apply to the case at bar, we conclude that McNeill is unable to show that the ARB erred in finding
    that Crane did not take any materially adverse employment action against McNeill. Accordingly we
    deny McNeill’s petition for review of the ARB’s Final Decision and Order.
    B. Order Denying Reconsideration
    In his motion for reconsideration, McNeill asked the ARB to reopen his case in order to
    permit him to supplement the record with further documentary evidence which, he argues,
    established that he was terminated. McNeill’s motion to reconsider was based on his belief that the
    ARB should reopen the case to consider evidence not in the record. The ARB determined that it was
    subject to the same standard for reopening a record as was the ALJ who originally presided over the
    hearing, i.e., it could not reopen the record unless the party movant demonstrated that there was
    “‘new and material evidence [that] has become available which was not readily available prior to the
    closing of the record.’” J.A. at 275 (Order Denying Recons. at 4) (quoting 
    29 C.F.R. § 18.54
    (c)).
    McNeill does not set forth what the standard of review is for evaluating the ARB’s Order
    Denying Reconsideration. Crane argues that we should review for an abuse of discretion. In Belt
    v. United States Dep’t of Labor, 163 F. App’x 382 (6th Cir. 2006) (unpublished), we applied the
    abuse-of-discretion standard to review an ARB decision refusing to reopen its final decision. 
    Id. at 389-90
    . Under any standard of review, however, McNeill’s argument that the ARB erred in denying
    his motion is without merit.
    14
    The ARB rested its denial of reconsideration on three grounds, one of which was that
    McNeill did not demonstrate that the documents he proffered were “not readily available” before the
    ARB issued its Final Decision and Order in July 2005. J.A. at 278 (Order Denying Recons. at 6).
    The ARB reasoned that Crane asserted (and McNeill did not dispute) that McNeill had acquired the
    documents in question no later than October 2003. This was more than one and one-half years
    before the ARB issued its Final Decision and Order.
    McNeill failed to provide the ARB with any reason for his failure to move to reopen the
    record while the case was still pending with the ARB. On appeal, McNeill again fails to address why
    he did not move to reopen the record while the case was pending with the ARB. Because McNeill
    has provided us with no argument to contradict the ARB’s reasoning, the ARB decision stands.
    Accordingly, we deny McNeill’s petition for review with respect to the Order Denying
    Reconsideration.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we DENY the petition for review.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 05-4190

Judges: Moore, Griffin, McKinley

Filed Date: 6/27/2007

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024