City Of Seattle, Resps v. American Healthcare Services, Inc., Et Ano, App ( 2020 )


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  • IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    CITY OF SEATTLE, SEATTLE OFFICE
    FOR CIVIL RIGHTS, and SEATTLE                   DIVISION ONE
    OFFICE OF LABOR STANDARDS,
    No. 79692-5-I
    Respondents,
    PUBLISHED OPINION
    v.
    AMERICAN HEALTHCARE SERVICES,
    INC., GIDEON OYELEKE, and the
    SEATTLE HEARING EXAMINER,
    Appellants.
    DWYER, J. — This is an employment discrimination case involving
    American Healthcare Services, Inc.’s (AHS) alleged discrimination and retaliation
    against Jasmine Pope premised on her request for a reasonable accommodation
    for her memory related disability. The City of Seattle (City) brought an action
    against AHS, on Pope’s behalf, before a city hearing examiner, alleging
    violations of Seattle’s Fair Employment Practices Ordinance, codified at chapter
    14.04 Seattle Municipal Code (SMC). The hearing examiner dismissed the case
    on summary judgment. The dismissal was subsequently reversed by the
    superior court.
    This appeal presents two questions: (1) what is the proper procedure for
    seeking judicial review of decisions of Seattle hearing examiners regarding
    violations of employment discrimination provisions of the SMC, and (2) did the
    City proffer evidence demonstrating that a genuine dispute of material fact
    No. 79692-5-I/2
    precluded summary judgment? We hold that appeals from a Seattle hearing
    examiner’s decision regarding alleged violations of chapter 14.04 SMC are
    governed by the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), chapter 34.05 RCW, and
    that the City presented evidence establishing a genuine dispute of material fact,
    precluding summary judgment. Thus, we affirm the superior court.
    I
    Jasmine Pope suffers from the aftereffects of a frontotemporal craniotomy
    she received in 2014 to correct multiple brain aneurysms, which include
    headaches, nausea, sensitivity to light and sound, and issues with her memory.
    In April 2015, Pope was employed as a home health aide for AHS, a company
    that provides in-home healthcare to its clients.1 Pope was certified by the
    Department of Health and Human Services for her job and provided in-home
    healthcare to AHS clients, helping them with food preparation, laundry, cleaning,
    toileting, grocery shopping, and sometimes with transportation to medical
    appointments.
    AHS utilized a telephone clock in system to keep track of employee hours
    and shifts.2 This system required employees to call from a client’s telephone to
    clock in at the beginning of a shift and to call again to clock out at the end of the
    shift. Pope had difficulty remembering to call to clock in and out, and received a
    disciplinary notice from AHS regarding the issue in May 2015. In response, Pope
    informed AHS of her then-recent brain surgery and provided a note from her
    1 AHS was founded by Gideon Oyeleke in 2000, and by 2015 employed approximately 50
    to 60 home health aides.
    2 AHS implemented the telephone clock in system in 2012. Before 2012, AHS utilized a
    paper time sheet system to keep track of employee hours.
    2
    No. 79692-5-I/3
    doctor describing the symptoms she continued to suffer as aftereffects of the
    surgery, including her memory problems. Pope also informed AHS that she
    believed there was a discrepancy between the hours that she had worked and
    the pay that she had received. AHS blamed the discrepancy on Pope’s failure to
    properly clock in and out using the telephone system. During this time, Pope
    also submitted paper time sheets recording the hours she worked.
    AHS did not initially provide any response to Pope’s notice of her memory
    troubles and did not do anything to assist her with the telephone system. Weeks
    later, a supervisor began calling Pope to remind her to use the telephone system
    at the beginning and end of her shifts, but this only happened a few times.
    In June 2015, a month after she had raised her medical issues with AHS,
    Pope filed a complaint with the Seattle Office of Civil Rights (SOCR) alleging that
    AHS did not accommodate her disability. Subsequently, the Seattle Office of
    Labor Standards (SOLS) filed a minimum wage and administrative wage theft
    charge against AHS.
    AHS learned of the accommodation complaint and the administrative
    wage theft charge in early July 2015. Shortly after learning of Pope’s complaints,
    AHS wrote to Pope’s medical provider demanding that she provide an
    assessment of whether Pope was capable of performing the duties of a care
    provider and complaining that Pope was unable to accurately use the telephone
    clock in system and was forgetful. Pope’s medical provider responded by
    informing AHS that she was not qualified to make such a vocational assessment.
    AHS did not engage in any further efforts to ascertain whether Pope was
    3
    No. 79692-5-I/4
    medically fit for work.
    The following week, AHS began assisting Pope with clocking in using the
    telephone system by instructing her to set reminder alarms on her own telephone
    and by calling her, although they did not do so every time Pope was required to
    clock in or out. Then, only one week later, AHS informed Pope that her client
    had complained that Pope had not come to work as scheduled on July 16 and
    17, 2015, and suspended Pope without pay.3 Pope did not believe that she had
    missed any scheduled work shifts because she had worked out a schedule with
    her client that did not require her to be with the client on those days. The
    suspension letter specifically stated that one of the reasons for the suspension
    was AHS’s need to accommodate her disability and that Pope would only be
    reinstated if her physician guaranteed that Pope was medically cleared to work
    as a home health aide.
    Pope subsequently had a medical provider send AHS an e-mail stating
    that she was cleared to work. AHS did not request any further medical opinions
    from any other providers. Instead, despite having received a doctor’s note
    stating that Pope was cleared to work, which is exactly what it had demanded
    from Pope in its suspension letter, AHS responded to Pope’s medical provider
    with an e-mail stating that it believed Pope could not use the telephone clock in
    system, that she lied about her work hours, and that she was a danger to
    vulnerable clients and could not work. AHS’s e-mail demanded that Pope’s
    3 It also appears that AHS accused Pope of refusing to show up for a shift on July 20,
    2015, the same day that she was suspended. However, the City presented evidence in which
    Pope stated that she was told not to go to her client’s house that day and was suspended before
    she could begin the shift.
    4
    No. 79692-5-I/5
    medical provider complete another assessment, send it a guarantee that Pope
    would be able to use the telephone clock in system in her then-current condition,
    and opine that Pope would not be a danger to clients. AHS also asserted in its
    response that the Department of Labor and Industries would not permit Pope to
    work given her condition.4 AHS did not permit Pope to return to work and did not
    send Pope to any independent fitness for duty examinations.
    SOCR and SOLS each investigated Pope’s allegations against AHS and
    determined both that AHS did not accommodate Pope’s disability and that it
    retaliated against her for making complaints related to her disability and wages.
    The Seattle city attorney then filed a complaint with the City’s Office of Hearing
    Examiner based on SOCR’s determination. Meanwhile, AHS appealed SOLS’s
    determination to the City’s Office of Hearing Examiner. The hearing examiner
    consolidated the cases for hearing.
    Subsequently, AHS filed a successful motion to dismiss all claims against
    it on summary judgment. Thereafter, the City filed a petition for writ of review in
    King County Superior Court pursuant to RCW 7.16.050. The superior court
    issued the writ of review and then proceeded to reverse the hearing examiner’s
    decision, concluding that disputed issues of material fact precluded summary
    judgment.
    AHS appeals. Our commissioner sought argument from the parties
    addressing whether the superior court’s order was appealable as a matter of
    right. The commissioner then referred the question to us.
    4There is no evidence in the record that the Department of Labor and Industries ever
    required AHS to suspend Pope or to bar her from working.
    5
    No. 79692-5-I/6
    II
    Before reaching the merits, we must resolve the parties’ dispute regarding
    whether AHS has a right to appeal from the superior court’s order reversing the
    hearing examiner’s dismissal on summary judgment. AHS contends that the
    superior court’s decision is appealable to us as a matter of right under RAP
    2.2(c) and chapter 7.16 RCW, and that, even if it was not appealable as a matter
    of right, discretionary review is warranted under RAP 2.3(b). In response, the
    City asserts that the superior court’s order is not appealable under RAP 2.2(c) or
    chapter 7.16 RCW and that discretionary review is not warranted in this case.
    Unfortunately, neither party correctly identified the applicable legal
    principles that resolve this dispute. Because RCW 49.60.330 authorizes review
    of Seattle hearing examiner decisions regarding claims of discrimination pursuant
    to the APA, which authorizes appeals to the Court of Appeals as a matter of right,
    AHS may appeal from the superior court’s order herein as a matter of right.
    Somewhat vexingly, while the parties dispute whether the superior court’s
    order is appealable as a matter of right, they agree that the superior court’s
    review was properly conducted pursuant to a statutory writ of review authorized
    by chapter 7.16 RCW. But this is not so.
    The right to petition the superior court for a writ of review, also known as a
    writ of certiorari, is set forth by statute.5 RCW 7.16.030,.040. A superior court
    5 There is also a distinct right to petition for a writ of certiorari recognized by our state
    constitution. CONST. art. IV, § 6. This constitutional writ of certiorari is only available when both
    direct appeal and a statutory writ of review are unavailable. Malted Mousse, Inc. v. Steinmetz,
    
    150 Wash. 2d 518
    , 533, 
    79 P.3d 1154
    (2003); Bridal Trails Cmty. Club v. City of Bellevue, 45 Wn.
    App. 248, 
    724 P.2d 1110
    (1986).
    6
    No. 79692-5-I/7
    may grant a writ of review when “an inferior tribunal, board or officer, exercising
    judicial functions, has exceeded the jurisdiction of such tribunal, board or officer,
    or one acting illegally, or to correct any erroneous or void proceeding, or a
    proceeding not according to the course of the common law,” but only when “there
    is no appeal, nor in the judgment of the court, any plain, speedy and adequate
    remedy at law.” RCW 7.16.040. A statutory writ of review is unavailable when
    direct appeal to superior court is authorized by statute. See City of Seattle v.
    Holifield, 
    170 Wash. 2d 230
    , 240, 
    240 P.3d 1162
    (2010). Thus, “[w]here a party fails
    to pursue a statutory right to a direct appeal, a petition for writ of review is
    properly denied on that basis alone.” Coballes v. Spokane County, 
    167 Wash. App. 857
    , 867, 
    274 P.3d 1102
    (2012) (citing Torrance v. King County, 
    136 Wash. 2d 783
    ,
    792, 
    966 P.2d 891
    (1998)).
    However, if a superior court grants a writ of review, and conducts that
    review, on the merits, of a decision from which the parties had a right to appeal to
    superior court, then an appellate court may review the superior court’s decision
    as though the superior court had been deciding a properly filed direct appeal,
    provided that the scope of the superior court’s review did not exceed the
    authority it would have had in reviewing the case through such an appeal. See
    
    Coballes, 167 Wash. App. at 868
    (“The superior court’s review on the merits was
    consistent with the fact that the only basis on which it should have reviewed the
    board’s decision was statutory appeal under RCW 36.32.330, and we treat its
    review as such.”); see also Russell v. Dep’t of Human Rights, 
    70 Wash. App. 408
    ,
    412 n.3, 
    854 P.2d 1087
    (1993) (noting that the writ of certiorari filed therein was
    7
    No. 79692-5-I/8
    the improper procedure for obtaining review because the parties had a right to
    appeal, but nevertheless considering the merits of the case).6
    The Seattle hearing examiner’s decision herein dismissed claims brought
    pursuant to the Seattle Fair Employment Practices Ordinance, chapter 14.04
    SMC. This ordinance is authorized by chapter 49.60 RCW, known as
    Washington’s Law Against Discrimination (WLAD). RCW 49.60.010,.330.
    WLAD also “provides a statutory right to obtain review of administrative remedies
    imposed pursuant to antidiscrimination ordinances enacted by a first class city
    with over 125,000 population.” 
    Russell, 70 Wash. App. at 412
    n.3 (citing RCW
    49.60.330).7 Furthermore, the Russell court noted, “the Legislature has provided
    that the right to obtain judicial review of administrative orders under the Law
    Against Discrimination is pursuant to the provisions of the Administrative
    6  The Coballes court did not identify a set of circumstances in which a superior court’s
    review of the merits of an agency decision through such an erroneously granted writ of review
    would require the exercise of judicial authority not authorized in a direct appeal. Given the
    Coballes court’s acknowledgement that writs of review are generally considered to entail a more
    limited scope of review than an appeal, it is unclear whether such a test would ever disallow
    review of a superior court’s disposition on the merits of an erroneously granted writ of review
    when there is a right to appeal. 
    See 167 Wash. App. at 867
    . We need not resolve this question to
    resolve the issues presented herein.
    7 RCW 49.60.330 states that
    [a]ny county or any city classified as a first-class city under RCW 35.01.010 with
    over one hundred twenty-five thousand population may enact resolutions or
    ordinances consistent with this chapter to provide administrative and/or judicial
    remedies for any form of discrimination proscribed by this chapter. The
    imposition of such administrative remedies shall be subject to judicial
    review. The superior courts shall have jurisdiction to hear all matters
    relating to violation and enforcement of such resolutions or ordinances,
    including petitions for preliminary relief, the award of such remedies and
    civil penalties as are consistent with this chapter, and enforcement of any
    order of a county or city administrative law judge or hearing examiner
    pursuant to such resolution or ordinance. Any local resolution or ordinance
    not inconsistent with this chapter may provide, after a finding of reasonable
    cause to believe that discrimination has occurred, for the filing of an action in, or
    the removal of the matter to, the superior court.
    (Emphasis added.)
    8
    No. 79692-5-I/9
    Procedure Act.”8 
    Russell, 70 Wash. App. at 412
    n.3 (citing RCW 49.60.270). Thus,
    litigants seeking judicial review of administrative orders pursuant to anti-
    discrimination ordinances authorized under RCW 49.60.330 have a right of
    appeal to the Court of Appeals. See RCW 34.05.526 (review by the Court of
    Appeals and the Supreme Court “shall be secured in the manner provided by law
    for review of superior court decisions in other civil cases”); accord Alpine Lakes
    Prot. Soc’y v. Dep’t of Nat. Res., 
    102 Wash. App. 1
    , 6, 
    979 P.2d 929
    (1999)
    (accepting appeal under the APA from superior court order reviewing an
    administrative summary judgment order of the Washington Forest Practices
    Appeals Board). Therefore, because Seattle is a first-class city9 with a
    population exceeding 125,000, Seattle hearing examiner orders pertaining to
    claims arising from alleged violations of chapter 14.04 SMC are appealable to
    superior court and to the Court of Appeals as a matter of right.
    Because there was a right to appeal from the Seattle hearing examiner’s
    order dismissing claims brought under chapter 14.04 SMC, it is plain that a writ of
    review was not the proper procedural mechanism for seeking judicial review of
    the Seattle hearing examiner’s decision. The petition for a writ of review should
    8 Oddly, the Russell court stated that it was declining to determine whether the writ of
    certiorari through which the superior court considered the hearing examiner’s decision was the
    proper procedural mechanism to obtain judicial 
    review. 70 Wash. App. at 412
    n.3. It made this
    statement despite explaining that the APA governs judicial review of a Seattle hearing examiner’s
    decision on claims arising from violations of chapter 14.04 SMC and actually analyzing the issues
    presented before it in the case through application of the judicial review mechanisms set forth in
    the APA. 
    Russell, 70 Wash. App. at 412
    . Thus, the Russell court plainly premised its decision on
    the conclusion that the APA applied to the issues presented therein.
    9 The statutory definition of a first-class city is “a city with a population of ten thousand or
    more at the time of its organization or reorganization that has a charter adopted under Article XI,
    section 10, of the state Constitution.” RCW 35.01.010. Seattle is such a first-class city. City of
    Seattle v. Sisley, 
    164 Wash. App. 261
    , 266, 
    263 P.3d 610
    (2011).
    9
    No. 79692-5-I/10
    have been denied. However, because the superior court issued the writ of
    review and considered the merits of the hearing examiner’s decision, we may
    treat such review as if the superior court had reviewed the matter through a direct
    appeal under the APA, provided that the superior court did not exceed the
    authority it would have had in such an appeal.10 See 
    Coballes, 167 Wash. App. at 868
    (“The superior court’s review on the merits was consistent with the fact that
    the only basis on which it should have reviewed the board’s decision was
    statutory appeal under RCW 36.32.330, and we treat its review as such.”).
    While the APA does not explicitly authorize agencies to use summary
    judgment procedures, case law has established that judicial review of such
    summary proceedings must “overlay the APA standard of review with the
    10  We note that the hearing examiner in this matter dismissed both a retaliation claim
    under chapter 14.04 SMC and a retaliation claim under former chapter 14.19 SMC (2014). While
    RCW 49.60.330 authorizes a right of appeal for claims arising from alleged violations of chapter
    14.04 SMC, it does not appear to extend such a right to claims arising from alleged violations of
    the former or current chapter 14.19 SMC. Thus, it appears that if the hearing examiner’s decision
    had considered solely claims alleging violations of former chapter 14.19 SMC, a petition for a writ
    of review would have been the proper procedure for seeking superior court review.
    This raises the question of whether, by considering the hearing examiner’s dismissal of
    the retaliation claim brought pursuant to former chapter 14.19 SMC—a dismissal that, on its own,
    appears not to be appealable as a matter of right—the superior court herein exceeded the scope
    of authority it would have had in a direct appeal of the hearing examiner’s order dismissing both
    claims arising under chapter 14.04 SMC and those arising under former chapter 14.19 SMC
    (2014). In other words, in a direct appeal of the hearing examiner’s order herein authorized by
    RCW 49.60.330 and the APA, would the superior court have been able to consider the dismissal
    of the chapter 14.19 SMC retaliation claim?
    We conclude that the superior court had the authority to consider the dismissal of the
    retaliation claim even though the dismissal of such a claim, on its own, would not be appealable.
    Once a party has an appealable order, an appeal therefrom brings the entire order before the
    reviewing court. Gazin v. Hieber, 
    8 Wash. App. 104
    , 114, 
    504 P.2d 1178
    (1972). Indeed, our
    Supreme Court adheres to this principle every time it undertakes direct review of a death penalty
    case and declines to restrict its review to issues pertaining solely to the sentence of death. See,
    e.g., State v. Brown, 
    132 Wash. 2d 529
    , 630-31, 
    940 P.2d 546
    (1997) (considering issues pertaining
    to the proper admission of witness testimony at trial and Miranda warnings in addition to
    sentencing issues (Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
    (1966)).
    Thus, because the hearing examiner’s decision was appealable under RCW 49.60.330 and the
    APA, the superior court would have had the authority to review the entire order on a direct
    appeal.
    10
    No. 79692-5-I/11
    summary judgment standard.” Verizon Nw., Inc. v. Emp’t Sec. Dep’t, 
    164 Wash. 2d 909
    , 915-16, 
    194 P.3d 255
    (2008). A reviewing court must “view the facts in the
    record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 916
    (citing Alpine 
    Lakes, 102 Wash. App. at 14
    ). “Summary judgment is
    appropriate only where the undisputed facts entitle the moving party to judgment
    as a matter of law.” Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 916
    (citing Alpine 
    Lakes, 102 Wash. App. at 14
    ). The reviewing court must “evaluate the facts in the
    administrative record de novo.” Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 916
    ; see also
    RCW 34.05.558 (“Judicial review of disputed issues of fact shall be conducted by
    the court without a jury and must be confined to the agency record for judicial
    review.”). Courts review an agency’s legal determinations under an “error of law”
    standard, see RCW 34.05.570(3)(d), which permits a reviewing court to
    substitute its view of the law for that of the agency. Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 915
    (citing Haley v. Med. Disciplinary Bd., 
    117 Wash. 2d 720
    , 728, 
    818 P.2d 1062
    (1991)).
    Herein, although reviewing the hearing examiner’s order by way of a writ
    of review, the superior court properly applied the review standards set forth in
    Verizon Nw., Inc. for consideration of an appeal of an agency’s summary
    judgment order, noting in its order that
    [s]ummary judgment is appropriate only if no genuine issue
    of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law. When determining whether summary judgment
    is appropriate, the court must consider the facts and all reasonable
    inferences from those facts in the light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party. Generally, administrative hearing bodies are
    authorized to summarily dispose of matters before them through a
    summary judgment procedure. On appeal, this court reviews de
    11
    No. 79692-5-I/12
    novo the materials submitted to the Hearing Examiner by both
    parties.
    (Citations omitted.)
    The superior court considered the evidence in the record as it was
    presented to the hearing examiner and concluded that there were material facts
    in dispute that precluded summary judgment. As in Coballes, the superior court’s
    review did not exceed the authority it would have had in a direct appeal and we
    therefore treat the superior court’s review as such a direct 
    appeal. 167 Wash. App. at 868
    . Therefore, AHS may appeal from the superior court’s order as a matter
    of right.
    III
    Having concluded that AHS has a right to appeal from the superior court’s
    order, we now address AHS’s contention that the superior court erred when it
    reversed the hearing examiner’s summary judgment order dismissing the City’s
    claims. This is so, AHS appears to assert, because there was no evidence
    presented to show that Pope could perform the essential elements of her job,
    that Pope ever requested a reasonable accommodation from AHS, that AHS did
    not accommodate Pope, and that AHS retaliated against Pope when she filed
    complaints about its practices. In response, the City asserts that the superior
    court correctly concluded that the City presented evidence establishing a dispute
    of material fact regarding all of these issues and that summary judgment was
    improper. The City has the better argument.
    As explained in section II, the APA governs judicial review of the Seattle
    hearing examiner’s decision. We apply the APA’s standards directly to the
    12
    No. 79692-5-I/13
    administrative record. Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 915
    (citing Tapper v.
    Emp’t Sec. Dep’t, 
    122 Wash. 2d 397
    , 402, 
    858 P.2d 494
    (1993)). We review the
    decision of the hearing examiner, not the underlying determinations of the SOCR
    and SOLS. See Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 915
    (noting that the court
    reviews the highest level administrative ruling). “Because this court sits in the
    same position as the superior court, we do not give deference to the superior
    court’s rulings.” Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 915
    (citing Waste Mgmt. of
    Seattle, Inc. v. Utils. & Transp. Comm’n, 
    123 Wash. 2d 621
    , 633, 
    869 P.2d 1034
    (1994)).
    Again, while the APA does not explicitly authorize agencies to use
    summary judgment procedures, case law has established that judicial review of
    such summary proceedings must “overlay the APA standard of review with the
    summary judgment standard.” Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 915
    -16. We
    must “view the facts in the record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
    party.” Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 916
    (citing Alpine 
    Lakes, 102 Wash. App. at 14
    ). “Summary judgment is appropriate only where the undisputed facts
    entitled the moving party to judgment as a matter of law.” Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 916
    (citing Alpine 
    Lakes, 102 Wash. App. at 14
    ).
    “We evaluate the facts in the administrative record de novo.” Verizon Nw.,
    
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 916
    ; see also RCW 34.05.558 (“Judicial review of disputed
    issues of fact shall be conducted by the court without a jury and must be confined
    to the agency record for judicial review.”). We review an agency’s legal
    determinations under an “error of law” standard, see RCW 34.05.570(3)(d),
    13
    No. 79692-5-I/14
    which permits reviewing courts to substitute their view of the law for that of the
    agency. Verizon Nw., 
    Inc., 164 Wash. 2d at 915
    (citing 
    Haley, 117 Wash. 2d at 728
    ).
    Summary judgment for an employer will seldom be appropriate in employment
    discrimination cases “because of the difficulty of proving a discriminatory
    motivation.” Scrivener v. Clark Coll., 
    181 Wash. 2d 439
    , 445, 
    334 P.3d 541
    (2014).
    AHS contends that the hearing examiner’s dismissal order herein was
    proper because there were no disputed issues of material fact regarding whether
    it had violated provisions of chapter 14.04 SMC because (1) the City failed to
    provide a prima facie showing of discrimination in violation of chapter 14.04
    SMC, (2) AHS established a complete defense to any discrimination claims
    under SMC 14.04.050(D), and (3) no evidence was submitted to prove that
    Pope’s suspension was retaliation for requesting an accommodation or filing
    complaints with the City. This is so, AHS asserts, because there was no dispute
    that Pope was unable to perform the essential functions of her job as defined by
    AHS, that she never requested a reasonable accommodation because she did
    not provide medical proof of her disability, and because her suspension was not
    an adverse employment action.
    “The Seattle Fair Employment Practices Ordinance, SMC 14.04, governs
    unfair employment practices” and is authorized by chapter 49.60 RCW. 
    Russell, 70 Wash. App. at 411
    . Because chapter 14.04 SMC substantially parallels chapter
    49.60 RCW, which substantially parallels the provisions of federal anti-
    discrimination law under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §
    2000e-2000e-17, we look to interpretations of state and federal law to guide our
    14
    No. 79692-5-I/15
    review of claims brought under chapter 14.04 SMC. 
    Russell, 70 Wash. App. at 415
    (citing Hollingsworth v. Wash. Mut. Sav. Bank, 
    37 Wash. App. 386
    , 390, 
    681 P.2d 845
    (1984), abrogated on other grounds by Allison v. Hous. Auth. of City of
    Seattle, 
    59 Wash. App. 624
    , 
    799 P.2d 1195
    (1990)); accord Davis v. Dep’t of Labor
    & Indus., 
    94 Wash. 2d 119
    , 125, 
    615 P.2d 1279
    (1980).
    Chapter 14.04 SMC states that it is an unfair employment practice for any:
    A. Employer to discriminate against any person with respect to
    hiring, tenure, promotion, terms, conditions, wages or privileges
    of employment, or with respect to any matter related to
    employment;
    ...
    F. Employer, employment agency, or labor organization to
    penalize or discriminate in any manner against any person
    because they opposed any practice forbidden by this chapter or
    because they made a charge, testified or assisted in any
    manner in any investigation, proceeding, or hearing initiated
    under the provisions of this chapter.[11]
    SMC 14.04.040. The code defines “[d]iscrimination,” “discriminate,” and
    “discriminatory act” as:
    any act, by itself or as part of a practice, which is intended to or
    results in different treatment or differentiates between or among
    individuals or groups of individuals by reason of race, color, age,
    sex, marital status, sexual orientation, gender identity, genetic
    information, political ideology, creed, religion, ancestry, national
    origin, honorably discharged veteran or military status, or the
    presence of any disability.[12] “Discrimination,” “discriminate,”
    and/or “discriminatory act” includes harassment, such as racial and
    sexual harassment, as well as harassment based on other
    protected classes.
    11  Similar language is set forth in former SMC 14.19.060, prohibiting penalizing or
    discriminating against an employee in retaliation for exercising rights protected under chapters
    14.19. Former SMC 14.19.060 (2014) (Ordinance No. 124644, § 1). Chapter 14.19 SMC was
    subsequently amended in 2015 through Ordinance No. 124960, but retains a substantively similar
    prohibition. SMC 14.19.055.
    12 SMC 14.04.030 defines “[d]isability” as a “sensory, mental, or physical impairment that:
    is medically cognizable or diagnosable; exists as a record or history; or is perceived to exist,
    whether or not it exists in fact.”
    15
    No. 79692-5-I/16
    SMC 14.04.030.
    SMC 14.04.050 sets forth several exceptions to the code’s general
    proscription of disability-based discrimination. Most pertinently, it declares that
    such proscriptions, “insofar as they declare discrimination on the basis of the
    presence of any sensory, mental or physical handicap to be an unfair
    employment practice, shall not apply if the particular disability prevents the
    proper performance of the particular worker involved.” SMC 14.04.050(D).
    In employment discrimination cases, the plaintiff has the initial burden of
    proving by a preponderance of the evidence a prima facie case of discrimination.
    McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 
    411 U.S. 792
    , 802, 
    93 S. Ct. 1817
    , 
    36 L. Ed. 2d
    668 (1973); 
    Hollingsworth, 37 Wash. App. at 390
    ; Ellingson v. Spokane Mortg.
    Co., 
    19 Wash. App. 48
    , 54-55, 
    573 P.2d 389
    (1978). “To establish a prima facie
    case of disability discrimination, an aggrieved employee must show that she: (1)
    has a disability; (2) can perform the essential functions of the job; and (3) was not
    reasonably accommodated.”13 Dedman v. Pers. Appeals Bd., 
    98 Wash. App. 471
    ,
    478, 
    989 P.2d 1214
    (1999) (citing Reese v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 
    107 Wash. 2d 563
    , 579, 
    731 P.2d 497
    (1987), overruled on other grounds by Phillips v. City of
    Seattle, 
    111 Wash. 2d 903
    , 
    766 P.2d 1099
    (1989); Dean v. Mun. of Metro. Seattle,
    
    104 Wash. 2d 627
    , 639, 
    708 P.2d 393
    (1985)). “Once the plaintiff establishes a
    prima facie case, the burden of production shifts to the employer to articulate a
    legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse employment action.”
    13 The parties do not dispute that Pope has a disability. Thus, we are concerned herein
    only with whether there was evidence sufficient to establish a dispute of material fact regarding
    whether Pope could perform the essential functions of her job and whether AHS provided her a
    reasonable accommodation.
    16
    No. 79692-5-I/17
    
    Scrivener, 181 Wash. 2d at 446
    (citing Grimwood v. Univ. of Puget Sound, Inc., 
    110 Wash. 2d 355
    , 363-64, 
    753 P.2d 517
    (1988), abrogated on other grounds by
    Mikkelsen v Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1 of Kittitas County, 
    189 Wash. 2d 516
    , 
    404 P.3d 464
    (2017)). If the employer meets this burden, then the employee must
    “‘produce sufficient evidence that [the employer’s] alleged nondiscriminatory
    reason for [the employment action] was a pretext.’” 
    Scrivener, 181 Wash. 2d at 446
    (second alteration in original) (quoting Hume v. Am. Disposal Co., 
    124 Wash. 2d 656
    , 667, 
    880 P.2d 988
    (1994)). “Evidence is sufficient to overcome summary
    judgment if it creates a genuine issue of material fact that the employer’s
    articulated reason was a pretext for a discriminatory purpose.” 
    Scrivener, 181 Wash. 2d at 446
    (citing 
    Hume, 124 Wash. 2d at 668
    ).
    In determining whether job functions are essential, Washington courts
    have utilized criteria suggested by the federal Equal Employment Opportunity
    Commission:
    (1) the employer’s judgment as to which functions are essential; (2)
    written job descriptions; (3) the amount of time spent on the job
    performing the function; (4) the consequences of not requiring the
    employee to perform the function; (5) the terms of a collective
    bargaining agreement; (6) the work experience of past employees
    in the job; and (7) the current work experience of employees in
    similar jobs.
    
    Dedman, 98 Wash. App. at 479
    (citing 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(n)(3)).
    To determine whether an employee with a disability qualifies for a
    reasonable accommodation, SMC 14.04.030(C) requires that an impairment14
    14An impairment is defined as including:
    1. Any physiological disorder or condition, cosmetic disfigurement, or anatomical
    loss affecting one or more of the following body systems: neurological,
    musculoskeletal, special sense organs, respiratory (including speech organs),
    17
    No. 79692-5-I/18
    must be known or shown through an interactive process to exist in
    fact and:
    1. The impairment must have a substantially limiting effect upon the
    individual’s ability to perform that individual’s job, the individual’s
    ability to apply or be considered for a job, or the individual’s
    access to equal benefits, privileges, or terms or conditions of
    employment; or
    2. The employee or domestic worker must have put the employer or
    hiring entity on notice of the existence of an impairment, and
    medical documentation must establish a reasonable likelihood
    that engaging in job functions without an accommodation would
    aggravate the impairment to the extent that it would create a
    substantially limiting effect.
    “The employee bears the burden of giving the employer notice of the
    disability.” Goodman v. Boeing Co., 
    127 Wash. 2d 401
    , 408, 
    899 P.2d 1265
    (1995)
    (citing 
    Hume, 124 Wash. 2d at 672
    ). This notice requirement, however, does not
    require the employee to inform the employer of the full nature and extent of the
    disability. 
    Goodman, 127 Wash. 2d at 408
    . Once an employer is notified, it is “the
    employer’s burden to take ‘positive steps’ to accommodate the employee’s
    limitations,” although the employee also retains a duty to cooperate with the
    employer’s efforts by explaining the disability and qualifications. 
    Goodman, 127 Wash. 2d at 408
    . Reasonable accommodation “envisions an exchange between
    employer and employee where each seeks and shares information to achieve the
    best match between the employee’s capabilities and available positions.”
    
    Goodman, 127 Wash. 2d at 408
    -09.
    cardiovascular, reproductive, digestive, genito-urinary, hemic and lymphatic,
    skin, and endocrine; or
    2. Any mental, developmental, traumatic, or psychological disorder, including but
    not limited to cognitive limitation, organic brain syndrome, emotional or mental
    illness, and specific learning disabilities.
    SMC 14.04.030(B).
    18
    No. 79692-5-I/19
    “To establish a prima facie case of retaliatory conduct, [an employee] must
    show that (1) she engaged in statutorily protected activity, (2) [the employer] took
    some adverse employment action against her, and (3) retaliation was a
    substantial factor behind the adverse employment action.”15 Wash. v. Boeing
    Co., 
    105 Wash. App. 1
    , 14, 
    19 P.3d 1041
    (2000) (citing Delahunty v. Cahoon, 
    66 Wash. App. 829
    , 840-41, 
    832 P.2d 1378
    (1992)). A “substantial factor” must be a
    significant motivating factor, but need not be the sole factor, or even a
    determining factor, in the decision. 
    Scrivener, 181 Wash. 2d at 444
    .
    Herein, AHS first asserts that the City failed to establish a prima facie case
    of discrimination. This is so, AHS asserts, because there is no dispute that (1)
    Pope was unable, due to her disability, to perform the essential functions of her
    job because she could not use the telephone clock in system utilized by AHS,
    and (2) Pope never requested a reasonable accommodation because she failed
    to provide medical proof of her disability. We disagree.
    AHS’s assertion that Pope was unable to perform essential functions of
    her job presumes that properly utilizing the phone clock in system was an
    essential function of the job.16 But the record shows that the City presented
    15 This test applies to all types of retaliation claims in the employment context, and so
    because the prohibition against retaliation is the same under both chapter 14.04 SMC and former
    chapter 14.19 SMC (2014), and the retaliatory acts alleged are the same for both the retaliation
    claims herein, we perform a single analysis to determine whether there is a genuine dispute of
    material fact regarding whether AHS retaliated against Pope. Such an analysis aligns with the
    hearing examiner’s decision, which analyzed the retaliation claims under the different code
    sections as one claim for retaliation.
    16 The hearing examiner appeared to accept this presumption because the job
    description provided by AHS stated that filling out accurate time sheets was a major responsibility
    of the job. While an employer’s description of a position’s duties is one piece of evidence that
    could be used to determine the essential functions of a job, it is not the only evidence a fact finder
    may consider. Indeed, the fact finder may also consider the amount of time spent on the job
    performing the function, the consequences of not requiring the employee to perform the function,
    the terms of a collective bargaining agreement, the work experience of past employees in the job,
    19
    No. 79692-5-I/20
    evidence disputing this and establishing that Pope was certified for her job and
    was capable of performing basic caregiving services such as doing household
    chores, laundry, cooking, and assisting clients in getting around and using the
    bathroom. Additionally, the City presented evidence showing that AHS did not
    implement a telephone clock in system until 2012 and that it allowed employees
    to use an alternative time sheet if necessary. Indeed, the City introduced
    evidence that Pope herself had utilized a paper time keeping system while
    working for AHS. This evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the City,
    could persuade a reasonable trier of fact that the telephone clock in system was
    not an essential function of Pope’s job and that she could perform the essential
    functions of her job.
    Similarly, AHS’s assertion that Pope never requested a reasonable
    accommodation is premised on the faulty argument that she had to provide
    certain medical proof of her disability to make such a request. This contention
    was flatly rejected by our Supreme Court in Goodman, which concluded that
    employers must take positive steps to address an employee’s disability once it is
    notified of the existence of such a 
    disability.17 127 Wash. 2d at 408-09
    . The City
    and the current work experience of employees in similar jobs. 
    Dedman, 98 Wash. App. at 479
    . The
    hearing examiner herein improperly considered the written job description to be dispositive.
    17 AHS appears to assert that the standard is different when the employee works with
    vulnerable clients, requiring the employee to medically prove the disability before an
    accommodation is required. AHS does not cite to any authority that supports its assertion.
    Instead, in the cases cited by AHS, it is the employer’s burden to establish that an employee
    poses a direct threat to the safety or health of other individuals in the employee’s workplace.
    Echazabal v. Chevron USA, Inc., 
    336 F.3d 1023
    , 1027 (9th Cir. 2003). Echazabal notes that
    [b]efore excluding an individual from employment as a direct threat, an
    employer must demonstrate that it has made an “individualized assessment” of
    the employee’s ability to perform the essential functions of the job, “based on a
    reasonable medical judgment that relies on the most current medical knowledge
    and/or on the best available objective 
    evidence.” 336 F.3d at 1027
    (quoting 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(r)).
    20
    No. 79692-5-I/21
    presented evidence that Pope informed AHS of her disability and requested an
    accommodation pertaining to the telephone clock in system, that AHS did not
    respond to her request or provide any assistance with the telephone clock in
    system for several weeks, and that when assistance was finally provided it was
    only provided on a few occasions prior to her filing a complaint with SOCR. This
    evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the City, could persuade a
    reasonable trier of fact that Pope requested, but did not receive, a reasonable
    accommodation from AHS.
    The City met its burden to produce evidence supporting a prima facie case
    of discrimination. Thus, the burden properly shifted to AHS to produce
    nondiscriminatory reasons for its failure to accommodate Pope’s disability.
    
    Scrivener, 181 Wash. 2d at 446
    . Herein, AHS’s only proffered explanation was that
    without certain medical proof of Pope’s disability, it was not able to develop an
    accommodation. Not only is this explanation legally insufficient—as employers
    are required to take affirmative steps to accommodate a disability once they are
    notified of its existence even in the absence of medical proof, 
    Goodman, 127 Wash. 2d at 408
    -09—but such an explanation appears dubious in light of the fact
    that AHS never once requested Pope to submit to a fitness for duty medical
    examination and ignored Pope’s medical provider’s e-mail declaring her fit for
    work. Plainly, the City established a dispute of material fact regarding the
    question of whether AHS discriminated against Pope because of her disability.
    The Echazabal court further noted that “an employer must gather ‘substantial information’
    about an employee’s work history and medical status” to make an individualized 
    assessment. 336 F.3d at 1028
    . There is no evidence in the record herein to suggest that AHS obtained such
    information or completed such an individualized assessment.
    21
    No. 79692-5-I/22
    AHS next asserts that it has a complete defense to discrimination claims
    under SMC 14.04.050(D) because Pope could not perform the essential
    functions of her job. However, because the City provided evidence of Pope’s
    ability to perform the essential functions of her job, AHS has not established, as a
    matter of law, that SMC 14.04.050(D)’s exception for cases wherein an
    employee’s disability prevents her or him from performing the job is applicable.
    Summary judgment premised on the defense set forth in SMC 14.04.050(D) was,
    therefore, improper.
    Finally, AHS asserts that the City failed to establish a prima facie case of
    retaliation under both SMC 14.04.040 and former SMC 14.19.060 (2014) and
    that even if it had so established, AHS provided unchallenged evidence justifying
    its suspension of Pope and establishing that retaliation was not a substantial
    factor in the suspension. This is so, AHS asserts, because (1) a suspension to
    enable an employee to obtain medical authorization to work is never an adverse
    employment action—and therefore there was no dispute that Pope’s suspension
    was not an adverse employment action—and (2) even if there was prima facie
    evidence of an adverse employment action, there was no evidence supporting an
    inference that the suspension was retaliatory because the suspension was
    intended to enable Pope to provide AHS with medical information about her
    disability so that it could develop a reasonable accommodation.18
    18  AHS also appears to assert that it suspended Pope because of disciplinary issues,
    specifically that she failed to remember to clock in properly or show up to work as scheduled.
    Even if these considerations were part of the decision to suspend Pope—the parties disputed
    whether these disciplinary issues were merely a pretext—that does not establish that the request
    for an accommodation and the filing of complaints were not substantial factors in the decision.
    Additionally, it is odd for AHS to so assert because, by doing so, it is essentially admitting that it
    suspended Pope because of issues arising directly from her memory related disability.
    22
    No. 79692-5-I/23
    AHS is incorrect that a medical suspension may never be an adverse
    employment action. See, e.g., Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White, 
    548 U.S. 53
    , 71-72, 
    126 S. Ct. 2405
    , 
    165 L. Ed. 2d 345
    (2006) (concluding that a
    medical suspension without pay was adverse employment action even when
    employee receives back pay at the end of the suspension). While a medical
    evaluation is not necessarily itself an adverse action, the accompanying
    suspension without pay certainly qualifies as adverse. See 
    Burlington, 548 U.S. at 73
    (“A reasonable employee facing the choice between retaining her job (and
    paycheck) and filing a discrimination complaint might well choose the former.”).
    It is undisputed that AHS suspended Pope without pay and never allowed her to
    return to work. Such a suspension plainly constitutes an adverse employment
    action.19
    AHS is also incorrect that its explanation for Pope’s suspension—to allow
    her to obtain medical proof of the impacts of her disability and to be medically
    cleared to work—established that it was not retaliatory. As the City notes in its
    briefing, a fact finder could doubt AHS’s proffered reason for suspending Pope
    because of the timing of the suspension, which occurred shortly after the filing of
    complaints with SOCR and SOLS, and because AHS never sought to have a
    doctor examine Pope during her suspension. The City therefore plainly
    19 Furthermore, it is disputed by the parties that AHS’s suspension of Pope was actually
    for the purpose of enabling her to obtain medical information for AHS. Given that the City
    presented evidence that Pope’s medical provider informed AHS that Pope was cleared to work
    and that AHS ignored this and yet declined to request Pope undergo an independent medical
    assessment, a trier of fact could reasonably conclude that AHS did not actually want to
    accommodate Pope. Thus, even if suspension to obtain medical clearance was not an adverse
    employment action, a disputed issue of fact would remain as to whether obtaining medical
    clearance to work was, in fact, the actual purpose of the suspension.
    23
    No. 79692-5-I/24
    presented evidence to dispute the credibility of AHS’s explanation for the
    suspension and such a dispute bars summary judgment on the retaliation claims.
    The order of the superior court is affirmed.
    WE CONCUR:
    24