Court Opinion

ID: 5133823
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-09 21:03:35.945962+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:23:40.267777
License: Public Domain

2021 IL App (2d) 200579-U
                                        No. 2-20-0579
                                Order filed December 9, 2021

      NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedent
      except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(l).
______________________________________________________________________________

                                           IN THE

                            APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

YUMING HUANG,                          ) On Petition for Administrative Review
                                       ) from the Illinois Human Rights Commission.
      Petitioner-Appellant,            )
                                       )
v.                                     ) Charge No. 2018-CF-2775
                                       )
                                       )
THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION,           )
THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RIGHTS, )
and AT&T SERVICES, INC.,               )
                                       )
      Respondents-Appellees.           )
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court.
       Presiding Justice Bridges and Justice McLaren concurred in the judgment.

                                          ORDER

¶1     Held: The Commission’s order sustaining the dismissal of petitioner’s harassment,
             discrimination, and retaliation claims is affirmed.

¶2     Pro se petitioner, Yuming Huang, appeals the Human Rights Commission’s order

sustaining the Department of Human Rights’ order dismissing, for lack of substantial evidence,

petitioner’s claims that his employer, AT&T Services, Inc., engaged in racial harassment and
2021 IL App (2d) 200579-U

discrimination against him and retaliated against him after he engaged in protected activity. 1 For

the following reasons, we affirm.

¶3                                      I. BACKGROUND

¶4     In March 2018, AT&T notified petitioner that it was terminating his employment as a

senior member of its technical staff.

¶5     In June 2018, petitioner filed with the Department a charge alleging four counts of

employment discrimination and retaliation against AT&T. First, petitioner, who is Asian, alleged

that from “early 2017” through April 30, 2018, he was harassed by his non-Asian supervisor,

Raymond Egler, who “constantly” criticized petitioner’s work quality and quantity, creating a

hostile work environment that impacted petitioner’s ability to do his job. Second, petitioner

alleged that Egler’s harassment closely followed petitioner’s engagement in protected activity,

raising an inference of retaliation. Specifically, petitioner claimed that he engaged in protected

activity when, (1) in March 2008, he filed a discrimination charge against AT&T; and (2) on

October 6, 2017, he filed an internal discrimination complaint against Egler. Third, petitioner

charged AT&T with race discrimination in its decision to terminate him. Petitioner noted that he

had been employed since July 31, 2000, and his performance met AT&T’s expectations. He

asserted that, on March 1, 2018, Egler notified him that he would be laid off effective April 30,

2018, because his position was being eliminated; however, petitioner asserted that similarly

situated non-Asian employees were not laid off. Finally, petitioner alleged that he was terminated

       1
           Although, on appeal, AT&T filed an appearance and requested multiple extensions of

time to file an appellee brief, which were granted, it never did so.

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in retaliation for having opposed discrimination on the two occasions described above (i.e., the

March 2008, charge with the Department and an October 2017, internal complaint against Egler).

¶6      In November 2019, the Department initially dismissed petitioner’s charges for a lack of

substantial evidence and issued an accompanying investigation report. In January 2020, petitioner

requested that the Commission review the dismissal. Apparently, he attached certain documents,

namely, emails, to that request. In response, the Department requested that the Commission

remand the matter for further investigation. Accordingly, on February 5, 2020, the Commission

reinstated and remanded petitioner’s charges to the Department for further investigation. We will

refer to this 2020 request for review and remand as the “first” request for review.

¶7      In March 2020, after conducting additional investigation, the Department again dismissed

petitioner’s charges. It prepared an addendum to its initial, 2019 report, summarizing its findings

and conclusions, and noted that the 2020 addendum report should be read in conjunction with the

initial report.

¶8      In June 2020, petitioner requested that the Commission review the Department’s 2020

dismissal of his charges (i.e., the second request for review). We note that the second request for

review received a Commission case number that was different from the first request; in other

words, it was not filed as a continuation of the first request and was treated as a separate process.

The request-for-review form again instructed petitioner to specifically describe the reasons that

the charges should not have been dismissed. Further, it again noted that he could attach additional

information or documents in support of his request. This time, petitioner attached only a one-page

document, summarizing two reasons why he believed the charges should not have been dismissed.

First, although it is not entirely clear, it appears he questioned how his performance rating in 2017

compared with that of an individual who had been discharged in December 2017, suggesting that,

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2021 IL App (2d) 200579-U

if his rating was the same in 2017 and 2018, yet he was not laid off in 2017, Egler might have

changed his 2018 rating to justify termination. Second, petitioner asserted that he had provided

specific and substantial evidence to support his claims with his first request for review (received

by the Commission in January 2020), but the investigator’s March 2020 report rejected that

evidence without any specific rebuttal.

¶9     The Department filed a response, in sum, explaining that, as opposed to racial harassment,

discrimination, or retaliation, its investigation revealed only that AT&T had periodically corrected

petitioner’s work performance and, for financial reasons, eliminated petitioner’s position after

determining that he had the lowest ranking based on performance, leadership, skills, and

experience. The Department included with its response the addendum investigation report, but no

exhibits or attachments that are referenced in that report.

¶ 10   In his reply, petitioner (1) noted that his performance rankings decreased from 2015

through 2018, when Egler was his supervisor; (2) asserted that Egler was unhappy with petitioner’s

accent; (3) argued that written evidence and emails submitted with his first request for review

proved the discrimination and harassment; and (4) questioned his 2018 performance rankings, as

compared with the 2017 rankings.

¶ 11   On September 28, 2020, the Commission sustained the Department’s dismissal of

petitioner’s charges. The Commission noted that petitioner alleged that, on one or two occasions

in early 2017, Egler laughed at petitioner’s accent and once mimicked petitioner on the phone.

Further, petitioner stated that Egler criticized his work performance in a meeting, gave him

additional work, even after he told Egler he was experiencing health issues due to work stress, and

that Egler did not respond to petitioner’s requests for work assistance. The Commission found

that, although on October 6, 2017, petitioner emailed Raj Savoor, complaining that Egler’s

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supervision humiliated him and detailing specific incidents that petitioner believed were harassing,

the email “did not mention any protected class discrimination; it did say that [p]etitioner believed

Egler’s conduct was in retaliation, but did not say what Egler was retaliating against him for.”

Further, during the Department’s investigation, petitioner did not recount any incidents of

harassment after the October 6, 2017, email. As for petitioner’s termination in March 2018, the

Commission noted that he was the only member of his five-person team who was laid off; of the

four remaining members of his team, one was Asian and three were non-Asian. However, four

other persons (outside of his team) were terminated at the same time as petitioner, one of whom

was Asian and three who were non-Asian. The evidence reflected that AT&T provided the

Department with the performance scores assigned to all members of petitioner’s team, and

petitioner had received the lowest score. Further, at the time of his layoff, petitioner was given

two months to apply for other positions within AT&T; he applied to 12 positions but was not hired.

However, of those 12 positions, 5 were “cancelled” and never filled, while 3 of the remaining 7

positions were filled by Asian applicants.

¶ 12   Therefore, based upon the Department’s investigation report, the Commission sustained

the Department’s findings that petitioner’s claims lacked substantial evidence. The Commission

found that petitioner failed to establish a prima facie case of unlawful harassment, discrimination,

or retaliation. First, as to harassment, it acknowledged that the two 2017 incidents petitioner

identified (Egler’s laughing at and mimicking petitioner’s accent) contained a racial connection,

but noted that, to be actionable, racial harassment requires more than a few isolated comments.

Indeed, the other incidents that petitioner characterized as harassment reflected only work-related

critiques or disputes, lacking connection to his protected class, and, therefore, were not actionable.

The Commission noted, “[p]etitioner provided emails between he and Egler with his initial

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Request [for review], and nothing in these emails constitutes actionable racial harassment.”

(Emphasis added.).

¶ 13   With respect to petitioner’s claim that AT&T terminated him on account of his race, the

Commission determined that petitioner failed to provide substantial evidence to establish that a

similarly situated, non-Asian employee was treated more favorably.           Instead, the evidence

demonstrated that petitioner was not the only Asian member of his team, and the one other Asian

member received the second-highest score in evaluations and was not terminated. Further, four

other employees (outside of the team) were laid off at the same time as petitioner, and three of

those terminated were non-Asian.

¶ 14   Finally, as to his claims that he was harassed and terminated in retaliation for protected

activity, the Commission found that petitioner failed to provide substantial evidence that the

alleged harassment was an actionable adverse action; the October 2017 email was protected

activity, as it did not complain about unlawful discrimination; or the March 2008 charge of

discrimination, which would constitute protected activity, held any causal connection to his alleged

harassment or termination almost 10 years later. Petitioner appeals.

¶ 15                                      II. ANALYSIS

¶ 16                   A. Petitioner’s Arguments and Standards of Review

¶ 17   On appeal, petitioner argues that the Commission erred in sustaining the dismissal of his

charges. He argues that the Commission erred in concluding that there were only two incidents of

harassment, which were insufficient to be actionable, and he instead asserts that Egler subjected

him to harassment and unfair treatment from 2016 to 2018. Petitioner explains that, initially, Egler

did not like his accent and, then, a hostile work environment developed when petitioner “fought

back” and complained about unfair treatment. For example, petitioner lists two times in October

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2021 IL App (2d) 200579-U

2016, when Egler blamed him for work errors and petitioner “fought back” and proved he did

nothing wrong. He lists eight occasions in 2017, when Egler believed that petitioner was

responsible for certain errors or work mishaps, “harassed” petitioner about them, petitioner “fought

back,” and then, when petitioner suffered health issues, Egler assigned him extra work instead of

reducing his responsibilities. As for retaliation, petitioner explains that, in October 2017, he

reported Egler’s conduct in an email he sent to Savoor “to complain about racial discrimination,

harassment, and retaliation.” Also, he filed a charge in 2008 and, with respect to the 10 years that

passed between his 2008 charge and his termination, petitioner asserts that AT&T had “long

memories and was vindictive.” Petitioner notes that he was rated as a “key employee” in 2015,

and his annual performance reviews in 2016 and 2017 acknowledged that he met performance

expectations or had a “meaningful impact.” In less than three years, however, he was rated

“bottom,” and AT&T has not explained how that happened. With respect to the Asian employees

who were not terminated, petitioner comments that the difference between him and them is that he

opposed racial discrimination. Accordingly, petitioner contends that his March 2018 termination

was retaliatory, and he asks that we vacate the dismissal of his charges and reinstate them for

further investigation.

¶ 18   The Illinois Human Rights Act (Act) (775 ILCS 5/1-101 et seq. (West 2018)) prohibits

discrimination against a person on the basis of his or her race. Id. §§ 1-102(A); 1-103(Q). In

addition, the Act prohibits retaliation against an individual because he or she has opposed unlawful

discrimination or has made a charge or complaint or participated in an investigation under the Act.

Id. § 6-101(A). When a person files a charge alleging discrimination or retaliation under the Act,

the Department must conduct a full investigation of the allegations and prepare a written report.

Id. §§ 7A-102(C)(1), (D)(1). The Department must determine whether there is “substantial

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evidence” that the alleged violation(s) occurred. Id. § 7A-102(D)(2). “Substantial evidence” is

“evidence which a reasonable mind accepts as sufficient to support a particular conclusion and

which consists of more than a mere scintilla but may be somewhat less than a preponderance.” Id.

§ 7A-102(D)(2). If the Department determines that there is no substantial evidence to support the

allegation, the charge is dismissed. Id. § 7A-102(D)(3).

¶ 19   The petitioner may seek review by the Commission of the dismissal. Id. The request may

be accompanied by argument and supporting materials. 775 ILCS 5/8-103(B) (West 2018); see

also 56 Ill. Admin. Code § 5300.410. Further, here, the Commission’s instructions for the request

for review provided that, absent permission, the request, argument, and supporting materials shall

not exceed 30 pages and, further:

       “In the space provided, you must list and describe the specific reasons that the charge

       should not have been dismissed. If appliable, you may write on the back of this form or

       attach additional information or documents, which support your Request for Review. You

       may review your investigation file to help you prepare your request by calling (312) [***-

       ****] or (217) [***-****]. The Department’s investigation file may be reviewed or copied

       upon request once the Department’s investigation has been completed. The Department is

       not responsible for copy service fees. A minimum of three (3) business days’ notice is

       required. Call (312) [***-****] to make arrangements.”

¶ 20   The Department may then file a response, which:

       “ ***shall consist of the following:

       1) a copy of the Charge, including amendments.

       2) the Department’s investigation report.

       3) results of additional [Department] investigation, if any.

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2021 IL App (2d) 200579-U

       4) a statement of [Department]’s position, including proposed findings to support

       dismissal.” (Emphasis added.) 56 Ill. Admin. Code § 5300.430.

Thereafter, the petitioner may file a reply. Id. § 5300.440.

¶ 21   In its review, the Commission may consider the Department’s report, any argument and

“supplemental evidence submitted,” and the results of any additional investigation the Department

conducts in response to the request for review. 775 ILCS 5/8-103(B) (West 2018). “When

considering whether there is substantial evidence to support a charge, the Commission is not to

resolve credibility issues or questions of fact.” Marinelli v. Human Rights Comm’n, 262 Ill. App.

3d 247, 253 (1994). Rather, the Commission must adopt the Department’s factual findings unless

they are against the manifest weight of the evidence. See id.         If the Commission ultimately

sustains the dismissal, the petitioner may seek direct administrative review in the appellate court.

Id. § 8-111(B)(1); Allen v. Lieberman, 359 Ill. App. 3d 1170, 1180 (2005).

¶ 22   We review the decision of the Commission, not the Department. See Zaderaka v. Illinois

Human Rights Comm’n, 131 Ill. 2d 172, 180 (1989). The Commission’s findings of fact are

entitled to deference and “shall be sustained unless the court determines that such findings are

contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence.” 775 ILCS 5/8-111(B)(2) (West 2018); see Stone

v. Department of Human Rights, 299 Ill. App. 3d 306, 314 (1998). The Commission’s decision to

sustain the dismissal of a charge will be reversed only where the decision was arbitrary and

capricious or an abuse of discretion. See Owens v. Department of Human Rights, 403 Ill. App. 3d

899, 917 (2010). A decision is arbitrary and capricious if it contravenes legislative intent, fails to

consider a critical aspect of the matter, or offers an explanation so implausible that it cannot be

considered as a result of the exercise of the agency’s expertise. Young v. Illinois Human Rights

Comm’n, 2012 IL App (1st) 112204, ¶ 33. Under this standard, a reviewing court may not reweigh

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evidence or substitute its judgment for that of the Commission. Id. Rather, an abuse of discretion

will be found only where no reasonable person could agree with the Commission’s decision. 2 Id.

¶ 23                                  B. The Appellate Record

¶ 24   Before addressing the merits of this appeal, we choose to comment on the state of the

record. Specifically, petitioner appealed to this court in October 2020, and, in December 2020,

the Commission submitted the administrative record. Thereafter, petitioner twice moved to

supplement the record with documents that he alleged were received by the Commission but were

missing. Petitioner identified the missing documents as: (1) 30 pages of evidence that he asserted

were electronically filed with the Department in March 2019 (i.e., during the Department’s first

investigation of the charges) and received by the Commission in January 2020 (i.e., when

petitioner filed his first request for review); (2) the Department’s January 2020 response to his

review request (i.e., where it requested the Commission to remand for further investigation); and

(3) the Commission’s February 2020 remand order.             In other words, petitioner wished to

supplement the record with documents concerning his first request for review. Although he

identified documents in his motions to this court, petitioner did not attach them; rather, he attached

only the cover page of his initial request for review and a notice of filing of the request for review,

as well as only the first page reflecting certain other documents were filed.

¶ 25   Initially, on January 5, 2021, this court granted petitioner’s motions. However, the

Commission moved us to reconsider, arguing that, because the documents from the first request

       2
           We note that the arbitrary-and-capricious and abuse-of-discretion standards are viewed

as equivalents. See ManorCare Health Services, LLC v. Illinois Health Facilities & Services

Review Board, 2016 IL App (2d) 151214, ¶ 21.

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for review were not in the record for petitioner’s second request for review, which led to the

decision at issue on appeal, we should not consider documents the Commission did not review in

rendering its decision. The Commission represented that the record before us was complete

because it included all documents it considered in entering its final administrative decision. On

January 13, 2021, we granted the Commission’s motion to reconsider. Petitioner moved us to

reconsider, pointing out that Illinois Supreme Court Rule 335(d) (eff. July 1, 2017) provides that

the “entire record before the administrative agency shall be the record on review,” 3 and essentially

arguing that the entire record here consists of all documents before the Department and

Commission that led to the initial dismissal, the remand for more investigation, the second

dismissal, and the Commission’s order affirming the dismissal. On January 21, 2021, we denied

petitioner’s motion to reconsider.

¶ 26     Setting aside the documents that were the subject of plaintiff’s ultimately-denied motions,

our consideration of the parties’ substantive appellate arguments raised for this court new questions

         3
             Rule 335(d) provides in full:

         “(d) The Record. The entire record before the administrative agency shall be the record on

review unless the agency and the petitioner stipulate to omit portions. Omitted portions shall be

transmitted to the Appellate Court at any time on the request of the agency, the petitioner or any

other party, which request shall be served on all parties, or on order of the court. The record shall

be filed with the Appellate Court and shall contain, be arranged, prepared numbered, and certified

as required for the record on appeal under Rules 321 through 325 and the Standards and

Requirements for Electronic Filing the Record on Appeal.” Ill. Sup. Ct. R. 335 (d) (eff. July 1,

2017).

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about the record. Specifically, certain documents referenced within the Commission’s order

(including an email from the first request for review) and which underly the Department’s and

Commission’s findings are not in the record. As such, on November 9, 2021, to be certain that we

received the full administrative record, we entered the following order:

       “On the court’s own motion, respondent Illinois Human Rights Commission shall submit

       a supplement to the record containing any documents explicitly referenced in its September

       28, 2020, decision (for example, including, but not limited to, emails), any other documents

       submitted for its review, and any other documents upon which it relied. Further, as the

       Commission reviewed the Department of Human Rights’ addendum report, which

       referenced 10 exhibits purportedly attached to that report, those exhibits shall also be

       submitted. The supplements to the record shall be submitted within 14 days of this order.”

¶ 27   The Commission has now moved this court to reconsider our sua sponte order.

Specifically, the Commission represents that the documents our order identifies were either not

part of the administrative record that it considered or it has already provided the entire record. It

explains that certain documents are not part of the record because: (1) petitioner submitted no

additional materials, such as the exhibits to the investigative and addendum reports, with his

request for review; and (2) the documents were not among the materials that the Department is

required to transmit to the Commission. Indeed, the Commission notes that, although its order

references certain emails between petitioner and his employer, the Department “does not”

(suggesting a routine procedure) provide those original documents to the Commission with its

response. “The references to emails in the Commission’s decision are therefore based on the

summaries of the evidence in the Department’s reports. So, the Commission did not review the

emails themselves when deciding the second request for review[.]” Similarly, as to the 10 exhibits

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that were purportedly attached to the addendum report, the Commission again represents it did not

receive or review those exhibits in making its decision. “While the Department’s investigative

report lists the exhibits that were attached to the report when it was reviewed by the Department’s

Director, those exhibits are not among the materials that [petitioner] and the Department sent to

the Commission in connection with the second request for review.” The Commission notes again

that petitioner could have attached relevant documents in support of his request for review, as he

did in his first request for review, but that he did not do so.

¶ 28    Given the Commission’s representations in its motion, we grant its motion to reconsider

our November 9, 2021, order. We have apparently received all documents that the Commission

had before it when deciding the issues and rendering its decision. On administrative review, we

are limited to considering the record that was before the agency and cannot consider new or

additional evidence; therefore, it would be improper for us to order the Commission to obtain

documents from the Department that it did not possess during its review and to submit them to this

court. See, e.g., Deen v. Lustig, 337 Ill. App. 3d 294, 304-05 (2003).

¶ 29    We note that the administrative framework here effectively permits the Commission to

base its review and ultimate findings on the Department’s summary of what the evidence showed,

not necessarily through independent inspection of the underlying evidence. From our perspective,

this is somewhat troubling, as it is our obligation to review the Commission’s decision under the

manifest-weight-of-the-evidence standard. Yet, the applicable statutes and regulations do not

appear to require the Department to transmit underlying evidence to the Commission. Although

one might expect that, where the Department is required to submit to the Commission its

“investigation report,” the exhibits referenced therein and attached to that report would be included

(for example, we generally deem exhibits attached to a complaint, referenced therein, as being part

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of the complaint. Kucinsky v. Pfister, 2020 IL App (3d) 170719, ¶ 33 (Exhibits attached to the

complaint, incorporated by reference, are part of the complaint)). Nevertheless, it appears that

there is no requirement that, in its response, the Department attach supporting evidence to its

report, and the regulations do not define “investigation report.” Rather, as noted, when listing

what must be included with the Department’s response, the regulations require only the

“investigation report” (56 Ill. Admin. Code § 5300.430) and the statute mentions only the “report”

(775 ILCS 5/8-103(B) (West 2018)). See, e.g., Cannon v. Illinois Human Rights Comm’n, 2021

IL App (3d) 190280-U, ¶ 25 (“There is no requirement to include the full investigative file, or the

exhibits referenced in the Department’s report.”). Moreover, again, it is the petitioner’s burden to

establish his case (see Zaderaka v. Illinois Human Rights Comm’n, 131 Ill. 2d 172, 178-79 (1989)).

Indeed, it appears that the Commission must adopt the Department’s factual findings unless the

petitioner, in the request for review and through supplemental evidence, if appropriate,

demonstrates those findings are against the manifest weight of the evidence. See Marinelli, 262

Ill. App. 3d at 253. The Act allowed the petitioner here to submit any evidence that he believed

the Commission should have considered for its review of his claims of error (775 ILCS 5/8-103(B)

(West 2018)), and while not detailed in the statutes and regulations, the Commission’s instructions

to the request for review specifically explained that petitioner could: submit documents with his

request; arrange to access all documents in the Department’s investigative file; and make copies

of evidence in the file that he wished to have the Commission consider. As the Commission points

out, petitioner attached documentary support to his first request for review, but did not follow those

procedures with the second request for review.

¶ 30   Technicalities aside, we note that it is not wholly unreasonable for a pro se petitioner to

presume, albeit incorrectly, that the record from an initial request for review would be part of the

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administrative record for a second request for review based on the same charges. Apparently, the

Commission treats each review request as a separate case number and proceeding, and the records

are not merged. Yet, the first review request resulted in a remand for additional investigation; that

additional investigation resulted in the report that gave rise to the second request for review.

Further, the Department’s addendum report specifies that it should be read along with the initial

report (which was the subject of the first request for review), and the Commission’s decision on

the second request for review references emails that petitioner submitted with his first request for

review. As such, it seems to us that the second report and request for review could be considered

a continuation of the first report and request for review, such that the administrative record would

include both, but it is not for us to decide or comment on the Commission’s case management

processes. In the end, to the extent that petitioner submitted documents with his first request for

review, that evidence was apparently served upon the Department with the petitioner’s request and

before it agreed in its response to a remand.           Therefore, the documents were presumably

incorporated into the additional investigation and encompassed in the addendum report and

findings.

¶ 31   In sum, given the various burdens, requirements, and case management processes at play

here, the record before us is apparently complete.

¶ 32                                   C. Racial Harassment

¶ 33   We turn now to the merits of this appeal. Addressing first petitioner’s claim of racial

harassment, the Commission found that petitioner failed to present substantial evidence of

actionable harassment.     To establish a racial-harassment claim, the petition must provide

substantial evidence that the employer’s conduct was so severe and pervasive that it altered the

terms and conditions of the petitioner’s employment and created an abusive working environment.

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See Village of Bellwood Board of Fire & Police Commissioners v. Human Rights Comm’n, 184

Ill. App. 3d 339, 350 (1989). “Racial harassment has been defined to include a steady barrage of

opprobrious racial comment. [Citation.] More than a few isolated incidents of harassment,

however, must have occurred; racial comments that are merely part of casual conversation, are

accidental, or are sporadic do not trigger civil rights protective measures.” Id. “[O]ffhand

comments, isolated incident[s,] and simple teasing do not rise to the level of conduct that alters the

terms and conditions of employment.” Scruggs v. Garst Seed Co., 587 F.3d 832, 840-41 (7th Cir.

2009).

¶ 34     Here, the Department and Commission found that petitioner identified roughly two

incidents where Egler laughed at petitioner’s accent and mocked him. While the incidents related

to petitioner’s race, they were isolated incidents and not a “steady barrage” of racial harassment.

Village of Bellwood, 184 Ill. App. 3d at 350. Although petitioner claimed that Egler harassed him

on other occasions, those incidents concerned work-performance issues, as opposed to petitioner’s

race. Indeed, in his opening brief, petitioner points to eight incidents of alleged harassment (which

it appears he did not identify below and is improperly raising for the first time on appeal), but all

concern Egler purportedly misidentifying petitioner as being responsible for perceived work errors

or mishaps and petitioner “fighting back.” He provides similar, non-racially-connected examples

in his reply brief. None describe racial comments or constitute substantial evidence that the

incidents were racially motivated.

¶ 35     Although petitioner claims that emails submitted with his first request for review

established racial harassment, the Department and Commission found that those emails did not

concern his race. The Commission noted in its order, “[p]etitioner provided emails between he

and Egler with his initial Request [for review], and nothing in these emails constitutes actionable

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racial harassment.” (Emphasis added.) On appeal, petitioner notes that the emails are not in the

record and that we denied his motion to supplement the record, in part, on the basis that documents

he referenced were purportedly not before the Commission during its review of the second request.

At the same time, however, he points out that the Commission’s order explicitly references and

relies upon an email and, so, he contends, “either the record is incomplete or the order is wrong.”

Not necessarily. As we discussed above, the record is not incomplete. Further, the Commission

was familiar with the relevant documents, as petitioner’s claims previously came before the

Commission during petitioner’s first request for review and the evidence was discussed in the

Department’s first investigative report (which, in turn, was incorporated into its second report).

Again, when, after the Department’s second decision dismissing his claims, petitioner filed a

second request for review, he did not attach documents to support his claims of error, although the

instructions provided that he could do so. Thus, it could be true both that the emails were not in

the record before the Commission during the second review request and that the Commission was

aware of their contents for purposes of addressing petitioner’s claims.         In any event, the

Commission’s order reflects that it considered documents that petitioner asserts support his claims,

but it found that they did not establish racial harassment. Our review of the Commission’s factual

findings is not de novo; rather, we consider them with deference and assess only whether they were

contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. See, e.g., Stone, 299 Ill. App. 3d at 314. Here,

petitioner did not rebut the Department’s findings that the emails did not mention race. Indeed,

even on appeal, petitioner identifies only two isolated incidents of comments relating to race.

Petitioner describes only in conclusory fashion that the emails support his claims, but he does not

describe with any specificity exactly what they said or how they established race harassment, so

as to rebut the Department’s and Commission’s findings. As such, we cannot conclude that the

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Commission’s finding that petitioner did not provide substantial evidence of actionable racial

harassment was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence or, ultimately, that dismissal of

his claims was an abuse of discretion.

¶ 36                                 D. Racial Discrimination

¶ 37   With respect to his termination, the Commission did not abuse its discretion in finding that

petitioner did not present substantial evidence of employment discrimination based upon race. In

cases involving employment discrimination under the Act, Illinois courts have adopted the

analytical framework used for addressing Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. §

2000e, et seq. (2012)) and other federal statutes. See Zaderaka v. Human Rights Comm’n, 131 Ill.

2d 172, 178 (1989). Within this framework, a plaintiff can prove discrimination through direct

evidence or through an indirect method of proof. See Lalvani v. Human Rights Comm’n, 324 Ill.

App. 3d 774, 790 (2001). For the indirect method, at issue here, courts use the analysis in

McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792 (1973). Specifically, petitioner here bore the

initial burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, a prima facie case of unlawful

discrimination. Illinois Bell Telephone Co. v. Illinois Human Rights Comm’n, 190 Ill. App. 3d

1036, 1048 (1989). As his claim concerns his termination, to establish a prima facie case,

petitioner must show by a preponderance of the evidence that: (1) he is a member of a protected

class; (2) he was performing satisfactorily; (3) despite the adequacy of his work, he was

discharged; and (4) a similarly situated employee who was not a member of the protected group

was not discharged. See Owens v. Department of Human Rights, 356 Ill. App. 3d 46, 52 (2005).

Once a petitioner establishes a prima facie case, “the employer must articulate, not prove, a

legitimate, nondiscriminatory basis for its action.” Id. The burden then shifts back to the petitioner

to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the employer’s articulated reason was not true

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and was a pretext for unlawful discrimination. Id. A petitioner’s failure “to present substantial

evidence of a prima facie discrimination claim or to disprove an employer’s articulated reason for

discharge warrants dismissal of the charge.” Id.

¶ 38   Here, the Commission found that petitioner did not present substantial evidence of a prima

facie claim because he did not establish that similarly situated non-Asian employees were treated

more favorably. Specifically, the Department’s investigation revealed that petitioner was not the

only Asian member of his team; the other Asian team member received the second-highest score

in evaluations and was not terminated. Further, four other employees (outside of the team) were

laid off at the same time as petitioner, and three of those terminated employees were non-Asian.

Petitioner did not present evidence during the second review request to establish that the

Department’s findings were incorrect. On appeal, petitioner vaguely asserts that the difference

between him and the non-terminated Asian team member is that he chose to oppose discrimination.

In addition to lacking support, this explanation does nothing to rebut the evidence that non-Asian

employees were also terminated at the same time. Nor has petitioner put forth evidence that, for

example, a non-Asian employee who had a lower performance score than him was not terminated,

which is not what the evidence demonstrated.

¶ 39                                      E. Retaliation

¶ 40   Finally, with respect to petitioner’s retaliation claims, the Commission did not abuse its

discretion in determining that petitioner failed to establish that the alleged racial harassment or

termination decisions were retaliatory. To prove a prima facie case of retaliation under the Act, a

plaintiff must prove that (1) he or she was engaged in statutorily-protected activity; (2) the

employer committed an adverse act against him or her; and (3) a causal connection existed between

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the protected activity and the adverse act. Terada v. Eli Lilly & Co., 2015 IL App (5th) 140170, ¶

25.

¶ 41   Preliminarily, with respect to the requirement of demonstrating an adverse action, while

petitioner’s termination is clearly an adverse action, the Commission correctly found that petitioner

did not establish racial harassment and, thus, the alleged harassment cannot serve as an additional

adverse action. Moreover, the Commission’s finding that petitioner did not establish a nexus

between the alleged adverse action and protected activity is not contrary to the manifest weight of

the evidence. Specifically, as noted, both the Department and Commission found that the 2017

email to Savoor did not mention racial harassment. Petitioner has not presented evidence to rebut

this finding.   Thus, because petitioner complained only generally of harassment or unfair

treatment, petitioner’s 2017 email complaining about Egler did not constitute protected activity.

Although protected activity includes internal complaints to managers or other appropriate persons

(see Burks v. Wisconsin Department of Transportation, 464 F.3d 744, 758 (7th Cir. 2006)), the

substance of the complaint must be sufficient to notify the employer that the petitioner reasonably

believes that prohibited discrimination has occurred. See Skiba v. Illinois Central R.R. Co., 884

F.3d 708, 718 (7th Cir. 2018). “Merely complaining in general terms of discrimination or

harassment, without indicating a connection to a protected class or providing facts sufficient to

create that inference, is insufficient.” Tomanovich v. City of Indianapolis, 457 F.3d 656, 663 (7th

Cir. 2006).

¶ 42   Moreover, although the Commission agreed that petitioner’s 2008 discrimination charge

against his employer would constitute protected activity, it properly concluded that petitioner did

not provide substantial evidence of a causal connection between that activity and his termination

10 years later. Indeed, as the Commission notes, an extended temporal proximity between the

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protected activity and adverse action precludes a finding of causality. See, e.g., Clark City School

District v. Breeden, 532 U.S. 268, 273-74 (2001) (20-month lapse between alleged protected

activity and adverse action insufficient to infer causal connection); see also Samuelson v.

Durkee/French/Airwick, 976 F.2d 1111, 1115 (7th Cir. 1992) (causal connection “discount[ed]”

on account of three-year lapse between protected activity and adverse action). Petitioner’s

assertion on appeal that the 10-year period is not an issue because AT&T has a long memory and

is vindictive constitutes unsupported speculation, not evidence. See, e.g., Folbert v. Department

of Human Rights, 303 Ill. App. 3d 13, 25 (1999) (speculation and conjecture does not constitute

substantial evidence). In sum, without more, petitioner’s 2008 alleged protected activity is too

remote from his termination to constitute substantial evidence of retaliation.

¶ 43                                   III. CONCLUSION

¶ 44   The decision of the Commission sustaining the Department’s dismissal of petitioner’s

charges for lack of substantial evidence was not an abuse of discretion. We affirm.

¶ 45   Affirmed.

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