Background and Facts Lori Franchina, a rescue lieutenant with the Providence Fire Department in Rhode Island, was assigned to work a shift with fellow firefighter Andre Ferro. During the shift, Ferro subjected her to unprofessional sexual comments and conduct. Based on Franchina’s account of Ferro’s actions, fire chief Curt Varone filed an intra-department complaint charging Ferro with sexual harassment. No action was taken. Other firefighters then began to treat Franchina with contempt. She was spit on and shoved and was forced to undergo verbal assaults, insubordination, and other kinds of negative treatment. She submitted forty different complaints of harassment to her superiors. Franchina filed a suit in a federal district court against the city of Providence, asserting that she was subjected to a hostile work environment as a result of her gender in violation of Title VII. The city argued that Franchina presented no evidence to support her claim. A jury issued a verdict in her favor and awarded damages. The city appealed.
Sticks and stones may break some bones, but harassment can hurt forever. * * * * Here, Franchina presented a plethora [a great deal] of evidence showing that the impetus [motivation] for the discrimination she sustained was based in part on her being a female. In gender discrimination cases premised on a hostile work environment, Title VII permits a plaintiffto prove unlawful discrimination by demonstrating that the workplace is permeated with discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, and insult that is suf-ficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions ofthe victim’s employment and create an abusive working envi-ronment. Evidence of sexual remarks, innuendos, ridicule, and intimidation may be sufficient to support a jury verdict for a hostile work environment. Here, there was repeated evidence that Franchina was called a “bitch,” * * *, and “Frangina” [a combination of her last name and the word “vagina”]. The use of these words is inherently gender-specific and their repeated and hostile use * * * can reasonably be considered evidence of sexual harassment. In fact a raft of case law * * * establishes that the use of sexually degrading, gender-specific epithets, such as “slut,” * * *, “whore,” and “bitch” * * *, has been consistently held to con-stitute harassment based upon sex. This case is no different. In fact, there was more. [Emphasis added.] There was also evidence that [within the fire department] women were treated as less competent; a treatment barred by Title VII. The critical issue, Title VII’s text indicates, is whether members of one sex are exposed to disadvantageous terms or conditions of employment to which members of the other sex are not exposed. There was evidence that men treated women better when they were perceived as willing to have sex with them. There was evidence that Franchina was subjected to humiliating sexual remarks and innuendos by Ferro, including asking the plaintiff if she wanted to have babies and if he could help her conceive. This type of sexually based animus [hostility] is a hallmark of Title VII. In sum, the jury heard evidence of repeated hostile, gender-based epithets, ill treatment of women as workers, sexual innuendoes, and preferential treatment for women who were more likely to sleep with the men of the department. This sampling of evidence demonstrates that the accumulated effect * * * taken together constitutes a hostile work environment
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