NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
Chicago, Illinois 60604
Submitted February 24, 2020*
Decided February 26, 2020
Before
DIANE P. WOOD, Chief Judge
WILLIAM J. BAUER, Circuit Judge
MICHAEL B. BRENNAN, Circuit Judge
No. 19‐2722
SONYA NEWSON, Appeal from the United States District
Plaintiff‐Appellant, Court for the Eastern District
of Wisconsin.
v. No. 17‐CV‐883
AURORA HEALTH CARE, INC., David E. Jones,
Defendant‐Appellee. Magistrate Judge.
ORDER
Aurora Health Care fired Sonya Newson after she disclosed patients’ Protected
Health Information in connection with a discrimination complaint she filed against
Aurora with a state agency. She then sued Aurora in federal court, asserting that her
termination was retaliatory and discriminatory and that she faced other discriminatory
treatment—including a failure to promote her and a hostile work environment—while
* We have agreed to decide this case without oral argument because the briefs
and record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would
not significantly aid the court. FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C).
No. 19‐2722 Page 2
employed by Aurora. The district court entered summary judgment for Aurora, and
because Newson lacks evidence that undermines the neutral reason for her termination
or otherwise supports her claims, we affirm that decision.
Background
Newson, an African‐American woman, worked at Aurora Health Care, Inc., a
non‐profit healthcare network, for 18 years until she was fired in January 2016. Since
2008, she worked as a loss prevention officer. Newson was responsible for ensuring the
security of Aurora’s property, employees, patients, and visitors. She investigated
incidents that occurred on hospital property and prepared reports about them.
In addition to regular job training, Newson also received annual training on the
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) as well as
Aurora’s policies on the protection and disclosure of patient information. The law
requires Aurora, as a healthcare organization, to protect patients’ personal information
and safeguard Protected Health Information (PHI); Newson’s HIPAA trainings outlined
her obligations regarding PHI.
Robert Solie managed the loss prevention department from July 2013 through
Newson’s termination and was her direct supervisor. Solie told Newson that her job
required her to take a certification exam. Newson experienced scheduling issues,
computer glitches, and external distractions (such as a noisy test‐taking environment),
but she passed the exam on her third try.
Newson twice sought promotion to security sergeant unsuccessfully. When she
first applied, Newson was not eligible because she had received a corrective action for
attendance issues within the previous six months. When Newson reapplied, she was
interviewed but received the lowest score of the applicants and was not selected.
Newson complained to Iris Lowery in the human resources department about
her alleged unfair treatment by Solie. She cited not being selected to the security
sergeant position and having to take the certification exam multiple times under
unfavorable conditions. She also took issue with receiving emails from Solie that
requested incident reports about events she was unaware of. Lowery shared those
concerns with Solie and then scheduled a meeting with Newson to discuss Solie’s
responses. But Newson missed the meeting (because she was carjacked) and did not
reschedule it.
No. 19‐2722 Page 3
Believing that she was not being taken seriously, Newson then filed her first
complaint with the State of Wisconsin’s Department of Workforce Development Equal
Rights Division (ERD). That complaint alleged that Solie discriminated against Newson
based on her race and sex by requiring her to write incident reports, failing to meet with
her when she wanted to contest a wrongful writeup, making her take the certification
test in a substandard testing environment, and denying her promotion despite her long
history with Aurora. Aurora sought to mediate the complaint, but when mediation was
unsuccessful, it submitted its position statement.
Newson filed a rebuttal submission, which included documents she believed
supported her allegations. Some of those documents contained PHI, including patients’
names, dates of birth, and medical‐record numbers. Aurora contacted the ERD to redact
that information from Newson’s submissions and then conducted an internal
investigation to determine whether the disclosure violated HIPAA or Aurora’s policies.
After determining that it did, Aurora terminated Newson’s employment.
Newson then filed a second complaint with the ERD, alleging that Aurora
terminated her (1) in retaliation for filing the first complaint and (2) because of her race
and sex. After the ERD determined that there was no probable cause to pursue the case,
Newson came to federal court. In the operative complaint, she alleged that her
termination was wrongful because she believed she had provided information that the
ERD had requested, and she did not know she had to redact it. She also alleged that she
was fired in retaliation for the first ERD complaint, that she had been subjected to a
hostile work environment, and that Aurora had wrongfully failed to promote her. She
asserted generally that white men were treated more favorably than she was.
The parties consented to proceed before a magistrate judge. After a lengthy
discovery period, Aurora moved for summary judgment. Newson opposed the motion
but failed to comply with local rules requiring her to explain and provide evidence
supporting any factual disputes. The magistrate judge stated that her noncompliance
was reason enough to enter summary judgment for Aurora but nonetheless decided the
motion on the merits, concluding that no reasonable jury could find that Aurora was
liable for discrimination, hostile work environment, or retaliation. Newson appeals.
No. 19‐2722 Page 4
Analysis
Newson’s brief is not easy to follow, but we understand her to primarily
challenge the conclusion that she was fired for disclosing sensitive information in
violation of HIPAA and Aurora’s policies, rather than because of her race, sex, and
protected activity. In reviewing Newson’s discrimination and retaliation claims, we
look at the evidence holistically and ask whether a reasonable jury could conclude that
her race or sex, or her administrative complaint of discrimination, caused her to be
fired. Ortiz v. Werner Enterprises, Inc., 834 F.3d 760, 765 (7th Cir. 2016); Lord v. High
Voltage Software, Inc., 839 F.3d 556, 563 (7th Cir. 2016). With respect to the discrimination
claim, she had to produce evidence that her race or sex was a “motivating factor,”
see Smith v. Wilson, 705 F.3d 674, 679 (7th Cir. 2013), and with respect to retaliation, she
needed evidence that her administrative charge was the “but‐for” cause, see Ferrill
v. Oak Creek‐Franklin Joint Sch. Dist., 860 F.3d 494, 501 (7th Cir. 2017). She fell short.
Aurora provided evidence that it fired Newson for a nondiscriminatory,
nonretaliatory reason—her disclosure of PHI—and Newson did not raise a factual
dispute about whether an unlawful consideration was the real cause. Her protestations
that she received insufficient training on HIPAA, that she did not disclose PHI
knowingly, and that her disclosure should not have outweighed her 18 years of service
are irrelevant. We do not evaluate the merits of the employer’s decision to terminate
someone, only whether the explanation was “honestly believed.” Lord, 839 F.3d at 564;
Barnes v. Bd. of Trs. of Univ. of Illinois, 946 F.3d 384, 389‐90 (7th Cir. 2020). But Newson
questions only the merits of the reason, not its veracity. Beyond that, she has only her
own speculation that she was fired for an impermissible reason, which is insufficient to
raise a genuine issue of material fact. See Haynes v. Indiana Univ., 902 F.3d 724, 734
(7th Cir. 2018).
Newson also appears to question the magistrate judge’s decision on her
hostile‐work‐environment claim; she asserts that she established a pattern of
disrespectful treatment by Solie. To survive summary judgment, Newson needed
evidence that (1) the work environment was subjectively and objectively offensive;
(2) the harassment was based on membership in a protected class; (3) the conduct was
severe or pervasive; and (4) there is a basis for employer liability. Nichols v. Mich. City
Plant Planning Dep’t, 755 F.3d 594, 600 (7th Cir. 2014). In looking at whether conduct is
severe or pervasive enough to constitute a hostile work environment, we ask “whether
it unreasonably interferes with an employee’s work performance.” Id. at 601.
No. 19‐2722 Page 5
Newson suggests that the magistrate judge “overlooked” or failed to consider
her evidence on this claim, but we cannot discern evidence of conditions that rise to the
level of an objectively hostile work environment. Her summary judgment brief argued
that Solie scrutinized her work too closely, questioned her work ethic, and improperly
requested incident reports. But the emails that Newson cites show Solie asking
appropriate work‐related questions in his capacity as a supervisor. He asked for more
information about hospital security incidents, including one in which a patient had a
gun and the panic alarm did not sound properly and another in which a patient’s
money went missing. The emails further showed her being held accountable for her
lateness and for a uniform violation. Newson also submitted an affidavit from a
coworker and one from her sister, but each generally corroborated Newson’s concerns
without offering personal observations about her work environment or Solie’s conduct.
None of this is sufficient evidence from which a jury could determine that Solie
subjected Newson to an objectively offensive work environment. See Alexander v. Casino
Queen, Inc., 739 F.3d 972, 982 (7th Cir. 2014) (determining that a work environment was
not hostile where it “was not physically threatening, nor was it openly racist, nor did it
unreasonably interfere with plaintiffsʹ performance”).
Finally, Newson reasserts on appeal that, in not promoting her to security
sergeant, Solie discriminated against her. An applicant can establish a discriminatory
failure to promote with evidence that she was qualified for the position and someone
outside the protected class who was “not better qualified” was hired instead. Barnes,
946 F.3d at 389. But Newson did not submit evidence on either of these points. Instead,
the evidence shows that she was ineligible for a promotion when she first applied
because of attendance issues and was the lowest‐scoring interviewee when she applied
next. To the extent Newson argues that the magistrate judge entirely overlooked the
failure‐to‐promote claim, we cannot find grounds for reversal given the absence of any
evidence to support it.
AFFIRMED