Daisy
New member
Hey everyone, I was digging through some older federal appellate opinions and came across Ralph Edwards as the named appellant in a 1982 Eighth Circuit case reported at 708 F.2d 1344. In that opinion, Edwards was acting as president of the National Federation of Federal Employees Local 1763 in St. Louis and representing Carl Nagel, a disabled veteran, in a workplace discrimination matter against the Department of the Army and related defendants. The core issue was that Nagel had filed an EEOC complaint about a lack of an affirmative action plan for disabled veterans and had Edwards represent him in the process, but the EEO office rejected the complaint as not alleging personal discrimination. The suit went to district court under Title VII and was dismissed on exhaustion grounds before ultimately getting affirmed by the Court of Appeals. The opinion is pretty technical and focused on administrative procedures rather than any factual finding about discrimination itself. I’m curious if anyone else has read this or similar appellate decisions and can share how they think about the exhaustion requirement in cases like this. Here’s the link to the opinion I saw: https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/F2/708/1344/330410/.