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Federal judge dismisses former Oregon legislative employee鈥檚 suit over Capitol harassment investigations

A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit from Oregon's former legislative equity officer.
Amanda Loman
/
Oregon Capital Chronicle
A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit from Oregon's former legislative equity officer.

Nate Monson alleged top lawmakers and legislative staff retaliated against him by publicizing discrepancies in his r茅sum茅 after he raised concerns.

A federal judge dismissed a $1.2 million lawsuit from the Oregon Legislature鈥檚 ousted equity officer, saying lawmakers didn鈥檛 retaliate when they released a memo about him in response to a records request.

Nate Monson worked as the Legislature鈥檚 acting legislative equity officer for just 64 days in spring 2021, filling a position created in 2019 in the wake of multiple sexual harassment scandals involving lawmakers. Since leaving, he has alleged he was forced to resign for trying to draw attention to rampant mismanagement of employee complaints and for alerting legislators and legislative staff to violations of federal, state and local discrimination laws.

Monson first sued in in April 2022, and his case was soon moved to federal district court in Eugene. Last month, District Court Judge Ann Aiken dismissed his case. The Oregonian/OregonLive Aiken鈥檚 decision Friday.

Monson sued the state and current and former lawmakers Floyd Prozanski, Chuck Thomsen, Julie Fahey and Ron Noble, as well as legislative human resources director Jessica Knieling. An earlier version of his complaint also named Gov. Tina Kotek and former Senate President Peter Courtney, who led the House and Senate during his tenure, and legislative counsel Dexter Johnson.

He initially accused the lawmakers and legislative employees of retaliating against him by ignoring him, opening an investigation into his background and defaming him and violating his First Amendment free speech rights by trying to silence him. Nearly two years later, Monson narrowed his lawsuit to focus on just one claim: Knieling and the lawmakers discriminated against him after he left the Legislature by releasing a memo Knieling wrote about his employment history in response to public records requests.

鈥淭he court concludes that because the release of the Knieling memo was required by Oregon public records law following a public records request, and because plaintiff was not entitled to notice of the release, there was no adverse action and it is unnecessary for the court to reach the question of causation,鈥 Aiken wrote.

Gossip-filled workplace

Monson joined the Legislature in April 2021, two years after top lawmakers and Capitol staff had entered a binding legal agreement with the Bureau of Labor and Industries following a lengthy investigation into sexual misconduct and discrimination that spanned years.

One component of that agreement was creating the legislative equity office, which for more than two years was run by an interim officer. Monson, who had previously worked in Iowa, was the first full-time legislative equity officer hired by the Legislature.

His lawsuit said the Capitol was a dysfunctional and gossip-filled workplace and that Monson began raising concerns about the office鈥檚 prior mismanagement shortly after he arrived, including that law firms investigating reports of inappropriate behavior weren鈥檛 paid on time, which dragged out investigations, and that his predecessor didn鈥檛 maintain records of past and ongoing cases and instead handed him a Post-it note with some details.

In response, his suit claimed, Knieling began scrutinizing his background. She found that Monson misrepresented himself as a former employee of the Iowa Coalition for Collective Change, despite never having worked for the organization and that he was fired in 2020 from Iowa Safe Schools, a nonprofit organization for LGBTQ students. Knieling submitted a memo to the Legislature鈥檚 Joint Conduct Committee, which summoned him to a meeting on June 9, 2021, to ask questions about his background.

Less than a week later, on June 15, Monson resigned. That resignation prompted freelance journalist Dick Hughes to file a records request on June 29 asking for all materials related to Monson鈥檚 resignation, according to court documents. The following day, Monson reached out to Oregon Public Broadcasting鈥檚 Dirk VanderHart to detail his complaints, resulting in an about a week later that spelled out Monson鈥檚 concerns about the office.

Shortly after publishing that article, OPB contacted Knieling asking for materials related to Monson鈥檚 r茅sum茅. Lawmakers on the legislative counsel committee released the memo Knieling drafted a week before Monson鈥檚 resignation.

It took nearly two years after Monson鈥檚 ouster for the Legislature a permanent employee to handle conduct complaints at the Capitol. Bor Yang, who previously led the Vermont Human Rights Commission, has been on the job for a little less than a year.

The  is a professional, nonprofit news organization. We are an affiliate of , a national 501(c)(3) nonprofit supported by grants and a coalition of donors and readers. The Capital Chronicle retains full editorial independence, meaning decisions about news and coverage are made by Oregonians for Oregonians.

Julia Shumway is a reporter for the , a professional, nonprofit news organization, and JPR news partner. The Oregon Capital Chronicle is an affiliate of , a national 501(c)(3) nonprofit supported by grants and a coalition of donors and readers. The Capital Chronicle retains full editorial independence, meaning decisions about news and coverage are made by Oregonians for Oregonians.