DENNIS L MAXBERRY, Complainant
GOODWILL INDUSTRIES, Respondent
An administrative law judge for the Equal Rights Division 
of the Department of Workforce Development issued a decision in this matter. 
A timely petition for review was filed.
The commission has 
considered the petition and the positions of the parties, and it has reviewed 
the evidence submitted to the administrative law judge. 
Based on its review, the commission agrees with the decision of 
the administrative law judge, and it adopts the findings and conclusion in that 
decision as its own, except that it makes the following modification:
The first paragraph of the “Discussion” portion of the 
administrative law judge's decision (on page 2) is deleted, and the following 
paragraph is substituted therefor:
“In order to file a complaint under the Wisconsin Fair 
Employment Act, which prohibits acts of unlawful employment discrimination, one 
must be a past, present, or prospective employee of the named respondent, or 
otherwise allege that the respondent engaged in an action that directly relates 
to a specific employment opportunity.”
The decision of the administrative law judge (copy 
attached), as modified, is affirmed.
Dated and mailed March 19, 2015
112.1
BY THE COMMISSION:
/s/ Laurie R. McCallum, Chairperson
/s/ C. William Jordahl, Commissioner
/s/ David B. Falstad, Commissioner 
The complainant's 
petition for commission review is difficult to decipher, and it is not clear on 
what basis the complainant believes that reversal of the administrative law 
judge's decision is appropriate.  
The complainant makes reference to the respondent having defamed him and written 
slanderous statements in his “C-file” with the Veterans Association, but does 
not elaborate on these assertions and does not explain how this alleged conduct 
is related to any of the allegations raised at the hearing. 
The complainant alleged, in a previous complaint, ERD Case 
No. CR200900827, that he applied for a job or jobs with the respondent in 2008 
and 2009, for which he was not hired. 
That complaint was dismissed for lack of probable cause. 
The complainant has not established that he applied for a job with the 
respondent thereafter, and certainly not within 300 days of his December 5, 
2013, discrimination complaint.  
While at the hearing the complainant suggested he applied for a housekeeping job 
in 2012, which would have been outside of the statute of limitations period for 
this complaint, he was unable to provide any further details about that job, and 
the respondent had no record of any job application from the complainant. 
The complainant later testified that he filed an online application in 
early January of 2013--again outside of the statute of limitations period--but 
could not explain what job or jobs he believed he had applied for. 
At the hearing the 
complainant also advanced a theory that the respondent was somehow connected 
with his work for a vocational rehabilitation program called Compensated Work 
Therapy (CWT), which involved making door signs, and that CWT later began making 
spray nozzles instead of door signs but did not offer him that work. 
(The complainant testified, in contradiction with his allegation that he 
was discriminated against based upon his race, that the work went to African 
American and Native American employees who were over the age of 60.) 
The complainant suggested that the respondent was responsible for CWT's 
switching from the manufacture of door signs to spray nozzles to his financial 
detriment.  The complainant's sole 
evidence in support of his contentions is his testimony that CWT has “social 
work connections” through the respondent, and that someone associated with CWT 
brought in equipment that had the respondent's name on it. 
However, the respondent's witness denied any knowledge of CWT or any 
association with the individual who allegedly began the spray nozzle operation. 
He indicated that the respondent is not involved in the production of 
spray nozzles and that he is unaware of the respondent having a spray nozzle 
program “in any way, shape or form.”
Under all the 
circumstances, the commission concludes that the complainant has not established 
that he had an actual or potential employment relationship with the respondent 
or that the respondent engaged in any action that directly related to an 
employment opportunity for him.  
Consequently, the dismissal of the 
complaint is affirmed.
| 
								 The commission has modified 
								the portion of the administrative law judge's 
								decision which states that in order to file a 
								complaint under the Wisconsin Fair Employment 
								Act (WFEA) one must be “an employee in an 
								employment.”  In 
								fact, a complaint may be stated under the WFEA, 
								even in the absence of an actual or potential 
								employment relationship between the parties, 
								provided the complainant has alleged that the 
								respondent engaged in an action that directly 
								relates to an employment opportunity. 
								
								See, 
								Wilde v. UW-Milwaukee, ERD Case No. 
								CR201403303 (LIRC Feb. 27, 2015), and cases 
								cited therein.  | 
				
cc:
Attorney Jason Kunschke
uploaded 2017/01/23