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The appeals court said Warmbier did not need to exhaust union grievance procedures first. Her claim was about retaliation for a protected disclosure, not about breaking the union contract itself. The court found her retaliation claim under Civil Service Law 75-b was properly detailed enough to move forward. However, the court agreed with the trial court on the other claims. It found she did not provide enough facts to support her discrimination, retaliation, or hostile work environment claims. Those claims stayed dismissed.
Grace Warmbier worked as a Criminalist III for the New York City Police Department. In 2022, she sued the NYPD and the City of New York. She claimed the City violated Civil Service Law 75-b, a law that protects workers who report wrongdoing. She also claimed gender and disability discrimination under state and city human rights laws. The City asked the court to dismiss most of her claims. A trial court agreed and dismissed several claims, including part of her retaliation claim. Warmbier appealed that decision to a higher court.
The appeals court had to decide two things. First, did Warmbier need to use her union's grievance process before suing under Civil Service Law 75-b? Second, did her complaint include enough facts to support claims for discrimination, retaliation, and a hostile work environment?
This case clarifies when city employees can go straight to court instead of using a union grievance process first. It shows that retaliation claims under whistleblower protection laws can sometimes skip that step. It also highlights how much detail a complaint needs to survive a motion to dismiss in discrimination cases.
Talk to a licensed employment law lawyer in New York.