Woman sues Deere over racial slurs

Woman sues Deere, claiming the farm-implement company did nothing to stop racial taunts from co-workers, a demotion, and a doll painted black hanging on her garage door. Although woman sues Deere, company declines to comment. 

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Rick Wilking/Reuters/File
A new John Deere tractor waits for a buyer at a dealer in Longmont, Colo., in this 2010 file photo. After a woman sues Deere for racial discrimination at its factory in Ankeny, Iowa, the company says it investigates employee complaints but declined to comment on specifics of a pending legal case.

A Des Moines woman who claims she was subjected to racial slurs by co-workers, including finding a doll whose face was painted black hanging outside her home with threats to quit her job at Deere & Co., has filed a discrimination lawsuit against the company.

Copa Burse, 48, said racial slurs were painted on her work locker at the Deere plant in Ankeny, and that she was yelled at and taunted by co-workers. She claims the agriculture equipment manufacturer knew about the behavior but did nothing to stop it.

Her lawsuit also claims she was demoted last October but assured she'd be moved back up when business improved, yet a white worker without recall rights was later moved into her former position. Burse claims it was in retaliation for her previous civil rights complaints.

Deere spokesman Ken Golden said Tuesday that he couldn't discuss specific allegations in a pending lawsuit. But he said the Illinois-based company "does not tolerate any conduct that creates a discriminatory, intimidating or hostile workplace."

"Deere strives through its policies, supervision and training to provide a work environment that is free from unlawful discrimination and harassment," Golden said, adding that the company investigates employee complaints and takes action if needed.

Burse, who is black, filed the lawsuit Oct. 15 in Polk County District Court after getting approval to do so from the Iowa Civil Rights Commission. She has worked at the plant, which primarily makes equipment used in cotton production, since 2010 in such roles as operating a forklift and unloading equipment.

She found the doll hanging on her garage door, beneath racially motivated threats indicating she should leave her job, when she arrived home from working a night shift in July 2011. Police investigated the incident as a hate crime, and it garnered widespread media attention in Iowa, though no arrests were made.

She also claims in the lawsuit that other black employees have endured similar incidents and have been increasingly filing complaints, and in reaction Deere has been hiring more black workers "as a means to cover the pattern of discrimination, or perhaps, it its own way, try to remedy it."

Burse's lawyer, Tom Newkirk, said the lawsuit is about showing companies that offering just enough blacks a job to meet a quota isn't enough to ensure equality.

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