The Dugger Law Firm Files Levine v. CUNY, a Putative Class Action Complaint Alleging Continued Denials of Disability-Based Remote-Work Accommodations, Retaliation, and Leave-Related Violations by CUNY

On March 29, 2026, Plaintiffs Robin Levine, Noreen Mulvanerty, Shavone Sease, Malik Sullivan, and Lucas Kwong filed a putative class action complaint in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York against The City University of New York, The Board of Trustees of The City University of New York, the City of New York, and Chancellor Félix V. Matos Rodríguez in his official capacity. The complaint alleges  that the named Plaintiffs are current and former CUNY faculty and staff who worked for CUNY at Queensborough Community College, Borough of Manhattan Community College, Kingsborough Community College, Hostos Community College, and New York City College of Technology.

The class action complaint alleges that Levine v. CUNY follows and expands upon the earlier-filed Ramjerdi action. In Ramjerdi, Professor Jan Ramjerdi alleged that CUNY maintained a one-size-fits-all in-person mandate that functioned as a presumptive bar to fully remote work as a disability accommodation; retaliated against faculty requesting disability-based remote work; denied FMLA leave requests tied to accommodation requests and/or to the characterization of conditions as permanent; and used a medical-separation policy in a manner that bypassed reasonable-accommodation rights. 

According to the class action complaint, Professor Ramjerdi’s case was not isolated. The complaint alleges that similar disability-based remote work requests were processed through the same or similar Queensborough Community College Human Resources and appeal channels, and that similar conduct affected faculty and staff across multiple campuses and job titles. It further alleges that CUNY did not change course after the Ramjerdi lawsuit was filed or after Professor Ramjerdi’s death, and instead continued to deny or materially restrict disability-based requests for fully remote work, substitute purported alternatives that still required in-person attendance, and treat accommodation requests as a trigger for leave substitution, AWOL status, discipline, or separation rather than as a prompt for an individualized good-faith interactive process or cooperative dialogue.

Taken together, the Ramjerdi and Levine class action complaints describe six concrete examples — Professor Ramjerdi and Plaintiffs Levine, Sease, Mulvanerty, Sullivan, and Kwong — spanning multiple CUNY campuses and both faculty and staff roles. The complaint alleges repeated remote-work denials, rigid in-person requirements, repeated recertification demands, retaliatory scrutiny, and separation pressure. It further alleges that Defendants’ resistance was especially pronounced when medical documentation described the disability, limitation, or accommodation need as permanent, chronic, ongoing, long-term, expected to last years, until further notice, or indefinite.

The Levine class action complaint further alleges a broader pattern, practice, custom, policy, method of administration, and/or standard operating procedure of denying, delaying, curtailing, and/or failing to implement: (1) disability-based remote-work accommodations; (2) substituting materially inferior measures or leave in place of effective accommodations; (3) treating permanent or long-term accommodation requests as categorically disfavored; and (4) retaliating against employees who request disability accommodations, invoke FMLA or accommodation-related leave, appeal accommodation denials, or complain about disability discrimination.

Plaintiffs seek class-wide declaratory and injunctive relief requiring lawful, individualized accommodation determinations and meaningful interactive processes and cooperative dialogues, as well as individual relief and damages. 

The case is Levine v. CUNY, Case No. 1:26-cv-01859, pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York and has been initially assigned to Magistrate Judge Robert M. Levy as the presiding judge.

The class action complaint contains allegations only, and the Court has not made findings on the merits.

The Dugger Law Firm Filed a Putative Class Action Challenging NYC’s Alleged Disability Accommodation Denials, Retaliation for Remote-Work Requests, and Medical Inquiry Violations at DCAS

Plaintiff Drilon Berdynaj (“Plaintiff”) has worked for the New York City Department of Citywide Administrative Services (“DCAS”) since approximately September 2018, in Real Estate Services within its Design & Project Management unit.

On March 16, 2026, Plaintiff filed a putative class action complaint against the City of New York (“Defendant” or the “City”) in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. The putative class action complaint alleges that, despite DCAS’s citywide role for providing equal employment opportunity and reasonable accommodation guidance to city agencies, DCAS itself violated disability accommodation rights in its treatment of its own employees.

The putative class action complaint’s allegations include alleged policies of: (1) denying disability-based accommodation requests because the disability and/or the requested accommodation was characterized as permanent or indefinite, or lacking a fixed end date; (2) retaliating against employees who requested disability-based remote work accommodations; and (3) repeatedly demanding unnecessary additional medical documentation from employees with permanent or long-term disabilities whose disability accommodations had previously been approved.


According to the putative class action complaint, Plaintiff initially requested and received a full-time remote work accommodation, and successfully performed his job remotely for years.

The putative class action complaint alleges that, DCAS later reversed course and denied his disability-based remote work accommodation, demanded additional unnecessary medical documentation and a “date certain” to return to the office, and stated that “reasonable accommodations are typically not permanent or indefinite.” The putative class action complaint further alleges that the City retaliated against Plaintiff through, instead of continuing his disability-based remote work accommodation, imposed forced use of leave, an AWOL designation, disciplinary charges, a Section 72 medical examination, and a September 12, 2025 involuntary FMLA designation.

The putative class action complaint further alleges that DCAS demoted Plaintiff on September 15, 2022, one day after he renewed his original accommodation request.

The putative class action complaint further alleges that, in March 2026, while Plaintiff remained out of work on involuntary leave, the City initially told him that he could only return to work if his doctor stated that he could return “full duty” or “without restrictions.” The putative class action complaint alleges that this stated requirement, like the earlier accommodation denials and documentation demands, was part of the same broader unlawful accommodation and retaliation practices challenged in the case.

The putative class action complaint asserts individual and class claims under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act on behalf of the proposed classes and an individual FMLA interference claim on behalf of Plaintiff.

Among other requested relief, the putative class complaint seeks class-wide declaratory and injunctive relief requiring lawful, timely, and individualized accommodation procedures, limits on unnecessary medical-document demands, reclassification of unlawfully categorized unauthorized absences or AWOL, correction of adverse personnel records, and anti-retaliation relief.

For Berdynaj individually, the putative class complaint seeks reinstatement to his current position or pre-demotion position, or an equivalent role, grant of a fully remote disability accommodation, back pay, front pay, restoration of leave and benefits, removal of AWOL status, restoration of depleted leave banks, nominal damages, liquidated damages, attorneys’ fees, and costs.


The case is Berdynaj v. The City of New York, Case No. 1:26-cv-02126, and is pending in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York before U.S. District Court Judge Dale E. Ho. and Magistrate Judge Jennifer Willis. The filed complaint is available here.. The complaint contains allegations only, and the Court has not made any findings on the merits.

We Are Hiring! Part-Time Remote Of Counsel Role (15 hours/week) — The Dugger Law Firm, PLLC

Part-Time Remote Of Counsel Role (15 hours/week)

Who We Are

The Dugger Law Firm, PLLC is a small, mission-driven, exclusively plaintiff-side employment firm that represents New York City employees in discrimination, retaliation, and wage-and-hour cases. We combine the use of traditional civil-rights laws with under-utilized New York City discrimination law to help improve the experience of being an employee in New York City.

What You’ll Do

  • Drafting and revising long form persuasive demand letters and administrative charges

  • Line edit and cite-check pre-litigation work and briefs for clarity and accuracy

  • Work set weekly schedule to help drive firm drafting forward (i.e., schedule of Monday and Tuesday 9:00 am to 5:00 pm with 30-minute lunch break or 10:00 am to 3:00 pm Monday to Wednesday)

The work is substantive but narrow in scope—perfect for an experienced employment attorney who enjoys the craft of writing about employment law claims more than endless discovery battle and/or an attorney seeking better work-life balance.

What You Bring

  • Current admission to the New York bar

  • Experience in employment discrimination law (plaintiff-side or defense-side)

  • Strong writing skills and attention to detail

  • Sharp research and analytical skills

  • Reliability, self-direction, and excellent time management (the role is fully remote)

  • Professional curiosity—an interest in creative or impact-oriented litigation

  • Familiarity with new legal-AI tools is strongly preferred and a commitment to learning new AI technologies is required

  • An ability to consistently move drafting forward each week

Compensation & Benefits

  • $50,000 annual salary

  • Three weeks PTO first year; four weeks thereafter

  • 401(k) matching

  • *Digital international nomads authorized to work locally are welcome to apply

  • *Dedicated work hours are not required to coincide with Eastern Time workday

How to Apply

Email your resume and a brief cover letter to dlfapplications@theduggerlawfirm.com with the subject line “Of Counsel Application” by July 25, 2025.

DLF is proud to be an equal-opportunity employer. We welcome applications from attorneys of all backgrounds who share our commitment to advancing workplace justice.