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New EEOC Regulations on Accommodations Required by the
Americans with Disabilities Acts
The EEOC recently issued new guidelines on the duties
of
employers to make reasonable accommodations to the disabilities of
employees and applicants. The full text of those regulations is
set forth below (with some additional formatting to allow toggling back
and forth, as the regulations are quite long). The guidelines can
also be found at: http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/accommodation.html
Enforcement Guidance:
Reasonable Accommodation and
Undue Hardship
Under the Americans with Disabilities Act
This Enforcement Guidance clarifies
the rights and
responsibilities of employers and individuals with disabilities
regarding reasonable accommodation and undue hardship. Title I of the
ADA requires an employer to provide reasonable accommodation to
qualified individuals with disabilities who are employees or applicants
for employment, except when such accommodation would cause an undue
hardship. This Guidance sets forth an employer's legal obligations
regarding reasonable accommodation; however, employers may provide more
than the law requires.
This Guidance examines what "reasonable
accommodation" means
and who is entitled to receive it. The Guidance addresses what
constitutes a request for reasonable accommodation, the form and
substance of the request, and an employer's ability to ask questions
and seek documentation after a request has been made.
The Guidance discusses reasonable
accommodations
applicable
to the hiring process and to the benefits and privileges of employment.
The Guidance also covers different types of reasonable accommodations
related to job performance, including job restructuring, leave,
modified or part-time schedules, modified workplace policies, and
reassignment. Questions concerning the relationship between the ADA and
the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) are examined as they affect
leave and modified schedules. Reassignment issues addressed include who
is entitled to reassignment and the extent to which an employer must
search for a vacant position. The Guidance also examines issues
concerning the interplay between reasonable accommodations and conduct
rules.
The final section of this Guidance
discusses
undue hardship,
including when requests for schedule modifications and leave may be
denied.
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Reasonable Accommodation
Title I of the Americans with Disabilities
Act
of 1990 (the
"ADA")(1) requires an employer(2) to provide reasonable accommodation to
qualified individuals with disabilities who are employees or applicants
for employment, unless to do so would cause undue hardship. "In
general, an accommodation is any change in the work environment or in
the way things are customarily done that enables an individual with a
disability to enjoy equal employment opportunities."(3)
There are three categories of "reasonable accommodations":
(i) modifications or adjustments to a job
application
process
that enable a
qualified applicant with a disability to be considered for the position
such qualified applicant desires; or
(ii) modifications or adjustments to the
work
environment,
or to the manner
or circumstances under which the position
held or desired is customarily performed, that enable a
qualified individual with a disability to perform the essential
functions of that position; or
(iii) modifications or adjustments that
enable
a covered
entity's employee with a disability to enjoy equal
benefits and privileges of employment as are enjoyed
by its
other similarly situated employees without disabilities."(4)
The duty to provide reasonable
accommodation is
a fundamental
statutory requirement because of the nature of discrimination faced by
individuals with disabilities. Although many individuals with
disabilities can apply for and perform jobs without any reasonable
accommodations, there are workplace barriers that keep others from
performing jobs which they could do with some form of accommodation.
These barriers may be physical obstacles (such as inaccessible
facilities or equipment), or they may be procedures or rules (such as
rules concerning when work is performed, when breaks are taken, or how
essential or marginal functions are performed). Reasonable
accommodation removes workplace barriers for individuals with
disabilities.
Reasonable accommodation is available to
qualified applicants
and employees with disabilities.(5) Reasonable accommodations must be provided to qualified
employees regardless of whether they work part-time or full-time, or
are considered "probationary." Generally, the individual with a
disability must inform the employer that an accommodation is needed.(6)
There are a number of possible reasonable
accommodations that
an employer may have to provide in connection with modifications to the
work environment or adjustments in how and when a job is performed.
These include:
- making existing facilities accessible;
- job restructuring;
- part-time or modified work schedules;
- acquiring or modifying equipment;
- changing tests, training materials, or policies;
- providing qualified readers or interpreters; and
- reassignment to a vacant position.(7)
There are several modifications or
adjustments that are not considered forms of reasonable accommodation.
An employer does not have to eliminate an essential function, i.e.,
a fundamental duty of the position. This is because a person with a
disability who is unable to perform the essential functions, with or
without reasonable accommodation,(8) is
not a "qualified" individual with a disability within the meaning of
the ADA. Nor is an employer required to lower production standards --
whether qualitative or quantitative(9)
-- that are applied uniformly to employees with and without
disabilities. However, an employer may have to provide reasonable
accommodation to enable an employee with a disability to meet the
production standard. While an employer is not required to eliminate an
essential function or lower a production standard, it may do so if it
wishes.
An employer does not have to provide as
reasonable
accommodations personal use item needed in accomplishing daily
activities both on and off the job. Thus, an employer is not required
to provide an employee with a prosthetic limb, a wheelchair,
eyeglasses, hearing aids, or similar devices if they are also needed
off the job. Furthermore, an employer is not required to provide
personal use amenities, such as a hot pot or refrigerator, if those
items are not provided to employees without disabilities. However,
items that might otherwise be considered personal may be required as
reasonable accommodations where they are specifically designed or
required to meet job-related rather than personal needs.(10)
A
modification or adjustment
satisfies the reasonable accommodation obligation if it is "effective."(11) In the context of
job performance, this means that a reasonable accommodation enables the
individual to perform the essential functions of the position.
Similarly, an effective accommodation will enable an applicant with a
disability to have an equal opportunity to participate in the
application process and to be considered for a job. Finally, a
reasonable accommodation will be effective if it allows an employee
with a disability an equal opportunity to enjoy the benefits and
privileges of employment that employees without disabilities enjoy.
Example A: An employee with a
hearing
disability must be able to contact the public by telephone. The
employee proposes that he use a TTY(12) to call a relay service operator who can then place
the telephone call and relay the conversation between the parties. This
is a reasonable accommodation because it is effective. It enables the
employee to communicate with the public.
Example B: A cashier easily
becomes
fatigued
because of lupus and, as a result, has difficulty making it through her
shift. The employee requests a stool because sitting greatly reduces
the fatigue. This reasonable accommodation is effective because it
removes a workplace barrier -- being required to stand -- and thus
gives the employee the opportunity to perform as well as any other
cashier.
The term "reasonable accommodation" is a
term of
art that
Congress defined only through examples of changes or modifications to
be made, or items to be provided, to a qualified individual with a
disability. The statutory definition of "reasonable accommodation" does
not include any quantitative, financial, or other limitations regarding
the extent of the obligation to make changes to a job or work
environment.(13) The
only statutory
limitation on an employer's
obligation to provide "reasonable accommodation" is that no such change
or modification is required if it would cause "undue hardship" on the
employer.(14)
Undue hardship addresses quantitative, financial, or other limitations
on an employer's ability to provide reasonable accommodation.
Undue Hardship
"Undue hardship" means significant
difficulty or
expense and
focuses on the resources and circumstances of the particular employer
in relationship to the cost or difficulty of providing a specific
accommodation. Undue hardship refers not only to financial difficulty,
but to reasonable accommodations that are unduly extensive,
substantial, or disruptive, or those that would fundamentally alter the
nature or operation of the business.(15) An employer must assess on a case-by-case basis
whether a particular reasonable accommodation would cause undue
hardship. The ADA's "undue hardship" standard is different from that
applied by courts under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 for
religious accommodation.(16)
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- How must an
individual request a reasonable accommodation?
When an individual decides to request
accommodation, the
individual or his/her representative must let the employer know that
s/he needs an adjustment or change at work for a reason related to a
medical condition. To request accommodation, an individual may use
"plain English" and need not mention the ADA or use the phrase
"reasonable accommodation."(17)
Example A: An employee tells
her
supervisor, "I'm having trouble getting to work at my scheduled
starting time because of medical treatments I'm undergoing." This is a
request for a reasonable accommodation.
Example B: An employee tells
his
supervisor, "I
need six weeks off to get treatment for a back problem." This is a
request for a reasonable accommodation.
Example C: A new employee,
who
uses a
wheelchair, informs the employer that her wheelchair cannot fit under
the desk in her office. This is a request for reasonable accommodation.
Example D: An employee tells
his
supervisor
that he would like a new chair because his present one is
uncomfortable. Although this is a request for a change at work, his
statement is insufficient to put the employer on notice that he is
requesting reasonable accommodation. He does not link his need for the
new chair with a medical condition.
While an individual with a disability
may
request a
change due to a medical condition, this
request does not necessarily mean that the employer is required to
provide the change. A request for reasonable accommodation is the first
step in an informal, interactive process between the
individual and the employer. In some instances, before addressing the
merits of the accommodation request, the employer needs to determine if
the individual's medical condition meets the ADA definition of
"disability,"(18) a
prerequisite for the individual to be entitled to a reasonable
accommodation.
- May
someone other than the
individual with a disability request a reasonable accommodation on
behalf of the individual?
Yes, a family member, friend, health
professional, or
other representative may request a reasonable accommodation on behalf
of an individual with a disability.(19) Of course, the individual with a disability may refuse
to accept an accommodation that is not needed.
Example A: An employee's
spouse
phones
the employee's supervisor on Monday morning to inform her that the
employee had a medical emergency due to multiple sclerosis, needed to
be hospitalized, and thus requires time off. This discussion
constitutes a request for reasonable accommodation.
Example B: An employee has
been
out of work for
six months with a workers' compensation injury. The employee's doctor
sends the employer a letter, stating that the employee is released to
return to work, but with certain work restrictions. (Alternatively, the
letter may state that the employee is released to return to a light
duty position.) The letter constitutes a request for reasonable
accommodation.
- Do
requests for reasonable
accommodation need to be in writing?
No. Requests for reasonable
accommodation do
not need to
be in writing. Individuals may request accommodations in conversation
or may use any other mode of communication.(20) An employer may choose to write a memorandum or letter
confirming the individual's request. Alternatively, an employer may ask
the individual to fill out a form or submit the request in written
form, but the employer cannot ignore the initial request. An employer
also may request reasonable documentation that the individual has an
ADA disability and needs a reasonable accommodation. (See Question 6).
- When should an individual with a
disability request a reasonable accommodation?
An individual with a disability may
request
a reasonable
accommodation at any time during the application process or during the
period of employment. The ADA does not preclude an employee with a
disability from requesting a reasonable accommodation because s/he did
not ask for one when applying for a job or after receiving a job offer.
Rather, an individual with a disability should request a reasonable
accommodation when s/he knows that there is a workplace barrier that is
preventing him/her, due to a disability, from effectively competing for
a position, performing a job, or gaining equal access to a benefit of
employment.(21) As a
practical matter, it may be in an employee's interest to request a
reasonable accommodation before performance suffers or conduct problems
occur.
- What must an employer do after
receiving a request for reasonable accommodation?
The employer and the individual with a
disability should engage
in an informal process to clarify
what the individual needs and identify the appropriate reasonable
accommodation.(22)
The employer may ask the individual relevant questions that will enable
it to make an informed decision about the request. This includes asking
what type of reasonable accommodation is needed.
The exact nature of the dialogue will
vary.
In many
instances, both the disability and the type of accommodation required
will be obvious, and thus there may be little or no need to engage in
any discussion. In other situations, the employer may need to ask
questions concerning the nature of the disability and the individual's
functional limitations in order to identify an effective accommodation.
While the individual with a disability does not have to be able to
specify the precise accommodation, s/he does need to describe the
problems posed by the workplace barrier. Additionally, suggestions from
the individual with a disability may assist the employer in determining
the type of reasonable accommodation to provide. Where the individual
or the employer are not familiar with possible accommodations, there
are extensive public and private resources to help the employer
identify reasonable accommodations once the specific limitations and
workplace barriers have been ascertained.(23)
- May an employer ask an individual
for documentation when the individual requests reasonable accommodation?
Yes. When the disability and/or
the need for accommodation is not obvious, the employer may
ask the individual for reasonable
documentation about his/her disability and functional
limitations.(24) The
employer is entitled to know that the individual has a covered
disability for which s/he needs a reasonable accommodation.
Reasonable documentation
means that the employer may require only the documentation that is
needed to establish that a person has an ADA disability, and that the
disability necessitates a reasonable accommodation. Thus, an employer,
in response to a request for reasonable accommodation, cannot ask for
documentation that is unrelated to determining the existence of a
disability and the necessity for an accommodation. This means that in
most situations an employer cannot request a person's complete medical
records because they are likely to contain information unrelated to the
disability at issue and the need for accommodation. If an individual
has more than one disability, an employer can request information
pertaining only to the disability that requires a reasonable
accommodation.
An employer may require that the
documentation about the
disability and the functional limitations come from an appropriate
health care or rehabilitation professional. The appropriate
professional in any particular situation will depend on the disability
and the type of functional limitation it imposes. Appropriate
professionals include, but are not limited to, doctors (including
psychiatrists), psychologists, nurses, physical therapists,
occupational therapists, speech therapists, vocational rehabilitation
specialists, and licensed mental health professionals.
In requesting documentation, employers
should specify
what types of information they are seeking regarding the disability,
its functional limitations, and the need for reasonable accommodation.
The individual can be asked to sign a limited release allowing the
employer to submit a list of specific questions to the health care or
vocational professional.(25)
As an alternative to requesting
documentation, an
employer may simply discuss with the person the nature of his/her
disability and functional limitations. It would be useful for the
employer to make clear to the individual why it is requesting
information, i.e., to verify the existence of an ADA disability
and the need for a reasonable accommodation.
Example A: An employee says
to an
employer, "I'm having trouble reaching tools because of my shoulder
injury." The employer may ask the employee for documentation describing
the impairment; the nature, severity, and duration of the impairment;
the activity or activities that the impairment limits; and the extent
to which the impairment limits the employee's ability to perform the
activity or activities (i.e., the employer is seeking
information as to whether the employee has an ADA disability).
Example B: A marketing
employee
has a severe
learning disability. He attends numerous meetings to plan marketing
strategies. In order to remember what is discussed at these meetings he
must take detailed notes but, due to his disability, he has great
difficulty writing. The employee tells his supervisor about his
disability and requests a laptop computer to use in the meetings. Since
neither the disability nor the need for accommodation are obvious, the
supervisor may ask the employee for reasonable documentation about his
impairment; the nature, severity, and duration of the impairment; the
activity or activities that the impairment limits; and the extent to
which the impairment limits the employee's ability to perform the
activity or activities. The employer also may ask why the disability
necessitates use of a laptop computer (or any other type of reasonable
accommodation, such as a tape recorder) to help the employee retain the
information from the meetings.(26)
Example C: An employee's
spouse
phones the
employee's supervisor on Monday morning to inform her that the employee
had a medical emergency due to multiple sclerosis, needed to be
hospitalized, and thus requires time off. The supervisor can ask the
spouse to send in documentation from the employee's treating physician
that confirms that the hospitalization was related to the multiple
sclerosis and provides information on how long an absence may be
required from work.(27)
If an individual's disability or need
for
reasonable
accommodation is not obvious, and s/he refuses to provide the
reasonable documentation requested by the employer, then s/he is not
entitled to reasonable accommodation.(28) On the other hand, failure by the employer to initiate
or participate in an informal dialogue with the individual after
receiving a request for reasonable accommodation could result in
liability for failure to provide a reasonable accommodation.(29)
- May an employer require an
individual to go to a health care professional of the employer's
(rather than the employee's) choice for purposes of documenting need
for accommodation and disability?
The ADA does not prevent an employer
from
requiring an
individual to go to an appropriate health professional of the
employer's choice if the individual provides insufficient information
from his/her treating physician (or other health care professional) to
substantiate that s/he has an ADA disability and needs a reasonable
accommodation. However, if an individual provides insufficient
documentation in response to the employer's initial request, the
employer should explain why the documentation is insufficient and allow
the individual an opportunity to provide the missing information in a
timely manner. Documentation is insufficient if it does not specify the
existence of an ADA disability and explain the need for reasonable
accommodation.(30)
Any medical examination conducted by
the
employer's
health professional must be job-related and consistent with business
necessity. This means that the examination must be limited to
determining the existence of an ADA disability and the functional
limitations that require reasonable accommodation.(31) If an employer requires an employee to go to a health
professional of the employer's choice, the employer must pay all costs
associated with the visit(s).
- Are there situations in which an
employer cannot ask for documentation in response to a request for
reasonable accommodation?
Yes. An employer cannot ask for
documentation when: (1)
both the disability and the need for reasonable accommodation are
obvious, or (2) the individual has already provided the employer with
sufficient information to substantiate that s/he has an ADA disability
and needs the reasonable accommodation requested.
Example A: An employee brings
a note
from her treating physician explaining that she has diabetes and that,
as a result, she must test her blood sugar several times a day to
ensure that her insulin level is safe in order to avoid a hyperglycemic
reaction. The note explains that a hyperglycemic reaction can include
extreme thirst, heavy breathing, drowsiness, and flushed skin, and
eventually would result in unconsciousness. Depending on the results of
the blood test, the employee might have to take insulin. The note
requests that the employee be allowed three or four 10-minute breaks
each day to test her blood, and if necessary, to take insulin. The
doctor's note constitutes sufficient documentation that the person has
an ADA disability because it describes a substantially limiting
impairment and the reasonable accommodation needed as a result. The
employer cannot ask for additional documentation.
Example B: One year ago, an
employer learned
that an employee had bipolar disorder after he requested a reasonable
accommodation. The documentation provided at that time from the
employee's psychiatrist indicated that this was a permanent condition
which would always involve periods in which the disability would remit
and then intensify. The psychiatrist's letter explained that during
periods when the condition flared up, the person's manic moods or
depressive episodes could be severe enough to create serious problems
for the individual in caring for himself or working, and that
medication controlled the frequency and severity of these episodes.
Now, one year later, the employee
again
requests a
reasonable accommodation related to his bipolar disorder. Under these
facts, the employer may ask for reasonable documentation on the need
for the accommodation (if the need is not obvious), but it cannot ask
for documentation that the person has an ADA disability. The medical
information provided one year ago established the existence of a
long-term impairment that substantially limits a major life activity.
Example C: An employee gives
her
employer a
letter from her doctor, stating that the employee has asthma and needs
the employer to provide her with an air filter. This letter contains
insufficient information as to whether the asthma is an ADA disability
because it does not provide any information as to its severity (i.e.,
whether it substantially limits a major life activity). Furthermore,
the letter does not identify precisely what problem exists in the
workplace that requires an air filter or any other reasonable
accommodation. Therefore, the employer can request additional
documentation.
- Is an employer
required to provide the reasonable accommodation that the individual
wants?
The employer may choose among
reasonable
accommodations
as long as the chosen accommodation is effective.(32)
Thus, as part of the interactive
process,
the employer may offer alternative suggestions for reasonable
accommodations and discuss their effectiveness in removing the
workplace barrier that is impeding the individual with a disability.
If there are two possible reasonable
accommodations, and
one costs more or is more burdensome than the other, the employer may
choose the less expensive or burdensome accommodation as long as it is
effective (i.e., it would remove a workplace barrier, thereby
providing the individual with an equal opportunity to apply for a
position, to perform the essential functions of a position, or to gain
equal access to a benefit or privilege of employment). Similarly, when
there are two or more effective accommodations, the employer may choose
the one that is easier to provide. In either situation, the employer
does not have to show that it is an undue hardship to provide the more
expensive or more difficult accommodation. If more than one
accommodation is effective, "the preference of the individual with a
disability should be given primary consideration. However, the employer
providing the accommodation has the ultimate discretion to choose
between effective accommodations."(33)
Example A: An employee with a
severe
learning disability has great difficulty reading. His supervisor sends
him many detailed memoranda which he often has trouble understanding.
However, he has no difficulty understanding oral communication. The
employee requests that the employer install a computer with speech
output and that his supervisor send all memoranda through electronic
mail which the computer can then read to him. The supervisor asks
whether a tape recorded message would accomplish the same objective and
the employee agrees that it would. Since both accommodations are
effective, the employer may choose to provide the supervisor and
employee with a tape recorder so that the supervisor can record her
memoranda and the employee can listen to them.
Example B: An attorney with
a
severe vision
disability requests that her employer provide someone to read printed
materials that she needs to review daily. The attorney explains that a
reader enables her to review substantial amounts of written materials
in an efficient manner. Believing that this reasonable accommodation
would be too costly, the employer instead provides the attorney with a
device that allows her to magnify print so that she can read it
herself. The attorney can read print using this device, but with such
great difficulty it significantly slows down her ability to review
written materials. The magnifying device is ineffective as a reasonable
accommodation because it does not provide the attorney with an equal
opportunity to attain the same level of performance as her colleagues.
Without an equal opportunity to attain the same level of performance,
this attorney is denied an equal opportunity to compete for promotions.
In this instance, failure to provide the reader, absent undue hardship,
would violate the ADA.
- How quickly must
an employer respond to a request for reasonable accommodation?
An employer should respond
expeditiously to
a request for
reasonable accommodation. If the employer and the individual with a
disability need to engage in an interactive process, this too should
proceed as quickly as possible.(34) Similarly, the employer should act promptly to provide
the reasonable accommodation. Unnecessary delays can result in a
violation of the ADA.(35)
Example A: An employer
provides
parking
for all employees. An employee who uses a wheelchair requests from his
supervisor an accessible parking space, explaining that the spaces are
so narrow that there is insufficient room for his van to extend the
ramp that allows him to get in and out. The supervisor does not act on
the request and does not forward it to someone with authority to
respond. The employee makes a second request to the supervisor. Yet,
two months after the initial request, nothing has been done. Although
the supervisor never definitively denies the request, the lack of
action under these circumstances amounts to a denial, and thus violates
the ADA.
Example B: An employee who
is
blind requests
adaptive equipment for her computer as a reasonable accommodation. The
employer must order this equipment and is informed that it will take
three months to receive delivery. No other company sells the adaptive
equipment the employee needs. The employer notifies the employee of the
results of its investigation and that it has ordered the equipment.
Although it will take three months to receive the equipment, the
employer has moved as quickly as it can to obtain it and thus there is
no ADA violation resulting from the delay. The employer and employee
should determine what can be done so that the employee can perform
his/her job as effectively as possible while waiting for the equipment.
- May an employer
require an individual with a disability to accept a reasonable
accommodation that s/he does not want?
No. An employer may not require a
qualified
individual
with a disability to accept an accommodation. If, however, an employee
needs a reasonable accommodation to perform an essential function or to
eliminate a direct threat, and refuses to accept an effective
accommodation, s/he may not be qualified to remain in the job.(36)
[Top]
- May an employer
ask whether a reasonable accommodation is needed when an
applicant has not asked for one?
An employer may tell applicants what
the
hiring process
involves (e.g., an interview, timed written test, or job
demonstration), and may ask applicants whether they will need a
reasonable accommodation for this process.
During the hiring process and
before a conditional offer is made, an employer generally
may not ask an applicant whether s/he needs a reasonable accommodation
for the job, except when the employer knows that an applicant has a
disability -- either because it is obvious or the applicant has
voluntarily disclosed the information -- and could reasonably believe
that the applicant will need a reasonable
accommodation to perform specific job functions. If the
applicant replies that s/he needs a reasonable accommodation, the
employer may inquire as to what type.(37)
After a conditional offer of
employment is extended, an employer may inquire whether
applicants will need reasonable accommodations
related to anything connected with the job (i.e., job
performance or access to benefits/privileges of the job) as long as all
entering employees in the same job category are asked this question.
Alternatively, an employer may ask a specific applicant if s/he needs a
reasonable accommodation if the employer knows that this applicant has
a disability -- either because it is obvious or the applicant has
voluntarily disclosed the information -- and could reasonably believe
that the applicant will need a reasonable accommodation. If the
applicant replies that s/he needs a reasonable accommodation, the
employer may inquire as to what type.(38)
- Does an employer have to provide a reasonable
accommodation to an applicant with a disability even if it believes
that it will be unable to provide
this individual with a reasonable accommodation on the job?
Yes. An employer must provide a
reasonable
accommodation
to a qualified applicant with a disability that
will enable the individual to have an equal
opportunity to participate in the application process and to be
considered for a job (unless it can show undue hardship). Thus,
individuals with disabilities who meet initial requirements to be
considered for a job should not be excluded from the application
process because the employer speculates, based on a request for
reasonable accommodation for the application process, that it will be
unable to provide the individual with reasonable accommodation to
perform the job. In many instances, employers will be unable to
determine whether an individual needs reasonable accommodation to
perform a job based solely on a request for accommodation during the
application process. And even if an individual will need reasonable
accommodation to perform the job, it may not be the same type or degree
of accommodation that is needed for the application process. Thus, an
employer should assess the need for accommodations for the application
process separately from those that may
be needed to perform the job.(39)
Example A: An employer is
impressed
with an applicant's resume and contacts the individual to come in for
an interview. The applicant, who is deaf, requests a sign language
interpreter for the interview. The employer cancels the interview and
refuses to consider further this applicant because it believes it would
have to hire a full-time interpreter. The employer has violated the
ADA. The employer should have proceeded with the interview, using a
sign language interpreter (absent undue hardship), and at the interview
inquired to what extent the individual would need a sign language
interpreter to perform any essential functions requiring communication
with other people.
Example B: An individual who
has
paraplegia
applies for a secretarial position. Because the office has two steps at
the entrance, the employer arranges for the applicant to take a typing
test, a requirement of the application process, at a different
location. The applicant fails the test. The employer does not have to
provide any further reasonable accommodations for this individual
because she is no longer qualified to continue with the application
process.
[Top]
The ADA requires employers to
provide reasonable accommodations so that employees with disabilities
can enjoy the "benefits and privileges of employment" equal
to those enjoyed by similarly-situated employees without disabilities.
Benefits and privileges of employment include, but are not limited to,
employer-sponsored: (1) training, (2) services (e.g., employee
assistance programs (EAP's), credit unions, cafeterias, lounges,
gymnasiums, auditoriums, transportation), and (3) parties or other
social functions (e.g., parties to celebrate retirements and
birthdays, and company outings).(41) If
an employee with a disability needs a reasonable accommodation in order
to gain access to, and have an equal opportunity to participate in,
these benefits and privileges, then the employer must provide the
accommodation unless it can show undue hardship.
- Does an employer have to provide
reasonable accommodation to enable an employee
with a disability to have equal access to information communicated in
the workplace to non-disabled employees?
Yes. Employers provide information to
employees through
different means, including computers, bulletin boards, mailboxes,
posters, and public address systems. Employers must ensure that
employees with disabilities have access to information that is provided
to other similarly-situated employees without disabilities, regardless
of whether they need it to perform their jobs.
Example A: An employee who is
blind
has
adaptive equipment for his computer that integrates him into the
network with other employees, thus allowing communication via
electronic mail and access to the computer bulletin board. When the
employer installs upgraded computer equipment, it must provide new
adaptive equipment in order for the employee to be integrated into the
new networks, absent undue hardship. Alternative methods of
communication (e.g., sending written or telephone messages to
the employee instead of electronic mail) are likely to be ineffective
substitutes since electronic mail is used by every employee and there
is no effective way to ensure that each one will always use alternative
measures to ensure that the blind employee receives the same
information that is being transmitted via computer.
Example B: An employer
authorizes
the Human
Resources Director to use a public address system to remind employees
about special meetings and to make certain announcements. In order to
make this information accessible to a deaf employee, the Human
Resources Director arranges to send in advance an electronic mail
message to the deaf employee conveying the information that will be
broadcast. The Human Resources Director is the only person who uses the
public address system; therefore, the employer can ensure that all
public address messages are sent, via electronic mail, to the deaf
employee. Thus, the employer is providing this employee with equal
access to office communications.
- Must an employer provide reasonable accommodation so
that an
employee may attend training programs?
Yes. Employers must provide reasonable
accommodation (e.g.,
sign language interpreters; written materials produced in alternative
formats, such as braille, large print, or on audio-cassette) that will
provide employees with disabilities with an equal opportunity to
participate in employer-sponsored training, absent undue hardship. This
obligation extends to in-house training, as well as to training
provided by an outside entity. Similarly, the employer has an
obligation to provide reasonable accommodation whether the training
occurs on the employer's premises or elsewhere.
Example A: XYZ Corp. has
signed a
contract with Super Trainers, Inc., to provide mediation training at
its facility to all of XYZ's Human Resources staff. One staff member is
blind and requests that materials be provided in braille. Super
Trainers refuses to provide the materials in braille. XYZ maintains
that it is the responsibility of Super Trainers and sees no reason why
it should have to arrange and pay for the braille copy.
Both XYZ (as an employer covered
under
Title I of the
ADA) and Super Trainers (as a public accommodation covered under Title
III of the ADA(42))
have obligations to provide materials in alternative formats. This
fact, however, does not excuse either one from their respective
obligations. If Super Trainers refuses to provide the braille version,
despite its Title III obligations, XYZ still retains its obligation to
provide it as a reasonable accommodation, absent undue hardship.
Employers arranging with an outside
entity
to provide
training may wish to avoid such problems by specifying in the contract
who has the responsibility to provide appropriate reasonable
accommodations. Similarly, employers should ensure that any offsite
training will be held in an accessible facility if they have an
employee who, because of a disability, requires such an accommodation.
Example B: XYZ Corp.
arranges for
one of its
employees to provide CPR training. This three-hour program is optional.
A deaf employee wishes to take the training and requests a sign
language interpreter. XYZ must provide the interpreter because the CPR
training is a benefit that XYZ offers all employees, even though it is
optional.
[Top]
Below are discussed certain types of
reasonable
accommodations related to job performance.
Job
Restructuring
Job restructuring includes modifications
such
as:
- reallocating or redistributing marginal job
functions that
an employee is unable to perform because of a disability; and
- altering when and/or how a function, essential or
marginal, is performed.(44)
An employer never has to reallocate
essential
functions as a
reasonable accommodation, but can do so if it wishes.
- If, as a reasonable
accommodation, an
employer restructures an employee's job to eliminate some marginal
functions, may the employer require the
employee to take on other marginal functions that s/he can
perform?
Yes. An employer may switch the
marginal
functions of two
(or more) employees in order to restructure a job as a reasonable
accommodation.
Example: A cleaning crew works
in an
office building. One member of the crew wears a prosthetic leg which
enables him to walk very well, but climbing steps is painful and
difficult. Although he can perform his essential functions without
problems, he cannot perform the marginal function of sweeping the steps
located throughout the building. The marginal functions of a second
crew member include cleaning the small kitchen in the employee's
lounge, which is something the first crew member can perform. The
employer can switch the marginal functions performed by these two
employees.
Leave
Permitting the use of accrued paid leave,
or
unpaid leave, is
a form of reasonable accommodation when necessitated by an employee's
disability.(45) An
employer does not have to provide paid leave
beyond that which is provided to similarly-situated employees. Employers
should allow an employee with a disability to exhaust accrued paid
leave first and then provide unpaid leave.(46) For example, if employees get 10 days of paid leave,
and an employee with a disability needs 15 days of leave, the employer
should allow the individual to use 10 days of paid leave and 5 days of
unpaid leave.
An employee with a disability may need
leave for
a number of
reasons related to the disability, including, but not limited to:
- obtaining medical treatment (e.g., surgery,
psychotherapy, substance abuse treatment, or dialysis); rehabilitation
services; or physical or occupational therapy;
- recuperating from an illness or an episodic
manifestation
of the disability;
- obtaining repairs on a wheelchair, accessible van,
or
prosthetic device;
- avoiding temporary adverse conditions in the work
environment (for example, an air-conditioning breakdown causing
unusually warm temperatures that could seriously harm an employee with
multiple sclerosis);
- training a service animal (e.g., a guide
dog); or
- receiving training in the use of braille or to learn
sign
language
- Can a "no-fault" leave policy,
under which employees are automatically terminated after they have been
on leave for a certain period of time, be applied to an employee with a
disability
who needs leave beyond the set period?
No. If an employee with a disability
needs
additional
unpaid leave as a reasonable accommodation, the employer must modify
its "no-fault" leave policy to provide the employee with the additional
leave, unless it can show that: (1) there is another effective
accommodation that would enable the person to perform the essential
functions of his/her position, or (2) granting additional leave would
cause an undue hardship. Modifying workplace policies, including leave
policies, is a form of reasonable accommodation.(47)
- Does an employer have to hold
open an employee's job as a reasonable accommodation?
Yes. An employee with a disability who
is
granted leave
as a reasonable accommodation is entitled to return to his/her same
position unless the employer demonstrates that holding open the
position would impose an undue hardship.(48)
If an employer cannot hold a position
open
during the
entire leave period without incurring undue hardship, the employer must
consider whether it has a vacant, equivalent position for which the
employee is qualified and to which the employee can be reassigned to
continue his/her leave for a specific period of time and then, at the
conclusion of the leave, can be returned to this new position.(49)
Example: An employee needs
eight
months
of leave for treatment and recuperation related to a disability. The
employer grants the request, but after four months the employer
determines that it can no longer hold open the position for the
remaining four months without incurring undue hardship. The employer
must consider whether it has a vacant, equivalent position to which the
employee can be reassigned for the remaining four months of leave, at
the end of which time the employee would return to work in that new
position. If an equivalent position is not available, the employer must
look for a vacant position at a lower level. Continued leave is not
required as a reasonable accommodation if a vacant position at a lower
level is also unavailable.
- Can an employer penalize an
employee for work missed during leavetaken as a
reasonable accommodation?
No. To do so would be retaliation for
the
employee's use
of a reasonable accommodation to which s/he is entitled under the law.(50) Moreover, such
punishment would make the leave an ineffective accommodation, thus
making an employer liable for failing to provide a reasonable
accommodation.(51)
Example A: A salesperson took
five
months of leave as a reasonable accommodation. The company compares the
sales records of all salespeople over a one-year period, and any
employee whose sales fall more than 25% below the median sales
performance of all employees is automatically terminated. The employer
terminates the salesperson because she had fallen below the required
performance standard. The company did not consider that the reason for
her lower sales performance was her five-month leave of absence; nor
did it assess her productivity during the period she did work (i.e.,
prorate her productivity).
Penalizing the salesperson in this
manner
constitutes
retaliation and a denial of reasonable accommodation.
Example B: Company X is
having a
reduction-in-force. The company decides that any employee who has
missed more than four weeks in the past year will be terminated. An
employee took five weeks of leave for treatment of his disability. The
company cannot count those five weeks in determining whether to
terminate this employee.(52)
- When an employee
requests leave as a reasonable accommodation, may an employer provide
an accommodation that requires him/her to remain on the job instead?
Yes, if the employer's reasonable
accommodation would be
effective and eliminate the need for leave.(53) An employer need not provide an employee's preferred
accommodation as long as the employer provides an effective
accommodation.(54)
Accordingly, in lieu of providing leave, an employer may provide a
reasonable accommodation that requires an employee to remain on the job
(e.g., reallocation of marginal functions or temporary transfer)
as long as it does not interfere with the employee's ability to address
his/her medical needs. The employer is obligated, however, to restore
the employee's full duties or to return the employee to his/her
original position once s/he no longer needs the reasonable
accommodation.
Example A: An employee with
emphysema
requests ten weeks of leave for surgery and recuperation related to his
disability. In discussing this request with the employer, the employee
states that he could return to work after seven weeks if, during his
first three weeks back, he could work part-time and eliminate two
marginal functions that require lots of walking. If the employer
provides these accommodations, then it can require the employee to
return to work after seven weeks.
Example B: An employee's
disability is getting
more severe and her doctor recommends surgery to counteract some of the
effects. After receiving the employee's request for leave for the
surgery, the employer proposes that it provide certain equipment which
it believes will mitigate the effects of the disability and delay the
need for leave to get surgery. The employer's proposed accommodation is
not effective because it interferes with the employee's ability to get
medical treatment.
- How should an
employer handle leave for an employee covered by both the ADA and the
Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)?(55)
An employer should determine an
employee's
rights under
each statute separately, and then consider whether the two statutes
overlap regarding the appropriate actions to take.(56)
Under the ADA, an
employee who needs leave related to his/her disability is entitled to
such leave if there is no other effective accommodation and the leave
will not cause undue hardship. An employer must allow the individual to
use any accrued paid leave first, but, if that is insufficient to cover
the entire period, then the employer should grant unpaid leave. An
employer must continue an employee's health insurance benefits during
his/her leave period only if it does so for other employees in a
similar leave status. As for the employee's position, the ADA requires
that the employer hold it open while the employee is on leave unless it
can show that doing so causes undue hardship. When the employee is
ready to return to work, the employer must allow the individual to
return to the same position (assuming that there was no undue hardship
in holding it open) if the employee is still qualified (i.e.,
the employee can perform the essential functions of the position with
or without reasonable accommodation).
If it is an undue hardship under the
ADA to
hold open an
employee's position during a period of leave, or an employee is no
longer qualified to return to his/her original position, then the
employer must reassign the employee (absent undue hardship) to a vacant
position for which s/he is qualified.
Under the FMLA, an
eligible employee is entitled to a maximum of 12 weeks of leave per 12
month period. The FMLA guarantees the right of the employee to return
to the same position or to an equivalent one.(57) An employer must allow the individual to use any
accrued paid leave first, but if that is insufficient to cover the
entire period, then the employer should grant unpaid leave. The FMLA
requires an employer to continue the employee's health insurance
coverage during the leave period, provided the employee pays his/her
share of the premiums.
Example A: An employee with an
ADA
disability needs 13 weeks of leave for treatment related to the
disability. The employee is eligible under the FMLA for 12 weeks of
leave (the maximum available), so this period of leave constitutes both
FMLA leave and a reasonable accommodation. Under the FMLA, the employer
could deny the employee the thirteenth week of leave. But, because the
employee is also covered under the ADA, the employer cannot deny the
request for the thirteenth week of leave unless it can show undue
hardship. The employer may consider the impact on its operations caused
by the initial 12-week absence, along with other undue hardship factors.(58)
Example B: An employee with
an ADA
disability
has taken 10 weeks of FMLA leave and is preparing to return to work.
The employer wants to put her in an equivalent position rather than her
original one. Although this is permissible under the FMLA, the ADA
requires that the employer return the employee to her original
position. Unless the employer can show that this would cause an undue
hardship, or that the employee is no longer qualified for her original
position (with or without reasonable accommodation), the employer must
reinstate the employee to her original position.
Example C: An employee with
an ADA
disability
has taken 12 weeks of FMLA leave. He notifies his employer that he is
ready to return to work, but he no longer is able to perform the
essential functions of his position or an equivalent position. Under
the FMLA, the employer could terminate his employment,(59) but under the ADA the employer must consider whether
the employee could perform the essential functions with reasonable
accommodation (e.g., additional leave, part-time schedule, job
restructuring, or use of specialized equipment). If not, the ADA
requires the employer to reassign the employee if there is a vacant
position available for which he is qualified, with or without
reasonable accommodation, and there is no undue hardship.
Modified or Part-Time
Schedule
- Must an employer allow an employee
with a disability to work a modified or part-time schedule
as a reasonable accommodation, absent undue hardship?
Yes.(60)
A modified schedule may involve adjusting arrival or departure times,
providing periodic breaks, altering when certain functions are
performed, allowing an employee to use accrued paid leave, or providing
additional unpaid leave. An employer must provide a modified or
part-time schedule when required as a reasonable accommodation, absent
undue hardship, even if it does not provide such schedules for other
employees.
Example A: An employee with
HIV
infection must take medication on a strict schedule. The medication
causes extreme nausea about one hour after ingestion, and generally
lasts about 45 minutes. The employee asks that he be allowed to take a
daily 45-minute break when the nausea occurs. The employer must grant
this request absent undue hardship.
For certain positions, the time
during which an essential function is performed may be critical.
This could affect whether an employer can grant a request to modify an
employee's schedule.(61)
Employers should carefully assess whether modifying the hours could significantly
disrupt their operations --
that is, cause undue hardship -- or whether the essential functions may
be performed at different times with little or
no impact on the operations or the ability of other
employees to perform their jobs.
If modifying an employee's schedule
poses an
undue
hardship, an employer must consider reassignment to a vacant position
that would enable the employee to work during the hours requested.(62)
Example B: A day care worker
requests
that she be allowed to change her hours from 7:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. to
10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. because of her disability. The day care center
is open from 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. and it will still have sufficient
coverage at the beginning of the morning if it grants the change in
hours. In this situation, the employer must provide the reasonable
accommodation.
Example C: An employee works
for a
morning
newspaper, operating the printing presses which run between 10 p.m. and
3 a.m. Due to her disability, she needs to work in the daytime. The
essential function of her position, operating the printing presses,
requires that she work at night because the newspaper cannot be printed
during the daytime hours. Since the employer cannot modify her hours,
it must consider whether it can reassign her to a different position.
- How should an employer handle requests for modified
or
part-time schedules for an employee covered by
both the ADA and the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)?(63)
An employer should determine an
employee's
rights under
each statute separately, and then consider whether the two statutes
overlap regarding the appropriate actions to take.
Under the ADA, an
employee who needs a modified or part-time schedule because of his/her
disability is entitled to such a schedule if there is no other
effective accommodation and it will not cause undue hardship. If there
is undue hardship, the employer must reassign the employee if there is
a vacant position for which s/he is qualified and which would allow the
employer to grant the modified or part-time schedule (absent undue
hardship).(64) An
employee receiving a part-time schedule as a reasonable accommodation
is entitled only to the benefits, including health insurance, that
other part-time employees receive. Thus, if non-disabled part-time
workers are not provided with health insurance, then the employer does
not have to provide such coverage to an employee with a disability who
is given a part-time schedule as a reasonable accommodation.
Under the FMLA, an
eligible employee is entitled to take leave intermittently or on a
part-time basis, when medically necessary, until s/he has used up the
equivalent of 12 workweeks in a 12-month period. When such leave is
foreseeable based on planned medical treatment, an employer may require
the employee to temporarily transfer (for the duration of the leave) to
an available alternative position, with equivalent pay and benefits,
for which the employee is qualified and which better suits his/her
reduced hours.(65) An
employer always must maintain the employee's existing level of coverage
under a group health plan during the period of FMLA leave, provided the
employee pays his/her share of the premium.(66)
Example: An employee with an
ADA
disability requests that she be excused from work one day a week for
the next six months because of her disability. If this employee is
eligible for a modified schedule under the FMLA, the employer must
provide the requested leave under that statute if it is medically
necessary, even if the leave would be an undue hardship under the ADA.
Modified Workplace
Policies
- Is it a reasonable accommodation
to modify a workplace policy?
Yes. It is a reasonable accommodation
to
modify a
workplace policy when necessitated by an individual's
disability-related limitations,(67) absent undue hardship. But, reasonable accommodation
only requires that the employer modify the policy for an employee who
requires such action because of a disability; therefore, the employer
may continue to apply the policy to all other employees.
Example: An employer has a
policy
prohibiting employees from eating or drinking at their workstations. An
employee with insulin-dependent diabetes explains to her employer that
she may occasionally take too much insulin and, in order to avoid going
into insulin shock, she must immediately eat a candy bar or drink fruit
juice. The employee requests permission to keep such food at her
workstation and to eat or drink when her insulin level necessitates.
The employer must modify its policy to grant this request, absent undue
hardship. Similarly, an employer might have to modify a policy to allow
an employee with a disability to bring in a small refrigerator, or to
use the employer's refrigerator, to store medication that must be taken
during working hours.
Granting an employee time off from
work or
an adjusted
work schedule as a reasonable accommodation may involve modifying leave
or attendance procedures or policies. For example, it would be a
reasonable accommodation to modify a policy requiring employees to
schedule vacation time in advance if an otherwise qualified individual
with a disability needed to use accrued vacation time on an unscheduled
basis because of disability-related medical problems, barring undue
hardship.(68)
Furthermore, an employer may be required to provide additional leave to
an employee with a disability as a reasonable accommodation in spite of
a "no-fault" leave policy, unless the provision of such leave would
impose an undue hardship.(69)
In some instances, an employer's
refusal to
modify a
workplace policy, such as a leave or attendance policy, could
constitute disparate treatment as well as a failure to provide a
reasonable accommodation. For example, an employer may have a policy
requiring employees to notify supervisors before 9:00 a.m. if they are
unable to report to work. If an employer would excuse an employee from
complying with this policy because of emergency hospitalization due to
a car accident, then the employer must do the same thing when the
emergency hospitalization is due to a disability.(70)
Reassignment(71)
The ADA specifically lists "reassignment
to a
vacant
position" as a form of reasonable accommodation.(72) This type of reasonable accommodation must be provided
to an employee who, because of a disability, can no longer perform the
essential functions of his/her current position, with or without
reasonable accommodation, unless the employer can show that it would be
an undue hardship.(73)
An employee must be "qualified" for the
new
position.
An employee is "qualified" for a position if s/he: (1) satisfies
the requisite skill, experience, education, and other job-related
requirements of the position, and (2) can perform the essential
functions of the new position, with or without reasonable accommodation.(74) The employee does
not need to be the best qualified individual for the position in order
to obtain it as a reassignment.
There is no obligation for the employer to
assist the
individual to become qualified. Thus, the employer does not have to
provide training so that the employee acquires necessary skills to take
a job.(75) The
employer, however, would have to provide an employee with a disability
who is being reassigned with any training that is normally provided to
anyone hired for or transferred to the position.
Example A: An employer is
considering
reassigning an employee with a disability to a position which requires
the ability to speak Spanish in order to perform an essential function.
The employee never learned Spanish and wants the employer to send him
to a course to learn Spanish. The employer is not required to provide
this training as part of the obligation to make a reassignment.
Therefore, the employee is not qualified for this position.
Example B: An employer is
considering
reassigning
an employee with a disability to a position in which she will contract
for goods and services. The employee is qualified for the position. The
employer has its own specialized rules regarding contracting that
necessitate training all individuals hired for these positions. In this
situation, the employer must provide the employee with this specialized
training.
Before considering reassignment as a
reasonable
accommodation, employers should first consider those accommodations
that would enable an employee to remain in his/her current position.
Reassignment is the reasonable accommodation of last resort and is
required only after it has been determined that: (1) there are no
effective accommodations that will enable the employee to perform the
essential functions of his/her current position, or (2) all other
reasonable accommodations would impose an undue hardship.(76) However, if both
the employer and the employee voluntarily
agree that transfer is preferable to remaining in the current position
with some form of reasonable accommodation, then the employer may
transfer the employee.
"Vacant" means that the position is
available
when the
employee asks for reasonable accommodation, or that the employer knows
that it will become available within a reasonable amount of time. A
"reasonable amount of time" should be determined on a case-by-case
basis considering relevant facts, such as whether the employer, based
on experience, can anticipate that an appropriate position will become
vacant within a short period of time.(77) A position is considered vacant even if an employer
has posted a notice or announcement seeking applications for that
position. The employer does not have to bump an employee from a job in
order to create a vacancy; nor does it have to create a new position.(78)
Example C: An employer is seeking
a
reassignment for an employee with a disability. There are no vacant
positions today, but the employer has just learned that another
employee resigned and that that position will become vacant in four
weeks. The impending vacancy is equivalent to the position currently
held by the employee with a disability. If the employee is qualified
for that position, the employer must offer it to him.
Example D: An employer is
seeking a
reassignment
for an employee with a disability. There are no vacant positions today,
but the employer has just learned that an employee in an equivalent
position plans to retire in six months. Although the employer knows
that the employee with a disability is qualified for this position, the
employer does not have to offer this position to her because six months
is beyond a "reasonable amount of time." (If, six months from now, the
employer decides to advertise the position, it must allow the
individual to apply for that position and give the application the
consideration it deserves.)
The employe must reassign the individual
to a
vacant position
that is equiavlent in terms of pay, status, or other relevant factors (e.g.,
benefits, geographical location) if the employee is qualified for the
position. If there is no vacant equivalent position, the employer must
reassign the employee to a vacant lower level position for which the
individual is qualified. Assuming there is more than one vacancy for
which the employee is qualified, the employer must place the individual
in the position that comes closest to the employee's current position
in terms of pay, status, etc.(79) If it is unclear which position comes closest, the
employer should consult with the employee about his/her preference
before determining the position to which the employee will be
reassigned. Reassignment does not include
giving an employee a promotion. Thus, an employee must compete for any
vacant position that would constitute a promotion.
- Is a probationary employee entitled
to reassignment?
Employers cannot deny a reassignment
to an
employee
solely because s/he is designated as "probationary."(80) An employee with a disability is eligible for
reassignment to a new position, regardless of whether s/he is
considered "probationary," as long as the employee adequately performed
the essential functions of the position, with or without reasonable
accommodation, before the need for a reassignment arose.
The longer the period of time in which
an
employee has
adequately performed the essential functions, with or without
reasonable accommodation, the more likely it is that reassignment is
appropriate if the employee becomes unable to continue performing the
essential functions of the current position due to a disability. If,
however, the probationary employee has never adequately
performed the essential functions, with or without reasonable
accommodation, then s/he is not entitled to reassignment because s/he
was never "qualified" for the original position. In this situation, the
employee is similar to an applicant who applies for a job for which
s/he is not qualified, and then requests reassignment. Applicants are
not entitled to reassignment.
Example A: An employer
designates
all
new employees as "probationary" for one year. An employee has been
working successfully for nine months when she becomes disabled in a car
accident. The employee, due to her disability, is unable to continue
performing the essential functions of her current position, with or
without reasonable accommodation, and seeks a reassignment. She is
entitled to a reassignment if there is a vacant position for which she
is qualified and it would not pose an undue hardship.
Example B: A probationary
employee has been
working two weeks, but has been unable to perform the essential
functions of the job because of his disability. There are no reasonable
accommodations that would permit the individual to perform the
essential functions of the position, so the individual requests a
reassignment. The employer does not have to provide a reassignment
(even if there is a vacant position) because, as it turns out, the
individual was never qualified -- i.e., the individual was
never able to perform the essential functions of the position, with or
without reasonable accommodation, for which he was hired.
- Must an employer offer reassignment as a reasonable
accommodation if it does not allow any of its
employees to transfer from one position to another?
Yes. The ADA requires employers to
provide
reasonable
accommodations to individuals with disabilities, including
reassignment, even though they are not available to others. Therefore,
an employer who does not normally transfer employees would still have
to reassign an employee with a disability, unless it could show that
the reassignment caused an undue hardship. And, if an employer has a
policy prohibiting transfers, it would have to modify that policy in
order to reassign an employee with a disability, unless it could show
undue hardship.(81)
- Is an employer's obligation to
offer
reassignment to a vacant position limited to
those vacancies within an employee's office, branch, agency,
department, facility, personnel system (if the employer has
more than a single personnel system), or
geographical area?
No. This is true even if the employer
has a
policy
prohibiting transfers from one office, branch, agency, department,
facility, personnel system, or geographical area to another. The ADA
contains no language limiting the obligation to reassign only to
positions within an office, branch, agency, etc.(82) Rather, the extent to which an employer must search
for a vacant position will be an issue of undue hardship.(83) If an employee is
being reassigned to a different geographical area, the employee must
pay for any relocation expenses unless the employer routinely pays such
expenses when granting voluntary transfers to other employees.
- Does an employer have to
notify an
employee with a disability about vacant
positions, or is it the employee's responsibility to learn
what jobs are vacant?
The employer is in the best position
to know
which jobs
are vacant or will become vacant within a reasonable period of time.(84) In order to narrow
the search for potential vacancies, the employer, as part of the
interactive process, should ask the employee about his/her
qualifications and interests. Based on this information, the employer
is obligated to inform an employee about vacant positions for which
s/he may be eligible as a reassignment. However, an employee should
assist the employer in identifying appropriate vacancies to the extent
that the employee has access to information about them. If the employer
does not know whether the employee is qualified for a specific
position, the employer can discuss with the employee his/her
qualifications.(85)
An employer should proceed as
expeditiously
as possible
in determining whether there are appropriate vacancies. The length of
this process will vary depending on how quickly an employer can search
for and identify whether an appropriate vacant position exists. For a
very small employer, this process may take one day; for other employers
this process may take several weeks.(86) When an employer has completed its search, identified
whether there are any vacancies (including any positions that will
become vacant in a reasonable amount of time), notified the employee of
the results, and either offered an appropriate vacancy to the employee
or informed him/her that no appropriate vacancies are available, the
employer will have fulfilled its obligation.
- Does reassignment mean
that the employee is permitted to compete
for a vacant position?
No. Reassignment means that the
employee
gets the vacant
position if s/he is qualified for it.
Otherwise, reassignment would be of little value and would not be
implemented as Congress intended.(87)
- If an employee is reassigned to a lower level
position, must
an employer maintain his/her salary
from the higher level position?
No, unless the employer transfers
employees
without
disabilities to lower level positions and maintains their original
salaries.(88)
OTHER
REASONABLE
ACCOMMODATION ISSUES(89)
- If an employer has provided one reasonable
accommodation,
does it have to provide additional reasonable
accommodations requested by an individual with a disability?
The duty to provide reasonable
accommodation
is an
ongoing one.(90)
Certain individuals require only one reasonable accommodation, while
others may need more than one. Still others may need one reasonable
accommodation for a period of time, and then at a later date, require
another type of reasonable accommodation. If an individual requests
multiple reasonable accommodations, s/he is entitled only to those
accommodations that are necessitated by a disability and that will
provide an equal employment opportunity.
An employer must consider each request
for
reasonable
accommodation and determine: (1) whether the accommodation is needed,
(2) if needed, whether the accommodation would be effective, and (3) if
effective, whether providing the reasonable accommodation would impose
an undue hardship. If a reasonable accommodation turns out to be
ineffective and the employee with a disability remains unable to
perform an essential function, the employer must consider whether there
would be an alternative reasonable accommodation that would not pose an
undue hardship. If there is no alternative accommodation, then the
employer must attempt to reassign the employee to a vacant position for
which s/he is qualified, unless to do so would cause an undue hardship.
- Does an employer have to change a
person's supervisor as a form of reasonable accommodation?
No. An employer does not have to
provide an
employee with
a new supervisor as a reasonable accommodation. Nothing in the ADA,
however, prohibits an employer from doing so. Furthermore, although an
employer is not required to change supervisors, the ADA may require
that supervisory methods be altered as a form of reasonable
accommodation.(91)
Also, an employee with a disability is protected from disability-based
discrimination by a supervisor, including disability-based harassment.
Example: A supervisor
frequently
schedules team meetings on a day's notice - often notifying staff in
the afternoon that a meeting will be held on the following morning. An
employee with a disability has missed several meetings because they
have conflicted with previously-scheduled physical therapy sessions.
The employee asks that the supervisor give her two to three days'
notice of team meetings so that, if necessary, she can reschedule the
physical therapy sessions. Assuming no undue hardship would result, the
supervisor must make this reasonable accommodation.
- Does an employer have to allow an employee with a
disability to work at home as a
reasonable accommodation?
An employer must modify its policy
concerning where work
is performed if such a change is needed as a reasonable accommodation,
but only if this accommodation would be
effective and would not cause an undue hardship.(92) Whether this
accommodation is effective will depend on whether the essential
functions of the position can be performed at home. There are certain
jobs in which the essential functions can only be performed at the work
site -- e.g., food server, cashier in a store. For such jobs,
allowing an employee to work at home is not effective because it does
not enable an employee to perform his/her essential functions. Certain
considerations may be critical in determining whether a job can be
effectively performed at home, including (but not limited to) the
employer's ability to adequately supervise the employee and the
employee's need to work with certain equipment or tools that cannot be
replicated at home. In contrast, employees may be able to perform the
essential functions of certain types of jobs at home (e.g.,
telemarketer, proofreader).(93) For these types of jobs, an employer may deny a
request to work at home if it can show that another accommodation would
be effective or if working at home will cause undue hardship.
- Must an employerwithhold
discipline or termination of an employee who, because of a disability,
violated a conduct rule that is job-related for the position
in question and consistent with business necessity?
No. An employer never has to excuse a
violation of a
uniformly applied conduct rule that is job-related and consistent with
business necessity. This means, for example, that an employer never has
to tolerate or excuse violence, threats of violence, stealing, or
destruction of property. An employer may discipline an employee with a
disability for engaging in such misconduct if it would impose the same
discipline on an employee without a disability.
- Must an employer provide a reasonable
accommodation for an employee with a disability who violated a conduct
rule that is job-related for the position in question and consistent
with business necessity?
An employer must make reasonable
accommodation to enable an
otherwise qualified employee with a disability to
meet such a conduct standard in
the future, barring undue hardship, except where the
punishment for the violation is termination.(94) Since reasonable accommodation is always prospective,
an employer is not required
to excuse past misconduct even if it is the result of the individual's
disability.(95)
Possible reasonable accommodations could include adjustments to
starting times, specified breaks, and leave if these accommodations
will enable an employee to comply with conduct rules.(96)
Example: An employee with
major
depression is often late for work because of medication side-effects
that make him extremely groggy in the morning. His scheduled hours are
9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., but he arrives at 9:00, 9:30, 10:00, or even
10:30 on any given day. His job responsibilities involve telephone
contact with the company's traveling sales representatives, who depend
on him to answer urgent marketing questions and expedite special
orders. The employer disciplines him for tardiness, stating that
continued failure to arrive promptly during the next month will result
in termination of his employment. The individual then explains that he
was late because of a disability and needs to work on a later schedule.
In this situation, the employer may discipline the employee because he
violated a conduct standard addressing tardiness that is job-related
for the position in question and consistent with business necessity.
The employer, however, must consider reasonable accommodation, barring
undue hardship, to enable this individual to meet this standard in the
future. For example, if this individual can serve the company's sales
representatives by regularly working a schedule of 10:00 a.m. to 6:30
p.m., a reasonable accommodation would be to modify his schedule so
that he is not required to report for work until 10:00 a.m.
- Is it a reasonable accommodation to make
sure that an employee takes medication as prescribed?
No. Medication monitoring is not a
reasonable
accommodation. Employers have no obligation to monitor medication
because doing so does not remove a workplace barrier. Similarly, an
employer has no responsibility to monitor an employee's medical
treatment or ensure that s/he is receiving appropriate treatment
because such treatment does not involve modifying workplace barriers.(97)
It may be a form of reasonable
accommodation, however, to
give an employee a break in order that s/he may take medication, or to
grant leave so that an employee may obtain treatment.
- Is an employer relieved of its
obligation to provide reasonable accommodation for an
employee with a disability who fails to take
medication, to obtain medical treatment, or to use an
assistive device (such as a hearing aid)?
No. The ADA requires an employer to
provide
reasonable
accommodation to remove workplace barriers, regardless of what effect
medication, other medical treatment, or assistive devices may have on
an employee's ability to perform the job.(98)
However, if an employee with a
disability,
with or
without reasonable accommodation, cannot perform the essential
functions of the position or poses a direct threat in the absence of
medication, treatment, or an assistive device, then s/he is
unqualified.
- Must an employer provide a reasonable accommodation
that
is needed because of the side effects of
medication or treatment related to the disability, or
because of symptoms or other medical conditions resulting from the
underlying disability?
Yes. The side effects caused by the
medication that an
employee must take because of the disability are limitations resulting
from the disability. Reasonable accommodation extends to all
limitations resulting from a disability.
Example A: An employee with
cancer
undergoes chemotherapy twice a week, which causes her to be quite ill
afterwards. The employee requests a modified schedule -- leave for the
two days a week of chemotherapy. The treatment will last six weeks.
Unless it can show undue hardship, the employer must grant this
request.
Similarly, any symptoms or related
medical
conditions
resulting from the disability that cause limitations may also require
reasonable accommodation.(99)
Example B: An employee, as a
result
of
insulin-dependent diabetes, has developed background retinopathy (a
vision impairment). The employee, who already has provided
documentation showing his diabetes is a disability, requests a device
to enlarge the text on his computer screen. The employer can request
documentation that the retinopathy is related to the diabetes but the
employee does not have to show that the retinopathy is an independent
disability under the ADA. Since the retinopathy is a consequence of the
diabetes (an ADA disability), the request must be granted unless undue
hardship can be shown.
- Must an
employer ask whether a reasonable accommodation is needed when an
employee has not asked for one?
Generally, no. As a general rule, the
individual with a
disability -- who has the most knowledge about the need for reasonable
accommodation -- must inform the employer that an accommodation is
needed.(100)
However, an employer should
initiate the reasonable accommodation interactive process(101) without
being asked if the employer: (1)
knows that the employee has a disability, (2) knows, or has reason to
know, that the employee is experiencing workplace problems because of
the disability, and (3) knows, or has reason to know, that the
disability prevents the employee from requesting a reasonable
accommodation. If the individual with a disability states that s/he
does not need a reasonable accommodation, the employer will have
fulfilled its obligation.
Example: An employee with
mental
retardation delivers messages at a law firm. He frequently mixes up
messages for "R. Miller" and "T. Miller." The employer knows about the
disability, suspects that the performance problem is a result of the
disability, and knows that this employee is unable to ask for a
reasonable accommodation because of his mental retardation. The
employer asks the employee about mixing up the two names and asks if it
would be helpful to spell the first name of each person. When the
employee says that would be better, the employer, as a reasonable
accommodation, instructs the receptionist to write the full first name
when messages are left for one of the Messrs. Miller.
- May an employer
ask whether a reasonable accommodation is needed when an employee with
a disability has not asked for one?
An employer may ask an employee with a
known
disability
whether s/he needs a reasonable accommodation when it reasonably
believes that the employee may need an accommodation. For example, an
employer could ask a deaf employee who is being sent on a business trip
if s/he needs reasonable accommodation. Or, if an employer is
scheduling a luncheon at a restaurant and is uncertain about what
questions it should ask to ensure that the restaurant is accessible for
an employee who uses a wheelchair, the employer may first ask the
employee. An employer also may ask an employee with a disability who is
having performance or conduct problems if s/he needs reasonable
accommodation.(102)
- May an employer tell other
employees that an individual is receiving a reasonable accommodation
when employees ask questions about a coworker with a disability?
No. An employer may not disclose that
an
employee is
receiving a reasonable accommodation because this usually amounts to a
disclosure that the individual has a disability. The ADA specifically
prohibits the disclosure of medical information except in certain
limited situations, which do not include disclosure to coworkers.(103)
An employer may certainly respond to a
question from an
employee about why a coworker is receiving what is perceived as
"different" or "special" treatment by emphasizing its policy of
assisting any employee who encounters difficulties in the workplace.
The employer also may find it helpful to point out that many of the
workplace issues encountered by employees are personal, and that, in
these circumstances, it is the employer's policy to respect employee
privacy. An employer may be able to make this point effectively by
reassuring the employee asking the question that his/her privacy would
similarly be respected if s/he found it necessary to ask the employer
for some kind of workplace change for personal reasons.
Since responding to specific coworker
questions may be
difficult, employers might find it helpful before such questions are
raised to provide all employees with information about various laws
that require employers to meet certain employee needs (e.g., the
ADA and the Family and Medical Leave Act), while also requiring them to
protect the privacy of employees. In providing general ADA information
to employees, an employer may wish to highlight the obligation to
provide reasonable accommodation, including the interactive process and
different types of reasonable accommodations, and the statute's
confidentiality protections. Such information could be delivered in
orientation materials, employee handbooks, notices accompanying
paystubs, and posted flyers. Employers may wish to explore these and
other alternatives with unions because they too are bound by the ADA's
confidentiality provisions. Union meetings and bulletin boards may be
further avenues for such educational efforts.
As long as there is no coercion by an
employer, an
employee with a disability may voluntarily
choose to disclose to coworkers his/her disability and/or the fact that
s/he is receiving a reasonable accommodation.
UNDUE HARDSHIP
ISSUES(104)
An employer does not have to provide a
reasonable
accommodation that would cause an "undue hardship" to the employer.
Generalized conclusions will not suffice to support a claim of undue
hardship. Instead, undue hardship must be based on an individualized
assessment of current circumstances that show that a specific
reasonable accommodation would cause significant difficulty or expense.(105) A determination
of undue hardship should be based on several factors, including:
- the nature and cost of the accommodation needed;
- the overall financial resources of the facility
making the
reasonable accommodation; the number of persons employed at this
facility; the effect on expenses and resources of the facility;
- the overall financial resources, size, number of
employees, and type and location of facilities of the employer (if the
facility involved in the reasonable accommodation is part of a larger
entity);
- the type of operation of the employer, including the
structure and functions of the workforce, the geographic separateness,
and the administrative or fiscal relationship of the facility involved
in making the accommodation to the employer;
- the impact of the accommodation on the operation of
the
facility.(106)
The ADA's legislative history indicates
that
Congress wanted
employers to consider all possible sources of outside funding when
assessing whether a particular accommodation would be too costly.(107) Undue hardship
is determined based on the net cost to
the employer. Thus, an employer should determine whether funding is
available from an outside source, such as a state rehabilitation
agency, to pay for all or part of the accommodation. In addition, the
employer should determine whether it is eligible for certain tax
credits or deductions to offset the cost of the accommodation.(108) Also, to the
extent that a portion of the cost of an accommodation causes undue
hardship, the employer should ask the individual with a disability if
s/he will pay the difference.
If an employer determines that one
particular
reasonable
accommodation will cause undue hardship, but a second type of
reasonable accommodation will be effective and will not cause an undue
hardship, then the employer must provide the second accommodation.
An employer cannot claim undue
hardship based on employees' (or customers') fears or prejudices toward
the individual's disability.(109) Nor can undue hardship be based on the fact that
provision of a reasonable accommodation might have a negative impact on
the morale of other employees. Employers, however, may be able to show
undue hardship where provision of a reasonable accommodation would be
unduly disruptive to other employees's ability to work.
Example A: An employee with breast
cancer is
undergoing chemotherapy. As a consequence of the treatment, the
employee is subject to fatigue and finds it difficult to keep up with
her regular workload. So that she may focus her reduced energy on
performing her essential functions, the employer transfers three of her
marginal functions to another employee for the duration of the
chemotherapy treatments. The second employee is unhappy at being given
extra assignments, but the employer determines that the employee can
absorb the new assignments with little effect on his ability to perform
his own assignments in a timely manner. Since the employer cannot show
significant disruption to its operation, there is no undue hardship.(110)
Example B: A convenience store
clerk
with multiple
sclerosis requests that he be allowed to go from working full-time to
part-time as a reasonable accommodation because of his disability. The
store assigns two clerks per shift, and if the first clerk's hours are
reduced, the second clerk's workload will increase significantly beyond
his ability to handle his responsibilities. The store determines that
such an arrangement will result in inadequate coverage to serve
customers in a timely manner, keep the shelves stocked, and maintain
store security. Thus, the employer can show undue hardship based on the
significant disruption to its operations and, therefore, can refuse to
reduce the employee's hours. The employer, however, should explore
whether any other reasonable accommodation will assist the store clerk
without causing undue hardship.
- Must an employer modify the
work
hours of an employee with a disability if doing so would
prevent other employees from performing their jobs?
No. If the result of modifying one
employee's work hours
(or granting leave) is to prevent other employees from doing their
jobs, then the significant disruption to the operations of the employer
constitutes an undue hardship.
Example A: A crane operator,
due to
his
disability, requests an adjustment in his work schedule so that he
starts work at 8:00 a.m. rather than 7:00 a.m., and finishes one hour
later in the evening. The crane operator works with three other
employees who cannot perform their jobs without the crane operator. As
a result, if the employer grants this requested accommodation, it would
have to require the other three workers to adjust their hours, find
other work for them to do from 7:00 to 8:00, or have the workers do
nothing. The ADA does not require the employer to take any of these
actions because they all significantly disrupt the operations of the
business. Thus, the employer can deny the requested accommodation, but
should discuss with the employee if there are other possible
accommodations that would not result in undue hardship.< |