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The Americans with Disabilities Act

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Title: The Americans with Disabilities Act


1
The Americans with Disabilities Act
  • 2007 Issues Forum

2
The Road to the ADA
  • Soldiers Rehabilitation Act 1918
  • Civilian Rehabilitation Act 1920
  • Architecture Barriers Act of 1968
  • Rehabilitation Act of 1973
  • Education for All Handicapped Children Act 1975
  • The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

3
ADA Purpose and Goals
  • ADA Title One Purpose
  • The Americans With Disabilities Act is not an
    affirmative-action law. Its an equal opportunity
    law. The objective is not to create jobs for
    people with disabilities, but to make it possible
    for them to fill jobs that would exist in any
    case.
  • Goals
  • Equality of Opportunity
  • Full Participation
  • Independent Living
  • Economic Self-Sufficiency

4
The ADAThree Titles
  • Title One Employment Provisions
  • Employers with 15 or more employees
  • Enforcement by the EEOC
  • Title Two Public Facilities and Services
  • State and local government
  • Enforcement by the DOJ
  • Title Three Private Facilities and Services
  • restaurants, hotels, theaters, convention
    centers, retail stores, shopping centers,
    pharmacies, doctors' offices, hospitals, etc.
  • Enforcement by the DOJ

5
Who Is Covered?
  • Physical or mental impairment that substantially
    limits one or more of a major life activity.
  • Major Life Activities Learning, Walking, Seeing,
    Hearing, Sitting, Standing, Breathing, Performing
    Manual Tasks, Ability to Care for Oneself
  • A record of such an impairment
  • Regarded as having such an impairment.

6
Key ADA Terms
  • Reasonable Accommodations
  • Modification or adjustment to a job or the work
    environment that will enable a qualified
    applicant or employee with a disability
  • To apply for jobs
  • Perform the essential job functions
  • Assure that a qualified individual with a
    disability has rights and privileges in
    employment.
  • ADAs reasonable accommodation rule cannot force
    changes to the point that the employer is not
    getting the performance required to support that
    part of the business. EEOC equates the
    reasonable in the phrase reasonable
    accommodation with effective.

7
What Are Reasonable Accommodations?
  • Applying for a job
  • Large print application
  • Interpreter
  • Job coach
  • Assistance with on-line applications
  • Accessible location

8
What Are Reasonable Accommodations?
  • Performing essential functions
  • restructuring of existing facilities
  • restructuring of the job
  • modification of work schedules
  • reassignment to another position
  • modification of equipment
  • installation of new equipment
  • provision of qualified readers or interpreters

9
What is not a Reasonable Accommodation?
  • Lowering performance standards
  • Providing additional paid leave
  • Waiving warranted discipline even if disability
    played a role in causing the conduct that is
    worthy of discipline
  • Removing or reallocating essential job functions
  • Creating a new position or bumping another
    employee to create a vacancy for reassignment

10
Requesting a Reasonable Accommodation
  • No magic words (such as ADA or reasonable
    accommodation) are required
  • Simply has to inform his/her employer (verbally
    or in writing) that he/she needs an adjustment or
    change in the workplace because of a disability.
  • A family member, friend, health professional, or
    other representative may request a reasonable
    accommodation on behalf of the individual.

11
Undue Hardship
  • Undue hardship refers to an accommodation that
    would be unduly costly, extensive, or disruptive.
  • Does the accommodation cost more than
    alternatives that are equally effective in
    removing work limitations?
  • Does it require extensive renovations that will
    disrupt the business?
  • Will it affect other employees or customers in a
    negative way? If any of the answers are yes, an
    employer is not required to provide the requested
    accommodation.
  • Undue hardship is decided on a case-by-case
    basis. Factors influencing whether a modification
    is considered an undue hardship on the employer
    include the size of the business and the
    availability of resources to reduce the net cost
    of the accommodation to the employer. An undue
    hardship for one business may not be an undue
    hardship for another.

12
Disclosure Under the ADAPoints to Ponder
  • The Stigma Factor
  • Only 26 of employers say they have knowingly
    hired a person with a physical or mental
    disability
  • Percent of Public Very Comfortable with
    Disability
  • Wheelchair User 58
  • Blind 46
  • Deaf 38
  • Intellectual Disability 33
  • Mental Illness 19

13
Points to Ponder
  • The worker with a non-apparent disability must
    make a choice without knowing
  • How the employer will respond to disclosure
  • How far the information will spread in the
    workplace
  • What ways it might impact on his or her personal
    or professional quality of life over time.

14
To Disclose or Not to Disclose?
  • Decision Tree
  • When to disclose,- during the hiring process,-
    after the job is secured, but before beginning
    work,- after a positive performance pattern has,
    been established,- when an accommodation is
    needed,- when a crisis occurs.
  • Consequences
  • Will telling increase or decrease my chances of
    getting the job?

15
To Disclose or Not to Disclose
  • Whom to tell,- the immediate supervisor,- a
    higher level manager,- co-workers,- friends in
    other areas of the company,- Personnel
    representatives,- Equal Employment Opportunity
    officers,- Employee Assistance personnel, etc.

16
To Disclose or Not to Disclose
  • How much and what type of information to
    provide,- stating that one has emotional
    problems vs. mental illness vs. some other
    label,- a psychiatric diagnostic label (e.g.,
    DSM-III-R diagnosis),- the duration of the
    condition,- the prognosis of the condition,-
    medications, other therapies, or supports used,-
    previous, current, or potential impact of the
    condition on one's job performance,- changes to
    the work environment that may be helpful (i.e.,
    accommodations).

17
Illegal Questions in the Interview Process
  • ADA prohibits employers from asking questions
    that are likely to reveal the existence of a
    disability before making a job offer. (No
    fishing)
  • Examples of prohibited questions
  • How many days were you sick last year?
  • Have you ever filed for workers compensation?
  • What prescription drugs are you taking?
  • Have you ever been treated for mental health
    problems?

18
Legal or Illegal
  • Do you need an accommodation to do this job?
  • May an employer ask an applicant whether he/she
    will need reasonable accommodation for the hiring
    process?
  • May an employer ask applicants about their lawful
    drug use?
  • Have you ever been convicted of a crime?
  • May an employer ask applicants about their
    current illegal use of drugs?
  • How many Mondays or Fridays were you absent last
    year on leave other than approved vacation
    leave?
  • May an employer ask applicants about their
    drinking habits?

19
Post Offer Phase
  • The Rules Change
  • Can ask questions that are likely to reveal the
    existence of a disability as long as it asks
    these questions of other applicants offered the
    same type of job.
  • Can require a medical examination as long as it
    requires the same medical examination of other
    applicants offered the same type of job.

20
The Discovery of a Disability
  • Disability revealed due to post-job offer
    questions or medical examination.
  • Can the employer withdraw the offer?
  • No, unless it can show that you are unable to
    perform the essential functions of the job or you
    pose a risk to yourself or others.

21
ADA Real Life Situations
  • An employee in a fast food chain with an
    intellectual disability has worked under the same
    manager for two years. When the manager takes a
    job at another store, he leaves a detailed
    description for the new manager of the employee's
    job duties and her reasonable accommodations.
  • Has the employer violated the employees right not
    to disclose?

22
Real Life Situations
  • Several times during the past three months, a
    supervisor has observed a newly hired secretary
    staring blankly, making chewing movements with
    her mouth, and engaging in random activity. On
    these occasions, the secretary has appeared to be
    unaware of people around her and has not
    responded when the supervisor has asked if she
    was okay. The secretary has no memory of these
    incidents.
  • Can the supervisor ask the secretary whether a
    medical condition, such as epilepsy, is affecting
    her ability to perform the essential functions of
    her job?

23
Real Life Situations
  • An employee with mental illness is allowed to
    work from home on occasion and take more frequent
    work breaks due to the side effects of a
    medication she is taking? Co-workers are
    gossiping about this and wondering why they cant
    have the same benefit.
  • Can the employer tell them the reason why this is
    being done?

24
Real Life Situations
  • Paul had depression and anxiety and had been
    hospitalized for mental health issues. When he
    became stressed at work, he asked to be moved to
    a low stress position. Is this a reasonable
    accommodation?

25
Real Life Situations
  • An worker with a small not-for-profit agency has
    a learning disability and does not request
    accommodation during the application process or
    when he begins working. Performance problems soon
    arise. He tries to solve the problems on his own,
    but they persist and he is counseled on improving
    his performance. The agency follows its policy on
    counseling and disciplining workers but these
    efforts are unsuccessful. During this entire
    period, when he is receiving counseling and
    warnings, he does not ask for reasonable
    accommodation. However, when his supervisor meets
    to fire him, then the worker reveals a disability
    and requests accommodation. Can the agency still
    fire him?

26
Real Life Situations
  • The employer does not allow workers to have food
    or drink at their workstation. However, a person
    with mental illness requests, due to the side
    effects of medication to be allowed to have water
    at his workstation.
  • Is this considered to be a reasonable
    accommodation?

27
Real Life Situations
  • A corporation subsidizes paid parking for its
    employees. An employee with an intellectual
    disability does not drive because of her
    disability. She requests that the employer
    provide her with the cash equivalent of the
    parking subsidy as a reasonable accommodation so
    that she can use the money to pay for her
    transportation. Does the employer have to grant
    this request?

28
Real Life Situations
  • A receptionist, with a known degenerative eye
    condition, has not been answering all the calls
    that come in to the office in her usual friendly
    manner.
  • Can the employer ask her questions about her eye
    condition?

29
Real Life Situations
  • A firefighter in a city had been injured in an
    off-duty accident resulting in paralysis from the
    waist down. He requested to be transferred to an
    administrative position within the department,
    which was vacant. The city requires that all
    administrative positions be able to help out in
    the event of a fire. Does the city have to accept
    this as a reasonable accommodation?

30
Real Life Situations
  • Juan, an associate with a medium-sized law firm,
    has a learning disability (low processing speed).
    Juan has been working successfully at the firm
    for six months, but he is concerned that his
    disability is starting to create some
    difficulties in performing his job. Juan finds
    that his disability can cause him to become
    distracted but that he can fully compensate for
    this problem by dictating his thoughts into a
    tape recorder instead of writing or typing.
    Therefore, he requests that he be permitted to
    have an administrative assistant transcribe his
    recordings. This accommodation enabled him to
    work successfully at his prior firm. Is this a
    reasonable accommodation?

31
Real Life Situations
  • An individual applies for a retail clerk position
    at a 24-hour convenience store.  The job posting
    indicated that the store was seeking to hire a
    clerk to work from 200 p.m. to 1000 p.m. 
    During the interview, the applicant mentions that
    the hours are ideal for him because he will not
    have to make any adjustments to his scheduled
    radiation treatments for prostate cancer, which
    occur in the early morning and are expected to
    continue for the next five weeks.  He also
    mentions that he has not had any side effects
    during his first three weeks of treatment.
  • Can the interviewer ask him any questions about
    the need for reasonable accommodations?

32
Real Life Situations
  • An individual has chosen to receive job placement
    services from an organization that serves people
    with disabilities. The individual has told the
    organization that he does not want to disclose
    his disability. The organizations brochures,
    business cards and website all state the fact
    that it serves people with disabilities. As the
    organizations job developer calls on employers
    to help located jobs for the consumer, he leaves
    his card and brochures with employers.
    Subsequently the job developer arranges for the
    consumer to have an interview with one of the
    companies where he has left brochures about his
    agency. The job-seeker learns that the job
    developer has left this information with
    employers. Has the organization violated the
    ADA?

33
Recent Court Cases
  • Sutton versus United Airlines Recent
    Interpretations
  • The effects of the persons mitigating measure
    (e.g. eyeglasses, medication) must be considered.
  • Capobianco v. City of New York
  • Kelly v. Metallics West, Inc.
  • D'Angelo v. Conagra Foods
  • Daoud v. Avamere Staffing, LLC

34
Recent Court Cases
  • Chevron v. Echazabal
  • Direct threat included threat to self as well
    as others.
  • Taylor v. Rice
  • EEOC v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours Co
  • Hammel v. Eua Galle Cheese Factory

35
Upon Further Review
  • Better Definition of Disability
  • Expansion of List of Major Life Activities
  • Sleeping
  • Controlling Body Wastes
  • Exercise and Sports
  • Physical Agility
  • Sexual Relations
  • Mental Activities
  • Interpersonal Activities
  • Transportation

36
Contact Information
  • Pat Steele
  • Mainstream Living
  • 333 SW 9th, Suite C
  • Des Moines, Iowa 50309
  • 515 309-0324
  • psteele_at_mainstreamliving.org
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