Employment
Q. What employers are covered by title I of the ADA,
and when is the coverage effective?
A. The title I employment provisions apply
to private employers, State and local governments, employment agencies, and
labor unions. Employers with 25 or more employees are covered as of July 26,
1992. Employers with 15 or more employees are covered as of July 26, 1994.
Q. What practices and activities are covered by the
employment nondiscrimination requirements?
A. The ADA prohibits discrimination in all
employment practices, including job application procedures, hiring, firing,
advancement, compensation, training, and other terms, conditions, and
privileges of employment. It applies to recruitment, advertising, tenure,
layoff, leave, fringe benefits, and all other employment-related activities.
Q. Who is protected from employment discrimination?
A. Employment discrimination is prohibited
against "qualified individuals with disabilities." This includes applicants for
employment and employees. An individual is considered to have a "disability" if
he/she has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or
more major life activities, has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded
as having such an impairment. Persons discriminated against because they have a
known association or relationship with an individual with a disability also are
protected.
The first part of the definition makes clear
that the ADA applies to persons who have impairments and that these must
substantially limit major life activities such as seeing, hearing, speaking,
walking, breathing, performing manual tasks, learning, caring for oneself, and
working. An individual with epilepsy, paralysis, HIV infection, AIDS, a
substantial hearing or visual impairment, mental retardation, or a specific
learning disability is covered, but an individual with a minor, nonchronic
condition of short duration, such as a sprain, broken limb, or the flu,
generally would not be covered.
The second part of the definition protecting
individuals with a record of a disability would cover, for example, a person
who has recovered from cancer or mental illness.
The third part of the definition protects
individuals who are regarded as having a substantially limiting impairment,
even though they may not have such an impairment. For example, this provision
would protect a qualified individual with a severe facial disfigurement from
being denied employment because an employer feared the "negative reactions" of
customers or co-workers.
Q. Who is a "qualified individual with a
disability"?
A. A qualified individual with a disability
is a person who meets legitimate skill, experience, education, or other
requirements of an employment position that he/she holds or seeks, and who can
perform the "essential functions" of the position with or without reasonable
accommodation. Requiring the ability to perform "essential" functions assures
that an individual with a disability will not be considered unqualified simply
because of inability to perform marginal or incidental job functions. If the
individual is qualified to perform essential job functions except for
limitations caused by a disability, the employer must consider whether the
individual could perform these functions with a reasonable accommodation. If a
written job description has been prepared in advance of advertising or
interviewing applicants for a job, this will be considered as evidence,
although not conclusive evidence, of the essential functions of the job.
Q. Does an employer have to give preference to a
qualified applicant with a disability over other applicants?
A. No. An employer is free to select the
most qualified applicant available and to make decisions based on reasons
unrelated to a disability. For example, suppose two persons apply for a job as
a typist and an essential function of the job is to type 75 words per minute
accurately. One applicant, an individual with a disability, who is provided
with a reasonable accommodation for a typing test, types 50 words per minute;
the other applicant who has no disability accurately types 75 words per minute.
The employer can hire the applicant with the higher typing speed, if typing
speed is needed for successful performance of the job.
Q. What is "reasonable accommodation"?
A. Reasonable accommodation is any
modification or adjustment to a job or the work environment that will enable a
qualified applicant or employee with a disability to participate in the
application process or to perform essential job functions. Reasonable
accommodation also includes adjustments to assure that a qualified individual
with a disability has rights and privileges in employment equal to those of
employees without disabilities.
Q. What are some of the accommodations applicants
and employees may need?
A. Examples of reasonable accommodation
include making existing facilities used by employees readily accessible to and
usable by an individual with s disability; restructuring a job; modifying work
schedules; acquiring or modifying equipment; providing qualified readers or
interpreters; or appropriately modifying examinations, training, or other
programs. Reasonable accommodation also may include reassigning a current
employee to a vacant position for which the individual is qualified, if the
person is unable to do the original job because of a disability even with an
accommodation. However, there is no obligation to find a position for an
applicant who is not qualified for the position sought. Employers are not
required to lower quality or quantity standards as an accommodation; nor are
they obligated to provide personal use items such as glasses or hearing
aids.
The decision as to the appropriate
accommodation must be based on the particular facts of each case. In selecting
the particular type of reasonable accommodation to provide, the principal test
is that of effectiveness, i.e., whether the accommodation will provide an
opportunity for a person with a disability to achieve the same level of
performance and to enjoy benefits equal to those of an average, similarly
situated person without a disability. However, the accommodation does not have
to ensure equal results or provide exactly the same benefits.
Q. Can an employer be required to modify, adjust, or
make other reasonable accommodations in the way a test is given to a qualified
applicant or employee with a disability?
A. Yes. Accommodations may be needed to
assure that tests or examinations measure the actual ability of an individual
to perform job functions rather than reflect limitations caused by the
disability. Tests should be given to people who have sensory, speaking, or
manual impairments in a format that does not require the use of the impaired
skill, unless it is a job-related skill that the test is designed to
measure.
Q. When is an employer required to make a reasonable
accommodation?
A. An employer is only required to accommodate a "known"
disability of a qualified applicant or employee. The requirement generally will
be triggered by a request from an individual with a disability, who frequently
will be able to suggest an appropriate accommodation. Accommodations must be
made on an individual basis, because the nature and extent of a disabling
condition and the requirements of a job will vary in each case. If the
individual does not request an accommodation, the employer is not obligated to
provide one except where an individuals's known disability impairs his/her
ability to know of, or effectively communicate a need for, an accommodation
that is obvious to the employer. If a person with a disability requests, but
cannot suggest, an appropriate accommodation, the employer and the individual
should work together to identify one. There are also many public and private
resources that can provide assistance without cost.
Q. What are the limitations on the obligation to
make a reasonable accommodation?
A. The individual with a disability
requiring the accommodation must be otherwise qualified, and the disability
must be known to the employer. In addition, an employer is not required to make
an accommodation if it would impose an "undue hardship" on the operation of the
employer's business. "Undue hardship" is defined as an "action requiring
significant difficulty or expense" when considered in light of a number of
factors. These factors include the nature and cost of the accommodation in
relation to the size, resources, nature, and structure of the employer's
operation. Undue hardship is determined on a case-by-case basis. Where the
facility making the accommodation is part of a larger entity, the structure and
overall resources of the larger organization would be considered, as well as
the financial and administrative relationship of the facility to the larger
organization. In general, a larger employer with greater resources would be
expected to make accommodations requiring greater effort or expense than would
be required of a smaller employer with fewer resources.
If a particular accommodation would be an
undue hardship, the employer must try to identify another accommodation that
will not pose such a hardship. Also, if the cost of an accommodation would
impose an undue hardship on the employer, the individual with a disability
should be given the option of paying that portion of the cost which would
constitute an undue hardship or providing the accommodation.
Q. Can an employer be required to reallocate an
essential function of a job to another employee as a reasonable
accommodation?
A. No. An employer is not required to
reallocate essential functions of a job as a reasonable accommodation.
Q. Can an employer maintain existing
production/performance standards for an employee with a disability?
A. Yes. An employer can hold employees with
disabilities to the same standards of production/performance as other similarly
situated employees without disabilities for performing essential job functions,
with or without reasonable accommodation. An employer also can hold employees
with disabilities to the same standards of production/performance as other
employees regarding marginal functions unless the disability affects the
person's ability to perform those marginal functions. If the ability to perform
marginal functions is affected by the disability, the employer must provide
some type of reasonable accommodation such as job restructuring but may not
exclude an individual with a disability who is satisfactorily performing a
job's essential functions.
Q. Can an employer establish specific attendance and
leave policies?
A. Yes. An employer can establish
attendance and leave policies that are uniformly applied to all employees,
regardless of disability, but may not refuse leave needed by an employee with a
disability if other employees get such leave. An employer also may be required
to make adjustments in leave policy as a reasonable accommodation. The employer
is not obligated to provide additional paid leave, but accommodations may
include leave flexibility and unpaid leave.
A uniformly applied leave policy does not
violate the ADA because it has a more severe effect on an individual because of
his/her disability. However, if an individual with a disability requests a
modification of such a policy as a reasonable accommodation, an employer may be
required to provide it, unless it would impose an undue hardship.
Q. Can an employer consider health and safety when
deciding whether to hire an applicant or retain an employee with a
disability?
A. Yes. The ADA permits employers to
establish qualification standards that will exclude individuals who pose a
direct threat - i.e., a significant risk of substantial harm - to the health or
safety of the individual or of others, if that risk cannot be eliminated or
reduced below the level of a "direct threat" by reasonable accommodation.
However, an employer may not simply assume that a threat exists; the employer
must establish through objective, medically supportable methods that there is
significant risk that substantial harm could occur in the workplace. By
requiring employers to make individualized judgments based on reliable medical
or other objective evidence rather than on generalizations, ignorance, fear,
patronizing attitudes, or stereotypes, the ADA recognizes the need to balance
the interests of people with disabilities against the legitimate interests of
employers in maintaining a safe workplace.
Q. Is testing for the illegal use of drugs
permissible under the ADA?
A. Yes. A test for the illegal use of drugs
is not considered a medical examination under the ADA; therefore, employers may
conduct such testing of applicants or employees and make employment decisions
based on the results. The ADA does not encourage, prohibit, or authorize drug
tests.
If the results of a drug test reveal the
presence of a lawfully prescribed drug or other medical information, such
information must be treated as a confidential medical record.
Q. Are alcoholics covered by the ADA?
A. Yes. While a current illegal user of
drugs is not protected by the ADA if an employer acts on the basis of such use,
a person who currently uses alcohol is not automatically denied protection. An
alcoholic is a person with a disability and is protected by the ADA if he/she
is qualified to perform the essential functions of the job. An employer may be
required to provide an accommodation to an alcoholic. However, an employer can
discipline, discharge or deny employment to an alcoholic whose use of alcohol
adversely affects job performance or conduct. An employer also may prohibit the
use of alcohol in the workplace and can require that employees not be under the
influence of alcohol.
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