Does the ADA require you to favor minimally-qualified disabled employees over rock-star job applicants?
Eric Meyer
You know the scientist dork in the action movie, the one the government ignores? This employment lawyer helps proactive companies avoid the action sequence.
It depends. (Of course, it does).
Ok, I'll explain.
Suppose that you employ someone who, during the course of his employment, becomes disabled. This disability makes it impossible for the employee to perform his current job. Enter the Americans with Disabilities Act. The ADA requires an employer to provide a reasonable accommodation to a qualified individual with a disability where doing so will allow that individual to perform the essential functions of the job (without creating undue hardship for the employer). One such accommodation is a transfer to another open position for which the employee is qualified.
Let’s go back to our hypothetical example. While the individual with the disability can no longer perform his current job, there is another open position that your company has been looking to fill. Indeed, you found another a highly-qualified candidate. Except, here’s the thing. The disabled employee is also qualified to perform this job — just not as qualified.
Does the ADA require minimally-qualified disabled employees to be granted special preferences in hiring over non-disabled applicants?
That was the question a South Carolina federal court had to resolve in this opinion. And I’ll get to that in a sec.
Before I do, I want to emphasize that courts across the country are divided on this issue. The Fifth, Eighth, and Eleventh Circuits follow the “opportunity to compete” view. So, in our example, the employee would have the opportunity to compete for the other open position. But, he would not be entitled to the position as a matter of law.
Conversely, the Tenth and D.C. Circuits follow the follow the “mandatory preference” view. In our example, it would not matter if the disabled employee was less qualified (or even the least qualified). As long as he can handle the new job, and there is no other available reasonable accommodation, he gets it. (This is also the position of the EEOC).
So, your mileage may vary.
And, where did the South Carolina come down on this issue? Well, it kinda punted:
The principle of judicial restraint counsels against unnecessarily deciding a contentious legal issue in the absence of controlling case law, particularly where, as here, the issue is not squarely presented to the Court but only tangentially incorporated into the extant claims.
But, it did offer some important guidance in cases where the employee does not ask for a job transfer:
[I]t should be noted that in each of the above cases … the employees actually requested reassignment as an accommodation; that is, they sought reassignment to a specific vacant position(s). Here, the undisputed evidence shows that Whitten effectively rejected reassignment alternatives that arose during the six months she was on a medical leave of absence because she was dissatisfied with the drastically reduced pay that would have come with those alternatives. By the time Whitten eventually communicated to McLeod that she was interested in the Monitor Technician position, she had already been discharged, and the ADA’s rules for reassignment of “employees” no longer applied to her.
But shouldn’t the employer have taken matters into its own hands, reassigned first, and asked questions later? Nope.
To put it succinctly, Plaintiff’s first objection— that “[t]he Report errs in its legal analysis of and conclusion with regard to whether the [ADA’s] reasonable accommodation provision requires an employer to affirmatively reassign a disabled employee to a vacant position when the employee satisfies the position’s basic qualification standards and expresses a desire in the position”—is a complete red herring.
In other words, the employee must express some desire in a job transfer before the onus could shift to the employer to transfer.
Employer takeaways.
- Again, remember, your mileage may vary. This is a South Carolina decision. So, if you find yourself in this situation, consult an employment lawyer.
- However, before you get to this crossroads, consider other alternatives to a job transfer. Maybe some time unpaid time off could be a reasonable accommodation. Or light duty. Or reassignment of non-essential job functions.
- And how do you figure out which accommodation(s) may work? Talk to your employee. Have a good-faith, interactive dialogue to explore the possible options.
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[This post first appeared here at TheEmployerHandbook.com].