In
This Issue...
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Neely v. Benchmark Family Services (S.D. Ohio
4/21/15), the plaintiff claimed that his employer retaliated against
him for failing to accommodate his undiagnosed alleged sleep disorder. His
symptoms included averaging two or three hours of sleep per night, and randomly
falling asleep during the day, including while at work. The court dismissed
Neely’s ADA discrimination claim and failure to accommodate claim, in large
part because there was no evidence that his sleep issues had a medical root.
Then the court turned to Neely’s retaliation claim:
One
might wonder how retaliation claim in the absence of a disability can be
squared with the text of the statute…. The line of cases relied upon by the
Sixth Circuit explains that “[a]n individual who is adjudged not to be a
qualified individual with a disability may still pursue a retaliation claim
under the ADA as long as [he] had a good faith belief that [a] requested
accommodation was appropriate.” Thus, “although ‘[i]t is questionable’ whether
an employee who merely requests a reasonable accommodation ‘fits within the literal
language of the statute,’ we are bound … to conclude that making such a request
is protected activity….”
Plaintiff
would have the Court extend this reasoning even further to himself, a litigant
who was not disabled under the act, unlike the cited cases, did not request an
accommodation and had not yet filed a formal charge…. Other courts have refused
to extend retaliation claims to employment actions taken after an employee’s
complaints of health conditions to a manager, and so will this Court.
What
does this mean for you, as a practical matter? When an employee complains about
a health problem at work, do your diligence. Determine if the employee
is requesting an accommodation. If so, seek and gather from the employee
medical information in support of the claimed disability and the requested
accommodation. Then, make an informed decision about whether the employee is disabled
and if you should offer an accommodation. These steps will put you in the
best position to defend against discrimination, accommodation, and
retaliation claims under the ADA.
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