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The Interactive Process and Accommodation of the Disabled under the ADA

Duration:
90 Minutes
Access:
6 months
Webinar Id:
700541
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Recorded Version

$195. One Participant

Recorded Version: Unlimited viewing for 6 months ( Access information will be emailed 24 hours after the completion of live webinar)

"The use of this seal is not an endorsement by the HR Certification Institute of the quality of the program. It means that this program has met the HR Certification Institute's criteria to be pre-approved for recertification credit."

"This program, has been approved for 1.5 (General ) recertification credit hours toward PHR, SPHR and GPHR recertification through the HR Certification Institute. Please be sure to note the program ID number on your recertification application form. For more information about certification or recertification, please visit the HR Certification Institute website at www.hrci.org."

Overview: Courts during the early years of the ADA strictly construed the ADA's definition of "disability," and judges always determined who met that definition. And, of course, judges would look to decisions from other judges for guidance in making their decisions. Cases rarely got past the first stage of whether one met the definition.

With the relaxation of how to interpret the definition, more and more cases are getting past this stage and getting into the stage of the ADA's requirement of the interactive process and the ADA's requirement that an employer provide reasonable accommodation to the disabled if the accommodation allows the individual to perform the essential functions of his/her position. Some courts will hold that some accommodations are "never" reasonable; however, the test of reasonable accommodation is typically a jury question. How will the jury rate your interactive process or the accommodations you offer?

Why should you attend: When the ADA was first passed, courts construed the definition of disability so strictly that most individuals found that they either did not meet the definition (or thus were not protected under the ADA) or that their impairments were so substantial, they were no longer able to perform the essential functions of the job. For this reason, courts rarely got to the issues of an effective interactive process between the employer and employee or there was a reasonable accommodation available.

With the amendments to the ADA that lessen the standard of how we interpret the definition of disability, courts are now looking more and more to the interactive issues and accommodation issues. The answers are not easy and are not uniform due to every individual has to be considered on a case by case basis and different companies may be required to do different things due to sheer size or resources.

Areas Covered in the Session:

  • The difference in interpretation of who is disabled under the "old" ADA and the "new" ADA.
  • Why pre-amendments resulted in cases rarely getting past the issue of whether an employee met the definition of "disability."
  • What do we mean about the "interactive process"?
  • What does the ADA and the EEOC require an employer to do during the interactive process?
  • Steps to take during the interactive process.
  • What happens when there is a breakdown during the interactive process?
  • Do you always have to give the employee the accommodation s/he requests?
  • What examples do the statute and EEO regulations give as possible reasonable accommodations?
  • Why you must distinguish between essential and marginal functions of a position when making reasonable accommodation decisions.
  • How to make sure courts will give deference to your definition of the "essential" functions of a position.
  • Is attendance always an essential function of a position? Why are the courts and the EEOC not Seeing Eye to eye on this issue?

Who Will Benefit:
  • Management
  • Human Resource Managers
  • Benefits Personnel
Instructor:

Susan Fahey Desmond is a Principal in the New Orleans, Louisiana, office of Jackson Lewis P.C which has offices in 59 cities across the country. She has been representing management in the area of labor and employment law since her graduation from the University of Tennessee School Of Law. She is a frequent speaker and author on a number of labor and employment issues. She is named in Best Lawyers in America and has been named by Chambers USA as one of America's leading business lawyers for labor and employment law.


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