Grievance Issue - Saga Continues!
njjel
1,235 Posts
The ee who filed the grievance against her supervisor for writing her up for her failure to take the front desk when asked, has now come to me to file an ADA complaint (sigh). She stated that since everyone here knows that she is diabetic, she should have been granted the ADA accommodation she requested when she asked her supervisor to give her time to get herself together.
OK so my question is - even though we all do know that she has health issues stemming from her diabetic condition I say that ADA does not require an employer to accommodate an employee who can not fulfill the duties of the job (which according to her statement to the supervisor she was unable to do at that time). AND even more specifically, she did not state to the supervisor that due to her "diabetic" condition she was unable to take the front. She said she "had had a bad night and needed time to get herself together."
I don't think we have a problem, but do we? Your thoughts again please.
OK so my question is - even though we all do know that she has health issues stemming from her diabetic condition I say that ADA does not require an employer to accommodate an employee who can not fulfill the duties of the job (which according to her statement to the supervisor she was unable to do at that time). AND even more specifically, she did not state to the supervisor that due to her "diabetic" condition she was unable to take the front. She said she "had had a bad night and needed time to get herself together."
I don't think we have a problem, but do we? Your thoughts again please.
Comments
On the other hand, if she wants to discuss the granting of reasonable accommodation, moving forward, yours is the proper desk at which to stop.
Sister diabetic needs to go further for you to have a concern with ADA, (based on what you have written here).
"Dandy PORK" is so good!
If management knew she wa a disabetic, the issue of whether it would have been a reaosnable accommodation to to provide what she was requesting (I don't recall exactly what it was), should have been evaluated through the interactive process.
While your supervisor may have been rigbt to order here to go to the front desk and disciplne her if she didn't, you still may be in trouble with EEOC if the supervisor didn't at least explore the issue of whether the diabetes was the cause for her request.
The issue of whether the employee could or could not perform the essential duties of the job at that point and whether she was entitled to reasonable accommodation is like the proverbial "chicken and the egg." But EEOC takes a hard look at what the employer does in response to an employee's request when it knows the emplyee has a medical condition as much as it looks at the outcome of any decision or non-decision regarding the request.
Just my humble (as always) opinion.
If you have a union invloved here, that would go a long way towards your efforts to show good faith.
Also, don't forget FMLA. If this person has a medical need to be off, she may have an FMLA claim.
PS and yes this is a union environment.
This employee probably knew that she crossed the line with her comments toward her supervisor and is now looking at the proverbial "golden umbrella" of the ADA to help her cause. Coming to you after the incident occurred and telling you, "Oh by the way, I should have been granted an accomodation that day" is not the way the ADA process works. Now if she came to you prior to, or during, the interactive process, to determine what accomodations could be made and one of them was some type of flexible schedule, that would be different. What you have here is an employee who was late to work, was insubordinate to her supervisor and was made to answer for it.
As an employee she had a responsibility to inform her supervisor if the reason she was late and not feeling well was due to her diabetic condition but she didn't so it is not up to the supervisor to disect the conversation to determine WHAT the employee MEANS when she speaks.