Sunday, March 22, 2009
Joanna Grossman & Gillian Thomas on Job Duties and Pregnancy Discrimination
Joanna L. Grossman (Hofstra Law) and Gillian Thomas (Legal Momentum) have posted Making Pregnancy Work: Overcoming the Pregnancy Discrimination Act's Capacity Based Model on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This
article considers the gaps and obstacles in current law faced by the
pregnant woman whose job duties may conflict with pregnancy's physical
effects. While there is no inherent conflict between pregnancy and
work, women in physically strenuous or hazardous occupations, from
nursing to law enforcement, routinely confront situations in which they
are physically unable to perform aspects of their job or, though
physically able, they seek to avoid certain tasks or situations because
of the potential risks to maternal or fetal health. The Pregnancy
Discrimination Act of 1978 (PDA) broadly protects against "pregnancy
discrimination," but it provides absolute rights only to the extent a
pregnant woman is able to work at full capacity, uninterrupted by
pregnancy's physical effects. To the extent that the law grants the
pregnant worker with temporary physical limitations "affirmative"
rights, such as the right to workplace accommodation, it is only on a
comparative basis - that is, only to the extent those rights already
are provided to "similarly situated" temporarily disabled employees. In
this way, pregnancy continues to inhibit equal employment opportunity
for millions of women, three decades after the PDA's passage.
After
briefly examining the medical literature documenting the conflicts
between pregnancy and certain kinds of work, as well as the law as
applied to pregnant workers who are fully capable or fully incapable
due to the effects of pregnancy or childbirth, we consider the
predicament of women in physically demanding fields whose work capacity
is partially diminished by pregnancy. We focus here on the problem of
access to "light-duty" work - temporary alternative job assignments
that accommodate the pregnant worker's limitations. Without such
accommodation, the pregnant firefighter or home health care aide whose
doctor directs her to avoid heavy lifting or other tasks is faced with
a Hobson's choice: ignore medical advice and continue to perform all
job duties, or stop working altogether, usually sacrificing wages and
other benefits for several months. We describe the limits of the
existing PDA framework for protecting these pregnant workers, and
suggest litigation strategies for maximizing pregnant workers' rights
under current law. These include re-framing the "similarly situated"
analysis for disparate treatment challenges to light-duty policies, and
exploring the untapped potential of the disparate impact theory in the
light-duty context.
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/reproductive_rights/2009/03/when-job-duties-conflict-with-pregnancy.html