Chronic Fatigue? ADA qualified
Mikki H
45 Posts
I cannot find information if a diagnosed chronic fatigue syndrome would be covered under ADA. We have an employee that is calling in to be 1-2 hours late, saying she needs more sleep due to this condition. Sometimes she needs to go home early or she has overslept during her lunch hour.
We have already adjusted her start time back 1/2 hour, but her job is critical to be one the early starts (7:30a.m.) or else no one else can begin their jobs for the day. We have not yet asked for a medical certificate on her condition, but plan to if this condition qualifies under ADA.
We have already adjusted her start time back 1/2 hour, but her job is critical to be one the early starts (7:30a.m.) or else no one else can begin their jobs for the day. We have not yet asked for a medical certificate on her condition, but plan to if this condition qualifies under ADA.
Comments
You would need to make the assessment if the employee is asking for reasonable accommodation based on a claimed disability. However, if you have accommodated her already by changing her working hours BECAUSE she claimed she was disabled (even if she is not), then you have treated her as disabled and that is one of the qualifying conditions for her to be accommodated and ANY factual assessment is now irrelevant. If you changed her hours as you would do for any other employee, then, it seems to me, that there is NO basis that you regarded her as disabled and a factual assessment needs to be done.
ASSUMING, for my response, that she is disabled under ADA and needs reasonable accommodation to help her perform the essential duties of the job. If one of the essential demands of the job is for her to be at work no later than 7:30 a.m., and NO reasonable accommodation would allow her to do that, she would no longer be considered ADA eligible. Remember, the purpose of a reasonable accommodation is to allow the employee to perform the essential duties of the job. If she can't do the essential duties with reasonable accommodation or there are no reasonable accommodations that would allow her to perform the essential duties of the job, she is not ADA eligible. But as with determining disability in the first place, reasonable accommodation is a fact-specific determination. What may be a do-able reasonable accommodation for one employee in one job may not be one for another employee in the same job.
Again, ASSUMING the employee is ADA eligible at this point, you would need to assess with the employee's input what reasonable accommodation may be do-able without being a hardship. Her doctor could also provide input. And there may be "chronic fatigue" associations that can provide some information. Remember, there may be several accommodations that would allow the employee to meet the essential requirement that she be at work 7:30. Just don't reject the concept until you've considered what's do-able and effective.
Since the employee's "chronic fatigue" is not an obvious condition, your best approach is to wait for her to link the attendance/tardiness problems to a claim that she has chronic fatigue rather than making the connection. Don't assume that she is late or has to go home early because she has a disability whatever it is unless it is obvious or previously KNOWN to you. If she doesn't raise reasonable accommodation directly by asking for a change in working conditions because she has chronic fatigue or any other medical condition or raise it in directly by explaining her poor attendance and tardiness problem as being caused by chronic fatigue, then again, DON'T assume that it is the cause of any problem.
She has already commented to her supervisor that she has this condition and it makes her very tired during the day and that being able to try to sleep in later would be beneficial. She also has stated that this condition makes her prone to catching colds (which has also procduced many absences). There has already been documented warnings regarding the tardiness and absence issues and I am worried about how far we can go with disciplinary procedures.
Beyond hiring another employee to take over this main duty, or trying to rearrange the duties of several other employees, there are no other accommodations that we can think of.
I guess this would be the time to consult legal counsel?
It still may be too early for the legal consultation. As long as you have not accommodated her on the basis of a claimed disability, I don't think that you have treated her as disabled. But that doesn't mean that you are off the hook on ADA. From what you posted, she has linked at least one work problem to a medical condition--her tardiness/poor attendance. That's enough to start the ADA process to determine if the medical condition rises to the level of an ADA disability and, if so, what if any reasonable accommodations are available, do-able and effective. Part of that is going through the famous "good faith, interactive process" that includes getting her input on what would be reasonable accommodations to allow her to perform the essential duties of the job.