Employers must consider additional accommodations under ADA & FEHA when an Employee exhausts available statutory leave time
This month, the EEOC and Sears, Roebuck & Co. entered into a court approved settlement agreement in the amount of $6,200,000.00 entitling the 235 impacted employees to over $26,000 each. The distribution is being carried out pursuant to the terms of a consent decree approved by Federal District Judge Wayne Anderson on September 29, 2009. You can read the EEOC’s press release here.
In its lawsuit against Sears, the EEOC had alleged that Sears maintained an inflexible workers’ compensation leave exhaustion policy and terminated employees instead of providing them with reasonable accommodations for their disabilities, in violation of the ADA.
This large settlement reminds employers that if employees are out on some form of statutory leave, like the workers’ compensation leave at issue in the Sears matter, and the employee exhausts the leave but is still experiencing a medical condition that qualifies under the ADA or California’s Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), the employer must engage in the “interactive process” to determine if a reasonable accommodation (including a possible extension of the employee’s leave) is available and can be provided to the employee without creating an undue hardship on the employer. Otherwise, strict application of leave policies that result in the termination of an employee who fails to return to work at the exhaustion of such leave may result in significant liability for the employer.
Employers must consider additional accommodations under ADA & FEHA when an Employee exhausts available statutory leave time

were these people allowed to go back to work?