STANLEY DECK, Complainant,
VS.
HENKEL CORP., Respondent.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
1. The complaint, CP# 05-85-12982,
was timely filed, processed, and the issues in the complaint are
properly before the Administrative Law Judge and ultimately before
the Commission.
2. In Iowa Code section
601A. 2(11), "disability" is defined as "the physical
or mental condition of a person which constitutes a substantial
handicap." IAC 161-8.26(l) provides that the term *substantially
handicapped" shall mean any person who has a physical or
mental impairment which substantially limits one or more major
life activities, has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded
as having such an impairment.
Section 161-8.26(5) further
explains "is regarded as having an impairment" as:
a. Has a physical or mental
impairment that does not substantially limit major life activities
but that is perceived as constituting such a limitation;
b. Has a physical or mental
impairment that substantially limits major life activities only
as a result of the attitudes of others toward such impairment;
or
c. Has none of the impairments
defined to be 'physical or mental impairments, " but is perceived
as having such an impairment.
Complainant claims discrimination
as the basis of *perceived mental disability. a
3. Deck was in and out of
various hospitals after April 1983, when he had a mental breakdown.
Over a year later, May 1984, Deck was still not capable of returning
to work because of his mental impairment. Through a union/management
agreement, Deck returned to work in August 1984, with continued
psychiatric care indicated.
Beginning in October 1983,
Deck became eligible for social security disability benefits and
medicare based on his mental impairment. That entitlement continued
as of the date of this Hearing. It is, therefore, concluded that
Stanley Deck was, in fact, mentally impaired.
4. The administrative rules
promulgated to implement the statutory prohibition of discrimination
on the basis of disability provide that the duty of accommodation
is owed to the otherwise qualified handicapped employee or applicant.
161 Iowa Admin. Code 8.27(6). Although that phrase is not further
defined in the Iowa Administrative rules, "qualified handicapped
person" is defined in the rules implementing the federal
Rehabilitation Act, on which the Iowa rules are patterned. There,
a "qualified handicapped employee" is defined as one
who with or without reasonable accommodation, can perform the
essential functions of the position in question without endangering
the health and safety of the individual or other. 29 C.F.R. §1613.702(f)
The Commission rule, specifically
161-8.27(6), requires reasonable accommodation. That section provides
as follows:
An employer shall make reasonable
accommodation to the known physical or mental limitations of an
otherwise gualified handicapped applicant or employee unless
the employer can demonstrate that the accommodation would impose
an undue hardship on the operation of its program. [Emphasis added]
Not only is the rule quite
clear and unambiguous in requiring reasonable accommodation to
an *otherwise qualified" person, but the statute also emphasizes
the same provision. Section 601A.6(l) (a) provides in part:
If a disabled person is
qualified to perform a particular occupation, by reason of training
or experience, the nature of that occupation shall not be the
basis for exception to the unfair or discriminatory practices
prohibited by this subsection.
"The essential functions
of a job are those set forth in the position description. Thus,
an individual is "qualified" if he can perform all of
the functions of his job as outlined in the standard position
description, even though because of a disability, he cannot perform
additional duties that are performed by other persons holding
the same job. Guinn v. Bolger, 598 F. Supp. 196 (D.C.D.C.
1984)
Furthermore, an individual
need not be able to perform an of the duties of the position in
question without modification. "It is sufficient if an individual
can perform the essential limitations." Trimble v. Carlin,
633 F. Supp. 367 (D.C. Pa. 1986); Strathie v. Dept. of Transp.,
716 F.2d 227 (3rd Cir. 1983).
Because no consideration
was given to allow Deck more time to acclimate himself to the
plant environment upon returning from his breakdown before subjecting
him to additional demands, nor was consideration given to allowing
Deck a more gradual training schedule which could have alleviated
his anxiety, one cannot conclude that Deck would have been unable
to perform the assistant operator function if he had been accommodated.
Offering additional training at the end of the training period,
after Deck's anxiety had been building to the point that he had
become physically ill and unable to do any job was not an accommodation.
Because the company made no accommodation to permit an assessment
of whether Deck could perform the assistant operator functions,
it is not necessary to determine whether that function is even
essential to the supply position. The testimony was that the cross-training
was required only so that trained substitutes would be available
if the regular employee was ill or on vacation.
Having concluded that Dock
was a qualified handicapped employee, Henkel owed Deck a duty
to accommodate his handicap. Henkel made no effort to accommodate
Deck's mental illness, but instead acted in accordance with its
previously determined stipulation that upon an absence "due
to a relapse of recurrence of illness he [would] be terminated..."
Therefore, the termination on January 21, 1985, was illegal discrimination
on the basis of disability.
6. The Complainant, Stanley Deck, has mitigated his lost earnings in that he has properly endeavored to secure other employment, although his endeavors have been unsuccessful.