- Your company insists that a job candidate with renal disease must be tested for drugs with a urine test — rather than a blood test.
- You ignore an employee’s repeated requests for a sign language interpreter.
- You fail to accommodate a greeter with a cognitive disability.
- You refuse to provide training materials in braille to a blind employee.
While the Americans with Disabilities Act doesn’t go quite as far Stevie’s message, it does require your business to provide reasonable accommodations for qualified individuals with a disability, if doing so will enable them to perform the essential functions of the job. With disability discrimination claims spiking in 2015, not knowing the basics could make you a statistic this year.
So, if an employee or applicant communicates to you that he/she has a disability and requires an accommodation, communicate with that individual — it can be very informal — find out what the individual needs, and identify the appropriate reasonable accommodation. Then provide that reasonable accommodation — maybe even the one that the individual requests — if one exists.
Image Credit: By File:Stevie Wonder at East End, Washington DC.jpg: John Athayde (boboroshi)
derivative work: Mathonius – http://www.flickr.com/photos/boboroshi/187575712/in/photostream/ or File:Stevie Wonder at East End, Washington DC.jpg, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=16669630