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Supreme Court Limits Meaning of Disability
By Joan Biskupic
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 23, 1999; Page A1

The Supreme Court significantly curtailed the scope of a federal law
designed to protect disabled workers from discrimination yesterday. By a 7
to 2 vote, the justices ruled that the Americans With Disabilities Act does
not cover people whose disabilities can be sufficiently corrected with
medicine, eyeglasses or other measures.

In their broadest look at the ADA to date, the justices decided four
disabilities cases, the most important being a pair of rulings that would
prevent millions of people from seeking coverage under the landmark 1990
law. The highly anticipated rulings could profoundly affect individuals with
a range of impairments - from diabetes and hypertension to severe
nearsightedness and hearing loss - who are able to function in society with
the help of medicines or aids but whose impairments may still make employers
consider them ineligible for certain jobs.

"These decisions create the absurd result of a person being disabled enough
to be fired from a job, but not disabled enough to challenge the firing,"
asserted Georgetown University law professor Chai Feldblum, who helped draft
the statute and who was one of several advocates who said they would ask
Congress to change the law.

The rulings represent a substantial win for employers, who praised the
court's decision to limit those covered by the statute. "Employers make
reasonable accommodations for employees who are truly disabled," said Steve
Bokat, general counsel at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, "but they should not
have to relax necessary standards for employees who have common and easily
correctable ailments."

The disability cases were closely followed by workers, businesses, civil
rights advocates and the Clinton administration, which had urged the
justices to interpret the law in a broad manner.

By identical votes of 7 to 2 in a pair of cases - one involving two
nearsighted pilots and the other a mechanic with high blood pressure - the
court ruled that when judges assess whether a worker pressing a
disability-bias suit qualifies as "disabled" under the law, they must take
into account any measures that lessen the worker's impairment.


By a unanimous vote in Albertson's v. Kirkingburg, the justices ruled that
employers who set job qualifications based on federal safety standards are
not required to dispense with those standards when a worker - in this case,
a truck driver blind in one eye - obtains a waiver from the federal agency.


By a 6 to 3 vote, the court ruled that states must place certain mentally
disabled people in community homes rather than hospitals. In a case focused
on a provision of the ADA that prohibits discrimination by public entities,
the court generally sided with two Georgia women with mental illnesses who
had sued state officials for keeping them in a psychiatric hospital long
after their doctors said they were ready to live in a community residence.

Enacted after years of effort, the Americans With Disabilities Act was meant
to open jobs and public spaces to the nation's then-estimated 43 million
disabled people. The law defines a "disability" as a "physical or mental
impairment that substantially limits one or more . . . major life
activities." Yesterday, the court addressed the most fundamental question of
how to determine who is and is not "disabled."

The main ruling dealt with twin sisters from Spokane, Karen Sutton and
Kimberly Hinton, who were turned down for pilot jobs at United Air Lines
because of their extreme nearsightedness, failing the airline's minimum
requirement for uncorrected visual acuity of 20/100. When they sued under
the ADA, judges said the law did not cover people who can correct their
disabilities - in this case, with glasses - and get along as well as most
other people.

Yesterday, the Supreme Court agreed, rejecting the position of the U.S.
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the majority of federal appeals
courts.

"Looking at the act as a whole," Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote for the
majority, "it is apparent that if a person is taking measures to correct
for, or mitigate, a physical or mental impairment, the effects of those
measures - both positive and negative - must be taken into account when
judging whether that person is 'substantially limited' in a major life
activity." She said the language of the law requires a person to be limited
"presently - not potentially or hypothetically."

O'Connor noted that Congress had written in the law that "some 43 million
Americans have one or more physical or mental disabilities" and argued that
if the law were intended to cover all those with common, correctable
impairments such as nearsightedness, that figure would have been far larger.

But the majority also emphasized that whether a person has a disability is
an individual question and that some people who have prosthetic limbs or
other corrective devices could still be considered "disabled" because of a
substantial limitation of their life activities.

O'Connor was joined by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices
Antonin Scalia, Anthony M. Kennedy, David H. Souter, Clarence Thomas and
Ruth Bader Ginsburg in Sutton v. United Air Lines, as well as in the related
ruling involving a mechanic with hypertension, Murphy v. United Parcel
Service.

Dissenting in both cases were Justices John Paul Stevens and Stephen G.
Breyer. In a statement written by Stevens, they said, "[T]o be faithful to
the remedial purpose of the Act, we should give it a generous, rather than a
miserly, construction."

Roy C. Englert Jr., who represented United, said he was pleased with the
court's ruling, which was cheered by other employers as well. Human
resources lawyer Ted Gies said the court provided important "clarification"
about who is covered by the ADA and its decision will help to reduce ADA
lawsuits. "Most people would say," Gies said, "that the biggest human
resource and legal challenge is the ADA."

But Michael A. Greene, a lawyer for the American Diabetes Association, said
the ruling puts people who take medicine to function in society in a
difficult position. "You're damned if you don't medicate, but you're damned
if you do, because you lose your legal rights," Greene said, adding that
sometimes impaired persons who can do the job might nonetheless seek special
accommodations or extra time off for medical care.

The case on community placement, Olmstead v. L.C., spoke to increased
efforts to move mentally ill people from institutions into communities in an
effort to end their isolation. A key provision of the ADA says disabled
persons shall not be discriminated against "by reason of their disability"
by a government program or service, and the Justice Department has said that
means programs must be offered "in the most integrated setting appropriate
to the needs" of people with disabilities.

Georgia officials, backed by numerous other state and local governments, had
argued that a state does not discriminate under the ADA when it keeps the
mentally ill in hospitals, even though a community setting might be more
desirable.

But in an opinion by Ginsburg, the court ruled that it is indeed illegal
discrimination "when the state's treatment professionals have determined
that community placement is appropriate, the transfer from institutional
care to less restrictive setting is not opposed by the affected individual,
and the placement can be reasonably accommodated, taking into account the
resources available to the state."

Concurring justices stressed that states should have "wide discretion in
adopting its own systems of cost analysis."

Dissenting were Rehnquist, Scalia and Thomas. In a statement for the trio,
Thomas said it is not "discrimination" when mentally ill people are
temporarily excluded from community placement centers.

Staff writer Kirsten Downey Grimsley contributed to this report.




© 1999 The Washington Post Company