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Jun 9, 2015

By Eric B. Meyer

Your employee has a fragrance allergy. What does the ADA — the Americans With Disabilities Act — require you to do?

This can be a really difficult situation. Just ask a local Pennsylvania employer.

In Brady v. United Refrigeration, Inc., the plaintiff suffered from heightened sensitivity to perfumes, fragrant chemicals, and lotions. After she told her employer, the company attempted a number of accommodations:

  • Purchased a portable air cleaner for use at the plaintiff’s work station.l
  • Purchased a second portable air cleaner for the plaintiff after she broke the first one.
  • Distributed several times a notice to all employees not to wear perfume, cologne or aftershave to the office.
  • Purchased face masks for the plaintiff (which she later refused to wear).
  • Relocated an employee who had to wear medically-prescribed skin lotion.
  • Cleaned a wall panel that plaintiff claimed had fragrances on it.
  • Cleaned the rug around the plaintiff’s work station
  • Cleaned the rug around your work station.

Did the employer do enough to accommodate?

Still, the plaintiff could not attend work regularly — and assume that regular attendance was an essential job function. And, ultimately, the company laid off the plaintiff because of her inconsistent attendance. So, the plaintiff sued, claiming, among other things, disability discrimination.

All those accommodations, and still, disability discrimination? Maybe.

To prove disability discrimination, a plaintiff needs to establish, among other things, that she has a disability and that she can perform the job with or without reasonable accommodation. Here, the disability is a no-brainer, especially in light of medical evidence that the plaintiff provided her employer.

So, how is someone with an unpredictable work schedule qualified to do the job, especially when regular attendance is an essential job function? In this case, the Court determined that the employer, with all of those steps taken above to accommodate the plaintiff, may not have acted reasonably. Yep:

Here, Plaintiffs’ circumstances do not involve unexplained absences; rather, Plaintiffs’ condition is triggered by stimuli that are at least somewhat within Defendants’ power to control. If Defendants’ own no fragrance policies are not ??being sufficiently administered or enforced, as Plaintiff alleges, Defendants may have to accept that Plaintiff must take some time away from that environment.”

Tough outcome for the employer

Did the employer get a raw deal? Probably.

First, depending on the size of the business, a fragrance-free workplace may be entirely impractical, given the number of people (employees and visitors) and other scent-producing products (cleaners, air fresheners, etc.) that could impact an individual who is sensitive to smells.

Second, the employer offered a face mask, which the Third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal in Philadelphia has previously deemed reasonable. The plaintiff even agreed to the mask, but then relented. So, even if temporary leave, such as intermittent FMLA, is reasonable, the employee does not get to pick and choose which accommodation to take, insofar as there are other reasonable options (hence, the mask).

How to address similar requests in your workplace

Requests for scent-free workplace can be difficult to accommodate. However, before responding with an automatic no, it is important for employers to entertain such a request in good faith have an interactive dialogue to determine what the employer can reasonably for the employee without creating an undue burden.

Ask the employee for medical documentation and support for whatever accommodation she requests. Hopefully, there is a middle ground — maybe, telecommuting on occasion — that will allow the employee to perform the essential functions of the job.

This was originally published on Eric B. Meyer’s blog, The Employer Handbook.