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36 Hamline L. Rev. 497 (2013)
Need I Prove More: Why an Adverse Employment Action Prong Has No Place in a Failure to Accommodate Disability Claim

handle is hein.journals/hamlrv36 and id is 543 raw text is: 497

NEED I PROVE MORE:
WHY AN ADVERSE EMPLOYMENT ACTION PRONG
HAS NO PLACE IN A
FAILURE TO ACCOMMODATE DISABILITY CLAIM
Megan I. Brennan *
I.   INTRODUCTION                                                497
II. CONFUSION REGARDING ELEMENTS OF A FAILURE
TO ACCOMMODATE CLAIM                                        499
III. THE LANGUAGE OF THE ADA'S DISCRIMINATION
STATUTE                                                     503
IV. EEOC REGULATIONS AND GUIDANCE                                505
V. DISAGREEMENT AMONGST COURTS                                   506
A. ADVERSE EMPLOYMENTACTION NEEDED                          507
B. ADVERSEEMPLOYMENTACTIONNOTNEEDED                         509
VI. PUBLIC POLICY                                                512
VII. CONCLUSION                                                  514
I. INTRODUCTION
Imagine a scenario where an employee with diabetes requests breaks
in order to monitor and maintain his blood sugar levels. The employer denies
this request. The employee is never able to use his meter at work and is not
allowed to eat or drink on the plant floor. As a result, the employee suffers
hypoglycemic attacks at work causing him to collapse and altering his
capacity to think clearly and act appropriately. The employer admits that it
reasonably failed to accommodate the employee. Does this employee state a
claim if he did not suffer a resulting adverse employment action, i.e. a
Megan I. Brennan is an associate at Nichols Kaster, PLLP. I am grateful to my
husband, John Brennan, and my colleagues, Steven Andrew Smith, Esq., Adam Hansen, Esq.
and paralegals Ashlee Wendt and Heather O'Neil, for their insightful comments and
assistance with editing this article.

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