What You Should Know About the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act
This list just provides some examples; many other reasonable accommodations may exist. Also, a worker may need different accommodations at different times during the pregnancy or after childbirth.
- The inability is “temporary;”
- The employee could perform the functions “in the near future;” and
- The inability to perform the essential functions can be reasonably accommodated.
This means that an employee who is temporarily unable to perform one or more essential functions of their job, and who therefore needs light duty or a change in their work assignments, may be able to get such a change as a reasonable accommodation.
- The employee or applicant should tell the employer that they have a limitation—a physical or mental condition related to, arising out of, or affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or a related medical condition—and that they need an adjustment or change in their working conditions due to the limitation. For example, the worker can say:
- “I’m having trouble getting to work at my scheduled starting time because of morning sickness.”
- “I need more bathroom breaks because of my pregnancy.”
- “I need time off from work to attend a medical appointment because of my pregnancy.”
The Commission expects that many PWFA accommodations can be granted after simple exchanges of information between employees or applicants and employers, such as brief conversations or emails.
- Train supervisors about the PWFA. First level supervisors may be particularly likely to receive accommodation requests and should be trained about how to respond, including how to avoid retaliating against those who request or use a reasonable accommodation.
- Workers do not need to use specific words to request an accommodation to begin the interactive process. Once an employee requests an accommodation, use the interactive process.
- Limitations may be minor and may be associated with an uncomplicated pregnancy and may require accommodations that are easy to make.
- A worker may need different accommodations as the pregnancy progresses, they recover from childbirth, or the related medical condition improves or gets worse.
- For assistance identifying possible reasonable accommodations, consult the Job Accommodation Network (JAN) (https://askjan.org/). JAN is a free, expert, confidential service that helps workers and employers with reasonable accommodations.
- The limitation and need for an adjustment or change at work due to the limitation is obvious. For example, an obviously pregnant employee who seeks a bigger uniform because of their pregnancy cannot be required to provide additional information.
- The employer already knows about the limitation and the adjustment or change at work due to the limitation. For example, if the employee has already provided enough information that they have morning sickness due to pregnancy and need a later start time, the employer cannot demand a new doctor’s note every time the employee uses the accommodation of coming in later.
- The employee is currently pregnant and needs breaks for the bathroom or to eat or drink, needs to carry water with them to drink, or needs to stand if their job requires sitting or to sit if their job requires standing.
- The employee is lactating and needs modifications to pump at work or nurse during work hours.
- The employer would not ask an employee for documentation in that situation normally. If an employer’s policy is that employees only need a note from a health care provider for absences if they are missing 3 or more days in a row, the employer can’t require someone who needs a reasonable accommodation of 1 day off because of pregnancy, childbirth, or a related medical condition to provide information from the health care provider.
If the employer is allowed to get documentation from a health care provider, the employer is limited to documentation that:
- Confirms the physical or mental condition. This means providing a simple statement of the physical or mental condition (e.g., back injury, swollen ankles, need to avoid certain chemicals, lifting restriction, need for rest, vomiting, need to attend health care appointments). This can be a modest or minor impediment or problem and does not need to be a medical diagnosis;
- Confirms that the physical or mental condition is related to, affected by, or arising out of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions. Pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions do not have to be the sole, the original, or a substantial cause of the physical or mental condition. Together, the information set forth in this paragraph and the prior paragraph constitute the employee’s “limitation” for purposes of coverage under the PWFA (see definition in Question 12); and
- Describes the adjustment or change at work that is needed due to the limitation (for example, no lifting more than 20 pounds for 3 months, the approximate number and frequency of health care appointments, the estimated time off for recovery, additional safety gear, work functions that should be suspended and for how long, or a later start time).
Under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), employers must keep medical information confidential. That applies to documentation gathered under the PWFA as well.