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Court: Blind in One Eye Is Not "Disabled" for ADA
>In his ruling that monocular vision “is not a per se disability,” US District Judge Bruce Kauffman said plaintiff Wesley Congleton didn’t convince the court that this his vision problems rose to the requisite level to qualify for ADA coverage, the Legal Intelligencer reported.
Kauffman noted the condition
results in a lack of depth perception
and a limited field of vision. However, he said those who
suffer from it are often able to compensate through
adjustments in the brain and by turning their heads. In
the plaintiff’s case, Kauffman found that Congleton lacks
depth perception, has a limited field of vision, has no
peripheral vision on his left side and cannot see objects
on his left side clearly.
Learned to Compensate
However, the court found that
Congleton “must have learned to compensate for these
impairments because, at the time he returned to work in
September 1999, he could drive a car, watch television,
read, and perform his normal daily activities.”
Further, the court pointed out that Congleton testified
in a pre-trial deposition that he needs no
accommodation to perform the tasks required by his
job.
“In fact, plaintiff has failed to
identify any daily activity that his condition prevents
or substantially limits him from doing,” Kauffman wrote
in the ruling.
Damaged Goods?
Kauffman also rejected Congleton’s
claim that he was “regarded as” disabled, finding that
the comments of his bosses showed only that they were
concerned about his condition, and not that they
considered it truly disabling.
“The fact that supervisors express
concern for an employee’s health does not necessarily
mean that they consider a condition to be a substantial
limitation to a major life activity,” Kauffman
wrote.
According to court papers, Congleton
began working as a sales representative for
Weil-McLain, a manufacturer of cast iron boilers in
1994. Five years later, he began experiencing problems
with his vision and was diagnosed with a detached
retina. Forced to undergo two surgeries, he was out of
work for four months. The suit alleged that when
Congleton returned to work, he had no restrictions
other than to refrain from heavy lifting, which is not
ordinarily required for his position.
Nonetheless, he claims that his
supervisor saw him as “damaged goods” and did not talk
to him, write to him, or call him about his job
performance during the four months before he was
terminated.