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Publication

A Sip of Cool Water: Pregnancy Accommodation After the ADA Amendments Act

Williams, Joan
Devaux, Robin
Fuschetti, Danielle
Salmon, Carolyn
Abstract
When April Roller began making repeated trips to the restroom because of morning sickness and pregnancy-related dizziness, her supervisor told her that her employer did not "pay [her] to pee." Rather than accommodating her need for more frequent restroom visits, the supervisor offered to buy her a larger wastebasket "so that she could take care of vomiting without having to visit the bathroom or leave her seat." Similarly, a sales associate was denied permission to carry a water bottle, which she needed for her pregnancy-related urinary tract and bladder infections. A cashier was denied permission to use a stool, which she needed because her doctor had forbidden her to stand for more than six hours at a time because of pregnancy-related circulation problems. A nursing home activity director was denied accommodation when her doctor imposed lifting restrictions to prevent miscarriage, despite the fact that lifting was a minor part of her job with which her co-workers were willing to help. All four women eventually lost their jobs.