Reasonable Accommodations Requirements
Your employer is required to provide what’s considered reasonable accommodations to you in order to help you perform your job duties. An accommodation is considered any change in the work environment or the process to help a disabled person perform the job or even apply to one.
Reasonable accommodations will vary from employee to employee and job to job, but some examples include:
- Modifying work schedules, job reassignment or job restructuring
- Modifying existing facilities to make them accessible to employees with disabilities
- Modifying existing or purchasing new equipment, devices, policies, training materials or examinations
- Providing an interpreter or a qualified reader
A few real-world examples include a deaf applicant needing an interpreter for sign language during an interview, a blind employee needing essential job reading material in braille, or an employee who can’t stand for long periods of time due to their disability being offered a chair to rest when needed.
An employer doesn’t have to provide accommodations if doing so would cause a significant expense or difficulty. Everything from the nature of the accommodation to the cost to the nature of the business to past accommodation expenses are considered when determining an undue hardship. Employers can’t simply say an accommodation is too expensive, however, because there are vocational rehabilitation funds and tax deductions/credit that may help offset the cost.
Furthermore, an employer doesn’t have to provide any accommodation unless an employee asks for one. It is the responsibility of the disabled employee or applicant, or their family, to let the employer know of the disability and the need for accommodation.