Tuesday, August 4, 2009

EEOC Obtains $90K Consent Judgment in Federal Court In Columbus Over ADA Violations When Employer Required Employees to be 100% Fit.

Last week, the EEOC announced that “AVI Foodsystems, Inc. (AVI) will pay more than $90,000 and offer jobs to discrimination victims to settle a class disability discrimination suit brought” by the EEOC in federal court in Columbus, Ohio. “The EEOC charged in its suit (Case no. 2:09-cv-00656-JDH-MRA . . . . that AVI violated federal law by failing to allow employees with disabilities to return to work without a full-duty, no-restriction doctor’s release. The EEOC asserted that this policy violated the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA). The agency said disabled employees who had been on leave and are able to return to work with some physical restrictions, but are still able to perform their jobs, should be allowed to do so. The policy adversely affected more than 80 AVI employees in several states, including Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Illinois, Kentucky, and West Virginia.”

According to the EEOC, “[t]he consent decree settling the suit provides that AVI will offer jobs to discrimination victims named in the decree, make payments to individuals who are not provided jobs, comply with the ADA, and train managers on the provisions of the ADA. According to company information, Warren, Ohio-based AVI, the largest independently owned and operated food service in the United States, maintains vending and dining services in commercial locations such as factories, universities, and health-care facilities.”

Insomniacs can read the full EEOC press release at http://