Managing interpersonal conflict in the workplace is always a delicate and time-consuming duty for managers and Human Resources personnel.  But what happens when an employee claims that he or she suffers from a disability due to stress from working with a specific manager or supervisor?  Must the employer accommodate the alleged disability by transferring the employee (or the supervisor!) to another role within the company?  According to a recent opinion from the California Court of Appeals, Higgins-Williams v. Sutter Medical Foundation, 237 Cal. App. 4th 78 (3d Dist. 2015), the answer is No.
Continue Reading My Boss Drives Me Nuts! But Is That A Disability?

Organizations like the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance (NAAFA) have been fighting for decades to establish federal and state laws that specifically prohibit discrimination in employment based on a person’s weight.  According to a NAAFA report from 2007, the likelihood of weight-based employment discrimination is 12 times more likely for overweight adults, 37 times more likely for obese persons, and 100 times more likely for severely obese adults.  Yet to date, no federal legislation exists that specifically prohibits discrimination based on weight, and only one state (Michigan) and a handful of cities have passed laws that make weight-based discrimination illegal. 
Continue Reading Will Obesity Become A Protected Characteristic?