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EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION: JBS Carriers to Pay $250,000 and not Resume ErgoMed Screening to Settle EEOC Discrimination Suit

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Saturday, November 23, 2024

EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION: JBS Carriers to Pay $250,000 and not Resume ErgoMed Screening to Settle EEOC Discrimination Suit

U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission issued the following announcement on April 4.

National trucking company JBS Carriers, Inc. will pay $250,000 and furnish other significant relief to settle a disability discrimination lawsuit filed by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the federal agency announced.

According to the EEOC's lawsuit, JBS Carriers contracted with a third party, ErgoMed Work Systems, Inc., to administer pre-employment screening of applicants for truck driving jobs. The EEOC alleged that this process unlawfully screened out people with disabilities who were qualified for the truck driving jobs they sought. The screening subjected all applicants to a medical history questionnaire, a physical examination, and nine physical abilities tests. If an applicant failed any one of the tests or was prevented by ErgoMed from taking the tests based on information obtained from the questionnaire or during the physical examination, ErgoMed sent JBS Carriers a negative job recom­mendation. The lawsuit alleged that JBS Carriers then withdrew conditional job offers to applicants based on ErgoMed's recom­mendations.

For example, the EEOC alleged in its suit that one applicant, Cindy Divine, had over 30 years of commercial truck driving experience. After JBS Carriers offered her a job, Divine traveled to Greeley, Colo. to complete the screening. According to the EEOC's lawsuit, ErgoMed concluded that she had disqualifying issues with her shoulders, even though Divine told ErgoMed's examiner that she was only sore from carrying heavy luggage from the bus stop to her motel. ErgoMed prevented Divine from completing its physical tests and provided a negative recommendation to JBS Carriers, which then withdrew her job offer.

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) prohibits employment discrimination based on disability and makes it illegal for employers to impose standards or criteria for job applicants that have the effect of discriminating based on disability or that screen out individuals with disabilities. In its suit (EEOC v. JBS Carriers, Civil Action No. 1:18-cv-02498-CMA-NRN (D. Colo.)), the EEOC charged that the pre-employment screening required by JBS Carriers and administered by ErgoMed violated the ADA because it excluded qualified applicants with disabilities. The EEOC also alleged that by relying on ErgoMed's screening without giving individual consideration to job applicants, JBS Carriers discrim­inated against job applicants based on disability and failed to provide reasonable accommodations.

The settlement payment of $250,000 will be distributed among five individuals who were adversely impacted by the ErgoMed screening and who participated in the EEOC's investigation.

After years of using the ErgoMed screen, JBS Carriers halted the practice, and now only requires job applicants to obtain the Department of Transportation (DOT) medical certification necessary to be a licensed commercial truck driver. Under the consent decree settling the EEOC's lawsuit, JBS Carriers will not contract with ErgoMed for three years and will not implement any physical or medical screening for conditional hires apart from the DOT medical certification and a urine analysis. JBS Carriers will also provide training on the ADA to its employees, appoint an ADA coordinator, review and revise its ADA policies, and report semi-annually to the EEOC on how the company has addressed reports of disability discrimination and requests for accommodation.

"We applaud the efforts by JBS Carriers to reach an early resolution with the EEOC that provides both meaningful monetary relief and important equitable relief," said Regional Attorney Mary Jo O'Neill of the EEOC's Phoenix District Office. "The company's willingness to cease the screening practices at issue shows a commitment to ensuring that all individuals qualified for a job have a level playing field and an equal opportunity for hiring."

EEOC Denver Field Office Director Amy Burkholder added, "The ADA prohibits arbitrary medical screens and onerous physical tests which prevent individuals from getting jobs for which they are qualified. The EEOC will continue to be vigilant of contracting arrangements that employers may have with companies like ErgoMed."

Original source can be found here.

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