Bobbi Miller appeals from the grant of summary judgment to the Illinois Department of Corrections in her suit under the Americans With Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101
et seq.
We can set to one side the evidence, which in the posture of the ease we must accept as true whether it is or not, that the warden was motivated by an irrational hostility to blind persons. It is alleged that he stated flatly that he didn’t want a blind person working in his prison — he was afraid that “people would be tripping over the [seeing-eye] dog at all times” — and that in discussing the matter “he grew very agitated and informed us that there was no way a blind person would ever work in his Prison.” Employment decisions motivated by the distaste or even distress that severe physical or mental disabilities arouse in some people violate the ADA,
Vande Zande v. Wisconsin Dept. of Administration,
She is right not to argue this. Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, a plaintiff who proves that a discriminatory intent entered into the decision to fire him cannot recover damages, or obtain an order reinstating him, if the employer proves that he would have been fired anyway. 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e-2(m), 2000e-5(g)(2)(B);
Hennessy v. Pemil Datacomm Networks, Inc.,
This is clearly the situation with regard to Miller’s desire to retain her job as a correctional officer. The Department of Corrections has specified a long list of duties that correctional officers are required to perform — including standing guard, counting inmates, inspecting for contraband, escorting inmates outside their cells, searching inmates and visitors, searching for escaped prisoners, and being on 24r-hour call to respond to emergencies, such as riots and escapes — and that Miller concedes she can’t perform, because of her blindness. The only specified duties of a correctional officer that she might be able to perform, though it would require special equipment (but that might be within the scope of the employer’s duty of reasonable accommodation), would be as a telephone switchboard operator or as an armory officer, where she would be in charge of issuing guns to correctional officers as needed. Normally, correctional officers rotate through the various duty positions. Miller could not do this, but she argues that she should be excused from performing the duties that she cannot perform and limited to the ones she can. So she would just rotate between the switchboard and armory positions.
But it seems to us, as it seemed to the district court (there is no case exactly on point), that if an employer has a legitimate reason for specifying multiple duties for a particular job classification, duties the occupant of the position is expected to rotate through, a disabled employee will not be qualified for the position unless he can perform enough of - these duties to enable a judgment that he can perform its
essential
duties. See
Allison v. Department of Corrections,
The more difficult issue is whether Miller should have been offered another job in the prison (or perhaps in another prison operated by the Department). Correctional officer is only one job classification in the prison. The prison employs cooks, dieticians, secretaries, receptionists, data processors, and other sendee personnel who are not required to be able to assist in the physical control of the inmate population. Many, perhaps all, of these are jobs that a blind person can fill if *1098 the employer makes a reasonable accommodation to the person’s blindness. See J. Elton Moore, “Blindness and Vision Disorders,” in Encyclopedia of Disability and Rehabilitation 115, 119 (Arthur E. Dell Orto & Robert P. Marinelli eds. 1995); Joseph J. Lazza-ro, “Computer Applications for Persons With Visual Impairments,” in id. at 197. What makes the issue of Miller’s exclusion from these other jobs difficult is the profound uncertainty about whether she has been excluded from them. In her correspondence and discussions with the prison officials she said she wanted to be a correctional officer. She acknowledged her inability to perform all the duties of the position and asked that it be restructured so that she would be required to perform only those duties that she can perform. She did say she’d told the warden that she “would even be willing to take the officer’s uniform off as long as I could be assigned to a position within the facility that would be appropriate for my professional experience and background)” and that she would “take any position at Graham [the name of the prison] or another facility with the Department that would be appropriate for my level of experience and my talents ... as long as such a position came with comparable pay,” but the portions of these statements that we have italicized imply that she wants the status and pay of a correctional officer without having to perform the full range of duties of the job. She wants an altered correctional-officer job classification.
When Miller lost her job at Graham, the state offered her, and she took, a job as a residential care worker at a state school for the visually impaired. She describes the job as a demotion because she took “a severe cut in pay.” So far as appears, the jobs in the prison for which she is qualified also pay much less than a correctional officer’s job. In general, there is a wage premium for dangerous and distasteful jobs, such as being a prison guard. Adam Smith noticed this more than two centuries ago (1 The Wealth of Nations 116-17, 121 (R.H. Campbell & A.S. Skinner eds. 1976) [1776]), and there is plenty of modern empirical confirmation. See, e.g., Craig A. Olson, “An Analysis of Wage Differentials Received by Workers on Dangerous Jobs,” 16 J. Human Resources 167 (1981); W. Kip Viscusi, Risk by Choice: Regulating Health and Safety in the Workplace (1983), esp. ch. 3; Jean-Michel Cousi-neau, Robert Lacroix, & Anne-Marie Girard, “Occupational Hazard and Wage Compensating Differentials,” 74 Rev.Econ. & Stat. 166 (1992); W. Kip Viscusi, “The Value of Risks to Life and Health,” 31 J.Econ.Lit. 1912, 1931-35 (1993). It is precisely the dangerous and distasteful aspects of a prison guard’s job, such as searching prisoners’ body cavities and breaking up fights among inmates, that Miller, through no. fault of her own, is incapable of performing. We do not understand her to be arguing that she seeks as an alternative to the job of correctional officer a nonTcorrectional-officer’s job, at a non-corree-tional-offieer’s salary, in the prison that is comparable to her job at the institute for the blind — a job, in other words, that she is qualified to perform. Until she applies for such a job, a suit complaining about the prison’s refusal to give it to her is premature.
In so ruling, we are mindful that the duty of reasonable accommodation requires more than a willingness on the part of the employer to listen to the employee’s suggestions as to how the workplace might at reasonable cost be adapted to the employee’s disability. The employer will often know more about the feasibility of such adaptations than the employee, so if the employee requests accommodation the employer must make a reasonable effort to explore the possibilities.
Bultemeyer v. Fort Wayne Community Schools, supra,
Miller’s counsel has tried in this court to east her case in that mold, arguing that she would have taken any job so long as she could stay at Graham. But the statements of hers that we have quoted and much else that we could quote paint a different picture. She wanted to remain at Graham on her own terms, and those terms involved her remaining, with or without the uniform, in the same job status that she had occupied before she became disabled. That is the job status that she is not qualified for under the disability law because she cannot perform its essential duties. She evinced no interest in prison jobs not occupied by correctional officers, jobs the essential duties of which may be within her ability to perform. She thus did not put the prison on notice to search out such jobs in order to determine whether there was one that she might fill.
We are
still
not at all sure that she wants to be anything less at Graham than a correctional officer; but if she does, it is not too late for her to apply. If you reapply for the same job that you were recently turned down for, and are again rejected, a new suit complaining about the second rejection is barred by the principle of collateral estoppel. Cf.
Kennedy v. Chemical Waste Management, Inc.,
AFFIRMED.
