A fall left Christopher Opsteen with serious cognitive shortcomings. He applied for and received disability benefits under both the Social Security program and his employer’s ERISA plan. Both applications asserted that he was totally and permanently disabled from performing his former job as a laborer in Keller’s steel shop, or indeed any other gainful employment. Notwithstanding these successful applications, however, Opsteen asked Keller to put him back on the employment rolls. He acknowledged that his mental shortcomings made it risky (to himself as well as to others) to work in a place where huge hydraulic presses bend and move heavy iron and steel products. Laborers use oxyacetylene torches to cut and weld large pieces of metal; they must shape and move heavy building components. Opsteen cannot do all of his former tasks and could be injured in the bustle of the workplace. But he contended that two possible accommodations were available: first, he might be allowed an indefinite leave of absence; second, he might be supplied with a full-time “job coach” who would take precautions on his behalf.
The nature of the risks and the proposed accommodations raises a serious question whether Opsteen is “qualified” for the purpose of the Americans with Disabilities Act. See, e.g.,
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Echazabal,
Opsteen was (and Remains) unable to fill out or understand the forms required to apply for disability benefits. ' Indeed, he testified at his deposition that he could not remember whether an application had been filed on his behalf and did not know that he was receiving disability benefits. Completing applications on Opsteen’s behalf, his wife represented that he could no longer work. Medical evaluations submitted in support of the applications detailed Opsteen’s limitations, chiefly impaired memory and attentiveness. One physician wrote, for example, that Opsteen “[njeeds supervision with all activities involving any
Cleveland v. Policy Management Systems, Corp.,
In order to obtain long-term disability benefits under Keller’s plan, Opsteen had to demonstrate that he could not do his former work
even with a reasonable accommodation.
His wife made that representation on his behalf, with considerable medical support; the plan’s administrator agreed and awarded . benefits. In this court Opsteen acknowledges that his current position is factually inconsistent with the position maintained in his application for benefits, but he asserts that his mental condition is not that bad. At a deposition, the physician whose words we have quoted testified that he did not know why he penned this language and that he now views such a gloomy assessment as mistaken. This is exactly the sort of factual contradiction that
Cleveland
forbids.
We stated in
Pals v. Schepel Buick & GMC Truck, Inc.,
Keller could not accommodate a permanent disability with part-time employment for a few months, though it went beyond what Pals required by putting Opsteen on six months’ leave to see whether improvement was likely, and not letting him go until it had medical opinions that he would remain totally disabled after that period. Nor could Keller be expected to let Ops-teen work a few hours a day; part-time work is an accommodation suited to physical weakness, and hours lengthen as strength returns. Mental shortcomings would have made every hour on the job dangerous to Opsteen and his co-workers, so he has not suggested a part-time job as an option. Pals offers him no support.
AFFIRMED.
