The plaintiff-appellant, Dan Jovanovic, brought this action against the defendant-appellee, In-Sink-Erator Division of Emerson Electric Company (“ISE”) of Racine, Wisconsin, alleging a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12111 et seq., when ISE, according to Jovanovic, terminated his employment because he was suffering from asthma and Barrett’s esophagus. 1 The trial court ordered that the materials Jovano-vic submitted in response to the summary judgment motion be stricken from the record because Jovanovic failed to file a timely response to ISE’s motion for summary judgment. The judge then granted ISE’s motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Jovanovic began working at ISE, a manufacturer of garbage disposals and hot water dispensers, on February 13, 1984, as a tool and die maker. Tool and die makers at ISE’s Racine facility have the responsibility to respond to maintenance and repair needs for equipment throughout the plant. As the district court noted, “it is ‘their job to keep the plant running.’ ... Tool and die makers possess technical skills which are specific to their job.... Few of these skilled workers are employed in the plant, and if absent they are not easy to replace.” During the time that Jovanovic was employed, ISE had an attendance policy which stated that an employee would be considered “excessively absent” if that employee was absent at a rate one full percentage point greater than the plant absentee average, provided that such absence rate exceeded seven days in a twelve-month period. 2
Jovanovic received his first warning regarding his erratic attendance on September 27, 1985. ISE thereafter warned Jovanovic on December 15, 1986, September 25, 1991, November 11, 1991, May 19, 1992, January 18, 1993, 3 and March 25, 1993. 4 On March 30, 1993, Jovanovic reported late to work and ISE terminated his employment.
After his termination, Jovanovic filed this suit alleging that ISE discharged him *896 because of his disability in violation of the ADA. Shortly after the case was assigned, the trial judge entered a scheduling оrder establishing discovery and filing deadlines. On March 12, 1997, Jovanovic’s counsel informed the court that he was in the process of gaining admission to the Eastern District of Wisconsin (he claimed he needed a certification of good faith from the Illinois Supreme Court) and requested that discovery be extended until May 31, 1997, and the deadline for dispositive motions be extended to June 15, 1997. On April 23, 1997, Jovanovic’s counsel infоrmed the district court that he had filed the necessary papers for admission and was awaiting a response. Satisfied that Jovanovic’s counsel had moved for admission, the court granted Jovanovic’s motion to amend the scheduling order on April 24, 1997.
Pursuant to the scheduling order, ISE moved for summary judgment on June 12, 1997. Although Jovanovic’s deadline for responding was July 17, 1997, he failed to file a response, much less request an extension, until July 22, when he asked for extra time to respond (until August 15) and requested leave to take eight additional depositions. When making this extension request, Jovanovic’s counsel informed the trial court that, contrary to his prior representations, there was no application for his admission to practice in the Eastern District of Wisconsin on file. 5 Because Jovanovic’s counsel was unаble to substantiate his claim that he had previously submitted an application for admission to the Eastern District of Wisconsin, the judge concluded that he could “only assume no such application was filed.”
Before the judge ruled on his motion to extend time to respond, Jovanovic filed a response to ISE’s summary judgment motion on August 22, 1997. On October 31, 1997, the trial judge denied Jovanovic’s motion to extend time to respond. The court considered ISE’s motion for summary judgment based only on the record before it,which did not include Jovanovic’s response brief and supporting materials, because they had been stricken from the record. The district judge granted ISE’s summary judgment motion. Jovanovic appeals.
II. ISSUES
On appeal, we consider whether the trial court abused its discretion in declining to consider the papers submitted by Jovano-vic in opposition to ISE’s motion for summary judgment. We also consider whether the court erred in granting summary judgment to ISE on Jovanovic’s claim that ISE allegedly discharged him because of his disability.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Refusal to consider Jovanovic’s untimely response
Jovanovic initially contends that the trial court abused its discretion in declining to consider his response to ISE’s summary judgment motion. While counsel does not contest that the papers were untimely, nor еven that the request for an extension was untimely, he asserts that, given the circumstances surrounding the tardiness of his filing, the trial judge should have found that the untimely filing was the result of “excusable neglect.” Jovanovic’s counsel explains that the materials were late because he had a state court trial which was advanced for trial due to the failing health of a party to that litigation and because оf a family crisis to which he had to attend.
We review a trial court’s refusal of a request for an extension for an abuse
*897
of discretion.
See Gonzalez v. Ingersoll Milling Mach. Co.,
In denying Jovanovic’s request for an extension, the trial court cited: 1) the fact that the applicable deadlines had been set and extended at Jovanovic’s urging; 2) that even Jovanovic’s request for an extension of time on August 22, 1997, was not filed within the deadline; and 3) that Jova-novic’s counsel acknowledged that, contrary to his prior representations to the court, he had not yet been admitted to practice in the Eastern District of Wisconsin. The judge also noted that Jovаnovic’s motion failed to set forth adequate reasons for his failure to file either his response or a request for an extension within the July 17,1997 deadline.
After the court issued its original decision, Jovanovic filed a Motion for Reconsideration, claiming that the trial judge erred in failing to apply the factors set forth in
Pioneer v. Brunswick Assocs. Ltd. Partnership,
After reviewing the record, we refuse to hold that the district court abused its discretion in declining to consider Jovanovic’s untimely response. Jovanovic’s counsel was late in filing papers with the court on a number of occasions, he missed deadlines that he had requested, and he misrepresented to the court the status of his application for admission to practice before it and then used the fact that he was not admitted as an excuse for his untimely filing. Because we hold that the trial judge acted within his discretion in denying Jovanovic’s request for an extension, Jovanovic’s response brief and supporting materials are not a part of this record on appeal.
B. Jovanovic’s Disparate Treatment Claim
Jovanovic contends that the district court erred in granting ISE’s summary judgment motion on the grounds that Jovanovic was not a qualified individual with a disability under the ADA because he could not perform the essential job function of regular attendance. He argues that the record presented by ISE in support of its motion does not support the court’s finding that job attendance was an essential function of the tool and die maker job. Instead, he claims, that when the judge considered an affidavit submitted by Jovanоvic’s supervisor, the court went beyond ISE’s proposed findings of fact and into the full record to reach his decision. *898 Jovanovic asserts that, in so doing, the trial judge opened up the entire record to review and, upon review of the entire record, should have denied ISE’s motion because the record reveals disputed material facts.
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. See Gonzalez,
Jovanovic contends that even absent consideration of his materials in response to ISE’s motion, the trial сourt’s grant of summary judgment was improper. He asserts that there is no evidence in the record to support the court’s conclusion that he is not a “qualified individual with a disability,” which is defined by the ADA as a disabled individual who can, with or without reasonable accommodation, perform the essential functions of a position. 8 See 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(m). We disagree.
Initially, we note that Jovanovic failed to request any form of accommodation from ISE. In
Taylor v. Principal Fin. Group, Inc.,
“[s]ome impairments may be disabling for particular individuals but not for others, depending on the stage of the disease or the disorder, the presence of other impairments that combine to make the impairment disabling or any number of other factors.” 29 C.F.R. 1630.2(j), App. (1995). Thus, while a given disability may limit one employee (and therefore necessitate a reasonable accommodation), it may not limit another. For this reason, the ADA does not require an employer to assume that an employee with a disability suffers from a limitation. In fact, better public policy dictates the opposite presumption: that disabled employees are not limited in their abilities to adequately perform their jobs. Such a policy is supported by the E.E.O.C.’s interpretive guide: еmployers “are prohibited from restricting the employment opportunities of qualified individuals with disabilities on the basis of stereo types and myths about the individual’s disability. Rather, the capabilities of qualified individuals must be determined on an individualized, case by case, basis.” 29 C.F.R. 1630.5, App. (1995)... .Accordingly, it is incumbent upon the ADA plaintiff to assert not only a disability, but also any limitation resulting therefrom.
^ % H* # sH
Thus, it is the employee’s initial request for an accommodation which triggers the employer’s obligation to participate in the interactive process of determining one.... If the employee fails to request an accommodation, the employer cannot be held liable for failing to provide one.
Although this court has never adopted the triggering requirement in Taylor, several cases from this circuit have commented on a plаintiffs failure to request an accommodation.
*899
In
Hunt-Golliday v. Metropolitan Water Reclamation Dist. of Greater Chicago,
We need not rest our decision on the fact that Jovanovic failed to request an accommodation because his erratic attendance record made it impossible for him to perform thе essential functions of the job.
9
See, e.g., Waggoner,
We need not go so far as to say that regular attendance is an essential function of
every
job in rendering our decision today, nor do we hold that an individual with erratic attendance can never be a qualified individual with a disability under the ADA. See
Waggoner,
In his affidavit, Jovanovic’s former supervisor, Robert Running, attests:
[t]hat the primary function of the tool room is to see that the machinery is maintained in good repair throughout the facility; that it is a 24-hour a day operation; and that it is essential to be able to rely on the regular attendance of tool and die makers which is a relatively small group of employees servicing approximately 850 workers.
Like the production job in Waggoner, the account representative job in Corder, and the teaching position in Nowak, it is clear that the tool and die maker position is one that must be performеd at ISE and on a regular basis. If a tool and die maker is not on the premise, he cannot carry out his employment responsibilities for which he was hired. Both Running’s affidavit and ISE’s summary judgment papers support this conclusion, and nothing in the record contradicts it.
The record before us supports the trial court’s conclusion that regular and timely attendance is an essential function of the tool and die maker position at ISE. It also supports the court’s conclusion that Jovanovic could not perform that function of his job. Further, because there is no evidence that Jovanovic ever requested an accommodation, nor that any reasonable accommodation would have enabled him to perform his job, the district court’s conclusion that Jovanovic is not a qualified individual with a disability was not in error. Therefore, the trial judge’s grant of summary judgment to ISE on Jovanovic’s ADA claims was proper.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Also called Barrett's syndrome — a peptic ulcer of the lower esophagus. These medical conditions frequently caused Jovanovic to be absent from work, but in no way impaired his ability to perform tool and die work when he was present at ISE.
. During Jovanovic’s period of employment, he was frequently either late (ISE does not give the exact number of times that Jovanovic arrived late) or absent from work. For example, in fiscal year 1991, the Racine plant’s absentee rate was approximately 1.31%, as compared to Jovanovic's rate of 3.35%. In fiscal year 1992, the Racine plant’s absentee rate was approximately 1.25%, while Jovano-vic's rate was 8.5%.
. At the time of the January 18, 1993 warning, ISE cautioned Jovanovic that his next attendance infraction would likely result in disciplinary action, including discharge.
. Jovanovic received his final warning on March 25, 1993, for poor attendance based on his having missed 24 days in the last 12 months.
. Jovanovic's counsel maintains that he had in fact previously submitted an application, but that it must have been lost by the Clerk for the Eastern District of Wisсonsin. However, he was unable to present any supporting evidence, such as a copy of an application, a check, or an accompanying correspondence, demonstrating that he actually filed an application with the clerk.
. After applying the Pioneer factors, the court once again ruled that the conduct of Jovano-vic’s counsel failed to amount to “excusablе neglect.” It explained that granting Jovano-vic’s extension request, which included a request to reopen discovery, would prejudice ISE by rendering its summary judgment motion moot and that the reasons provided for the late filing were within the control of Jova-novic’s counsel; for example, the state court trial he referred to ended July 14, 1997, three days before the response deadline, yet he still failеd to timely file his motion for an extension. The district judge also found that Jova-novic's counsel was guilty of not acting in good faith, specifically citing his misrepresentation to the court regarding the status of his application to practice in the Eastern District of Wisconsin. Finally, the judge noted that counsel failed to meet the deadlines that he (counsel) had selected.
. Despite the fact that wе agree with Jovano-vic that the trial judge looked beyond ISE’s moving papers and was, therefore, obligated to examine the entire court record on summary judgment to ensure that it revealed no material factual disputes, Jovanovic’s untimely brief, Rule 6.05 response, and attached affidavits are not included in this record.
See Uhl v. Zalle Josephs Fabricators, Inc.,
. For purposes of this decision, we assume, without analysis, that Jovanovic is disabled as defined by the Americans with Disabilities Act.
. As the district judge noted, "the only imaginable accommodation would be an open-ended schedule that would allow Jovanovic to come and go as he pleased.” We would be hard-pressed to imagine a manufacturing facility that could operate effectively when its employees are essentially permitted to set their own work hours, and we thus reject such a schedule as an unreasonable accommodation under the circumstances of this case.
See Waggoner v. Olin Corp.,
