Dеbra L. McWright, who is unable to bear children, alleges that her employer, the Office of Civil Rights of the United States Department of Education (DOE), discriminated against her on the basis of handicap by refusing to grant her requests for childcare leave on terms comparable to *224 those given to biological mothers. The district court dismissed McWright’s complaint brought under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 701 et seq., for failure to state a claim. We reverse and remand.
I.
The facts, as alleged by the complaint, are as follows. McWright contracted polio at the age of one and a half years, leaving her with permanent physical handicaps. Among these handicaps is the inability to bear children. In February 1977, the DOE hired McWright as an equal opportunity specialist in the post-secondary education division of its Office of Civil Rights. McWright was hired as a handicapped individual pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 501.
In July 1982, McWright informed her immediate supervisor, Branch Chief Catherine Martin, that she and her husband had decided to adopt a child and were pursuing the аdoption process. McWright advised Martin that if she were able to adopt a child, she would be requesting extended leave to care for the child. In September 1982, McWright informed Martin and Martin’s supervisor, Mary Francis O’Shea, that she and her husband had been accepted as adoptive parents and that she would be requesting extended child-care leave as soon as a child was placed.
In November 1982, McWright filed applications for childcare leаve consisting of a combination of annual leave and leave without pay. Because McWright could not predict precisely when placement of a child would occur, she did not specify particular dates in her leave applications. On December 17, 1982, Martin met with McWright and advised her that she could take her requested leave only in one of three ways: first, she could take her leave immediately; second, she could specify a speсific date in the future and take her leave at that time; or third, she could agree to complete all her pending work assignments before taking her leave. When presenting these options, Martin was fully aware that a child had not yet been placed with McWright.
McWright had no realistic choice but to accede to the third condition and agree to complete all her pending work assignments before taking her leave. The very next day, however, on Decеmber 18, 1982, Martin significantly increased McWright’s caseload by assigning her three new cases. At the time, Martin knew that completion of these cases could take as long as a year or more.
Less than three weeks later, on January 5, 1983, McWright learned that a child would be available for placement. She immediately resubmitted her leave request, asking for annual leave from January 11 to February 7, 1983, and leave without pay from February 8 to May 17, 1983. The DOE denied her leave requеsts the next day, asserting that, because she had previously refused to specify particular dates for her leave, McWright would be required to complete her current caseload before taking leave.
When a son was placed with McWright on January 11, 1983, the DOE did give her four days of leave to bring the infant home and arrange for child care. After January 15, however, the DOE required McWright to return to work on a full-time basis, including a full week of travel to Ohio during the last week of Januаry.
In February 1983, McWright again renewed her leave request, asking for annual leave from February 8 through March 8 and leave without pay from March 10 through June 29. This time, the DOE initially purported to approve her request unconditionally. In fact, however, the leave was granted on the condition that McWright work at home while on leave. McWright began her annual leave on February 3 and worked out of her home without compensation. On March 10, however (the day her leave without рay was to begin), McWright was informed by Martin that she would have to return to work full-time until all her pending assignments were completed.
On March 17, 1983, McWright informed her supervisors that she could no longer work under the conditions the office had imposed. She stated that unless her leave was reinstated, she would have no choice *225 but to resign. The DOE again denied McWright’s leave request, and McWright tendered her resignation.
McWright alleges that she was treated differently from similarly situated non-handicaрped DOE employees — i.e., biological mothers requesting extended leave for child care. The DOE consistently granted such requests made by biological mothers. In addition, it did not condition child-care leave for biological mothers upon the completion of pending work assignments, nor did it require biological mothers to work at home without compensation or to return to work before the expiration of their leave.
After exhausting her administrative remedies, McWright brought suit in the district court under the Rehabilitation Act. She alleged that the DOE had discriminated against her on the basis of her handicap and had failed to make a reasonable accommodation of her handicap. The DOE moved to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The district court granted the DOE’s motion to dismiss, concluding that the “causal nexus between the alleged discrimination suffered by McWright and her inability to bear a child is too attenuated to meet the requirements of the Rehabilitation Act.”
McWright v. Alexander,
II.
We review a decision granting a motion to dismiss
de novo,
assuming the truth of all well-pleaded factual allegations and drawing inferences in favor of the plaintiff.
Wroblewski v. City of Washburn,
Section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 791, imposes an affirmative duty upon federal agencies “to structure their procedures and programs so as to еnsure that handicapped individuals are afforded equal opportunity in both job assignment and promotion.”
Prewitt v. United States Postal Serv.,
McWright’s complaint raises two claims: one is denominated “Failure to Accommodate” and the other “Disparate Treatment.” Although the complaint does not specify the section of the Act under which each claim is brought, on appeal McWright refers to her accommodation claim as a § 501 claim and her disparate treatment claim as a § 504 claim. The distinction may be relevant, for we have expressed doubts about whether § 504 applies to employment discrimination suits against federal agencies,
McGuinness v. United States Postal Serv.,
We need not resolve the question here. The complaint does not distinguish between § 501 and § 504, and we may treat both of McWright’s claims as having been brought under § 501. In addition to requiring accommodation of individuals with handicaps, § 501 — by regulation and interpretation — prohibits discrimination on
*226
the basis of handicap, just like § 504. 29 C.F.R. § 1613.703 (“An agency shall not discriminate against a qualified physically or mentally handicapped person.”);
Gardner v. Morris,
Has McWright pleaded two claims or only one? Some courts seem to view the “reasonable accommodation” inquiry not as a separate claim, but simply as a part of the handicap discrimination inquiry.
See, e.g., Gardner,
An agency shall make reasonable accommodation to the known physical or mental limitations of a qualified handicapped apрlicant or employee unless the agency can demonstrate that the accommodation would impose an undue hardship on the operation of its program.
29 C.F.R. § 1613.704(a). Moreover, the Supreme Court relied on the
absence
of “affirmative action” language in § 504 in concluding that it does not demand steps beyond “evenhanded treatment” — the clear implication being that § 501 does demand such steps.
Southeastern Community College v. Davis,
Assuming that McWright may pursue the failure to accommodate as a separate claim, we conclude that her claim must survive the DOE’s motion to dismiss. The applicable regulation includes three basic elements: (1) the plaintiff must be a qualified individual with a handicap; (2) the agency must make “reasonable accommodation” for the handicap; and (3) an accommodation need not be made if it would impose an “undue hardship.” 29 C.F.R. § 1613.704(a);
Fuller,
We reject the DOE’s contention that McWright is simply requesting more favorable treatment than that afforded biological mothers. McWright’s claim is that the DOE effectively denied her child-care leave while routinely granting such leave to biological mothers. It is true that McWright requests a change in the (supposedly neutral) standard operating procedure — but that is the essence of reasonable accommodation. On remand, of сourse, the DOE will have an opportunity to make a showing that the accommodation desired by McWright would cause the agency undue hardship. But accepting McWright’s allegations (as we must at this procedural stage), we must assume that the DOE could accommodate her handicap without undue hardship. We also reject the district court’s suggestion that McWright’s claim was defective because the accommodation she requested “was not related to any specific condition of her work.”
McWright,
Count II of McWright’s complaint is a straightforward discrimination claim, one that (substantively, at least) might as easily come under § 504 as under § 501. In this claim McWright alleges that the DOE “treated [her] requests for leave less favorably than those of biological mothers because, due to her inability to bear children, [she] could neither provide a medical certification for her leave nor specify in advance the particular dates for her leave.” Complaint ¶ 56. McWright thus alleges that she was actually
treated differently
from biological mothers. Complaint MI 52-55. But she also indicates that the
reason
for the different treatment was her inability to specify in advance the dates of her leave. Complaint ¶ 56. McWright describes her discrimination claim as one of “disparate treatment,” a term that is ordinarily defined as intentional discrimination — in this context, discrimination
because of
McWright’s handicap.
See Pime v. Loyola Univ. of Chicago,
This reveals a potential problem. If McWright is simply challenging a policy that requires several months' advance notice to obtain child-care leave, then her challenge does not appear to be one of intentional discrimination on the basis of handicap. The district judge recognized this problem, reasoning that the “causal nexus” between the alleged discrimination and McWright’s sterility was too attenuated to serve as the basis for a handicap discrimination claim.
McWright,
These same considerations give us pause as well. They presuppose, however, that McWright’s discrimination claim is conceived as relying strictly on a “disparate treatment” theory (i.e., one of intentional discrimination on account of handicap) rather than a theory of “disparate impact.” In fact, the complaint’s heading for this second claim — “Disparate Treatment” — is somewhat surprising, for in many ways Count II sounds like a classic disparatе impact claim. It appears (at least from paragraph 56 of the complaint) to involve a facially neutral requirement that burdens sterile women more heavily than nonsterile women.
Despite these difficulties, we ultimately conclude that McWright’s handicap discrimination claim should not be dismissed, for three reasons.
First, the line between disparate treatment and disparate impact is actually finer than the above discussion suggests, particularly in the context of hаndicap discrimination. We have warned that an employer cannot be permitted to use a technically neutral classification as a proxy to evade the prohibition of intentional discrimination. An example is using gray hair as a proxy for age: there are young people with gray hair (a few), but the “fit” between age and gray hair is sufficiently close that they would form the same basis for invidious classification.
See Finnegan v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
Second, it appears that McWright may pursue her discrimination claim under a disparate impact theory. In
Alexander v. Choate,
Third, even if we were to hold McWright to a strict version of the disparate treatment theory it is not clear that dismissal would be proper, for the intent issue is not entirely foreclosed by the complaint. In spite of paragraph 56 of the complaint, it is not clear from the allegations whether the DOE applied a no-leave-without-notice policy to adoptive mothers generally, or only to McWright as a sterile mother. Paragraphs 52 through 55 simply allege that the DOE treated McWright differently from biological mothers in its attachment of conditions and denial of rеquests for leave. There is no suggestion of adoptive mothers who are not sterile receiving the same treatment as McWright. In addition, paragraph 20 indicates that McWright’s supervisor intentionally (or at least knowingly) placed particularly onerous burdens on McWright by increasing her workload the day after McWright had agreed to complete her assignments before taking her leave. An inference of disparate treatment on the basis of McWright’s handicap may therefore by supported by the allegations.
Finally, we note that the DOE’s argument regarding the proposed “Family and Medical Leave Act” is without merit. 3 The DOE contends that Congress, by considering a comprehensive statute that would have addressed medical and family leave, has implicitly rejected any application of the Rehabilitation Act to family leave policies. As McWright points out, however, such reasoning is flawed. We assume that an employer cоuld not impose a policy prohibiting family leave for any woman over the age of 40; yet on the DOE’s theory, such a policy would be insulated from review under age discrimination law merely because Congress has considered legislation governing leave policies. The fact that Congress has addressed leave policies in other legislation simply does not mean that the Rehabilitation Act does not cover such policies.
III.
Because McWright’s complaint adequately states a claim under the Rehabilitation Act, the judgment of the district court is Reversed and the case is Remanded for *230 further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. There are procedural and remedial differences between § 501 and § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. The "remedies, procedures, and rights” of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 are available under § 501, while those of Title VI apply to § 504. 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(1) & (2);
see also McGuinness,
. The court in
Prewitt
relied on a commentator's four-part classification of discriminatory barriers encountered by individuals with handicaps: (1) intentional discrimination for reasons of social bias; (2) neutral standards with disparate impact; (3) surmountable impairment barriers; and (4) insurmountable impairment barriers.
. The bill was vetoed in June 1990 and has been reintroduced in the House of Representatives but not enacted. See H.R.Rep. No. 102-135, 102d Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 1 (1991).
