E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Company (“DuPont”) appeals the partial grant of summary judgment to the EEOC and its refusal to alter the judgment following a jury verdict awarding Laura Barrios back-pay, frontpay, and punitive damages for violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. DuPont argues that Barrios was not disabled under the ADA, that it did not “regard her” as disabled, that she could not perform an essential function of her job, and that the awards of punitive damages and front- and backpay were inappropriate. Finding only the frontpay award to be infirm, we AFFIRM in part and REVERSE in part.
I. BACKGROUND
Laura Barrios began working in 1981 as a lab operator in DuPont’s LaPlace, Louisiana, chemical plant. In 1986, she was diagnosed with a number of medical conditions that made it increasingly difficult for her to walk and for which she received continuing medical treatment.
Barrios’s position required her to obtain annual physical examinations by DuPont plant physicians. In 1996, the company physicians restricted Barrios from, inter alia, standing for more than ten minutes, *728 walking more than one hundred feet without resting, working in a stooped position, or working more than eight hours. A year later, DuPont transferred her to the position of lab clerk, a sedentary job that involved copying and filing.
DuPont’s examinations culminated in a 1999 functional capacity evaluation (“FCE”) because of concerns about Barrios’s ability to safely walk at the plant. The FCE was intended to evaluate Barrios’s ability to perform the basic functions of her job and to meet certain qualification standards, including the ability to evacuate in the event of an emergency. Because of the hazardous nature of the chemical manufacturing process at the plant, DuPont was concerned about Barrios’s ability to evacuate safely. DuPont contends that the ability to evacuate during an emergency is required of all employees, and DuPont routinely conducts emergency response drills.
After the FCE confirmed Barrios’s walking impairment, DuPont physicians concluded that she should be medically restricted from walking anywhere at the plant. DuPont believed this restriction left her unable to evacuate in event of an emergency. The company placed Barrios on temporary disability for six months and total and permanent disability thereafter. Barrios’s attempt to get her job back was rebuffed by Dupont, even though she demonstrated in 2003 that she could walk an evacuation route without assistance.
The EEOC filed suit against DuPont in June 2003, alleging that DuPont violated the ADA by forcing Barrios to undergo the FCE and by discharging her. DuPont responded that Barrios was terminated because the FCE showed she could not safely evacuate the plant on her own during an emergency. After both parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court granted the EEOC’s motion in part and denied DuPont’s motion. The court found that DuPont regarded Barrios as disabled under the ADA, but it found other material issues of fact.
The parties proceeded to trial, and a jury found that Barrios was discharged in violation of the ADA and awarded her $91,000 in backpay, $200,000 in frontpay, and $1,000,000 in punitive damages, which the district court reduced to $300,000. 1 The court denied DuPont’s post-judgment motions. DuPont now appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
DuPont argues that the district court erred in granting partial summary judgment to the EEOC and in denying its motions for judgment as a matter of law, new trial, and to amend or alter the judgment because Barrios was not disabled or “regarded as” disabled under the ADA; the awards of back- and frontpay are improper; and the punitive damages award was unsupported. We address each issue in turn.
A. Disability
DuPont appeals both the district court’s grant of partial summary judgment to the EEOC on the issue whether DuPont regarded Barrios as substantially limited in the major life activity of walking and the court’s failure to determine as a matter of law that Barrios was not disabled. Because the EEOC does not defend the jury’s finding that Barrios was actually disabled for ADA purposes, this appellate review must consider whether to sustain the judgment solely on the basis that DuPont regarded Barrios as disabled.
This court reviews
de novo
the district court’s grant of summary judgment, utiliz
*729
ing the same criteria as the district court.
Cutrera v. Bd. of Supervisors of La. State Univ.,
The ADA’s definition of “disability” includes individuals who are “regarded as having such an impairment [that substantially limits one or more of the major life activities].” 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(C);
see also Rodriguez v. ConAgra Grocery Prods. Co.,
In holding that DuPont regarded Barrios as disabled, the district court relied upon the broad restrictions placed on her by DuPont physicians, the total and permanent disability benefits provided to her with DuPont’s assistance, and DuPont’s pleadings and discovery responses. DuPont admitted in its discovery responses that Barrios was “incapable of walking” and “permanently disabled from walking.” DuPont plant physicians placed restrictions on her walking anywhere at the plant site, including on level and paved surfaces, because they considered her “substantially impaired in walking” and because she “could not dependably be counted on to walk safely.” The district court cited a large quantity of evidence consistent with its conclusion.
In response, DuPont argues that, rather than having regarded Barrios as entirely disabled from the major life activity of walking, it regarded her as having a medical restriction that prevented her from walking at the plant. Two of this court’s decisions,
Ray v. Glidden Co.,
DuPont’s reliance upon
Ray
and
Pryor
is misplaced. The evidence demonstrates that DuPont did not regard Barrios as restricted from a narrow range of jobs; rather, DuPont regarded Barrios as restricted from
all
jobs at the plant, because every employment position requires walking on the plant site. Moreover, DuPont’s perception of Barrios’s walking impairment was not limited to the plant — Dupont physicians believed her impairment extended to “home, at work, wherever.” If
*730
company experts believed Barrios could not walk safely even in her own work area, which consisted of level, flat surfaces, then DuPont must also have believed she could not safely walk anywhere.
See Rodriguez,
Therefore, for ADA purposes, DuPont regarded Barrios as substantially limited in the major life activity of walking.
See
29 C.F.R § 1630.2(j)(l)(i) (stating that “substantially limits” means “[ujnable to perform a major life activity that the average person in the general population can perform”);
Talk v. Delta Airlines, Inc.,
B. Sufficiency of Evidence
DuPont next contends that ADA liability cannot attach as a matter of law because Barrios was not qualified for the position of lab clerk, she could not perform the essential function of evacuation, and she constituted a direct safety threat to herself and others. The jury implicitly found otherwise.
DuPont cannot prevail in seeking judgment as a matter of law “unless there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury[’s] verdict.”
Arsement v. Spinnaker Exploration Co.,
The ADA states that a qualified individual with a disability is one who “with or without reasonable accommodation, can perform the
essential functions
of the employment position that such individual holds or desires.”
Rodriguez,
DuPont asserted that Barrios was incapable of evacuating from the plant in an emergency and that evacuation is an essential function of all workers at a chem *731 ical refinery. We do not doubt that safety measures are extremely important in such workplaces. Nevertheless, Barrios and the EEOC offered contradictory evidence on DuPont’s precise points, and the jury was entitled to decide whether to credit Barrios or DuPont. We will not disturb its choice.
DuPont also asserts as an affirmative defense that Barrios posed a direct threat to herself and other employees because she could not safely evacuate.
See
42 U.S.C. § 12113(a)-(b). The ADA does not protect an employee who poses a direct threat to the health and safety of herself or others in the workplace.
Robertson v. Neuromedical Ctr.,
Here, too, there was sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude that Barrios was not a direct threat to herself or her co-workers. Despite her medical restriction from walking, Barrios safely ambulated the evacuation route without assistance in 2003, and testimony at trial supported that she could safely evacuate without threatening the safety of others.
See Rizzo v. Children’s World Learning Ctrs., Inc.,
C. Back- and Frontpay Damages
The jury awarded $91,000 backpay from the date of Barrios’s separation, July 1999, to the date of judgment in January 2005, and the court awarded frontpay of $200,000, premised on Barrios’s ability to work until she became sixty-five and on the infeasibility of reinstatement at DuPont. DuPont challenges both awards.
The jury’s determination of the backpay period in this case was not insupportable.
See Brunnemann v. Terra Int’l, Inc.,
The same cannot be said of the district court’s award of frontpay, which was based on an advisory jury verdict.
*732
See Julian v. City of Houston,
“Front pay is awarded to compensate the plaintiff for lost future wages and benefits.”
Rutherford v. Harris County,
The district court concluded that Barrios was likely to have continued working for DuPont despite her walking impairment. This conclusion was based on testimony that Barrios was hard-working, committed, and had a “high tolerance for pain.” Given Barrios’s steadily deteriorating medical condition, however, her doctor’s repeated statements as time went on that she remained unable to work, and the fact that the trial occurred more than three years after her doctor’s first disability determination and five years after the adverse FCE, the court’s finding that Barrios could work for nearly
ten
more years post-judgment defies reality and the record. As she was unable to work in the future, Barrios was not eligible to receive “future wages and benefits.”
See, e.g., Mcinnis v. Fairfield Cmtys., Inc.,
backpay period was not clearly erroneous, the district court’s award of frontpay was an abuse of discretion. Only the backpay award can stand.
D. Punitive Damages
Finally, DuPont challenges the award of punitive damages. It argues that there was no evidence of malice or reckless indifference and that punitive damages are unavailable as a matter of law absent a finding of compensatory damages.
A plaintiff may recover punitive damages if the defendant acted “with malice or with reckless indifference to the federally protected rights of an aggrieved individual.” 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(b)(l). The availability of punitive damages turns on the defendant’s state of mind, not the nature of the defendant’s egregious conduct.
Kolstad v. Am. Dental Ass’n,
*733
There was sufficient, albeit disputed, evidence to support the jury finding that DuPont intentionally discriminated against Barrios with malice or with reckless disregard for her rights. DuPont was aware of its responsibilities under the ADA. Yet, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, DuPont made Barrios’s job more difficult. The company placed Barrios’s printer over one hundred feet from her desk in spite of her walking difficulties, whereas other lab clerks’ printers were adjacent to their desks. DuPont refused to allow Barrios to demonstrate her ability to evacuate before she was terminated — for inability to evacuate. The company spent years trying to convince Barrios to retire on disability. But the crowning evidentiary blow against DuPont is that after Barrios attempted to get her job back, a DuPont supervisor stated that he no longer wanted to see her “crippled crooked self, going down the hall hugging the walls.” The supervisor’s denial of this remark under oath, like DuPont’s rejoinder to other negative evidence, was subject to the jury’s credibility assessment. The jury likewise could have rejected DuPont’s good-faith defense based on the conclusory assertions by two DuPont employees that they comply with the law.
Cf. Hatley v. Hilton Hotels Corp.,
DuPont alternatively contends that the punitive damages award was impermissible in the absence of compensatory damages; front- and backpay awards are “equitable” remedies, rather than compensatory. Whether this is a correct interpretation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981a is an issue of first impression in our court. We review this legal question
de novo. La. ACORN Fair Housing v. LeBlanc,
The analysis begins with the text of the statute.
Doe v. KPMG, LLP,
*734
DuPont relies upon
LeBlanc
to support its argument that the “equitable” awards of front- and backpay are insufficient to sustain an award of punitive damages.
See
Although
LeBlanc
surveyed the landscape concerning punitive damages under various statutes and around the circuits, the case ultimately ruled on their availability (a) under the Fair Housing Act and (b) in a case where no compensatory damages of any sort were awarded. Under Section 1981a, back- and frontpay awards serve a compensatory function, leading courts to conclude that a Fair Housing Act case is not analogous.
See Corti,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we AFFIRM liability and the awards of back-pay and punitive damages but REVERSE the award of frontpay.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART.
Notes
. See 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(b)(3)(D).
.
See, e.g., Blanks v.
Sw.
Bell Commc'ns, Inc.,
. Because DuPont's briefs argue only for reversal of the judgment, the company has ' failed sufficiently to brief and thus waived any claim to a new trial. Another point of confusion is that DuPont argues that the jury was "clearly wrong” in its verdict. Clear error is not the standard for judgment as a matter of law, but we assume that DuPont's argument is meant to be internally consistent.
. The backpay award was adjusted for the amount of disability compensation Barrios received from DuPont during this period.
. DuPont also challenges the district court's finding that reinstatement was infeasible; however, because the district court’s award of frontpay was an abuse of discretion, we do not address this argument.
.
See Tisdale v. Fed. Express Corp.,
