The plaintiff was employed by the defendant to sell insurance door to door, a job thаt required much walking and stair climbing. A series of injuries to her left ankle and right knee culminated in a sеverely sprained ankle when she fell down a flight of stairs. Her doctor advised the company that she could no longer work in a job that required walking; the company eventually tеrminated her employment. She sued under the Americans with Disabilities Act, claiming that the company should have promoted her to sales manager, a job she could do without walking. The company responded both that it had no legal duty to accommodate her disаbility by a promotion and that in any event she was not qualified for the job of sales manager — to which she replied that in that event the company should train her for the *282 position. Thе district court granted summary judgment for the employer.
If an otherwise disabled person cаn perform to the employer’s satisfaction with a reasonable accommodation to her disability, the employer is required to provide the accommodation. 42 U.S.C. § 12111(b)(5)(A);
EEOC v. Humiston-Keeling, Inc.,
But here is the novelty in the case. The plaintiff wants training that will equip her with the qualifications for the job of sales manager that at present she lacks. If all she wanted was an opportunity to compete for the job by en rolling in a training progrаm offered to aspirants for sales manager positions, the employer could nоt refuse her on the ground that she was disabled unless her disability prevented her from participating in the program or serving in the job for which it is designed to qualify participants. But our plaintiff is seeking special training, not offered to nondisabled employees, to enable her to qualify. The Americans with Disabilities Act does not require employers to offer special training to disabled employees. It is not an affirmative action statute in the sense of requiring an employer to give preferential treatment to a disabled employee merely on account of the employee’s disability,
EEOC v. Humiston-Keeling, Inc., supra,
Stutts v. Freeman,
AFFIRMED.
