Aрpellant Simonne Phelps claims that she was dismissed from her nursing position at the Catholic Medical Center (CMC)
1
in violation of Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101
et seq.,
and § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794(a),
2
The district court ruled on summary judgment that Phelps was not a “qualified individual with a disability” because she could not perform the “essential functions” of her job “with or withоut reasonable accommodation.”
Phelps v. Optima Health, Inc.,
Civ. No. 99-227-JD,
BACKGROUND
The following facts are summarized in the light most favorable to the appellant.
*24
Greenwald v. Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corp.,
As a result of a temporary shortage of nurses, Phelps stopped being a medication nurse and began to undertake some patient care in early 1995. Phеlps remained unable to fulfill all the duties of a typical staff nurse, so she shared a patient load with her sister, Suzanne Lemire (who was also employed as a nurse in the rehabilitation unit at CMC). If Lemire was unavailable or otherwise occupied, other nurses would undertake lifting tasks. Although this job-sharing arrangement was never officially reported to either the Employee Health Department or the Human Resources Department at CMC, it was unofficially approved by Simon.
In June of 1997, Jeanne Wolfendale replaced Simon as the nurse manager for the rehabilitation unit. Wolfendale asked Phelps to provide a more recent physician’s report on the extent of her physical restrictions. The report indicated that Phelps could lift twenty pounds frequently, but was unable to lift fifty pounds at all. 3 Wolfendale concluded that, lacking the ability to lift fifty pounds, Phelps was unable to perform the essential functiоns of the clinical nurse position. Phelps was therefore dismissed from her position in the rehabilitation unit on October 27, 1997, but remained employed by CMC.
Immediately after Phelps was notified of her removal from the rehabilitation unit, she met with human resources manager Vicki L’Heureux. L’Heureux reviewed the availablе positions both at CMC and elsewhere in the Optima system, explained the application process for an internal transfer to a new position, and offered to help Phelps find a new position that was compatible with her physical limitations. Phelps indicated that any position would have tо have the same flexibility as to scheduling and the same level of pay that she had at the rehabilitation unit. CMC terminated Phelps on February 25, 1998, without having employed her in a new position.
DISCUSSION
To state a prima facie claim of disability discrimination under the ADA, a plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that: (1) she was disabled within the meaning of the ADA; (2) she was a qualified individual; and (3) she was discharged because of her disability.
Ward v. Mass. Health Research Inst., Inc.,
A qualified individual under the ADA is one “able to perform the essential functions of [her position] with or without reasonable accommodation.” Id. at 33. Our analysis of whether an individual is qualified occurs in two steps: first, whether the individual can perform the essential functions of her position; and second, if she is unable to perform those essential functions, whether any reasonable accommodation by her employer would allow her to do so. Id.
A. Lifting as an Essential Function of Phelps’s Position
The district court held that the ability to lift fifty pounds on a consistent basis was an essential function of the clinical nurse position. Phelps does not disagree with this determination, nor does she suggest that the court erred in its conclusion that she was unable to lift that amount of weight on a consistent basis. Instead, she argues that she was not technically a clinical nurse, but that she held a nursing position that had been created specifically for her physical limitations. The district court found no evidentiary support for such an argument: “It appears to be undisputed that Phelps was working in a clinical nurse I position, shared with her sister, at the time her employment was terminated.”
Phelps,
First, Phelps testified that she was no longer a medication nurse at the time of her termination, and that although she had not considered what her job description was at the time of her termination, she “assume[d] [that she] was a staff RN.” Phelps then indicated that the technical job description “clinical nurse I” was essentially synonymous with the shorthand “staff nurse.” 4 Second, CMC Human Resources Manager Mary Ann Flatten testified that Human Resources had to approve changes to job descriptions or the creation of new positions. It is undisputed that Human Resources never approved, nor was even aware of, the altered nurse position that Phelps describes. All of the differences between her position and that of the other nurses were a result of understandings between Phelps, Simon, and other nurses in the rehabilitation unit, and none were in writing. Third, Phelps testified that there were occasions in which nurses other than her sister had to assist her in nursing duties. The fact that Phelps and Lemire would occasionally work on different shifts suggests that there was no formal and permanent job-sharing arrangement. In short, the evidence clearly indicates that Phelps held the position of clinical nurse, albeit with unwritten mоdifications aimed at allowing her to fulfill most job duties despite her disability.
Although this Court has not yet addressed the issue, several other courts have indicated that — even when an employer and employee have made arrangements to account for the employee’s disability — a court must evaluate the essential functions of the job without considering the effect of the special arrangements.
See, e.g., Basith v. Cook County,
Phelps's basic counter-argument is that the accommodations offered by Simon, her sister, and the rest of the nursing staff distinguished the essential functions of Phelps's position from those of the other nurses; i.e., that for Phelps's nursing pôsition alone, lifting was not an essential function. However, we agree with the Seventh Circuit that evidence that accommodations were made so that an employee could avoid a particular task "merely shows the job could be restructured, not that [the function] was non-essential." Basith,
B. Reasonable Accommodation
Having found that the ability to lift fifty pounds was an essential function of the position held by Phelps at the time of her termination, we next ask whether any reasonable accommodation on the part of her employer would allow Phelps to perform that function. Feliciano v. Rhode Island,
First, appellant contends that it would have been a reasonable accommodation to allow her to continue sharing patient lifting duties with other nurses. Although a reаsonable accommodation may include job restructuring, 42 U.s.c. § 12111(9)(B), an employer need not exempt an employee from performing essential functions, nor need it reallocate essential functions to other employees. Feliciano,
*27
Second, Phelps suggests that it would have been a reasonable accommodation for appellees to allow her to return to her medicine nurse position. Rеasonable accommodation may include “reassignment to a vacant position.” 42 U.S.C. § 12111(9)(B);
Feliciano,
C. The Interactive Process
Phelps also argues that she was denied the opportunity to investigate other vacant positions for which she was qualified because appellees failed to engage in an interactive process to determine appropriate accommodation. Although the EEOC regulations that implement the ADA do not mandate that an employer provide an interactive process,
see Jacques v. Clean-Up Group, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
Phelps has not presented sufficient evidence to meet her burden of showing that she could perform the essential functions of her position, with or without reasonable accommodation. The grant of summary judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Appellee CMC is a subsidiary of appellee Optima Health, Inc. (Optima).
. Claims under Title I of the ADA and § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act are analyzed under the same standards.
EEOC v. Amego, Inc.,
. Phelps later conceded that she had asked the doctor for an optimistic evaluation of her physical limitations; in actuality, she could lift twenty pounds only “occasionally” rather than “frequently.”
. After reading the written job description for clinical nurse I, Phelps testified that "a lot of it [was] very familiar to [her] because that's what an RN does [; i.e., the responsibilities described] are the normal functions of an RN [in] the [rehabilitation unit].”
. The district сourt did not evaluate the quality of the interactive process at any great length because it concluded that Phelps had not met her burden of showing that a vacant position for which she was qualified existed.
Phelps,
. We reproduce here the relevant deposition testimony indicating Phelps's lack of good faith in participating in the interactive process:
Q: “Do you recall [L’Heureux] telling you that you shared some responsibility for trying to find you a new position in the system?”
A: "Correct.”
Q: "Did you agree with that?”
A: "No, I didn't.”
Q: "You felt it was strictly up to the hospital to find a place for you?”
A: "I felt they displaced me and it was their job to find another position within the hospital facility.”
Q: "So you didn't feel like you had an obligation to interact with them in thаt process?”
A: "Not in this situation. I didn’t ask to be terminated.”
Q: "And so you didn't interact with them in this process?”
A: "Correct.”
. Phelps partly premises her argument on the fact that she was dismissed from the rehabilitation unit on October 27, 1997, immediately prior to meeting with human resources personnel. She asserts that, once she had been dismissed, CMC could not have engaged in a true interactive process eventuаlly leading to a new position because Phelps was no longer employed. However, although Phelps was dismissed from the rehabilitation unit in October of 1997, she was not terminated as a CMC employee until February of 1998. We cannot say that appellees’ decision to remove Phelps from a job which she was physically incapable of performing, without actual termination of her employment, constitutes a failure to engage in the interactive process.
