ORDER
This mаtter is before the Court upon motion of the Defendant Weyerhaeuser Paper Company for summary judgment. For the reasons stated herein, the Defendant’s motion will be granted.
Plaintiff, a former employee of the Defendant, has filed this suit alleging that the Defendant discriminated against him by failing to accommodate his disability and terminating his employment, in violation of the Ameriсans With Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12112 et seq. (“ADA”). Plaintiff was hired by the Defendant at its Hovis Road facility in Charlotte in April of 1990. That facility manufactures container board packaging and is within the Containerboard Packaging Division of Weyerhaeuser Company. Hourly *326 production and maintenance employees at that facility are represented by Local 1821 of the United Paperworkers International Union. Wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment for bargaining unit employees are governed by a collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) between the Hovis Road facility and the Union. The Plaintiff was hired into a job covered by the CBA and was a Union member. At the time he was hired, the Plaintiff disclosed to Katie Barta, the Human Resources Director for the facility, that he was blind in one eye. After a training period, Plaintiff operated a 245 rotary die cutter, a machine with sharp rotating blades. After experiencing some blurred vision and dizziness which interfered with the quality of his work production, Plaintiff was sent to a physician and was ultimately diagnosed as having multiple sclerosis (“MS”). Plaintiffs physician concluded that Plaintiff could not safely operate or work around machinery. The Defendant contends that it then engaged in a process of considering reasonable accommodations, but was unsuccessful in identifying any reasonable accommodation that would enable the Plaintiff to perform the essential functions of an available position for which he was otherwise qualified. Aсcordingly, the Plaintiff was terminated. After seeking appropriate administrative remedies, Plaintiff filed the present complaint.
Defendant first argues that this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over Plaintiffs claim because Plaintiff failed to submit the matter of his termination to the mandatory grievance and arbitration procedures under the CBA. In making this argument, Defendant relies on
Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp.,
[T]he use of alternative dispute resolution mechanisms is intended to supplement, not supplant, the remedies provided by this Act. Thus, for example ... any аgreement to submit disputed issues to arbitration, whether in the context of a collective bargaining agreement or in an employment contract, does not preclude the affected person from seeking relief under the enforcement provisions of this Act.
H.R.Rep. No. 485(111), 101st Cong., 2nd Sess. (1990) reprinted in 1990 U.S.C.C.A.N. pp. 267, 445, 499-500.
As Congress has clearly expressed its intent that the statutory rights and judicial remedies of the ADA cannot bе waived, under Gilmer, the grievance and arbitration provisions of the CBA do not preclude Plaintiff from pursuing his judicial remedies. Accordingly, Defendant’s argument that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction is without merit.
The ADA provides that “[n]o covered entity shall discriminate against a qualified individual with a disability because of the disability of such individual ...” 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a). To state a claim, a plaintiff must be a “qualifiеd individual with a disability”, defined as “an individual with a disability who, with or without reasonable accommodation, can perform the essential functions of the employment position that such individual holds or desires.” 42 U.S.C. § 12111(8).
*327
The Fourth Circuit has developed two analytical frameworks for ADA claims.
Vazquez v. Bedsole,
Under the ADA, a disability is defined as “a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of the major life activities of such individual.” 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(A). The Plaintiff has been diagnosed with MS, a progressive disease of the central nervous system. His symptoms include vision and balance problems, as well as numbness and decrеased sensation on his left side. Prior to the diagnosis of MS, Plaintiff also suffered from blindness in one eye. Plaintiff’s physician restricted him from working around machinery or heights. The Court finds that Plaintiff has sufficiently established that he suffers from a disability.
Plaintiff next has the burden of establishing that he is otherwise qualified for the position in question. To determine whether the Plaintiff is “qualified”, the Court must decide 1) whether he cоuld perform the essential functions of his job, and 2) if not, whether any reasonable accommodation by the Defendant would enable him to perform these functions.
See Tyndall,
A reasonable accommodation is an accommodation that would “enable the employer’s employees with disabilities to enjoy equal benefits and privileges of employment as are enjoyed by employees without disabilities.” 29 C.F.R. Pt. 1630.2(o) App. (1994). This includes reassignment to a vacant position. 42 U.S.C. § 12111(9)(B). Employers must make “reasonable accommodation”, unless the employer can show that the accommodation would impose an undue hardship on the operation of its business. 42 U.S.C. § 12112(b)(5)(A).
The Plaintiff bears the burden of demonstrating that he could perform the essential functions of his job with reasonable accommodation.
Tyndall,
In general, only if an individual cannot perform his current position with a reasonable accommodation does an employer have to consider reassignment to a vacant position for which the individual is qualified. 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, App. § 1630.2(o) (1994). An employer is not required to reassign a disabled person to a vacant position unless the disabled emplоyee is qualified for that position.
Howell v. Michelin Tire Corp.,
*328 The Defendant has produced undisputed evidence of its efforts to consider reasonable accommodations, such as discussing with the Plaintiff, the plant superintendent, and the production manager what positions they believed Plaintiff could perform; preparing for the Plaintiff’s physicians’s consideration written job descriptions and videotapes of the positions Plaintiff believed he might be able to perform; contacting the Job Accommodation Network, a national resource providing information to employers about possible accommodations; and contacting the ADA Helpline, another resource fоr employers and persons with disabilities. After engaging in substantial discussions, evaluating alternative positions, and relying on the medical opinion expressed by Plaintiffs chosen physician, the Defendant concluded that there were no available positions for which the Plaintiff was qualified and which he could safely perform. Plaintiff conceded that he was unwilling to take any position unless his physician cleared him to perform it, and that he and Mrs. Barta agreed that since all jobs in the plant involved working around machinery, he could not perform any of them. Of the few jobs that Plaintiff might possibly have been able to perform safely, there were no vacancies in those positions during the time period between November 1, 1992 (the approximate date Plaintiff was diagnosed with MS) and May 7, 1993 (the effective termination date).
Plaintiff maintains that since he could not perform any of the available manufacturing positions at the Hovis Road facility, that the Defendant is under a statutory obligation to place him either in an available administrative or clerical position at Hovis Road, or to relocate him to another Weyerhaeuser facility that had an available position for which he was qualified. Defendant has produced evidence that during the relevant time period there were no office or administrative vacancies at the Hovis Road facility, and that the Plaintiff was not qualified for or could not safely perform the vacancies in the other Charlotte facilities or that transfer to such positions would have constituted a promotion. Moreover, Plaintiff has not produced evidence or set forth specific facts raising a genuine issue that he was qualified for any office or administrative position or that such a position was vacant during the relevant time period. While he contends thаt he was able to type 60 words per minute, and that he could operate a calculator and ten-key adding machine, he concedes that his typing speed was determined primarily during 3 years of typing that he took 18-20 years earlier in high school. Plaintiff also concedes that he never held a clerical or administrative job or a job requiring typing, and that he lаcked any training or familiarity with computers. Plaintiff argues that he could have been trained for those positions. However, it appears to the Court that imposing an obligation on an employer to retrain a disabled employee in a new line of work goes far beyond the intended scope of the ADA to prevent employment discrimination against qualified individuals with disabilities.
Plaintiffs main contention is that the Defendant was obligated to transfer him to an available position for which he was qualified at another Weyerhaeuser facility. Weyer-haeuser is a large multinational corporation with approximately 300 facilities located in 40 states and 6 countries, and most facilities handle their own hiring of hourly employees. The Defendant has produced uncontroverted evidence that Weyerhaeuser does not have a policy or practice of transferring hourly employees from one facility to another. Employees desiring to work at another facility must reapply at the facility, and qualifications are generally evaluated by local managemеnt. If a person is hired as an hourly employee at another Weyerhaeuser facility, he starts at that facility as a new employee.
The issue in this case is whether the Defendant violated the ADA by terminating the Plaintiff instead of transferring him to a vacant position in another facility. The Defendant argues that as a matter of law it is not required to transfer Plaintiff to anothеr facility to accommodate his disability. Plaintiff urges that a material issue of fact exists as to whether transferring him to another facility would cause Defendant undue hardship.
In the recent case of
Emrick v. Libbey-Owens-Ford Co.,
Because it is the aim of the ADA to merely ensure equality and not preference to disabled employees, an employer is only required to offer transfer to another facility in situations where it is the regular practice of that employer to transfer employees between facilities. To hold otherwise would entitle employees with disabilities to more opportunities for employment than are offered to employees withоut disabilities, and such is not the intent of the ADA.
Emrick,
Similarly, in
Reigel v. Kaiser Found. Health Plan of N.C.,
This circuit has made it clear, however, that the duty of reasonable accommodation does not encompass a responsibility to provide a disabled employee with alternative employment when thе employee is unable to meet the demands of his present position.
Myers v. Hose,
The Defendant herein has produced uneon-troverted evidence that it does not have a policy allowing hourly employees to transfer from one facility to another. The Plaintiff argues that the Defendant’s employment manual specifically recognizes that the Defendаnt will take affirmative action with regard to handicapped employees and that its effort will go beyond any type of minimum requirement in employment practices involving disabled employees. However, the language in the employment manual referred to by the Plaintiff merely sets forth a policy of nondiscrimination. It does not establish a program of affirmative action favoring employees with handicaps, nor does it establish a policy regarding transfer of disabled individuals. Moreover, even if the language in the Defendant’s employment manual could somehow be construed to establish a policy giving disabled employees preferential treatment, Plaintiffs argument was expressly rejected by the Fourth Circuit in Myers. In Myers, the plаintiff attempted to rely on Personnel Rules which provided for an employee to have time to correct a disability. The court held that:
A particular accommodation is not necessarily reasonable, and thus federally mandated, simply because the [employer] elects to establish it as a matter of policy. While the [employer] is free to exceed the requirements of the ADA in fashioning its policies regarding disabled employees, such policies are not the definitive source of the standard by which reasonable accommodation is measured under federal law.
Myers,
In
White v. York Int'l,
Even if the Plaintiff could meet his burden as to the second prong of the
Tyndall
analysis, he could not show that the Defendant’s motive for terminating him was discriminatory. It is undisputed that Katie Barta, the Human Resources Director and the person responsible for terminating the Plaintiff, was the same person who hired the Plaintiff. At the time the Plaintiff was hired, Ms. Barta was aware that he was blind in one eye. The Fourth Circuit has held that in ADA cases a strong inference of nondiscrimination arises when the hirer and firer are the same person.
See Tyndall,
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the Defendant’s motion for summary judgment is hereby GRANTED.
