MEMORANDUM
I have considered the defendant Secretary of the Navy’s motion for partial summary judgment (doc. #39), seeking judgment in favor of the Navy on Count I of the complaint, which asserts various claims under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 701 et seq. The motion for partial summary judgment presents a simple question, requiring a surprisingly complicated analysis: whether a plaintiff asserting a claim of discrimination on the basis of handicap under the Rehabilitation Act must be qualified to perform the position for which he was originally hired or whether he need only be qualified for the light-duty positions to which hе was reassigned after becoming handicapped. For the reasons that follow, I conclude that plaintiffs acknowledged inability to perform the essential functions of his original position does not *934 undermine Ms Rehabilitation Act claims. Accordingly, defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment will be denied.
I.
On October 6, 1980, plaintiff John Dean Taylor was hired as a Rigger Helper at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard (“PNSY”). Taylor was promoted to the position of a Rigger Worker in 1984. In February 1986, Taylor suffered a back injury while working at the PNSY which, as the parties agree, resulted in his becoming a “handicapped individual” within the meaning of the Rehabilitation Act. There is also no dispute that the injury rendered Taylor unable to perform the essential functions of rigger. No longer qualified to work as a rigger, Taylor was placed on leave status and began to receive federal workers’ compensation payments. In October 1986, plaintiffs physician indicated that plaintiff could return to work in a light-duty capacity. Beginning on February 2, 1987, the Navy terminated Taylor’s compensation benefits and returned him to work at PNSY in a variety of temporary, light-duty work assignments (such as a driver, a messenger and a receptionist). 1 While doing the light-duty work, Taylor continued to be formally classified as a rigger, although Taylor’s physician requested official reclassification given his view that Taylor’s back injury was permanent and that he could never again return to work as a rigger. Taylor remained classified as a rigger until he was discharged from PNSY on December 4, 1989, allegedly for having filed false claims with the government. According to Taylor, he has been demed workers’ compensation benefits since his termination.
In Count I of his amended complaint, Taylor alleges that PNSY failed to accommodate his disability and otherwise discriminated against him on grounds of that disability in violation of the Rehabilitation Act. Specifically, Taylor contends that although the Navy initially offered him light-duty work within his medical restrictions in order to take him off the compensation rolls, they subsequently transferred him to inappropriate job assignments (such as doing yard work that required heavy lifting) and harassed him in hopes of effecting his resignation so as to make him ineligible for further workers’ compensation benefits. Then, having failed to force his resignation, the Navy proceeded to terminate him on pretextual grounds. Taylor seeks reinstatement at PNSY in a permanent position consistent with his medical restriction (if such is available at PNSY); he does not seek reinstatement as a rigger.
In the instant motion, defendant claims that Taylor cannot prevail on Count I, and partial summary judgment should be directed in its favor on this count, because Taylor has acknowledged that he was not qualified to work as a rigger, the position for which he was hired and in which he was continually classified. In rеsponse, plaintiff contends that the pertinent question is whether he was “otherwise qualified” to perform the light-duty jobs to which he was assigned after becoming handicapped. 2
*935 ii.
Taylor claims that the Navy discriminated against him based on his handicap in violation of sections 504 and 501 of the Rehabilitation Act. Section 504(a) of the Rehabilitation Act provides in relevant part:
No otherwise qualified individual with handicaps in the United States ... shall, solely by reason of his or her handicap, be ... subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance or under any program or activity conducted by any Executive agency or by the United States Postal Service.
29 U.S.C. § 794(a). Section 501, which applies to federal agencies but not to federal grantees, also places a duty to insure that qualified handicapped individuals are not discriminated against in federal employment (as well as a further requirement of affirmative action,
see infra). Davis v. United States Postal Serv.,
“An otherwise qualified person is one who is able to meet all of a program’s requirements in spite of his handicap.”
Southeastern Community College v. Davis,
the [Southeastern Community College ] Court indicated that an individual may be “otherwise qualified” in some instances even though he cannot meet all of a program’s requirements. This is the case when the refusal to modify an existing program to accommodate the handicapped individual would be unreasonable, and thereby discriminatory.
Strathie v. Department of Transp.,
The Navy’s position can be concisely summarized. Taylor was hired as a rigger and remained formally classified as a rigger; therefore, rigger was the “position in question,” and, even though Taylor might havе been qualified to perform other jobs within the Navy and even though he was assigned to perform light-duty work, Taylor was only protected by the Rehabilitation Act insofar he was “otherwise qualified” to be a rigger. As an initial matter, it is important to note that the Navy’s stance presupposes that it had no obligation under the Rehabilitation Act to transfer Taylor, once he proved unable to perform his original job, to another suitable, permanent position within the agency or to reclassify him within his medical restrictions. That premise may prove to be true once the surrounding circumstances of this case are fleshed out at trial — as they have not been up to this point — but it cannot be sustained categorically, as would be necessary to direct partial summary judgment in favor of the Navy on the limited factual record before me.
Section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act requires federal agencies such as the Navy to “submit to the [Equal Opportunity] Commission and to the Committee an affirmative action program plan for the hiring, placement, and advancement of individuals with handicaps in such [agency].” 29 U.S.C. § 791(b). It is understood that section 501, in addition to requiring nondiscrimination in federal employment, “creates judicially enforceable rights to affirmative action in federal employment placement and promotion.”
Davis v. United States Postal Serv.,
Discussing the requirement of accommodation under section 504, the Supreme Court has suggested, in dicta, that the Rehabilitation Act — while it does not invariably create a right in a handicapped employee to be reassigned to a light-duty job as a reasonable accommodаtion 4 — may, in certain limited circumstances, oblige an employer to accommodate a handicapped employee who is no longer qualified to perform his original job by placing him in a different position.
Employers have an affirmative obligation to make a reasonable accommodation for a handicapped employee. Although they are not required to find another job for an employee who is not qualified for the job he or she is doing, they cannot deny an employee alternative employment opportunities. reasonably available under the employer’s existing policies.
Arline,
In its pretrial memorandum, the Navy described its reassignment procedure at PNSY as follows:
It was the practice at PNSY to make reasonable accommodations for employees with light-duty work restrictions by referring the employees to shops for temporary assignments. PNSY made no permanent light-duty assignments.
Defendants’ Pretrial Memorandum at 4.
7
Still, there is no factual basis in the record demonstrating (1) that this is the Navy’s policy with respect to accommodation of handicaрped workers (as alleged); (2) why permanent light-duty assignments are resisted; (3) whether there were any permanent positions at the PNSY consistent with Taylor’s medical restrictions during the years in question; and (4) whether a different policy with respect to permanent light-duty assignments would impose an undue hardship on the Navy.
8
Cf. Strathie,
However, my decision to deny summary judgment does not hinge on the present uncertainty as to whether the Navy had an obligation to reassign Taylor to a permanent light-duty position. Even if the phrase “position in question” does not include other positions within the agency to which the plaintiff aspires for purposes of a reassignment claim and the Navy, accordingly, had no duty to reassign Taylor to a light-duty position, certainly when an employee has been offered light-duty work — work that he must accept in order to maintain workers’ cоmpensation eligibility — and that employee challenges the conditions of, and the reasons for his separation from, such light-duty work, the relevant inquiry must be his qualifications to perform that work in which he was engaged when the alleged discrimination occurs. No case cited by defendant is to the contrary.
The cases cited by defendants stand collectively for the proposition that an employee is properly fired if that employee cannot perform the essential features of his job. However, the Navy has never suggested that Taylor was discharged because of his inability to perform the job of rigger or even, more broadly, that his qualifications as a rigger had anything whatsoever to do with his discharge. 9 Indeed, the Navy agreed to place *939 Taylor in light-duty assignments despite his lack of qualification as a rigger — or, one might even say, because of his lack of qualifications as a rigger. Still, the Navy submits that Taylor has no protections under the Rehabilitation Act because he is not “otherwise qualified” to be a rigger. Such a construction of the Rehabilitation Act and its regulations — in addition to being undocumented in the case law — would make nonsense out of the Aсt. If one were to accept the Navy’s rigid definition of the “position in question,” an employer who chose to reassign to light-duty work an employee who had become unable to perform his original job would have an unsettling “carte blanche” power over that employee. During the course of the handicapped worker’s light-duty employment, the employer would be able, without any sanction under the Rehabilitation Act, to harass that worker because of his handicap, fail reasonably to accommodate that worker’s disability, оr otherwise engage in handicap-based discrimination simply because the employee was not “qualified” for a position that had nothing to do with his current work. 10 This result is particularly egregious where, if plaintiffs contentions are to believed, PNSY’s temporary light-duty placement system is itself designed to harm disabled workers, and disabled workers such as Taylor, who are forced to accept offers of “suitable” employment in order to remain eligible for workers’ compensation benefits, return to PNSY to encounter inadequate accommodation of their disabilities within their “light-duty” assignments and a hostile work environment. 11 In short, to allow an employ *940 er to operate outside the Rehabilitation Act simply due to the formal job title that the employer has chosen to confer on a handicapped employee contradicts not only common sense, but also the basic promise set forth in the regulations implementing the Rehabilitation Act that “the federal government shall become a model employer of handicapped individuals.” 29 C.F.R. § 1613.-703 (1992).
III.
Conclusion
The phrase “the position in question” should not be defined so as to constrain the bounds of a federal employer’s obligation to make reasonable accommodations in the workplace for its disabled employees, but rather should be interpreted consistently with that duty of reasonable accommodation to ensure that an employer need not retain a worker in a position whose basic functions that worker is unqualified to perform. Therefore, Taylor’s lack of qualifications to perform the job of rigger does not prevent him from claiming that the Navy failed to make reasonable accommodations for his disability when he was assigned to do light-duty work and that the Navy separated him from his light-duty employment because' of that disability. Accordingly, defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment will be denied.
Notes
. For a period of approximately seven months in 1987, Taylor was unable to work at all at PNSY because of a reaggravation of his back injury, and he again received workers' compensation benefits during this time.
. I dealt with this dispute briefly in a September 11, 1992 memorandum granting in part and denying in part defendants' motion for judgment on the pleadings. There I wrote:
[Djefcndants argue thаt plaintiff has failed to state a claim under the Rehabilitation Act because he is not an "otherwise qualified” handicapped individual. "An otherwise qualified handicapped person is one who is able to meet all of a program’s requirements in spite of his handicap.” Southeastern Community College v. Davis,442 U.S. 397 , 406[,99 S.Ct. 2361 , 2367,60 L.Ed.2d 980 ] (1979). On defendants' view, because plaintiff has failed to allege that he can do the work of a rigger, his Rehabilitation Act claims should be dismissed. However, plaintiff's contention is that he is "otherwise qualified" to perform light duty jobs at the PNSY, and so much he has properly alleged.
Slip op. at 11. Thus, the Navy has essentially represented its former argument in much greater detail for this court's reconsideration. As is explained in the text, I remain convinced that plaintiff's Rehabilitation Act claims do not fail as a matter of law simply due to Taylor's concession that he can no longer do the work of a rigger.
. Although section 501 specifically addresses employment of the handicapped by federal agencies, and section 504 only generally addresses "any program" conducted by federal agencies without explicitly mentioning
employment
programs, the parties appear to agree, as have many courts, that section 504 applies also to employment programs conducted by the federal government and federal agencies.
See Smith v. United States Postal Serv.,
.
See, e.g., Bey v. Bolger,
.
Arline,
a suit against a county school board in receipt of federal funds, interpreted the duties of federal grantees under section 504, rather than the duties of federal employers who, under section 501, have additional affirmative obligations towards handicapped employees.
See Southeast
ern
Community College,
Because the Court has ... made clear that the federal employer’s duty is greater than that of the grantee-employer, courts must set the test for the mandated "reasonable” accommodation under section 501 at a higher level of effort than that required under section 504. In the Court’s words, the requisite level of change, adjustment, or modification can be " 'substantial’ and might even involve " 'fundamental alteration[s].’"
Tate,
supra,
at 801-2 (quoting
Alexander v. Choate,
. See Coley,
.This pretrial memorandum was submitted also on behalf of defendant Robert C. Brown, who is not named as a defendant in Count I (containing the Rehabilitation Act claims at issue today).
. See supra note 5, suggesting that a federal employer might have to demonstrate that a reassignment policy more accommodating to handicapped employees would impose an undue hardship on the employer.
. For instanсe, Taylor's qualifications as a rigger might become relevant were the Navy to argue that it had originally believed that Taylor’s disability was temporary and that only when Taylor proved permanently unable to perform the job of rigger did they release him. Although I do not perceive the Navy to be making this argument, it
*939
would go something like the following: (1) Taylor's light-duty assignments were just temporary placements until such time as he might become fit again to become a rigger (not a restructure of the rigger position or a permanent light-duty placement), and (2) PNSY discharged Tаylor when it became clear that he could not work again as a rigger, because PNSY has no permanent light-duty placements and is not required to create a new position. However, even were this the Navy's position, it would still be inappropriate to award summary judgment on the basis of this argument because it poses an essentially factual question: what position Taylor was in when he was discharged (i.e. was he a "rigger” doing temporary odd jobs, or had he been essentially given a new light-duty position?). As illustrated in
Dancy v. Kline,
[B]ecause this is a case stemming from a discharge 'the position in question’ will be the job from which plaintiff was dismissed. The issue at trial will be whether plaintiff's position at the time of his termination was that of a FPO or the 'light duty’ clerical job.
Id.
. Similarly, because Taylor seeks reinstatement in a permanent light-duty position — not reinstatement as a rigger — it is difficult to see why Taylor’s qualifications to perform as a rigger have anything to do with the work which he seeks to continue performing in the future.
Cf. Strathie,
. Title VII concepts are often applied in deciding section 794 cases,
see, e.g., Prewitt v. United States Postal Serv.,
