A Colorado hospital won a legally blind employee’s suit alleging it discriminated against her by failing to allow her to work a flexible schedule to accommodate her transportation needs, because the law doesn’t require an accommodation in this situation, a federal appeals court said.
The federal Americans with Disabilities Act and the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act don’t require employers to accommodate employees’ “non-work related barriers created by personal lifestyle choices,” the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit said Thursday.
It affirmed a judgment for Colorado Plains Medical Center reached by a federal district court after a three-day bench trial....