In September 2024, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) filed lawsuits against three separate employers alleging violations of the Pregnant Workers’ Fairness Act (PWFA), a federal law enacted in June 2023 that requires covered employers to provide reasonable accommodations to employees for known limitations related to pregnancy, childbirth, and related medical conditions.
PWFA Requirements
The PWFA includes the following obligations for employers:
EEOC Final Rule and Enforcement Actions
In April 2024, the EEOC issued interpretative guidance related to the PWFA in the form of a Final Rule. Per the EEOC, the Final Rule sought to provide clarity to employers and workers about coverage and specifics of the PWFA and to provide examples of how the PWFA is meant to work in real-life scenarios. Now, it seems that the EEOC’s focus has shifted from guidance for the new law to enforcement of the new law, as indicated by the EEOC’s recent lawsuits, which have been initiated to “defend workers’ rights under” the PWFA. (See EEOC Press Release).
The trend began on September 10, 2024, when the EEOC filed a first-of-its-kind lawsuit in the Western District of Kentucky, EEOC v. Wabash National Corporation, against a national manufacturing company alleging it denied a pregnant assembly line worker’s accommodation request. According to the lawsuit, at seven months’ pregnant, the employee’s job duties required her to put pressure on her pregnant stomach, resulting in pain and, in turn, fear for the safety of her unborn child. The employee allegedly asked to be temporarily transferred to a different position or to move to light-duty for the remainder of her pregnancy. According to the EEOC’s complaint, the company rejected the employee’s accommodation requests and gave her the sole option of taking an unpaid leave of absence.
A few weeks later, on September 25, 2024, the EEOC filed two additional lawsuits against employers in EEOC v. Polaris Industries, Inc., Case 5:24-cv-1305 and EEOC v. Urologic Specialists of Oklahoma, Inc., Case 4:24-cv-0452. In Polaris, pending in the Northern District of Alabama, the EEOC alleges that the employer, a vehicle manufacturing company, refused to allow a pregnant employee to take absences for prenatal and other pregnancy-related appointments and ultimately terminated the employee for accruing unexcused attendance points under the company’s time off policy. In Urologic Specialists of Oklahoma, Inc., pending in the Northern District of Oklahoma, the EEOC alleges a medical practice denied a pregnant employee’s request to periodically sit and take short breaks to eat and drink throughout the day due to certain pregnancy complications and later terminated her employment.
These lawsuits are in their early stages, and likely far from any final or merit-based determinations. Nevertheless, this flurry of activity and the EEOC’s focus on pregnancy accommodations in the workplace means employers should take note.
Employers should also keep in mind that workplace issues that trigger employee rights under the PWFA may also implicate other applicable employment laws and employer obligations under those laws, such as the Family Medical Leave Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, or certain state laws, if applicable.
The EEOC’s recent activity is particularly noteworthy given that the EEOC’s overall enforcement actions for 2024 are down by about 35% from 2023. The EEOC foreshadowed that aggressive enforcement of the PWFA would be a priority for the agency in the near term in its recent Strategic Enforcement Plan for Fiscal Years 2024–2028 (issued in September 2023). Employers should proceed cautiously when faced with any potential pregnancy-related workplace concerns or complaints, or if questions arise as it relates to the PWFA generally, an employer’s compliance obligations or an employee’s rights under the law.
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