Arnold v. United Parcel, 1st Cir. (1998)
Arnold v. United Parcel, 1st Cir. (1998)
Arnold v. United Parcel, 1st Cir. (1998)
GLEN ARNOLD,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
Defendant, Appellee.
____________________
Before
General Counsel,
Couns
were on brief
Opportunity Commissi
amicus curiae.
Charles W. March and Sunenblick, Reben, Benjamin & March on
________________
___________________________________
br
Geraty, and Pierce, Atwood, Scribner, Allen, Smith & Lancaster were
______
__________________________________________________
on brief
for
New
England Legal
Foundati
amicus curiae.
____________________
UPS
him
refused
mellitus, in
to hire
violation of
(ADA), 42 U.S.C.
12101
because of
his
the Americans
et seq.
______
The
alleging that
disability, diabetes
with Disabilities
district court
that
the
court considered
Act
granted
shown
Arnold's diabetes
in
its treated
state,
medication.
interpretive regulations.
that such an
analysis was
facts he has
"individual
with
disability," and
that
UPS
has failed
demonstrate that it is
UPS
district
argues
disability
ameliorative
the
grant
regulations
that
the
was
proper,
medication.
of
summary
required
of law.
court's
including
its
of
of law.
Arnold's
consideration
of
judgment,
it
analysis
to
to
deny
UPS
contends
Arnold's
that
federal
application
for
as a matter
Facts
Facts
_____
Because this
judgment in
favor of
is
an appeal
from
defendant UPS, we
a grant
of
summary
in the
-22
nonmovant, Arnold.
Dubois v. United
______
______
States Dep't of Agriculture, 102 F.3d 1273, 1284 (1st Cir. 1996),
___________________________
2510 (1997).
Plaintiff-Appellant Glen
As such,
day.
He is also required to
signs of hypoglycemia,
would die in
to four times a
Arnold has
In
mechanic."
time
"cover
mechanics
in four
locations:
an
automotive
mechanic
for
Wells,
Hampshire.
six years,
Maine,
and Dover,
and
had
obtained
an
Arnold met
in
After the
initial
phone conversation,
person with both the human resources representative for UPS, Paul
North
went well.
By
all accounts,
its
both meetings
-33
said that
date.
required to
fill
pass a driving
out additional
Transportation
Arnold
the
test, have
paperwork, and
(DOT) physical.1
driving
test.
then
facility,
Seacoast
physical,
Arnold, responding to
indicated
that
physician
informed him
he
his fingerprints
submit to
On or about
Redicare, for
was
an
sent to
the
DOT
a local
and passed
health care
physical.
a question from
insulin-dependent
that DOT
taken,
Department of
He was
would be
At
the
the physician,
diabetic.
regulations preclude
The
insulin-
informed Arnold that UPS could not hire him because he was unable
alternate position, as
a package "pre-loader," a
an
position which
ADA, 42 U.S.C.
M.R.S.A.
4551 et seq.
________
5, 1997, Magistrate
Decision, ruling
in favor
____________________
of UPS on
the grounds
On May
his Recommended
that, because
1.
by the
-44
Arnold's
diabetes
injections, he
On
May
was
effectively
30, 1997,
the
district
by
insulin
the ADA.
court
controlled
(Hornby,
favor of UPS.
J.)
affirmed
entered judgment in
I
I
Arnold was
his insulin-dependent
limit one
court
analyzing
diabetic condition
or more of his
addressed
the
Arnold's
ADA, because
did not
substantially
The district
question
diabetic
of
substantial
condition
after
_____
limitation
he
took
by
his
diabetes.
this analysis
A
A
the language
Corp. v.
_____
of the statute
Bonjorno, 494
________
itself.'"
U.S. 827,
835 (1990)
(quoting Consumer
________
447 U.S.
102, 108
____________________
2.
interpretation
Act.
Because
guidance to
statute," Soileau
_______
Maine courts
A.2d 70, 74
interpreting the
in
12, 14
reasonable
dispose
disability discrimination,
-55
state
105 F.3d
has
(1980)); see
___
F.2d
within
"the
the law is
sole function
according to
of
its terms."
the
courts is
to
enforce the
statute
242 U.S.
v. Natural Resources
_________________
The plain
produce
an absurd
result or
one
manifestly at
odds with
the
614, 617
Of
(1st Cir.
the
1995).
meaning
of
whole
statute,
Beecham
_______
v. United States,
______________
511
course, we
not
of
focus on
isolated
U.S. 368,
372
"the plain
sentences."
(1994), and
we
Thus, the
look
into a
district court is
statute's
legislative
correct that we
history
if
the
need not
statutory
language is
Leroux, 69
______
F.3d 608, 610 (1st Cir. 1995) ("Plain statutory language does not
prompt
recourse
least in the
to
countervailing
legislative history."),
-66
at
legislative intent
(1st
Cir.
1996).
If
the
text
unambiguously
clear,
the
the
legislature's meaning.
One
legislative
If that
history.
is not
history
reveals an
unequivocal
the
statute
by
the
agency
charged
with
its
enforcement.
F.3d
12, 17 (1st Cir. 1995) (applying the test of Chevron, 467 U.S. at
_______
842-44).
If the plain
court defers
to
language and
legislative history
still
the interpretation
by an
agency charged
with
Id.;
___
B
B
____________________
3.
"[E]ven
the
most
basic
general
principles
of
statutory
Passengers,
__________
overridden
414
U.S.
literal language
undermined Congress'
3,
8 (1st
453,
aim."
458
(1974).
where it
appeared
United States v.
_____________
Thus,
117 S. Ct.
"[w]e
have
inadvertent and
(1997)).
meaning of a statute
Secretary of Health & Human Servs., 969 F.2d 201, 205-7 (6th Cir.
__________________________________
1992); Sciarotta v.
_________
-77
clear,
here:
should
individual
a court,
with
condition or
in
determining whether
a disability,"
his
consider his
condition after
treatment
Arnold is
"an
untreated medical
_________
with
ameliorating
medications?
The
ADA
protects
qualified
individual
with
42 U.S.C.
mean
12112(a) (1994).
"(A) a
limits
one
individual;
regarded
(1994).
order to
physical or
or
more
(B) a
of
mental
the
record of
as having such
An
major
such an
life
under the
activities
42
one of these
ADA.
substantially
impairment; or
an impairment."
be covered
impairment that
If an
U.S.C.
of
[an]
(C) being
12102(2)
three prongs
individual is
in
not
"disabled" within the meaning of one of the three prongs, the ADA
issue to
determine either
whether any
adverse action
has been
the employer
The
statute
does
"impairment," "substantially
all of
the
statute
does not
not
itself
define
the
terms
limits," or "major
life activity,"
In particular,
indicate whether
medications, prosthetic
-88
court in
impairment
major
life
determining whether
and whether
activity.
an individual
such impairment
"The
statute
suffers from
substantially limits
certainly
or 'impairment
Supp. 1420,
not
after treatment'
does
an
say
or
Sicard v. City
______
____
1996).
require
an
evaluation
either
before
or
after
ameliorative
treatment.
If
or phrase,
a court should
508 U.S.
"normally construe
or natural meaning."
Smith
_____
it in
accordance
v. United States,
_____________
F.2d at 706.
But
reasonable
minds
can
differ,
especially
regarding
whether
UPS argues
that
the statutory
language
plainly
and
with
other measures.
In UPS's
words, "substantially
this
formulation begs
might not
impairment
limits means
the
substantially limits."
question.
reference to an
substantially limit
The
ambiguous issue
is
or
a major life
without treatment or
But
activity) means
an impairment
an
after treatment.
-99
The
word
"impairment"
could
conceivably
be
read
to
mean
"impairment
after
ameliorative
court
the
"impairment that
of
condition
is
treated
with
interpreted
absence
underlying
it.
Or
the word
results from
any ameliorative
could
the underlying
treatment,"
be
read
to mean
condition in
as the
EEOC
the
and the
Arnold's
contention that
diabetes
mellitus
protected
by
'substantially
the
--
his
underlying
constitutes
ADA.
limits' may be
an
Similarly,
medical condition
"impairment"
that
"[a]lthough
the
unambiguous in and
--
is
term
of itself, it
nonetheless does not speak to the issue before [us]; that is, the
considered
with
or
without
regard
to
mitigating
measures."
characterized it,
C
C
the
ADA's
Congress
legislative
intended the
history make
analysis of
-1010
it
abundantly
an "impairment"
Both
included in
clear that
and of
the
question
to be
condition,
without
medication,
example,
considering
prostheses,
or
the
other
ameliorative
mitigating
or mental)
effects
measures.
of
For
assessed without
or
reasonable
accommodations,
substantial limitation."
(1989),
would
such as auxiliary
result
in
aids
less-than-
III, at 28
Report);
see
___
H.R. Rep.
No.
101-485,
pt.
II, at
(The determination
individual
within
the
regard
to the
reasonable
whether
scope of
an
ADA coverage
availability
of
mitigating
(1990),
Labor Report")
has
"should be
52
"disability"
assessed without
measures,
such
as
Indeed,
Congress
spoke
directly
to
the
medical
as
the
effects of
House Labor
the impairment
Report at
are
52; see
___
includes . .
controlled by
id. at
___
disability, "even if
51 (Although
medication."
it is
not
-1111
at 22 (same).
These
statutory
definition
of
underlying
medical
without regard
disability
Senate Report
--
an
"impairment
condition, in
to whether
this case
"the effects
of
Arnold's diabetes,
the impairment
are
(contained in the
Report's discussion of
that
controlled by medication."
The
conditions that
that therefore
do
are under
control,
not currently
limit
on
the
basis
of
their
medical
conditions.
For
example, individuals
with
prong 3
controlled
denied
Such
diabetes
jobs for
denials
or epilepsy
which
are
the
are
they are
result
often
qualified.
of
negative
Senate Report at 24; see Arnold v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., No.
___ ______
_________________________
96-294-P-H, slip
op. at 13
5, 1997).
Noting that
history,
view such
legislative
courts should
court relies
on the
above-
quoted passage from the Senate Report to conclude that the EEOC's
interpretation
does not
construction of the
the test of
flow
statute."
rationally
from
843).
"permissible
at 13 (applying
The court
reached this
____________________
4.
Both the House Labor Report, at 51-52, and the Senate Report,
at 22,
as an impairment
under prong
_____
-1212
F.3d
at
Report's
17).
The
allusion to
district
court
for deference
reasoned that
uncontrolled diabetes
in
the
Senate
the context
of
prong
three
demonstrates
that
the definition
Congress
did
to be included
of "disability."
not
intend
in prong one
of
has no
explanation for why the Senate Report had previously said, in its
disability
availability
should
of
accommodations or
does
the court
be
assessed
mitigating
measures,
auxiliary aids."
explain why
without
such
regard
as
Senate Report
both House
Reports and
to
the
reasonable
at 23.
Nor
the Senate
without consideration of
_______
only
since
Senate Report
is not
actually inconsistent
with that
that courts
should focus
on the
could
have a
"disability"
under
both
____
prong
report's
Report) stating
untreated impairments:
the
these
that an individual
one
(having
an
activity) and
___
time;
one does
not preclude
the other.
-1313
The ADA
protects any
individual with
D
D
"'As in all
is
to
interpret the
words
of [the
statute] in
light
our task
of the
Caron, 77
_____
must
F.3d at
be understood
3-4.
in
Thus,
light
"[t]he definition
of
congressional
of disability
objectives
in
Soileau v.
_______
12, 14 (1st
Cir. 1997).
the
require evaluation
ADA to
diabetes
only
after
_____
The district
of an
ameliorative
court's interpretation of
impairment
treatment
like Arnold's
such
as
insulin
Parcel Serv.,
____________
"familiar
128 F.3d
canon
of
legislation," such as
effectuate its
336 (1967).
408,
414 (6th
statutory
1997).
construction
purposes."
Cir.
Penny v. United
_____
______
Tcherepnin
__________
that
It is
remedial
be construed broadly
v. Knight, 389
______
to
U.S. 332,
elimination of
12101(b)(1)
discrimination,
(1994).
In
the thrust
the
of this
context
purpose
of
employment
is essentially
42 U.S.C.
to
condition or
capable of doing
-1414
the
job, with
or without
the help
of medications,
prosthetic
devices, or
and with or
without a
that are
from
beyond the
stereotypic
contribute to,
from
control of such
assumptions
individual ability
of such
society").5
discriminatory
erroneously believe
. . . based
actions
not
individuals to
by
resulting
indicative
of
participate in,
protects such
some
the individual's
on characteristics
individuals and
truly
The ADA
a history
employers
the
and
individuals
who
medical condition
might
renders
her unable to do the particular job for which she has applied, or
794
(1994)).
____________________
5.
to
isolate
and segregate
individuals
with disabilities
social
areas
as
discrimination,
discriminatory
continue
to
be
against
serious
and
12101(a)(3)
("discrimination
in such critical
employment");
disabilities
disabilities, and,
forms of discrimination
problem");
against individuals
with
12101(a)(5)
continually
including
effects
of
encounter
("individuals
various
outright intentional
.
. .
exclusionary
forms
exclusion,
with
of
the
qualification
-1515
Conceptually, it seems
sense,
to interpret
broadly, so
against
the
the words
Act's coverage
discrimination.
Even
"individual
with a
protects more
with
such
disability"
types of
broad
people
view
of
are still
the
individual with a
For example,
job.
42
U.S.C.
Additionally, if
perform
some
of
reasonableness
those
of that
job
functions,
accommodation,
we
will
including its
12111(9),
(10);
see also
_________
definition
of
'handicapped
Arline,
______
examine
480
U.S.
individual'
at
[in
cost
the
and
42 U.S.C.
285
504
("[T]he
of
the
both
qualified
handicapped
relief.").6
and
___
otherwise
are
eligible
for
The
distinction:
structure
the
of
the
Act
term "disability"
supports
is defined
this conceptual
in
12102, a
areas.
The Act thus covers all "disabled" individuals and protects their
rights
to the
extent defined
in
each subchapter.
The
terms
____________________
6.
We use
guidance in interpreting
504 of
the ADA.
-1616
for
12117(b)).
"qualified"
and "reasonable
accommodation"
are
subchapter
defines
and
limits
responsibilities of employers
the
purposes
of
the
Act,
the
defined
This particular
substantive
and employees
rights
and
(or applicants
for
interests of each, in
within the
in
furtherance of
particular
context
of
employment.
of
"individual with
definition
were we to accept
disability"
without considering
unacceptably
the protective
(i.e.,
a broad definition
if we
examine
ameliorative measures),
the
then an
But that
is what Congress
intended.
to the Act
is that "some
or more
the
population
12101(a)(1).
It
as a
whole
is
growing older."
42
U.S.C.
sweep broadly,
of
the
remedial
brief.
statute would
purposes was
be
inconsistent
pointed out
by
with
the
the EEOC
interpretation
Act's
in its
broad
amicus
discrimination in
hiring.
and obtained
But once he
was hired
treatment under
the employer's
health plan,
he would
lose the
-1717
employer
could then
without fear of
he would no longer be
fire him
on
the basis
"disabled."
of his
The
disability
UPS argues that "[t]his is simply not true; such conduct would be
to cover."
prong
one.
"persons
Indeed,
the
House
Report
three,
specifically
as epilepsy or
under
mentions
diabetes, which
________
substantially limit a major life activity" and says that they are
"covered
even
the
if
medication."
Report
effects
of
the
impairment
House Report
at 52
There is
no reason
at 22.
are
controlled
(emphasis added);
by
see Senate
___
not be
remedial purposes of
128 F.3d
the ADA,
see Penny,
___ _____
at 414,
we
Similarly,
plaintiff
UPS's
reading
would treat
differently
not be
who is
also
suffering
condition
as
medications.
diabetic (i.e.,
Arnold)
but
who
according to UPS's
cannot
from the
afford
a plaintiff
same
to
medical
take
his
would not.
-1818
We do
not
prevented
only because he
underlying medical
condition, without
despite
his impairment if
ameliorative treatment).
accommodate him.
court to
determine.
and the
district court's
disabled and
hence not
even a proper
plaintiff under
the Act.
gets
the
to
the
merits
of
alleged
discrimination,
of
the
disease
with
its
treatment,"
1997),
it
96-1057, slip
conflates
determination
as to
issue;
protected
by the ADA
at 15.
Once
two
separate
whether
threshold
F.3d
Matczak
_______
if
one
is
v.
op. at
6 (3d
parts
of
an individual
not disabled,
the
Nov. 18,
ADA.
The
is "disabled"
then
against discrimination.
a person is
Cir.
determined to be
one
is
is a
not
covered by the
in employment
long
as
(inter alia)
she is
qualified
on the basis
for
the
of her
job,
with
disability, as
or
without
-1919
reasonable accommodation.
this
case,
plaintiff
Were
we to
would
have
adopt UPS's
to
prove
position in
that
she
is
therefore
possibly unable
elements of
protective
employer
the
job
could avoid
plaintiff
(with
ameliorative
perform
umbrella.
applicant an
to
from
Thus,
under
of
the
the
ADA's
without
medication.
UPS's
coverage,
interpretation, the
by excluding
without
giving
reasonable
See
___
essential
opportunity to show
or
some
Robert
for the
accommodation),
L.
Burgdorf,
the
Jr.,
with
The
___
26 Harv.
C.R.-C.L. L.
can be addressed
i.e., the
to perform
one or more
Indeed, the
any
accommodations
functions of the
Arnold
needs
articulated concerns
stage where
job.
he is
would
be
too
expensive
of UPS's
UPS
of the essential
burden will be on
accommodation.
the court is
are applicable
at the
-2020
or
But none
threshold
individual is
Thus,
contrary
to
"disability" is most
UPS's
reading,
their
untreated
the
state,
without
ADA's
definition
broad purposes of
the
ameliorative
effect
of
the
in
of
in light
Act, we
conclude that
Congress
intended a
reviewing court
to
evaluate
Arnold's disability
condition
without
based
considering the
insulin medication.
on
his underlying
ameliorative effects
medical
of his
holding to the
contrary.
E
E
point, the
court
also
erred
in
failing
to
afford
adequate
____________________
7.
UPS's
interpretation
could
such
disability
concerns
is able
very
produce
into account.
to use
well
medical
That a
results
Act's attempt
person
knowledge or
with
technology to
that he will,
any sort of
should not
leave
him
subject
to discrimination
disability.
because
has
he
independently
based
on
his underlying
taken
the
initiative
It
and
is hard to
it to their employer
to deny protection
independently to overcome
-2121
in its
guidelines.
the EEOC to
The
"requires" --
format to carry
out"
the
Act.
authority,
which as
the
42 U.S.C.
EEOC has
12116 (1994).
promulgated
Pursuant
regulations,
to that
attached to
the statute.
of whether
an individual
the determinations
has an "impairment"
and whether
that
made
"on a
measures
EEOC
case by
basis, without
regard to
mitigating
Interpretive
1630.2(h)
(1997)
(substantially
insulin would
because
case
Guidance,
(physical
limits)
(noting
lapse into a
the individual
29
C.F.R.
impairment)
that
"a
coma would be
cannot
Part
perform
1630,
App.
and
1630.2(j)
diabetic
who without
substantially limited
major
life
activities
not
to
the
Administrative
controlling.8
Procedure
Nevertheless, such
Act,
U.S.C.
552,
interpretive guidelines
are
"'do
____________________
8.
language
by
the
agency
charged
interpretation is
statute's
permissible
language and
construction
enforcement
legislative history.
is
one
that
is
Id. at
___
if
the
of the
843.
not
"arbitrary,
Id. at 844.
___
"The court need not conclude that the agency construction was the
-2222
constitute a
body of experience
to which
Meritor
_______
Sav. Bank, FSB v. Vinson, 477 U.S. 57, 65 (1986) (quoting General
______________
______
_______
Elec. Co.
__________
v.
Gilbert,
_______
429
U.S.
141-42 (1976));
Grenier
_______
v.
They
deference" as
statute.
long as
Reno
____
v.
it is a
Koray, 515
_____
permissible construction
U.S.
1996)
(holding
that
even
50, 61
of the
(1995);
see also
_________
(1st Cir.
something
as
informal
as
"[a]n
deference,"
deference,"
"not
although
"something
less
than
full
to
Chevron
_______
yet reduced
to specific
regulation"
(citing F.D.I.C.
________
v.
this
court has
See supra at
___ _____
previously "looked
to"
history and
Parts C and D.
the same
Moreover,
body of
EEOC
only
one
it
permissibly
could
have
adopted
to
uphold
the
Id.
___
-2323
App.
addition,
the
bolstered by a
37 F.3d 12,
reasonableness of
the
16 (1st Cir.
EEOC's
1994).
In
interpretation is
the United
ADA's
part of
prohibition of discrimination
state and
based on disability
See
___
on the
28 C.F.R.
Defendant
UPS claims
that
the EEOC's
interpretation
(and,
Department's) reads
statutory
word
impairments.
in Harris v.
______
question.
"impairment"
sentence,
we.
UPS's
to
interpretive
requirement
guideline
____________________
is whether the
treated
or
untreated
requirement pertains to
that
argument
reading
and so do
refers
the words
out
helps
is read to mean
untreated state.
of
the
to clarify
statute,
an
the
EEOC's
ambiguity
in the
9.
UPS itself
relies on
a different section
of the
same EEOC
1630.15(e), in
should be
-2424
proper
relation
to
"substantially limits"
the
impairment.
as referring to the
The
guideline
reads
untreated impairment
decide whether
any
major
the untreated
life
activity
constitutes a "disability"
is a
Id.
___
permissible reading
Surely,
approach.
impairment "substantially
before
the
of the
ambiguous statutory
Indeed,
untreated
as noted
supra,
_____
at least
limits"
impairment
ADA.
This
language.
out this
with respect
to
such an
interpretation specifically
in mind.
See House
___
Labor
UPS further
claim
is also
meritless.
Nowhere
does the
This
EEOC interpretive
apply.
On
emphasize
treated
the contrary,
the
requirement
individually.
(observing that
C.F.R.
Part
"impairment"
case
that
regulations and
every
person's
Appendix to Part
guidelines
situation
be
1630, "Background"
1630,
App.
1630.2(j)
(Determinations
of
by case basis.");
for particular
See
___
the EEOC
individuals but
not for
-2525
may be disabling
others.").
Again, the
us is whether the
UPS's
analytical
substantive
EEOC's
argument
process or
the
between
our
one
hand, and
the
results from
that
process.
The
does not
become a
methodology,
conclusion
reading of
blurs
that
the statute
distinction
on the
an individualized evaluation is
per se rule
_______
applied to
turn out to be
the same.
will
found
probably
be
to
qualify
as
For
the result
example, even
all quadriplegics
"individuals
with
disabilities" under the ADA, but this result does not mean courts
are
applying
per se
_______
rule
rather
than
an
individualized
analysis.
F
F
Finally, the
majority of
federal circuit
courts that
have
that
ameliorative
determining
whether
measures
an
should
impairment
not
be
considered
substantially
limits
in
an
7; Doane v. City of Omaha, 115 F.3d 624, 627-28 (8th Cir.), cert.
_____
_____________
_____
denied,
______
118
(reviewing
Interpretive
S. Ct.
693
legislative
Guidance
statute); Holihan
_______
(1998);
history
is
Harris,
______
102 F.3d
and concluding
permissible
that
construction
-2626
at
520-21
the
of
EEOC
the
366 (9th
Cir.
1996),
cert. denied,
____________
117
S.
Ct.
1349 (1997);
Roth
____
Sutton v.
______
Gilday
______
F.3d
v.
But see
_______
760, 767
(6th Cir.
1997)
(dicta).
UPS
really
argues
follow the
in its
EEOC
brief
that these
interpretation of
the
courts
did not
law but
rather
UPS
is simply
wrong.
"acknowledge"
the "existence" of
principle of law
whether an individual is
therefore
protected by the
cite
EEOC guidelines
principle.
They state a
considered in determining
the
the guidelines.
one
disabled and
as
ground
not to be
-- and then
in support
of
this
of whether [plaintiff] is
disabled does
at
1454; Harris,
______
interpretation
is
102 F.3d
"firmly
at 521
rooted
(concluding that
in
the
ADA's
the EEOC's
legislative
history").
reaching the
same conclusion,
guidelines,
applied full
rather
than
Chevron deference
_______
the lesser
degree
of
to the
EEOC's
deference that
-2727
see also
supra at
22.
But
not undergone
the conclusion
in Harris
remains
________
_____
______
of the ADA
is a permissible one.
to the lesser
to
Meritor
_______
--
giving
interpretation.
interpretation
history,
some
____
Like the
to
be
as outlined
consideration
Harris
______
consistent
supra,
_____
court,
with
and with
to
the
we find
the
EEOC's
the
ADA's
EEOC's
legislative
the overall
protective
We
from
discrimination if he
medical
condition,
limitations
are
is disabled
without
ameliorated
regard
to
through
the ADA
protects Arnold
based on
his underlying
whether
some
medication
of
or
his
other
treatment.
is
to
here,
limited
mellitus.
the condition
presented
namely diabetes
same conclusion if
presented.10
are worthy of
Arnold's diabetes, in
its
____________________
10.
of
For example, we
a
myopic
individual
eyeglasses.
remedy,
The
whose
vision
availability of
such
is
a
in the case
correctable
with
simple, inexpensive
control of all
the kind of
to make correctable
Report at 23,
-2828
myopia
the ADA.11
case is
opinion.
remanded for
remanded
________
further proceedings
consistent with
this
____________________
11.
Arnold
argues that,
amelioration,
even looking
at
his condition
after
ADA is to
limiting effects
-2929