Appendix C to Part 35 - Guidance to Revisions to ADA Title II and Title III Regulations Revising the Meaning and Interpretation of the Definition of “Disability” and Other Provisions in Order To Incorporate the Requirements of the ADA Amendments Act
28:1.0.1.1.36.9.32.1.13 : Appendix C
Appendix C to Part 35 - Guidance to Revisions to ADA Title II and
Title III Regulations Revising the Meaning and Interpretation of
the Definition of “Disability” and Other Provisions in Order To
Incorporate the Requirements of the ADA Amendments Act Note:
This appendix contains guidance providing a section-by-section
analysis of the revisions to 28 CFR parts 35 and 36 published on
August 11, 2016.
Guidance and Section-by-Section Analysis
This section provides a detailed description of the Department's
changes to the meaning and interpretation of the definition of
“disability” in the title II and title III regulations, the
reasoning behind those changes, and responses to public comments
received on these topics. See Office of the Attorney
General; Amendment of Americans with Disabilities Act Title II and
Title III Regulations to Implement ADA Amendments Act of 2008, 79
FR 4839 (Jan. 30, 2014) (NPRM).
Sections 35.101 and 36.101 - Purpose and Broad Coverage
Sections 35.101 and 36.101 set forth the purpose of the ADA
title II and title III regulations. In the NPRM, the Department
proposed revising these sections by adding references to the ADA
Amendments Act in renumbered §§ 35.101(a) and 36.101(a) and by
adding new §§ 35.101(b) and 36.101(b), which explain that the ADA
is intended to have broad coverage and that the definition of
“disability” shall be construed broadly. The proposed language in
paragraph (b) stated that the primary purpose of the ADA Amendments
Act is to make it easier for people with disabilities to obtain
protection under the ADA. Consistent with the ADA Amendments Act's
purpose of reinstating a broad scope of protection under the ADA,
the definition of “disability” in this part shall be construed
broadly in favor of expansive coverage to the maximum extent
permitted by the terms of the ADA. The primary object of attention
in ADA cases should be whether covered entities have complied with
their obligations and whether discrimination has occurred, not
whether the individual meets the definition of disability. The
question of whether an individual meets the definition of
disability should not demand extensive analysis.
Many commenters supported inclusion of this information as
reiterating the statutory language evincing Congress' intention “to
restore a broad definition of `disability' under the ADA. . . .”
Several commenters asked the Department to delete the last sentence
in §§ 35.101(b) and 36.101(b), arguing that inclusion of this
language is inconsistent with the individualized assessment
required under the ADA. Some of these commenters acknowledged,
however, that this language is drawn directly from the “Purposes”
of the ADA Amendments Act. See Public Law 110-325, sec.
2(b)(5). The Department declines to remove this sentence from the
final rule. In addition to directly quoting the statute, the
Department believes that this language neither precludes nor is
inconsistent with conducting an individualized assessment of
whether an individual is covered by the ADA.
Some commenters recommended that the Department add a third
paragraph to these sections expressly stating that “not all
impairments are covered disabilities.” These commenters contended
that “[t]here is a common misperception that having a diagnosed
impairment automatically triggers coverage under the ADA.” While
the Department does not agree that such a misperception is common,
it agrees that it would be appropriate to include such a statement
in the final rule, and has added it to the rules of construction
explaining the phrase “substantially limits” at §§ 35.108(d)(1)(v)
and 36.105(d)(1)(v).
Sections 35.104 and 36.104 - Definitions
The current title II and title III regulations include the
definition of “disability” in regulatory sections that contain all
enumerated definitions in alphabetical order. Given the expanded
length of the definition of “disability” and the number of
additional subsections required in order to give effect to the
requirements of the ADA Amendments Act, the Department, in the
NPRM, proposed moving the definition of “disability” from the
general definitional sections at §§ 35.104 and 36.104 to a new
section in each regulation, §§ 35.108 and 36.105, respectively.
The Department received no public comments in response to this
proposal and the definition of “disability” remains in its own
sections in the final rule.
Sections 35.108(a)(1) and 36.105(a)(1) Definition of “disability” -
General
In the ADA, Congress originally defined “disability” as “(A) a
physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more
major life activities of an individual; (B) a record of such an
impairment; or (C) being regarded as having such an impairment.”
Public Law 101-336, sec. 3 (1990). This three-part definition - the
“actual,” “record of,” and “regarded as” prongs - was modeled after
the definition of “handicap” found in the Rehabilitation Act of
1973. H.R. Rep. No. 110-730, pt. 2, at 6 (2008). The Department's
1991 title II and title III ADA regulations reiterate this
three-part basic definition as follows:
Disability means, with respect to an individual,
• a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one
or more of the major life activities of such individual;
• a record of such an impairment; or
• being regarded as having such an impairment.
56 FR 35694, 35717 (July 26, 1991); 56 FR 35544, 35548 (July 26,
1991).
While the ADA Amendments Act did not amend the basic structure
or terminology of the original statutory definition of
“disability,” the Act revised the third prong to incorporate by
reference two specific provisions construing this prong. 42 U.S.C.
12102(3)(A)-(B). The first statutory provision clarified the scope
of the “regarded as” prong by explaining that “[a]n individual
meets the requirement of `being regarded as having such an
impairment' if the individual establishes that he or she has been
subjected to an action prohibited under this chapter because of an
actual or perceived physical or mental impairment whether or not
the impairment limits or is perceived to limit a major life
activity.” 42 U.S.C. 12102(3)(A). The second statutory provision
provides an exception to the “regarded as” prong for impairments
that are both transitory and minor. A transitory impairment is
defined as “an impairment with an actual or expected duration of 6
months or less.” 42 U.S.C. 12102(3)(B). In the NPRM, the Department
proposed revising the “regarded as” prong in §§ 35.108(a)(1)(iii)
and 36.105(a)(1)(iii) to reference the regulatory provisions that
implement 42 U.S.C. 12102(3). The NPRM proposed, at §§ 35.108(f)
and 36.105(f), that “regarded as” having an impairment would mean
that the individual has been subjected to an action prohibited by
the ADA because of an actual or perceived impairment that is not
both “transitory and minor.”
The first proposed sentence directed that the meaning of the
“regarded as prong” shall be understood in light of the
requirements in §§ 35.108(f) and 36.105(f). The second proposed
sentence merely provided a summary restatement of the requirements
of §§ 35.108(f) and 36.105(f). The Department received no comments
in response to this proposed language. Upon consideration, however,
the Department decided to retain the first proposed sentence but
omit the second as superfluous. Because the first sentence
explicitly incorporates and directs the public to the requirements
set out in §§ 35.108(f) and 36.105(f), the Department believes that
summarizing those requirements here is unnecessary. Accordingly, in
the final rule, §§ 35.108(a)(1)(iii) and 36.105(a)(1)(iii) simply
reference paragraph (f) of the respective section. See also,
discussion in the Guidance and Section-by-Section analysis of §§
35.108(f) and 36.105(f), below.
Sections 35.108(a)(2) and 36.105(a)(2) Definition of “disability” -
Rules of Construction
In the NPRM, the Department proposed §§ 35.108(a)(2) and
36.105(a)(2), which set forth rules of construction on how to apply
the definition of “disability.” Proposed §§ 35.108(a)(2)(i) and
36.105(a)(2)(i) state that an individual may establish coverage
under any one or more of the prongs in the definition of
“disability” - the “actual disability” prong in paragraph
(a)(1)(i), the “record of” prong in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) or the
“regarded as” prong in paragraph (a)(1)(iii). See §§
35.108(a)(1)(i) through (iii); 36.105(a)(1)(i) through (iii). The
NPRM's inclusion of rules of construction stemmed directly from the
ADA Amendments Act, which amended the ADA to require that the
definition of “disability” be interpreted in conformance with
several specific directives and an overarching mandate to ensure
“broad coverage . . . to the maximum extent permitted by the terms
of [the ADA].” 42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(A).
To be covered under the ADA, an individual must satisfy only one
prong. The term “actual disability” is used in these rules of
construction as shorthand terminology to refer to an impairment
that substantially limits a major life activity within the meaning
of the first prong of the definition of “disability.” See §§
35.108(a)(1)(i); 36.105(a)(1)(i). The terminology selected is for
ease of reference. It is not intended to suggest that an individual
with a disability who is covered under the first prong has any
greater rights under the ADA than an individual who is covered
under the “record of” or “regarded as” prongs, with the exception
that the ADA Amendments Act revised the ADA to expressly state that
an individual who meets the definition of “disability” solely under
the “regarded as” prong is not entitled to reasonable modifications
of policies, practices, or procedures. See 42 U.S.C.
12201(h).
Proposed §§ 35.108(a)(2)(ii) and 36.105(a)(2)(ii) were intended
to incorporate Congress's expectation that consideration of
coverage under the “actual disability” and “record of disability”
prongs of the definition of “disability” will generally be
unnecessary except in cases involving requests for reasonable
modifications. See 154 Cong. Rec. H6068 (daily ed. June 25,
2008) (joint statement of Reps. Steny Hoyer and Jim Sensenbrenner).
Accordingly, these provisions state that, absent a claim that a
covered entity has failed to provide reasonable modifications,
typically it is not necessary to rely on the “actual disability” or
“record of” disability prongs. Instead, in such cases, the coverage
can be evaluated exclusively under the “regarded as” prong,” which
does not require a showing of an impairment that substantially
limits a major life activity or a record of such an impairment.
Whether or not an individual is challenging a covered entity's
failure to provide reasonable modifications, the individual may
nevertheless proceed under the “actual disability” or “record of”
prong. The Department notes, however, that where an individual is
challenging a covered entity's failure to provide effective
communication, that individual cannot rely solely on the “regarded
as prong” because the entitlement to an auxiliary aid or service is
contingent on a disability-based need for the requested auxiliary
aid or service. See 28 CFR 35.160(b), 28 CFR 36.303(c).
The Department received no comments objecting to these proposed
rules of construction. The final rule retains these provisions but
renumbers them as paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of §§ 35.108(a)(2) and
36.105(a)(2) and replaces the reference to “covered entity” in the
title III regulatory text with “public accommodation.”
The Department has added a third rule of construction at the
beginning of §§ 35.108(a)(2) and 36.105(a)(2), numbered §§
35.108(a)(2)(i) and 36.105(a)(2)(i). Closely tracking the amended
statutory language, these provisions state that “[t]he definition
of disability shall be construed broadly in favor of expansive
coverage, to the maximum extent permitted by the terms of the ADA.”
See 42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(A). This principle is referenced in
other portions of the final rule, but the Department believes it is
important to include here underscore Congress's intent that it be
applied throughout the determination of whether an individual falls
within the ADA definition of “disability.”
Sections 35.108(b) and 36.105(b) - Physical or Mental Impairment
The ADA Amendments Act did not change the meaning of the term
“physical or mental impairment.” Thus, in the NPRM, the Department
proposed only minor modifications to the general regulatory
definitions for this term at §§ 35.108(b)(1)(i) and 36.105(b)(1)(i)
by adding examples of two additional body systems - the immune
system and the circulatory system - that may be affected by a
physical impairment.
In addition, the Department proposed adding “dyslexia” to §§
35.108(b)(2) and 36.105(b)(2) as an example of a specific learning
disability that falls within the meaning of the phrase “physical or
mental impairment.” Although dyslexia is a specific diagnosable
learning disability that causes difficulties in reading, unrelated
to intelligence and education, the Department became aware that
some covered entities mistakenly believe that dyslexia is not a
clinically diagnosable impairment. Therefore, the Department sought
public comment regarding its proposed inclusion of a reference to
dyslexia in these sections.
The Department received a significant number of comments in
response to this proposal. Many commenters supported inclusion of
the reference to dyslexia. Some of these commenters also asked the
Department to include other examples of specific learning
disabilities such as dysgraphia 1 and dyscalculia. 2 Several
commenters remarked that as “research and practice bear out,
dyslexia is just one of the specific learning disabilities that
arise from `neurological differences in brain structure and
function and affect a person's ability to receive, store, process,
retrieve or communicate information.' ” These commenters identified
the most common specific learning disabilities as: “Dyslexia,
dysgraphia, dyscalculia, auditory processing disorder, visual
processing disorder and non-verbal learning disabilities,” and
recommended that the Department rephrase its reference to specific
learning disabilities to make clear that there are many other
specific learning disabilities besides dyslexia. The Department has
considered all of these comments and has decided to use the phrase
“dyslexia and other specific learning disabilities” in the final
rule.
1 Dysgraphia is a learning disability that negatively affects
the ability to write.
2 Dyscalculia is a learning disability that negatively affects
the processing and learning of numerical information.
Another commenter asked the Department to add a specific
definition of dyslexia to the regulatory text itself. The
Department declines to do so as it does not give definitions for
any other physical or mental impairment in the regulations.
Other commenters recommended that the Department add ADHD to the
list of examples of “physical or mental impairments” in §§
35.108(b)(2) and 36.105(b)(2). 3 Some commenters stated that ADHD,
which is not a specific learning disability, is a very commonly
diagnosed impairment that is not always well understood. These
commenters expressed concern that excluding ADHD from the list of
physical and mental impairments could be construed to mean that
ADHD is less likely to support an assertion of disability as
compared to other impairments. On consideration, the Department
agrees that, due to the prevalence of ADHD but lack of public
understanding of the condition, inclusion of ADHD among the
examples set forth in §§ 35.108(b)(2) and 36.105(b)(2) will provide
appropriate and helpful guidance to the public.
3 The Department is using the term ADHD in the same manner as it
is currently used in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders: Fifth Edition (DSM-5), to refer to three
different presentations of symptoms: Predominantly inattentive
(which was previously known as “attention deficit disorder);
predominantly hyperactive or impulsive; or a combined presentation
of inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity. The DSM-5 is the most
recent edition of a widely-used manual designed to assist
clinicians and researchers in assessing mental disorders. See
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: Fifth
Edition DSM-5, American Psychiatric Association, at 59-66
(2013).
Other commenters asked the Department to include arthritis,
neuropathy, and other examples of physical or mental impairments
that could substantially impair a major life activity. The
Department declines to add any other examples because, while it
notes the value in clarifying the existence of impairments such as
ADHD, it also recognizes that the regulation need not elaborate an
inclusive list of all impairments, particularly those that are very
prevalent, such as arthritis, or those that may be symptomatic of
other underlying impairments already referenced in the list, such
as neuropathy, which may be caused by cancer or diabetes. The list
is merely illustrative and not exhaustive. The regulations clearly
state that the phrase “physical or mental impairment” includes, but
is not limited to” the examples provided. No negative implications
should be drawn from the omission of any specific impairment in §§
35.108(b) and 36.105(b).
The Department notes that it is important to distinguish between
conditions that are impairments and physical, environmental,
cultural, or economic characteristics that are not impairments. The
definition of the term “impairment” does not include physical
characteristics such as eye color, hair color, or left-handedness,
or height, weight, or muscle tone that are within “normal” range.
Moreover, conditions that are not themselves physiological
disorders, such as pregnancy, are not impairments. However, even if
an underlying condition or characteristic is not itself a physical
or mental impairment, it may give rise to a physical or mental
impairment that substantially limits a major life activity. In such
a case, an individual would be able to establish coverage under the
ADA. For example, while pregnancy itself is not an impairment, a
pregnancy-related impairment that substantially limits a major life
activity will constitute a disability under the first prong of the
definition. 4 Major life activities that might be substantially
limited by pregnancy-related impairments could include walking,
standing, and lifting, as well as major bodily functions such as
the musculoskeletal, neurological, cardiovascular, circulatory,
endocrine, and reproductive functions. Alternatively, a
pregnancy-related impairment may constitute a “record of” a
substantially limiting impairment, or may be covered under the
“regarded as” prong if it is the basis for a prohibited action and
is not both “transitory and minor.”
4 Pregnancy-related impairments may include, but are not limited
to: Disorders of the uterus and cervix, such as insufficient cervix
or uterine fibroids; and pregnancy-related anemia, sciatica, carpal
tunnel syndrome, gestational diabetes, nausea, abnormal heart
rhythms, limited circulation, or depression. See EEOC
Enforcement Guidance on Pregnancy Discrimination and Related
Issues, EEOC Notice 915.003, June 25, 2015, available at
http://www.eeoc.gov/laws/guidance/pregnancy_guidance.cfm
(last visited Feb. 3, 2016).
Sections 35.108(c) and 36.105(c) - Major Life Activities
Prior to the passage of the ADA Amendments Act, the ADA did not
define “major life activities,” leaving delineation of illustrative
examples to agency regulations. Paragraph 2 of the definition of
“disability” in the Department's current title II and title III
regulations at 28 CFR 35.104 and 36.104 states that “major life
activities” means functions such as caring for one's self,
performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking,
breathing, learning, and working.
The ADA Amendments Act significantly expanded the range of major
life activities by directing that “major” be interpreted in a more
expansive fashion, by adding a significant new category of major
life activities, and by providing non-exhaustive lists of examples
of major life activities. The amended statute's first list of major
life activities includes, but is not limited to, “caring for
oneself, performing manual tasks, seeing, hearing, eating,
sleeping, walking, standing, lifting, bending, speaking, breathing,
learning, reading, concentrating, thinking, communicating, and
working.” 42 U.S.C. 12102(2)(A). The ADA Amendments Act also
broadened the definition of “major life activity” to include
physical or mental impairments that substantially limit the
operation of a “major bodily function,” which include, but are not
limited to, the “functions of the immune system, normal cell
growth, digestive, bowel, bladder, neurological, brain,
respiratory, circulatory, endocrine, and reproductive functions.”
42 U.S.C. 12102(2)(B). These expanded lists of examples of major
life activities reflect Congress's directive to expand the meaning
of the term “major” in response to court decisions that interpreted
the term more narrowly than Congress intended. See Public
Law 110-25, sec. 3 (b)(4).
Examples of Major Life Activities, Other Than the Operations of a
Major Bodily Function
In the NPRM, at §§ 35.108(c) and 36.105(c), the Department
proposed revisions of the title II and title III lists of examples
of major life activities (other than the operations of a major
bodily function) to incorporate all of the statutory examples, as
well as to provide additional examples included in the EEOC title I
final regulation - reaching, sitting, and interacting with others.
See 29 CFR 1630.2(i)(1)(i).
A number of commenters representing persons with disabilities or
the elderly recommended that the Department add a wide variety of
other activities to this first list. Some commenters asked the
Department to include references to test taking, writing, typing,
keyboarding, or executive function. 5 Several commenters asked the
Department to include other activities as well, such as the ability
to engage in sexual activity, perform mathematical calculations,
travel, or drive. One commenter asked the Department to recognize
that, depending upon where people live, other life activities may
fall within the category of major life activities. This commenter
asserted, for example, that tending livestock or operating farm
equipment can be a major life activity in a farming or ranching
community, and that maintaining septic, well or water systems, or
gardening, composting, or hunting may be a major life activity in a
rural community.
5 “Executive function” is an umbrella term that has been
described as referring to “a constellation of cognitive abilities
that include the ability to plan, organize, and sequence tasks and
manage multiple tasks simultaneously.” See, e.g. National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Domain Specific
Tasks of Executive Functions, available at
grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-NS-04-012.html
(last visited Feb. 3, 2016).
On consideration of the legislative history and the relevant
public comments, the Department decided to include “writing” as an
additional example in its non-exhaustive list of examples of major
life activities in the final rule. The Department notes Congress
repeatedly stressed that writing is one of the major life
activities that is often affected by a covered learning disability.
See, e.g., 154 Cong. Rec. S8842 (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008)
(Statement of the Managers); H.R. Rep. No. 110-730 pt. 1, at 10-11
(2008).
Other than “writing,” the Department declines to add additional
examples of major life activities to these provisions in the final
rule. This list is illustrative, and the Department believes that
it is neither necessary nor possible to list every major life
activity. Moreover, the Department notes that many of the
commenters' suggested inclusions implicate life activities already
included on the list. For example, although, as commenters pointed
out, some courts have concluded that test taking is a major life
activity, 6 the Department notes that one or more already-included
major life activities - such as reading, writing, concentrating, or
thinking, among others - will virtually always be implicated in
test taking. Similarly, activities such as operating farm
equipment, or maintaining a septic or well system, implicate
already-listed major life activities such as reaching, lifting,
bending, walking, standing, and performing manual tasks.
6 In Bartlett v. N.Y. State Bd. of Law Exam'rs,
970 F. Supp. 1094, 1117 (S.D.N.Y. 1997), aff'd in part and
vacated in part, 156 F.3d 321 (2d Cir. 1998), cert. granted,
judgment vacated on other grounds, 527 U.S. 1031 (1999), and
aff'd in part, vacated in part, 226 F.3d 69 (2d Cir. 2000),
then-Judge Sotomayor stated, “[I]n the modern era, where
test-taking begins in the first grade, and standardized tests are a
regular and often life-altering occurrence thereafter, both in
school and at work, I find test-taking is within the ambit of
`major life activity.' ” See also Rawdin v. American Bd.
of Pediatrics, 985 F. Supp. 2d 636 (E.D. Pa. 2013), aff'd.
on other grounds, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 17002 (3d Cir. Sept. 3,
2014).
The commenters' suggested additions also implicate the
operations of various bodily systems that may already be recognized
as major life activities. See discussion of §§
35.108(c)(1)(ii) and 36.105(c)(1)(ii), below. For example, it is
the Department's view that individuals who have cognitive or other
impairments that affect the range of abilities that are often
described as part of “executive function” will likely be able to
assert that they have impairments that substantially limit brain
function, which is one of the major bodily functions listed among
the examples of major life activities.
Examples of Major Life Activities - Operations of a Major Bodily
Function
In the NPRM, the Department proposed revising the regulatory
definitions of disability at §§ 35.108(c)(1)(ii) and
36.105(c)(1)(ii) to make clear that the operations of major bodily
functions are major life activities, and to include a
non-exhaustive list of examples of major bodily functions,
consistent with the language of the ADA as amended. Because the
statutory list is non-exhaustive, the Department also proposed
further expanding the list to include the following examples of
major bodily functions: The functions of the special sense organs
and skin, genitourinary, cardiovascular, hemic, lymphatic, and
musculoskeletal systems. These six major bodily functions also are
specified in the EEOC title I final regulation. 29 CFR
1630.2(i)(1)(i).
One commenter objected to the Department's inclusion of
additional examples of major life activities in both these lists,
suggesting that the Department include only those activities and
conditions specifically set forth in the ADA as amended. The
Department believes that providing other examples of major life
activities, including major bodily functions, is within the
Attorney General's authority to both interpret titles II and III of
the ADA and promulgate implementing regulations and that these
examples provide helpful guidance to the public. Therefore, the
Department declines to limit its lists of major life activities to
those specified in the statute. Further, the Department notes that
even the expanded lists of major life activities and major bodily
functions are illustrative and non-exhaustive. The absence of a
particular life activity or bodily function from the list should
not create a negative implication as to whether such activity or
function constitutes a major life activity under the statute or the
implementing regulation.
Rules of Construction for Major Life Activities
In the NPRM, proposed §§ 35.108(c)(2) and 36.105(c)(2) set out
two specific principles applicable to major life activities: “[i]n
determining other examples of major life activities, the term
`major' shall not be interpreted strictly to create a demanding
standard for disability,” and “[w]hether an activity is a `major
life activity' is not determined by reference to whether it is of
`central importance to daily life.' ” The proposed language
furthered a main purpose of the ADA Amendments Act - to reject the
standards enunciated by the Supreme Court in Toyota Motor
Manufacturing, Kentucky, Inc. v. Williams that (1)
strictly interpreted the terms “substantially” and “major” in the
definition of “disability” to create a demanding standard for
qualifying as disabled under the ADA, and that (2) required an
individual to have an impairment that prevents or severely
restricts the individual from doing activities that are of central
importance to most people's daily lives to be considered as
“substantially limited” in performing a major life activity under
the ADA. Public Law 110-325, sec. 2(b)(4).
The Department did not receive any comments objecting to its
proposed language. In the final rule, the Department retained these
principles but has numbered each principle individually and deemed
them “rules of construction” because they are intended to inform
the determination of whether a particular activity is a major life
activity.
Sections 35.108(d)(1) and 36.105(d)(1) - Substantially Limits
Overview. The ADA as amended directs that the term
“substantially limits” shall be “interpreted consistently with the
findings and purposes of the ADA Amendments Act.” 42 U.S.C.
12102(4)(B). See also Findings and Purposes of the ADA
Amendments Act, Public Law 110-325, sec. 2(a)-(b). In the NPRM, the
Department proposed to add nine rules of construction at §§
35.108(d) and 36.105(d) clarifying how to interpret the meaning of
“substantially limits” when determining whether an individual's
impairment substantially limits a major life activity. These rules
of construction are based on the requirements of the ADA as amended
and the clear mandates of the legislative history. Due to the
insertion of the rules of construction, these provisions are
renumbered in the final rule.
Sections 35.108(d)(1)(i) and 36.105(d)(1)(i) - Broad Construction,
Not a Demanding Standard
In accordance with Congress's overarching directive to construe
the term “disability” broadly, see 42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(A),
the Department, in its NPRM, proposed §§ 35.108(d)(1)(i) and
36.105(d)(1)(i), which state: “The term `substantially limits'
shall be construed broadly in favor of expansive coverage, to the
maximum extent permitted by the terms of the ADA.” These provisions
are also rooted in the Findings and Purposes of the ADA Amendments
Act, in which Congress instructed that “the question of whether an
individual's impairment is a disability under the ADA should not
demand extensive analysis.” See Public Law 110-325, sec.
2(b)(1), (4)-(5).
Several commenters on these provisions supported the
Department's proposal to include these rules of construction,
noting that they were in keeping with both the statutory language
and Congress's intent to broaden the definition of “disability” and
restore expansive protection under the ADA. Some of these
commenters stated that, even after the passage of the ADA
Amendments Act, some covered entities continued to apply a narrow
definition of “disability.”
Other commenters expressed concerns that the proposed language
would undermine congressional intent by weakening the meaning of
the word “substantial.” One of these commenters asked the
Department to define the term “substantially limited” to include an
element of materiality, while other commenters objected to the
breadth of these provisions and argued that it would make the pool
of people who might claim disabilities too large, allowing those
without substantial limitations to be afforded protections under
the law. Another commenter expressed concern about the application
of the regulatory language to the diagnosis of learning
disabilities and ADHD.
The Department considered all of these comments and declines to
provide a definition of the term “substantially limits” or make any
other changes to these provisions in the final rule. The Department
notes that Congress considered and expressly rejected including
language defining the term “substantially limits”: “We have
concluded that adopting a new, undefined term that is subject to
widely disparate meanings is not the best way to achieve the goal
of ensuring consistent and appropriately broad coverage under this
Act. The resulting need for further judicial scrutiny and
construction will not help move the focus from the threshold issue
of disability to the primary issue of discrimination.” 154 Cong.
Rec. S8441. (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008) (Statement of the
Managers).
The Department believes that the nine rules of construction
interpreting the term “substantially limits” provide ample guidance
on determining whether an impairment substantially limits a major
life activity and are sufficient to ensure that covered entities
will be able to understand and apply Congress's intentions with
respect to the breadth of the definition of “disability.”
Moreover, the commenters' arguments that these provisions would
undermine congressional intent are unsupported. To the contrary,
Congress clearly intended the ADA Amendments Act to expand
coverage: “The managers have introduced the ADA Amendments Act of
2008 to restore the proper balance and application of the ADA by
clarifying and broadening the definition of disability, and to
increase eligibility for the protections of the ADA. It is our
expectation that because this bill makes the definition of
disability more generous, some people who were not covered before
will now be covered.” 154 Cong. Rec. S8441 (daily ed. Sept. 16,
2008) (Statement of the Managers).
The Department has also considered the comments expressed about
the interplay between the proposed regulatory language and the
diagnosis of learning disabilities and ADHD disorders. The
Department believes that the revised definition of “disability,”
including, in particular, the provisions construing “substantially
limits,” strikes the appropriate balance to effectuate Congress's
intent when it passed the ADA Amendments Act, and will not modify
its regulatory language in response to these comments.
Sections 35.108(d)(1)(ii) and 36.105(d)(1)(ii) - Primary Object of
ADA Cases
In the ADA Amendments Act, Congress directed that rules of
construction should ensure that “substantially limits” is construed
in accordance with the findings and purposes of the statute.
See 42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(B). One of the purposes of the Act
was to convey that “the primary object of attention in cases
brought under the ADA should be whether entities covered under the
ADA have complied with the obligations and to convey that the
question of whether an individuals' impairment is a disability
should not demand extensive analysis.” Public Law 110-325, sec.
2(b)(5). The legislative history clarifies that: “Through this
broad mandate [of the ADA], Congress sought to protect anyone who
is treated less favorably because of a current, past, or perceived
disability. Congress did not intend for the threshold question of
disability to be used as a means of excluding individuals from
coverage. Nevertheless, as the courts began interpreting and
applying the definition of disability strictly, individuals have
been excluded from the protections that the ADA affords because
they are unable to meet the demanding judicially imposed standard
for qualifying as disabled.”). H.R. Rep. No. 110-730, pt. 2, at 5
(2008) (House Committee on the Judiciary).
In keeping with Congress's intent and the language of the ADA
Amendments Act, the rules of construction at proposed §§
35.108(d)(1)(iii) and 36.105(d)(1)(iii) make clear that the primary
object of attention in ADA cases should be whether public or other
covered entities have complied with their obligations and whether
discrimination has occurred, not the extent to which an
individual's impairment substantially limits a major life activity.
In particular, the threshold issue of whether an impairment
substantially limits a major life activity should not demand
extensive analysis.
A number of commenters expressed support for these rules of
construction, noting that they reinforced Congress's intent in
ensuring that the primary focus will be on compliance. Several
commenters objected to the use of the word “cases” in these
provisions, stating that it lacked clarity. The word “cases” tracks
the language of the ADA Amendments Act and the Department declines
to change the term.
A few commenters objected to these provisions because they
believed that the language would be used to supersede or otherwise
change the required analysis of requests for reasonable
modifications or testing accommodations. See 28 CFR
35.130(b)(7), 36.302, 36.309. The Department disagrees with these
commenters. These rules of construction relate only to the
determination of coverage under the ADA. They do not change the
analysis of whether a discriminatory act has taken place, including
the determination as to whether an individual is entitled to a
reasonable modification or testing accommodation. See
discussion of §§ 35.108(d)(1)(vii) and 36.105(d)(1)(vii) below.
The Department retained the language of these rules of
construction in the final rule except that in the title III
regulatory text it has changed the reference from “covered entity”
to “public accommodation.” The Department also renumbered these
provisions as §§ 35.108(d)(1)(ii) and 36.105(d)(1)(ii).
Sections 35.108(d)(1)(iii) and 36.105(d)(1)(iii) - Impairment Need
Not Substantially Limit More Than One Major Life Activity
Proposed §§ 35.108(d)(1)(viii) and 36.105(d)(1)(viii) stated
that “[a]n impairment that substantially limits one major life
activity need not substantially limit other major life activities
in order to be considered a substantially limiting impairment.”
See 42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(C). This language reflected the
statutory intent to reject court decisions that had required
individuals to show that an impairment substantially limits more
than one major life activity. See 154 Cong. Rec. S8841-44
(daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008) (Statement of the Managers). Applying
this principle, for example, an individual seeking to establish
coverage under the ADA need not show a substantial limitation in
the ability to learn if that individual is substantially limited in
another major life activity, such as walking, or the functioning of
the nervous or endocrine systems. The proposed rule also was
intended to clarify that the ability to perform one or more
particular tasks within a broad category of activities does not
preclude coverage under the ADA. See H.R. Rep. No. 110-730,
pt. 2, at 19 & n.52 (2008) (House Committee on the Judiciary). For
instance, an individual with cerebral palsy could have a capacity
to perform certain manual tasks yet nonetheless show a substantial
limitation in the ability to perform a “broad range” of manual
tasks.
The Department received one comment specifically supporting this
provision and none opposing it. The Department is retaining this
language in the final rule although it is renumbered and is found
at §§ 35.108(d)(1)(iii) and 36.105(d)(1)(iii).
Sections 35.108(d)(1)(iv) and 36.105(d)(1)(iv) - Impairments That
Are Episodic or in Remission
The ADA as amended provides that “an impairment that is episodic
or in remission is a disability if it would substantially limit a
major life activity when active.”
42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(D). In the NPRM, the Department proposed §§
35.108(d)(1)(vii) and 36.105(d)(1)(vii) to directly incorporate
this language. These provisions are intended to reject the
reasoning of court decisions concluding that certain individuals
with certain conditions - such as epilepsy or post traumatic stress
disorder - were not protected by the ADA because their conditions
were episodic or intermittent. The legislative history provides
that “[t]his . . . rule of construction thus rejects the reasoning
of the courts in cases like Todd v. Academy Corp.
[57 F. Supp. 2d 448, 453 (S.D. Tex. 1999)] where the court found
that the plaintiff's epilepsy, which resulted in short seizures
during which the plaintiff was unable to speak and experienced
tremors, was not sufficiently limiting, at least in part because
those seizures occurred episodically. It similarly rejects the
results reached in cases [such as Pimental v.
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Clinic, 236 F. Supp. 2d 177, 182-83
(D.N.H. 2002)] where the courts have discounted the impact of an
impairment [such as cancer] that may be in remission as too
short-lived to be substantially limiting. It is thus expected that
individuals with impairments that are episodic or in remission
(e.g., epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, cancer) will be able to
establish coverage if, when active, the impairment or the manner in
which it manifests (e.g., seizures) substantially limits a major
life activity.” H.R. Rep. No. 110-730, pt. 2, at 19-20 (2008)
(House Committee on the Judiciary).
Some examples of impairments that may be episodic include
hypertension, diabetes, asthma, major depressive disorder, bipolar
disorder, and schizophrenia. The fact that the periods during which
an episodic impairment is active and substantially limits a major
life activity may be brief or occur infrequently is no longer
relevant to determining whether the impairment substantially limits
a major life activity. For example, a person with post-traumatic
stress disorder who experiences intermittent flashbacks to
traumatic events is substantially limited in brain function and
thinking.
The Department received three comments in response to these
provisions. Two commenters supported this provision and one
commenter questioned about how school systems should provide
reasonable modifications to students with disabilities that are
episodic or in remission. As discussed elsewhere in this guidance,
the determination of what is an appropriate modification is
separate and distinct from the determination of whether an
individual is covered by the ADA, and the Department will not
modify its regulatory language in response to this comment.
Sections 35.108(d)(1)(v) and 36.105(d)(1)(v) - Comparisons to Most
People in the Population, and Impairment Need Not Prevent or
Significantly or Severely Restrict a Major Life Activity
In the legislative history of the ADA Amendments Act, Congress
explicitly recognized that it had always intended that
determinations of whether an impairment substantially limits a
major life activity should be based on a comparison to most people
in the population. The Senate Managers Report approvingly
referenced the discussion of this requirement in the committee
report from 1989. See 154 Cong. Rec. S8842 (daily ed. Sept.
16, 2008) (Statement of the Managers) (citing S. Rep. No. 101-116,
at 23 (1989)). The preamble to the Department's 1990 title II and
title III regulations also referenced that the impact of an
individual's impairment should be based on a comparison to most
people. See 56 FR 35694, 35699 (July 26, 1991).
Consistent with its longstanding intent, Congress directed, in
the ADA Amendments Act, that disability determinations “should not
demand extensive analysis” and that impairments do not need to rise
to the level of “prevent[ing] or severely restrict[ing] the
individual from doing activities that are of central importance to
most people's daily lives.” See Public Law 110-325, sec.
2(b)(4)-(5). In giving this direction, Congress sought to correct
the standard that courts were applying to determinations of
disability after Toyota, which had created “a situation in
which physical or mental impairments that would previously have
been found to constitute disabilities are not considered
disabilities under the Supreme Court's narrower standard.” 154
Cong. Rec. S8840-8841 (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008) (Statement of the
Managers). The ADA Amendments Act thus abrogates Toyota's
holding by mandating that “substantially limited” must no longer
create “an inappropriately high level of limitation.” See
Public Law 110-325, sec. 2(b)(4)-(5) and 42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(B). For
example, an individual with carpal tunnel syndrome, a physical
impairment, can demonstrate that the impairment substantially
limits the major life activity of writing even if the impairment
does not prevent or severely restrict the individual from
writing.
Accordingly, proposed §§ 35.108(d)(1)(ii) and 36.105(d)(1)(ii)
state that an impairment is a disability if it substantially limits
the ability of an individual to perform a major life activity as
compared to most people in the general population. However, an
impairment does not need to prevent, or significantly or severely
restrict, an individual from performing a major life activity in
order to be substantially limiting. The proposed language in the
NPRM was rooted in the corrective nature of the ADA Amendments Act
and its explicit rejection of the strict standards imposed under
Toyota and its progeny. See Public Law 110-325, sec.
2(b)(4).
The Department received several comments on these provisions,
none of which recommended modification of the regulatory language.
A few commenters raised concerns that are further addressed in the
“Condition, manner, or duration” section below, regarding the
Department's inclusion in the NPRM preamble of a reference to
possibly using similarly situated individuals as the basis of
comparison. The Department has removed this discussion and
clarified that it does not endorse reliance on similarly situated
individuals to demonstrate substantial limitations. For example,
the Department recognizes that when determining whether an elderly
person is substantially limited in a major life activity, the
proper comparison is most people in the general population, and not
similarly situated elderly individuals. Similarly, someone with
ADHD should be compared to most people in the general population,
most of whom do not have ADHD. Other commenters expressed interest
in the possibility that, in some cases, evidence to support an
assertion that someone has an impairment might simultaneously be
used to demonstrate that the impairment is substantially limiting.
These commenters approvingly referenced the EEOC's interpretive
guidance for its ADA Amendments Act regulation, which provided an
example of an individual with a learning disability. See 76
FR 16978, 17009 (Mar. 25, 2011). In that example, evidence gathered
to demonstrate the impairment of a learning disability showed a
discrepancy between the person's age, measured intelligence, and
education and that person's actual versus expected achievement. The
EEOC noted that such individuals also likely would be able to
demonstrate substantial limitations caused by that impairment to
the major life activities of learning, reading, or thinking, when
compared to most people in the general population, especially when
the ameliorative effects of mitigating measures were set aside. The
Department concurs with this view.
Finally, the Department added an explicit statement recognizing
that not every impairment will constitute a disability within the
meaning of the section. This language echoes the Senate Statement
of Managers, which clarified that: “[N]ot every individual with a
physical or mental impairment is covered by the first prong of the
definition of disability in the ADA. An impairment that does not
substantially limit a major life activity is not a disability under
this prong.” 154 Cong. Rec. S8841 (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008)
(Statement of the Managers).
Sections 35.108(d)(1)(vi) and 36.105(d)(1)(vi) - “Substantially
Limits” Shall Be Interpreted To Require a Lesser Degree of
Functional Limitation Than That Required Prior to the ADA
Amendments Act
In the NPRM, proposed §§ 35.108(d)(1)(iv) and 36.105(d)(1)(iv)
state that determining whether an impairment substantially limits a
major life activity requires an individualized assessment. But, the
interpretation and application of the term “substantially limits”
for this assessment requires a lower degree of functional
limitation than the standard applied prior to the ADA Amendments
Act.
These rules of construction reflect Congress's concern that
prior to the adoption of the ADA Amendments Act, courts were using
too high a standard to determine whether an impairment
substantially limited a major life activity. See Public Law
110-325, sec. 2(b)(4)-(5); see also 154 Cong. Rec. S8841
(daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008) (Statement of the Managers) (“This bill
lowers the standard for determining whether an impairment
constitute[s] a disability and reaffirms the intent of Congress
that the definition of disability in the ADA is to be interpreted
broadly and inclusively.”).
The Department received no comments on these provisions. The
text of these provisions is unchanged in the final rule, although
they have been renumbered as §§ 35.108(d)(1)(vi) and
36.105(d)(1)(vi).
Sections §§ 35.108(d)(1)(vii) and 36.105(d)(1)(vii) - Comparison of
Individual's Performance of Major Life Activity Usually Will Not
Require Scientific, Medical, or Statistical Analysis
In the NPRM, the Department proposed at §§ 35.108(d)(1)(v) and
36.105(d)(1)(v) rules of construction making clear that the
comparison of an individual's performance of a major life activity
to that of most people in the general population usually will not
require scientific, medical, or statistical evidence. However, this
rule is not intended to prohibit or limit the use of scientific,
medical, or statistical evidence in making such a comparison where
appropriate.
These rules of construction reflect Congress's rejection of the
demanding standards of proof imposed upon individuals with
disabilities who tried to assert coverage under the ADA prior to
the adoption of the ADA Amendments Act. In passing the Act,
Congress rejected the idea that the disability determination should
be “an onerous burden for those seeking accommodations or
modifications.” See 154 Cong. Rec. S8842 (daily ed. Sept.
16, 2008) (Statement of the Managers). These rules make clear that
in most cases, people with impairments will not need to present
scientific, medical, or statistical evidence to support their
assertion that an impairment is substantially limiting compared to
most people in the general population. Instead, other types of
evidence that are less onerous to collect, such as statements or
affidavits of affected individuals, school records, or
determinations of disability status under other statutes, should,
in most cases, be considered adequate to establish that an
impairment is substantially limiting. The Department's proposed
language reflected Congress's intent to ensure that individuals
with disabilities are not precluded from seeking protection under
the ADA because of an overbroad, burdensome, and generally
unnecessary requirement.
The Department received several comments in support of these
provisions and a number of comments opposing all or part of them.
One commenter representing individuals with disabilities expressed
support for the proposed language, noting that “[m]any people with
disabilities have limited resources and requiring them to hire an
expert witness to confirm their disability would pose an
insurmountable barrier that could prevent them from pursuing their
ADA cases.”
Commenters representing testing entities objected to this
language arguing that they needed scientific, medical, or
statistical evidence in order to determine whether an individual
has a learning disability or ADHD. These commenters argued that,
unlike other disabilities, assessment of learning disabilities and
ADHD require scientific, medical, or statistical evidence because
such disabilities have no overt symptoms, cannot be readily
observed, and lack medical or scientific verifiability. One
commenter stated that the proposed language “favor[s] expedience
over evidence-based guidance.”
In opposing these provisions, these commenters appear to
conflate proof of the existence of an impairment with the analysis
of how an impairment substantially limits a major life activity.
These provisions address only how to evaluate whether an impairment
substantially limits a major life activity, and the Department's
proposed language appropriately reflects Congress's intent to
ensure that individuals with disabilities are not precluded from
seeking protection under the ADA because of overbroad, burdensome,
and generally unnecessary evidentiary requirements. Moreover, the
Department disagrees with the commenters' suggestion that an
individual with ADHD or a specific learning disability can never
demonstrate how the impairment substantially limits a major life
activity without scientific, medical, or statistical evidence.
Scientific, medical, or statistical evidence usually will not be
necessary to determine whether an individual with a disability is
substantially limited in a major life activity. However, as the
rule notes, such evidence may be appropriate in some
circumstances.
One commenter suggested that the words “where appropriate” be
deleted from these provisions in the final rule out of concern that
they may be used to preclude individuals with disabilities from
proffering scientific or medical evidence in support of a claim of
coverage under the ADA. The Department disagrees with the
commenter's reading of these provisions. Congress recognized that
some people may choose to support their claim by presenting
scientific or medical evidence and made clear that “plaintiffs
should not be constrained from offering evidence needed to
establish that their impairment is substantially limiting.”
See 154 Cong. Rec. S8842 (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008)
(Statement of the Managers). The language “where appropriate”
allows for those circumstances where an individual chooses to
present such evidence, but makes clear that in most cases
presentation of such evidence shall not be necessary.
Finally, although the NPRM did not propose any changes with
respect to the title III regulatory requirements applicable to the
provision of testing accommodations at 28 CFR 36.309, one commenter
requested revisions to § 36.309 to acknowledge the changes to
regulatory language in the definition of “disability.” Another
commenter noted that the proposed changes to the regulatory
definition of “disability” warrant new agency guidance on how the
ADA applies to requests for testing accommodations.
The Department does not consider it appropriate to include
provisions related to testing accommodations in the definitional
sections of the ADA regulations. The determination of disability,
and thus coverage under the ADA, is governed by the statutory and
regulatory definitions and the related rules of construction. Those
provisions do not speak to what testing accommodations an
individual with a disability is entitled to under the ADA nor to
the related questions of what a testing entity may request or
require from an individual with a disability who seeks testing
accommodations. Testing entities' substantive obligations are
governed by 42 U.S.C. 12189 and the implementing regulation at 28
CFR 36.309. The implementing regulation clarifies that private
entities offering covered examinations need to make sure that any
request for required documentation is reasonable and limited to the
need for the requested modification, accommodation, or auxiliary
aid or service. Furthermore, when considering requests for
modifications, accommodations, or auxiliary aids or services, the
entity should give considerable weight to documentation of past
modifications, accommodations, or auxiliary aids or services
received in similar testing situations or provided in response to
an Individualized Education Program (IEP) provided under the IDEA
or a plan describing services provided under section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (often referred as a Section 504
Plan).
Contrary to the commenters' suggestions, there is no conflict
between the regulation's definitional provisions and title III's
testing accommodation provisions. The first addresses the core
question of who is covered under the definition of “disability,”
while the latter sets forth requirements related to documenting the
need for particular testing accommodations. To the extent that
testing entities are urging conflation of the analysis for
establishing disability with that for determining required testing
accommodations, such an approach would contradict the clear
delineation in the statute between the determination of disability
and the obligations that ensue.
Accordingly, in the final rule, the text of these provisions is
largely unchanged, except that the provisions are renumbered as §§
35.108(d)(1)(vii) and 36.108(d)(1)(vii), and the Department added
“the presentation of,” in the second sentence, which was included
in the corresponding provision of the EEOC final rule. See
29 CFR 1630.2(j)(1)(v).
Sections 35.108(d)(1)(viii) and 36.105(d)(1)(viii) - Determination
Made Without Regard to the Ameliorative Effects of Mitigating
Measures
The ADA as amended expressly prohibits any consideration of the
ameliorative effects of mitigating measures when determining
whether an individual's impairment substantially limits a major
life activity, except for the ameliorative effects of ordinary
eyeglasses or contact lenses. 42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(E). The statute
provides an illustrative, and non-exhaustive list of different
types of mitigating measures. Id.
In the NPRM, the Department proposed §§ 35.108(d)(2)(vi) and
36.105(d)(2)(vi), which tracked the statutory language regarding
consideration of mitigating measures. These provisions stated that
the ameliorative effects of mitigating measures should not be
considered when determining whether an impairment substantially
limits a major life activity. However, the beneficial effects of
ordinary eyeglasses or contact lenses should be considered when
determining whether an impairment substantially limits a major life
activity. Ordinary eyeglasses or contact lenses refer to lenses
that are intended to fully correct visual acuity or to eliminate
refractive errors. Proposed §§ 35.108(d)(4) and 36.105(d)(4),
discussed below, set forth examples of mitigating measures.
A number of commenters agreed with the Department's proposed
language and no commenters objected. Some commenters, however,
asked the Department to add language to these sections stating
that, although the ameliorative effects of mitigating measures may
not be considered in determining whether an individual has a
covered disability, they may be considered in determining whether
an individual is entitled to specific testing accommodations or
reasonable modifications. The ADA Amendments Act revised the
definition of “disability” and the Department agrees that the Act's
prohibition on assessing the ameliorative effects of mitigating
measures applies only to the determination of whether an individual
meets the definition of “disability.” The Department declines to
add the requested language, however, because it goes beyond the
scope of this rulemaking by addressing ADA requirements that are
not related to the definition of “disability.” These rules of
construction do not apply to the requirements to provide reasonable
modifications under §§ 35.130(b)(7) and 36.302 or testing
accommodations under § 36.309 in the title III regulations. The
Department disagrees that further clarification is needed at this
point and declines to modify these provisions except that they are
now renumbered as §§ 35.108(d)(1)(viii) and §
36.105(d)(1)(viii).
The Department notes that in applying these rules of
construction, evidence showing that an impairment would be
substantially limiting in the absence of the ameliorative effects
of mitigating measures could include evidence of limitations that a
person experienced prior to using a mitigating measure or evidence
concerning the expected course of a particular disorder absent
mitigating measures.
The determination of whether an individual's impairment
substantially limits a major life activity is unaffected by an
individual's choice to forgo mitigating measures. For individuals
who do not use a mitigating measure (including, for example,
medication or auxiliary aids and services that might alleviate the
effects of an impairment), the availability of such measures has no
bearing on whether the impairment substantially limits a major life
activity. The limitations posed by the impairment on the individual
and any negative (non-ameliorative) effects of mitigating measures
will serve as the foundation for a determination of whether an
impairment is substantially limiting. The origin of the impairment,
whether its effects can be mitigated, and any ameliorative effects
of mitigating measures that are employed may not be considered in
determining if the impairment is substantially limiting.
Sections 35.108(d)(1)(ix) and 36.105(d)(1)(ix) - Impairment That
Lasts Less Than Six Months Can Still Be a Disability Under First
Two Prongs of the Definition
In §§ 35.108(d)(1)(ix) and 36.105(d)(1)(ix), the NPRM proposed
rules of construction noting that the six-month “transitory” part
of the “transitory and minor” exception does not apply to the
“actual disability” or “record of” prongs of the definition of
“disability.” Even if an impairment may last or is expected to last
six months or less, it can be substantially limiting.
The ADA as amended provides that the “regarded as” prong of the
definition of “disability” does “not apply to impairments that are
[both] transitory and minor.” 42 U.S.C. 12102(3)(B). “Transitory
impairment” is defined as “an impairment with an actual or expected
duration of six months or less.” Id. The statute does not
define the term “minor.” Whether an impairment is both “transitory
and minor” is a question of fact that is dependent upon individual
circumstances. The ADA as amended contains no such provision with
respect to the first two prongs of the definition of “disability” -
“actual disability,” and “record of” disability. The application of
the “transitory and minor” exception to the “regarded as” prong is
addressed in §§ 35.108(f) and 36.105(f).
The Department received two comments on this proposed language.
One commenter recommended that the Department delete this language
and “replace it with language clarifying that if a condition cannot
meet the lower threshold of impairment under the third prong, it
cannot meet the higher threshold of a disability under the first
and second prongs.” The Department declines to modify these
provisions because the determination of whether an individual
satisfies the requirements of a particular prong is not a
comparative determination between the three means of demonstrating
disability under the ADA. The Department believes that the
suggested language would create confusion because there are
significant differences between the first two prongs and the third
prong. In addition, the Department believes its proposed language
is in keeping with the ADA Amendments Act and the supporting
legislative history.
The other commenter suggested that the Department add language
to provide greater clarity with respect to the application of the
transitory and minor exception to the “regarded as prong.” The
Department does not believe that additional language should be
added to these rules of construction, which relate only to whether
there is a six-month test for the first two prongs of the
definition. As discussed below, the Department has revised both the
regulatory text at §§ 35.108(f) and 36.105(f) and its guidance on
the application of the “transitory and minor” exception to the
“regarded as” prong. See discussion below.
Sections 35.108(d)(2) and 36.105(d)(2) - Predictable Assessments
In the NPRM, proposed §§ 35.108(d)(2) and 36.105(d)(2) set forth
examples of impairments that should easily be found to
substantially limit one or more major life activities. These
provisions recognized that while there are no “per se”
disabilities, for certain types of impairments the application of
the various principles and rules of construction concerning the
definition of “disability” to the individualized assessment would,
in virtually all cases, result in the conclusion that the
impairment substantially limits a major life activity. Thus, the
necessary individualized assessment of coverage premised on these
types of impairments should be particularly simple and
straightforward. The purpose of the “predictable assessments”
provisions is to simplify consideration of those disabilities that
virtually always create substantial limitations to major life
activities, thus satisfying the statute's directive to create
clear, consistent, and enforceable standards and ensuring that the
inquiry of “whether an individual's impairment is a disability
under the ADA should not demand extensive analysis.” See
Public Law 110-325, sec. 2(b)(1), (5). The impairments identified
in the predictable assessments provision are a non-exhaustive list
of examples of the kinds of disabilities that meet these criteria
and, with one exception, are consistent with the corresponding
provision in the EEOC ADA Amendments Act rule. See 29 CFR
1630.2(j)(3)(iii). 7
7 In the NPRM, the Department proposed adding “traumatic brain
injury” to the predictable assessments list.
The Department believes that the predictable assessments
provisions comport with the ADA Amendments Act's emphasis on
adopting a less burdensome and more expansive definition of
“disability.” The provisions are rooted in the application of the
statutory changes to the meaning and interpretation of the
definition of “disability” contained in the ADA Amendments Act and
flow from the rules of construction set forth in §§
35.108(a)(2)(i), 36.105(a)(2)(i), 35.108(c)(2)(i) and (ii),
36.105(c)(2)(i) and (ii). These rules of construction and other
specific provisions require the broad construction of the
definition of “disability” in favor of expansive coverage to the
maximum extent permitted by the terms of the ADA. In addition, they
lower the standard to be applied to “substantially limits,” making
clear that an impairment need not prevent or significantly restrict
an individual from performing a major life activity; clarify that
major life activities include major bodily functions; elucidate
that impairments that are episodic or in remission are disabilities
if they would be substantially limiting when active; and
incorporate the requirement that the ameliorative effects of
mitigating measures (other than ordinary eyeglasses or contact
lenses) must be disregarded in assessing whether an individual has
a disability.
Several organizations representing persons with disabilities and
the elderly, constituting the majority of commenters on these
provisions, supported the inclusion of the predictable assessments
provisions. One commenter expressed strong support for the
provision and recommended that it closely track the corresponding
provision in the EEOC title I rule, while another noted its value
in streamlining individual assessments. In contrast, some
commenters from educational institutions and testing entities
recommended the deletion of these provisions, expressing concern
that it implies the existence of “per se” disabilities, contrary to
congressional intent that each assertion of disability should be
considered on a case-by-case basis. The Department does not believe
that the predictable assessment provisions constitutes a “per se”
list of disabilities and will retain it. These provisions
highlight, through a non-exhaustive list, impairments that
virtually always will be found to substantially limit one or more
major life activities. Such impairments still warrant
individualized assessments, but any such assessments should be
especially simple and straightforward.
The legislative history of the ADA Amendments Act supports the
Department's approach in this area. In crafting the Act, Congress
hewed to the ADA definition of “disability,” which was modeled on
the definition of “disability” in the Rehabilitation Act, and
indicated that it wanted courts to interpret the definition as it
had originally been construed. See H.R. Rep. No. 110-730,
pt. 2, at 6 (2008). Describing this goal, the legislative history
states that courts had interpreted the Rehabilitation Act
definition “broadly to include persons with a wide range of
physical and mental impairments such as epilepsy, diabetes,
multiple sclerosis, and intellectual and developmental disabilities
. . . even where a mitigating measure - like medication or a
hearing aid - might lessen their impact on the individual.” Id.;
see also id. at 9 (referring to individuals with disabilities
that had been covered under section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act
and that Congress intended to include under the ADA - “people with
serious health conditions like epilepsy, diabetes, cancer, cerebral
palsy, multiple sclerosis, intellectual and developmental
disabilities”); id. at 6, n.6 (citing cases also finding
that cerebral palsy, hearing impairments, intellectual
disabilities, heart disease, and vision in only one eye were
disabilities under the Rehabilitation Act); id. at 10
(citing testimony from Rep. Steny H. Hoyer, one of the original
lead sponsors of the ADA in 1990, stating that “[w]e could not have
fathomed that people with diabetes, epilepsy, heart conditions,
cancer, mental illnesses and other disabilities would have their
ADA claims denied because they would be considered too functional
to meet the definition of disability”); 2008 Senate Statement of
Managers at 3 (explaining that “we [we]re faced with a situation in
which physical or mental impairments that would previously have
been found to constitute disabilities [under the Rehabilitation
Act] [we]re not considered disabilities” and citing individuals
with impairments such as amputation, intellectual disabilities,
epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, diabetes, muscular dystrophy, and
cancer as examples).
Some commenters asked the Department to add certain impairments
to the predictable assessments list, while others asked the
Department to remove certain impairments. Commenters representing
educational and testing institutions urged that, if the Department
did not delete the predictable assessment provisions, then the list
should be modified to remove any impairments that are not obvious
or visible to third parties and those for which functional
limitations can change over time. One commenter cited to a pre-ADA
Amendments Act reasonable accommodations case, which included
language regarding the uncertainty facing employers in determining
appropriate reasonable accommodations when mental impairments often
are not obvious and apparent to employers. See Wallin v.
Minnesota Dep't of Corrections, 153 F.3d 681, 689 (8th Cir.
1998). This commenter suggested that certain impairments, including
autism, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and
obsessive-compulsive disorder, should not be deemed predictable
assessments because they are not immediately apparent to third
parties. The Department disagrees with this commenter, and believes
that it is appropriate to include these disabilities on the list of
predictable assessments. Many disabilities are less obvious or may
be invisible, such as cancer, diabetes, HIV infection,
schizophrenia, intellectual disabilities, and traumatic brain
injury, as well as those identified by the commenter. The
likelihood that an impairment will substantially limit one or more
major life activities is unrelated to whether or not the disability
is immediately apparent to an outside observer. Therefore, the
Department will retain the examples that involve less apparent
disabilities on the list of predictable assessments.
The Department believes that the list accurately illustrates
impairments that virtually always will result in a substantial
limitation of one or more major life activities. The Department
recognizes that impairments are not always static and can result in
different degrees of functional limitation at different times,
particularly when mitigating measures are used. However, the ADA as
amended anticipates variation in the extent to which impairments
affect major life activities, clarifying that impairments that are
episodic or in remission nonetheless are disabilities if they would
be substantially limiting when active and requiring the
consideration of disabilities without regard to ameliorative
mitigating measures. The Department does not believe that limiting
the scope of its provisions addressing predictable assessments only
to those disabilities that would never vary in functional
limitation would be appropriate.
Other commenters speaking as individuals or representing persons
with disabilities endorsed the inclusion of some impairments
already on the list, including traumatic brain injury, sought the
inclusion of additional impairments, requested revisions to some
descriptions of impairments, or asked for changes to the examples
of major life activities linked to specific impairments.
Several commenters requested the expansion of the predictable
assessments list, in particular to add specific learning
disabilities. Some commenters pointed to the ADA Amendments Act's
legislative history, which included Representative Stark's remarks
that specific learning disabilities are “neurologically based
impairments that substantially limit the way these individuals
perform major life activities, like reading or learning, or the
time it takes to perform such activities.” 154 Cong. Rec. H8291
(daily ed. Sept. 17, 2008). Others recommended that some specific
types of specific learning disabilities, including dyslexia,
dyscalculia, dysgraphia, dyspraxia, and slowed processing speed
should be referenced as predictable assessments. With respect to
the major life activities affected by specific learning
disabilities, commenters noted that specific learning disabilities
are neurologically based and substantially limit learning,
thinking, reading, communicating, and processing speed.
Similarly, commenters recommended the inclusion of ADHD, urging
that it originates in the brain and affects executive function
skills including organizing, planning, paying attention, regulating
emotions, and self-monitoring. One commenter noted that if ADHD
meets the criteria established in the DSM-5, then it would
consistently meet the criteria to establish disability under the
ADA. The same commenter noted that ADHD is brain based and affects
the major life activity of executive function. Another commenter
suggested that ADHD should be included and should be identified as
limiting brain function, learning, reading, concentrating,
thinking, communicating, interacting with others, and working.
Other commenters urged the inclusion of panic disorders, anxiety
disorder, cognitive disorder, and post-concussive disorder. A
number of commenters noted that the exclusion of impairments from
the predictable assessments list could be seen as supporting an
inference that the impairments that are not mentioned should not
easily be found to be disabilities.
The Department determined that it will retain the language it
proposed in the NPRM and will not add or remove any impairments
from this list. As discussed above, the list is identical to the
EEOC's predictable assessments list, at 29 CFR 1630.2(g)(3)(iii),
except that the Department's NPRM added traumatic brain injury. The
Department received support for including traumatic brain injury
and did not receive any comments recommending the removal of
traumatic brain injury from the list; thus, we are retaining it in
this final rule.
The Department's decision to track the EEOC's list, with one
minor exception, stems in part from our intent to satisfy the
congressional mandate for “clear, strong, consistent, enforceable
standards.” A number of courts already have productively applied
the EEOC's predictable assessments provision, and the Department
believes that it will continue to serve as a useful, common-sense
tool in promoting judicial efficiency. It is important to note,
however, that the failure to include any impairment in the list of
examples of predictable assessments does not indicate that that
impairment should be subject to undue scrutiny.
Some commenters expressed concern about the major life
activities that the Department attributed to particular
impairments. Two commenters sought revision of the major life
activities attributed to intellectual disabilities, suggesting that
it would be more accurate to reference cognitive function and
learning, instead of reading, learning, and problem solving. One
commenter recommended attributing the major life activity of brain
function to autism rather than learning, social interaction, and
communicating. The Department determined that it will follow the
EEOC's model and, with respect to both intellectual disabilities
and autism, it will reference the major bodily function of brain
function. By using the term “brain function” to describe the system
affected by various mental impairments, the Department intends to
capture functions such as the brain's ability to regulate thought
processes and emotions.
The Department considers it important to reiterate that, just as
the list of impairments in these sections is not comprehensive, the
list of major bodily functions or other major life activities
linked to those impairments are not exhaustive. The impairments
identified in these sections, may affect a wide range of major
bodily functions and other major life activities. The Department's
specification of certain major life activities with respect to
particular impairments simply provides one avenue by which a person
might elect to demonstrate that he or she has a disability.
The Department recognizes that impairments listed in §§
35.108(d)(2) and 36.105(d)(2) may substantially limit other major
life activities in addition to those listed in the regulation. For
example, diabetes may substantially limit major life activities
including eating, sleeping, and thinking. Major depressive disorder
may substantially limit major life activities such as thinking,
concentrating, sleeping, and interacting with others. Multiple
sclerosis may substantially limit major life activities such as
walking, bending, and lifting.
One commenter noted that the NPRM did not track the EEOC's
language with respect to the manner in which it identified a major
bodily function that is substantially limited by epilepsy, muscular
dystrophy, or multiple sclerosis in 29 CFR 1630.2(j)(3)(iii). While
the EEOC listed each of these three impairments individually,
noting in each case that the major bodily function affected is
neurological function, at 29 CFR 1630.2(j)(3)(iii), the NPRM
grouped the three impairments and noted that they affect
neurological function. In order to clarify that each of the three
impairments may manifest a substantial limitation of neurological
function, the final rule incorporates “each” immediately following
the list of the three impairments. Similarly, the Department added
an “each” to §§ 35.108(d)(2)(iii)(K) and 36.105(d)(2)(iii)(K) to
make clear that each of the listed impairments substantially limits
brain function.
Some commenters representing testing entities and educational
institutions sought the insertion of language in the predictable
assessment provisions that would indicate that individuals found to
have disabilities are not, by virtue of a determination that they
have a covered disability, eligible for a testing accommodation or
a reasonable modification. The Department agrees with these
commenters that the determination of disability is a distinct
determination separate from the determination of the need for a
requested modification or a testing accommodation. The Department
declines to add the language suggested by the commenters to §§
35.108(d)(2) and 36.105(d)(2), however, because the requirements
for reasonable modifications are addressed separately in §§
35.130(b)(7) and 36.302 of the title II and III regulations and the
requirements related to providing appropriate accommodations in
testing and licensing are found at § 36.309.
Sections 35.108(d)(3) and 36.105(d)(3) - Condition, Manner, or
Duration
Overview. Proposed §§ 35.108(d)(3) and 36.105(d)(3), both
titled “Condition, manner[,] and duration,” addressed how evidence
related to condition, manner, or duration may be used to show how
impairments substantially limit major life activities. These
principles were first addressed in the preamble to the 1991 rule.
At that time, the Department noted that “[a] person is considered
an individual with a disability . . . when the individual's
important life activities are restricted as to the conditions,
manner, or duration under which they can be performed in comparison
to most people.” 56 FR 35544, 35549 (July 26, 1991); see
also S. Rep. No. 101-116, at 23 (1989).
These concepts were affirmed by Congress in the legislative
history to the ADA Amendments Act: “We particularly believe that
this test, which articulated an analysis that considered whether a
person's activities are limited in condition, duration and manner,
is a useful one. We reiterate that using the correct standard - one
that is lower than the strict or demanding standard created by the
Supreme Court in Toyota - will make the disability
determination an appropriate threshold issue but not an onerous
burden for those seeking accommodations or modifications. At the
same time, plaintiffs should not be constrained from offering
evidence needed to establish that their impairment is substantially
limiting.” 154 Cong. Rec. S8346 (Sept. 11, 2008). Noting its
continued reliance on the functional approach to defining
disability, Congress expressed its belief that requiring
consistency with the findings and purposes of the ADA Amendments
Act would “establish[ ] an appropriate functionality test for
determining whether an individual has a disability.” Id.
While condition, manner, and duration are not required factors that
must be considered, the regulations clarify that these are the
types of factors that may be considered in appropriate cases. To
the extent that such factors may be useful or relevant to show a
substantial limitation in a particular fact pattern, some or all of
them (and related facts) may be considered, but evidence relating
to each of these factors often will not be necessary to establish
coverage.
In the NPRM, proposed §§ 35.108(d)(3)(i) and 35.105(d)(3)(i)
noted that the rules of construction at §§ 35.108(d)(1) and
35.105(d)(1) should inform consideration of how individuals are
substantially limited in major life activities. Sections
35.108(d)(3)(ii) and 36.105(d)(3)(ii) provided examples of how
restrictions on condition, manner, or duration might be interpreted
and also clarified that the negative or burdensome side effects of
medication or other mitigating measures may be considered when
determining whether an individual has a disability. In §§
35.108(d)(3)(iii) and 36.105(d)(3)(iii), the proposed language set
forth a requirement to focus on how a major life activity is
substantially limited, rather than on the ultimate outcome a person
with an impairment can achieve.
The Department received comments on the condition, manner, or
duration provision from advocacy groups for individuals with
disabilities, from academia, from education and testing entities,
and from interested individuals. Several advocacy organizations for
individuals with disabilities and private individuals noted that
the section title's heading was inconsistent with the regulatory
text and sought the replacement of the “and” in the section's
title, “Condition, manner, and duration,” with an “or.” Commenters
expressed concern that retaining the “and” in the heading title
would be inconsistent with congressional intent and would
incorrectly suggest that individuals are subject to a three-part
test and must demonstrate that an impairment substantially limits a
major life activity with respect to condition, manner, and
duration. The Department agrees that the “and” used in the title of
the proposed regulatory provision could lead to confusion and a
misapplication of the law and has revised the title so it now reads
“Condition, manner, or duration.” Consistent with the
regulatory text, the revised heading makes clear that any one of
the three descriptors - “condition,” “manner,” or “duration” - may
aid in demonstrating that an impairment substantially limits a
major life activity or a major bodily function.
Condition, Manner, or Duration
In the NPRM, proposed §§ 35.108(d)(3)(i) and 36.105(d)(3)(i)
noted that the application of the terms “condition” “manner,” or
“duration” should at all times take into account the principles in
§ 35.108(d)(1) and § 36.105(d)(1), respectively, which referred to
the rules of construction for “substantially limited.” The proposed
regulatory text also included brief explanations of the meaning of
the core terms, clarifying that in appropriate cases, it could be
useful to consider, in comparison to most people in the general
population, the conditions under which an individual performs a
major life activity; the manner in which an individual performs a
major life activity; or the time it takes an individual to perform
a major life activity, or for which the individual can perform a
major life activity.
Several disability rights advocacy groups and individuals
supported the NPRM approach, with some referencing the value of
pointing to the rules of construction and their relevance to
condition, manner, or duration considerations. Some commenters
noted that it was helpful to highlight congressional intent that
the definition of “disability” should be broadly construed and not
subject to extensive analysis. Another commenter recommended
introducing a clarification that, while the limitation imposed by
an impairment must be important, it does not need to rise to the
level of severely or significantly restricting the ability to
perform a major life activity. Some commenters sought additional
guidance regarding the meaning of the terms “condition,” “manner,”
and “duration” and recommended the addition of more illustrative
examples.
In response to commenters' concerns, the Department has modified
the regulatory text in §§ 35.108(d)(3)(i) and 36.105(d)(3)(i) to
reference all of the rules of construction rather than only those
pertaining to “substantially limited.” The Department also added §§
35.108(d)(3)(iv) and 36.105(d)(3)(iv), further discussed below, to
clarify that the rules of construction will not always require
analysis of condition, manner, or duration, particularly with
respect to certain impairments, such as those referenced in
paragraph (d)(2)(iii) (predictable assessments). With these
changes, the Department believes that the final rule more
accurately reflects congressional intent. The Department also
believes that clarifying the application of the rules of
construction to condition, manner, or duration will contribute to
consistent interpretation of the definition of “disability” and
reduce inadvertent reliance on older cases that incorporate
demanding standards rejected by Congress in the ADA Amendments
Act.
It is the Department's view that the rules of construction offer
substantial guidance about how condition, manner, or duration must
be interpreted so as to ensure the expansive coverage intended by
Congress. Except for this clarification, the Department did not
receive comments opposing the proposed regulatory text on
condition, manner, or duration in §§ 35.108(d)(3)(i) and
36.105(d)(3)(i) and did not make any other changes to these
provisions.
Some commenters objected to language in the preamble to the NPRM
which suggested that there might be circumstances in which the
consideration of condition, manner, or duration might not include
comparisons to most people in the general population. On
reconsideration, the Department recognizes that this discussion
could create confusion about the requirements. The Department
believes that condition, manner, or duration determinations should
be drawn in contrast to most people in the general population, as
is indicated in the related rules of construction, at §§
35.108(d)(1)(v) and 36.105(d)(1)(v).
Condition, Manner, or Duration Examples, Including Negative Effects
of Mitigating Measures
Proposed §§ 35.108(d)(3)(ii) and 36.105(d)(3)(ii) set forth
examples of the types of evidence that might demonstrate condition,
manner, or duration limitations, including the way an impairment
affects the operation of a major bodily function, the difficulty or
effort required to perform a major life activity, the pain
experienced when performing a major life activity, and the length
of time it takes to perform a major life activity. These provisions
also clarified that the non-ameliorative effects of mitigating
measures may be taken into account to demonstrate the impact of an
impairment on a major life activity. The Department's discussion in
the NPRM preamble noted that such non-ameliorative effects could
include negative side effects of medicine, burdens associated with
following a particular treatment regimen, and complications that
arise from surgery, among others. The preamble also provided
further clarification of the possible applications of condition,
manner, or duration analyses, along with several examples. Several
commenters supported the proposed rule's incorporation of language
and examples offering insight into the varied ways that limitations
on condition, manner, or duration could demonstrate substantial
limitation. One commenter positively noted that the language
regarding the “difficulty, effort, or time required to perform a
major life activity” could prove extremely helpful to individuals
asserting a need for testing accommodations, as evidence previously
presented regarding these factors was deemed insufficient to
demonstrate the existence of a disability. Some commenters
requested the insertion of additional examples and explanation in
the preamble about how condition, manner or duration principles
could be applied under the new rules of construction. Another
commenter sought guidance on the specific reference points that
should be used when drawing comparisons with most people in the
general population. The commenter offered the example of delays in
developmental milestones as a possible referent in evaluating
children with speech-language disorders, but noted a lack of
guidance regarding comparable referents for adults. The commenter
also noted that guidance is needed regarding what average or
acceptable duration might be with respect to certain activities. An
academic commenter expressed support for the Department's reference
to individuals with learning impairments using certain
self-mitigating measures, such as extra time to study or taking an
examination in a different format, and the relevance of these
measures to condition, manner, and duration.
The Department did not receive comments opposing the NPRM
language on condition, manner, or duration in §§ 35.108(d)(3)(ii)
and 36.105(d)(3)(ii) and is not making any changes to this
language. The Department agrees that further explanation and
examples as provided below regarding the concepts of condition,
manner, or duration will help clarify how the ADA Amendments Act
has expanded the definition of “disability.” An impairment may
substantially limit the “condition” or “manner” in which a major
life activity can be performed in a number of different ways. For
example, the condition or manner in which a major life activity can
be performed may refer to how an individual performs a major life
activity; e.g., the condition or manner under which a person with
an amputated hand performs manual tasks will likely be more
cumbersome than the way that most people in the general population
would perform the same tasks. Condition or manner also may describe
how performance of a major life activity affects an individual with
an impairment. For example, an individual whose impairment causes
pain or fatigue that most people would not experience when
performing that major life activity may be substantially limited.
Thus, the condition or manner under which someone with coronary
artery disease performs the major life activity of walking would be
substantially limited if the individual experiences shortness of
breath and fatigue when walking distances that most people could
walk without experiencing such effects. An individual with specific
learning disabilities may need to approach reading or writing in a
distinct manner or under different conditions than most people in
the general population, possibly employing aids including
verbalizing, visualizing, decoding or phonology, such that the
effort required could support a determination that the individual
is substantially limited in the major life activity of reading or
writing.
Condition or manner may refer to the extent to which a major
life activity, including a major bodily function, can be performed.
In some cases, the condition or manner under which a major bodily
function can be performed may be substantially limited when the
impairment “causes the operation [of the bodily function] to
over-produce or under-produce in some harmful fashion.” See
H.R. Rep. No. 110-730, pt. 2, at 17 (2008). For example, the
endocrine system of a person with type I diabetes does not produce
sufficient insulin. For that reason, compared to most people in the
general population, the impairment of diabetes substantially limits
the major bodily functions of endocrine function and digestion.
Traumatic brain injury substantially limits the condition or manner
in which an individual's brain functions by impeding memory and
causing headaches, confusion, or fatigue - each of which could
constitute a substantial limitation on the major bodily function of
brain function.
“Duration” refers to the length of time an individual can
perform a major life activity or the length of time it takes an
individual to perform a major life activity, as compared to most
people in the general population. For example, a person whose back
or leg impairment precludes him or her from standing for more than
two hours without significant pain would be substantially limited
in standing, because most people can stand for more than two hours
without significant pain. However, “[a] person who can walk for 10
miles continuously is not substantially limited in walking merely
because on the eleventh mile, he or she begins to experience pain
because most people would not be able to walk eleven miles without
experiencing some discomfort.” See 154 Cong. Rec. S8842
(daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008) (Statement of the Managers) (quoting S.
Rep. No. 101-116, at 23 (1989)). Some impairments, such as ADHD,
may have two different types of impact on duration considerations.
ADHD frequently affects both an ability to sustain focus for an
extended period of time and the speed with which someone can
process information. Each of these duration-related concerns could
demonstrate that someone with ADHD, as compared to most people in
the general population, takes longer to complete major life
activities such as reading, writing, concentrating, or
learning.
The Department reiterates that, because the limitations created
by certain impairments are readily apparent, it would not be
necessary in such cases to assess the negative side effects of a
mitigating measure in determining that a particular impairment
substantially limits a major life activity. For example, there
likely would be no need to consider the burden that dialysis
treatment imposes for someone with end-stage renal disease because
the impairment would allow a simple and straightforward
determination that the individual is substantially limited in
kidney function.
One commenter representing people with disabilities asked the
Department to recognize that, particularly with respect to learning
disabilities, on some occasions the facts related to condition,
manner, or duration necessary to reach a diagnosis of a learning
disability also are sufficient to establish that the affected
individual has a disability under the ADA. The Department agrees
that the facts gathered to establish a diagnosis of an impairment
may simultaneously satisfy the requirements for demonstrating
limitations on condition, manner, or duration sufficient to show
that the impairment constitutes a disability.
Emphasis on Limitations Instead of Outcomes
In passing the ADA Amendments Act, Congress clarified that
courts had misinterpreted the ADA definition of “disability” by,
among other things, inappropriately emphasizing the capabilities of
people with disabilities to achieve certain outcomes. See
154 Cong. Rec. S8842 (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008) (Statement of the
Managers). For example, someone with a learning disability may
achieve a high level of academic success, but may nevertheless be
substantially limited in one or more of the major life activities
of reading, writing, speaking, or learning because of the
additional time or effort he or she must spend to read, speak,
write, or learn compared to most people in the general population.
As the House Education and Labor Committee Report emphasized:
[S]ome courts have found that students who have reached a high
level of academic achievement are not to be considered individuals
with disabilities under the ADA, as such individuals may have
difficulty demonstrating substantial limitation in the major life
activities of learning or reading relative to “most people.” When
considering the condition, manner or duration in which an
individual with a specific learning disability performs a major
life activity, it is critical to reject the assumption that an
individual who performs well academically or otherwise cannot be
substantially limited in activities such as learning, reading,
writing, thinking, or speaking. As such, the Committee rejects the
findings in Price v. National Board of Medical
Examiners, Gonzales v. National Board of Medical
Examiners, and Wong v. Regents of University of
California.
The Committee believes that the comparison of individuals with
specific learning disabilities to “most people” is not problematic
unto itself, but requires a careful analysis of the method and
manner in which an individual's impairment limits a major life
activity. For the majority of the population, the basic mechanics
of reading and writing do not pose extraordinary lifelong
challenges; rather, recognizing and forming letters and words are
effortless, unconscious, automatic processes. Because specific
learning disabilities are neurologically-based impairments, the
process of reading for an individual with a reading disability
(e.g., dyslexia) is word-by-word, and otherwise cumbersome,
painful, deliberate and slow - throughout life. The Committee
expects that individuals with specific learning disabilities that
substantially limit a major life activity will be better protected
under the amended Act.
H.R. Rep. No. 110-730 pt. 1, at 10-11 (2008).
Sections 35.108(d)(3)(iii) and 36.105(d)(3)(iii) of the proposed
rule reflected congressional intent and made clear that the outcome
an individual with a disability is able to achieve is not
determinative of whether an individual is substantially limited in
a major life activity. Instead, an individual can demonstrate the
extent to which an impairment affects the condition, manner, or
duration in which the individual performs a major life activity,
such that it constitutes a substantial limitation. The ultimate
outcome of an individual's efforts should not undermine a claim of
disability, even if the individual ultimately is able to achieve
the same or similar result as someone without the impairment.
The Department received several comments on these provisions,
with disability organizations and individuals supporting the
inclusion of these provisions and some testing entities and an
organization representing educational institutions opposing them.
The opponents argued that academic performance and testing outcomes
are objective evidence that contradict findings of disability and
that covered entities must be able to focus on those outcomes in
order to demonstrate whether an impairment has contributed to a
substantial limitation. These commenters argued that the evidence
frequently offered by those making claims of disability that
demonstrate the time or effort required to achieve a result, such
as evidence of self-mitigating measures, informal accommodations,
or recently provided reasonable modifications, is inherently
subjective and unreliable. The testing entities suggested that the
Department had indicated support for their interest in focusing on
outcomes over process-related obstacles in the NPRM preamble
language where the Department had noted that covered entities “may
defeat a showing of substantial limitation by refuting whatever
evidence the individual seeking coverage has offered, or by
offering evidence that shows that an impairment does not impose a
substantial limitation on a major life activity.” NPRM, 79 FR 4839,
4847-48 (Jan. 30, 2014). The commenters representing educational
institutions and testing entities urged the removal of §§
35.108(d)(3)(iii) and 36.105(d)(3)(iii) or, in the alternative, the
insertion of language indicating that outcomes, such as grades and
test scores indicating academic success, are relevant evidence that
should be considered when making disability determinations.
In contrast, commenters representing persons with disabilities
and individual commenters expressed strong support for these
provisions, noting that what an individual can accomplish despite
an impairment does not accurately reflect the obstacles an
individual had to overcome because of the impairment. One
organization representing persons with disabilities noted that
while individuals with disabilities have achieved successes at
work, in academia, and in other settings, their successes should
not create obstacles to addressing what they can do “in spite of an
impairment.” Commenters also expressed concerns that testing
entities and educational institutions had failed to comply with the
rules of construction or to revise prior policies and practices to
comport with the new standards under the ADA as amended. Some
commenters asserted that testing entities improperly rejected
accommodation requests because the testing entities focused on test
scores and outcomes rather than on how individuals learn; required
severe levels of impairment; failed to disregard the helpful effect
of self-mitigating measures; referenced participation in
extracurricular activities as evidence that individuals did not
have disabilities; and argued that individuals diagnosed with
specific learning disabilities or ADHD in adulthood cannot
demonstrate that they have a disability because their diagnosis
occurred too late.
Commenters representing persons with disabilities pointed to the
discussion in the legislative history about restoring a focus on
process rather than outcomes with respect to learning disabilities.
They suggested that such a shift in focus also would be helpful in
evaluating ADHD. One commenter asked the Department to include a
reference to ADHD and to explain that persons with ADHD may achieve
a high level of academic success but may nevertheless be
substantially limited in one or more major life activities, such as
reading, writing, speaking, concentrating, or learning. A private
citizen requested the addition of examples demonstrating the
application of these provisions because, in the commenter's view,
there have been many problems with decisions regarding individuals
with learning disabilities and an inappropriate focus on outcomes
and test scores.
The Department declines the request to add a specific reference
to ADHD in these provisions. The Department believes that the
principles discussed above apply equally to persons with ADHD as
well as individuals with other impairments. The provision already
references an illustrative, but not exclusive, example of an
individual with a learning disability. The Department believes that
this example effectively illustrates the concern that has affected
individuals with other impairments due to an inappropriate emphasis
on outcomes rather than how a major life activity is limited.
Organizations representing testing and educational entities
asked the Department to add regulatory language indicating that
testing-related outcomes, such as grades and test scores, are
relevant to disability determinations under the ADA. The Department
has considered this proposal and declines to adopt it because it is
inconsistent with congressional intent. As discussed earlier in
this section, Congress specifically stated that the outcome an
individual with a disability is able to achieve is not
determinative of whether that individual has a physical or mental
impairment that substantially limits a major life activity. The
analysis of whether an individual with an impairment has a
disability is a fact-driven analysis shaped by how an impairment
has substantially limited one or more major life activities or
major bodily functions, considering those specifically asserted by
the individual as well as any others that may apply. For example,
if an individual with ADHD seeking a reasonable modification or a
testing accommodation asserts substantial limitations in the major
life activities of concentrating and reading, then the analysis of
whether or not that individual has a covered disability will
necessarily focus on concentrating and reading. Relevant
considerations could include restrictions on the conditions,
manner, or duration in which the individual concentrates or reads,
such as a need for a non-stimulating environment or extensive time
required to read. Even if an individual has asserted that an
impairment creates substantial limitations on activities such as
reading, writing, or concentrating, the individual's academic
record or prior standardized testing results might not be relevant
to the inquiry. Instead, the individual could show substantial
limitations by providing evidence of condition, manner, or duration
limitations, such as the need for a reader or additional time. The
Department does not believe that the testing results or grades of
an individual seeking reasonable modifications or testing
accommodations always would be relevant to determinations of
disability. While testing and educational entities may, of course,
put forward any evidence that they deem pertinent to their response
to an assertion of substantial limitation, testing results and
grades may be of only limited relevance.
In addition, the Department does not agree with the assertions
made by testing and educational entities that evidence of testing
and grades is objective and, therefore, should be weighted more
heavily, while evidence of self-mitigating measures, informal
accommodations, or recently provided accommodations or
modifications is inherently subjective and should be afforded less
consideration. Congress's discussion of the relevance of testing
outcomes and grades clearly indicates that it did not consider them
definitive evidence of the existence or non-existence of a
disability. While tests and grades typically are numerical measures
of performance, the capacity to quantify them does not make them
inherently more valuable with respect to proving or disproving
disability. To the contrary, Congress's incorporation of rules of
construction emphasizing broad coverage of disabilities to the
maximum extent permitted, its direction that such determinations
should neither contemplate ameliorative mitigating measures nor
demand extensive analysis, and its recognition of learned and
adaptive modifications all support its openness for individuals
with impairments to put forward a wide range of evidence to
demonstrate their disabilities.
The Department believes that Congress made its intention clear
that the ADA's protections should encompass people for whom the
nature of their impairment requires an assessment that focuses on
how they engage in major life activities, rather than the ultimate
outcome of those activities. Beyond directly addressing this
concern in the debate over the ADA Amendments Act, Congress's
incorporation of the far-reaching rules of construction, its
explicit rejection of the consideration of ameliorative mitigating
measures - including “learned behavioral or adaptive neurological
modifications,” 42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(E)(i)(IV), such as those often
employed by individuals with learning disabilities or ADHD - and
its stated intention to “reinstat[e] a broad scope of protection to
be available under the ADA,” Public Law 110-325, sec. 2(b)(1), all
support the language initially proposed in these provisions. For
these reasons, the Department determined that it will retain the
language of these provisions as they were originally drafted.
Analysis of Condition, Manner, or Duration Not Always Required
As noted in the discussion above, the Department has added §§
35.108(d)(3)(iv) and 36.105(d)(3)(iv) in the final rule to clarify
that analysis of condition, manner, or duration will not always be
necessary, particularly with respect to certain impairments that
can easily be found to substantially limit a major life activity.
This language is also found in the EEOC ADA title I regulation.
See 29 CFR 1630(j)(4)(iv). As noted earlier, the inclusion
of these provisions addresses several comments from organizations
representing persons with disabilities. This language also responds
to several commenters' concerns that the Department should clarify
that, in some cases and particularly with respect to predictable
assessments, no or only a very limited analysis of condition,
manner, or duration is necessary.
At the same time, individuals seeking coverage under the first
or second prong of the definition of “disability” should not be
constrained from offering evidence needed to establish that their
impairment is substantially limiting. See 154 Cong. Rec.
S8842 (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008) (Statement of the Managers). Such
evidence may comprise facts related to condition, manner, or
duration. And, covered entities may defeat a showing of substantial
limitation by refuting whatever evidence the individual seeking
coverage has offered, or by offering evidence that shows that an
impairment does not impose a substantial limitation on a major life
activity. However, a showing of substantial limitation is not
defeated by facts unrelated to condition, manner, or duration that
are not pertinent to the substantial limitation of a major life
activity that the individual has proffered.
Sections 35.108(d)(4) and 36.105(d)(4) - Examples of Mitigating
Measures
The rules of construction set forth at §§ 35.108(d)(1)(viii) and
36.105(d)(1)(viii) of the final rule make clear that the
ameliorative effects of mitigating measures shall not be considered
when determining whether an impairment substantially limits a major
life activity. In the NPRM, proposed §§ 35.108(d)(4) and
36.105(d)(4) provided a non-inclusive list of mitigating measures,
which includes medication, medical supplies, equipment, appliances,
low-vision devices, prosthetics, hearing aids, cochlear implants
and implantable hearing devices, mobility devices, oxygen therapy
equipment, and assistive technology. In addition, the proposed
regulation clarified that mitigating measures can include “learned
behavioral or adaptive neurological modifications,” psychotherapy,
behavioral therapy, or physical therapy, and “reasonable
modifications” or auxiliary aids and services.
The phrase “learned behavioral or adaptive neurological
modifications,” is intended to include strategies developed by an
individual to lessen the impact of an impairment. The phrase
“reasonable modifications” is intended to include informal or
undocumented accommodations and modifications as well as those
provided through a formal process.
The ADA as amended specifies one exception to the rule on
mitigating measures, stating that the ameliorative effects of
ordinary eyeglasses and contact lenses shall be considered in
determining whether a person has an impairment that substantially
limits a major life activity and thereby is a person with a
disability. 42 U.S.C. 12102(4)(E)(ii). As discussed above, §§
35.108(d)(4)(i) and 36.105(d)(4)(i) incorporate this exception by
excluding ordinary eyeglasses and contact lenses from the
definition of “low-vision devices,” which are mitigating measures
that may not be considered in determining whether an impairment is
a substantial limitation.
The Department received a number of comments supporting the
Department's language in these sections and its broad range of
examples of what constitutes a mitigating measure. Commenters
representing students with disabilities specifically supported the
inclusion of “learned behavioral or adaptive neurological
modifications,” noting that the section “appropriately supports and
highlights that students [and individuals in other settings] may
have developed self-imposed ways to support their disability in
order to perform major life activities required of daily life and
that such measures cannot be used to find that the person is not
substantially limited.”
The Department notes that self-mitigating measures or
undocumented modifications or accommodations for students who have
impairments that substantially limit learning, reading, writing,
speaking, or concentrating may include such measures as arranging
to have multiple reminders for task completion; seeking help from
others to provide reminders or to assist with the organization of
tasks; selecting courses strategically (such as selecting courses
that require papers instead of exams); devoting a far larger
portion of the day, weekends, and holidays to study than students
without disabilities; teaching oneself strategies to facilitate
reading connected text or mnemonics to remember facts (including
strategies such as highlighting and margin noting); being permitted
extra time to complete tests; receiving modified homework
assignments; or taking exams in a different format or in a less
stressful or anxiety-provoking setting. Each of these mitigating
measures, whether formal or informal, documented or undocumented,
can improve the academic function of a student having to deal with
a substantial limitation in a major life activity such as
concentrating, reading, speaking, learning, or writing. However,
when the determination of disability is made without considering
the ameliorative effects of these measures, as required under the
ADA as amended, these individuals still have a substantial
limitation in major life activities and are covered by the ADA.
See also discussion of §§ 35.108(d)(1) and 36.105(d)(1),
above.
Some commenters argued that the Department's examples of
mitigating measures inappropriately include normal learning
strategies and asked that the Department withdraw or narrow its
discussion of self-mitigating measures. The Department disagrees.
Narrowing the discussion of self-mitigating measures to exclude
normal or common strategies would not be consistent with the ADA
Amendments Act. The Department construes learned behavioral or
adaptive neurological modifications broadly to include strategies
applied or utilized by an individual with a disability to lessen
the effect of an impairment; whether the strategy applied is normal
or common to students without disabilities is not relevant to
whether an individual with a disability's application of the
strategy lessens the effect of an impairment.
An additional commenter asked the Department to add language to
the regulation and preamble addressing mitigating measures an
individual with ADHD may employ. This commenter noted that “[a]n
individual with ADHD may employ a wide variety of self-mitigating
measures, such as exertion of extensive extra effort, use of
multiple reminders, whether low tech or high tech, seeking a quiet
or distraction free place or environment to do required
activities.” The Department agrees with this commenter that these
are examples of the type of self-mitigating measures used by
individuals with ADHD, but believes that they fall within the range
of mitigating measures already addressed by the regulatory
language.
Another commenter asked the Department to add language to the
regulation or preamble addressing surgical interventions in a
similar fashion to the approach taken in the EEOC's title I
preamble, 76 FR 16978, 16983 (Mar. 25, 2011). There, the EEOC noted
that a surgical intervention may be an ameliorative mitigating
measure that could result in the permanent elimination of an
impairment, but it also indicated that confusion about how this
example might apply recommended against its inclusion in the
regulatory text. Therefore, the EEOC eliminated that example from
the draft regulatory text and recommended that, “[d]eterminations
about whether surgical interventions should be taken into
consideration when assessing whether an individual has a disability
are better assessed on a case-by-case basis.” The Department agrees
with the EEOC and underscores that surgical interventions may
constitute mitigating measures that should not be considered in
determining whether an individual meets the definition of
“disability.” The Department declines to make any changes to its
proposed regulatory text for these sections of the final rule.
The ADA Amendments Act provides an “illustrative but
non-comprehensive list of the types of mitigating measures that are
not to be considered.” 154 Cong. Rec. S8842 (daily ed. Sept. 16,
2008) (Statement of the Managers) at 9; see also H.R. Rep.
No. 110-730, pt. 2, at 20 (2008). The absence of any particular
mitigating measure should not convey a negative implication as to
whether the measure is a mitigating measure under the ADA.
Id. This principle applies equally to the non-exhaustive
list in §§ 35.108(d)(4) and 36.105(d)(4).
Sections 35.108(e) and 36.105(e) - Has a Record of Such an
Impairment
The second prong of the definition of “disability” under the ADA
provides that an individual with a record of an impairment that
substantially limits or limited a major life activity is an
individual with a disability. 42 U.S.C. 12102(1)(B).
Paragraph (3) of the definition of “disability” in the existing
title II and title III regulations states that the phrase “has a
record of such an impairment” means has a history of, or has been
misclassified as having, a mental or physical impairment that
substantially limits one or more major life activities. 28 CFR
35.104, 36.104. The NPRM proposed keeping the language in the title
II and title III regulations (with minor editorial changes) but to
renumber it as §§ 35.108(e)(1) and 36.105(e)(1). In addition, the
NPRM proposed adding a new second paragraph stating that any
individual's assertion of a record of impairment that substantially
limits a major life activity should be broadly construed to the
maximum extent permitted by the ADA and should not require
extensive analysis. If an individual has a history of an impairment
that substantially limited one or more major life activities when
compared to most people in the general population or was
misclassified as having had such an impairment, then that
individual will satisfy the third prong of the definition of
“disability.” The NPRM also proposed adding paragraph (3), which
provides that “[a]n individual with a record of a substantially
limiting impairment may be entitled to a reasonable modification if
needed and related to the past disability.”
The Department received no comments objecting to its proposed
language for these provisions and has retained it in the final
rule. The Department received one comment requesting additional
guidance on the meaning of these provisions. The Department notes
that Congress intended this prong of the definition of “disability”
to ensure that people are not discriminated against based on prior
medical history. This prong is also intended to ensure that
individuals are not discriminated against because they have been
misclassified as an individual with a disability. For example,
individuals misclassified as having learning disabilities or
intellectual disabilities are protected from discrimination on the
basis of that erroneous classification. See H.R. Rep. No.
110-730, pt. 2, at 7-8 & n.14 (2008).
This prong of the definition is satisfied where evidence
establishes that an individual has had a substantially limiting
impairment. The impairment indicated in the record must be an
impairment that would substantially limit one or more of the
individual's major life activities. The terms “substantially
limits” and “major life activity” under the second prong of the
definition of “disability” are to be construed in accordance with
the same principles applicable under the “actual disability” prong,
as set forth in §§ 35.108(b) and 36.105(b).
There are many types of records that could potentially contain
this information, including but not limited to, education, medical,
or employment records. The Department notes that past history of an
impairment need not be reflected in a specific document. Any
evidence that an individual has a past history of an impairment
that substantially limited a major life activity is all that is
necessary to establish coverage under the second prong. An
individual may have a “record of” a substantially limiting
impairment - and thus establish coverage under the “record of”
prong of the statute - even if a covered entity does not
specifically know about the relevant record. For the covered entity
to be liable for discrimination under the ADA, however, the
individual with a “record of” a substantially limiting impairment
must prove that the covered entity discriminated on the basis of
the record of the disability.
Individuals who are covered under the “record of” prong may be
covered under the first prong of the definition of “disability” as
well. This is because the rules of construction in the ADA
Amendments Act and the Department's regulations provide that an
individual with an impairment that is episodic or in remission can
be protected under the first prong if the impairment would be
substantially limiting when active. See §§ 35.108(d)(1)(iv);
36.105(d)(1)(iv). Thus, an individual who has cancer that is
currently in remission is an individual with a disability under the
“actual disability” prong because he has an impairment that would
substantially limit normal cell growth when active. He is also
covered by the “record of” prong based on his history of having had
an impairment that substantially limited normal cell growth.
Finally, these provisions of the regulations clarify that an
individual with a record of a disability is entitled to a
reasonable modification currently needed relating to the past
substantially limiting impairment. In the legislative history,
Congress stated that reasonable modifications were available to
persons covered under the second prong of the definition.
See H.R. Rep. No. 110-730, pt. 2, at 22 (2008) (“This makes
clear that the duty to accommodate . . . arises only when an
individual establishes coverage under the first or second prong of
the definition.”). For example, a high school student with an
impairment that previously substantially limited, but no longer
substantially limits, a major life activity may need permission to
miss a class or have a schedule change as a reasonable modification
that would permit him or her to attend follow-up or monitoring
appointments from a health care provider.
Sections 35.108(f) and 36.105(f) - Is Regarded as Having Such an
Impairment
The “regarded as having such an impairment” prong of the
definition of “disability” was included in the ADA specifically to
protect individuals who might not meet the first two prongs of the
definition, but who were subject to adverse decisions by covered
entities based upon unfounded concerns, mistaken beliefs, fears,
myths, or prejudices about persons with disabilities. See
154 Cong. Rec. S8842 (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008) (Statement of the
Managers). The rationale for the “regarded as” part of the
definition of “disability” was articulated by the Supreme Court in
the context of section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 in
School Board of Nassau County v. Arline, 480 U.S. 273
(1987). In Arline, the Court noted that, although an
individual may have an impairment that does not diminish his or her
physical or mental capabilities, it could “nevertheless
substantially limit that person's ability to work as a result of
the negative reactions of others to the impairment.” Id. at
283. Thus, individuals seeking the protection of the ADA under the
“regarded as” prong only had to show that a covered entity took
some action prohibited by the statute because of an actual or
perceived impairment. At the time of the Arline decision,
there was no requirement that the individual demonstrate that he or
she, in fact, had or was perceived to have an impairment that
substantially limited a major life activity. See 154 Cong.
Rec. S8842 (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008) (Statement of the Managers).
For example, if a daycare center refused to admit a child with burn
scars because of the presence of the scars, then the daycare center
regarded the child as an individual with a disability, regardless
of whether the child's scars substantially limited a major life
activity.
In Sutton v. United Air Lines, Inc., 527 U.S. 471
(1999), the Supreme Court significantly narrowed the application of
this prong, holding that individuals who asserted coverage under
the “regarded as having such an impairment” prong had to establish
either that the covered entity mistakenly believed that the
individual had a physical or mental impairment that substantially
limited a major life activity, or that the covered entity
mistakenly believed that “an actual, nonlimiting impairment
substantially limit[ed]” a major life activity, when in fact the
impairment was not so limiting. Id. at 489. Congress
expressly rejected this standard in the ADA Amendments Act by
amending the ADA to clarify that it is sufficient for an individual
to establish that the covered entity regarded him or her as having
an impairment, regardless of whether the individual actually has
the impairment or whether the impairment constitutes a disability
under the Act. 42 U.S.C. 12102(3)(A). This amendment restores
Congress's intent to allow individuals to establish coverage under
the “regarded as” prong by showing that they were treated adversely
because of an actual or perceived impairment without having to
establish the covered entity's beliefs concerning the severity of
the impairment. See H.R. Rep. No. 110-730, pt. 2, at 18
(2008).
Thus, under the ADA as amended, it is not necessary, as it was
prior to the ADA Amendments Act and following the Supreme Court's
decision in Sutton, for an individual to demonstrate that a
covered entity perceived him as substantially limited in the
ability to perform a major life activity in order for the
individual to establish that he or she is covered under the
“regarded as” prong. Nor is it necessary to demonstrate that the
impairment relied on by a covered entity is (in the case of an
actual impairment) or would be (in the case of a perceived
impairment) substantially limiting for an individual to be
“regarded as having such an impairment.” In short, to be covered
under the “regarded as” prong, an individual is not subject to any
functional test. See 154 Cong. Rec. S8843 (daily ed. Sept.
16, 2008) (Statement of the Managers) (“The functional limitation
imposed by an impairment is irrelevant to the third `regarded as'
prong.”); H.R. Rep. No. 110-730, pt. 2, at 17 (2008) (“[T]he
individual is not required to show that the perceived impairment
limits performance of a major life activity.”) The concepts of
“major life activities” and “substantial limitation” simply are not
relevant in evaluating whether an individual is “regarded as having
such an impairment.”
In the NPRM, the Department proposed §§ 35.108(f)(1) and
36.105(f)(1), which are intended to restore the meaning of the
“regarded as” prong of the definition of “disability” by adding
language that incorporates the amended statutory provision: “An
individual is `regarded as having such an impairment' if the
individual is subjected to an action prohibited by the ADA because
of an actual or perceived physical or mental impairment, whether or
not that impairment substantially limits, or is perceived to
substantially limit, a major life activity, except for an
impairment that is both transitory and minor.”
The proposed provisions also incorporate the statutory
definition of transitory impairment, stating that a “transitory
impairment is an impairment with an actual or expected duration of
six months or less.” The “transitory and minor” exception was not
in the third prong in the original statutory definition of
“disability.” Congress added this exception to address concerns
raised by the business community that “absent this exception, the
third prong of the definition would have covered individuals who
are regarded as having common ailments like the cold or flu.”
See H.R. Rep. No. 110-730, pt. 2, at 18 (2008). However, as
an exception to the general rule for broad coverage under the
“regarded as” prong, this limitation on coverage should be
construed narrowly. Id. The ADA Amendments Act did not
define “minor.”
In addition, proposed §§ 35.108(f)(2) and 36.105(f)(2) stated
that any time a public entity or covered entity takes a prohibited
action because of an individual's actual or perceived impairment,
even if the entity asserts, or may or does ultimately establish, a
defense to such action, that individual is “regarded as” having
such an impairment. Commenters on these provisions recommended that
the Department revise its language to clarify that the
determination of whether an impairment is in fact “transitory and
minor” is an objective determination and that a covered entity may
not defeat “regarded as” coverage of an individual simply by
demonstrating that it subjectively believed that the impairment is
transitory and minor. In addition, a number of commenters cited the
EEOC title I rule at 29 CFR 1630.15(f) and asked the Department to
clarify that “the issue of whether an actual or perceived
impairment is `transitory and minor' is an affirmative defense and
not part of the plaintiff's burden of proof.” The Department agrees
with these commenters and has revised paragraphs (1) and (2) of
these sections for clarity, as shown in §§ 35.108(f)(2) and
36.105(f)(2) of the final rule.
The revised language makes clear that the relevant inquiry under
these sections is whether the actual or perceived impairment that
is the basis of the covered entity's action is objectively
“transitory and minor,” not whether the covered entity claims it
subjectively believed the impairment was transitory and minor. For
example, a private school that expelled a student whom it believes
has bipolar disorder cannot take advantage of this exception by
asserting that it believed the student's impairment was transitory
and minor, because bipolar disorder is not objectively transitory
and minor. Similarly, a public swimming pool that refused to admit
an individual with a skin rash, mistakenly believing the rash to be
symptomatic of HIV, will have “regarded” the individual as having a
disability. It is not a defense to coverage that the skin rash was
objectively transitory and minor because the covered entity took
the prohibited action based on a perceived impairment, HIV, that is
not transitory and minor.
The revised regulatory text also makes clear that the
“transitory and minor” exception to a “regarded as” claim is a
defense to a claim of discrimination and not part of an
individual's prima facie case. The Department reiterates that to
fall within this exception, the actual or perceived impairment must
be both transitory (less than six months in duration)
and minor. For example, an individual with a minor back
injury could be “regarded as” an individual with a disability if
the back impairment lasted or was anticipated to last more than six
months. The Department notes that the revised regulatory text is
consistent with the EEOC rule which added the transitory and minor
exception to its general affirmative defense provision in its title
I ADA regulation at 29 CFR 1630.15(f). Finally, in the NPRM, the
Department proposed §§ 35.108(f)(3) and 36.105(f)(3) which provided
that an individual who is “regarded as having such an impairment”
does not establish liability based on that alone. Instead, an
individual can establish liability only when an individual proves
that a private entity or covered entity discriminated on the basis
of disability within the meaning of the ADA. This provision was
intended to make it clear that in order to establish liability, an
individual must establish coverage as a person with a disability,
as well as establish that he or she had been subjected to an action
prohibited by the ADA.
The Department received no comments on the language in these
paragraphs. Upon consideration, in the final rule, the Department
has decided to retain the regulatory text for §§ 35.108(f)(3) and
36.105(f)(3) except that the reference to “covered entity” in the
title III regulatory text is changed to “public accommodation.”
Sections 35.108(g) and 36.105(g) - Exclusions
The NPRM did not propose changes to the text of the existing
exclusions contained in paragraph (5) of the definition of
“disability” in the title II and title III regulations, see
28 CFR 35.104, 36.104, which are based on 42 U.S.C. 12211(b), a
statutory provision that was not modified by the ADA Amendments
Act. The NPRM did propose to renumber these provisions, relocating
them at §§ 35.108(g) and 36.105(g) of the Department's revised
definition of “disability.” The Department received no comments on
the proposed renumbering, which is retained in the final rule.
Sections 35.130(b)(7)(i) - General Prohibitions Against
Discrimination and 36.302(g) - Modifications in Policies,
Practices, or Procedures
The ADA Amendments Act revised the ADA to specify that a public
entity under title II, and any person who owns, leases (or leases
to), or operates a place of public accommodation under title III,
“need not provide a reasonable accommodation or a reasonable
modification to policies, practices, or procedures to an individual
who meets the definition of disability” solely on the basis of
being regarded as having an impairment. 42 U.S.C. 12201(h). In the
NPRM, the Department proposed §§ 35.130(b)(7)(i) and 36.302(g) to
reflect this concept, explaining that a public entity or covered
entity “is not required to provide a reasonable modification to an
individual who meets the definition of disability solely under the
`regarded as' prong of the definition of disability.” These
provisions clarify that the duty to provide reasonable
modifications arises only when the individual establishes coverage
under the first or second prong of the definition of “disability.”
These provisions are not intended to diminish the existing
obligations to provide reasonable modifications under title II and
title III of the ADA.
The Department received no comments associated with these
provisions and retains the NPRM language in the final rule except
for replacing the words “covered entity” with “public
accommodation” in § 36.302(g).
Sections 35.130(i) and 36.201(c) - Claims of No Disability
The ADA as amended provides that “[n]othing in this [Act] shall
provide the basis for a claim by an individual without a disability
that the individual was subject to discrimination because of the
individual's lack of disability.” 42 U.S.C. 12201(g). In the NPRM
the Department proposed adding §§ 35.130(i) and 36.201(c) to
the title II and title III regulations, respectively, which
incorporate similar language. These provisions clarify that persons
without disabilities do not have an actionable claim under the ADA
on the basis of not having a disability.
The Department received no comments associated with this issue
and has retained these provisions in the final rule.
Effect of ADA Amendments Act on Academic Requirements in
Postsecondary Education
The Department notes that the ADA Amendments Act revised the
rules of construction in title V of the ADA by including a
provision affirming that nothing in the Act changed the existing
ADA requirement that covered entities provide reasonable
modifications in policies, practices, or procedures unless the
entity can demonstrate that making such modifications, including
academic requirements in postsecondary education, would
fundamentally alter the nature of goods, services, facilities,
privileges, advantages, or accommodations involved. See 42
U.S.C. 12201(f). Congress noted that the reference to academic
requirements in postsecondary education was included “solely to
provide assurances that the bill does not alter current law with
regard to the obligations of academic institutions under the ADA,
which we believe is already demonstrated in case law on this topic.
Specifically, the reference to academic standards in post-secondary
education is unrelated to the purpose of this legislation and
should be given no meaning in interpreting the definition of
disability.” 154 Cong. Rec. S8843 (daily ed. Sept. 16, 2008)
(Statement of the Managers). Given that Congress did not intend
there to be any change to the law in this area, the Department did
not propose to make any changes to its regulatory requirements in
response to this provision of the ADA Amendments Act.
[AG Order 3702-2016, 81 FR 53225, Aug. 11, 2016]