Note: I am not a lawyer, just a close reader of texts. Smart comments from lawyers on stuff I get wrong will always be welcome.
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In Hwang v KSU, a professor (listed as assistant professor, but reading as if she's on a one-year contract, which might just be her pre-tenure contract) got cancer. She received 6 months paid leave, was still sick and asked for more time, and was instead fired (with disability benefits). She sued. Lost. Appealed. Lost.
Here's the nut paragraph from Gorsuch's ruling:
Still, it’s difficult to conceive how an employee’s absence for six months — an absence in which she could not work from home, part-time, or in any way in any place — could be consistent with discharging the essential functions of most any job in the national economy today. Even if it were, it is difficult to conceive when requiring so much latitude from an employer might qualify as a reasonable accommodation. Ms. Hwang’s is a terrible problem, one in no way of her own making, but it’s a problem other forms of social security aim to address. The Rehabilitation Act seeks to prevent employers from callously denying reasonable accommodations that permit otherwise qualified disabled persons to work — not to turn employers into safety net providers for those who cannot work.He's an accessible, sharp, writer. I can see why people like him. His position here, as I see it, isn't unreasonable. If an employee can't work due to disability, the employer isn't obligated to provide social security, that's what social security is for!
Of course: Republicans also want to gut social security and shred the safety net.
More to come in this exciting new series!