By Myron Curry
How should you treat a pregnant employee or job applicant to avoid liability for pregnancy discrimination? There's a short answer to that question that covers the entire topic: just exactly like you would an applicant or employee with any other health condition that (1) may (but doesn't necessarily) affect their job performance and (2) necessitates their having to take some time off from work. Of course, how you may treat employees with medical conditions -- whether pregnancy or anything else -- is controlled by federal and state laws.
Before Congress passed the Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA) in 1978, it was fairly common for employers to terminate a woman who became pregnant, because the employer believed that she could no longer do the job effectively or that it was too dangerous for her to continue in the job or that clients or customers preferred to deal with non-pregnant employees, and other such reasons mostly based on stereotypes. It was common as well for employers to take pregnancy as a sign that a woman wasn't sufficiently committed to her job or that she wouldn't be able to stay late or travel or engage in other job-related activities that male employees were expected to perform. Consequently, the employer didn't give her the same promotion, training, and other opportunities given to male employees with similar qualifications. All these actions became unlawful in 1978 -- although in some workplaces there may still be managers making unlawful decisions based on such outmoded thinking.
The Pregnancy Discrimination Act makes it illegal for an employer to take any of the following actions:
If you're an employer subject to the Family and Medical Leave Act, your FMLA policy should cover an employee who seeks pregnancy-related leave. There may also be state laws that provide leave rights. If you have the appropriate FMLA policy, treat the employee who wants pregnancy leave within the terms of the policy. Years ago, many employers maintained a "maternity leave policy." These days that would be a mistake, since it suggests that there's something different about maternity from other types of temporary-disability leave.
There are a number of situations that may arise which should only be addressed after consulting with an expert in the human relations department or legal counsel. For example, if a pregnant employee has had an absenteeism problem before becoming pregnant and the problem gets worse during pregnancy, any discipline must be carefully managed so as not to give an appearance of treating the employee differently because she is pregnant. Other possible problem issues are passing over employees for promotion or laying off employees when they are pregnant or on leave.
Training Reduces Exposure
Discrimination is a sensitive and costly problem that is becoming all too common in many workplaces. By providing discrimination prevention training to your employees and managers on a regular basis, you'll reduce your organization’s expose to this costly problem and create a safer workplace.
About the Author
Myron Curry is President of Business Training Media, a leading provider of workforce training videos, DVDs, online courses, articles and workshops designed exclusively for corporate deployment. The company offers training resources on hundreds of topics including leadership, customer service, teamwork, workplace safety, diversity, sales, harassment prevention, ethics and more.
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