The Florida Times-Union

Agency: Employers must accommodat­e abortions

- Daniel Wiessner REUTERS

U.S. employers’ obligation to accommodat­e workers’ pregnancie­s also extends to abortions and the use of contracept­ion, the U.S. agency that enforces workplace discrimina­tion laws said on Monday.

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission (EEOC) unveiled a rule to implement the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, a law that Congress passed with bipartisan support and the backing of major business groups in 2022. The law requires employers to alter job duties or give time off to workers with “limitation­s related to … pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions.”

The commission’s rule, which was proposed last year, has drawn criticism from some Republican­s and religious groups who say the law’s protection­s should not extend to workers who choose to have abortions or take birth control, or that if it does, religious employers should be eligible for an exemption.

A group of Republican­s in Congress suggested in comments to the EEOC that the lack of a religious exemption could form the basis of a legal challenge to the rule.

Rep. Virginia Foxx, a Republican from North Carolina, said on Monday the EEOC exceeded its authority by adopting the rule.

The EEOC’s five members are appointed by the president, but the agency functions independen­tly from the White House. The rule will be formally published on Friday and will take effect 60 days later.

The 2022 law requires U.S. employers with 15 or more employees to provide reasonable accommodat­ions to pregnant workers. Previously, federal law only required those accommodat­ions if employers also gave them to employees with injuries or medical conditions.

The EEOC rule’s list of accommodat­ions that workers may seek includes limits on heavy lifting, part-time work schedules, additional breaks to drink water and use restrooms, modified equipment and uniforms, seating, remote work, and paid or unpaid leave.

Workers may also ask to be relieved of certain essential functions of their jobs, as long as they can resume performing them after a pregnancy, the EEOC said.

Business groups and other critics of the rule have said that providing accommodat­ions such as seating and additional breaks sounds simple, but can be impractica­l for many jobs and workplaces.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other groups told the EEOC last year that whether specific accommodat­ions are appropriat­e should be considered on a case-by-case basis. And once temporary accommodat­ions are granted to pregnant workers, employers should be permitted to periodical­ly request documentat­ion showing that they are still necessary, the groups said.

Many worker advocacy groups supported the regulation­s. A Better Balance, which advocates for work-life balance measures, said the broad EEOC rule would remove various obstacles to women staying in the workforce when they are pregnant and after they give birth.

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 ?? SHELBY TAUBER/REUTERS ?? The commission’s rule has drawn criticism from some Republican­s and religious groups who say the law’s protection­s should not extend to workers who choose to have abortions or take birth control, or that if it does, religious employers should be eligible for an exemption.
SHELBY TAUBER/REUTERS The commission’s rule has drawn criticism from some Republican­s and religious groups who say the law’s protection­s should not extend to workers who choose to have abortions or take birth control, or that if it does, religious employers should be eligible for an exemption.

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