Justices hear pregnant-worker case

They debate whether she had a claim to light duty at UPS

WASHINGTON -- U.S. Supreme Court justices sparred Wednesday over the rights of pregnant workers as they weighed the case of a former UPS Inc. driver who had to leave her job after her doctor recommended she not lift heavy items.

In an hour-long argument in Washington, the justices debated whether expectant mothers must be offered light-duty assignments on the same basis as workers who have similar physical limitations for other reasons.

The session hinted at the ideological and gender divides that have been present in other high court cases affecting women's rights. Justices Antonin Scalia and Samuel Alito both suggested they might reject the worker's suit against UPS.

On the other side was Justice Elena Kagan, who said a 1978 pregnancy anti-discrimination law "was supposed to be about removing stereotypes of pregnant women as marginal workers."

Kagan pressed for what she called a "middle ground" interpretation of the law that might send the case back to a lower court for more study. Under Kagan's approach, an employer would have a chance to show at trial that it had a legitimate reason for offering light-duty work only to other employees who weren't pregnant.

Two lower courts ruled in favor of UPS.

Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer joined their fellow Democratic appointee Kagan in aiming skeptical questions at UPS' lawyer, Caitlin Halligan.

"Mr. Bagenstos has told us that there is not in this record a single instance of anyone who needed a lifting dispensation who didn't get it except for pregnant people," Ginsburg said, referring to Samuel Bagenstos, the attorney for the former UPS driver. "And if that's the case in fact, then you lose, don't you?"

Halligan called that a "mischaracterization" and said a trial judge found that "no light duty was given to any employees, male or female, with any medical conditions not related to work."

Halligan also argued that Kagan's suggestion couldn't be squared with the statute's language.

Young worked at a UPS facility in Landover, Md. Her job required her to load packages onto vehicles and deliver them to their destination. Although she said the vast majority of those packages were envelope-size, her job description required her to lift parcels of up to 70 pounds.

In 2006, Young became pregnant after in vitro fertilization, and her doctor and midwife said she shouldn't lift objects weighing more than 20 pounds during the first half of the pregnancy or more than 10 pounds for the rest.

She said UPS refused to accommodate her needs either by adjusting her job responsibilities or by temporarily assigning her to a position that didn't require heavy lifting.

She went on an unpaid leave of absence and returned to work after her baby was born. She later left UPS.

Young, now 42, sued the company for compensation, claiming it had violated the Pregnancy Discrimination Act.

UPS said it was simply abiding by its seniority system and union contract, which makes no provision for pregnant employees with physical limitations. The union agreement called for reassignments to be available to workers with job-related injuries and those considered permanently disabled under the Americans With Disabilities Act.

The agreement also made provisions for people who lost their federal driver's certification, letting them temporarily take jobs that don't involve operating a vehicle.

"Because Peggy Young's 20-pound lifting restriction resulted from her pregnancy and not from one of those conditions, UPS rejected her request," Bagenstos said.

That contention drew resistance from Justice Anthony Kennedy, who pressed Bagenstos to say that some nonpregnant workers similarly weren't provided with alternative work.

"You make it sound as if the only condition that was not accommodated was a lifting restriction because of pregnancy, and I did not understand that to be the case," Kennedy said.

The Atlanta-based delivery company shifted its policy after the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case. UPS said that starting Jan. 1 it will treat pregnant employees with restrictions the same as workers with on-the-job injuries, giving them light-duty assignments if available. Young is continuing to press her case in an effort to win damages.

A diverse collection of groups -- including President Barack Obama's administration and anti-abortion advocates -- is urging the court to side with Young. That would extend the reach of the federal Pregnancy Discrimination Act in much of the country.

Business groups say the case threatens to undercut employers' ability to apply neutral policies, including seniority systems.

The high court will rule by late June.

A Section on 12/04/2014

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