EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION GUIDELINES ON PREGNANCY DISCRIMINATION
Last Reviewed: March, 2017

 

After thirty years of silence, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) issued new guidelines on pregnancy discrimination in the workplace. Enforcement Guidance: Pregnancy Discrimination and Related Issues. While the Guidance does not officially constitute law, it is instructive on how the EEOC will investigate and treat pregnancy discrimination charges.

The Guidance provides the following:

An employer may not:

An employer must also hold open a job for a pregnancy-related absence for the same length of time that jobs are held open for employees on sick or temporary disability leave.

If an employer extends leave to new mothers beyond the period of recuperation from childbirth, it cannot lawfully refuse to provide an equivalent amount of leave to new fathers for the same purpose.

Health insurance benefit plans must apply the same terms and conditions for pregnancy-related costs as for medical costs unrelated to pregnancy. If a plan covers a particular percentage of the medical costs incurred for non-pregnancy related conditions, it must cover the same percentage of recoverable costs for pregnancy-related expenses.

Employers can violate the PDA by providing health insurance that excludes coverage of prescription contraceptives, whether the contraceptives are prescribed for birth control or for medical purposes. To comply with Title VII, an employer's health insurance plan must cover prescription contraceptives on the same basis as prescription drugs, devices, and services that are used to prevent the occurrence of medical conditions other than pregnancy covered. This is contrary to Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., in which the Supreme Court recently ruled that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act's contraceptive mandate violated the Religious Freedom Restoration Act as applied to closely hold for-profit corporations whose owners had religious objections to providing certain types of contraceptives.

Employers are required to provide reasonable accommodations for pregnant employees. A reasonable accommodation is a change in the workplace or in the way things are customarily done that enables an individual with a disability to apply for a job, perform a job's essential functions, or enjoy equal benefits and privileges of employment.

Examples of reasonable accommodations include:

 

EEOC References: