DOJ Cautions Employers about Disability Considerations with Hiring Technologies

14 Jun, 2022 Frank Ferreri

                               

Washington, DC (WorkersCompensation.com) – Automation is all around, and anyone who has applied for a job lately has probably encountered multiple layers of artificial intelligence somewhere along the path from seeing a job posting to landing a job offer.

And while technology can help employers speed up the hiring process, as the U.S. Department of Justice recently advised, it can unintentionally create a potential for disability discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act. To help employers stay out of ADA trouble, DOJ recently issued guidance on algorithms and artificial intelligence in hiring.

The following chart highlights DOJ’s key guidance points.

Topics

DOJ’s Guidance

Consideration of different disabilities

An employer that designs its hiring technology to avoid discriminating against blind applicants must be aware that it may violate the ADA if its technology discriminates against applicants with autism or epilepsy.

Screening out people with disabilities

Although employers can use qualification standards that are job-related and consistent with business necessity, employers must provide reasonable accommodations to allow applicants to meet those standards, unless doing so would be an undue hardship. Thus, employers should examine hiring technologies to assess whether they screen out individuals with disabilities who can perform the essential functions of a job with or without required reasonable accommodations.

Testing technologies

Under the ADA, employers must ensure that pre-hiring tests or games measure only the relevant skills and abilities of an applicant, rather than reflection the applicant’s impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills that the tests do not seek to measure.

For example, an applicant to a school district with a vision impairment may get passed over for a staff assistant job because they do poorly on a computer-based test that requires them to see, even though that applicant is able to do the job.

Examples of reasonable accommodations for applicants with disabilities

A reasonable accommodation is a change in the way things are usually done to give equal opportunities to a person with a disability in applying for a job, performing a job, or accessing the benefits and privileges of employment.

Some possible examples could include:

  • Telling applicants about the type of technology being used and how the applicants will be evaluated.
  • Providing enough information to applicants so that they may decide whether to seek a reasonable accommodation.
  • Providing and implementing clear procedures for requesting reasonable accommodations and making sure that asking for one does not hurt the applicant’s chance of getting the job.

 

 

 


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    About The Author

    • Frank Ferreri

      Frank Ferreri, M.A., J.D. covers workers' compensation legal issues. He has published books, articles, and other material on multiple areas of employment, insurance, and disability law. Frank received his master's degree from the University of South Florida and juris doctor from the University of Florida Levin College of Law. Frank encourages everyone to consider helping out the Kind Souls Foundation and Kids' Chance of America.

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