In a PWFA World, Can an Employer Safely Request FMLA Medical Certification for an Absence Due to Pregnancy?
For decades, employers have applied the usual FMLA rules for an employee who cannot work because of limitations due to pregnancy. When these limitations render a pregnant employee unable to work, the employer has always had the right to obtain medical certification to confirm the limitation and the employee’s need for leave from work. When the FMLA became law in 1993, there was no such thing as the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA), which as of last year requires employers to provide accommodations to individuals limited by pregnancy-related conditions (unless undue hardship exists). In its final rules implementing the PWFA, the EEOC went to unusual lengths to rein in an employer’s ability to obtain medical documentation when an employee requests a pregnancy accommodation. The agency rejected the ADA’s more expansive approach to supporting documentation, instead allowing medical documentation only if it is reasonable under the circumstances to determine if the employee has a qu...