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Press Release 09-11-2009

EEOC SUES SUPERVALU / JEWEL-OSCO FOR DISCRIMINATORY LEAVE AND DISABILITY RULES

Federal Agency Says 'One Year and You're Out' and 'No Accommodation, No Restrictions' Rules Violate Americans With Disabilities Act

CHICAGO – Jewel-Osco, an operating unit of  national grocery giant Supervalu, Inc., has been violating federal  anti-discrimination law by its leave and disability policies, the U.S. Equal  Employ­ment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) charged in a lawsuit it filed  today.

According to the EEOC’s suit,  Jewel-Osco is alleged to have refused to allow qualified employees with  disabilities who are on authorized disability leave, or who are eligible for  it, to return to work if they have any work restrictions, and to have terminated  them if they reach the one-year mark on leave.  The EEOC also charges that the company has refused to allow qualified  employees with disabilities to be assigned to temporary light duty jobs unless  they were injured on the job.

In addition, the EEOC contends,  Jewel-Osco failed to stop the harassment of an employee disabled by a seizure  disorder at its Melrose Park,  Ill., warehouse. Among other things said to him, the EEOC maintains,  was ‘Go have a seizure and crawl on the floor.’”

The EEOC asserts that all this  alleged conduct violates the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA).

The EEOC filed suit in U.S.  District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, EEOC v. SUPERVALU, INC. a Delaware  corporation, and JEWEL-OSCO, an operating unit of SUPERVALU, INC., No. 09 CV 5637, assigned to District Judge Richard Guzman and  Magistrate Judge Michael Mason, after  first attempting to reach a voluntary settlement.

EEOC Chicago District Director John  Rowe, who supervised the administrative investigation which the agency conducted  before filing suit, said, “The findings of our investigation were troubling.  What we learned indicated to us that Jewel-Osco was apparently not moved to  implement its leave policies in a way which might have brought capable disabled  employees who had been on leave back to work—instead, they were shut out. We also learned about apparent on-the-job  harassment of a disabled employee which was far out of bounds.”

EEOC Chicago  Regional Attorney John Hendrickson said, “Whether discrimination on the basis  of disability strikes at classes of employees or at a single individual, it  violates the ADA.  Whether the issue is one of leave or  termination, accommodation or harassment, the lesson is the same –federal law  requires that qualified individuals with disabilities be accorded a fair shot  on the job. This case is going to be about seeing how this employer measured up  against that standard.”

Today’s  lawsuit is the second recently filed in Chicago  by the EEOC against Jewel-Osco under the ADA.  On September 4, 2009, the agency filed  suit against the company, charging that it had failed to reasonably accommodate  a pharmacy employee at its 183rd    Street store in Homewood, Ill.;  the employee suffered from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and severe  allergic reactions to cosmetic fragrances. The September 4 case (N.D. Ill. No. 09 CV  5504) has been assigned to District Judge Elaine E. Bucklo.
 
  Supervisory  Trial Attorney Gregory Gochanour and Trial Attorney Gordon Waldron of the EEOC  Chicago District Office will lead the agency’s litigation team on todays case. The EEOC Chicago District Office is  responsible for processing charges of discrimination, administrative  enforcement, and the conduct of agency litigation in Illinois,  Wisconsin, Minnesota,  Iowa, and North and South  Dakota, with Area Offices in Milwaukee  and Minneapolis.

According  to company information, Minneapolis-based Supervalu operates a store network  with more than 2,500 locations under various brand names.

The EEOC  enforces federal laws prohibiting employment discrimination. Further information about the Commission is available on its web site at www.eeoc.gov.