The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has filed its first lawsuit alleging that an employer violated the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, which took effect last year. In EEOC v. Wabash National Corp., filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Kentucky, the EEOC alleges that a manufacturer of semi-trailers and commercial trucking equipment violated the PWFA by requiring a pregnant employee to take unpaid leave instead of granting a requested accommodation. The lawsuit also alleges that the company conducted an overly broad medical inquiry by requiring the employee to submit ADA paperwork that was not necessary to process her PWFA request.
The employee worked as a front plate assembler at Wabash’s facility in Cadiz, Ky. She told Wabash that her pregnant stomach made it painful for her to bend over trailers, and she asked to be moved to another position or to light duty. Wabash refused. The EEOC asserted that placing Knight on leave without engaging in the interactive constituted a forced accommodation.