Posted on 03/19/2020 11:13:55 PM PDT by nickcarraway
A 600-pound man who lost his job as a bus driver after failing repeated medical and physical evaluations cannot claim that he was discriminated against for being obese, state judges ruled Thursday.
Corey Dickson sued Community Bus Lines, which does business as Coach USA, claiming that he was subjected to a hostile work environment before he lost his job.
But a Superior Court judge last year dismissed the lawsuit because fat people are not one of the protected groups under the state Law Against Discrimination. That decision was upheld Thursday by a three-judge appellate panel.
While disabled people are considered a protected class, state courts will only consider obesity as a disability if it was caused by bodily injury, birth defect or illness.
The Superior Court judge pointed out that doctors never determined that Dickson was disabled and that he had previously passed every physical since he was hired in 2005, even though his weight had never been less than 500 pounds.
Bus drivers are required to pass a medical exam every two years and obtain a medical certification card verifying that they are fit to drive. He failed his physical for the first time in 2015.
The discrimination law prohibits biased treatment in employment, housing, places of public accommodation, and credit and business contracts in all or most of the following:
race religion color national origin nationality ancestry age sex (including pregnancy) familial status marital status domestic partnership or civil union status affectional or sexual orientation gender identity or expression atypical hereditary cellular or blood trait genetic information military service mental or physical disability or perceived disability AIDS/HIV status On appeal, Dickson argued that while obesity may not be a disability, his company acted as if they perceived it to be a disability.
He argued that the company must have believed he was disabled because before he was hired he had threatened to sue if they turned him down for being obese.
But judges did not buy this argument because obesity alone is not a protected class and Dickson could not show that the company had ever treated him as if he were disabled. He had the same routes and pay as everyone else and had won company awards for his performance.
NJ Office of the Attorney General According to the appellate decisions summary of the case, Dickson was examined in April 2015 by an independent doctor who noted that he could not bend over to take off his shoes. The doctor found that he had a massive pedal edema and venous stasis. The doctor temporarily disqualified him from driving a bus until he could be tested for sleep apnea, mobility and get an echocardiogram, which is a heart sonogram.
The bus company had him get a second opinion. That second doctor confirmed the first doctors conclusions and added that Dicksons swelling in the legs could be an indicator of heart disease and that his weight might aggravate health conditions such as sleep apnea, which is a concern for bus drivers and train conductors.
Dickson filed his lawsuit in February 2016. He got a third examination in July 2017 and was diagnosed with sleep apnea. Two days later he suffered a stroke, the appellate decision says. He was later diagnosed with peripheral edema, obstructive sleep apnea, morbid obesity, chronic congestive heart failure, myocardial systolic dysfunction and more.
The judge who tossed the lawsuit also found no evidence that he was subjected to a hostile work environment, which is another component of the discrimination law.
The lawsuit had said that his co-workers regularly made rude comments like calling him fat, compared his size to a bus or a 747, and said that he might eat all the snacks in the vending machine or break a chair if he sat on it.
While these comments were hurtful, the judge reasoned, they were not severe or pervasive enough to affect his employment.
The appellate judges added that his co-workers' comments were not physically threatening, and were in line with the self-deprecating comments plaintiff made about himself."
In addition, [Dickson] never claimed that the rude remarks unreasonably interfered with his work driving the bus," Thursday's decision says. "Until he was unable to secure a medical certification card, [Dickson] was a valued employee who received several commendations. Community never fired [Dickson], and kept his job open in the hope that he would be able to pass his licensing examination.
Ping
Finally! Some common sense from the judiciary.
The jabba used the hostile work environment excuse as the pillar of his discrimination lawsuit but the judge was unmoved about it. Plus his 3rd medical exam was not because he was fat but because of sleep apnea. The judge ruled correctly. The guy was just a mess, in and out.
Down side: The judge ruled against him.
Up side: Now hes got the time to study sumo wresting.
a 600 pound female bus driver would have won her case.
A ticking timebomb with a high probability of a major heart attack while driving, putting everyone in the bus at risk.
Oh dear, his co-workers called him fat. Imagine that.
So, which relative got him the job?
The school district will save a lot in fuel costs.
This guy has no business holding any job where physical capacity (even just staying conscious) is a requirement.
If he wanted to keep his job, there are ways of losing the weight. For example, keto works.
This guy is fat because he doesn't want to change his destructive high sugar diet.
My uncle Louie was a bus driver.
I hope, when my time comes, I pass away peacefully in my sleep, like Louie,
not screaming in terror like his passengers.
No ones going to throw him under the bus. Oh wait, he IS the bus.
“after failing repeated medical and physical evaluations..”
Any discrimination basis should have stopped right here.
Bus drivers have strict health qualifications to keep up with. A friend of mine had to be taken off bus duty due to high blood sugar. He was given a month to get it controlled and couldnt at least to acceptable numbers and was told he was done. Good luck on your future endeavors is basically what he was told.
How does he even fit into a car or truck?
Threatened to sue if they didn’t hire him because of his obesity?
Sounds like he needs another job for his health anyway. Certainly couldn’t respond well to so some sort of emergency at the back of the bus or whatever.
“How does he even fit into a car or truck?”
That. is why he is a bus driver.
How much do you have to eat a day to get to or hold that kind of weight???/
My brother was pretty heavy but has since lost quite a bit of weight. It can be done.
It’s taking time, but it didn’t go on all at once, so it’s not coming off all at once.
At 600 pounds, it should be fairly easy to drop some weight by simply cutting your portion sizes.
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