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Home > USPS Listens to Deaf Employees' Claims

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USPS Listens to Deaf Employees' Claims

By James W. Cushing Contact All Articles 

The Legal Intelligencer

March 22, 2013

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The matter of Hubbard v. Donahoe, Civil Case No. 03-1062, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, is a class action lawsuit that pits the United States Postal Service against its deaf and hard-of-hearing employees.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission brought a class action suit on behalf of various deaf employees USPS alleging that the USPS denied them communication accommodations (e.g., American sign-language interpreters), especially during meetings, refused to provide them a TTY for telephone communication, failed to give them emergency evacuation notification systems, did not promote them or provide assistance in their effort to get promoted, and subjected them to a hostile work environment as a direct result of their disabilities.

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Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • US District Court
  • United States Postal Service
  • Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

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  • Labor and Employment Law

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