SUTTON v. UNITED AIR LINES, INC., 527 U.S. 471 (1999) 119 S.Ct. 2139
KAREN SUTTON AND KIMBERLY HINTON, PETITIONERS v. UNITED AIR LINES, INC.
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
No. 97-1943.
Argued April 28, 1999
Decided June 22, 1999
Petitioners, severely myopic twin sisters, have uncorrected
visual acuity of 20/200 or worse, but with corrective measures,
both function identically to individuals without similar
impairments. They applied to respondent, a major commercial
airline carrier, for employment as commercial airline pilots but
were rejected because they did not meet respondent's minimum
requirement of uncorrected visual acuity of 20/100 or better.
Consequently, they filed suit under the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), which prohibits covered employers
from discriminating against individuals on the basis of their
disabilities. Among other things, the ADA defines a "disability"
as "a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one
or more . . . major life activities,"
42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(A), or as "being regarded as having
such an impairment," § 12102(2)(C). The District Court
dismissed petitioners' complaint for failure to state a
claim upon which relief could be granted. The court held
that petitioners were not actually disabled under
subsection (A) of the disability definition because they
could fully correct their visual impairments. The court
also determined that petitioners were not "regarded" by
respondent as disabled under subsection (C) of this
definition. Petitioners had alleged only that respondent
regarded them as unable to satisfy the requirements of a
particular job, global airline pilot. These allegations
were insufficient to state a claim that petitioners were
regarded as substantially limited in the major life
activity of working. Employing similar logic, the Tenth Circuit affirmed.
Held: Petitioners have not alleged that they are
"disabled" within the ADA's meaning. Pp. 477-494.
(a) No agency has been delegated authority to interpret the term
"disability" as it is used in the ADA. The EEOC has,
nevertheless, issued regulations that, among other things,
define "physical impairment" to mean "[a]ny physiological disorder . . .
affecting . . . special sense organs," "substantially limits"
to mean "[u]nable to perform a major life activity that the
average person in the general population can perform," and
"[m]ajor [l]ife [a]ctivities [to] mea[n] functions such as
. . . working." Because both parties accept these regulations
as valid, and determining their validity is not necessary to
decide this
Page 472
case, the Court has no occasion to consider what
deference they are due, if any. The EEOC and the Justice
Department have also issued interpretive guidelines providing
that the determination whether an individual is substantially
limited in a major life activity must be made on a case by case
basis, without regard to mitigating measures such as assistive
or prosthetic devices. Although the parties dispute the
guidelines' persuasive force, the Court has no need in this
case to decide what deference is due. Pp. 477-480.
(b) Petitioners have not stated a § 12102(2)(A) claim that
they have an actual physical impairment that substantially limits
them in one or more major life activities. Three separate ADA
provisions, read in concert, lead to the conclusion that the
determination whether an individual is disabled should be made
with reference to measures, such as eyeglasses and contact
lenses, that mitigate the individual's impairment, and that the
approach adopted by the agency guidelines is an impermissible
interpretation of the ADA. First, because the phrase
"substantially limits" appears in subsection (A) in the present
indicative verb form, the language is properly read as requiring
that a person be presently  not potentially or
hypothetically  substantially limited in order to
demonstrate a disability. A "disability" exists only where an
impairment "substantially limits" a major life activity, not
where it "might," "could," or "would" be substantially limiting
if corrective measures were not taken. Second, because
subsection (A) requires that disabilities be evaluated "with
respect to an individual" and be determined based on whether an
impairment substantially limits the individual's "major life
activities," the question whether a person has a disability under
the ADA is an individualized inquiry. See Bragdon v.
Abbott, 524 U.S. 624, 641-642. The guidelines'
directive that persons be judged in their uncorrected or
unmitigated state runs directly counter to this mandated
individualized inquiry. The former would create a system in
which persons would often be treated as members of a group having
similar impairments, rather than as individuals. It could also
lead to the anomalous result that courts and employers could not
consider any negative side effects suffered by the individual
resulting from the use of mitigating measures, even when those
side effects are very severe. Finally, and critically, the
congressional finding that 43 million Americans have
one or more physical or mental disabilities, see §
12101(a)(1), requires the conclusion that Congress did not intend
to bring under the ADA's protection all those whose uncorrected
conditions amount to disabilities. That group would include
more than 160 million people. Because petitioners allege that
with corrective measures their vision is 20/20 or better, they
are not actually disabled under subsection (A). Pp. 481-489.
Page 473
(c) Petitioners have also failed to allege properly that they are
"regarded as," see § 12102(2)(C), having an impairment that
"substantially limits" a major life activity, see §
12102(2)(A). Generally, these claims arise when an employer
mistakenly believes that an individual has a substantially
limiting impairment. To support their claims, petitioners
allege that respondent has an impermissible vision
requirement that is based on myth and stereotype and that
respondent mistakenly believes that, due to their poor
vision, petitioners are unable to work as "global airline
pilots" and are thus substantially limited in the major
life activity of working. Creating physical criteria for a
job, without more, does not violate the ADA. The ADA
allows employers to prefer some physical attributes over
others, so long as those attributes do not rise to the
level of substantially limiting impairments. An employer
is free to decide that physical characteristics or medical
conditions that are not impairments are preferable to
others, just as it is free to decide that some limiting,
but not substantially limiting, impairments make
individuals less than ideally suited for a job. In
addition, petitioners have not sufficiently alleged that
they are regarded as substantially limited in the major
life activity of working. When the major life activity
under consideration is that of working, the ADA requires,
at least, that one's ability to work be significantly
reduced. The EEOC regulations similarly define
"substantially limits" to mean significantly restricted in
the ability to perform either a class of jobs or a broad
range of jobs in various classes as compared to the average
person having comparable training, skills and abilities.
The Court assumes without deciding that work is a major
life activity and that this regulation is reasonable. It
observes, however, that defining "major life activities" to
include work has the potential to make the ADA circular.
Assuming work is a major life activity, the Court finds
that petitioners' allegations are insufficient because the
position of global airline pilot is a single job. Indeed, a
number of other positions utilizing petitioners' skills,
such as regional pilot and pilot instructor, are available
to them. The Court also rejects petitioners' argument that
they would be substantially limited in their ability to
work if it is assumed that a substantial number of airlines
have vision requirements similar to respondent's. This
argument is flawed because it is not enough to say that if
the otherwise permissible physical criteria or preferences
of a single employer were imputed to all similar employers
one would be regarded as substantially limited in the major
life activity of working only as a result of this
imputation. Rather, an employer's physical criteria are
permissible so long as they do not cause the employer to
make an employment decision based on an impairment, real or
imagined, that it regards as substantially limiting a major
Page 474
life activity. Petitioners have not alleged, and cannot demonstrate,
that respondent's vision requirement reflects a belief that their
vision substantially limits them. Pp. 489-494.
130 F.3d 893, affirmed.
O'CONNOR, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and SCALIA, KENNEDY, SOUTER, THOMAS, and
GINSBURG, JJ., joined. GINSBURG, J., filed a concurring opinion.
STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BREYER, J.,
joined. BREYER, J., filed a dissenting opinion, post, p. 474.
Van Aaron Hughes argued the cause for petitioners. With him on
the breifs were Tucker K. Trautman and Shawn D. Mitchell.[fn*]
Deputy SOlicitor General Kneedler argued the cause for the United
States as amicus curiae urging revasal. On the breifs were Solicitor
General Waxman, Acting Assistant Attorney General Lee, Deputy Solicito
General Underwood, James A. Feldman, Jessica Dunsay Silver, Seth M.
Galanter, Philip B. Sklover, and Carolyn L. Wheeler.
Roy T. Englert, Jr., argued the cause for respondent. With him on
the breif were Lisa Hogan and Patrick F. Carrigan.
[fn*] Breifs of amici curiae urging reversal were filed for AIDS Action
et al. by Claudia Center and Guy Wallace; for the American Civil
Liberties Uniion by Louis M. Bograd, Chai R. Feldblum, Steven R.
Shapiro, and Matthew A. Coles; for the American Federation of Labor
and Congress of Industrial Organizations by Jonathan P. Hiatt,
Marsha S. Berzon, and Laurence Gold; and for the National Employment
Lawyers Association by Gary Phelan and Paula A. Brantner.
Briefs of amici curiae urging affirmance were filed for the Air
Transport Association of America, Inc., by John H. Gallagher, Neal
D. Mollen, and Margaret H. Spurlin; and for the Equal Employment
Advisory Council et al. by Ann Elizabeth Reesman, corrie L. Fischel,
Stephen A. Bokat, Robin S. Conrad, and J. Walker Henry.
Breifs of amici curae were filed for LPA, Inc. by Daniel V. Yager;
for the Society for Human Resource Management by Peter J. Petesch,
Thomas J. Walsh, Jr., Timothy S. Bland, and David S. Harvey, Jr.; and
for Senator Tom Harkin et al. by Arlene B. Mayerson.
Page 475
JUSTICE O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA or Act),
104 Stat. 328, 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., prohibits certain
employers from discriminating against individuals on the basis
of their disabilities. See § 12112(a). Petitioners challenge
the dismissal of their ADA action for failure to state a claim
upon which relief can be granted. We conclude that the
complaint was properly dismissed. In reaching that result, we
hold that the determination of whether an individual is
disabled should be made with reference to measures that
mitigate the individual's impairment, including, in this
instance, eyeglasses and contact lenses. In addition, we hold
that petitioners failed to allege properly that respondent
"regarded" them as having a disability within the meaning of the ADA.
I
Petitioners' amended complaint was dismissed for failure to
state a claim upon which relief could be granted. See Fed.
Rule Civ. Proc. 12(b)(6). Accordingly, we accept the allegations
contained in their complaint as true for purposes of this case.
See United States v. Gaubert, 499 U.S. 315, 327 (1991).
Petitioners are twin sisters, both of whom have severe myopia.
Each petitioner's uncorrected visual acuity is 20/200 or worse in
her right eye and 20/400 or worse in her left eye, but "[w]ith
the use of corrective lenses, each . . . has vision that is 20/20
or better." App. 23. Consequently, without corrective lenses,
each "effectively cannot see to conduct numerous activities such
as driving a vehicle, watching television or shopping in public
stores," id., at 24, but with corrective measures, such
as glasses or contact lenses, both "function identically to
individuals without a similar impairment," ibid.
In 1992, petitioners applied to respondent for employment as
commercial airline pilots. They met respondent's basic age,
education, experience, and Federal Aviation
Page 476
Administration certification qualifications. After submitting
their applications for employment, both petitioners were
invited by respondent to an interview and to flight simulator
tests. Both were told during their interviews, however, that
a mistake had been made in inviting them to interview because
petitioners did not meet respondent's minimum vision
requirement, which was uncorrected visual acuity of 20/100 or
better. Due to their failure to meet this requirement,
petitioners' interviews were terminated, and neither was
offered a pilot position.
In light of respondent's proffered reason for rejecting them,
petitioners filed a charge of disability discrimination under the
ADA with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC).
After receiving a right to sue letter, petitioners filed suit in
the United States District Court for the District of Colorado,
alleging that respondent had discriminated against them "on the
basis of their disability, or because [respondent] regarded
[petitioners] as having a disability" in violation of the ADA.
App. 26. Specifically, petitioners alleged that due to their
severe myopia they actually have a substantially limiting
Page 477
impairment or are regarded as having such an impairment, see
id., at 23-26, and are thus disabled under the Act.
The District Court dismissed petitioners' complaint for
failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. See
Civ. A. No. 96-5-121 (Aug. 28, 1996), App. to Pet. for Cert.
A-27. Because petitioners could fully correct their visual
impairments, the court held that they were not actually
substantially limited in any major life activity and thus had not
stated a claim that they were disabled within the meaning of the
ADA. Id., at A-32 to A-36. The court also determined
that petitioners had not made allegations sufficient to support
their claim that they were "regarded" by respondent as having
an impairment that substantially limits a major life activity.
Id., at A-36 to A-37. The court observed that "[t]he
statutory reference to a substantial limitation indicates . . .
that an employer regards an employee as handicapped in his or her
ability to work by finding the employee's impairment to foreclose
generally the type of employment involved." Id., at A-36
to A-37. But petitioners had alleged only that respondent
regarded them as unable to satisfy the requirements of a
particular job, global airline pilot. Consequently, the court
held that petitioners had not stated a claim that they were
regarded as substantially limited in the major life activity of
working. Employing similar logic, the Court of Appeals for the
Tenth Circuit affirmed the District Court's judgment.
130 F.3d 893 (1997).
The Tenth Circuit's decision is in tension with the decisions
of other Courts of Appeals. See, e.g., Bartlett v. New York
State Bd. of Law Examiners, 156 F.3d 321, 329 (CA2 1998)
(holding self-accommodations cannot be considered when
determining a disability), cert. pending, No. 98-1285; Baert
v. Euclid Beverage, Ltd., 149 F.3d 626, 629-630 (CA7 1998)
(holding disabilities should be determined without reference
to mitigating measures); Matczak v. Frankford Candy &
Chocolate Co., 136 F.3d 933, 937-938 (CA3 1997) (same); Arnold
v. United Parcel Service, Inc., 136 F.3d 854, 859-866 (CA1
1998) (same); see also Washington v. HCA Health Servs. of
Texas, Inc., 152 F.3d 464, 470-471 (CA5 1998) (holding that
only some impairments should be evaluated in their uncorrected
state), cert. pending, No. 98-1365. We granted certiorari,
525 U.S. 1063 (1999), and now affirm.
II
The ADA prohibits discrimination by covered entities,
including private employers, against qualified individuals with a
disability. Specifically, it provides that no covered employer
"shall discriminate against a qualified individual with a
disability because of the disability of such individual in regard
to job application procedures, the hiring, advancement, or
discharge of employees, employee compensation, job training, and
other terms, conditions, and privileges
Page 478
of employment." 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a); see also § 12111(2) ("The term
`covered entity' means an employer, employment agency, labor
organization, or joint labor-management committee"). A
"qualified individual with a disability" is identified as "an
individual with a disability who, with or without reasonable
accommodation, can perform the essential functions of the
employment position that such individual holds or desires." §
12111(8). In turn, a "disability" is defined as:
"(A) a physical or mental impairment that
substantially limits one or more of the major
life activities of such individual;
"(B) a record of such an impairment; or
"(C) being regarded as having such an impairment." §
12102(2).
Accordingly, to fall within this definition one must have an
actual disability (subsection (A)), have a record of a disability
(subsection (B)), or be regarded as having one (subsection (C)).
The parties agree that the authority to issue regulations to
implement the Act is split primarily among three Government
agencies. According to the parties, the EEOC has authority to
issue regulations to carry out the employment provisions in Title
I of the ADA, §§ 12111-12117, pursuant to § 12116 ("Not
later than 1 year after [the date of enactment of this Act], the
Commission shall issue regulations in an accessible format to
carry out this subchapter in accordance with subchapter II of
chapter 5 of title 5"). The Attorney General is granted
authority to issue regulations with respect to Title II, subtitle
A, §§ 12131-12134, which relates to public services. See
§ 12134 ("Not later than 1 year after [the date of enactment
of this Act], the Attorney General shall promulgate regulations
in an accessible format that implement this part"). Finally, the
Secretary of Transportation has authority to issue regulations
pertaining to the transportation provisions of Titles II and III.
See § 12149(a)
Page 479
("Not later than 1 year after [the date of enactment of this
Act], the Secretary of Transportation shall issue regulations,
in an accessible format, necessary for carrying out this
subpart (other than section 12143 of this title)"); § 12164
(substantially same); § 12186(a)(1) (substantially same); §
12143(b) ("Not later than one year after [the date of
enactment of this Act], the Secretary shall issue final
regulations to carry out this section"). See also § 12204
(granting authority to the Architectural and Transportation
Barriers Compliance Board to issue minimum guidelines to
supplement the existing Minimum Guidelines and Requirements
for Accessible Design). Moreover, each of these agencies is
authorized to offer technical assistance regarding the
provisions they administer. See § 12206(c)(1) ("Each Federal
agency that has responsibility under paragraph (2) for
implementing this chapter may render technical assistance to
individuals and institutions that have rights or duties under
the respective subchapter or subchapters of this chapter for
which such agency has responsibility").
No agency, however, has been given authority to issue
regulations implementing the generally applicable provisions of
the ADA, see §§ 12101-12102, which fall outside Titles I-V.
Most notably, no agency has been delegated authority to interpret
the term "disability." § 12102(2). JUSTICE BREYER'S
contrary, imaginative interpretation of the Act's delegation
provisions, see post, at 514-515 (dissenting opinion), is
belied by the terms and structure of the ADA. The EEOC has,
nonetheless, issued regulations to provide additional guidance
regarding the proper interpretation of this term. After
restating the definition of disability given in the statute, see
29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(g) (1998), the EEOC regulations define the
three elements of disability: (1) "physical or mental
impairment," (2) "substantially limits," and (3) "major life
activities." See §§ 1630.2(h)-(j). Under the regulations, a
"physical impairment" includes "[a]ny physiological disorder,
or condition, cosmetic disfigurement,
Page 480
or anatomical loss affecting one or more of the following body
systems: neurological, musculoskeletal, special sense organs,
respiratory (including speech organs), cardiovascular,
reproductive, digestive, genito-urinary, hemic and lymphatic,
skin, and endocrine." § 1630.2(h)(1). The term
"substantially limits" means, among other things, "[u]nable to
perform a major life activity that the average person in the
general population can perform"; or "[s]ignificantly restricted
as to the condition, manner or duration under which an individual
can perform a particular major life activity as compared to the
condition, manner, or duration under which the average person in
the general population can perform that same major life
activity." § 1630.2(j). Finally, "[m]ajor [l]ife
[a]ctivities means functions such as caring for oneself,
performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking,
breathing, learning, and working." § 1630.2(i).
Because both parties accept these regulations as valid, and
determining their validity is not necessary to decide this case,
we have no occasion to consider what deference they are due, if
any.
The agencies have also issued interpretive guidelines to aid
in the implementation of their regulations. For instance, at the
time that it promulgated the above regulations, the EEOC issued
an "Interpretive Guidance," which provides that "[t]he
determination of whether an individual is substantially limited
in a major life activity must be made on a case by case basis,
without regard to mitigating measures such as medicines, or
assistive or prosthetic devices." 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, App. §
1630.2(j) (1998) (describing § 1630.2(j)). The Department of
Justice has issued a similar guideline. See 28 C.F.R. pt. 35, App.
A, § 35.104 ("The question of whether a person has a
disability should be assessed without regard to the availability
of mitigating measures, such as reasonable modification or
auxiliary aids and services"); pt. 36, App. B, § 36.104
(same). Although the parties dispute the persuasive force of
these interpretive guidelines, we have no need in this case to
decide what deference is due.
Page 481
III
With this statutory and regulatory framework in mind, we turn
first to the question whether petitioners have stated a claim
under subsection (A) of the disability definition, that is,
whether they have alleged that they possess a physical impairment
that substantially limits them in one or more major life
activities. See 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(A). Because
petitioners allege that with corrective measures their vision "is
20/20 or better," App. 23, they are not actually disabled
within the meaning of the Act if the "disability" determination
is made with reference to these measures. Consequently, with
respect to subsection (A) of the disability definition, our
decision turns on whether disability is to be determined with
or without reference to corrective measures.
Petitioners maintain that whether an impairment is
substantially limiting should be determined without regard to
corrective measures. They argue that, because the ADA does not
directly address the question at hand, the Court should defer to
the agency interpretations of the statute, which are embodied in
the agency guidelines issued by the EEOC and the Department of
Justice. These guidelines specifically direct that the
determination of whether an individual is substantially limited
in a major life activity be made without regard to mitigating
measures. See 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, App. § 1630.2(j); 28 C.F.R. pt.
35, App. A. § 35.104 (1998); 28 C.F.R. pt. 36, App. B §
36.104.
Respondent, in turn, maintains that an impairment does not
substantially limit a major life activity if it is corrected. It
argues that the Court should not defer to the agency guidelines
cited by petitioners because the guidelines conflict with the
plain meaning of the ADA. The phrase "substantially limits one
or more major life activities," it explains, requires that the
substantial limitations actually and presently exist. Moreover,
respondent argues, disregarding mitigating measures taken by an
individual defies the statutory
Page 482
command to examine the effect of the impairment on the major
life activities "of such individual." And even if the statute
is ambiguous, respondent claims, the guidelines' directive to
ignore mitigating measures is not reasonable, and thus this
Court should not defer to it.
We conclude that respondent is correct that the approach
adopted by the agency guidelines  that persons are to be
evaluated in their hypothetical uncorrected state  is an
impermissible interpretation of the ADA. Looking at the Act as a
whole, it is apparent that if a person is taking measures to
correct for, or mitigate, a physical or mental impairment, the
effects of those measures  both positive and negative  must be taken into
account when judging whether that person is "substantially
limited" in a major life activity and thus "disabled" under the
Act. Justice Stevens relies on the legislative history of the ADA
for the contrary proposition that individuals should be examined
in their uncorrected state. See post, at 499-501 (dissenting
opinion). Because we decide that, by its terms, the ADA
cannot be read in this manner, we have no reason to consider the
ADA's legislative history.
Three separate provisions of the ADA, read in concert, lead us
to this conclusion. The Act defines a "disability" as "a
physical or mental impairment that substantially
limits one or more of the major life activities" of an
individual. § 12102(2)(A) (emphasis added). Because the
phrase "substantially limits" appears in the Act in the present
indicative verb form, we think the language is properly read as
requiring that a person be presently  not potentially or
hypothetically  substantially limited in order to
demonstrate a disability. A "disability" exists only where an
impairment "substantially limits" a major life activity, not
where it "might," "could," or "would" be substantially limiting
if mitigating measures were not taken. A person whose physical
or mental impairment is corrected by medication or other measures
does not have an impairment that presently "substantially
Page 483
limits" a major life activity. To be sure, a person whose physical or
mental impairment is corrected by mitigating measures still has
an impairment, but if the impairment is corrected it does not
"substantially limi[t]" a major life activity.
The definition of disability also requires that disabilities
be evaluated "with respect to an individual" and be determined
based on whether an impairment substantially limits the "major
life activities of such individual." § 12102(2). Thus,
whether a person has a disability under the ADA is an
individualized inquiry. See Bragdon v. Abbott, 524 U.S. 624,
641-642 (1998) (declining to consider whether HIV infection is
a per se disability under the ADA); 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, App. §
1630.2(j) ("The determination of whether an individual has a
disability is not necessarily based on the name or diagnosis
of the impairment the person has, but rather on the effect of
that impairment on the life of the individual").
The agency guidelines' directive that persons be judged in
their uncorrected or unmitigated state runs directly counter to
the individualized inquiry mandated by the ADA. The agency
approach would often require courts and employers to speculate
about a person's condition and would, in many cases, force them
to make a disability determination based on general information
about how an uncorrected impairment usually affects individuals,
rather than on the individual's actual condition. For instance,
under this view, courts would almost certainly find all diabetics
to be disabled, because if they failed to monitor their blood
sugar levels and administer insulin, they would almost certainly
be substantially limited in one or more major life activities. A
diabetic whose illness does not impair his or her daily
activities would therefore be considered disabled simply because
he or she has diabetes. Thus, the guidelines approach would
create a system in which persons often must be treated as members
of a group of people with similar impairments, rather than
Page 484
as individuals. This is contrary to both the letter and the spirit
of the ADA.
The guidelines approach could also lead to the anomalous
result that in determining whether an individual is disabled,
courts and employers could not consider any negative side effects
suffered by an individual resulting from the use of mitigating
measures, even when those side effects are very severe. See,
e.g., Johnson, Antipsychotics: Pros and Cons of
Antipsychotics, RN (Aug. 1997) (noting that antipsychotic
drugs can cause a variety of adverse effects, including
neuroleptic malignant syndrome and painful seizures); Liver
Risk Warning Added to Parkinson's Drug, FDA Consumer (Mar. 1,
1999) (warning that a drug for treating Parkinson's disease
can cause liver damage); Curry & Kulling, Newer Antiepileptic
Drugs, American Family Physician (Feb. 1, 1998) (cataloging
serious negative side effects of new antiepileptic drugs).
This result is also inconsistent with the individualized
approach of the ADA.
Finally, and critically, findings enacted as part of the ADA
require the conclusion that Congress did not intend to bring
under the statute's protection all those whose uncorrected
conditions amount to disabilities. Congress found that "some
43,000,000 Americans have one or more physical or mental
disabilities, and this number is increasing as the population as
a whole is growing older." § 12101(a)(1). This figure is
inconsistent with the definition of disability pressed by
petitioners.
Although the exact source of the 43 million figure is not
clear, the corresponding finding in the 1988 precursor to the ADA
was drawn directly from a report prepared by the National Council
on Disability. See Burgdorf, The Americans with Disabilities
Act: Analysis and Implications of a Second-Generation Civil
Rights Statute, 26 Harv. Civ. Rights Civ. Lib. L. Rev. 413, 434,
n. 117 (1991) (reporting, in an article authored by the drafter
of the original ADA bill introduced in Congress in 1988, that the
report was the source for a
Page 485
figure of 36 million disabled persons quoted in the versions
of the bill introduced in 1988). That report detailed the
difficulty of estimating the number of disabled persons due to
varying operational definitions of disability. National
Council on Disability, Toward Independence 10 (1986). It
explained that the estimates of the number of disabled
Americans ranged from an overinclusive 160 million under a
"health conditions approach," which looks at all conditions
that impair the health or normal functional abilities of an
individual, to an underinclusive 22.7 million under a "work
disability approach," which focuses on individuals' reported
ability to work. Id., at 10-11. It noted that "a figure of 35 or 36
million [was] the most commonly quoted estimate." Id.,
at 10. The 36 million number included in the 1988 bill's
findings thus clearly reflects an approach to defining
disabilities that is closer to the work disabilities approach
than the health conditions approach.
This background also provides some clues to the likely source
of the figure in the findings of the 1990 Act. Roughly two years
after issuing its 1986 report, the National Council on Disability
issued an updated report. See On the Threshold of Independence
(1988). This 1988 report settled on a more concrete definition
of disability. It stated that 37.3 million individuals have
"difficulty performing one or more basic physical activities,"
including "seeing, hearing, speaking, walking, using stairs,
lifting or carrying, getting around outside, getting around
inside, and getting into or out of bed." Id., at 19.
The study from which it drew this data took an explicitly
functional approach to evaluating disabilities. See U.S. Dept.
of Commerce, Bureau of Census, Disability, Functional Limitation,
and Health Insurance Coverage: 1984/85, p. 2 (1986). It measured
37.3 million persons with a "functional limitation" on performing
certain basic activities when using, as the questionnaire put it,
"special aids," such as glasses or hearing aids, if the person
usually used such aids. Id., at 1, 47. The number of
Page 486
disabled provided by the study and adopted in the 1988 report,
however, includes only noninstitutionalized persons with physical
disabilities who are over age 15. The 5.7 million gap between
the 43 million figure in the ADA's findings and the 37.3 million
figure in the report can thus probably be explained as an effort
to include in the findings those who were excluded from the
National Council figure. See, e.g., National Institute on Disability and
Rehabilitation Research, Data on Disability from the National
Health Interview Survey 1983-1985, pp. 61-62 (1988) (finding
approximately 943,000 noninstitutionalized persons with an
activity limitation due to mental illness; 947,000
noninstitutionalized persons with an activity limitation due to
mental retardation; 1,900,000 noninstitutionalized persons under
18 with an activity limitation); U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau
of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States 106
(1989) (Table 168) (finding 1,553,000 resident patients in
nursing and related care facilities (excluding hospital-based
nursing homes) in 1986).
Regardless of its exact source, however, the 43 million figure
reflects an understanding that those whose impairments are
largely corrected by medication or other devices are not
"disabled" within the meaning of the ADA. The estimate is
consistent with the numbers produced by studies performed during
this same time period that took a similar functional approach to
determining disability. For instance, Mathematica Policy
Research, Inc., drawing on data from the National Center for
Health Statistics, issued an estimate of approximately 31.4
million civilian noninstitutionalized persons with "chronic
activity limitation status" in 1979. Digest of Data on Persons
with Disabilities 25 (1984). The 1989 Statistical Abstract
offered the same estimate based on the same data, as well as an
estimate of 32.7 million noninstitutionalized persons with
"activity limitation" in 1985. Statistical Abstract,
supra, at 115 (Table 184). In both cases, individuals
with "activity limitations" were those who,
Page 487
relative to their age-sex group could not conduct "usual" activities:
e.g., attending preschool, keeping house, or living
independently. See National Center for Health Statistics, U.S.
Dept. of Health and Human Services, Vital and Health Statistics,
Current Estimates from the National Health Interview
Survey, 1989, Series 10, pp. 7-8 (1990).
By contrast, nonfunctional approaches to defining disability
produce significantly larger numbers. As noted above, the 1986
National Council on Disability report estimated that there were
over 160 million disabled under the "health conditions approach."
Toward Independence, supra, at 10; see also Mathematica
Policy Research, supra, at 3 (arriving at similar
estimate based on same Census Bureau data). Indeed, the number
of people with vision impairments alone is 100 million. See
National Advisory Eye Council, U.S. Dept. of Health and Human
Services, Vision Research  A National Plan: 1999-2003, p.
7 (1998) ("[M]ore than 100 million people need corrective lenses
to see properly"). "It is estimated that more than 28 million
Americans have impaired hearing." National Institutes of Health,
National Strategic Research Plan: Hearing and Hearing Impairment
v (1996). And there were approximately 50 million people with
high blood pressure (hypertension). Tindall, Stalking a Silent
Killer; Hypertension, Business & Health 37 (August 1998) ("Some
50 million Americans have high blood pressure").
Because it is included in the ADA's text, the finding that 43
million individuals are disabled gives content to the ADA's
terms, specifically the term "disability." Had Congress intended
to include all persons with corrected physical limitations among
those covered by the Act, it undoubtedly would have cited a much
higher number of disabled persons in the findings. That it did
not is evidence that the ADA's coverage is restricted to only
those whose impairments are not mitigated by corrective measures.
The dissents suggest that viewing individuals in their
corrected state will exclude from the definition of "disab[led]"
Page 488
those who use prosthetic limbs, see post, at 497-498
(opinion of STEVENS, J.), post, at 513 (opinion of BREYER,
J.), or take medicine for epilepsy or high blood pressure,
see post, at 507, 509 (opinion of STEVENS, J.). This
suggestion is incorrect. The use of a corrective device does
not, by itself, relieve one's disability. Rather, one has a
disability under subsection (A) if, notwithstanding the use of a
corrective device, that individual is substantially limited in a
major life activity. For example, individuals who use prosthetic
limbs or wheelchairs may be mobile and capable of functioning in
society but still be disabled because of a substantial limitation
on their ability to walk or run. The same may be true of
individuals who take medicine to lessen the symptoms of an
impairment so that they can function but nevertheless remain
substantially limited. Alternatively, one whose high blood
pressure is "cured" by medication may be regarded as disabled by
a covered entity, and thus disabled under subsection (C) of the
definition. The use or nonuse of a corrective device does not
determine whether an individual is disabled; that determination
depends on whether the limitations an individual with an
impairment actually faces are in fact substantially
limiting.
Applying this reading of the Act to the case at hand, we
conclude that the Court of Appeals correctly resolved the issue
of disability in respondent's favor. As noted above, petitioners
allege that with corrective measures, their visual acuity is
20/20, App. 23, Amended Complaint ¶ 36, and that they
"function identically to individuals without a similar
impairment," id., at 24, Amended Complaint ¶ 37e. In
addition, petitioners concede that they "do not argue that the
use of corrective lenses in itself demonstrates a substantially
limiting impairment." Brief for Petitioners 9, n. 11.
Accordingly, because we decide that disability under the Act is
to be determined with reference to corrective measures, we agree
with the courts below that petitioners have not stated
Page 489
a claim that they are substantially limited in any major life activity.
IV
Our conclusion that petitioners have failed to state a claim
that they are actually disabled under subsection (A) of the
disability definition does not end our inquiry. Under subsection
(C), individuals who are "regarded as" having a disability are
disabled within the meaning of the ADA. See § 12102(2)(C).
Subsection (C) provides that having a disability includes "being
regarded as having," § 12102(2)(C), "a physical or mental
impairment that substantially limits one or more of the major
life activities of such individual," § 12102(2)(A). There
are two apparent ways in which individuals may fall within this
statutory definition: (1) a covered entity mistakenly believes
that a person has a physical impairment that substantially limits
one or more major life activities, or (2) a covered entity
mistakenly believes that an actual, nonlimiting impairment
substantially limits one or more major life activities. In both
cases, it is necessary that a covered entity entertain
misperceptions about the individual  it must believe
either that one has a substantially limiting impairment that one
does not have or that one has a substantially limiting impairment
when, in fact, the impairment is not so limiting. These
misperceptions often "resul[t] from stereotypic assumptions not
truly indicative of . . . individual ability." See
42 U.S.C. § 12101(7). See also School Bd. of Nassau Cty. v.
Arline, 480 U.S. 273, 284 (1987) ("By amending the
definition of `handicapped individual' to include not only those
who are actually physically impaired, but also those who are
regarded as impaired and who, as a result, are substantially
limited in a major life activity, Congress acknowledged that
society's accumulated myths and fears about disability and
disease are as handicapping as are the physical limitations that
flow from actual impairment"); 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, App. §
1630.2(l) (explaining that the purpose of the regarded as prong
is to cover individuals
Page 490
"rejected from a job because of the `myths, fears and
stereotypes' associated with disabilities").
There is no dispute that petitioners are physically impaired.
Petitioners do not make the obvious argument that they are
regarded due to their impairments as substantially limited in the
major life activity of seeing. They contend only that respondent
mistakenly believes their physical impairments substantially
limit them in the major life activity of working. To support
this claim, petitioners allege that respondent has a vision
requirement, that is allegedly based on myth and stereotype.
Further, this requirement substantially limits their ability to
engage in the major life activity of working by precluding them
from obtaining the job of global airline pilot, which they argue
is a "class of employment." See App. 24-26, Amended Complaint
¶ 38. In reply, respondent argues that the position of
global airline pilot is not a class of jobs and therefore
petitioners have not stated a claim that they are regarded as
substantially limited in the major life activity of working.
Standing alone, the allegation that respondent has a vision
requirement in place does not establish a claim that respondent
regards petitioners as substantially limited in the major life
activity of working. See Post-Argument Brief for Respondent 2-3
(advancing this argument); Post-Argument Brief for United
States et al. as Amici Curiae 5-6 ("[U]nder the EEOC's
regulations, an employer may make employment decisions based on
physical characteristics"). By its terms, the ADA allows
employers to prefer some physical attributes over others and to
establish physical criteria. An employer runs afoul of the ADA
when it makes an employment decision based on a physical or
mental impairment, real or imagined, that is regarded as
substantially limiting a major life activity. Accordingly, an
employer is free to
Page 491
decide that physical characteristics or medical conditions
that do not rise to the level of an impairment  such as one's
height, build, or singing voice  are preferable to others, just as it is
free to decide that some limiting, but not substantially
limiting, impairments make individuals less than ideally suited
for a job.
Considering the allegations of the amended complaint in
tandem, petitioners have not stated a claim that respondent
regards their impairment as substantially limiting their
ability to work. The ADA does not define "substantially limits,"
but "substantially" suggests "considerable" or "specified to a
large degree." See Webster's Third New International Dictionary
2280 (1976) (defining "substantially" as "in a substantial
manner" and "substantial" as "considerable in amount, value, or
worth" and "being that specified to a large degree or in the
main"); see also 17 Oxford English Dictionary 66-67 (2d ed. 1989)
("substantial": "[r]elating to or proceeding from the essence of
a thing; essential"; "of ample or considerable amount, quantity
or dimensions"). The EEOC has codified regulations interpreting
the term "substantially limits" in this manner, defining the term
to mean "[u]nable to perform" or "[s]ignificantly restricted."
See 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(j)(1)(i),(ii) (1998)
When the major life activity under consideration is that of
working, the statutory phrase "substantially limits" requires, at
a minimum, that plaintiffs allege they are unable to work in a
broad class of jobs. Reflecting this requirement, the EEOC uses
a specialized definition of the term "substantially limits" when
referring to the major life activity of working:
"significantly restricted in the ability to perform either a
class of jobs or a broad range of jobs in various classes as
compared to the average person having comparable
training, skills and abilities. The inability to
perform a single, particular job does not constitute
a substantial limitation in the major life
activity of working." § 1630.2(j)(3)(i).
The EEOC further identifies several factors that courts should
consider when determining whether an individual is
Page 492
substantially limited in the major life activity of working, including the
geographical area to which the individual has reasonable access,
and "the number and types of jobs utilizing similar training,
knowledge, skills or abilities, within the geographical area,
from which the individual is also disqualified." §§
1630.2(j)(3)(ii)(A), (B). To be substantially limited in the
major life activity of working, then, one must be precluded from
more than one type of job, a specialized job, or a particular job
of choice. If jobs utilizing an individual's skills (but perhaps
not his or her unique talents) are available, one is not
precluded from a substantial class of jobs. Similarly, if a host
of different types of jobs are available, one is not precluded
from a broad range of jobs.
Because the parties accept that the term "major life
activities" includes working, we do not determine the validity of
the cited regulations. We note, however, that there may be some
conceptual difficulty in defining "major life activities" to
include work, for it seems "to argue in a circle to say that if
one is excluded, for instance, by reason of [an impairment, from
working with others] . . . then that exclusion constitutes an
impairment, when the question you're asking is, whether the
exclusion itself is by reason of handicap." Tr. of Oral Arg. in
School Bd. of Nassau Co. v. Arline, O. T. 1986, No. 85-1277,
p. 15 (argument of Solicitor General). Indeed, even the EEOC
has expressed reluctance to define "major life activities" to
include working and has suggested that working be viewed as a
residual life activity, considered, as a last resort, only
"[i]f an individual is not substantially limited with respect
to any other major life activity." 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, App. §
1630.2(j) (1998) (emphasis added) ("If an individual is
substantially limited in any other major life activity, no
determination should be made as to whether the individual is
substantially limited in working" (emphasis added)).
Assuming without deciding that working is a major life
activity and that the EEOC regulations interpreting the term
"substantially limits" are reasonable, petitioners have
Page 493
failed to allege adequately that their poor eyesight is regarded as an
impairment that substantially limits them in the major life
activity of working. They allege only that respondent regards
their poor vision as precluding them from holding positions as a
"global airline pilot." See App. 25-26, Amended Complaint ¶
38f. Because the position of global airline pilot is a single
job, this allegation does not support the claim that respondent
regards petitioners as having a substantially limiting
impairment. See 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(j)(3)(i)(1998) ("The inability
to perform a single, particular job does not constitute a
substantial limitation in the major life activity of
working"). Indeed, there are a number of other positions
utilizing petitioners' skills, such as regional pilot and
pilot instructor to name a few, that are available to them.
Even under the EEOC's Interpretative Guidance, to which
petitioners ask us to defer, "an individual who cannot be a
commercial airline pilot because of a minor vision impairment,
but who can be a commercial airline co-pilot or a pilot for a
courier service, would not be substantially limited in the
major life activity of working." 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, App. § 1630.2
(1998).
Petitioners also argue that if one were to assume that a
substantial number of airline carriers have similar vision
requirements, they would be substantially limited in the major
life activity of working. See Brief for Petitioners 44-45. Even
assuming for the sake of argument that the adoption of similar
vision requirements by other carriers would represent a
substantial limitation on the major life activity of working,
the argument is nevertheless flawed. It is not enough to say
that if the physical criteria of a single employer were
imputed to all similar employers one would be regarded as
substantially limited in the major life activity of working
only as a result of this imputation. An otherwise valid job
requirement, such as a height requirement, does not become
invalid simply because it would limit a person's employment
opportunities in a substantial way if it were
Page 494
adopted by a substantial number of employers. Because
petitioners have not alleged, and cannot demonstrate, that
respondent's vision requirement reflects a belief that
petitioners' vision substantially limits them, we agree with
the judgement of the Court of Appeals affirming the dismissal
of petitioners' claim that they are regarded as disabled.
For these reasons, the decision of the Court of Appeals for
the Tenth Circuit is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE GINSBURG, concurring.
I agree that 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(A) does not reach the
legions of people with correctable disabilities. The strongest
clues to Congress' perception of the domain of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA), as I see it, are legislative findings
that "some 43,000,000 Americans have one or more physical or
mental disabilities," § 12101(a)(1), and that "individuals
with disabilities are a discrete and insular minority," persons
"subjected to a history of purposeful unequal treatment, and
relegated to a position of political powerlessness in our
society," § 12101(a)(7). These declarations are inconsistent
with the enormously embracing definition of disability
petitioners urge. As the Court demonstrates, see ante,
at 483-487, the inclusion of correctable disabilities within the
ADA's domain would extend the Act's coverage to far more than 43
million people. And persons whose uncorrected eyesight is poor,
or who rely on daily medication for their well-being, can be
found in every social and economic class; they do not cluster
among the politically powerless, nor do they coalesce as
historical victims of discrimination. In short, in no sensible
way can one rank the large numbers of diverse individuals with
corrected disabilities as a "discrete and insular minority." I do
not mean to suggest that any of the constitutional presumptions
or doctrines that may apply to "discrete and insular"
minorities in other contexts are relevant here; there is no
Page 495
constitutional dimension to this case. Congress' use of the
phrase, however, is a telling indication of its intent to
restrict the ADA's coverage to a confined, and historically
disadvantaged, class.
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE BREYER joins, dissenting.
When it enacted the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990,
Congress certainly did not intend to require United Air Lines to
hire unsafe or unqualified pilots. Nor, in all likelihood, did
it view every person who wears glasses as a member of a "discrete
and insular minority." Indeed, by reason of legislative myopia
it may not have foreseen that its definition of "disability"
might theoretically encompass, not just "some 43,000,000
Americans," 42 U.S.C. § 12101(a)(1), but perhaps two or three
times that number. Nevertheless, if we apply customary tools of
statutory construction, it is quite clear that the threshold
question whether an individual is "disabled" within the meaning
of the Act  and, therefore, is entitled to the basic
assurances that the Act affords  focuses on her past or
present physical condition without regard to mitigation that has
resulted from rehabilitation, self-improvement, prosthetic
devices, or medication. One might reasonably argue that the
general rule should not apply to an impairment that merely
requires a nearsighted person to wear glasses. But I believe
that, in order to be faithful to the remedial purpose of the Act,
we should give it a generous, rather than a miserly,
construction.
There are really two parts to the question of statutory
construction presented by this case. The first question is
whether the determination of disability for people that Congress
unquestionably intended to cover should focus on their
unmitigated or their mitigated condition. If the correct answer
to that question is the one provided by eight of the
Page 496
nine Federal Courts of Appeals to address the issue,[fn1] and by all
three of the Executive agencies that have issued regulations or
interpretive bulletins construing the statute  namely,
that the statute defines "disability" without regard to
ameliorative measures  it would still be necessary to
decide whether that general rule should be applied to what might
be characterized as a "minor, trivial impairment."
Arnold v. United Parcel Service, Inc., 136 F.3d 854, 866, n.
10 (CA1 1998) (holding that unmitigated state is determinative
but suggesting that it "might reach a different result" in a
case in which "a simple, inexpensive remedy," such as
eyeglasses, is available "that can provide total and
relatively permanent control of all symptoms"). See also
Washington v. HCA Health Servs., of Texas 152 F.3d 464
(CA5 1998) (same), cert. pending, No. 98-1365. I shall therefore first
consider impairments that Congress surely had in mind before
turning to the special facts of this case.
I
"As in all cases of statutory construction, our task is to
interpret the words of [the statute] in light of the purposes
Congress sought to serve." Chapman v. Houston Welfare Rights
Organization, 441 U.S. 600, 608 (1979). Congress
Page 497
expressly provided that the "purpose of [the ADA is] to
provide a clear and comprehensive national mandate for the
elimination of discrimination against individuals with
disabilities." 42 U.S.C. § 12101(b)(1). To that end, the
ADA prohibits covered employers from "discriminat[ing] against a
qualified individual with a disability because of the
disability" in regard to the terms, conditions, and privileges of
employment. 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a) (emphasis added).
The Act's definition of disability is drawn "almost verbatim"
from the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 706(8)(B).
Bragdon v. Abbott, 524 U.S. 624, 631 (1998). The ADA's definition provides:
"The term `disability' means, with respect to an individual
â€â€
"(A) a physical or mental impairment that
substantially limits one or more of the major
life activities of such individual;
"(B) a record of such an impairment; or
"(C) being regarded as having such an impairment."
42 U.S.C. § 12102(2).
The three parts of this definition do not identify mutually
exclusive, discrete categories. On the contrary, they furnish
three overlapping formulas aimed at ensuring that individuals who
now have, or ever had, a substantially limiting impairment are
covered by the Act.
An example of a rather common condition illustrates this
point: There are many individuals who have lost one
or more limbs in industrial accidents, or perhaps in the service
of their country in places like Iwo Jima. With the aid of
prostheses, coupled with courageous determination and physical
therapy, many of these hardy individuals can perform all of their
major life activities just as efficiently as an average couch
potato. If the Act were just concerned with their present
ability to participate in society, many of these individuals'
physical impairments would not be viewed as disabilities.
Page 498
Similarly, if the statute were solely concerned with whether
these individuals viewed themselves as disabled  or with
whether a majority of employers regarded them as unable to
perform most jobs  many of these individuals would lack
statutory protection from discrimination based on their
prostheses.
The sweep of the statute's three-pronged definition, however,
makes it pellucidly clear that Congress intended the Act to cover
such persons. The fact that a prosthetic device, such as an
artificial leg, has restored one's ability to perform major life
activities surely cannot mean that subsection (A) of the
definition is inapplicable. Nor should the fact that the
individual considers himself (or actually is) "cured," or that a
prospective employer considers him generally employable, mean
that subsections (B) or (C) are inapplicable. But under the
Court's emphasis on "the present indicative verb form" used in
subsection (A), ante, at 482, that subsection presumably
would not apply. And under the Court's focus on the individual's
"presen[t]  not potentia[l] or hypothetica[l]" â€â€
condition, ibid., and on whether a person is "precluded
from a broad range of jobs," ante, at 492, subsections
(B) and (C) presumably would not apply.
In my view, when an employer refuses to hire the individual
"because of" his prosthesis, and the prosthesis in no way affects
his ability to do the job, that employer has unquestionably
discriminated against the individual in violation of the Act.
Subsection (B) of the definition, in fact, sheds a revelatory
light on the question whether Congress was concerned only
about the corrected or mitigated status of a person's
impairment. If the Court is correct that "[a] `disability'
exists only where" a person's "present" or "actual" condition
is substantially impaired, ante, at 482, there would be no
reason to include in the protected class those who were once
disabled but who are now fully recovered. Subsection (B) of
the Act's definition, however, plainly covers a person who
previously had a serious hearing impairment
Page 499
that has since been completely cured. See School Bd. of Nassau
Cty. v. Arline, 480 U.S. 273, 281 (1987). Still,
if I correctly understand the Court's opinion, it holds that one
who continues to wear a hearing aid that she has worn
all her life might not be covered  fully cured impairments
are covered, but merely treatable ones are not. The text of the
Act surely does not require such a bizarre result.
The three prongs of the statute, rather, are most plausibly
read together not to inquire into whether a person is currently
"functionally" limited in a major life activity, but only into
the existence of an impairment  present or past â€â€
that substantially limits, or did so limit, the individual before
amelioration. This reading avoids the counterintuitive
conclusion that the ADA's safeguards vanish when individuals make
themselves more employable by ascertaining ways to overcome their
physical or mental limitations.
To the extent that there may be doubt concerning the meaning
of the statutory text, ambiguity is easily removed by looking at
the legislative history. As then-JUSTICE REHNQUIST stated for
the Court in Garcia v. United States, 469 U.S. 70 (1984): "In
surveying legislative history we have repeatedly stated that
the authoritative source for finding the Legislature's intent
lies in the Committee Reports on the bill, which `represen[t]
the considered and collective understanding of those Congressmen
involved in drafting and studying the proposed legislation.'"
Id., at 76 (quoting Zuber v. Allen, 396 U.S. 168, 186 (1969)).
The Committee Reports on the bill that became the ADA make it
abundantly clear that Congress intended the ADA to cover
individuals who could perform all of their major life
activities only with the help of ameliorative measures.
The ADA originated in the Senate. The Senate Report states
that "whether a person has a disability should be assessed
without regard to the availability of mitigating measures, such
as reasonable accommodations or auxiliary aids."
Page 500
S. Rep. No. 101-116, p. 23 (1989). The Report further explained, in
discussing the "regarded as" prong:
"[An] important goal of the third prong of the [disability]
definition is to ensure that persons with medical
conditions that are under control, and that
therefore do not currently limit major life
activities, are not discriminated against on the
basis of their medical conditions. For example,
individuals with controlled diabetes or epilepsy
are often denied jobs for which they are
qualified. Such denials are the result of
negative attitudes and misinformation." Id., at 24.
When the legislation was considered in the House of
Representatives, its Committees reiterated the Senate's basic
understanding of the Act's coverage, with one minor modification:
They clarified that "correctable" or "controllable" disabilities
were covered in the first definitional prong as well. The Report
of the House Committee on the Judiciary states, in discussing the
first prong, that, when determining whether an individual's
impairment substantially limits a major life activity, "[t]he
impairment should be assessed without considering whether
mitigating measures, such as auxiliary aids or reasonable
accommodations, would result in a less-than-substantial
limitation." H.R. Rep. No. 101-485, pt. III, p. 28 (1990). The
Report continues that "a person with epilepsy, an impairment
which substantially limits a major life activity, is covered
under this test," ibid., as is a person with poor
hearing, "even if the hearing loss is corrected by the use of a
hearing aid," id., at 29.
The Report of the House Committee on Education and Labor
likewise states that "[w]hether a person has a disability should
be assessed without regard to the availability of mitigating
measures, such as reasonable accommodations or auxiliary aids."
Id., pt. II, at 52. To make matters perfectly plain,
the Report adds:
"For example, a person who is hard of hearing is substantially
limited in the major life activity of hearing,
Page 501
even though the loss may be corrected through the
use of a hearing aid. Likewise, persons with
impairments, such as epilepsy or diabetes, which
substantially limit a major life activity are
covered under the first prong of the definition
of disability, even if the effects of the
impairment are controlled by medication." Ibid.
(emphasis added).
All of the Reports, indeed, are replete with references to the
understanding that the Act's protected class includes individuals
with various medical conditions that ordinarily are perfectly
"correctable" with medication or treatment. See id., at
74 (citing with approval Straithe v. Department of
Transportation, 716 F.2d 227 (CA3 1983), which held that an
individual with poor hearing was "handicapped" under the
Rehabilitation Act even though his hearing could be corrected
with a hearing aid); H.R. Rep. No. 101-485, pt. III, at 51
("[t]he term" disability includes "epilepsy, . . . heart disease,
diabetes"); id., pt. III, at 28 (listing same impairments); S.
Rep. No. 101-116, at 22 (same).[fn2]
In addition, each of the three Executive agencies charged with
implementing the Act has consistently interpreted the Act as
mandating that the presence of disability turns on an
individual's uncorrected state. We have traditionally accorded
respect to such views when, as here, the agencies "played a
pivotal role in setting [the statutory] machinery in motion."
Ford Motor Credit Co. v. Milhollin, 444 U.S. 555, 566 (1980)
(brackets in original; internal quotation marks and
Page 502
citation omitted). At the very least, these interpretations
"constitute a body of experience and informed judgment to which
[we] may properly resort" for additional guidance.
Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 139-140 (1944). See
also Bragdon, 524 U.S., at 642 (invoking this maxim with
regard to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's (EEOC)
interpretation of the ADA).
The EEOC's Interpretive Guidance provides that "[t]he
determination of whether an individual is substantially limited
in a major life activity must be made on a case by case basis,
without regard to mitigating measures such as medicines, or
assistive or prosthetic devices." 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, App. §
1630.2(j) (1998). The EEOC further explains:
"[A]n individual who uses artificial legs would . . . be
substantially limited in the major life activity of
walking because the individual is unable to walk without
the aid of prosthetic devices. Similarly, a diabetic who
without insulin would lapse into a coma would be substantially
limited because the individual cannot perform major life
activities without the aid of medication." Ibid.
The Department of Justice has reached the same conclusion. Its
regulations provide that "[t]he question of whether a person has
a disability should be assessed without regard to the
availability of mitigating measures, such as reasonable
modification or auxiliary aids and services." 28 C.F.R. pt. 35,
App. A, § 35.104 (1998). The Department of Transportation
has issued a regulation adopting this same definition of
"disability." See 49 C.F.R. pt. 37.3 (1998).
In my judgment, the Committee Reports and the uniform agency
regulations merely confirm the message conveyed by the text of
the Act  at least insofar as it applies to impairments
such as the loss of a limb, the inability to hear, or any
condition such as diabetes that is substantially limiting without
medication. The Act generally protects individuals who have
"correctable" substantially limiting impairments
Page 503
from unjustified employment discrimination on the basis of
those impairments. The question, then, is whether the fact
that Congress was specifically concerned about protecting a
class that included persons characterized as a "discrete and
insular minority" and that it estimated that class to include
"some 43,000,000 Americans" means that we should construe the
term "disability" to exclude individuals with impairments that
Congress probably did not have in mind.
II
The EEOC maintains that, in order to remain allegiant to the
Act's structure and purpose, courts should always answer "the
question whether an individual has a disability . . . without
regard to mitigating measures that the individual takes to
ameliorate the effects of the impairment." Brief for United
States et al. as Amicis Curiae 6. "[T]here is nothing about
poor vision," as the EEOC interprets the Act, "that would
justify adopting a different rule in this case." Ibid.
If a narrow reading of the term "disability" were necessary in
order to avoid the danger that the Act might otherwise force
United to hire pilots who might endanger the lives of their
passengers, it would make good sense to use the "43,000,000
Americans" finding to confine its coverage. There is, however,
no such danger in this case. If a person is "disabled" within
the meaning of the Act, she still cannot prevail on a claim of
discrimination unless she can prove that the employer took action
"because of" that impairment, 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a), and that
she can, "with or without reasonable accommodation, . . . perform
the essential functions" of the job of a commercial airline
pilot. See § 12111(8). Even then, an employer may avoid
liability if it shows that the criteria of having uncorrected
visual acuity of at least 20/100 is "job-related and consistent
with business necessity" or if such vision (even if correctable
to 20/20) would pose a health or safety hazard. §§ 12113(a)
and (b).
Page 504
This case, in other words, is not about whether petitioners
are genuinely qualified or whether they can perform the job of an
airline pilot without posing an undue safety risk. The case just
raises the threshold question whether petitioners are members of
the ADA's protected class. It simply asks whether the ADA lets
petitioners in the door in the same way as the Age Discrimination
in Employment Act of 1967 does for every person who is at least
40 years old, see 29 U.S.C. § 631(a), and as Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 does for every single individual in the
work force. Inside that door lies nothing more than basic
protection from irrational and unjustified discrimination
because of a characteristic that is beyond a person's control.
Hence, this particular case, at its core, is about whether,
assuming that petitioners can prove that they are "qualified,"
the airline has any duty to come forward with some legitimate
explanation for refusing to hire them because of their
uncorrected eyesight, or whether the ADA leaves the airline free
to decline to hire petitioners on this basis even if it is acting
purely on the basis of irrational fear and stereotype.
I think it quite wrong for the Court to confine the coverage
of the Act simply because an interpretation of "disability" that
adheres to Congress' method of defining the class it intended to
benefit may also provide protection for "significantly larger
numbers" of individuals, ante, at 487, than estimated in
the Act's findings. It has long been a "familiar canon of
statutory construction that remedial legislation should be
construed broadly to effectuate its purposes." Tcherepnin v.
Knight, 389 U.S. 332, 336 (1967). Congress sought, in enacting
the ADA, to "provide a . . . comprehensive national mandate
for the discrimination against individuals with disabilities."
42 U.S.C. § 12101(b)(1). The ADA, following the lead of the
Rehabilitation Act before it, seeks to implement this mandate
by encouraging employers "to replace . . . reflexive reactions
to actual or perceived handicaps with actions based on
medically sound judgments."
Page 505
Arline, 480 U.S., at 284-285. Even if an authorized
agency could interpret this statutory structure so as to pick and
choose certain correctable impairments that Congress meant to
exclude from this mandate, Congress surely has not authorized us
to do so.
When faced with classes of individuals or types of
discrimination that fall outside the core prohibitions of
anti-discrimination statutes, we have consistently construed those
statutes to include comparable evils within their coverage, even
when the particular evil at issue was beyond Congress'
immediate concern in passing the legislation. Congress, for
instance, focused almost entirely on the problem of
discrimination against African-Americans when it enacted Title
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. See, e.g., Steelworkers
v. Weber, 443 U.S. 193, 202-203 (1979). But that narrow focus
could not possibly justify a construction of the statute that
excluded Hispanic-Americans or Asian-Americans from its
protection  or as we later decided (ironically enough, by
relying on legislative history and according "great deference"
to the EEOC's "interpretation"), Caucasians. See McDonald v.
Santa Fe Trail Transp. Co., 427 U.S. 273, 279-280 (1976).
We unanimously applied this well-accepted method of
interpretation last Term with respect to construing Title VII to
cover claims of same-sex sexual harassment. Oncale v.
Sundowner Offshore Services, Inc., 523 U.S. 75 (1998).
We explained our holding as follows:
"As some courts have observed, male-on-male
sexual harassment in the workplace was assuredly
not the principal evil Congress was concerned
with when it enacted Title VII. But statutory
prohibitions often go beyond the principal evil
to cover reasonably comparable evils, and it is
ultimately the provisions of our laws rather than
the principal concerns of our legislators by
which we are governed. Title VII prohibits
`discriminat[ion] . . . because of . . . sex' in
the `terms' or `conditions'
Page 506
of employment. Our holding that this includes
sexual harassment must extend to sexual harassment of any kind
that meets the statutory requirements." Id., at 79-80.
This approach applies outside of the discrimination context as
well. In H. J. Inc. v. Northwestern Bell Telephone
Co., 492 U.S. 229 (1989), we rejected the argument that the
Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) should
be construed to cover only "organized crime" because Congress
included findings in the Act's preamble emphasizing only that
problem. See Pub.L. 91-452 § 1, 84 Stat. 941. After
surveying RICO's legislative history, we concluded that even
though "[t]he occasion for Congress' action was the perceived
need to combat organized crime, . . . Congress for cogent
reasons chose to enact a more general statute, one which,
although it had organized crime as its focus, was not limited
in application to organized crime." 492 U.S., at 248.[fn3]
Under the approach we followed in Oncale and H.
J. Inc., visual impairments should be judged by the same
standard as hearing impairments or any other medically
controllable condition. The nature of the discrimination alleged
is of the same character and should be treated accordingly.
Indeed, it seems to me eminently within the purpose and policy
of the ADA to require employers who make hiring and firing
decisions based on individuals' uncorrected vision to clarify why
having, for example, 20/100 uncorrected vision
Page 507
or better is a valid job requirement. So long as an employer
explicitly makes its decision based on an impairment that in some
condition is substantially limiting, it matters not under the
structure of the Act whether that impairment is widely shared or
so rare that it is seriously misunderstood. Either way, the
individual has an impairment that is covered by the purpose of
the ADA, and she should be protected against irrational stereotypes
and unjustified disparate treatment on that basis.
I do not mean to suggest, of course, that the ADA should be
read to prohibit discrimination on the basis of, say, blue eyes,
deformed fingernails, or heights of less than six feet. Those
conditions, to the extent that they are even "impairments," do
not substantially limit individuals in any condition and thus are
different in kind from the impairment in the case before us.
While not all eyesight that can be enhanced by glasses is
substantially limiting, having 20/200 vision in one's better eye
is, without treatment, a significant hindrance. Only two percent
of the population suffers from such myopia.[fn4] Such
acuity precludes a person from driving, shopping in a public
store, or viewing a computer screen from a reasonable distance.
Uncorrected vision, therefore, can be "substantially limiting" in
the same way that unmedicated epilepsy or diabetes can be.
Because Congress obviously intended to include individuals with
the latter impairments in the Act's protected class, we should
give petitioners the same protection.
III
The Court does not disagree that the logic of the ADA requires
petitioners' visual impairment to be judged the same as other
"correctable" conditions. Instead of including petitioners
within the Act's umbrella, however, the Court
Page 508
decides, in this opinion and its companion, to expel all
individuals who, by using "measures [to] mitigate [their]
impairment[s]," ante, at 475, are able to overcome substantial
limitations regarding major life activities. The
Court, for instance, holds that severe hypertension that is
substantially limiting without medication is not a "disability,"
Murphy v. United Parcel Service, Inc., post, p. 516, and â€â€
perhaps even more remarkably  indicates (directly contrary to
the Act's legislative history, see supra, at 500-501) that
diabetes that is controlled only with insulin treatments is
not a "disability" either, ante, at 483-484.
The Court claims that this rule is necessary to avoid
requiring courts to "speculate" about a person's "hypothetical"
condition and to preserve the Act's focus on making
"individualized inquiries" into whether a person is disabled.
Ante, at 483. The Court also asserts that its rejection of
the general rule of viewing individuals in their unmitigated
state prevents distorting the scope of the Act's protected
class to cover a "much higher number" of persons than Congress
estimated in its findings. And, I suspect, the Court has been
cowed by respondent's persistent argument that viewing all
individuals in their unmitigated state will lead to a tidal
wave of lawsuits. None of the Court's reasoning, however,
justifies a construction of the Act that will obviously
deprive many of Congress' intended beneficiaries of the legal
protection it affords.
The agencies' approach, the Court repeatedly contends, "would
create a system in which persons often must be treated as members
of a group of people with similar impairments, rather than
individuals, [which] is both contrary to the letter and spirit of
the ADA." Ante, at 483-484. The Court's mantra regarding
the Act's "individualized approach," however, fails to support
its holding. I agree that the letter and spirit of the ADA is
designed to deter decision making based on group stereotypes, but
the agencies' interpretation of the Act does not lead to this
result. Nor does it require courts to "speculate" about people's
"hypothetical"
Page 509
conditions. Viewing a person in her "unmitigated"
state simply requires examining that individual's abilities in a
different state, not the abilities of every person who shares
a similar condition. It is just as easy individually to test
petitioners' eyesight with their glasses on as with their glasses off.[fn5]
Ironically, it is the Court's approach that actually condones
treating individuals merely as members of groups. That
misdirected approach permits any employer to dismiss out of hand
every person who has uncorrected eyesight worse than 20/100
without regard to the specific qualifications of those
individuals or the extent of their abilities to overcome their
impairment. In much the same way, the Court's approach would
seem to allow an employer to refuse to hire every person who has
epilepsy or diabetes that is controlled by medication, or every
person who functions efficiently with a prosthetic limb.
Under the Court's reasoning, an employer apparently could not
refuse to hire persons with these impairments who are
substantially limited even with medication, see ante, at
487-488, but that group-based "exception" is more perverse still.
Since the purpose of the ADA is to dismantle employment barriers
based on society's accumulated myths
Page 510
and fears, see 42 U.S.C. § 12101(a)(8); Arline,
480 U.S., at 283-284, it is especially ironic to deny protection for
persons with substantially limiting impairments that, when
corrected, render them fully able and employable. Insofar as
the Court assumes that the majority of individuals with
impairments such as prosthetic limbs or epilepsy will still be
covered under its approach because they are substantially
limited "notwithstanding the use of a corrective device,"
ante, at 283-284, I respectfully disagree as an empirical
matter. Although it is of course true that some of these
individuals are substantially limited in any condition,
Congress enacted the ADA in part because such individuals are
not ordinarily substantially limited in their mitigated
condition, but rather are often the victims of "stereotypic
assumptions not truly indicative of the individual ability of
such individuals to participate in, and contribute to,
society." 42 U.S.C. § 12101(a)(7).
It has also been suggested that if we treat as "disabilities"
impairments that may be mitigated by measures as ordinary and
expedient as wearing eyeglasses, a flood of litigation will
ensue. The suggestion is misguided. Although vision is of
critical importance for airline pilots, in most segments of the
economy whether an employee wears glasses  or uses any of
several other mitigating measures  is a matter of complete
indifference to employers. It is difficult to envision many
situations in which a qualified employee who needs glasses to
perform her job might be fired  as the statute requires
 "because of," § 12112, the fact that she cannot see well
without them. Such a proposition would be ridiculous in the
garden-variety case. On the other hand, if an accounting
firm, for example, adopted a guideline refusing to hire any
incoming accountant who has uncorrected vision of less than
20/100  or, by the same token, any person who is unable
without medication to avoid having seizures  such a rule
would seem to be the essence of invidious discrimination.
In this case the quality of petitioners' uncorrected vision
is relevant only because the airline regards the ability to see
Page 511
without glasses as an employment qualification for its pilots.
Presumably it would not insist on such a qualification unless it
has a sound business justification for doing so (an issue we do
not address today). But if United regards petitioners as
unqualified because they cannot see well without glasses, it
seems eminently fair for a court also to use uncorrected vision
as the basis for evaluating petitioners' life activity of seeing.
Under the agencies' approach, individuals with poor eyesight
and other correctable impairments will, of course, be able to
file lawsuits claiming discrimination on that basis. Yet all of
those same individuals can already file employment discrimination
claims based on their race, sex, or religion, and â€â€
provided they are at least 40 years old  their age.
Congress has never seen this as reason to restrict classes of
antidiscrimination coverage. Indeed, it is hard to believe that
providing individuals with one more antidiscrimination protection
will make any more of them file baseless or vexatious lawsuits.
To the extent that the Court is concerned with requiring
employers to answer in litigation for every employment practice
that draws distinctions based on physical attributes, that
anxiety should be addressed not in this case, but in one that
presents an issue regarding employers' affirmative defenses.
In the end, the Court is left only with its tenacious grip on
Congress' finding that "some 43,000,000 Americans have one or
more physical or mental disabilities," 42 U.S.C. § 12101(a)(1)
 and that figure's legislative history extrapolated from a
law review "article authored by the drafter of the original
ADA bill introduced in Congress in 1988." Ante, at 484. We
previously have observed that a "statement of congressional
findings is a rather thin reed upon which to base" a statutory
construction. National Organization for Women, Inc. v. Scheidler,
510 U.S. 249, 260 (1994). Even so, as I have noted above, I readily agree
that the agencies' approach to the Act would extend coverage to
more than that number of people (although the Court's lofty
estimates,
Page 512
see ante, at 487, may be inflated because they do not appear
to exclude impairments that are not substantially limiting).
It is equally undeniable, however, that "43 million" is not a
fixed cap on the Act's protected class: By including the
"record of" and "regarded as" categories, Congress fully
expected the Act to protect individuals who lack, in the
Court's words, "actual" disabilities, and therefore are not
counted in that number.
What is more, in mining the depths of the history of the 43
million figure  surveying even agency reports that predate
the drafting of any of this case's controlling legislation
 the Court fails to acknowledge that its narrow approach
may have the perverse effect of denying coverage for a sizeable
portion of the core group of 43 million. The Court appears to
exclude from the Act's protected class individuals with
controllable conditions such as diabetes and severe hypertension
that were expressly understood as substantially limiting
impairments in the Act's Committee Reports, see supra,
at 500-501  and even, as the footnote in the margin shows, in
the studies that produced the 43 million figure.[fn6]
Given the inability to make the 43 million figure fit any
consistent method of interpreting the word "disabled," it would
be far wiser for the Court to follow  or at least to
mention  the documents reflecting Congress' contemporaneous
understanding of the term: the Committee Reports on the actual legislation.
Page 513
IV
Occupational hazards characterize many trades. The farsighted
pilot may have as much trouble seeing the instrument panel as the
near sighted pilot has in identifying a safe place to land. The
vision of appellate judges is sometimes subconsciously obscured
by a concern that their decision will legalize issues best left
to the private sphere or will magnify the work of an
already-overburdened judiciary. See Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307, 326, 337-339 (1979) (STEVENS, J., dissenting).
Although these concerns may help to explain the Court's
decision to chart its own course  rather than to follow the
one that has been well marked by Congress, by the overwhelming
consensus of circuit judges, and by the Executive officials
charged with the responsibility of administering the ADA â€â€
they surely do not justify the Court's crabbed vision of the
territory covered by this important statute.
Accordingly, although I express no opinion on the ultimate
merits of petitioners' claim, I am persuaded that they have a
disability covered by the ADA. I therefore respectfully dissent.
[fn1] See Bartlett v. New York State Bd. of Law Examiners,
156 F.3d 321, 329 (CA2 1998), cert. pending, No. 98-1285;
Washington v. HCA Health Servs. of Texas, 152 F.3d 464,
470-471 (CA5 1998), cert. pending, No. 98-1365; Baert v.
Euclid Beverage, Ltd., 149 F.3d 626, 629-630 (CA7 1998); Arnold v. United
Parcel Service, Inc., 136 F.3d 854, 859-866 (CA1 1998);
Matcza v. Frankford Candy & Chocolate Co., 136 F.3d 933,
937-938 (CA3 1997); Doane v. Omaha, 115 F.3d 624, 627 (CA8
1997); Harris v. H & W Contracting Co., 102 F.3d 516, 520-521 (CA11 1996);
Holihan v. Lucky Stores, Inc., 87 F.3d 362, 366 (CA9 1996).
While a Sixth Circuit decision could be read as expressing
doubt about the majority rule, see Gilday v. Mecosta County,
124 F.3d 760, 766-768 (1997) (Kennedy, J., concurring in part
and dissenting in part); id., at 768 (Guy, J., concurring in
part and dissenting in part), the sole holding contrary to
this line of authority is the Tenth Circuit's opinion that the
Court affirms today.
[fn2] The House's decision to cover correctable impairments under
subsection (A) of the statute seems, in retrospect, both
deliberate and wise. Much of the structure of the House Reports
is borrowed from the Senate Report; thus it appears that the
House Committees consciously decided to move the discussion of
mitigating measures. This adjustment was prudent because in a
case in which an employer refuses, out of animus or fear, to hire
an individual who has a condition such as epilepsy that the
employer knows is controlled, it may be difficult to determine
whether the employer is viewing the individual in her uncorrected
state or "regards" her as substantially limited.
[fn3] The one notable exception to our use of this method of
interpretation occurred in the decision in General Elec.
Co. v. Gilbert, 429 U.S. 125 (1976), in which the
majority rejected an EEOC guideline and the heavy weight of
authority in the federal courts of appeals in order to hold that
Title VII did not prohibit discrimination on the basis of
pregnancy-related conditions. Given the fact that Congress
swiftly "overruled" that decision in the Pregnancy Discrimination
Act of 1978, 92 Stat. 2076, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(k), I submit
that the views expressed in the dissenting opinions in that case,
429 U.S., at 146 (opinion of Brennan, J.), and id., at 160
(opinion of STEVENS, J.), should be followed today.
[fn4] J. Roberts, Binocular Visual Acuity of Adults, United States,
1960-1962, p. 3 (National Center for Health Statistics, Series
11, No. 30, Department of Health and Welfare, 1968).
[fn5] For much the same reason, the Court's concern that the agencies'
approach would "lead to the anomalous result" that courts would
ignore "negative side effects suffered by an individual resulting
from the use of mitigating measures," ante, at 10, is
misplaced. It seems safe to assume that most individuals who
take medication that itself substantially limits a major life
activity would be substantially limited in some other way if they
did not take the medication. The Court's examples of psychosis,
Parkinson's disease, and epilepsy certainly support this
presumption. To the extent that certain people may be
substantially limited only when taking "mitigating measures," it
might fairly be said that just as contagiousness is symptomatic
of a disability because an individual's "contagiousness and her
physical impairment each [may result] from the same underlying
condition," School Bd. of Nassau Cty. v. Arline, 480 U.S. 273,
282 (1987), side effects are symptomatic of a disability
because side effects and a physical impairment may flow from
the same underlying condition.
[fn6] See National Council on Disability, Toward Independence 12 (1986)
(hypertension); U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Census,
Disability, Functional Limitation, and Health Insurance Coverage:
1984/85, p. 51 (1986) (hypertension, diabetes); National
Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, Data on
Disability from the National Health Interview Survey 1983-1985,
p. 33 (1988) (epilepsy, diabetes, hypertension); U.S. Dept. of
Commerce, Bureau of Census, Statistical Abstract of the United
States 114-115 (1989) (Tables 114 and 115) (diabetes,
hypertension); Mathematica Policy Research, Inc., Digest of Data
on Persons with Disabilities 3 (1984) (hypertension,
diabetes).
JUSTICE BREYER, dissenting.
We must draw a statutory line that either (1) will include
within the category of persons authorized to bring suit under the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 some whom Congress may
not have wanted to protect (those who wear ordinary eyeglasses),
or (2) will exclude from the threshold category those whom
Congress certainly did want to protect (those who successfully
use corrective devices or medicines, such as hearing aids or
prostheses or medicine for epilepsy). Faced with this dilemma,
the statute's language, structure, basic purposes, and history
require us to choose the former statutory line, as JUSTICE
STEVENS (whose opinion I join) well explains. I would add that,
if the more generous choice of threshold led to too many lawsuits
that ultimately proved
Page 514
without merit or otherwise drew too much time and attention
away from those whom Congress clearly sought to protect, there
is a remedy. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC), through regulation, might draw finer definitional
lines, excluding some of those who wear eyeglasses (say, those
with certain vision impairments who readily can find
corrective lenses), thereby cabining the overly broad
extension of the statute that the majority fears.
The majority questions whether the EEOC could do so,
for the majority is uncertain whether the EEOC possesses typical
agency regulation-writing authority with respect to the statute's
definitions. See ante, at 479-480. The majority poses this
question because the section of the statute, 42 U.S.C. § 12116,
that says the EEOC "shall issue regulations" also says
these regulations are "to carry out this subchapter"
(namely, § 12111 to § 12117, the employment subchapter);
and the section of the statute that contains the three-pronged
definition of "disability" precedes "this subchapter,"
the employment subchapter, to which § 12116 specifically
refers. (Emphasis added.)
Nonetheless, the employment subchapter, i.e.,
"this subchapter," includes other provisions that use
the defined terms, for example a provision that forbids
"discriminat[ing] against a qualified individual with a
disability because of the disability." § 12112(a). The EEOC
might elaborate, through regulations the meaning of "disability"
in this last-mentioned provision, if elaboration is needed in
order to "carry out" the substantive provisions of "this
subchapter." An EEOC regulation, on that elaborated on the meaning of
this use of the word "disability" would fall within the scope
both of the basic definitional provision and also the
substantive provisions of "this" later subchapter, for
the word "disability" appears in both places.
There is no reason to believe that Congress would have wanted
to deny the EEOC the power to issue such a regulation, at least
if the regulation is consistent with the earlier
Page 515
statutory definition and with the relevant interpretations by other
enforcement agencies. The physical location of the definitional
section seems to reflect only drafting or stylistic, not
substantive, objectives. And to pick and choose among which of
"this subchapter['s]" words the EEOC has the power to
explain would inhibit the development of law that coherently
interprets this important statute.
Page 516