Limitations on ADA Requirements:
The ADA does not require employers to provide accommodations that pose an undue hardship on the employer or the business entity. The ADA defines "undue hardship" as accommodations that exceed the employer's financial resources or that would constitute significant hardship or difficulty for the employer (Halbert & Ingulli, 2008). In that regard, the ADA analysis of what accommodations are unduly difficult or expensive depends on specific factors such as the relative size and budget of the employing entity as well as the nature of the business, products, or services provided by that business.
The employer is not required to provide accommodations that would decrease the quality or the volume of the goods or services it provides, nor is the employer required to furnish specific personal items such as blood monitoring equipment, glasses, or hearing devices. Generally, the employer is only required to provide reasonable accommodations after the disabled applicant or employee makes a request for such accommodations, but employers are strictly prohibited from retaliating in any way against employees for requesting any reasonable accommodations (Dershowitz, 2002; Friedman, 2005; Halbert & Ingulli, 2008). Where the employee does not make such a request but the employer believes that the employee's disability is significantly interfering...
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