While Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and other applicable laws originated with both physical and psychiatric disabilities in mind, employers tend to focus more on the physical disabilities. According to a 2013 study by the National Alliance on Mental Illness, an estimated 61.5 million Americans have experienced a mental health impairment in a given year. That number, if anything, continues to rise. This webinar will discuss the employment rights of persons with psychiatric disabilities and conversely the employer’s responsibilities toward those employees under the ADA and other applicable laws, with emphasis on workplace accommodations and discuss issues that arise including, without limitation:

·      How the broadened definition of disability under the ADA Amendments Act (ADAAA) affects individuals with psychiatric disabilities

·         When is a person with a psychiatric disability is “qualified” for a job?

·         Common workplace issues involving persons with psychiatric disabilities;

·         Applicable case examples;

·       When does an employee’s psychiatric issues(s) raise safety issues how does the concept of “direct threat” apply?

 

Area Covered:

·         Mental Illness in the Workplace: Trends and Statistics

·         Applicable Laws (ADA, Rehabilitation Act, Executive Orders, among others)

·         Potential Legal Issues: Discrimination, Disparate Treatment, Disparate Impact;

·      Americans with Disabilities Act (Definition of Disability, Reasonable Accommodation, Undue Hardship, Direct Threat;

·         Workplace Safety/Violence Issues;

·         Leave and Attendance Issues;

·         Medication;

·         Substance Abuse;

·         Permissible inquiries, medical exams;

·         Co-worker questions and issues.

 

Learning Objectives:

·         Learn how the ADA/ADAAA and other applicable laws defines and addresses psychiatric disabilities;

·     Understand extent and limits of an employer’s obligation to provide reasonable accommodations to employees with psychiatric issues;

·         Learn and understand which practices can give rise to a discrimination claim under applicable federal laws;

·     Understand when undue hardship and direct threat are a viable defense to a claim of failure to accommodate;

·         Learn how to balance your obligations to provide reasonable accommodations to the employee and the accommodation to provide a safe workplace for co-workers, customers and the public.

 

Why Should You Attend?

The Americans with Disabilities Act requires employers to provide reasonable accommodations to qualified individuals with disabilities, including those with mental impairments, that substantially limit their major life activities–unless the accommodation causes an undue hardship on the employer; or the employee poses a direct threat either to his safety or the safety of others. But what does all that really mean? When interacting with employees with psychiatric conditions, which fears and concerns are valid? How should employers address these concerns, especially in light of the increase in and devastating damage caused by incidents of workplace violence? How do you know when someone has a psychiatric illness or is just plain strange? And, when someone does have a psychiatric illness, what are your obligations? Not knowing the answers to these questions could guarantee you legal trouble. By becoming aware of your responsibilities you can take your first steps toward preventing tragedy, ensuring a productive, engaged workforce and safe workplace, and that you are protected against legal liability.

 

Who Will Benefit?

·         HR Directors

·         Managers

·         VP’s, Hiring Managers

·         CEO’s

·         COO’s Business Owners

·         Senior Management

·         Safety Officers

·         Compliance Officers.

·         Any industry or business with employees.

Instructor

Instructor

Janette Levey

HR Attorney

Janette S. Levey, “The Employer’s Lawyer” has over 20 years of legal experience, more than 10 of which she has spent in Employment Law. It was during her tenure as sole in-house counsel for a mid-size staffing company headquartered in Central New Jersey, with operations all over the continental US, that she truly developed her passion for Employment Law. Janette operates under this core belief: It is possible, and it is in an employer’s best interest, to proactively solve workforce challenges before they become problems, before they result in lawsuits or steep fines caused by government audits. Janette works with employers on most employment law issues, to ensure that employers are in the best position possible to avoid litigation, audits, employee relations problems, and the attendant, often exorbitant costs. Janette authors the firm’s weekly blog, where you can read each week, in plain English (not legalese) about issues impacting employers today. Janette has written articles on many different employment law issues for many publications, including EEO Insight, Staffing Industry Review, @Law, and Chief Legal Officer. Janette has served on the Workplace Violence Prevention Institute, a multidisciplinary task force dedicated to providing proactive, holistic solutions to employers serious about promoting workplace safety and preventing workplace violence. Janette currently serves as an Advisory Board Member for Child and Family Resources of Morris County, New Jersey. Janette has also spoken and trained on topics, such as Criminal Background Checks in the Hiring Process, Joint Employment, Severance Arrangements, Addressing and Preventing Employee Leave Abuse, Pre-Employment Screening among many, many others.

Credits

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Opty learn is recognized by SHRM to offer Professional Development Credits (PDCs) for SHRM-CP® or SHRM-SCP® recertification activities.

Frequently Asked Questions

Live training course/ webinar is an Online training seminar which you can access through your computer and laptop or phone and directly interact with our expert speaker and allow to ask questions during the Live webinar. Conference material used by our speaker to the Live webinar will be provide with your Instruction kit before the Training.

Recorded webinars or On-Demand are self-paced audio-visual training program that you can watch at your own pace to earn Continuing Education Units (if applicable). Online, recorded training courses are accessible whenever you choose, for an unlimited number of times. Additionally, you have three months from the purchase date to watch as many times as you like. After a live training or webinar has started, you will receive the instructions and link to access the recorded training course. If it has already been recorded, you can access it right away.

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Course Thumbnail

Legal Issues Concerning Employees with Psychiatric Illness

icon Course Type HR & Payroll
icon Date & Time May 22nd 2025 01:00 PM ET
icon Duration 90 Minutes
icon Instructior Janette Levey

Purchase Options

  • Recorded
    Recorded session is a recorded format of live webinar which you can access anytime at your convenience without any time limit.
    $ 165
  • E-transcript
    E-transcripts is a text version of a live webinar which you will get in pdf format.
    $ 165
  • Recorded + E-transcript
    Recorded session is a recorded format of live webinar which you can access anytime at your convenience without any time limit. E-transcripts is a text version of a live webinar which you will get in pdf format.
    $ 175
  • Recorded with Copyright
    E-transcripts is a text version of a live webinar which you will get in pdf format. Copyright is a recorded session which you can share with your colleagues.
    $ 195
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