
Vol. 77, No. 10, October 
2004
The Scope of Disability Law in Wisconsin
Wisconsin Supreme Court decisions in two recent cases clarify that an 
employee's inability to adequately undertake his or her job-related 
responsibilities will not be sufficient justification under the WFEA for 
denying a requested accommodation. The decisions raise more questions 
than they answer - leading the way to more litigation
 
Sidebars:
 by 
Meg Vergeront & Drew J. Cochrane
n what has been called both a "major court victory" for 
disabled workers1 and a development that 
"threatens Wisconsin's economy,"2 the 
Wisconsin Supreme Court recently decided two cases that significantly 
affect the rights of disabled workers in Wisconsin. In Crystal Lake 
Cheese Factory v. LIRC,3 the court held 
that the Wisconsin Fair Employment Act (WFEA) may require an employer to 
reassign the job duties that a disabled employee is unable to perform 
because of her disability.4 In 
Hutchinson Technology Inc. v. LIRC,5 the court held that the WFEA may require an 
employer to alter an employee's work schedule by permanently shortening 
her work shift in order to accommodate her disability.6
Importantly, the court did not limit an employer's obligation to 
accommodate a disabled employee only to situations in which the 
employee's nonessential job functions were being affected.7 As a result, employers may now be obligated to 
reassign even those duties that make up the essence of the job the 
disabled employee holds.8
This article first examines the court's holdings in Crystal 
Lake and Hutchinson. It then discusses some of the 
significant practical effects of the decisions. For example, the 
decisions make it clear that Wisconsin employees now have much greater 
rights under the WFEA than they typically do under the federal Americans 
with Disabilities Act (ADA). The ADA has long provided that employers 
need not reassign essential job functions or alter an employee's work 
schedule if an employee's disability leaves the employee unable to 
perform the "essential duties" of a job either with or without a 
reasonable accommodation.9
Wisconsin law will almost certainly dictate a different result. Under 
Crystal Lake and Hutchinson, employees who are unable 
to perform the essential functions of the job will not be immediately 
excluded from the WFEA's protections. As a result, the decisions will 
probably increase the ability of disabled persons to bring an effective 
cause of action under the WFEA.
In Wisconsin, the pertinent legal analysis will now focus on whether 
the proposed accommodation is reasonable and, if so, whether it creates 
a hardship on the employer. The relative dearth of case law defining 
these terms will create difficulties for employees, employers, and the 
courts alike. As a result, the decisions will undoubtedly increase the 
uncertainty of litigation as administrative tribunals and courts try to 
determine when the proposed accommodation is reasonable and, if so, 
whether it nonetheless imposes a hardship on the employer.
Crystal Lake: Facts and Background
Susan Catlin worked in Crystal Lake Cheese Factory's wholesale 
department.10 The wholesale department 
consisted of four positions: department head, cheese cutter, cryovacer, 
and labeler.11 The company required all 
department employees to be trained to perform all four positions.12 Catlin was hired initially as the cheese cutter 
but was later promoted to department head.13
Fifteen months after Catlin was hired, she was involved in a car 
accident that left her a quadriplegic.14 
She eventually regained partial use of both of her arms, but she still 
needed to use a wheelchair.15 Ten months 
after the accident, she asked to be returned to her position as 
department head.16
Crystal Lake hired an expert to determine what types of reasonable 
accommodations might be provided to permit a person confined to a 
wheelchair to perform the duties of Catlin's position.17 The company did not give the expert any 
information about Catlin other than that she was confined to a 
wheelchair, nor did the expert ever talk to Catlin about her 
limitations. The expert ultimately concluded that no reasonable 
accommodation existed, because Catlin would be unable to perform all of 
the job duties within the department. That is, she would not be able to 
perform all duties required of all department employees.18
Catlin's own expert agreed that she would be unable to perform some 
of the duties of the position.19 Her 
expert, however, found that she would be able to perform most of the 
required duties and that one way to accommodate Catlin would be to make 
her job more clerical and eliminate some of the physical duties she 
could not perform.20
Crystal Lake relied on the conclusions of its expert and ultimately 
denied Catlin's request to return to work. Catlin filed a disability 
discrimination claim with the Wisconsin Equal Rights Division.21 An administrative law judge determined that 
Crystal Lake did not discriminate against Catlin, because there was no 
reasonable accommodation that Crystal Lake could have made without 
imposing a hardship on the company.22 The 
Labor and Industry Review Commission (LIRC) reversed.23 LIRC determined that Catlin was able to perform 
some or most of the jobs in the department and that Crystal Lake failed 
to reasonably accommodate Catlin when it refused to modify Catlin's job 
duties to exempt her from performing the duties she could no longer 
perform.24 The circuit court and the 
Wisconsin Court of Appeals affirmed LIRC's determination.25
Crystal Lake: Supreme Court Decision
Affirming LIRC's decision, the supreme court began its analysis with 
a brief overview of the WFEA disability discrimination provisions. The 
court first noted that to prove discrimination under the WFEA, an 
employee must show that she is an individual with a disability and that 
she has suffered an adverse employment action because of her 
disability.26 If a complainant does so, the 
burden shifts to the employer to prove either that 1) the complainant 
is, because of her disability, unable to "adequately undertake the 
job-related responsibilities" of the job she holds, even with a 
reasonable accommodation,27 or 2) any 
reasonable accommodation that might exist creates a hardship for the 
employer.28
In Crystal Lake, the employer conceded that Catlin was 
disabled and that it refused to rehire her based on her 
disability.29 The case therefore turned on 
the job relatedness and hardship questions: whether Catlin was able to 
undertake the job-related responsibilities of her job with a reasonable 
accommodation and, if so, whether the accommodation constituted a 
hardship.30 Crystal Lake argued that it was 
unreasonable to require an employer to excuse an employee from any and 
all of the duties she could no longer perform - essentially creating a 
new job - as a means of accommodating a disability.31
The court disagreed, ruling that reasonable accommodations are not 
limited to those accommodations that would permit the employee to 
perform all of his or her job responsibilities.32 In so ruling, the court gave no consideration to 
whether the duties at issue were essential or nonessential to the 
position for which the complainant had been hired. As a result, in 
situations in which an employee can perform some or most of the duties 
of her job, reassignment of even key job duties may well be a reasonable 
accommodation. The court then held that reassignment was in fact 
reasonable in Catlin's case because the duties she could not perform 
could be divided among the three other employees, permitting Catlin to 
focus on those duties she could perform.
Hutchinson Technology: Facts and Background
Hutchinson operated a manufacturing plant in Eau Claire, Wis.33 The plant was open 24 hours a day, seven days a 
week.34 Hutchinson had four crews that 
worked rotating 12-hour shifts.35 Using 
this schedule, each Hutchinson employee worked a total of 84 hours every 
two weeks.36
The plaintiff, Susan Roytek, began her employment with Hutchinson in 
June 1998.37 Roytek's position required her 
to work a 12-hour shift, rotating through four types of work: 
inspection, shearing, book work, and work in the bay.38 Roytek worked the 12-hour shift for 
approximately three months until mid-September 1998, when she was 
diagnosed with lower back pain and took a medical leave of 
absence.39
When Roytek returned to work in November 1998, she gave Hutchinson a 
note from her treating physician indicating that she could only work six 
hours a day and that she could not lift anything weighing more than 20 
pounds.40 In January 1999, Roytek's work 
restrictions were amended to allow her to work an eight-hour shift, 
although she was still limited to performing only one of her original 
four job functions.41
Hutchinson allowed Roytek to work a modified shift on a temporary 
basis but terminated her in September 1999 when it learned that her 
eight-hour-per-shift work restriction was permanent.42 Roytek then brought suit, claiming that her 
termination constituted disability discrimination under the WFEA.43
LIRC sided with Roytek, determining that reducing the employee's 
shifts from 12 to eight hours was a reasonable accommodation that did 
not create a hardship for the employer. Quoting Crystal Lake, 
the Wisconsin Court of Appeals upheld LIRC's determination in an 
unpublished decision, saying succinctly that "[a] change in job duties 
may be a reasonable accommodation in a given circumstance."44
Hutchinson Technology: Supreme Court Decision
The Wisconsin Supreme Court affirmed the court of appeals. The 
supreme court first held that Roytek was "disabled" under the WFEA, 
because she had an actual or perceived impairment that made, or was 
perceived as making, achievement unusually difficult or that limited her 
capacity to work.45 Accordingly, she was 
considered an "individual with a disability" under the WFEA.
The court then considered whether the accommodation suggested by 
Roytek - that she be allowed to work eight-hour instead of 12-hour 
shifts - was reasonable and whether it imposed a hardship on 
Hutchinson.46 Because Roytek's disability 
allowed her to perform only one of the four positions required by her 
job, Hutchinson maintained that the proposed accommodation required it 
to create an entirely new job for her.47 
This, Hutchinson argued, posed a significant hardship that employers 
should not be required to bear.48 Roytek 
countered that she had been working eight-hour shifts for a significant 
period with no apparent complications and, thus, Hutchinson could not 
meet its burden of showing that the accommodation was unreasonable or 
posed a hardship.49
The court sided with Roytek, holding that she met her initial burden 
of establishing the reasonableness of her proposed accommodation and 
that Hutchinson did not establish that it could not reasonably 
accommodate Roytek's disability without any significant difficulties or 
hardship to its business.50
Significance of the Supreme Court's Decisions
  | 
| 
 Vergeront 
 | 
  | 
| 
 Cochrane 
 | 
Meg Vergeront, U.W. 1993, 
is a partner at Stafford Rosenbaum LLP, Madison. Her practice focuses on 
helping employers find common-sense solutions to day-to-day workplace 
problems they face, from hiring to firing and everything in between. She 
can be reached at mvergeront@staffordlaw.com.
Drew J. Cochrane, U.W. 1999, is a senior associate 
at the firm, focusing on labor and employment law and litigation. He can 
be reached at dcochrane@staffordlaw.com.
 
Under the court's rulings in Crystal Lake and 
Hutchinson, employers must give consideration to reassigning 
any duty that a disabled individual cannot perform because of the 
disability, if the employee can perform even some of the job's other 
duties. The court's failure to expressly limit this obligation to 
nonessential duties creates several issues for Wisconsin lawyers.
As an initial matter, the failure to limit the obligation to 
nonessential duties is a substantial departure from what has typically 
been considered the law of disability discrimination in this country. 
Federal courts have routinely held that the ADA's reasonable 
accommodation requirement does not require an employer to eliminate or 
reassign essential job duties, create a new job, or hire others to 
perform the essential functions that a disabled employee cannot 
perform.51 Under Crystal Lake and 
Hutchinson, the ADA's essential functions test has no relevance 
to cases brought under the WFEA.
While the language of the WFEA does not include the exact essential 
functions language used in the ADA, the WFEA does state that an 
accommodation is reasonable only if it allows a disabled individual to 
"adequately undertake the [person's] job-related 
responsibilities."52 The court apparently 
has chosen to downplay the significance of this language because, in 
both cases, the court held to be reasonable accommodations that forced 
the employers to reassign and excuse the disabled employee from having 
to undertake what clearly are job-related responsibilities. The court's 
willingness to downplay the job-related responsibilities test is bound 
to create confusion as employers and employees - and the attorneys who 
counsel them - struggle to determine how the court's rulings will apply 
in practice.
While the majority opinion in Crystal Lake stated that 
Wisconsin law has never applied an essential functions-type test,53 the case law does not necessarily support the 
court's position. For example, in McMullen v. LIRC,54 LIRC itself argued that "the duty to accommodate 
an employee's handicap under the WFEA ... does not require an 
employer to transfer the employee to a different job."55 Thus, it seems clear that an employee's ability 
to perform the position's job-related responsibilities used to merit at 
least some consideration. After Crystal Lake and 
Hutchinson, this may no longer be the case.
Accordingly, while the question of how the WFEA's disability 
provisions have historically been interpreted may be open to debate, 
Crystal Lake and Hutchinson clearly strengthen the 
ability of disabled persons to bring causes of action under the WFEA. 
The law in Wisconsin is now clear that, under the WFEA, disabled persons 
may pursue discrimination claims even if they are not able to perform 
the position's key job-related responsibilities.
Another practical effect of the Crystal Lake and 
Hutchinson decisions is that the litigation of WFEA disability 
claims will now focus on the vague questions of whether an accommodation 
is "reasonable" and whether the accommodation would pose a "hardship" to 
the employer. The WFEA does not define these terms, nor has the case law 
helped to clarify the amorphous nature of these terms. For example, in 
Target Stores v. LIRC,56 the court 
of appeals found that it was unreasonable to terminate an employee with 
sleep apnea before determining if treatment could correct the problem 
despite the fact that the condition made it impossible for the employee 
to perform all the job functions. Conversely, in Gordon v. Good 
Samaritan Medical Center,57 LIRC held 
that the reasonable accommodation requirement does not require the 
employer to retain the employee and tolerate less than adequate 
attendance if an employee's disability causes the employee to be absent 
excessively. The court did not do much to help define these terms in 
either Crystal Lake or Hutchinson. While the decisions 
give us two examples of what the court considers reasonable, the court 
failed to outline any test that can be used in the future to determine 
reasonableness or hardship.
The inevitable uncertainty about what constitutes a hardship 
undoubtedly will increase the amount of litigation in this area and will 
make it difficult for attorneys to advise their clients, whether they be 
employers or employees. The likelihood of increased litigation is 
compounded by the fact that whether a particular type of accommodation 
is reasonable and whether it imposes a hardship are factual issues that 
must be resolved on a case-by-case basis.58 
Because the focus of future WFEA litigation now will be on the 
interpretation of these vague terms, the decisions are bound to increase 
costs for businesses as litigation becomes more uncertain.
Similarly, the decisions also restrict the ability of employers to 
configure their workforce in the most efficient manner possible. Rather, 
employers must be prepared to rewrite job descriptions and otherwise 
alter the nature of their workforce to accommodate disabled individuals. 
The Hutchinson court specifically mentioned this concern, 
stating that it was "mindful that a business must have the right to set 
its own employment rules to encourage maximum productivity. We caution, 
however, that such rules do not exist in a vacuum, but must bend to the 
requirements of the WFEA."59
Exactly how much "bending" will be required is, of course, uncertain. 
For example, as noted by the dissent in Crystal Lake, because 
the WFEA applies equally to applicants and current employees,60 an employer now must be prepared to post job 
openings in which it ultimately may be required to hire someone who, 
even with accommodations, would not be able to perform the duties 
attributed to the position they are seeking to fill.61 The potentially endless reach of these decisions 
is yet another question left unanswered by the court.
Conclusion
Crystal Lake and Hutchinson demonstrate that LIRC 
and the courts will become increasingly involved when it comes to 
defining jobs. An employee's inability to perform the position's key 
job-related responsibilities will not be sufficient justification under 
the WFEA for denying a requested accommodation. Rather, the employer 
must justify and prove why a proposed accommodation is unreasonable or 
creates a hardship. Unfortunately, the decisions ultimately raise many 
more questions than they answer, leaving lawyers and business owners in 
a quagmire that will be sorted out only through more litigation.
Endnotes
1Matt Pommer, Court Rules for 
Disabled Workers, Capital Times, July 11, 2003, at 7D.
2Supreme Court Disables 
Business, Wis. State J., Aug. 17, 2003, at B3.
32003 WI 106, 264 Wis. 2d 200, 664 
N.W.2d 651.
4Id. ¶ 19.
52004 WI 90, 267 Wis. 2d 961, 682 
N.W.2d 343.
6Id. ¶ 2.
7Id.
8Id.
9See, e.g., Peters v. City of 
Mauston, 311 F.3d 835, 845-46 (7th Cir. 2002); Watson v. 
Lithonia Lighting, 304 F.3d 749-52 (7th Cir. 2002); Bultmeyer 
v. Fort Wayne Community Sch., 100 F.3d 1281, 1284 (7th Cir. 
1996).
10Crystal Lake, 2003 WI 
106, ¶ 6, 264 Wis. 2d 200.
11Id.
12Id.
13Id.
14Id. ¶ 9.
15Id.
16Id. ¶ 10.
17 Id.
18Id.
19Id. ¶¶ 
11-12.
20Id.
21Id. ¶ 13.
22Id. ¶ 14.
23Id. ¶¶ 
15-16.
24Id.
25Crystal Lake Cheese Factory 
v. LIRC, 2002 WI App 290, 258 Wis. 2d 414, 654 N.W.2d 186.
26Brown County v. LIRC, 
124 Wis. 2d 560, 564-65 n.5, 369 N.W.2d 735 (1985).
27Wis. Stat. § 
111.34(2)(a).
28Wis. Stat. § 
111.34(1)(b).
29Crystal Lake, 2003 WI 
106, ¶ 44, 264 Wis. 2d 200.
30Id.
31Id. ¶ 45.
32Id. ¶ 52.
33Hutchinson, 2004 WI 
90, ¶ 3, 267 Wis. 2d 961.
34Id.
35Id.
36Id.
37Id. ¶ 4.
38Id.
39Id. ¶ 5.
40Id.
41Id.
42Id.
43Id. ¶ 6.
44No. 02-3328, 2003 WL 22143719 
(Wis. Ct. App. Sept. 18, 2003).
45Hutchinson, 2004 WI 
90, ¶¶ 10-19, 267 Wis. 2d 961.
46Id. ¶ 20.
47Id. ¶ 26.
48Id.
49Id. ¶ 27.
50Id. ¶ 37.
51See, e.g., Peters v. City 
of Mauston, 311 F.3d 835, 845-46 (7th Cir. 2002); Watson v. 
Lithonia Lighting, 304 F.3d 749-52 (7th Cir. 2002); Bultmeyer 
v. Fort Wayne Community Sch., 100 F.3d 1281, 1284 (7th Cir. 
1996).
52Wis. Stat. § 
111.34(2)(a).
53Crystal Lake, 2003 WI 
106, ¶ 115, 264 Wis. 2d 200.
54148 Wis. 2d 270, 434 N.W.2d 830 
(Ct. App. 1998).
55Crystal Lake, 2003 WI 
106, ¶ 115, 264 Wis. 2d 200 (citing Brief of LIRC at 24, 
McMullen v. LIRC, 148 Wis. 2d 270, 434 N.W.2d 830 (emphasis 
added)).
56217 Wis. 2d 1, 576 N.W.2d 545 
(Ct. App. 1998).
57ERD Case No. 8551631 (Apr. 26, 
1988).
58McMullen, 148 Wis. 2d 
at 276.
59Hutchinson, 2004 WI 
90, ¶ 37, 267 Wis. 2d 961.
60Wis. Stat. § 
111.21(1).
61Crystal Lake, 2003 WI 
106, ¶ 114 n.4, 264 Wis. 2d 200.
Wisconsin Lawyer