Employee Survival Guide®

Remote Work On Trial: EEOC v. FedEx Consent Decree for $280,000

Mark Carey | Employment Lawyer & Employee Advocate Season 7 Episode 60

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A job can be done perfectly and still become impossible to keep. We dig into an EEOC disability discrimination case where a FedEx dispatcher with decades of experience kept operations running while working from home, only to have that accommodation pulled back after a return-to-office push. When a company relocates a role and the commute becomes the true obstacle, the ADA forces a hard conversation: are we talking about the work, or the building?

We break down the facts the EEOC highlighted, including serious health conditions that limited mobility and a multi-year stretch of successful telework that, on paper, looked like proof the essential functions were largely sedentary and doable remotely. Then we turn to FedEx’s legal defense: denials of wrongdoing, claims of operational need for in-office interaction, disputes over what performance systems capture, and the argument that remote work during a crisis doesn’t rewrite the rules forever.

Finally, we walk through the consent decree that ended the dispute, including a $280,000 payment and policy-focused terms like ADA training, better tracking of accommodation requests, workplace notices, and a reinstatement pathway. We also leave you with the question at the center of today’s remote work accommodation battles: if the work was already proven from home, what should an employer still be allowed to require?

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A Workplace Clash Begins

SPEAKER_00

Welcome to another episode of the Employee Survival Guide, produced by Employment Attorney Mark Carey. You know, I want you to imagine dedicating three decades to a single company. You master every nuance of your role, only to have this sudden geographical decision by your employer make showing up to work physically impossible.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that is a tough scenario. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

Right. I mean, you can still do the actual job flawlessly. But the building itself and the journey to get there has suddenly become this fortress you simply cannot reach.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. And, you know, today we're looking into a fascinating legal clash over the modern workplace, remote work, and well, disability rights.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Yeah, we really are. And we have a great stack of sources to go through with you today. We've got a federal discrimination complaint filed by the EEOC, that's the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And we also have the official legal answer and denials from the defendant, which in this case is FedEx.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And finally, we have the final consent decree press release that actually resolved the dispute. So our mission today is to unpack how a 30-year veteran employee's remote work arrangement evolved into a federal lawsuit.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and we'll understand how the employer defended their return to office mandate and just, you know, look at the six-figure settlement that ended the whole battle.

SPEAKER_00

So before looking at the legal arguments, let's establish the human element here, like the core conflict found in the EEOC's complaint.

SPEAKER_01

It's so important to ground this in the facts.

SPEAKER_00

Totally. So we are looking at the charging party, Elise Johnson. She successfully worked as a dispatcher for FedEx at their Somerset, New Jersey location for about 30 years.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell 30 years. I mean, that is a lot of institutional knowledge.

SPEAKER_00

It really is. But then we hit the catalyst. In March 2020, FedEx closed the Somerset office and relocated its dispatch operations to Manhattan. Specifically 130 LeRoy Street.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And we really need to detail how this changed her daily life. I mean, her commute went from a 20-minute drive with, you know, really close parking to a 40-mile journey.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, 40 miles.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, 40 miles requiring multiple train rides and a significant amount of walking. Oh, wow.

SPEAKER_00

And the medical reality outlined in the complaint makes this even more stark. The complaint says she had type 2 diabetes, asthma, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, and diabetic neuropathy.

SPEAKER_01

Which is a really severe set of conditions.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, they severely limited her mobility, making that new New York City commute physically unmanageable. It's like changing the rules of the game in the fourth quarter, you know?

SPEAKER_01

That's a great way to put it.

SPEAKER_00

Suddenly the physical toll of just getting to the building becomes an insurmountable barrier, completely separate from the employee's actual job skills.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And the pandemic actually inadvertently provided a temporary and highly successful solution to all of this.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, let's talk about that pandemic pivot. So in April 2020, due to COVID-19, FedEx allowed all dispatchers to telework full-time.

SPEAKER_01

Everybody went home.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. But by August 2021, FedEx formalized the process. They required employees who wanted to continue teleworking for disability reasons to submit formal accommodation requests.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And Johnson followed that. She submitted her medical documentation.

SPEAKER_00

She did. And the corporate human capital management committee actually approved her request.

SPEAKER_01

Which is a huge detail.

SPEAKER_00

It is. And she was incredibly successful. She worked remotely from April 2020 through February 2023. The complaint notes she was evaluated as a dependable team player and a self-starter.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and the remote setup even allowed her to step in on short notice. Like I think the complaint mentioned she helped out on Christmas Eve to help the operation.

SPEAKER_00

Wow. Yeah, that really shows dedication.

SPEAKER_01

It does. And you know, from a legal standpoint, according to the EEOC, this nearly three-year stretch proved she could perform the predominantly sedentary essential functions of the dispatcher role completely remotely.

SPEAKER_00

Which brings up the big question. If the remote arrangement was working so well, why did it end?

SPEAKER_01

Right. This is where we get to the reversal, which is kind of the climax of the complaint.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. According to the complaint, non-disabled New York City employees started complaining about the remote workers.

SPEAKER_01

Office politics, basically.

SPEAKER_00

Basically, yeah. So in February 2023, dispatch managers, Vlaoba and Murata, asked to reevaluate the accommodation. They cited a drop in COVID cases and an operational need to have dispatchers in the office.

SPEAKER_01

And this is where the corporate committee steps in. They revoked the telework accommodations for Johnson and others.

SPEAKER_00

And the wild part is they allegedly did this without even speaking to the managers or the disabled employees.

SPEAKER_01

They just revoked it unilaterally.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And the result? Forced to choose between an impossible commute and her health, Johnson was forced to retire in July 2023. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

It's just devastating.

FedEx Defense And Undue Hardship

SPEAKER_00

It really is. So let's look at the employer's official legal defense. Right. What was FedEx's answer?

SPEAKER_01

Well, keeping it brief, FedEx denied the EEOC's allegations of discrimination. They did admit Johnson requested an accommodation and that they initially approved it temporarily.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, so they admitted that much.

SPEAKER_01

Right. But they firmly asserted an operational need for dispatchers to be in the office to interact with the team and step in frequently. They also denied failing to engage in the interactive process. And they claimed that their software, the dispatcher workstation, didn't track all the day-to-day functions. Interesting. Yeah, and ultimately, they argued that keeping the accommodation would impose an undue hardship on the business.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, wait, I have to push back here based on the facts. Go for it. Wait, if she was successfully doing the job from home for nearly three years, how can the company suddenly claim, in their legal answer, that it's an undue hardship or that an in-office presence is essential? Doesn't the three-year track record completely disprove the undue hardship defense?

SPEAKER_01

You know, that is the exact legal tension at the heart of this. The EEOC definitely argued that those three years proved it wasn't a hardship. Right. But FedEx's posture was that surviving a global crisis with remote workers doesn't permanently redefine their standard operating procedure. But we'll never know how a jury would have answered your question because the two sides actually reached a settlement.

SPEAKER_00

Right. The resolution. So the case was settled via a consent decree. And this was signed around April 16, 2026, by attorneys including Kiverly Cruise for the EEOC and Charles C. Holmes for FedEx. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

And the financial amount is quite significant.

SPEAKER_00

Let's get to that. FedEx agreed to pay$280,000 to settle the disability discrimination lawsuit. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Which is a substantial sum. But it wasn't just about the money. There were systemic changes outlined in the decree as well.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Yeah, let's outline those nonmonetary terms briefly. So FedEx committed to avoiding ADA violations, obviously. Right. And they have to provide training for employees evaluating accommodation requests, specifically for the Manhattan office. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Which is exactly where this whole issue started.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Exactly. They also have to update policies to track these requests, post workplace notices about the settlement, and provide a path to reinstatement for an aggrieved dispatcher.

SPEAKER_01

And you know, for you listening, it's important to clarify that a consent decree is really a compromise. Right. FedEx maintains its denials and didn't admit to breaking the law, but the EEOC secured financial relief for the employees and forced these systemic policy changes.

The Big Question About RTO

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, they forced a real structural change. So just to summarize for you, the core tension we explored today is really that clash between an employer's desire for in-office attendance and an employee's right to reasonable accommodations under the ADA.

SPEAKER_01

Especially when remote work has already been proven viable for years.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. It just really highlights how complicated these situations can get.

SPEAKER_01

It does.

SPEAKER_00

So we want to leave you with a final thought to ponder. If a massive global disruption proves that a job can be done flawlessly from home, does an employer permanently lose the right to demand an in office presence later? It challenges you to look at your own workplace and ask what rules are truly essential to the work and what is just tradition.

SPEAKER_01

That is a great question to think about.

SPEAKER_00

It really is. Well, thank you so much for joining us for this conversation today. We appreciate you taking the time.