US employment commission sues UPS, alleging discrimination against deaf driver candidates

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Sept 22 (Reuters) – The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) on Friday said it sued United Parcel Service (UPS.N) for disability discrimination, alleging the delivery firm refused to hire deaf or hearing-impaired individuals as drivers.

The agency said the Department of Transportation (DOT) has authorized the practice of employing those individuals to drive vehicles weighing more than 10,000 pounds through a program that exempts them from a hearing test and instead uses alternative criteria to ensure an equivalent level of driver safety.

Atlanta-based UPS said it is modifying driver training for those who are deaf and hard of hearing and would start accepting exemptions to the DOT commercial driver hearing standard for operators of its ubiquitous brown delivery trucks in January 2024.

UPS said training is necessary because “current regulations do not consider best practices for driving larger commercial vehicles that make frequent stops in residential neighborhoods, or other significant factors UPS considers as it works to help keep its drivers and communities safe.”

Read on at https://www.reuters.com/legal/eeoc-sues-ups-disability-discrimination-hiring-2023-09-22/?fbclid=IwAR3zFbHruzOHBjJAPA09NDHsM1nGtQJQ9MN1VWK_b2dlpVtWdldjMasm3kM