HR-3195-110
Became Public Law
Sponsored by Steny Hoyer (D-MD)
What it does
This law broadens the definition of "disability" under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) to cover more people. It requires that disability status be determined without considering the effects of corrective measures (such as medication or prosthetics), and it specifies that conditions that are episodic or in remission — such as epilepsy or cancer — still qualify as disabilities when active. It also shifts employment discrimination protections to cover any qualified individual on the basis of disability, not just those with a diagnosed disability.
Who benefits
People with episodic or managed conditions (e.g., epilepsy, diabetes, cancer in remission, multiple sclerosis) who were previously excluded from ADA protections because their symptoms were controlled by medication or treatment. People with vision impairments who use corrective lenses, who can no longer be screened out by uncorrected-vision job requirements unless the employer demonstrates business necessity. Workers broadly who gain stronger protections against disability-based employment discrimination. Disability rights advocacy organizations. Plaintiffs' attorneys handling ADA cases. Employers who gain clearer regulatory guidance from the EEOC on compliance standards.
Who is hurt
Employers — particularly small businesses — who face a broader pool of employees and applicants entitled to reasonable accommodations, potentially increasing compliance costs. Insurers and benefits administrators who may face expanded claims under disability-related benefit programs, though the law explicitly states it does not alter eligibility standards for workers' compensation or federal/state disability benefit programs. Employers in safety-sensitive industries (e.g., transportation, construction) who relied on uncorrected-vision or similar standards as screening tools. Non-disabled workers who might have sought reverse-discrimination claims, as the law explicitly forecloses such claims.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Supreme Court's rulings in Sutton v. United Airlines (1999) and Toyota Motor Manufacturing v. Williams (2002) had drastically narrowed the ADA's original scope, leaving millions of people with real impairments — including those managing conditions with medication — without legal protection. They contend that Congress intended the ADA to cover a broad range of disabilities and that the amendments restore that original intent, ensuring that people with conditions like epilepsy, diabetes, and cancer are not denied workplace protections simply because their treatment is effective.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that dramatically expanding the definition of "disability" creates significant compliance uncertainty for employers, who must now assess a far wider range of conditions when determining reasonable accommodation obligations. They contend that the "regarded as" provision — which extends protections to anyone perceived as having an impairment, regardless of actual limitation — could expose businesses to litigation over routine employment decisions, and that the broad construction mandate shifts the burden onto employers without providing clear guidance on where accommodation obligations end.