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Convention and Competence: Disability Rights in Sports and
Education
In the last six months, federal district courts have issued decisions in two highly
publicized cases alleging discrimination on the basis of disability. In one, the
Professional Golfers Association (PGA) was ordered to allow Casey Martin, a talented
contender with a serious leg impairment, to use a golf cart in its championship
tournaments, in contravention of its existing rules. In the other, Boston University (BU)
was permitted to maintain its foreign language requirement without exceptions for
learning-disabled students after a court-mandated faculty committee determined that the
requirement was "fundamental to the nature of a liberal arts degree" at that
university.
Both cases were brought under Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA),
which prohibits discrimination in "public accommodations," a term which covers a
wide range of facilities, institutions, and organized activities. Both addressed the same
issue under Title III: Was the proposed exception a "reasonable modification,"
or would it "fundamentally alter the nature" of the good, service, or activity
in question?
The drafters of the ADA expected the meaning of "reasonable modification" to
be fleshed out in the courts, and the two rulings were made in the context of the distinct
bodies of case law governing organized sports and higher education. Still, the cases look
similar, at least from the distance of a newspaper report, and so it may seem puzzling
that they were resolved differently. Why should the PGA not be allowed to decide that
walking is fundamental to tournament play, if BU is allowed to decide that a foreign
language requirement is fundamental to its liberal arts program?
Several explanations suggest themselves. The courts may be more deferential to the
judgment of faculty committees, given the greater prestige of academics and the long
tradition of university self-government, than to professional athletic associations. The
nature of Casey Martin's disability was clear and undisputed, while the diagnosis of
"learning disability" on which the BU students' ADA claim rested remains deeply
controversial. Finally, the opportunities available to the plaintiffs in the two cases
were strikingly different. While there is only one PGA Tour (the most prestigious of the
four tours offered by the PGA, and arguably the most prestigious in golf), there are lots
of places to obtain a liberal arts degree -- some more prestigious than BU, and many not
requiring two years of a foreign language. For these reasons, the courts may have been
more inclined to require inclusiveness and accommodation on the part of the PGA, while
holding BU to a less demanding standard.
Ultimately, however, we cannot explain the appearance of inconsistency, or assess the
merits of these decisions, without some understanding of how the ADA defines
discrimination and what it requires for its redress.
What the ADA Demands
In enacting the ADA, Congress found that people with disabilities had been
systematically denied "the opportunity to compete on an equal basis" by
pervasive discrimination, involving not only "outright intentional exclusion"
but also "architectural, transportation, and communication barriers,"
"exclusionary qualification standards and criteria," and the "failure to
make modifications to existing facilities and practices." The ADA thus treats
discrimination against people with disabilities as, in part, a sin of commission -- the
imposition of exclusionary practices and standards -- and, in part, a sin of omission --
the failure to remove barriers and to make reasonable modifications. This understanding of
discrimination reflects a recognition that our society has deliberately or negligently
excluded its disabled members from a wide range of activities by structuring those
activities in a way that makes them needlessly inaccessible.
Eliminating such structural discrimination often requires significant changes in the
physical and social environment. The most visible accommodations required by the ADA are
the design features that ensure access for people in wheelchairs or people who are blind:
curb-cuts, ramps, accessible entrances and bathrooms, braille signs, and computers that
read their own screens aloud. But the ADA also requires less tangible accommodation, in
the "design" of jobs, tasks, and activities. As one recent law review article
observes, "By contrast to earlier prohibitions against discrimination, the ADA
incorporates a more explicit understanding of the contingency of existing job
configurations: that they need not be structured the way that they are. Rather than taking
job descriptions as a given, reasonable accommodation doctrine asks how the job might be
modified to enable more individuals to perform it."
The demand for restructuring may make the ADA look more "affirmative" than
other civil rights laws; the measures required to accommodate people with disabilities
appear more extensive, and less directly linked to the redress of prior intentional
discrimination, than those required to protect the rights of women and minorities. But in
fact, the changes mandated by the ADA are more circumscribed than those mandated by other
civil rights legislation. For example, the ADA requires job restructuring only for those
disabled individuals "otherwise qualified" to perform the job's "essential
functions." Moreover, it requires modifications only if they are
"reasonable," if they do not impose an "undue burden," and, to bring
us back to the present cases, if they do not "fundamentally alter the nature" of
the activity, good, or service being offered.
These exceptions make the antidiscrimination mandate of the ADA a good deal more
conservative than it initially appears, but they still demand a bracing exercise in
institutional self-examination. They require employers, public and private service
providers, and, ultimately, the courts to decide what constitutes the essential functions
of a job or the fundamental nature of an activity, good, or service. Because the functions
of a job, the requirements for a degree, the rules of a game or social practice depend to
a large extent on convention, habit, and the practical imperatives of bygone eras, it will
often be difficult to say whether they are essential, or why. And because the ADA places
the burden of proof on those who seek to maintain exclusionary practices, the difficulty
of establishing that such practices are essential will often work to the benefit of those
demanding accommodation.
Demonstrating Competence
If the implementation of the ADA has been complicated by uncertainty about the
essential nature of various activities, goods, or services, it has also been complicated
by uncertainty over what constitutes competence or qualification in those persons who are
excluded from them. Formally, the second concern might not appear independent of the
first: the competence or qualification of a person with a disability would seem to depend
on the essential requirements of the job or the fundamental nature of the activity. But
competence is not always assessed with reference to the requirements of a particular task
or job. We will sometimes be more certain about a person's talent for achieving the
outcomes associated with an activity than about the activity's fundamental nature; even
those who claimed that walking was fundamental to the PGA Tour conceded that Casey Martin
had already shown himself to be a formidable golfer. It may also be that our understanding
of an activity's fundamental nature will be decisively shaped by our convictions
about an individual's achievement. If we are more certain of the consummate skill that
Casey Martin displays in playing golf than we are about the specific skills which golf
requires, we may deny that the highest-level professional golf could possibly require any
skill that Martin lacks. Along with his defenders, we may conclude that the PGA Tour is
essentially a shotmaking competition.
There is a second reason why the assessment of competence is so uncertain: competence
is more likely to have been attained and exhibited in some domains than in others. This
may be the most striking contrast between the PGA and BU cases. Golfers who seek to
compete in the PGA Tour will have had abundant opportunity to demonstrate their talent in
other tournaments, while students at a liberal arts college most likely have promise
rather than actual accomplishments to show. Admittedly, some college students can boast a
Westinghouse Science Prize or a poem published in the New Yorker. But they are the
exception. A liberal arts education offers few venues for precocious achievement, and
talent in its specific domains may simply take longer to cultivate and display. The PGA
case thus appears closer than the BU case to the ADA's paradigm injustice of a talented
person with a disability denied an opportunity to "participate in, and contribute to,
society."
In saying this, we do not mean to suggest that the ADA requires plaintiffs to display
competence as clearly as Casey Martin did. Indeed, most people who claim discrimination
based on disability will probably fall somewhere between Martin and the BU students, with
achievements more concrete than the students' but less compelling than Martin's. Our
suggestion is simply that in close or disputed cases -- particularly cases where the
fundamental nature of the activity is at all uncertain -- plaintiffs are more likely to
prevail if they can clearly display competence or qualification in the activities from
which they have been excluded.
The "Fundamental Nature" Test
However unfair Casey Martin's exclusion from the PGA Tour might have appeared, it might
not have been illegal if walking were indeed fundamental to the highest-level professional
play. On this point, there was conflicting and ambiguous evidence. The PGA rules clearly
stated that contestants were to walk the course, and some players regarded that as a
formidable challenge in hot, humid weather and difficult terrain. But walking was not
(otherwise) part of the competition: players did not get lower scores for faster walking,
and no minimum pace or time was specified. Moreover, many players felt that walking was
actually advantageous, giving them a feel for the course they would lack if they rode in a
cart. Finally, the fact that other tournaments permit carts did not settle the issue of
how to regard the walking requirement in the PGA Tour. That requirement may be seen as
gratuitous, since walking is deemed essential in no other tournament, or, no less
plausibly, as a defining requirement of the PGA Tour, distinguishing it from other
tournaments.
Behind this specific clash of interpretations lies the more general question of how the
courts could ascertain the fundamental nature of a conventional activity like PGA Tour
golfing. This question invites comparison with the inquiry mandated under Title I of the
ADA as to whether a given requirement is an "essential function" of a job. Title
I prohibits employers from refusing to hire or retain "otherwise qualified"
individuals on the basis of their disabilities; an individual is otherwise qualified if
she can perform the "essential functions" of the job with reasonable
accommodation. If the person with a disability cannot perform an essential function even
with accommodation (such as the provision of assistive technology), the individual is not
qualified.
Though many of the functions that people with disabilities cannot perform are clearly
incidental to the jobs they seek to do, such as walking up a flight of stairs to work as a
computer programmer, there is often disagreement about whether a particular function is
incidental or essential (e.g., is the ability to quickly analyze a fact pattern and apply
complex rules essential to lawyering, or is speed incidental, and extra time on bar
examinations therefore a reasonable accommodation for applicants with learning
disabilities?). Such questions -- which were rarely asked before civil rights laws forced
employers to address them -- will sometimes be difficult to answer. But generally they can
be resolved by examining a company's past practice, its productive and financial goals and
constraints, and the practice of similar organizations: Does the employer really need this
employee to perform this function in order to maintain its productivity or market share,
comply with OSHA or EPA standards, or increase its dividends?
The inquiry may be less straightforward when a person with a disability seeks access to
an activity, good, or service rather than a job. Formally, the language of Title I
(regarding employment) and Title III (regarding public accommodations) is quite similar.
Where the former requires "reasonable accommodation," the latter requires
"reasonable modification"; both make an exception for undue burdens. And much as
an employer is not required to accommodate a person with a disability who cannot perform
the essential functions of the job, an organization is not required to modify the
activity, good, or service it offers if that change would "fundamentally alter [its]
nature." If walking indisputably had as incidental a role in golfing as it has in
computer programming, the Casey Martin case would be an easy one under either section of
the ADA.
The demand for reasonable modification suggests that the ADA recognizes the same
contingency in the "existing configurations" of activities like sports and
education as it does in employment. But the contingency in such activities is different
from that found in jobs. Sports are conventional in a way that jobs are not (or are not
generally thought to be). Their features are not dictated by the external objective of
making a product or a profit, but are shaped by tacit consensus and informal practice of
the participants themselves. Education falls somewhere in the middle: closer to employment
if we see it in more instrumental terms as job training; closer to sports if we see it as
a constituent of a good, cultured, or civilized life, e.g., "Part of being an
informed and cultured member of our society is having learned (or at least having been
exposed to) a foreign language or the Classics of Western Civilization."
The more conventional character of sports, and arguably of education, may appear to
make them more flexible, more amenable to modification, than the production- or
profit-driven operations of a business. But their conventional nature is double-edged. The
rules and practices that define a sport or a liberal arts education may be in some sense
arbitrary, but they may also acquire a non-instrumental value that few job descriptions
possess. The ADA's exemption for modifications that fundamentally alter the nature of an
activity, good, or service can be seen as protecting, perhaps too categorically, the
attachments and expectations that develop around conventional activities.
In the BU case, the court deferred to the considered judgment of a faculty committee
that the foreign language requirement was essential to a liberal arts education at Boston
University. There was ample precedent for this deference in other cases addressing the
fundamental nature of an academic or professional program, based in part on the tradition
of academic autonomy. (Indeed, that deference might have been greater if the BU president
had not provoked the controversy with a wholesale attack on his school's program for
students with learning disabilities and on the very idea of accommodating such
disabilities.) Such deference may look elitist if we see the nature of a liberal arts
degree as no less conventional than a golf tournament -- why should academics be allowed
to judge which of their conventions are fundamental while sports organizers must yield to
the court's judgment? It will look a little less elitist if we see the requirements for a
liberal arts degree as instrumental -- developing the skills needed to succeed in civic or
commercial life outside the academy (or within it, as professors). But the university
might be reluctant to justify its foreign language requirement in instrumental terms. If
the question is whether students perform better at various life pursuits with the minimal
proficiency that two years of a foreign language confer, the BU faculty has no more
expertise than other educators in providing an answer. Rather, the university may see the
foreign language requirement as an essential constituent of a liberal education as BU
defines it. In that case, its authority to impose the requirement is a matter of
prerogative, not expertise
Making Exceptions
One issue close to the surface but rarely discussed in cases like these is why we
should have to choose between excluding people with disabilities from an activity, or
altering its rules and conventions for everyone so that people with disabilities can be
included. Why not simply make an exception to those rules or conventions for participants
with disabilities? What does it matter if a few people are allowed to depart from the
conventions that govern a sport or an academic program?
The most obvious concern is that exceptions would give some participants an unfair
advantage, thereby imposing an undue burden on the others. Suppose that Casey Martin won a
game on the PGA Tour by one stroke, pulling ahead on the final hole to beat a player
exhausted by walking a long course on a hot, humid day. Or suppose that the two top
seniors at BU had otherwise equal GPAs, but that one was a learning-disabled student who
had gotten A's in foreign culture but would probably have gotten C's or D's in a foreign
language, the other a non-LD student who had gotten B's in a foreign language but would
probably have gotten A's in foreign culture. Would it be fair to award Casey Martin the
trophy, and to make the learning-disabled student valedictorian?
A second concern is that exceptions would alter the fundamental nature of an activity.
Clearly, this could happen if an "exception" were available to all -- and if
there were some advantage to non-disabled participants in the alternative way of engaging
in the activity. But it could also happen even if the exception were limited to disabled
participants, since our notion of what constitutes achievement in that activity would be
affected by their success. BU, for instance, would be hard-pressed to claim that two years
of a foreign language were integral to its conception of a liberal arts education if
several of its recent valedictorians were learning-disabled students who lacked that
coursework.
Operating in a legal framework somewhat different from the ADA, an Ontario court faced
both of these concerns when it was asked to decide whether the province's Youth Bowling
Council could exclude Tammy McLeod, a girl with cerebral palsy, from tournament play.
Tammy aimed and released the ball down a ramp rather than holding it in her hand. The
judge concluded that the girl was "not able, because of handicap, to perform the
essential act of bowling -- manual control and release of the ball." Under the ADA,
such a finding would have settled the matter: By analogy with Title I, the employment
section, the bowling council would not be required to include Tammy if she was unable,
even with accommodation, to perform the essential functions of the sport. But under the
Ontario Human Rights Code, as the judge interpreted it, the bowling council was
required to include her. A person with a disability is entitled to accommodation whether
or not she can perform the essential functions of an activity, so long as the
accommodation does not impose a hardship on the organizers or on other participants. In
this case, the judge ruled that there was no hardship: Tammy's device gave her "no
competitive advantage over others" (since it did not allow her to impart speed or
spin to the ball), and her use of it did not require other bowlers to alter their manner
of play in the slightest.
The judge went on to say, however, that if use of the ramp had given Tammy a
competitive advantage, or if she were to adopt a more sophisticated device, the bowling
council might well be allowed to exclude her. In effect, he ruled that Tammy could
participate as long as she was not competitive. He gave her permission only to engage in a
loosely parallel activity alongside real bowlers, in which she was unlikely to obtain a
higher score than the real bowlers, and unlikely to be regarded as having won a bowling
game even if she did. Though she could be a participant in some attenuated sense, she
could never be a contender. This resolution is ironic in a case where the judge emphasized
the inherently competitive nature of sports: "All sport at all levels involves
competition; all participants strive to win." It may have been a fair resolution for
a youth tournament, where winning is not the only thing, but if so, the decision was fair
for reasons that belied its stated rationale.
It will, of course, be as difficult to say when an alternative way of performing an
activity confers an unfair advantage as it is to say whether it departs from the
fundamental nature of that activity. From the moment he began to dance around Sonny Liston
in Las Vegas, to the moment he had the ropes loosened in the Kinshasa ring to defeat
George Foreman with his rope-a-dope, Muhammed Ali was accused of gaining unfair advantage
or threatening the fundamental nature of heavyweight boxing; he is now almost universally
regarded as having improved it. A cart on a PGA Tour golf course is surely closer to
looser ropes in a boxing ring than to ramps in a bowling alley. But closer cases and
difficult judgment calls will inevitably attend the integration of people with
disabilities. |
Protected Values
We would like to conclude with some reflections on the values that may be protected by
the "fundamental nature" exception of Title III. If the law were simply
concerned with equitably distributing the costs of reasonable accommodation and
modification among people with disabilities, employers, public accommodations, and the
larger society, it is not clear why it would need such an exception in addition to that
for "undue burden," as well as the overall requirement of reasonableness. If a
public accommodation can modify its activity, service, or good without undue burden, what
does it matter that the modification alters its fundamental nature?
This impatience with convention is found in some feminist writing on sports, which
challenges the need for rules that limit the participation and success of women. Thus,
Janice Moulton maintains:
As it is now, athletes are used to adjusting their play to rule changes, and systems of
scoring now exist to allow players at different levels to compete together. Informal games
of many kinds are played with whoever shows up, and every school athlete has played in
such games. The rules are freely revised to take into account the number of players, the
playing field . . . , the level of skill, and anything else that is considered important.
People who object to making changes in the standard rules may not realize how very often
such rules are altered in practice.
As anyone who has followed the protracted controversies about rule-changes in many
sports will appreciate, however, players and spectators are often fiercely attached to the
status quo, and regard even minor changes as threats to the integrity of the sport.
Changes far subtler than those needed for the inclusion of people with various
disabilities might well alter the style of play and the character of the game. The point
is not that such changes would make the sport intrinsically better or worse, or would
impose any tangible burden on the players, spectators, or organizers, but that they would
alter familiar and cherished conventions. Moulton recognizes how sports talk pervades our
social lives and civilization, but fails to recognize how much of that talk concerns the
very details she would so readily alter in the interest of greater inclusiveness. It is
not the improvised pick-up games that are debated in the barbershops and the tabloids; it
is organized sports with highly specific rules and other conventions, a knowledge and
acceptance of which is presupposed in the spirited discourse Moulton observes. This hardly
renders those conventions sacrosanct, but it does suggest that changes can be wrenching
and disruptive.
Moreover, one does not have to be a fetishist about existing conventions to worry about
the broad postwar trend, in work, school, and sports, toward specialization. American
sports used to place a premium on endurance and versatility, just as American universities
once imposed a comprehensive liberal arts curriculum. A football career required a full 60
minutes on the gridiron, on defense and offense; a B.A. once required not only proficiency
in Latin and Greek, and a familiarity with the classics of Western Civilization, but also
an ability to swim several laps in an Olympic-size pool. The specialization that has
overtaken many domains may be a welcome trend for those with finely honed but narrow
talents and capabilities. But in these domains, many well-intentioned people fight to
preserve an emphasis on versatility or well-roundedness, lest the participants become
technicians instead of scholars or athletes. And even those not disposed to rearguard
actions may feel some sense of loss when excellence in golf is confined to shotmaking or
when pitchers no longer have to come to the plate to face their opposite numbers on the
mound, leaving that task to designated hitters. Whether or not we believe that the law
should attempt to take cognizance of such costs, it must recognize the danger of deforming
a practice so extensively that it is no longer one in which previously excluded or
included people wish to participate. At that point, the attempt to reshape the practice
becomes self-defeating.
If the ADA does give weight to convention in exempting public accommodations from
changes that would fundamentally alter the nature of their activities, goods, and
services, this is consistent with the generally conservative and incremental character of
that statute. The ADA is committed to opening up existing employment, facilities,
activities, goods, and services to people with disabilities, but it was not designed to
equalize opportunities in more radical ways. While the interests of people with specific
disabilities might be well served by the creation of new sports emphasizing skills in
which they were likely to have developed compensatory superiority -- the rough analogue of
a proposal made by Jane English for reducing sex inequality in sports -- or of more
universities like Gallaudet, the ADA requires nothing of the sort. Rather, it calls for
the maximum feasible integration, and leaves it to the courts to decide whether what is of
distinctive value in an enterprise can be preserved by changes that permit people with a
given disability to participate, and even to compete and win. Will the singular virtues of
the highest-level professional golf be compromised if players use carts to go from hole to
hole? Would a BU liberal arts degree lose its special character if it were conferred
without two years of a foreign language? Such questions will often be difficult ones, both
for disabled individuals who seek inclusion and for institutions which are pressed to
change. Nevertheless, they provoke a valuable exercise in institutional appraisal.
-- Anita Silvers and David Wasserman
Sources: Pamela S. Karlan and George Rutherglen, "Disabilities, Discrimination,
and Reasonable Accommodation," Duke Law Journal, vol. 46, no. 1 (October
1996); Ruth Shalit, "Defining Disability Down," New Republic (August 25,
1997); Michael Grunwald, "U.S. Launches Drive for Disabled Golfer: Justice Dept.
Invokes ADA in Martin Case," Washington Post (August 24, 1998); Janice
Moulton, "Why Everyone Deserves a Sporting Chance: Education, Justice, and College
Sport," in Rethinking College Athletics, edited by Judith Andre and David N.
James (Temple University Press, 1991); Jane English, "Sex Equality in Sports," Philosophy
and Public Affairs, vol. 7 (Spring 1978); Youth Bowling
Council of Ontario v. McLeod, 75 Ontario Reports (2d).
Disability, Difference, Discrimination: Perspectives
on Justice in Bioethics and Public Policy
Anita Silvers, David Wasserman, and Mary B. Mahowald,
with an afterword by Lawrence C. Becker
How should our society respond to individuals with disabilities? What does it mean
to be disabled, and is a disabled person necessarily less independent and less competent
than a person who is not disabled? Is a life with a disability any less worth living than
a life without one? In this compelling book, three experts on disability issues, ethics,
and the law address pressing issues in bioethics, including the prospect of genetic
discrimination, heroic treatment of seriously impaired neonates, and how to assess the
benefits and burdens of ending the segregation of people with disabilities. The authors
bring leading theories of justice to bear on matters of concern to a wide variety of
disciplines dealing with disability, including feminist, minority, and cultural studies,
and they do so in the context of the groundbreaking Americans with Disabilities Act. Disability,
Difference, Discrimination will be of great interest to the legal, philosophical, and
medical communities engaged in ongoing debates about the disabled.
Anita Silvers is professor of philosophy at San Francisco State University and the
author of many publications on ethics and medical ethics, aesthetics, disability studies,
feminism, higher education, and public policy. David Wasserman is a research scholar at
the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy, University of Maryland. He is a practicing
attorney who works on philosophical issues that arise in public policy and law related to
disability. Mary B. Mahowald is professor at the Pritzker School of Medicine, University
of Chicago. Her books include Women and Children in Health Care.
"The authors offer novel and enlightening perspectives on disability and justice.
I learned a lot from their different ways of approaching this difficult tangle of issues.
All three essays in this volume challenge commonly accepted patterns of thought and will
repay careful study."
-- Richard Arneson, University of California, San Diego
Point/Counterpoint: Philosophers Debate Contemporary Issues
December 1998
176 pages
$54.00 (cloth)
$18.95 (paper)
Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
4720 Boston Way
Lanham, Maryland 20706
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