Civil and Human Rights

CAC Release: Purporting to Effectuate “Pure Textualism,” Supreme Court Guts ADA’s Protections for Retirees, Neglecting Critical Statutory Context and History

WASHINGTON, DC – Following today’s decision at the Supreme Court in Stanley v. City of Sanford, a case in which the Court considered whether the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) protects against disability discrimination with respect to retirement benefits distributed after employment, Constitutional Accountability Center Senior Appellate Counsel Miriam Becker-Cohen issued the following reaction:

 

This case presented the question whether a retired employee who does not hold or seek a job is a “qualified individual” who may experience actionable discrimination under Title I of the ADA. Answering that question required the Court to untangle a complicated statutory puzzle.

Rather than acknowledge the ambiguity of the law’s text and use statutory context to understand its meaning, the majority read the definition of “qualified individual” in isolation and fixated on verb tense at the expense of ordinary meaning. The result, it declared, is that a retiree is never a “qualified individual,” meaning the ADA allows employers to engage in post-employment discrimination. That makes little sense, sharply limits relief for people with disabilities, and is at odds with the proper approach to statutory interpretation.

To be sure, the Court today did leave open a potential path to relief for retirees who became “subject to” discriminatory fringe-benefits policies while they were both disabled and still held their jobs. But as Justice Jackson explained in her dissenting opinion, the Court was wrong to refuse to adopt that path in the current posture of this case. Lt. Stanley spent years serving her community dutifully and developed Parkinson’s disease in the line of duty. She should not now have to wait years to have her claims vindicated.

 

CAC Senior Appellate Counsel Smita Ghosh added this reaction:

 

As our brief on behalf of Lt. Stanley explained, Congress enacted the ADA in response to years of advocacy—including countless hearings and a 28-hour sit-in at a government office—from Americans with disabilities seeking equal access to all the benefits of employment. Although the Court’s conservative supermajority chided Lt. Stanley for invoking the ADA’s purpose, the law’s history, as Justice Jackson explained, “helps us to understand—not override” the statute’s text. Read alongside this history, the ADA’s text makes clear that it does not allow employers to discriminate against employees with disabilities before or after they retire.

More from Civil and Human Rights

Civil and Human Rights
November 20, 2025

Supreme Court Could Redefine the Limits of State Power

Newsweek
As the Supreme Court considers Chiles v. Salazar, a case examining Colorado’s 2019 ban on gay conversion therapy...
Civil and Human Rights
U.S. Supreme Court

Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J.

In Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J., the Supreme Court is considering whether laws in Idaho and West Virginia that prohibit all transgender women and girls from joining women’s and girls’ sports teams—across...
Civil and Human Rights
November 9, 2025

Supreme Court to hear case on religious rights in prison

Deseret News
Oral arguments on Monday in Landor v. Louisiana will focus on religious liberties while incarcerated.
Civil and Human Rights
November 10, 2025

CAC Release: In Landor Case, Question of Whether Person in Prison Who Suffered Undisputed Religious Liberty Violation Has Any Meaningful Remedy Hangs in the Balance

WASHINGTON, DC – Following oral argument at the Supreme Court this morning in Landor v....
Civil and Human Rights
October 7, 2025

Supreme Court Appears Poised to Strike Down Ban on Anti-LGBTQ ‘Conversion Therapy’

The New Civil Rights Movement
The U.S. Supreme Court appears poised to strike down a Colorado ban on so-called conversion...
Civil and Human Rights
October 6, 2025

Conversion Therapy Ban Case Tests Traditional State Police Power

Bloomberg Law
A therapist’s challenge to Colorado’s ban on treatment the state says harms LGBTQ+ youths may...