JANET BOND ARTERTON, District Judge.
Plaintiff Peter Charles Rumbin filed suit pro se against Defendant Association of American Medical Colleges ("AAMC") under Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act ("ADA"), 42 U.S.C. § 12181. He claims that he reported to Defendant that he was severely limited in the major life activities of seeing and reading, but his requests for accommodations in taking the Medical College Admission Test ("MCAT"), administered by Defendant,
After the AAMC denied Mr. Rumbin's accommodation request for the MCAT, he filed suit in small claims court, which was dismissed. On February 11, 2008, he filed a disability discrimination complaint with the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities ("CHRO"), asserting that AAMC denied him "reasonable accommodation on the basis of a disability on or about August 2007," in violation of Conn. Gen.Stat. §§ 46a-58(a) and 46a-64(a) and the ADA. He identified his disability as "glaucoma, ocular misalignment."
On June 26, 2008, Mr. Rumbin filed suit in Connecticut Superior Court, and on June 30, 2008, he initiated this action, receiving a release of CHRO jurisdiction on September 15, 2008. He asserts that he applied for but was denied MCAT testing accommodations in 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008. In addition to AAMC, he initially sued testing companies Prometric, Inc. ("Prometric") and Sylvan Learning, Inc. ("Sylvan"). The accommodation action requested the following relief: three days to take the MCAT, submission by the AAMC submit his MCAT practice test results to medical schools, and $14-15 million and damages for years of lost earnings and future lost earnings. On March 9, 2009, the Court dismissed Prometric and Sylvan as defendants and granted AAMC's Motion to Dismiss Mr. Rumbin's damages claim under Title III of the ADA, under which damages cannot be awarded, and his request for an injunction requiring AAMC to accept and certify as official his practice MCAT results. The claim that remained for trial was Mr. Rumbin's ADA claim against AAMC, seeking injunctive relief.
The AAMC is a non-profit membership organization that represents medical schools and teaching hospitals. It provides a centralized application service for medical schools in the United States and Canada. (See June 30, 2010 Trial Tr.) Its testing personnel develop and administer the MCAT, scores for which are considered by medical schools in evaluating applications. Nearly 63,000 people took the MCAT in 2009. The exam is designed to predict success in the first few years of
The AAMC has established procedures that disabled test takers may use to request accommodations and has published those procedures in a document titled "Documenting Physical Disabilities" available on the AAMC website. (See Ex. TT.
The AAMC provides a number of accommodations for test-takers, several of which are adjustments to the testing computers for people with visual disabilities. For example, the AAMC can provide "zoom text," which increases font sizes up to 36 times, gives test-takers screen overlays to reduce glare, and can adjust contrast on monitors. The AAMC can also give extra breaks in between examination sections, so disabled test takers may rest their eyes. Although the AAMC can give extra time, it is reluctant to do so, because according to Sparacino, unlike other accommodations, studies show that scores on tests taken with extra time are not equivalent to scores on tests taken with standardized timing. According to Sparacino, in 2008, the AAMC received 700 to 800 requests for accommodations, more than 50 percent of which were granted, and 10 to 20 percent of which were incomplete.
Although his initial requests for accommodation on the MCAT cited glaucoma as the basis for his disability, Mr. Rumbin and his treating opthalmologist David McCullough clarified during trial that it is his "convergence insufficiency" that causes his difficulty seeing and reading and that necessitates accommodation. Plaintiff no longer claims that his glaucoma requires accommodation.
Convergence insufficiency occurs when an individual tries to turn his eyes inwards, towards each other, resulting in difficulty in visually focusing on close-in objects. It can cause headaches, fatigue, eye strain, and double vision. According to Jack Terry, Executive Director of the National Board of Examiners in Optometry, who reviewed Mr. Rumbin's accommodations requests for the AAMC, convergence insufficiency is diagnosed based on objective factors, including "near-point of convergence," ("NPC"), i.e., the number of centimeters from one's nose at which he or she sees double or one eye deviates out, and subjective factors, including whether the patient suffers from headaches after prolonged reading or visual difficulty while reading. Both Mr. Terry and Dr. McCullough agree that an NPC of ten centimeters is on cusp of the "normal range" and does not, in and of itself, demonstrate convergence insufficiency.
Mr. Rumbin testified that he struggles with tiny, dense text. He has difficulty reading books with shiny pages, such as textbooks. Nonetheless, Mr. Rumbin graduated with a B.S. in physics from Southern Connecticut State University, having begun his undergraduate studies at the University of Chicago and studied at Harvard University. Although he was not given formal accommodations for vision problems while in college, Mr. Rumbin succeeded by using reading strategies such as "mapping passages," whereby he would use a pencil to read lines, circle key words, and outline passages; while at Harvard, he received "informal accommodations" such as separate proctoring for examinations. Mr. Rumbin pursued graduate degrees in mathematics at Wesleyan College and Columbia University, and although he completed his doctoral qualifying examination and wrote a masters essay, for financial reasons, he never completed these degrees. Mr. Rumbin has taken the Law School Admissions Test without accommodations and said that as a result, he had "very low scores."
Mr. Rumbin has difficulty with everyday tasks such as grocery shopping and using ATMs as a result of his visual deficiencies. He testified at length about how long it takes for him to read the fine print on products at the supermarket to meet his special dietary needs and about his difficulty at times distinguishing among bills of varying denominations. He also said that he avoids using computers and relies on others to send and receive emails on his behalf.
Despite these challenges, Mr. Rumbin also testified that he recently worked for three years as a biophysics research assistant on a team at Yale University that won the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for x-ray defraction studies of the structure of molecules and mapping the ribosome. Mr. Rumbin's work involved reviewing computer-generated electron-density maps in a plexiglass viewing box and writing computer programs, which he says did not require use of a computer. Mr. Rumbin testified that his visual difficulties did not hinder his work at Yale. Mr. Rumbin also previously worked as a tutor at Southern Connecticut State University and as a lifeguard, for which he needed no accommodations and was not limited by his vision problems.
Mr. Rumbin testified that he is an avid painter, has submitted landscape paintings in national competitions, and reads books.
Mr. Rumbin has registered for and took the MCAT in 1978, 1979, 1983, and 1988 without accommodations. (See Mr. Rumbin MCAT Info, Ex. SS.) He testified that he registered for the August 2005 MCAT and applied for an accommodation for glaucoma but was not notified until the day before the exam date that his request was denied. In support of Mr. Rumbin's application to take the August 2006 MCAT with accommodations for glaucoma, Dr. McCullough faxed a note to the MCAT Program Office on March 26, 2006 explaining that "Peter Rumbin has a visual field deficit that slows his reading ability" and further requesting that the test administrators "allow him extra time taking his MCAT tests." The fax included no further information. (Ex. C.)
On May 30, 2006, the MCAT Accommodations Office at the AAMC responded to Mr. Rumbin, explaining that it could not process his request for accommodation because he had not completed his registration, he did not have a current fee waiver, and his request for accommodations was insufficient. (Ex. E.) The letter noted that
On June 17, 2006, Mr. Rumbin wrote to the MCAT Accommodations Office specifying that his glaucoma and eye infection "cause[ ] my eyes to tear," a problem that increases "as the day passes," such that "I will have to stop reading and resume the test the next day because I will not be able to read, and grid my answers." (Ex. F.) He said that not only would he "need to blot my eyes and ... stop and apply a warm compress to my eyes," but he would also "lo[ ]se time transferring answers to the answer grid." Mr. Rumbin requested accommodations including having the proctor check that his answers have been entered correctly; having the test administered in a "distraction free environment because when I am working I do not wish to be interrupted or disturbed since my productive examination time is most valuable"; and up to "11 times" the normal time allotted for the examination. (Id.) His letter said that he had attached copies of his prescriptions, appointments, and information, but that "no doctor will send you extensive data" because of "doctor patient confidentiality laws [that] are strictly enforced in Connecticut." (Id.)
On August 2, 2006, the AAMC sent Mr. Rumbin a letter acknowledging receipt of his request for accommodation and notifying him that "[o]nce [his] request for special accommodations is processed, MCAT will notify [him]." (Ex. 0.) Attached to that letter was an admissions ticket for Mr. Rumbin to take the August 2006 MCAT examination that listed as test center "MCAT Testing Accommodations" and specified in the "Notice" section that "[y]our application with an accommodation request has been processed. An approved or denied letter with test center info will follow." (Ex. 1.)
On August 15, 2006, Dr. McCullough sent another note to the AAMC, received on August 22, 2006, stating
(Ex. I.)
On February 5, 2007, Dr. McCullough examined Mr. Rumbin and filled out a
(Id. (emphasis in original).) Dr. McCullough did not test Mr. Rumbin for eye fatigue and did not provide any data comparing Mr. Rumbin's reading skills to the general population.
On July 28, 2007, Dr. McCullough sent a follow-up letter recommending that Mr. Rumbin be allowed to take a paper and pencil version of the MCAT and be given a 5 to 10 minute break every 20 to 30 minutes of test taking "to allow his eye muscles to rest." (Ex. Q.) Dr. McCullough further noted that Mr. Rumbin's "occular misalignment can easily cause him to misalign the `bubbles' on the answer sheet and code the answer in the wrong `slot,'" and therefore, Mr. Rumbin "should be given extra time to recheck the transposition of his answers."
Sparacino emailed Mr. Rumbin in late-August 2007, informing him that the AAMC received documentation from his doctor in early 2007, and review of his accommodation request would not be completed until October 2007, after the last 2007 sitting for the examination. (Ex. S.) On October 19, 2007, Mr. Terry completed an ADA Accommodation Evaluation Survey based on Dr. McCullough's findings. (Def.'s Ex. T.) Mr. Terry's ultimate recommendation was "approval of accommodation, but different than requested by candidate." His evaluation concluded that "the examination records reveal that the candidate's near point of convergence is normal at 10 centimeters (with glasses). Also, no specific visual assessment was performed during reading or testing conditions to substantiate the level of difficulty in reading or its full etiology." (Id.) The evaluation further noted that Dr. McCullough "provided no description of the beneficial effects that orthoptics or other therapies are having in reducing any associated symptoms." (Id.) With respect to the ocular misalignment, which Dr. McCullough said affected Plaintiff's ability to bubble-in answers, Mr. Terry noted that Dr. McCullough "does not provide the documentation of the testing that was performed to establish this deficiency," and that "the examiner does not explain why a paper examination which requires the use of a bubble sheet would be preferable over a computer-based test that does not utilize a bubble sheet." On October 25, 2007, John Hosterman, Ph.D., the AAMC Director of Accommodations Review sent Mr. Rumbin a letter explaining that based on Mr. Terry's review, Mr. Rumbin's request for accommodations would be denied, although he
On February 11, 2008, Randy Schulman, a behavioral optometrist, analyzed Mr. Rumbin's condition and provided the AAMC with additional observations from her examination of Mr. Rumbin's eyes, including that Mr. Rumbin's "near point of convergence was 4"/10" instead of the expected 3"/4-6"," that Mr. Rumbin had difficulty on eye movement testing both on observations and standardized tests, and that "[o]n the Developmental Eye Movement [("DEM")] Test, which assesses eye movement speed and accuracy, Peter scored at a 6 year-old level." (Id.) She noted that on the Van Orden Star Test, Mr. Rumbin "had some difficulty with binocular skills and visual motor integration." (Id.) Schulman "diagnosed Peter with convergence insufficiency, binocular dysfunction and oculomotor dysfunction." She explained that Mr. Rumbin's "diagnoses are medical in nature and cannot be treated with medications" and that "[g]lasses are sometimes helpful but the most effective treatment particularly for the convergence insufficiency is vision therapy." In the meantime, Schulman said that Mr. Rumbin "experiences considerable visual stress and has great difficulty performing any near task easily and efficiently and should be considered visually disabled at this time." (Id.) Her recommendation was that the AAMC "increase the font on [Mr. Rumbin's] computer and print out material to read from the computer." She also recommended that he be allowed 150% the normal time for the MCAT, to "allow for the breaks he requires from near work and prevent stress to his binocular and eye movement systems." (Id.) When Dr. McCullough forwarded Schulman's letter to the AAMC on February 22, 2008 (Pl.'s Ex. 10), he further opined that "[i]t is crystal clear to me that Mr. Mr. Rumbin has significant ocular misalignment, binocular dysfunction, and oculor-motor dysfunction. Special testing conditions are necessary to adequately test his fund of knowledge, rather than his incapacity to visually perform on a computer or filling out a `bubble' answer sheet." (Id. (emphasis in original).) Dr. McCullough testified that he believed Mr. Rumbin should be given sufficient time to finish the exam to avoid unfairness.
The AAMC sent the new Schulman information to Mr. Terry for his further independent evaluation. Mr. Terry determined that contrary to Schulman's report, there were no indicia in the materials provided to the AAMC that Mr. Rumbin suffered from convergence insufficiency, let alone a condition that was severe enough to substantially impact Mr. Rumbin's ability to read. Mr. Terry recommended "denial of accommodation," citing several shortcomings with Schulman's report: (1) Schulman's oculomotor tests, including near point of convergence and phorometric testing produced findings that "were within normal variability," and "[t]he examiner did not show a ca[us]al effect between these normal results and a clinically-significant visual disability"; (2) "a 6 year old would have eye movements consistent with an adult," and "no specific visual assessment was performed during reading or other related testing conditions to substantiate the level of difficulty in reading"; (3) "[t]he examiner did not explain why convergence insufficiency, binocular dysfunction, and oculomotor dysfunction are medical (versus ophthalmic) in nature and why the prescribed glasses were inappropriate or inadequate t[o] improve the candidate's oculomotor status"; (4) Schulman did not describe Mr. Rumbin's difficulty in performing "any near task easily" was assessed and how it contributed substantively to a reduction in the candidate's ability to read and learn"; (5) "the examiner provided
On June 28, 2008, Mr. Rumbin requested reconsideration of the AAMC's accommodation denial. On February 21, 2009, Schulman sent a follow-up letter to AAMC (Ex. II), based on her February 11, 2008 evaluation. In addition to restating her earlier findings, she clarified in the February 2009 letter that on the Visagraph III test, a standardized computerized test of extraocular movements recorded with electrodes, Mr. Rumbin scored at the second grade level, "indicating very poor reading eye movements." (Id.)
Mr. Terry responded in an evaluation on March 20, 2009. (Ex. JJ.) In addition to restating his earlier findings, Mr. Terry identified several additional shortcomings in Schulman's and Rumbin's. As to the Visagraph III results indicating that Mr. Rumbin's extraocular movements were at a second-grade level, Mr. Terry explained that the ability to clinically correlate such recordings "to grade level or reading level is spurious." In response to Schulman's Van Orden Star Test of Mr. Rumbin that revealed "some difficulty," Mr. Terry noted that "this lack of objective assessment does not permit a correlation of these results with the reading achievement levels." In response to Mr. Rumbin's indication this his ability to "speed read decreases substantially until I am unable to read anymore without rest and medicated eye drops," Mr. Terry determined that "[i]t is undocumented what medicated eye drops have been prescribed for this purpose (i.e., to restore reduced speed reading), by whom, their efficacy, and the duration of this treatment. It also is unclear how a reduced level of speed reading substantially limits a major life activity since the vast majority of the population does not have the ability to speed read." Additionally, Mr. Terry noted that the documentation provided by Dr. McCullough is more than two years old and thus "inadequate due to the chronic and potentially progressive nature of glaucoma," and because Mr. Rumbin suffered from his visual impairments for an extended period of time,
According to Mr. Terry, Mr. Rumbin's test results are "totally inconsistent with convergence insufficiency."
Although Schulman based her letter on an examination conducted in February 2008, and the AAMC had a six-month currency requirement for medical evaluations, the AAMC nonetheless credited Schulman's letter but on March 25, 2009 denied
Dr. McCullough responded to the March 25, 2009 denial letter, explaining that glaucoma was not the basis for Mr. Rumbin's reconsideration request, but rather, it was his convergence insufficiency and other impairments. (Ex. 16.) Dr. McCullough disagreed with the evaluation's assessment, writing "[i]ncreased font size is well known to make reading easier, even in people who measure 20/20 reading acuity," and "the longer a patient with convergence insufficiency reads the more the eye muscles fatigue and the fixed prism in the eyeglasses is no longer adequate," among other responses. Mr. Rumbin testified that he has continued to seek reconsideration and has attempted to register for the MCAT with accommodations including extra time, but has been unsuccessful.
The ADA "prohibit[s] discrimination against qualified disabled individuals by requiring that they receive `reasonable accommodations' that permit them to have access to and take a meaningful part in public services and public accommodations." Powell v. Nat'l Bd. of Med. Exam'rs, 364 F.3d 79, 85 (2d Cir.2004) (internal citations omitted). Under the ADA, "[a]ny person that offers examinations or courses related to applications ... for secondary or post-secondary education... shall offer such examination ... in a place and manner accessible to persons with disabilities." 42 U.S.C. § 12189. Mr. Rumbin claims that the AAMC "has repeated[ly] denied accommodation to sit for the MCAT test.
A person is disabled under the ADA if he has "a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of the major life activities." 42 U.S.C. § 12102(1)(A).
AAMC concedes that Mr. Rumbin has vision impairments and further concedes that the activities that Mr. Rumbin claims to be affected by his vision impairments— seeing, learning, and reading—are major life activities. (Def.'s Trial Mem. at 27.) What remains at issue, and is central to the outcome of this case, is whether the documentation submitted by Mr. Rumbin to the AAMC demonstrates that he suffers from convergence insufficiency and if so, whether it substantially limits his ability to read, see, or learn. At trial, Mr. Rumbin highlighted as evidence of his limitations Dr. McCullough and Schulman's determinations that he developed headaches, eye-fatigue, and blurred vision while reading for prolonged periods, and Mr. Rumbin emphasized his difficulty with everyday tasks such as grocery shopping and using computers.
"Although almost any impairment may, of course, in some way affect a major life activity, the ADA clearly does not consider every impaired person to be disabled. Thus, in assessing whether a plaintiff has a disability, courts have been careful to distinguish impairments which merely affect major life activities from those that substantially limit those activities." Ryan v. Grae & Rybicki, P.C., 135 F.3d 867, 870 (2d Cir.1998) (emphasis in original). "The determination of whether an individual has a disability is not necessarily based on the name or diagnosis of the impairment the person has, but rather on the effect of that impairment on the life of the individual." Sutton v. United Air Lines, Inc., 527 U.S. 471, 483, 119 S.Ct. 2139, 144 L.Ed.2d 450 (1999). The preamble to the Department of Justice regulations on nondiscrimination on the basis of disability in state and local government services—applied by the Second Circuit to an ADA Title III action in which a plaintiff sought testing accommodations because of vision problems, see Bartlett v. N.Y. State Bd. of Law Exam'r's, 226 F.3d 69, 80 (2d Cir.2000)—provides that "[a] person is considered an individual with a disability when the individual's important life activities are restricted as to the conditions, the manner, or duration under which they can be performed in comparison to most people." 28 C.F.R. § 35.104.
For Mr. Rumbin to be disabled under the ADA, his ability to see, learn, and read must be substantially limited by his visual impairments in comparison to "most people." The relevant comparison is not with other test-takers or future doctors, but rather, with members of the general population. See Bartlett, 226 F.3d at 81-82 (whether a law student's learning abilities substantially limited her ability to read did not depend on whether she was limited compared to college freshmen because "because the proper reference group is `most people,' not college freshmen"); see also, e.g., Singh v. George Washington Univ. School of Medicine and Health Sciences, 508 F.3d 1097, 1100-01 (D.C.Cir.2007) (the proper comparison is to "the general population, rather than to persons of elite ability or unusual experience," i.e., "an injured ultramarathoner, who could once run 100
Plaintiff has failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he is substantially limited in his ability to see, learn, and read vis-à-vis the general population. Eye conditions, even blindness in one eye or monocular vision, are not per se disabilities and require case-by-case determinations as to whether they constitute substantial limitations to the major life activities of seeing, reading, and learning. Albertson's, Inc. v. Kirkingburg, 527 U.S. 555, 566, 119 S.Ct. 2162, 144 L.Ed.2d 518 (1999). Here, the only objective measures of Plaintiff's convergence insufficiency do not indicate that it substantially limits his ability to see, learn, and read. It is undisputed that Plaintiff's ten centimeter NPC was on the cusp of normal, and his accommodated convergence ratio was within normal range. After reviewing Dr. McCullough's compiled data, Mr. Terry doubted whether Plaintiff had convergence insufficiency at all, let alone suffered from the condition to the point at which reading would be a struggle. Further, there are no reliable data before the Court from which Mr. Rumbin's ability to read compared to the general population can be determined; Schulman relied on the DEM test, which was developed and normalized for children, not adults, and on the Visagraph III, which does not produce findings that can be correlated to a reading level.
Although Dr. McCullough wrote to the AAMC that Mr. Rumbin "has great difficulty `reading' or test taking for more than 30 mins. at a time," requires breaks, and develops "double vision, head ache & eye strain if forced to go beyond 20-30 mins of test taking," and described at length the general negative impact of convergence insufficiency on test-takers, he never compared Mr. Rumbin's reading or seeing skills to the "average person." Courts determining whether individuals suffer from substantial limitations to the major life activities of learning, seeing, and reading do so based on comparative testing of reading, see, e.g., Gonzales v. National Board of Medical Examiners, 225 F.3d 620 (6th Cir.2000) (a medical student who suffered from an alleged learning disability and sought extended time for the USMLE Step 1 was not substantially limited in the major life activity of reading despite significant clinical evidence of a reading disorder, including an expert's conclusion that the plaintiff met the DSM-IV criteria for Reading Disorder, because the defendant's expert witness concluded that the plaintiff "read as well as the average person," based on a litany of clinical tests); cf. Bartlett v. New York State Bd. of Law Exam'rs, No. 93cv4986(SS), 2001 WL 930792 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 15, 2001) (the plaintiff was substantially limited in the major life activity of reading based on clinical judgments made by evaluating doctors that plaintiff's "reading was more limited than the average person"), testing which Dr. McCullough did not conduct. Rather, Dr. McCullough watched Mr. Rumbin read various documents and noted that Mr. Rumbin's reading speed decreased over
Mr. Rumbin also argues that his struggles with everyday tasks evince his substantial limitations in seeing and reading. Although Plaintiff has difficulty reading the small print on packaging at the grocery store and does not use computers or ATMs, he also reads books, paints, pursued graduate degrees, and worked on a biochemistry project at Yale University that required him to develop computer programs and read electron-density maps—all without formal accommodation. Many courts have found no ADA-covered disability where purportedly disabled individuals can both read books and perform their job-duties without formal accommodations, even when faced with other limitations in daily life. See, e.g., Carreras v. Sajo, Garcia & Partners, 596 F.3d 25, 34 (1st Cir.2010) (there was no genuine issue of material fact as to whether plaintiff's diabetes substantially limited his major life activity of seeing, although he experienced bouts of blurriness, because it was undisputed that he drove to and from work every day, reads as part of his current employment, and "performs other routine activities that presumably would not be possible if his vision were substantially impaired"); Manz v. Gaffney, 200 F.Supp.2d 207, 216-18 (E.D.N.Y.2002) (plaintiff who suffered from "ocular albinism" causing his vision to "wash out" under certain conditions, had corrected vision of 20/60 in each eye, and was limited in his ability to hunt, watch television, and read the newspaper, was not disabled for ADA purposes, as he could drive, read, and perform the duties of his occupation), aff'd in relevant part, 56 Fed.Appx. 50 (2d Cir. 2003); Hoehn v. Int'l Sec. Servs. and Investigations, Inc., 244 F.Supp.2d 159, 171-72 (W.D.N.Y.2002) (among other reasons, because "Hoehn's vision deficit [did not] ever pose any problem with the job duties of his security guard position," he was not "substantially limited in his ability to see"); Sweet v. Electronic Data Systems, Inc., No. 95cv3987(MBM), 1996 WL 204471, *5 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 26, 1996) (plaintiff's testimony that he is able to "work as a sales representative without any accommodation from his employer" weighed in favor of the court determining he was not disabled). Here, Mr. Rumbin's condition affects aspects of the way in which he leads his life. However, the evidence of his past employment requiring substantial visual focus, his ability to paint and read books, and his prior education and test-taking without accommodations, demonstrate that he is not substantially limited in the major life activities of seeing, learning, and reading. The objective measures of Mr. Rumbin's visual acuity and difficulties are within normal ranges. There is no evidence that he struggles to read significantly more than the average person, and he has worked, studied, and participated in hobbies—without formal accommodations—that require reading. The Court concludes therefore that Plaintiff has failed to prove that he is substantially limited and therefore disabled within the meaning of the ADA. Thus, he is not entitled to accommodations under the ADA or the ADAAA.
For these reasons, the AAMC has shown that it is entitled to judgment in its
IT IS SO ORDERED.