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The EU Court of Justice has decided that obese people are disabled, and so entitled to protection under employment law. Not correct. The court said that an obese person can be considered disabled, if their ability to work is limited. In itself this isn't a major change. Fury as Euro court rules the obese are disabled Daily Express, 19 December 2014 A decision concerning a childminder who claims he was sacked for being overweight was published yesterday by the Court of Justice of the European Union. Most of the media have reported that the outcome means that obesity can be a disability, rather than that it is. What's the difference, and does it matter? In 2010, Karsten Kaltoft was dismissed from his job by a Danish local authority, and a union took a case on his behalf alleging that he had been singled out on the basis of his obesity. EU law protects employees from being treated less favourably on various grounds, such as age, disability and sexual orientation. The District Court hearing the case wasn't sure whether an obese person can qualify for the protection of this law, so it asked the EU Court of Justice for a 'preliminary ruling' to decide. This isn't the same as deciding whether Mr. Kaltoft was actually discriminated against, which is still a matter for the Danish court. The Court of Justice said that EU law does not state a general principle of non-discrimination on grounds of obesity as such. But the Danish court had asked another question: basically, can obesity be deemed to be a disability? This was asked because being disabled (and so protected from discrimination) isn't defined as having one of a list of conditions. It usually depends on the circumstances of each individual. The court said that obesity itself isn't a disability, because it doesn't necessarily entail the existence of a limitation on someone's contribution in the workplace. But if it does, in a particular person's case, give rise to a limitation on their ability to work or find employment, then a court should protect that person from discrimination. So when the case plays out in the Danish District Court, they can decide that Mr. Kaltoft's obesity makes him disabled if they think it has that kind of impact—but they don't have to treat him as disabled just because he's obese. It's the effect of obesity that matters, not the fact of it. So most of the press are correct in reporting the outcome, in the context of employment law, being that obesity can lead to disability, rather than is a disability. The upshot of this judgment is a little unclear for now. English law already said that when it comes to obesity, the effect rather than the label is what matters. Some lawyers think this case expands the notion of a disability a little, from medical conditions associated with obesity to other features of it like inability to move or breathe easily. That might make it tricky for employers to work out when such difficulties are severe enough to trigger their responsibility to make reasonable adjustments in the workplace. But it's hardly a massive change—whereas a decision that being severely obese automatically makes someone disabled certainly would have been. Since the judgment is about employment law, it has no impact on access to disability benefits, or the Blue Badge scheme, or anything else disabled people are entitled to outside the workplace. Update 20 December 2014 The Daily Mail originally opened its story by stating Obesity is a disability, Europe's highest court has today ruled. This has since been corrected, but the online headline remains Obesity IS a disability, rules highest EU court....
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