Unmasked: Disability Rights at Work

The Cost of Disability Disclosure: When Support Turns Into Set-Up

10 min · 17 de jun de 2025
Portada del episodio The Cost of Disability Disclosure: When Support Turns Into Set-Up

Descripción

The provided text describes Johnny’s experience as an autistic individual seeking a reasonable accommodation for remote work. It highlights his sensory sensitivities to the office environment and the daily exhaustion of masking his true self to meet neurotypical expectations. With a neuropsychologist’s formal recommendation, a history of stellar performance, and a role fully suited for remote work, Johnny finally feels empowered to make his needs known. HR approves the accommodation. Leadership seems supportive. But just three weeks later, that trust is shattered. Johnny is abruptly reassigned to a high-pressure, unfamiliar process during a peak workload period—without training, support, or even a heads-up. The move not only threatens his performance but raises critical questions: Was this retaliation in disguise? A setup masked as opportunity? This episode exposes the cracks in corporate accommodation systems—where approval on paper doesn’t always translate to real-world support. ⚠️ The betrayal begins here. And Johnny saw it coming...

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6 episodios

episode From Accommodation to ‘Not Meeting Expectations’: The Setup Pattern artwork

From Accommodation to ‘Not Meeting Expectations’: The Setup Pattern

In Episode 6 of Unmasked: Disability Rights at Work, we follow Johnny’s timeline from a formally approved disability accommodation to a sudden workload shift he warned would damage his performance. What comes next is a sequence that many employees recognize but rarely hear explained clearly: delayed training, manufactured “performance friction,” contradictory verbal praise versus harsh written documentation, and a manager’s chilling admission that the mismatch is “just write-up language.” Then the story escalates: a promotion denial justified with claims about “acclimating” to remote work, followed by remarks explicitly tying disability and family life to credibility and advancement. We break down why these moments raise serious red flags under ADA best practices and EEOC retaliation frameworks, how “neutral” processes can be used to build pretext, and what a compliant employer should have done instead. This episode ends where the stakes get even higher: the complaint is filed, and the investigation begins. Next episode, we go inside the investigation phase and how scope, credibility, and documentation can shape outcomes long before any “finding” is announced.

7 de feb de 202612 min
episode Thrown Under the Bus: The Setup Behind the "Reasonable Accomodation" artwork

Thrown Under the Bus: The Setup Behind the "Reasonable Accomodation"

On this episode we continue Johnny’s story—an autistic high performer whose career took a dangerous turn shortly after disclosing his disability and receiving a remote work accommodation. What looked like operational restructuring turned out to be something else entirely: a deliberate setup. Johnny was reassigned to a high-volume, high-risk process he hadn’t touched in years—without notice, without training, and without support. He immediately raised red flags. He documented his need for guidance. He stayed professional. But the silence from leadership was deafening. Then came the line no one forgets: “Yeah, I know. Sorry—I threw you under the bus. But I had to do it.” From that moment on, Johnny’s requests were ignored, his learning curve weaponized, and mistakes that could’ve been avoided became ammunition for write-ups filled with loaded, accusatory language. All this while teammates in similar roles weren’t held to the same standard. This episode exposes how plausible deniability becomes a shield for managerial sabotage—and how "support" can quickly become a smokescreen for retaliation.

19 de jun de 202520 min
episode The Cost of Disability Disclosure: When Support Turns Into Set-Up artwork

The Cost of Disability Disclosure: When Support Turns Into Set-Up

The provided text describes Johnny’s experience as an autistic individual seeking a reasonable accommodation for remote work. It highlights his sensory sensitivities to the office environment and the daily exhaustion of masking his true self to meet neurotypical expectations. With a neuropsychologist’s formal recommendation, a history of stellar performance, and a role fully suited for remote work, Johnny finally feels empowered to make his needs known. HR approves the accommodation. Leadership seems supportive. But just three weeks later, that trust is shattered. Johnny is abruptly reassigned to a high-pressure, unfamiliar process during a peak workload period—without training, support, or even a heads-up. The move not only threatens his performance but raises critical questions: Was this retaliation in disguise? A setup masked as opportunity? This episode exposes the cracks in corporate accommodation systems—where approval on paper doesn’t always translate to real-world support. ⚠️ The betrayal begins here. And Johnny saw it coming...

17 de jun de 202510 min