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Spencer's Gifts Settles Disability Discrimination Case, Agrees to Statewide Reforms and $97,500 Compensation

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Summary

The California Civil Rights Department (CRD) reached a $97,500 settlement with Spencer's Gifts, LLC resolving allegations of disability discrimination at a store in Alameda County. The investigation found that the company unlawfully suspended a former employee and required medical documentation for wheelchair use that was not job-related or consistent with business necessity. Without admitting liability, Spencer's agreed to train all HR and supervisory staff statewide, update disability accommodation policies, and report future accommodation outcomes to the state.

Why this matters

California employers should review their medical documentation requirements for disability accommodations against the FEHA standard applied here: employers may not request documentation for obvious disabilities that do not affect job performance. Retail employers with store-level management should ensure their HR staff understand that requiring documentation in these circumstances violates state law, and that suspending employees while accommodation requests are pending is prohibited.

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Published by CA CRD on calcivilrights.ca.gov . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

CRD determined that Spencer's Gifts violated California's disability discrimination protections by requiring a former employee to provide medical documentation to justify wheelchair use, despite the disability being obvious and not affecting job performance. The settlement requires Spencer's to train all hiring, supervisory, and HR staff on the state's reasonable accommodations process, update policies regarding medical devices and accommodations to include a clause preventing employee suspension during accommodation reviews, and report future accommodation request outcomes to the state.

Employers across California with similar accommodation practices should review their medical documentation requirements against state law standards. Under California FEHA, employers generally may not request medical documentation for obvious disabilities that do not impair job ability. Companies operating retail locations with visible disabled employees should audit their accommodation processes and training to ensure compliance with these obligations.

Penalties

$97,500 in compensation to the former employee

Archived snapshot

Apr 20, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Spencer’s Gifts Commits to Reforming Workplace Disability Policies Across California

April 2, 2026

For Immediate Release

publicaffairs@calcivilrights.ca.gov

916-938-4113

Settlement resolves state investigation into alleged disability discrimination against former employee at store in Alameda County

SACRAMENTO – The California Civil Rights Department (CRD) today announced reaching a nearly $100,000 settlement with Spencer Gifts, LLC (Spencer’s) to resolve a state investigation into alleged disability discrimination against a former employee at a store in Alameda County. As part of the settlement, Spencer’s, which has stores in nearly 60 cities across California, has agreed to provide training to human resources staff statewide, update their policies for workers with disabilities, and compensate the former employee.

“More than a quarter of adults in the United States have a disability,” said CRD Director Kevin Kish. “The fact that someone uses a wheelchair does not mean their boss can automatically question whether they can do the job. Employers need to know their responsibilities when it comes to disabilities in the workplace.”

It’s Obvious Though

In late 2024, CRD received a complaint against Spencer’s from a former employee who alleged that they were unlawfully suspended from work and told they could not return unless they were able to provide medical documentation explaining their use of a wheelchair. The former employee shared that they had already been working in sales at the store in Alameda County for about a month before a manager told them that they needed to go through the disability accommodation process to keep working.

Under California law, employers generally may not ask people using medical devices, including wheelchairs, about their disability unless it is both job-related and consistent with business necessity. In other words, if a person’s disability is obvious and does not get in the way of their ability to do the job, employers are generally required to let them do the work. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 1 in 4 adults in the United States have some type of disability, including more than 12% with difficulty walking or climbing stairs.

State Takes Action

After conducting an initial investigation, CRD determined that Spencer’s violated state protections for workers with disabilities and provided the company an opportunity to resolve the allegations through mediation. As a result of the settlement, Spencer’s, without admitting liability, will:

  • Train all staff involved in hiring, supervising, and human resources on the state’s reasonable accommodations process for workers with disabilities.
  • Update its policies regarding medical devices and reasonable accommodations, including a clause to ensure employees are not suspended while a request is being evaluated.
  • Report to the state on the outcomes of future reasonable accommodations requests.
  • Pay $97,500 in compensation to the former employee. If you or someone you know has experienced disability discrimination, CRD may be able to assist you through its complaint process. The department also provides general information and factsheets online about civil rights protections, including on disability discrimination in the workplace.

The settlement announced today was secured by Senior Staff Counsel Jacy Gaige. It was mediated by Senior Attorney Mediator Yu-Yee Wu.

You can learn more by reading a copy of the settlement.

The California Civil Rights Department (CRD) is the state agency charged with enforcing California’s civil rights laws. CRD’s mission is to protect the people of California from unlawful discrimination in employment, housing, public accommodations, and state-funded programs and activities, and from hate violence and human trafficking. For more information, visit calcivilrights.ca.gov.

View Press Release (PDF) Spencer’s Gifts Commits to Reforming Workplace Disability Policies Across California

651 Bannon Street, Suite 200
Sacramento, CA 95811
Regional Offices 800-884-1684 (voice), 800-700-2320 (TTY) or
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contact.center@calcivilrights.ca.gov

Named provisions

Reasonable accommodations Medical device documentation

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
CA CRD
Filed
April 2nd, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers
Industry sector
4411 Retail Trade
Activity scope
Disability discrimination settlement Reasonable accommodations HR training compliance
Geographic scope
California US-CA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Civil Rights
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Employment & Labor Civil Rights

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