Agrait v. Hillsborough County Public Schools

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 30, 2025
Docket8:23-cv-01555
StatusUnknown

This text of Agrait v. Hillsborough County Public Schools (Agrait v. Hillsborough County Public Schools) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Agrait v. Hillsborough County Public Schools, (M.D. Fla. 2025).

Opinion

UMNIIDTEDDL ES TDAISTTERS IDCITS TORFI FCLTO CROIDUART TAMPA DIVISION

Nilsa Ivette Agrait,

Plaintiff,

v. CASE NO. 8:23-cv-01555-SDM-SPF

Hillsborough County Public Schools,

Defendant. ___________________________________/

ORDER Nilsa Ivette Agrait sues (Doc. 1) her former employer, Hillsborough County Public Schools (the school board) and asserts claims for disability discrimination, failure to accommodate, and retaliation. The school board moves (Doc. 61) for sum- mary judgment on each claim. Agrait responds (Docs. 62, 64). BACKGROUND From 1993 to 2022, Agrait worked for the school board as a speech language pathologist or SLP. (Doc. 61-3 at 104:22) Five years into her employment with the school board, Agrait was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a chronic autoimmune disease affecting the central nervous system. (Doc. 61-3 at 104:23) To overcome vi- sion and mobility problems caused by her multiple sclerosis, Agrait relied on eye- glasses and either a walker or an electric scooter. (Doc. 61-3 at 132:4-6) Also, she had a handicapped parking space throughout her employment with the school board and was granted medical leave on numerous occasions during her employment to manage “flare ups” of her multiple sclerosis. (Doc. 61-1 at ¶11; Doc. 61-3 at 32:2 Doc. 61-3 at 97:19) As an SLP, Agrait provided speech and language instruction for kindergarten through twelfth grade exceptional student education (ESE) and for non-ESE stu-

dents. (Doc. 61-2 at ¶4; Doc 61-1 at Ex. I; Doc. 61-3 at 65:3-19) ESE students range in age from three to twenty-one and have a diagnosis of developmental delay. (Doc. 61-2 at ¶4; Doc. 61-3 at 74:16-76:8) Also, the ESE program includes “Access stu- dents” who exhibit a cognitive disability and require assistance with routine tasks. (Doc. 61-3 at 74:16-76:8) Some are completely non-verbal. (Doc. 61-3 at 143:6-8)

Agrait was to follow the expectations for “[a]ll district employees,” which in- clude “regular and predictable attendance.” Agrait’s official job description, issued in 2012, specifies that “[p]hysical presence is a part of a reliable and predictable pattern of attendance.”1 (Doc. 61-1 at Exhibit I) Additionally, the “Hillsborough County Public Schools Policy Manual,” dated June 23, 2015, provides “Regular attendance

is an essential function of all employees. All employees who are absent from duty must be on approved leave. Any employee who is absent from duty without ap- proved leave may be subject to disciplinary action up to and including dismissal.” (Doc. 61-1 at Exhibit C) Finally, the same policy manual requires that both instruc- tional staff members and support staff members “shall maintain a standard of care for

1 During her deposition, Agrait acknowledged that her physical presence was expected at the work- place. (Doc. 61-3 at 66:20) the supervision, control, and protection of students commensurate with their as- signed duties and responsibilities.” (Doc. 61-1 at Exhibits D-E) In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the school board adopted online learning and temporarily loosened the longstanding expectation of a school board

employee’s physical presence at work. During the 2020–21 school year, Agrait pro- vided her services “virtually” and the students she taught participated “virtually.” (Doc. 61-3 at 84:12-86:4) However, by the 2021–2022 school year, Agrait’s students attended school in-person, and Agrait was again required to service them in-person as she had for more than two decades before the pandemic. (Doc. 61-3 at 84:12-

86:4) In 2021, Agrait went to the hospital on two occasions: she was admitted in August due to COVID-19 complications and again in December due to a stomach virus. (Doc. 61-3 at 87:24; Doc. 61-3 at 101:21). Both ailments exacerbated Agrait’s

multiple sclerosis: her vision and balance worsened, she was unable to drive a long distance,2 and her energy level dropped unpredictably. (Doc. 61-1 at ¶14; Doc. 61-3 at 129:24-130:4) After the second hospitalization, Agrait was fearful that returning to in-person work risked further illness and might further exacerbate her multiple sclero- sis. (Doc. 61-3 at 144:5-6) The School board does not dispute any of Agrait’s de-

scribed symptoms or their effect on Agrait’s ability to drive to work. (Doc. 61 at 4-5)

2 In her deposition, Agrait states that “it would be impossible” to drive to work on her own. (Doc. 61-3 at 118:10-11) On December 31, 2021, and again on January 20, 2022, even though her stu- dents had returned to in-person classes, Agrait submitted requests to work from home indefinitely. (Doc. 61-1 at ¶13; Doc. 61-1 at Exhibits E-F; Doc 61-2 at ¶8; Doc. 61-2 at Exhibit J; Doc. 61-3 at 112:3-113:4; 120:5-121:11) In support of these re-

quests, Agrait submitted two doctor’s notes dated January 14, 2022 and March 7, 2022. The first note states, “Please accommodate patient to work from home given her increased symptoms from her Multiple Sclerosis.” (Doc. 61-1 at Exhibit E) The second note states, “Patient continues to report significant dizziness and is unable to drive at this point. Please accommodate her to work from home. Please also mini-

mize sources of stress given her neurological diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis.” (Doc. 61-1 at Exhibit F) In addition to the doctor’s notes, Agrait provided a proposal for the school board to implement a “Pilot Program” (which, as Agrait admits, “has never been done anywhere in the nation”) that would enable her to provide her services virtu-

ally. (Doc. 61-1 at Exhibit E; Doc. 61-3 at 123:19-20) This program would require the School board to assign an employee to chaperone students attending virtual diag- nostic sessions conducted remotely by an SLP working from home. (Doc. 61-2 at ¶9; Doc 61-3 at 128:18-21) This meant the necessity of two or more employees to do what formerly required only one. (Doc. 61-2 at ¶9; Doc 61-3 at 134:17-21)

Agrait’s requests to work from home were denied on January 13, 2022, and again on January 25, 2022. (Doc. 61-1 at ¶15; Doc. 61-1 at Exhibit E; Doc. 61-2 at ¶10; Doc. 61-2 at Exhibit J) School board staff encouraged Agrait to discuss with her doctor possible accommodations to enable her to work at school. (Doc. 61-1 at ¶15; Doc. 61-1 at Exhibit E) Staff instructed that if she could not return to the workplace, Agrait should contact a school board leave specialist to explore leave options. (Doc. 61-1 at ¶15; Doc. 61-1 at Exhibit E)

As an accommodation, the school board offered her a walker or other device to help with her balance, offered her options to magnify documents to help her see, offered her a dedicated handicapped-parking space, offered to move her office closer to her dedicated parking space to minimize travel, offered her transfer to a Hills- borough Virtual School (“HVS”) SLP position if one were to become available (be-

tween January 2022 and April 2022 one was not available), and offered her medical leave. (Doc. 61-1 at ¶16; Doc. 61-3 at 130:15-22, 131:3-19, 132:10-24) Agrait re- sponded that she did not need to use a walker or a device to magnify documents be- cause she already used a scooter and eyeglasses. (Doc. 61-1 at ¶17; Doc. 61-3 at 130:15-22, 132:10-17) Agrait rejected the other proposed accommodations. (Doc. 61-

1 at ¶17) Between February 4 and February 11, 2022, Agrait attempted to work re- motely with the assistance of school personnel who were unaware Agrait’s work- from-home requests had been denied. (Doc. 61-1 1 at ¶18; Doc. 61-2 at ¶¶11-12; Doc. 61-3 at 137:16-138:22) Specifically, Agrait directed personnel to put ESE students in

front of a computer at their designated start time and have the regular students go to a separate area of the school for their SLP sessions. (Doc. 61-2 at ¶12; Doc.

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