Court of Appeal Clarifies Public Entity Immunity and FEHA Interactive Process in Return-to-Office Case: Allos v. Poway Unified School Dist.

In Allos v. Poway Unified School Dist. (2025) 112 Cal.App.5th 822, the Court of Appeal (Fourth Appellate District, Division One) held that a school district’s COVID-19-related decisions, including a return-to-office mandate, fell under its Government Tort Claims Act immunity. It also clarified that an employer’s engagement in the interactive process does not constitute an admission of an employee’s disability. 

Per District policy, Plaintiff began working from home at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic. After the District lifted its stay-at-home order, Plaintiff requested to continue remote work, citing, in part, an alleged COVID-19 vaccine allergy and caregiving for her disabled mother. Defendant sought Plaintiff’s full-time return to office, but over several years, the parties agreed to various hybrid accommodations. Amid interactive process discussions, Plaintiff sued for FEHA disability discrimination, retaliation, associational discrimination, and various Labor Code violations. Post-suit, the parties agreed to a hybrid accommodation effective until January 3, 2023. Shortly after the accommodation ended, Plaintiff requested retirement effective June 5, 2023. Defendant then moved for summary judgment, arguing Plaintiff lacked a disability, her retirement was not an adverse action, and that it was immune under Gov. Code § 855.4. The trial court granted the motion based on Defendant’s immunity, alternatively finding Plaintiff failed to establish triable issues. Plaintiff appealed.

The Court of Appeal affirmed the judgment against Plaintiff. It held Defendant’s remote work, return-to-office, and vaccine-optional decisions fell under its § 855.4 immunity. The court rejected Plaintiff’s argument that her FEHA claims fell outside this immunity’s scope because she failed to cite relevant authority. It found Plaintiff failed to establish a qualifying disability under FEHA, noting her minor Tdap vaccine reaction a decade prior was insufficient under Hodges v. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (2023) 91 Cal.App.5th 894, 909. Notably, the court held that Defendant’s repeated interactive process meetings with Plaintiff were “not an admission she was disabled,” asserting that such a finding would contravene public policy by discouraging employer engagement. It rejected Plaintiff’s associational discrimination claim, as her voluntary retirement was not an adverse employment action. Finally, the court found that Defendant’s refusal to offer Plaintiff her requested accommodation did not constitute FEHA retaliation, and Plaintiff failed to cite relevant legal authority for her Labor Code claims.

Full opinion

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