Early Warning Signs in Pregnancy Accommodations

Pregnancy accommodation obligations remain a critical compliance priority, and potential EEOC rule changes in 2026 may reshape how requests are evaluated under the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA).

Regulatory shifts do not reduce employer risk; instead, they increase the need for clarity and consistency. Pregnancy-related needs are often time-sensitive and individualized, and when responses are delayed, inconsistently applied, or default to leave-first solutions, the consequences can be immediate for both employees and employers.

At ConnectBridge, we see the same early warning signs when accommodation processes begin to break down.

Signals HR should be watching for:

  • Small requests that come with urgency. Needing a chair, lighter tasks, or schedule flexibility can signal time-sensitive pregnancy-related needs.
  • Quick pivots to leave. Offering leave before exploring adjustments may indicate that the process is defaulting to absence rather than accommodation.
  • Inconsistent manager responses. Similar requests producing different outcomes across teams often point to gaps in guidance or training.
  • Vague or stalled follow-ups. Delays, unclear next steps, or missing check-ins can escalate otherwise manageable situations.
  • Thin documentation. Files that show an outcome but not the reasoning behind it are a risk when decisions are later questioned.



Recent reporting from Reuters highlights how evolving regulatory priorities may influence accommodation enforcement and case outcomes. To read the full article by Reuters, click here.

More Resources

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