"I wouldn't think with your condition and—your medical condition and your age that you would want to teach."
"I think your disability is slowing all this down.… You're really too old to be doing this."
"You need to go ahead and retire.… I'm concerned about this disability you have, your condition with your liver."
"Just how disabled are you?"
"I'm tired of disabilities and I'm tired of medical problems."
"I'm not running a rehabilitation clinic."
"If you're not at 100 percent, I can't use you. You've got to be 100 percent for this job."
These are just some of the comments Robert Bledsoe — a 58-year-old nuclear-plant operator who returned to work following a liver transplant — claims his supervisor made to him in the months prior to his removal from a teaching position. The Tennessee Valley Authority, on the other hand, claimed that it demoted Bledsoe based on ethical concerns after his son was accepted to the training program he taught.