The decision is much narrower than Joel's description.  It does not cover all 
employees of religious organizations--only clergy.  And it only involves claims 
involving discrimination against the religious organization,
leaving open litigation from even clergy on contract and tort theories.  

Marci



On Jan 11, 2012, at 12:26 PM, Joel wrote:

>  
> The Supreme Court has sided unanimously with a church sued for firing an 
> employee on religious grounds, issuing an opinion on Wednesday that religious 
> employers can keep the government out of hiring and firing decisions.
>  
> In the case of Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC, Cheryl Perich, a "called" teacher, 
> argued that the Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School of 
> Redford, Mich., had discriminated against her under the Americans With 
> Disabilities Act by refusing to reinstate her to her job after she took leave 
> for narcolepsy.
>  
>  
> http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/01/11/supreme-court-sides-with-church-on-decision-to-fire-employee-on-religious/
>  
>  
> Joel L. Sogol
> Attorney at Law
> 811 21st Ave.
> Tuscaloosa, Alabama  35401
> ph (205) 345-0966
> fx (205) 345-0971
> email:  jlsa...@wwisp.com
> website: www.joelsogol.com
> Ben Franklin observed that truth wins a fair fight - which is why we have 
> evidence rules in U.S. courts.
>  
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