Exactly, if  thats what happened...they have a pretty solid case of discrimination.
----- Original Message -----
From: Angela
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2003 8:53 PM
Subject: RE: [Sndbox] Library Worker Fired For Refuseing To Work On Sunday

Thats not a good thing. You cannot be fired for refusing to work on a Sunday as long as you can prove it is for religious beliefs. Of course around here that wouldnt matter. None of the libraries are open on Sunday
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Greg Hopper
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2003 9:02 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Sndbox] Library Worker Fired For Refuseing To Work On Sunday

Library Worker Sues After Being Fired for Refusing to Work Sundays

By Allie Martin
October 6, 2003

(AgapePress) - A federal employment discrimination complaint has been filed on behalf of a Missouri woman who says she was fired for refusing to work on Sunday.

Connie Rehm was an employee of the Savannah Branch of the Rolling Hills Consolidated Library in Savannah, Missouri, for 12 years. During that time, she was considered one of the library's top employees.

Rehm had never been required to work on Sundays until earlier this year, when she was informed along with other employees that the library was implementing a schedule change and, starting with a 3-month trial period, would be open to the public on weekends.

According to Drew Gardner, an attorney with the Christian Law Association, Rehm was fired not long after telling her boss that sincerely held religious beliefs prevented her from working on Sunday. Now Savannah officials are facing a federal employment discrimination suit.

Gardner says a federal law, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, mandates that employers must accommodate the religious beliefs of their employees. The attorney notes that the Christian Law Association deals with cases similar to Rehm's all over the U.S.

"The Christians that we represent in these cases are good, hardworking people who are typically willing to work six days a week," Gardner says, "and they will give their employer their all when they're on the job, but they just have beliefs against working on Sundays."

According to the St. Joseph News-Press, the library's director said discussions were held with Ms. Rehm, but the library found it could not accommodate Rehm's needs and enacted her two-week notice after she refused to work "the schedule presented to her."

But Gardner contends that the library officials did not make a diligent effort to consider and work around their employee's religious convictions.

"We believe the library did not fulfill its duty to accommodate Miss Rehm," he says. Instead, Gardner says her employers "took a weak stab at an attempt at accommodation" by asking other employees to volunteer to work Rehm's Sunday shift. Even in that effort, the attorney says the library failed to give employees enough time to respond to the request for volunteers.

The president of the library board resigned after Rehm was fired, and a number of local patrons have held demonstrations and circulated petitions to protest the dismissal of the library employee, as well as the resignation of another staff member who refused to work the Sunday hours.

The Christian Law Association describes itself as a "legal helps ministry," and provides assistance to Christian churches and individuals that are experiencing legal difficulty in practicing their faith because of some form of governmental regulation, prohibition, or intrusion.

© 2003 AgapePress all rights reserved.

 
 
Greg Hopper
 
"Why is it that our children can't read a Bible in school, but they can in
prison?"


________________________________

Changes to your subscription (unsubs, nomail, digest) can be made by going to http://sandboxmail.net/mailman/listinfo/sndbox_sandboxmail.net
________________________________

Changes to your subscription (unsubs, nomail, digest) can be made by going to 
http://sandboxmail.net/mailman/listinfo/sndbox_sandboxmail.net 

Reply via email to