Religious Discrimination
Wildsporty
283 Posts
Has anyone had any experience with a religious discrimination suit?
I interviewed 5 people for a job, we picked two and from one of them we picked the one we hired.
One of the people that was not picked went to the Human Rights commission and said we discriminated against her because she is a Hindu!
Well we do not ask religion and did not even know she was a Hindu.
Now the Human Rights commission wants to know the religious affiliation of the person we hired and of myself and our communications manager. I do not know what their religion is because I never have asked and do not wish to ask now. Isn't it a violation to ask them now? I do not think they have a right to ask me and I don't want to say because it is none of the companies business what religion I am.
We sent back a response and told them we do not know the religions of these employees because we have never asked we do not hire based on religion.
Can they force us to get this information?
Shirley
I interviewed 5 people for a job, we picked two and from one of them we picked the one we hired.
One of the people that was not picked went to the Human Rights commission and said we discriminated against her because she is a Hindu!
Well we do not ask religion and did not even know she was a Hindu.
Now the Human Rights commission wants to know the religious affiliation of the person we hired and of myself and our communications manager. I do not know what their religion is because I never have asked and do not wish to ask now. Isn't it a violation to ask them now? I do not think they have a right to ask me and I don't want to say because it is none of the companies business what religion I am.
We sent back a response and told them we do not know the religions of these employees because we have never asked we do not hire based on religion.
Can they force us to get this information?
Shirley
Comments
I just attended a labor law conference that discussed religious discrimination in detail. E-mail me your mailing address and I will put a copy of the info in the mail for you.
I would think the burden would be on the applicant to show how she was discriminated against.
I can't see how they can demand that you divulge your own religious affiliation without presenting some type of case first that demonstrates that the ee was somehow discriminated against.
Even if you, your communications manager, and the person you hired were all Christian for example, it wouldnt prove that there had been discrimination.
Statistically, 80 percent of Americans claim "christian" as their religious affiliation so that is a statistical probability.
Besides, I've visited your office and I know that you belong to the Church of NASCAR.
This was a real shock and truthfully I do not know the religion of people I work with, it just never is discussed and never is asked.
Thanks for sending me the information.
[email]smcallister@aimintl.com[/email]
Shirley
>never have asked and do not wish to ask now.
If you don't want to ask your co-workers to reveal their religion, you could forward the request to them and let them respond directly to the Commission, I'd think. But having several people communicating directly with the Commission may make things sticky.
Maybe have everyone write down on a piece of paper what they are and seal their response in an envelope, then you can present the set of sealed envelopes to the Commission. I'd personally take this as evidence of how confidentially you treat the religion issue, thereby reinforcing any statements that you do not ask and do not want to know an applicant's or employee's affiliation.
Just suggestions.
To me it sounds like sour grapes...
Human Rights complaints place the accused in a guilty-until-proven-innocent situation.