Gasoline prices from around the world

This chart is from CNN’s website. Gas prices around the world  (in US dollars per gallon):

Gasoline prices in the United States, which have recently hit record highs, are actually much lower than in many countries. Drivers in some European cities, like Amsterdam and Oslo, are paying nearly 3 times more than those in the U.S.

The main factor in price disparities between countries is government policy, according to AirInc, a company that tracks the cost of living in various places around the world. Many European nations tax gasoline heavily, with taxes making up as much as 75 percent of the cost of a gallon of gasoline, said a spokesperson for AirInc.

  • Netherlands Amsterdam $6.48
  • Norway Oslo $6.27
  • Italy Milan $5.96
  • Denmark Copenhagen $5.93
  • Belgium Brussels $5.91
  • Sweden Stockholm $5.80
  • United Kingdom London $5.79
  • Germany Frankfurt $5.57
  • France Paris $5.54
  • Portugal Lisbon $5.35
  • Hungary Budapest $4.94
  • Luxembourg $4.82
  • Croatia Zagreb $4.81
  • Ireland Dublin $4.78
  • Switzerland Geneva $4.74
  • Spain Madrid $4.55
  • Japan Tokyo $4.24
  • Czech Republic Prague $4.19
  • Romania Bucharest $4.09
  • Andorra $4.08
  • Estonia Tallinn $3.62
  • Bulgaria Sofia $3.52
  • Brazil Brasilia $3.12
  • Cuba Havana $3.03
  • Taiwan Taipei $2.84
  • Lebanon Beirut $2.63
  • South Africa Johannesburg $2.62
  • Nicaragua Managua $2.61
  • Panama Panama City $2.19
  • Russia Moscow $2.10
  • Puerto Rico San Juan $1.74
  • Saudi Arabia Riyadh $0.91
  • Kuwait Kuwait City $0.78
  • Egypt Cairo $0.65
  • Nigeria Lagos $0.38
  • Venezuela Caracas $0.12

In a few Latin America and Middle-East nations, such as Venezuela and Saudi Arabia, oil is produced by a government-owned company and local gasoline prices are kept low as a benefit to the nation’s citizens, he said. All prices updated March, 2005.

Source:

CNN

http://money.cnn.com/pf/features/lists/global_gasprices/

Let the GOP confirm Bolton

I think it is time that the Dems let the GOP confirm Bolton. We have already won in showing the entire world what wingnuts this administration has put in place.

Dems should vote against him but let the Rethugs confirm him.

Afterwhich, every time Bolton makes an ass out of himself and the country we can point to the fact that the Dems tried to warn the country but the Rethugs insisted on having this jackass represent the US to the world.

Also, with Dem assholes like Kerry on the commission it has the effect of letting them think that they have carte blanche just because they decided once in a blue moon to show some testicular fortitude. Kerry is a complete asshole thinking that his little show on this commission will some how make up for his asshole-ishness in regards to the wingnut pharmacist and now stabbing in the back the Mass civil unions bill.

If this is the trade off then give up Bolton. He will make an ass out of himself and the nation but the Democrats can not be blamed

Gannon/Guckert on West Wing

I admit I am behind the times. It was only after the election I discovered how great is the West Wing television show. Thanks to a friend who let me borrow his DVD’s. I spent many a night plowing thru episode after episode. So you can imagine my frustration when I ran out of DVD’s.

Grace be to God Amazon.co.uk releases the series DVD’s before the US. So I preorder Season Five and couldn’t wait to get it into my hot little hands.

Having the opportunity to watch this for the first time with the aid of 20/20 hindsight has been thoroughly enlightening. It is obvious the West Wing was “gotten” to.

  • Charlie is agreeing with school vouchers,
  • Barlet puts a certifiable theo-wingnut on the bench that is somehow suppose to counteract a female judge who has had an abortion…like the two are equaled…they even have Charlie agreeing with his racist defense of dismantling Affirmative Action. To really rub the salt in …they Jeb have agreeing to make recess appointments of Federal judges.
  • Tax cuts to stay at home Moms is not such a bad thing and again is put on the same par as child care allowances for those Jezebelle’s who dare to leave the home and work.
  • Continuing this debauchery the Barlett Administration openly and purposely screws the Unions.
  • Oh yeah… Personal accounts (not private) are on the table to save Social Security.

These are just a few examples… this is so sad I don’t even think I can bring my self to see the rest of the series.

I know to most this is old…but to watch this with “new” eyes it is really an eye-opener.

Knowing now… what no one knew then… it is interesting to see the characterizations of some of the “players”. There is a whiny light skinned African American man working in the realm of defense who is constantly hand wringing and afraid of taking bold steps and aggressive actions against our enemies.

Then there is this new bald headed “reporter” who suddenly is in the in and asks questions at every press briefing and even is considered by CJ a go to guy when she wants a tête-à-tête with powerful reporters.

What I wanna know is who the hell is Guckert sleeping with… because who ever it is they are in love with this man… idolizing him in front of the whole nation is really a creepy turn-on.

And … I hope people are not misunderestimating his pull with who ever he is having sex with in the WH … the fact that he has not been found in a ditch somewhere with a suicide note is very telling indeed.

Snitch Programs

 Students Rewarded for Tattling at School

ATLANTA – For a growing number of students, the easiest way to make a couple of hundred dollars has nothing to do with chores or after-school jobs, and everything to do with informing on classmates.

Tragedies like last month’s deadly shooting at a Red Lake, Minn., school have prompted more schools to offer cash and other prizes — including pizza and premium parking spots — to students who report classmates who carry guns, drugs or alcohol, commit vandalism or otherwise break school rules.

“For kids of that age, it’s hard for them to tell on their peers. This gives them an opportunity to step up if they know something that will help us make an arrest,” said James Kinchen, an assistant school superintendent in Houston County, Ga., which earlier this month started offering rewards of up to $100 for reporting relatively minor crimes like vandalism or theft and $500 for information about a crime, or plans for a crime, involving a gun.

Critics call them “snitch” programs, saying they are a knee-jerk reaction to student violence. Some education professionals fear such policies could create a climate of distrust in schools and turn students against each other.

“There are very few things that I can think of that would be more effective at destroying that sense of community,” said Bruce Marlowe, an education psychology professor at Roger Williams University in Bristol, R.I.

About 2,000 schools and colleges, from Honolulu to Palm Beach County, Fla., have adopted Student Crime Stoppers programs like Houston County, according to the nonprofit [Crime Stoppers U.S.A., http://www.c-s-i.org ] which began helping schools set up such programs in 1983.

My first question is who is this organization? Why am I not surprised that they come from Texas?

Crime Stoppers International, Inc.

Corporate Office

P.O. Box 614

Arlington, TX 76004-0614

USA

800.245.0009

(U.S. and Canada)

817.451.9229

(Outside U.S. and Canada)

817.446.1576

(Corporate Telecopier)

Is this another post box?

At Model High, some of the 650 students complain that the program wrongly implies their school is dangerous. In a Rome News-Tribune cartoon, the school’s official mascot was mockingly changed from the Blue Devils to the “Tattlers.”

No one has received a reward yet at Model High.

“Everyone just thinks it’s a joke. No one is going to tell on their friends for cash,” said senior Katie Burnes, president of the school’s National Honor Society chapter. “If someone brings a gun to school or is doing drugs in the bathroom, no one has to pay me to let the teachers know.”

Frank Farley, an educational psychology professor at Temple University in Philadelphia, said students should be taught to speak up without being offered a reward.

This idea of surveillance — there’s something unsavory there,” Farley said. “We’re familiar with the history of that in the former Soviet Union and Nazi Germany.” He added: “I think it’s bad civics.”

Who are these people and why does a private organization have this much access to our children?

What jurisdiction do they have? If this is so neccessary why isn’t homeland security doing this?

WHAT THE HELL IS HAPPENING TO THIS COUNTRY!!!

Crime Stoppers International Foundation

Why contribute or care about a Crime Stoppers International Foundation?

The world of crime and terrorism has changed… it is now transnational without borders or boundaries. What happens in one part of our world affects us here at home. The same is true when combating crime and terrorism. We continue to fight it at home, but we MUST help others to combat it before it reaches our home cities. The security web must be widened.

For example: a major North American city took down a nine member al-

Qaeda cell from a Crime Stopper tip. What could have happened to your area if they had been allowed to continue their planning for death and destruction?

18 million dollars worth of drugs bound for Boston were seized in Bermuda from a Crime Stopper tip. What impact would those drugs have had if they had reached California?

3 Columbine-type massacres were averted through Crime Stopper tips.

What if these attacks had been carried out in your schools?

To make our home cities safer, Crime Stoppers International is expanding its influence and impact to avert these crimes BEFORE they hit home. The key to this fight will be HUMAN INTELLIGENCE and Crime Stoppers is the source of that intelligence.

And they feel that turrists are in our highschool class rooms????

Sanctioned Child Abuse

MY HOW THINGS HAVE CHANGED!!!!

I was physically sickened by this video of the 5 year old girl’s arrest in handcuffs. The female host was visually horrified as the asswipe male host “spinned” that this was somehow acceptable behavoir from TWO TEACHERS AND THREE POLICE to handcuff a five year old girl.

The little girl was set up (hence the videoing) … why the hell would they arrest her at the time she was sitting quietly? Where is the rest of the tape?

There was no excuse and the supervisors should be immediately arrested themselves.

Children are children and not adults!!!!

They are not to be judged by the same rules.

As many times I would have loved the “discipline” a howling child in the mall … I KNOW IT IS WRONG because I AM AN ADULT.

How are we to be a compassionate society that supposedly protects children, when teachers and police act in this cruel and unusual manner with the blessing of the media and school board administrators.

If you haven’t see this watch it and listen to the school board wingnut saying that this will be par for the course in schools from now on.

…before even clicking on the link … something told me that this could not have been a white child. What a powerful visual for African American children to see in the US … it says you will never be safe… in this country.

Justice = Just Us – R. Pryor

Dems giving in on Social Security

Why do we even bother when we have jokers like this representing us.

Dems. Adjust on Social Security Stance

House Democrats have decided to quit emphasizing that they will not negotiate changes to Social Security until President Bush drops his idea for private accounts. The switch in strategy comes after Democrats learned from focus groups that people frown on the lawmakers for being obstinate.

“People feel like it doesn’t show a good-faith effort,” said a top House aide, who like several others spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the internal data. “It makes us seem like we’re `typical politicians.'”

The shift in tactics comes with Democrats and Republicans unsure what will happen after the end next month of a campaign-style, 60-day travel blitz by the president and administration officials who are promoting his plan.

If they were not so pathetic this would be funny. This is the jist of the entire problem with the Democratic leadership… the entire base is behind them and unified … but these asshole rather listen to a fucking focus group…(ie Al From, LIEberman, Clinton and Kerry) and throw in the towel when were were fucking winning… unfucking believable.

Only White Evangelists Burn Crosses and Bomb Churches

I think this point needs to be made very clear. This is not about religion it is about race. There was a poll done amongst these so-called Evangelical Christians and most of them did not even know basic stories of the bible.

Why is this important:

We need to separate the wheat from the shaft and real Christians from the wingnuts.

I was thinking of some re-framing on being a Christian.

When asked by a wingnut if you believe in the lord… howyabout replying:

– “Yes, I believe in the true Lord, not the false one who supposedly hates Spongebob Squarepants”

or

– “Yes, I believe in the true Lord, not the false one made up by the Republicans”

maybe

– “Yes, I believe in the true Lord, not the false one who advocate burning crosses and bombing Black churches”

Any more suggestions…??

I don’t think we should try to get holier than thou but just smack them in the face with their hypocracy

Social Justice Sunday … Fundraiser

Social Justice Sunday…Fundraiser

Quoted from a diary by George Lakoff (I added the fundraising part):

The right-wing frame is now complete and Bill Frist has signed on with Tom DeLay: “The filibuster was once abused to protect racial bias, and it is now used against people of faith.” This is not just the nuclear option; it is the thermonuclear option. The implicit claim is that every religious person is a right-wing conservative. Filibustering against horrendous right-wing judges is repudiating all believers in every religion – and being racist to boot.  The national campaign is on. Sunday April 24 is booked for national TV at a Kentucky megachurch and called “Justice Sunday.”

We must respond. We will call April 24 “Social Justice Sunday.” We must show that spiritual progressives are alive and well and willing not just to speak out, but to shout out. The Clergy and Laity Network and DriveDemocracy.org are leading the effort.

This is great but I think we need to take this even one step further.

This day should be used also to recruit activist and FUNDRAISE on a MASSIVE SCALE.

I can’t help but think that this is a HUGE GOP DISTRACTION meant for us to use up a lot of our resources (i.e. money and energy) before for the 2006 campaigns… kinda like how we were sidetracked into wasting a hell of a lot of money fighting Arnold in 2003 instead of just dumping Gray Davis…it is time for the Democrats to WORK SMARTER NOT HARDER

Turn the tables …use the enemies strenths to strengthen our strengths.

Make this SOCIAL JUSTICE SUNDAY FUNDRAISER to help end Right Wing tyrannny.

Let’s start OPERATION CONSTITUTION TROLL on April 24 with a bang

….turn the GOP wingnuts into trolls like we did on Blog for America… everytime a troll came on and said something stupid we would donate more money to Dean’s bat.

We need A CONSTITUTION TROLL BAT or bat of Social Justice… call it whatever…there are more clever people than myself around the blogs….then  everytime after when the wingnuts do something fascist- like we “hit the bat”

This can be done by the DNC or even better by linking as many blogs together as possible…like it was done for “THere is No Crisis”  

We need to do this on the national level… everytime Frist, Delay or any other LAWMAKER who publically denounces the Constitution … we should give 10 bucks and/or get another person to sign up as an activists.

… and Dean desperately could use the money to build up all 50 state Dem parties…

This is just a suggestion… but it can harness all that frustration out there and fill our coffers at the same time.

A better solution than the Kerry/Santorum Discrimination Act

Seems as though many people didn’t read the solution that the ACLU came up with

A Narrowly Drafted Bill Is a Better Response to the Problem

Congress should replace WRFA with more narrowly drafted legislation that bolsters only the requirements imposed on employers to accommodate the scheduling of leave time for the observation of religious holidays or for the wearing of religious apparel or a beard or hairstyle.  Not only would a narrowly drafted bill address most of the problems actually experienced by employees denied religious accommodations, but it also would be a constitutionally sound approach to legislation.

Based on our review of 25 years of Title VII religious accommodation federal decisions, we conclude that the vast majority of the religious accommodation claims that are denied by employers fall into three categories:

  • scheduling of religious holidays,
  • the wearing of religious clothing or a beard or hairstyle, or
  • claims that would result in harm to critical personal or civil rights.  

Congress does not have to guess at what types of religious practices it is accommodating or refusing to accommodate when considering WRFA or any amendments to it.  The ACLU found that claims for the scheduling of time off for religious holidays or the wearing of religious clothing or a beard together made up 83 of the 113 reported federal decisions since 1977 through the end of last year in which the employee lost his or her claim to a reasonable accommodation.

Changing the approach from WRFA to a bill specifically focused on the problems that real people actually face in the workplace would be consistent with the approach that Congress took a few years ago when it replaced the Religious Liberty Protection Act with the more sharply focused Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000.  Not only did Congress create a powerful new tool for protecting religious exercise without harming any other rights, but it also created a vehicle that was so popular that it passed both houses by unanimous consent on the same afternoon.

Further, a more narrowly drafted bill is more likely to survive an Eleventh Amendment challenge by a state claiming that the statute violates the state’s sovereign immunity.  The existing religious accommodation standard in Title VII is the only provision in Title VII to have been found unconstitutional by a federal court of appeals deciding an Eleventh Amendment challenge.  See Endres v. Indiana State Police, 334 F.3d 618, 627-30 (7th Cir. 2003).  As it considers strengthening the religious accommodation standard in Title VII, Congress must be careful to meet the federalism standards set by the Supreme Court in several recent decisions.  Close tailoring of the legislative solution to the constitutional harm being prevented increases the likelihood that a statute will be upheld against an Eleventh Amendment challenge, and decreases the possibility of establishing additional case law further limiting the power of Congress to provide federal remedies for discrimination.

This solution would address everyone’s concerns yet not allow free for all discrimination.

  • This would take care of the two old ladies that Kerry says were fired because as Catholics they did not want to work on Christmas.

  • It would also allow Jews and Muslims to wear religous clothing to their hearts content…even Rasatfarians to wear dreadlocks.

THIS WOULD NOT ALLOW WINGNUTS TO DISCRIMINATE WILLY NILLY TO THEIR HEARTS CONTENT AND REFUSE SERVICE.

Think about it people… had Kerry’s bill been ratified the workers and police officers serving and protecting Terry Schaivo would be legally allowed not to carry out their duties in accordance to the law.

Harmful Effects of the Workplace Religious Freedom Act

ACLU Letter on the Harmful Effect of S. 893, the Workplace Religious Freedom Act, on Critical Personal and Civil Rights

June 2, 2004

Dear Senator: [So Kerry and Hilliary got this letter and have chosen to ignore the warnings]

The American Civil Liberties Union strongly urges you to oppose S. 893, the Workplace Religious Freedom Act (“WRFA”)–unless it is amended to ensure that the legislation will not have the presumably unintended consequence of harming critical personal and civil rights of coworkers, customers, or patients.  Unless amended, the bill would threaten important rights of religious minorities, racial minorities, women, gay men and lesbians, and persons seeking reproductive health care and mental health services.

WRFA would revise and strengthen the existing requirements imposed on employers to accommodate the religious practices of their employees.  This letter explains:  the current religious accommodation requirements under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the changes made to Title VII by the legislation, WRFA’s potential harm to important personal and civil rights, and the availability of a more targeted alternative to WRFA.

In preparing this letter, the ACLU reviewed every Title VII religious accommodation federal decision reported either in an official reporter or on Westlaw–since the Hardison decision in 1977 through December 31, 2002–in which a court reached the question of reasonable accommodation or undue hardship.  A quarter-century of reported litigation gives a fairly accurate picture of the full range of cases that employees already win under the current religious accommodation standard, and the cases that employees typically lose under the current standard.(1)  Based on that review, the ACLU (2)

has serious concerns about the potential harmful effect of WRFA, but we also see an opportunity for alternative legislation that would have addressed nearly all of the religious accommodation claims that did not involve harm to critical personal and civil rights.

Over the past 25 years, employees have brought an array of claims for employers to accommodate religious practices that would have resulted in harm to critical personal or civil rights.  If WRFA had been law, the following rejected religious accommodation claims could have been decided differently:  

  • police officer’s request to refuse to protect an abortion clinic,
  • another police officer’s request to abstain from arresting protestors blocking a clinic entrance,
  • social worker’s decision to use Bible readings, prayer, and the “casting out of demons” with inmates in a county prison, instead of providing the county’s required secular mental health counseling,
  • state-employed visiting nurse’s decision to tell an AIDS patient and his partner that God “doesn’t like the homosexual lifestyle” and that they needed to pray for salvation,
  • delivery room nurse’s refusal to scrub for an emergency inducement of labor and an emergency caesarian section delivery on women who were in danger of bleeding to death,
  • two different male truck drivers and a male emergency medical technician request to avoid overnight work shifts with women because they could not sleep in the same quarters with women,  
  • employee assistance counselor’s request to refuse to counsel unmarried or gay or lesbian employees on relationship issues,
  • hotel worker’s decision to spray a swastika on a mirror as a religious “good luck” symbol,  
  • private sector employee’s request to uncover and display a KKK tattoo of a hooded figure standing in front of a burning cross,  
  • state-employed sign language interpreter’s request to proselytize and pray aloud for her assigned deaf mental health patients, and
  • retail employee’s request to begin most statements on the job with “In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth.”

These examples were all actual cases brought into federal court by employees claiming that their employers refused to provide a reasonable accommodation of their religious beliefs.  Applying the existing Title VII reasonable accommodation standard, the courts rejected all of these claims.  But Congress has no assurance that courts would continue to reject all of these types of claims if WRFA becomes law.

The harm that WRFA could cause is completely avoidable.  Congress can–and should–pass legislation tightly focused on strengthening the federal requirements imposed on employers to accommodate workplace scheduling changes for the observation of religious holidays and the wearing of religious clothing or a beard or hairstyle.  These two areas of religious accommodation account for nearly three-fourths of all of the religious accommodation claims rejected by federal courts in published opinions during the past quarter-century.  A narrowly tailored bill could address these problems for religious minorities without any of the harms that WRFA could cause.

Existing Law Provides a Base Level of Coverage

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 requires employers to provide a reasonable accommodation of the religious observance or practice of employees.  Although the Supreme Court, in TWA v. Hardison, 432 U.S. 63 (1977), limited the employer’s obligations under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to accommodate its employees’ religious practices at work, employers continue to have a legal duty to accommodate religious exercise in the workplace that does not cause the employer more than a de minimus cost.  

During the quarter-century after Hardison, employees have won about one-third of their litigated claims for scheduling changes for observance of religious holidays, nearly one-half of claims for having a beard or hairstyle for religious reasons, and roughly one-fourth of claims for wearing religious apparel.  In addition, employees have won claims for an array of other requested religious accommodations.  Of course, these were claims that were actually litigated and resulted in published opinions.  Presumably, a large number of additional claims were accommodated by employers without employees having to resort to litigation.

WRFA Is Overbroad and Would Likely Harm Critical Personal and Civil Rights

WRFA would broadly strengthen existing requirements imposed on an employer to provide reasonable accommodations of an employee’s religious observances and practices in the workplace.  Although most of the proponents of WRFA seek only to accommodate the observance of religious holidays and the wearing of beards/hairstyle or religious clothing–and have no interest in harming anyone’s rights–WRFA may have a much broader impact than at least most of its supporters intend it to have.

WRFA would make the following three changes in the law:

  • Create a definition of “essential functions of the employment position,” but then exempt restrictions on work “practices that may have a temporary or tangential impact on the ability to perform job functions” if related to participation in a religious observance or practice (emphasis added);
  • Replace the Supreme Court’s determination that an employer does not have to provide a reasonable accommodation of a religious practice under Title VII if providing the accommodation would cause anything more than a de minimis cost.  Instead, an employer can refuse an accommodation only if it would incur “significant difficulty or expense,” as determined by factors such as “identifiable cost of the accommodation,” the size of the employer, and the location and characteristics of its various facilities; and
  • Require that a reasonable accommodation must “remove the conflict between employment requirements and the religious observance or practice of the employee.”

The combined effect of these changes will be radically different analyses of those religious accommodation claims that could result in harm to critical personal or civil rights.  Congress has no assurance that courts will continue to reject claims that could cause important harm.

First, the introduction of the “essential functions” of the job standard into Title VII’s religious accommodation definition raises important questions of which functions of an employee’s job are “essential.”  Increasing numbers of employees will go to court arguing that a refusal to perform all aspects of a job involving health or public safety, unwillingness to comply with employer policies precluding religious or racial harassment, or an objection to sharing overnight work shifts with women do not infringe on any “essential function” of a job.  In many cases, an employee would likely bolster his or her claim that a religious practice does not affect an essential function of a job by claiming that the religious practice has nothing more than a “temporary or tangential impact on the ability to perform job functions,” and is thus entirely exempt from the definition of “essential function.”  Employers will have to determine whether a police officer’s decision to pick and choose who he or she is protecting, a medical or mental health worker’s decision on who he or she will treat and how the person will be treated, a worker’s occasional religious condemnation of a coworker, or the occasional flashing of a swastika or KKK symbol in a private workplace is essential or causes nothing more than a temporary or tangential impact on performance.  And if the effect on work performance is “temporary or tangential,” then the employer will have no choice; it will have to provide the requested accommodation.

Second, WRFA borrows from the Americans with Disabilities Act a definition of a “significant difficulty or expense” which would relieve employers of having to provide the requested reasonable accommodation.  However, the criteria involve primarily financial factors such as loss of productivity, and the relationship of the costs to the size and structure of the employer.  While the definition may be appropriate for a disability rights statute such as the ADA in which the accommodation may require costly changes such as architectural improvements, it has less relevance to a religious anti-discrimination statute.  If WRFA passes, employers may have great difficulty defining the “identifiable costs” of allowing employees to proselytize or harass other coworkers or third parties, such as customers or patients.  The harmful effect of a particular accommodation on another person might be difficult to express in specifics such as loss of productivity or financial losses relative to the size of the employer.

Third, the requirement that a reasonable accommodation must “remove the conflict between employment requirements and the religious observance or practice of the employee” would likely bolster arguments that an employer may not simply choose to transfer an employee to another position in order to accommodate an employee.  Instead, it could require that employers must change the requirements of the employee’s existing position–even when having the employee remain in his or her current position would result in harm to others.  Although it is not clear that this “remove the conflict” requirement would necessarily result in employers having to restructure jobs for employees who insist on performing their jobs in ways that harm others, courts will at least have to resolve the question of whether this provision is directed at the specific job of an employee or simply means an equivalent job.

It is impossible to determine the certain effect of WRFA on all possible claims for accommodations that would cause harm, but it is clear that WRFA would be a significant break from how courts decided religious accommodation cases over the past quarter-century.  And it is equally clear that the drafters of WRFA have taken no steps to ensure that it could not be used to reverse the outcomes of the types of cases decided during the past 25 years in which an employee was denied a claim to use his or her religious exercise in a way that would harm critical personal or civil rights.

Who Could Be Harmed by WRFA

Congress should consider the types of cases that employees have actually lost under the current religious accommodation standard before bolstering the standard through WRFA.  During the quarter-century between the Supreme Court’s 1977 decision in Hardison and the end of last year, employees lost 113 religious accommodation cases reported by either federal reporters or Westlaw in which a federal court considered whether the requested accommodation was reasonable or whether it imposed more than a de minimus cost on the employer.  But 83 of those decisions involved the scheduling of religious holidays or the wearing of religious clothing or a beard.  Employees lost only 30 cases over 25 years that involved claims for something other than scheduling of religious holidays or the wearing of religious clothing or beards.

By examining the 30 reported cases that did not involve religious holidays, religious clothing, or beards, Congress can more easily determine the change in the scope of coverage caused by replacing WRFA with targeted legislation that precludes harm to critical personal and civil rights–and what types of cases would likely confront employers and the courts more frequently if Congress goes ahead and passes WRFA with no changes.  Based on a review of these cases, it should be clear that employees would lose almost nothing more than those claims that harm important rights if Congress amends WRFA to focus solely on reasonable accommodation of religious holidays and religious clothing and beards.

16 of the 30 reported cases involved some type of harm or potential harm to critical personal or civil rights.(3)  These cases, which would have been analyzed differently–and could have had a different outcome–if WRFA was law when they were decided, threatened harm to:

Religious Minorities: The courts have rejected an array of claims by employees claiming a right to proselytize others, or otherwise engage in unwanted religious activities directed toward others, while at work.  

A county sheriff did not have to accommodate–and thereby risk disrupting the county’s religious neutrality policy–a social worker hired to provide secular mental health counseling to county prisoners, but who used Bible readings, prayer, and the “casting out of demons” with the inmates.  Spratt v. County of Kent, 621 F. Supp. 594 (W.D. Mich. 1985), aff’d, 810 F.2d 203 (6th Cir. 1986).  Similarly, a Veterans Administration hospital had no obligation to accommodate a hospital chaplain in a psychiatric department whose practices included interfering with medical decisions, contradicting religious advice given by another chaplain to a patient, and using graphic metaphors in talks that confused the psychiatric patients–because such practices were antithetical to the medical work of the hospital.  Baz v. Walters, 782 F.2d 701 (7th Cir. 1986).  

Although a claim by a hotel worker for a religious accommodation to allow his spraying of a swastika on a mirror while setting up for an event as a religious “good luck” symbol was denied by a court because the employee failed to provide notice of his need for an accommodation, the court also stated that providing the accommodation would have imposed an undue hardship on the employer.  Kaushal v. Hyatt Regency Woodfield, 1999 WL 436585 (N.D. Ill. 1999).  Another court held that a private employer provided a reasonable accommodation of an employee’s religiously motivated request to wear an anti-abortion button that included a color photograph of a fetus by requiring her to cover it while at work to minimize its disruptive impact on coworkers disturbed by the display of the photograph–including coworkers who shared both her religion and her anti-abortion views.  Wilson v. U.S. West Communications, 58 F.3d 1337 (8th Cir. 1995).  

A court held that an employer had no duty to accommodate an employee’s need to write letters to both a supervisor and a subordinate at their homes severely criticizing their private lives and urging religious solutions.  Chalmers v. Tulon Co. of Richmond, 101 F.3d 1012 (4th Cir. 1996).  The court reasoned that accommodating the employee’s need to send these letters would subject the employer to potential liability for not protecting the religious rights of its other employees.  Id. at 1021.  Similarly, a court held that a retail employer did not have to accommodate an employee’s religious belief that “required her to preface nearly every sentence she spoke with the phrase “In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth” because it would impose an undue hardship of “offend[ing] the religious beliefs or non beliefs of its customers.”  Johnson v. Halls Merchandising, Inc., 1989 WL 23201 (W.D. Mo. 1989).  In a similar case, an employer reasonably accommodated an employee’s need to say “Have a Blessed Day” to everyone in the workplace by allowing her to use the phrase with coworkers, but prohibiting her from using the phrase with clients that complained about its use.  Anderson v. U.S.F. Logistics (IMC), Inc., 274 F.3d 470 (7th Cir. 2001).

Racial Minorities:  In addition to the claim for an accommodation for the display of a swastika discussed in the religious minorities section above, Kaushal, 1999 WL 436585, a court rejected a claim by an employee in a private workplace to uncover and display his KKK tattoo of a hooded figure standing in front of a burning cross.  The court held that the employer had already provided a reasonable accommodation by allowing the employee to uncover the tattoo when washing it, but that any further accommodation would result in undue hardship because it would violate the employer’s racial harassment policy.  Swartzentruber v. Gunite Corp., 99 F. Supp.2d 976 (N.D. Ind. 2000).

Women:  Courts have rejected several claims made by male employees claiming that employers failed to accommodate their religious objections to working with women during overnight shifts because they could not sleep in the same quarters as women.  The courts rejected claims by two male truck drivers objecting to overnight runs with women drivers because the employers could not accommodate the requests without incurring undue hardships, Virts v. Consolidated Freightways Corporation of Delaware, 285 F.3d 508 (6th Cir. 2002); Weber v. Roadway Express, Inc., 199 F.3d 270 (5th Cir. 2000), and also rejected a similar claim by a male emergency medical technician refusing overnight shifts with women because the employer had already made a reasonable accommodation by installing folding walls in the break room and authorizing the employee to sleep in alternative places, Miller v. Drennon, 1991 WL 325291 (D.S.C. 1991), aff’d, 966 F.2d 1443 (4th Cir. 1992).

Gay Men and Lesbians:  Two important claims would have harmed the rights of gay men and lesbians to nondiscriminatory health care and mental health services.  A court rejected a claim from a state-employed visiting nurse who, during a nursing visit to a gay man with AIDS and his partner, explained that they would only have salvation through her view of Christian beliefs and that God “doesn’t like the homosexual lifestyle.”  The court held that accommodating the nurse’s request to proselytize her patients was not reasonable because it would interfere with the state providing services in a religion-neutral manner.  Knight v. Conn. Dep’t of Public Health, 275 F.3d 156 (2nd Cir. 2001).  Another court held that an employer had already provided a reasonable accommodation (by offering to transfer to another job) to an employee assistance counselor who refused to counsel unmarried or gay or lesbian employees on relationship issues, but would have incurred more than a de minimus cost if it was forced to accept the counselor’s request to remain in her current position but allow her to refuse clients.  Bruff v. North Mississippi Health Services, Inc., 244 F.3d 495 (5th Cir. 2001).

Persons Seeking Access to Reproductive Health Care:  A court held that, because a hospital offered to transfer a nurse who objected to ending any life to a position outside of the labor and delivery section (which does not perform elective abortions) of the hospital, the hospital had no further duty to accommodate the nurse’s refusal to participate in emergency procedures that terminate pregnancies.  The labor and delivery nurse had twice refused to scrub for emergency obstetrical procedures on women with life-threatening conditions; in the second incident, the nurse’s refusal delayed the emergency procedure by thirty minutes–on a woman who was “standing in a pool of blood.”  Shelton v. Univ. of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey, 223 F.3d 220 (3d Cir. 2000).  

Two courts recently upheld the denial of requests by police officers to refuse to protect abortion clinics.  A court held that the availability of a transfer to a district without an abortion clinic was a reasonable accommodation of a police officer’s request to refuse to protect an abortion clinic in his assigned district, but that the police department had no further obligation to accommodate the request if the officer chose to stay in a district with an abortion clinic.  Rodriguez v. City of Chicago, 156 F.3d 771 (7th Cir. 1998).  Another court upheld a police department’s refusal of a police sergeant’s request to refuse to arrest any persons blocking access to abortion clinics, by holding that accommodating the request would be an undue hardship of potentially jeopardizing the “duty to uphold the law which has been passed by the people in order to protect society” and threatening the protection of “individuals inside abortion clinics from others’ interference with their legally protected rights.”  Parrott v. District of Columbia, 1991 WL 126020 (D.D.C. 1991).

Persons Seeking Access to Mental Health Services:  As discussed above, courts have rejected claims by an employee assistance counselor to refuse to counsel unmarried and gay and lesbian employees on relationship issues, Bruff, 244 F.3d 495, and a hospital chaplain to engage in certain practices viewed by the employer as disruptive of the treatment of psychiatric patients, Baz, 782 F.2d 701.  In addition, in a claim consolidated with the claim by a visiting nurse to proselytize an HIV-positive patient, the Second Circuit upheld the denial of a sign language interpreter’s request to proselytize and pray aloud for mental health patients that she was assigned by the state to interpret.  Knight, 275 F.3d 156.  Relying on the trial court’s finding that the employee’s actions were disruptive, the appellate court held that accommodating the employee’s request would not be reasonable because it would preclude the employer from providing mental health services in a religion-neutral manner.  Id. at 168.

A Narrowly Drafted Bill Is a Better Response to the Problem

Congress should replace WRFA with more narrowly drafted legislation that bolsters only the requirements imposed on employers to accommodate the scheduling of leave time for the observation of religious holidays or for the wearing of religious apparel or a beard or hairstyle.  Not only would a narrowly drafted bill address most of the problems actually experienced by employees denied religious accommodations, but it also would be a constitutionally sound approach to legislation.

Based on our review of 25 years of Title VII religious accommodation federal decisions, we conclude that the vast majority of the religious accommodation claims that are denied by employers fall into three categories:

  • scheduling of religious holidays,
  • the wearing of religious clothing or a beard or hairstyle, or
  • claims that would result in harm to critical personal or civil rights.  

Congress does not have to guess at what types of religious practices it is accommodating or refusing to accommodate when considering WRFA or any amendments to it.  The ACLU found that claims for the scheduling of time off for religious holidays or the wearing of religious clothing or a beard together made up 83 of the 113 reported federal decisions since 1977 through the end of last year in which the employee lost his or her claim to a reasonable accommodation.

Changing the approach from WRFA to a bill specifically focused on the problems that real people actually face in the workplace would be consistent with the approach that Congress took a few years ago when it replaced the Religious Liberty Protection Act with the more sharply focused Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000.  Not only did Congress create a powerful new tool for protecting religious exercise without harming any other rights, but it also created a vehicle that was so popular that it passed both houses by unanimous consent on the same afternoon.

Further, a more narrowly drafted bill is more likely to survive an Eleventh Amendment challenge by a state claiming that the statute violates the state’s sovereign immunity.  The existing religious accommodation standard in Title VII is the only provision in Title VII to have been found unconstitutional by a federal court of appeals deciding an Eleventh Amendment challenge.  See Endres v. Indiana State Police, 334 F.3d 618, 627-30 (7th Cir. 2003).  As it considers strengthening the religious accommodation standard in Title VII, Congress must be careful to meet the federalism standards set by the Supreme Court in several recent decisions.  Close tailoring of the legislative solution to the constitutional harm being prevented increases the likelihood that a statute will be upheld against an Eleventh Amendment challenge, and decreases the possibility of establishing additional case law further limiting the power of Congress to provide federal remedies for discrimination.

We should add that at least some of the sponsors of WRFA already have a draft of a more narrowly focused bill.  This draft bill could become the basis of a consensus approach to protecting religious exercise rights in the workplace.

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There simply is no reason to create a standard under WRFA that could call into question the resolution of claims such as these requests for accommodations that would result in harm to critical personal or civil rights.  Congress can, and should, pass legislation that focuses narrowly on the real problems of scheduling time off for religious holidays and the wearing of religious apparel or a beard.  For these reasons, the ACLU urges you to oppose WRFA until amended to avoid any threat of harm to important personal or civil rights.

Thank you for your attention to these concerns.  Please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any questions regarding this issue.

Sincerely,

Laura W. Murphy                

Director

Christopher E. Anders

Legislative Counsel