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View Full Version : Not Christian Enough? Job Seeker Sues Company for Asking When He Was 'Saved'



Teh One Who Knocks
06-18-2012, 04:33 PM
By NILS KONGSHAUG - ABC News


http://i.imgur.com/avfHA.jpg

The Voss Lighting Company of Lincoln, Neb., doesn't hide its religious light under a barrel.

"Our biblical mission," an online statement reads, "is to 'sell' our lighting products so that we may 'tell' everyone we can about God's soul-saving, life transforming gospel message..."

Perfectly legal, says Patrick Holman, an attorney with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

"The Commission has no problem with a corporation having religious values," he says.

But Holman does have a problem with a corporation using religious values to make hiring decisions.

Holman and the EEOC are representing an Oklahoma man, Edward Wolfe, who says he was denied a job at Voss because he wasn't Christian enough.

"It's unique," Holman says. "I haven't seen anything like it since I've been here."

Wolfe says he applied for a job as Operations Supervisor at Voss's Tulsa, Oklahoma store.

In the complaint filed against Voss by the EEOC, Wolfe says he saw the position on a church website. His first interview went well, but in a second interview with the branch manager, he told lawyers, he was questioned about his religious practices and beliefs.

According to the complaint, the manager asked Wolfe "to identify every church he has attended over the past several years; where and when [he] was 'saved' and the circumstances that led up to it."

In the interview, Wolfe claims he was told most employees at Voss were Southern Baptist, but employees could go to any church, as long as they were "born again."

The complaint claims the manager asked Wolfe if he would "have a problem" coming to work early, without pay, to attend Bible study.

Wolfe, a single parent who says he cannot attend church on Sundays, told lawyers the branch manager was "agitated" at his answers.

He didn't get the job.

The suit is filed under Title VII, part of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which makes it illegal to discriminate in hiring on the basis of religion.

In a statement, the company denies Wolfe was turned down for the job "as a consequence of his religious beliefs." Vice president and general manager Steve Sanderson writes, "The individual hired by Voss had more lighting product experience and was more qualified."

Hal-9000
06-18-2012, 04:43 PM
On the opposite side of things, we used to do about 16 separate inventories a year, all on weekends. I finally stopped showing up on Sundays because of my personal life (and the fact I didn't like working 5 days, then 2 days, then 5 more days consecutively. Head of HR wanted to know why I wouldn't commit to Sundays...I told her it that I went to church and she laughed (on the phone), so I hung up on her. Never got asked to work another Sunday since that phone call...

Teh One Who Knocks
06-18-2012, 05:07 PM
Even though you aren't supposed to discriminate due to religion, I'm kinda on the side of the company here. As the article states, they don't hide the fact that they are uber religious, so what exactly did this person expect when he applied there?

Something tells me that even if he had gotten the job, he would have founds something else to complain about once he was there. I can see him filing a lawsuit saying he was made to feel 'uncomfortable' or something to that effect.

Hal-9000
06-18-2012, 05:14 PM
Yes but they asked him to come in early daily with no pay for his time to attend bible studies.And to also work Sundays. I assume it was a full time spot and if he can't come in early (for no pay) or work Sundays, the employer has no right to make those demands or implications.

Teh One Who Knocks
06-18-2012, 05:16 PM
I don't see where it says they are asking him to work on Sunday, the complainant is the one who states that because he is a single parent, he can't go to church on Sunday. I think he was just volunteering that information.

I believe the only thing they asked him is if he would have a 'problem' with coming in early for bible study, without pay.

Hal-9000
06-18-2012, 05:18 PM
Yeah it appears that way.

Probably adding that he can't make church on Sundays didn't help his employment opportunity.

Acid Trip
06-18-2012, 05:25 PM
Solution: Don't apply for a highly religious company if you aren't highly religious.