Posted on 10/28/2021 11:22:51 AM PDT by Mount Athos
The Biden administration’s questionnaire for evaluating requests for religious exemptions to vaccine mandates asks such detailed questions about faith and medical history that employees may find them intrusive and hostile.
“How long have you held the religious belief underlying your objection?” is one question on the questionnaire, which originates from a “template” provided by the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force. The task force was created on day one of the Biden administration “to give the heads of federal agencies ongoing guidance” about “operating during the COVID-19 pandemic.”
The template is being used by the Departments of Homeland Security, Commerce, and Agriculture, the General Services Administration, and likely other agencies. The Department of Justice is using 6 of 7 questions from the template.
Another question asks if and when exemption-seekers have received any vaccines as an adult and “If you do not have a religious objection to the use of all vaccines, please explain why your objection is limited to particular vaccines.”
“If there are any other medicines or products that you do not use because of the religious belief underlying your objection, please identify them,” is another question.
If adopted by federal agencies and copied by private businesses seeking to follow the federal government’s lead, the questionnaire for exemption-seekers may result in significant litigation by religious employees, Andrea R. Lucas, a Republican commissioner at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, told The Federalist. The EEOC is responsible for enforcing federal laws that make it illegal to discriminate against an employee because of the person’s religion.
“The law does not provide a pandemic-related exception for disregarding the rights of religious employees,” Lucas told The Federalist. “No matter the context, intrusive questions presuming insincerity from the start, seeking to ‘catch’ an employee in an inconsistency, and looking for any reason to deny a religious accommodation request, are inappropriate.”
Millions of Americans are subject to vaccine mandates. Federal employees are required to receive a Covid-19 vaccination, with religious and medical exceptions only as required by law, by November 22 (or November 8, since employees are not considered fully vaccinated until two weeks after a single-shot vaccine or until receiving the second dose of a two-part vaccine). Federal contractors have until December 8. Thus, many agencies would have already required religious exemption requests to have been submitted.
The questionnaire could also align with the forthcoming Occupational Safety and Health Administration guidelines for companies with 100 or more employees to require Covid vaccination of their workforces.
Sen. Josh Hawley, R-MO, has called on the government to rescind the questionnaire, saying it “evinces a skepticism and indeed a hostility to applicants who harbor sincerely held religious objections to the Covid-19 vaccine. I fear this will chill applications by civil servants to apply for religious exemptions.”
Form Questions Your Sincerity “To be eligible for a possible exception, you must first establish that your refusal to be vaccinated is based upon a sincere belief that is religious in nature,” the questionnaire states.
Some people object to getting the Covid vaccines due to the use of abortion-derived cell lines in their testing and development. The questionnaire ask employees to describe the nature of their objection to the Covid-19 vaccination requirement and to explain if and how complying with the requirement would substantially burden the employee’s religious exercise.
“If there are any other medicines or products that you do not use because of the religious belief underlying your objection, please identify them,” reads another question.
Condescension toward the Religious “The form is dripping with suspicion and condescension in an attempt to discredit well-known religious beliefs concerning the use of aborted fetal cell lines in drugs,” according to Roger Severino, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center and former director of the Office for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
The government has “no business second-guessing the religious beliefs of its employees,” Severino said in an interview with The Federalist. The Supreme Court has made clear that religious beliefs can be idiosyncratic, but as long as they are sincere, they must be taken at face value, he added.
The questionnaire “smacks of a religious test,” which may be unlawful, according to Severino. A better approach would be to offer exemption requestors a form asking about the nature of their objection to the vaccine only to see how it could be accommodated, then having them sign under penalty of perjury, he said.
Legal Problems with the Questionnaire If federal agencies and private companies adopt the task force’s template, it could lead to potential violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and of the Americans with Disabilities Act, according to Sharon Fast Gustafson, former Republican general counsel at the EEOC.
The question “Would complying with the COVID-19 vaccination requirement substantially burden your religious exercise? If so, please explain how” is too narrow, Gustafson said in an interview. Title VII does not just protect religious “exercise” but also “religious beliefs, practices, or observances.”
Some of the questions could also lead to violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act by subjecting federal employees to invasive medical questions, which could result in the employee disclosing information about a disability or other medical condition. The questionnaire could give rise to federal employees bringing religious discrimination, harassment, or retaliation claims, in addition to failure to accommodate claims, according to Gustafson.
Against EEOC Guidance The questions (three through six) about the length of holding religious beliefs, receiving other vaccines, and religious objection to other vaccines and medicines, may also go against EEOC guidance, Gustafson believes. That guidance says, in part:
Does an employer have to accept an employee’s assertion of a religious objection to a COVID-19 vaccination at face value? May the employer ask for additional information? (10/25/21)
Generally, under Title VII, an employer should assume that a request for religious accommodation is based on sincerely held religious beliefs. However, if an employer has an objective basis for questioning either the religious nature or the sincerity of a particular belief, the employer would be justified in making a limited factual inquiry and seeking additional supporting information.
EEOC guidance on religious discrimination also says that “employers who unreasonably request unnecessary or excessive corroborating evidence risk being held liable for denying a reasonable accommodation request, and having their actions challenged as retaliatory or as part of a pattern of harassment.”
The government’s decision to ask about whether employees’ religious beliefs, practices, or observances have been consistent may suggest that federal agencies are gearing up to reject accommodation requests by any employees who reveal such inconsistencies. But EEOC guidance notes that “an employee’s newly adopted or inconsistently observed religious practice may nevertheless be sincerely held.”
Notably, the EEOC is not part of the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force that created the template. For EEOC employees requesting exceptions to the vaccine mandate, the EEOC itself uses a different religious accommodation form than the task force’s template.
The EEOC’s equivalent questionnaire, currently in use at the commission, simply asks the employee to “describe the nature of your sincerely held religious beliefs or religious practice or observance” that conflicts with an EEOC requirement. It also asks, “What is the accommodation or modification that you are requesting?” and “List any alternative accommodations that also would eliminate the conflict between the EEOC requirement, policy, or practice and your sincerely held religious beliefs.”
Too Late for Some Since federal employees who filled out the template by their agency’s deadline already have been subjected to these questions, those employees may already have discrimination, harassment, or retaliation claims against the government — even if the government changes the form or ultimately grants these employees their requests for accommodations.
Some federal employees who were deterred by the inappropriate questions on the template may have missed their agency’s submission deadline, harming their ability to get an accommodation and possibly causing termination. Others may have violated their conscience and gotten the Covid vaccination instead of risking being terminated.
The exemption request must be signed to declare it is true and correct. “Any intentional misrepresentation to the Federal Government may result in legal consequences, including termination or removal from Federal Service,” it warns.
The Covid task force that produced the form adds in its guidance that if granted a religious exemption to the vaccination requirement, the employee would instead be required to comply with alternative health and safety protocols. However, the agency may determine that only a vaccine is adequate for safety and deny the religious exemption.
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None of their d*** business.
This information is privileged information and is only meant to be between me and my mystic shaman and the of course the Magic Crystals. I cannot in good conscience answer any of these questions. And I positively will not talk about the midnight ceremonies on full moon nights.
“To be eligible for a possible exception, you must first establish that your refusal to be vaccinated is based upon a sincere belief that is religious in nature,”
2 falsehoods in this: First, the law holds that anything that violates your individual conscience is a valid grounds for exemption, regardless of whether it is religious in nature or not. Not all “conscientious objecters” to Vietnam did it out of a religious belief, for example.
Second, you do not have to “establish” anything to the government. You are the own arbiter of your conscience, not the government.
LOL.
Yep
Anybody who reads that should have come to the same conclusion that I did.
They don’t want to give this exemption. They want you to choose between your job and your conscience. They will use this information against you.
The questions are intrusive.
You and I know very well that a muzz who claims a religious exemption would get it in a second. Jews and Christians - off to the gas chambers.
No need to worry about the USA becoming a totalitarian dictatorship. It is already.
Second, you do not have to “establish” anything to the government. You are the own arbiter of your conscience, not the government.
—
Indeed. This ridiculous questionnaire puts the government in charge of judging the “worthiness” of your religious objection on their terms. In other words it is government interference in religion.
In a sane world, this questioning would be struck down by all US district courts, and never requiring SCOTUS to rule.
In the modern clown world, our rights will come down to John Roberts...
“How long have you held the religious belief underlying your objection?”
Since President Retard and the coup took over by cheating.
In my religion only God is qualified and recognized to know the sincerity of my belief.
The Constitution makes no distinction of religion and therefore can’t qualify a religion since all are recognized; even the religion of one, ME.
I wrote the following about a week ago in the for what it is worth column. Here it is again:
Any letter claiming accommodation needs to be short.
So let your speech be yea, yea or nay, nay for to say more is of the devil.
I have been shoveling, mowing, blowing and mulling this over some more this afternoon. Additional points for consideration, this is not short:
In an appeal, do not allow yourself to be drawn into an irrelevant logic trap such as, “you take other vaccines that use fetal tissue derivatives why won’t you take this one?” Answer, this is the one of the subject at hand. The offer for religious accommodation has been made for this one only and I accept that offer on the grounds of my sincerely held religious belief against taking or any of its cousins.
We have also fallen into the trap of the grounds being because of use of fetal tissue or derivatives. That is not important. What is important is that the taking of the vaccine violates my sincerely held religious beliefs that are unspecified as that is not a condition of religious accommodation. Is it? I have not seen so.
I believe we also fall into the trap of thinking our beliefs have to be based on some established mainstream religion supported by a note from a priest or clergy. I don’t think that is true. First of all I do not recognize either priest or clergy as qualified or superior to my faith. The practice of religion can be a religion of one declared by me. That is true by the Constitution though it is not my belief. How else have atheists managed to impose their “religion” on societal norms and practice such as prayer in school?
I can even create my own code or bible but The Bible says “Let each seek his own salvation with fear and trembling” That, in my upbringing, means I will find my own salvation according to my own understanding and image of my God or even some other person or thing though mine is God. My understanding may be wrong and I may fail but it is still my choice and understanding of even God’s word.
I will not recognize any man who claims to judge my sincerity or correctness of religious belief. It is not for a man, any man, to say that I am right or wrong in this regard. Many of us will surely fail in fact but it is at our own peril. All dogs may go to heaven but all men will not and it will surprise all of us how it turns out.
The consequence of failure to obey God’s word correctly in my religious understanding is too critical for me or anyone else to direct me or for me to direct them. I will not allow anyone to tell me how to attain my salvation without invoking my own discretion, understanding and discernment. I will also not tell or expect anyone else to follow my direction as to how to pursue salvation and perhaps because of a mistake condemn them to the fires of hell for all eternity without expecting them to prove the way is right for themselves. I will lead them to The Word though and let them make their own choices.
Religious accommodation has been offered and it can only rightfully be offered without conditions neither have I seen such conditions attached other than the misdirected and unprovable suggestion of “sincerly held”. Tomfoolery written by someone who has no idea what he is saying. It is not definable or determinable.
I will accept your offer of exception to the Covid Vaccine on the grounds of sincerely held religious belief and in accordance with my sincerely held religious belief my position is that I will not take the Covid-19 vaccine. End of story, stick to it.
If one insists on a religious reason there are others, at least one comes to mind: “Do you not know your body is a temple?” I have not and will not knowingly take anything into my body that I believe to defile it or not to the advantage of my body and I will not now. End of story. “But you take other vaccines, why not this one?” Because I believe those others prevent disease and are to the advantage of my body.
The Declaration states that our rights, as recognized and enumerated, derive from God. It also recognizes that nobody can take these stated and personally held rights away from us and then goes on in the Bill of Rights to state these rights. Do not let them take away your God given right to self-determination.
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.—That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers....”
None of this calls for anarchy, indeed, it calls for the strictest adherence to order and respect of our rights. I don’t see anyplace it provides for capricious mandates of questionable and evidently increasingly ineffective vaccines of any kind or derivation. Nor does it call for or permit determination by anyone as to the sincerity and nature of my religious beliefs.
Refuse, Resist, Solidarity.
And you are absolutely correct.
Do not submit to the judgement of man. None are qualified.
Religious exemption has been offered. take it.
Forget the religious exemption fig leaf.
Just stand up for your freedom. Don’t “USE” God as an excuse. You don’t NEED an excuse. Just REFUSE! It’s YOUR RIGHT!
Grow a pair!
If you REALLY object on religious grounds, have faith in God Himself to work things out for you NOT some godless employer.
By this, do you mean
a) That you already work for an employer who isn’t heading up this sort of insanity; or
b) That the sort of work/pay you do is fungible enough that you can pop from one employer to another without disrupting life?
If otherwise, consider that there exist people with families who can’t easily just uproot, and others where their job isn’t instantly portable (or where their whole industry is colluding to leave no safe haven).
Alternatively, please be prepared to support your local families who stand on this issue and suffer loss.
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Maranatha!
Even so, Come Lord Jesus!
Yeppers
(This ridiculous questionnaire puts the government in charge of judging the “worthiness” of your religious objection on their terms.)
Agreed.
I don’t know if he’s right or not, but Robert Barnes (youtuber with Viva Frei, or on locals at vivabarneslaw) claims that the case law is clear. The employer can’t interrogate the “sincerity” of your beliefs. Once the objection is asserted, they have to take that part at face value.
The question becomes the nature of the accomodation. This is getting a lot of litigation attention at the moment, and should make for some interesting law going forward.
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