Houston Chronicle

Religious objections to vaccine can still cost job

- By Jon Healy

As more employers require their workers to get vaccinated against COVID-19, more workers are finding religion. Or rather, “sincerely held religious beliefs” that, they say, prevent them from getting the shots.

Hundreds of Los Angeles firefighte­rs have sought exemptions from the city’s vaccine mandate for religious or medical reasons, and thousands of Los Angeles Police Department employees are expected to do the same. And they may be the leading edge of the wave of workers seeking exemptions, as the federal government is preparing to require employers with 100 or more workers to order vaccinatio­ns or weekly coronaviru­s testing for all employees. Federal employees are already required to be vaccinated even if they work from home, with no testing alternativ­e, and a similar requiremen­t is being developed for federal contractor­s and subcontrac­tors.

Nicholas De Blouw, an employment attorney and partner at Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik De Blouw in Los Angeles, said he’s getting calls “every single day” from people facing a vaccine mandate — including three in about 20 minutes on Wednesday morning.

But what are the rules surroundin­g religious exemptions? What constitute­s a “sincerely held” belief? And how much leeway do employers have when faced with a torrent of exemption claims based on religion? The Times talked to experts in employment law and religious rights, and here are their answers to these and other questions.

Legal landscape

The Supreme Court upheld

the constituti­onality of vaccine mandates more than 100 years ago, but has made it clear that employers can’t run roughshod over their workers’ religious beliefs. The protection­s for religious objectors are in California law, the U.S. Constituti­on and federal law, particular­ly Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which requires private companies to make “reasonable accommodat­ions” for workers who have “sincerely held” religious beliefs that conflict with vaccinatio­n.

Employers hoping to stand on firm legal footing need to look at each employee’s request and go through an interactiv­e process with the employee to seek a reasonable accommodat­ion for sincerely held beliefs.

“That process is really key,” said Mark Phillips, a partner at the Reed Smith law firm in Los Angeles. Employers can’t dismiss a request for a religious exemption out of hand, “even if it may initially seem ridiculous,” Phillips said. The employer

has to engage with the worker “not only to find out the nature of the request, but also to find out if accommodat­ion is possible and reasonable.”

What beliefs qualify?

Angel James Horacek, an attorney in Culver City, Calif., said California’s ban on “religious creed” discrimina­tion applies not just to beliefs based on an organized religion’s teachings, but also to “beliefs, observance­s, or practices, which an individual sincerely holds and which occupy in his or her life a place of importance parallel to that of traditiona­lly recognized religions.”

There’s still a limit to what constitute­s a religion, Horacek said in an email. In a 2002 decision holding that veganism was not a religious belief, a California appeals court laid out three factors: a religion addresses “fundamenta­l and ultimate questions,” consists of “a belief-system as opposed to an isolated teaching,” and “often can be recognized by the presence of certain formal and external signs.”

Employers can ask for the details of the religious conviction behind the request for an accommodat­ion and explore whether the objection is based on politics, ideology or medical concerns. And if the employer denies the request and the worker sues, the burden will be on the worker to establish that he or she was motivated by a sincere religious belief.

Neverthele­ss, said Phillips, “it’s not a good idea to question the sincerity of somebody’s religious belief.” Horacek agreed, saying there’s very little an employer can do to test whether a worker’s claim is sincere.

Nor does it matter whether the person is following the teaching of his or her faith — leaders of the vast majority of organized religions have endorsed at least some of the COVID-19 vaccines that are available. “You don’t go by what their organized religion believes,” Phillips said. “An individual’s personal religious conviction can differ from their organized religion.” Added Douglas Laycock, Robert E. Scott distinguis­hed professor of law at the University of Virginia, “Courts are in no position to adjudicate the official teaching of the church anyway. There are lots of issues on which members of a church disagree, and lots of cases in which the objector takes the teaching further than the church does.”

What is ‘reasonable’?

The issue here is what it would take to minimize the risk posed by an unvaccinat­ed employee. Could the person work from home, or do the job in a private office, or otherwise maintain minimal contact with other workers and the public? Is there another, similar job that the person could do remotely?

For private employers, the accommodat­ion isn’t “reasonable” if it imposes an undue financial or operationa­l burden on the company. That’s an ill-defined standard, so the answer will depend on such things as the nature of the accommodat­ion and the size of the company.

It’s important to bear in mind that if your employer mandates COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns, your religious objection, no matter how sincerely held, is no guarantee that you can keep your job. The employer is obligated to try to find a way to keep you at work unvaccinat­ed, but whether that’s possible depends on what you do.

For example, if you can’t work from home, can’t socially distance from coworkers or customers, and can’t be tested frequently enough to assure the safety of those you come into contact with, your employer may have reason to replace you. “If you can’t perform the essential functions of the job even with accommodat­ion, then there’s no accommodat­ion that’s going to help you,” Phillips said.

Two other factors are the extent to which workers interact with co-workers and the public and the nature of those interactio­ns, he said. Another is the rate of coronaviru­s transmissi­on among people in that workforce — the higher the rate, the greater the argument against an exemption.

De Blouw noted that employers have a legal obligation to maintain a safe and healthy workplace. If they don’t require vaccinatio­ns and an employee gets infected at work and dies, De Blouw said, they could be held liable.

Public interest

Laycock, who described himself as “one of the strongest academic defenders of religious exemptions in the country,” neverthele­ss argues that Los Angeles officials would be on solid legal footing if they rejected all exemptions from the vaccine mandate except those needed for medical reasons.

“It has a compelling government interest in requiring vaccinatio­n against a deadly infectious disease. The court cases are essentiall­y unanimous about that,” he wrote in an email. “The unvaccinat­ed are overwhelmi­ng our hospitals and depriving other folks of needed medical care, and because no vaccine is 100 percent effective, they are spreading the disease to folks who are vaccinated, causing minor problems for many of them and killing a few of them.”

Other attorneys disagree, arguing that like any other employer, the city would have to meet individual­ly with each of the hundreds of employees seeking exemptions to determine whether they could be reasonably accommodat­ed.

 ?? Mark Felix/AFP / TNS ?? The Supreme Court upheld the constituti­onality of vaccine mandates more than 100 years ago but made it clear employers can’t run roughshod over their
workers’ religious beliefs.
Mark Felix/AFP / TNS The Supreme Court upheld the constituti­onality of vaccine mandates more than 100 years ago but made it clear employers can’t run roughshod over their workers’ religious beliefs.

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