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NYCLU > News/Press > February
24, 2004; Salvation Army Lawsuit
NYCLU Sues Salvation Army and Suffolk County Social Services
for Religious Discrimination Against Employees in Government Funded
Social Services for Children
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Jared Feuer, media@suffolknyclu.org;
(631) 882-7400
Click here to read the complaint.
Suffolk County, New York: The New York Civil Liberties Union filed
a lawsuit today in federal court charging The Salvation Army with
religious discrimination against employees in its government funded
social services in New York City and on Long Island. The lawsuit
asks the federal court to order the 136 year old charity to stop
the practices and to rule that the government funding of the Salvation
Army’s faith based discrimination against its social services
employees in foster care, adoption, HIV, juvenile detention and
other social services is illegal. Social services agencies for New
York State, New York City and Nassau County and Suffolk County are
named also as co-defendants.
The Salvation Army provides social services for more than 2,000
children each day who are placed with the charity by the government.
The programs are funded almost exclusively by taxpayer money. The
agency receives $89 million in taxpayer funds for social services
and employs about 800 people.
In describing the lawsuit, Jared Feuer, Director of the Suffolk
Chapter of the NYCLU, noted, “The NYCLU believes strongly
in the First Amendment right of religious groups to practice their
faith. But they cannot use taxpayer money to discriminate against
the very people who provide these funds.”
In Suffolk County, the Department of Social Services provides funds
for The Salvation Army to perform publicly financed services with
respect to families that are receiving government family assistance
payments and families that are transitioning off assistance –
what is often termed “welfare to work.” Despite the
secular nature of this work, The Salvation Army recently began to
require all employees in its Social Services for Children division
to fill out a form on which they: a) identify their church affiliation
and all other churches attended for the past decade, b) authorize
their religious leaders to reveal private communications to The
Salvation Army; and c) pledge to adhere to the religious mission
of The Salvation Army which, according to The Salvation Army, is
to “preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ.”
Moreover, new job descriptions for every social services employee
now require compliance with The Salvation Army’s religious
mission statement. Previously, the social services unit had its
own mission statement which was completely secular.
All this began as part of a Reorganization Plan last year by the
national leaders of the charity “to narrow the gap”
between the ecclesiastical Salvation Army and the social services
component. The goal of the Reorganization Plan was to ensure that
“as a Christian agency […] a reasonable number of Salvationists
along with other Christians [will be employed by The Salvation Army.]”
The suit was filed on behalf of eighteen current and former Salvation
Army employees of varying religious and non-religious backgrounds.
They include many of the most respected senior managers in the agency.
Marina Obermaier, a resident of the town of Huntington, is the
Assistant Director for Homefinding of the Social Services for Children
Foster Home and Adoption Services program of The Salvation Army.
She is responsible for the implementation of all New York State
and City laws, regulations and procedures relating to the study
and maintenance of foster homes. “We work with foster parents
who are gay, not married or otherwise non-traditional in their lifestyles.
We apply non-discriminatory guidelines when working with these parents.
I’m really fearful of these new guidelines of The Salvation
Army which would be in conflict with our work with foster families
and young people,” says Obermaier.
Added Mary Jane Dessable who is the Management Information Systems
Director for The Salvation Army and has worked for the charity for
12 years, “Although I am not a Salvationist, I have sung for
their Devotionals…attended their Good Friday services. I participated
because I wanted to, not because it was required or requested of
me.”
And Margaret Geissman who is the former Human Resources Manager
for Social Services for Children with The Salvation Army has left
the charity rather than provide personal information about employees.
“When I refused to answer questions that I felt were clearly
illegal and violated my employees’ privacy, I was harassed
to the point where eventually I resigned. As a Christian, I deeply
resent the use of discriminatory employment practices in the name
of Christianity.”
NYCLU Legal Director Arthur Eisenberg noted that The Salvation
Army’s new employment practices “have injected religion
into the workplace in ways that violate the anti-discrimination
principles of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Martin Garbus, whose firm, Davis and Gilbert is co-counsel with
the NYCLU, cited President Bush’s Faith-Based Initiative as
the catalyst for the current situation and called it “the
greatest transfer of wealth from governmental bodies to evangelical
churches. Federal, state and local services are being used to spread
the evangelical message.”
In addition to Eisenberg, Lieberman and Garbus, plaintiffs are
also represented by NYCLU staff attorney Beth Haroules; NYCLU co-counsel
Deborah Karpatkin; and Howard Rubin and Gregg Brochin from the Davis
and Gilbert law firm.
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The NYCLU is the New York affiliate of the American Civil Liberties
Union.
Click here to read the complaint.
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