United States: Adventist representative to promote workplace freedom before Congress

Standish urging U.S. citizens to write congressional representatives



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Church representative James D. Standish will vouch for the rights of Sabbath keepers during a congressional hearing February 12. His testimony will support people of faith who face workplace discrimination. [ANN file photo]

Seventh-day Adventist Church representative for Legislative Affairs, James D. Standish, Esq., will join other witnesses in testifying before a U.S. Congressional hearing February 12, urging legislators to sponsor the lately reintroduced Workplace Religious Freedom Act.

"Americans don't accept bigotry in our media, in our schools, or in our government, and we certainly shouldn't accept bigotry against people of faith in our workplaces," Standish wrote in a letter that concerned U.S. citizens can send to their congressional representatives.

The Act, originally brought before Congress 10 years ago, now garners broad, bipartisan support in both houses of the U.S. Congress, Standish said. If enacted, it would protect and expand rights first introduced 40 years ago when Congress passed workplace freedom legislation under the umbrella of the U.S. Civil Rights Act.

According to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, claims of religious discrimination climbed 83 percent between 1992 and 2006 while other claims of discrimination -- including race, gender and age -- either held steady or decreased.

Standish and other faith leaders fault narrow interpretation of existing workplace freedom legislation for the rise. "As Congress has worked to give rights to many groups in the workplace, it has left Sabbath keepers and other people of faith far behind."

Workers, Standish added, should not be required to choose between fulfilling job requirements and fully practicing their respective faiths. "This is a common sense, reasonable bill that simply requires employers to show they have a good reason to refuse time off on Sabbath before they fire [a person of faith]," he said.

U.S. citizens can click here to ask their Senators and House representatives to support workplace freedom.


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