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Published On: Tue, Apr 12th, 2016

ADF defends Michigan funeral home’s dress code policy after ‘cross dressing’ lawsuit

Alliance Defending Freedom attorneys representing a Michigan funeral home asked a federal court Thursday to dismiss what remains of an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit against the business’s sex-specific dress code, which requires employees to dress in a manner sensitive to grieving family members and friends.

“The government should respect the freedom of Americans who are serving the grieving and vulnerable,” said ADF Legal Counsel Doug Wardlow. “The funeral home’s dress policy is legitimate, understandable, and legal. Numerous courts have recognized that companies may differentiate between men and women in their dress and grooming policies without violating Title VII, the federal law that prohibits sex discrimination in employment.”

“The former employee who filed a complaint with the EEOC was at all times free to dress as desired outside of work,” added ADF Legal Counsel Caleb Dalton, “but was required, as all other employees are, to abide by the dress policy while on the job.”

R.G. & G.R. Harris Funeral Homes has locations in Detroit, Garden City, and Livonia. Preferred Funeral Directors International awarded it the Parker Award in 2011 for demonstrating exemplary service, and the Livonia location was voted “best hometown funeral home” just last month. The company’s sole corporate officer and majority owner, Thomas Rost, is a devout Christian whose faith informs the way he operates his business and how he presents it to the public.

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photo by Okan Caliskan via Pixabay

The funeral home hired the biologically male employee as a funeral director and embalmer at its Garden City location in 2007. Funeral directors at the company regularly interact with the public, including grieving family members and friends. After informing Rost of an intention to begin dressing as a female at work, the employee was dismissed for refusing to comply with the dress code.

Not only would Rost be violating his faith if he were to pay for and otherwise permit his employees to dress as members of the opposite sex while at work, ADF attorneys explain, but the employee dress policy is also designed to be sensitive to interaction with customers at an especially delicate time of their lives.

“R.G. was not motivated by animus against people who dress as members of the opposite sex,” the motion and brief filed in Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. R.G. & G.R. Harris Funeral Homes states. “Indeed, it is undisputed that R.G. would not discharge or otherwise discipline employees who dress as members of the opposite sex on their own time but comply with the dress code while on the job…. Moreover, the uncontested evidence demonstrates that R.G.’s dress code and its enforcement of the dress code against [this employee] are based on R.G.’s legitimate interest in ensuring that mourners have a space free of disruptions to begin the healing process after the loss of a loved one.”

The ADF motion argues that the funeral home did not violate Title VII and is, in fact, protected by a different federal law, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

RFRA says that the government cannot force someone like Rost to violate his faith unless it demonstrates that doing so is the “least restrictive means” of furthering a “compelling government interest.” But as the ADF motion explains, “the EEOC cannot demonstrate a compelling interest here…. Nor can the EEOC satisfy RFRA’s least-restrictive-means requirement. A number of available alternatives would allow the government to achieve its goals without violating R.G.’s free-exercise rights.”

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