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On Parade
This is a
WorldNetDaily printer-friendly version of the article which follows.
Thursday, July 31, 2003
By
Art Moore The city of Oakland barred two employees from advertising an
informal group that respects "the natural family, marriage and
family values," contending the bulletin-board flyer was
"homophobic."
In a case that could set a precedent challenging
anti-discrimination laws, Regina Rederford and Robin Christy filed
suit yesterday in U.S. District Court in Oakland against two city
supervisors who enforced a policy they insist is unconstitutional.
"It's ridiculous – the flyer doesn't mention homosexuality
whatsoever," said Rederford's attorney, Scott Lively.
"It's a completely affirmative and positive statement about a
Christian value system centered on the natural family," Lively told
WorldNetDaily. "For the city of Oakland to have interpreted that to
mean an attack on homosexuality was really taking liberties."
On an employee bulletin board where a variety of political and
sexually oriented causes are promoted, Rederford posted a flyer Jan.
3 titled, "Preserve Our Workplace With Integrity." The entire text
said:
If you would like to be a part of preserving integrity in the
Workplace call Regina Rederford @xxx-xxxx or Robin Christy
@xxx-xxxx The flyer was removed the same day, however, by order of Joyce
Hicks, Oakland's deputy director of the Community and Economic
Development Agency, who is named in the lawsuit along with then-City
Manager Robert Bobb.
In a Feb. 20 memo announcing a newly revised workplace
anti-discrimination policy, Hicks noted recent incidents of
employees "inappropriately posting materials" in violation of that
policy.
"Specifically," she wrote according to a copy obtained by WND,
"flyers were placed in public view which contained statements of a
homophobic nature and were determined to promote sexual
orientation-based harassment."
Lively said if the judge approaches this case as a contest
between the First Amendment and the anti-discrimination policy,
similar policies across the state could be overturned.
"This is one of the cleanest examples of blatant free-speech
discrimination that I've ever seen – the fact that the city actually
acknowledged that they were discriminating, based on content, in
their own memo," Lively said.
The state of California and many local jurisdictions have added
sexual orientation as a protected category in areas such as housing
and employment laws and school policies.
"Citizens should retain the right to criticize alternative sexual
lifestyles without fear of retaliation or retribution," Lively
contends.
Rederford and Christy are defended by the United States Justice Foundation,
the public interest group Lively, Ackerman and Cody, and the
Pro-Family Law Center. They charge Hicks and Bobb violated their
clients' constitutional right to "to pray, associate, communicate
religious ideas, and worship" according to the U.S. Constitution and
the laws and regulations of the city of Oakland.
WND contacted the Oakland city attorney's office for a response,
but no one was available to comment.
Lively said the city, in its defense, could use one of two
arguments. One is that the flyer is a violation of the city's
anti-discrimination policy.
"That's a stretch," he said, because "even if that type of policy
was able to trump the First Amendment, this particular flyer does
not fall within that policy."
The other position is that they have a right to control the
bulletin board.
"That's a weak argument, because once they've created a limited
public forum by letting other employees post messages, they lose
their right to censor what is on the bulletin board."
The civil rights complaint says Rederford and Christy were denied
equal accommodation when they asked to be given the same opportunity
as others to communicate with employees.
Defendants Hicks and Bobb acted, the suit contends, "because they
do not approve of the Christian beliefs, practices, and activities
of plaintiffs."
Without intervention, the complaint says, the defendants will
"continue to engage in discriminatory behavior that persecutes,
silences, and segregates Christian employees."
To view this item online, visit
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=33845
LAW OF THE LAND
City
ties 'family values'
to 'homophobia'
Employee's flyer promoting Christian meeting deemed
harassment
Posted: July 31, 2003
1:00 a.m.
Eastern
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com
Good News Employee Associations is a forum for people
of Faith to express their views on the contemporary issues of the
day. With respect for the Natural Family, Marriage and Family
values.
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