New York, August 31
Sikhs in the US will be allowed to wear turbans and grow beards in federal agencies like the police department and transit authority after New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg today signed a Bill into law that will ensure freedom for employees to practice religious beliefs at workplace.
The ‘Workplace Religious Freedom Bill’ was initiated by civil rights group Sikh Coalition and sponsored by Queens Democrat Council member Mark Weprin.
In signing the law, Bloomberg said employers must make a “reasonable accommodation” for an employee’s religious practices unless following such practises create an “undue hardship.” The undue hardship is now defined as requiring “significant expense or difficulty.” “This Bill sends the message that people should not have to choose between serving our city and adhering to their religious beliefs. All Americans should receive the full embrace of our country’s constitutional freedoms,” Weprin said.
Sikh Coalition’s programme director and co-founder Amardeep Singh said the law would ensure that religious minorities like Sikhs and Muslims in the US are not discriminated against by their employers for practising their religion.
“The law is a major step in ensuring Sikhs and other religious minorities are not unfairly excluded from jobs for which they are otherwise qualified,” Singh said. He said a few Sikhs were told by the New York Police Department (NYPD) that they could not wear their turbans as traffic agents.
Sikhs in the US will be allowed to wear turbans and grow beards in federal agencies like the police department and transit authority after New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg today signed a Bill into law that will ensure freedom for employees to practice religious beliefs at workplace.
The ‘Workplace Religious Freedom Bill’ was initiated by civil rights group Sikh Coalition and sponsored by Queens Democrat Council member Mark Weprin.
In signing the law, Bloomberg said employers must make a “reasonable accommodation” for an employee’s religious practices unless following such practises create an “undue hardship.” The undue hardship is now defined as requiring “significant expense or difficulty.” “This Bill sends the message that people should not have to choose between serving our city and adhering to their religious beliefs. All Americans should receive the full embrace of our country’s constitutional freedoms,” Weprin said.
Sikh Coalition’s programme director and co-founder Amardeep Singh said the law would ensure that religious minorities like Sikhs and Muslims in the US are not discriminated against by their employers for practising their religion.
“The law is a major step in ensuring Sikhs and other religious minorities are not unfairly excluded from jobs for which they are otherwise qualified,” Singh said. He said a few Sikhs were told by the New York Police Department (NYPD) that they could not wear their turbans as traffic agents.
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