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Home » Patterson v. Walgreen Co.

Patterson v. Walgreen Co.

Justices hint interest in revisiting Title VII religious accommodation while declining to hear football coach prayer case

January 30, 2019 by Michael Peabody

It is debatable whether a claim by a public school football coach that he is compelled by religious belief to pray at the 50-yard line following each game is a good vehicle for addressing either free exercise or workplace religious accommodation. However, it does appear that the four justices who signed onto Alito’s response have concerns about the chilling effect of Hardison and Smith on the ability to even raise Title VII religious accommodation and Free Exercise Clause claims. With Patterson v. Walgreen Co., the Supreme Court has the opportunity to revisit religious accommodation claims under Title VII.

Filed Under: Employment Law, Free Exercise, Free Speech, Religious Accommodation, Supreme Court Tagged With: Patterson v. Walgreen Co., religious accommodation, religious freedom, religious liberty, Title VII, TWA v. Hardison

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“Barbarism, like the jungle, does not die out, but only retreats behind the barriers that civilization has thrown up against it, and waits there always to reclaim that to which civilization has temporarily laid claim.”

— Will Durant

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