On July 7, Elizabeth Cox,a teacher at Bishop England High School, a private Catholic institution, had
her contract terminated for various Facebook posts that supported pro-choice
views. Cox had been teaching at the school for sixteen years and had been
notified after the 2018/2019 school year that she would not be allowed to teach
the following year. The posts included (but were not limited to) a feminist
activist quote asserting gun purchases should go through as rigorous screenings
as abortions and a link to a story with the headline “Leslie Jones leads the
charge against Alabama’s abortion ban in the SNL season finale”. While Cox was
a teacher, she taught both secular and religious courses daily to her students.
Teachers
at Bishop England are required to sign a contract agreeing to speak publicly in
accordance with Catholic beliefs, regardless of whether they identify as Catholics.
The principle, Patrick Finneran, was quoted saying “Parents send their children
to [Bishop England] expressly because they want a Catholic teaching and
upbringing. Your public expression of disagreement with Catholic values
undermines that." In her lawsuit, Cox claims that her firing “violates
political rights and privileges of free speech guaranteed by the United States
Constitution and/or the Constitution of the State of South Carolina." Cox
wishes to be granted a monetary award and reinstatement to the school in her
same position.
The
question faced in this case has been disputed in other cases recently observed
on this blog (see Teacher fired for her pregnancy at a Tennessee Christian School and Should misgendering lead to termination?). The case asks whether or
not a teacher’s public posts can lead to a termination if those posts are against
the contractual beliefs of a private educational institution. The Supreme Court
has set precedent in relation to the lawful firing of religious institutions. In
2012, the Court ruled unanimously in Hossana-Tabor Evangelical Church andSchool v. EEOC in favor of religious private institutions. In this case, a
teacher, Cheryl Perich, was terminated from a private religious school after returning
from several months of sickness and taking out disability. The school argued that the “ministerial
exemption” should apply for this case. This exemption gives all religious institutions
the right to control employment matters for ministerial positions without the
court’s interference. The Supreme Court decided unanimously in favor of the
school, stating that the teacher was a ministerial position because she taught
daily religious classes to the students. Part of the reasoning for the court’s
decision was the fact that the teacher accepted the “formal call to religion”.
in her position through her commitment to the school.
Although
this case has not been decided in court yet, the precedent set by the Hossana
case helps us to predict the likely outcome. Although Elizabeth Cox was
fired for very different reasons than the Cheryl Perich, they both represent ministerial
positions within a private institution. Cox signed a contract at the beginning
of her employment that stated she had to act and speak according to Catholic
beliefs, which can be compared to the Supreme Court’s interpretation of Perich’s
acceptance of the “formal call to religion.” The main difference between this
set precedent and the Cox lawsuit is the infringement on free speech. Cox
believed that even though she signed a contract, her free speech rights on an
online social media cite should not be restricted by her employer. I believe
that the court will not even dispute the issue of free speech or what was posted.
They will focus solely on the fact that the private employee is viewed as a ministerial
position in court, and therefore can be fired and hired at the discretion of
the private institution. The wide definition set by the Supreme Court in Hosanna
of an employee being in a ministerial position removes many valid cases
from the court simply due to the set precedent.
The
court’s decision here and in many other cases cannot be simply thrown out due
to the employee’s status. Although private religious institutions should not be
held up to the same standards of nonreligious private or public organizations,
they should not be allowed to discriminate in hiring or restrict the free
speech of their employees. The Establishment Clause protects every individual’s
religious beliefs but does not protect those actions which conflict with a
compelling state interest. In the case of hiring and firing of employees, the religious
institutions should be allowed to express their beliefs, but not to
discriminate in all employment and termination instances. Even if the employee
represents the religious beliefs within their workday, religious organizations should
not be able to restrict their personal beliefs and speech during their free
time. The court set unconstitutional precedent in Hossana-Tabor Evangelical
Church and School v. EEOC, and this precedent continues to make waves
within the various courts of the nation.
4 comments:
I think the school firing her is constitutional. We've seen a lot of cases like this, when a private institution fires someone because they did not like what they said or did. I don't think her speech should protect her from being fired, even if she has a honest intentions. If the school feels the teacher is not representing the values they want, they are free to fire her. The first amendment does not protect people from the actions of other individuals.
I also believe that it was very much constitutional for this private religious establishment to fire this woman. While I have my own personal beliefs on whether or not one's social media should factor in to their standing at places of employment, I do not think this is an issue of constitutionality. The constitution gives individuals freedom of speech but not freedom from the repercussions that could come from one's peers or private employers.
I agree with the other commenters that firing this teacher is constitutional. The fact that she signed a contract before teaching saying that she would act and speak according to Catholic beliefs makes it okay. Even with the case of free speech, I think the school still has the upper hand in this case, giving them the right to fire her, because of the prior agreement she gave this institution about speaking and acting in a certain way.
The school's decision to fire the teacher is constitutional, and does not infringe on the first amendment. The existence of a contract makes this decision much clearer as well. The contract is a concrete explanation that there must be commitment to the values of the school on behalf of its employees, and should the employer find that their employee is not representing there school well they can fire them. Not only was she breaching the terms of her contract with the school, but the school is rightfully punishing her for determining that she was not living up to their standards.
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