AUSTIN, Texas – Alliance Defending Freedom attorneys filed suit Thursday in federal court on behalf of Dr. Andrew Fox against the city for firing the former volunteer chaplain of the Austin Fire Department for sharing his religious view on his personal blog, in violation of his First Amendment rights.
Dr. Fox is an ordained minister who started Austin’s fire chaplaincy program
and served as the city’s lead chaplain—a volunteer position—for eight years.
After sharing on his personal blog his religious and commonsense view that men
and women are biologically different and men should not compete on women’s
sports teams, city officials demanded that Dr. Fox recant and apologize for
expressing that view, and then proceeded to fire him.
“Everyone should be able to speak freely without fear of the government coming
after you just because you expressed a view they disagree with,” said ADF Senior
Counsel Ryan Bangert. “Dr. Fox served Austin’s fire department—without pay—for
eight years with excellence and integrity, treating everyone equally, including
those in the LGBT community. But none of that mattered to city officials when
he shared one opinion on his personal blog that they didn’t like. No matter
your personal view on whether men should be allowed to compete on women’s
sports teams, it should deeply concern every American that the government can
fire someone for expressing it.”
As the complaint in Fox v. City of Austin filed in the U.S.
District Court for the Western District of Texas, Austin Division, states: “For
eight years, Dr. Fox walked side-by-side with first responders and their
families, providing a listening ear and source of prayer as they encountered
deaths, suicides, and other tragedies. For eight years, Dr. Fox provided all
firefighters with consistent care and equal treatment no matter who they were,
including those in the LGBT community. For eight years, Dr. Fox treated everyone
he encountered with dignity and respect as he ministered to others in
accordance with his religious beliefs and fire department policy. And he did
this all voluntarily—without pay—out of love for the men and women who
sacrificially serve their community.”
The complaint continues: “No one ever accused him of discriminating against
anyone or treating anyone improperly. To the contrary, the City lauded him for
his integrity and service. Dr. Fox consistently shared his religious and
philosophical reflections online for years without any problem. It was only
when Dr. Fox expressed a particular set of views that officials disliked that
the City extinguished Dr. Fox’s career.… Americans cannot learn to respect each
other’s differences when they face career-crushing consequences anytime their
personal beliefs, expressed openly on their own time outside of work,
contradict the ideological commitments of some HR officials.”
Dr. Fox, who is a resident of Williamson County, Texas, served in a voluntary
capacity as lead chaplain of the Austin Fire Department for eight years until
his dismissal in December 2021.
ADF attorneys successfully litigated and won a religious liberty case on behalf
of Atlanta’s fire chief in Cochran
v. City of Atlanta.
Alliance Defending Freedom is an alliance-building, non-profit legal
organization committed to protecting religious freedom, free speech, parental
rights, and the sanctity of life.
No comments:
Post a Comment