Does a
requirement that customers at Satmar-run stores in Brooklyn dress
modestly run afoul of human rights law? That is the question at issue in
the upcoming trial of seven businesses being sued by New York City’s
Commission on Human Rights for having signs in their storefronts
stating, “No shorts, no barefoot, no sleeveless, no low cut neckline
allowed in this store.”
Friday, 15 February 2013
NYC Suing Ultra-Orthodox for Posting Modesty Guidelines in Their Stores
The businesses are all located along a
two-block stretch of Lee Avenue, Williamsburg’s main Hasidic shopping
street, which bustles with cars and pedestrian shoppers during the week
but on Shabbos becomes silent but for the men wearing prayer shawls
hurrying to synagogue along the sidewalks.
“These stores are public accommodations,
and they are prohibited from posting any kind of advertisement
specifying a preference for one type of customer or another, or
expressing discrimination against one type or another,” said Clifford
Mulqueen, deputy commissioner and general counsel to the human rights
commission.
Public accommodation is a legal term meaning entities like stores, public or private, that are used by the public.
The signs are “pretty specific to
women,” Mulqueen said. “It seems pretty clear that it’s geared toward
women dressing modestly if they choose to come into the store, and that
would be discrimination.”
The virtually identical modesty signs
began appearing in Williamsburg store windows in 2011 and 2012, and the
human rights commission filed the lawsuits in August 2012. There is a
pre-trial meeting at court scheduled on March 12th, Mulqueen said.
The business owners are pushing back,
claiming that in fact it is the city’s bias against Satmar Hasidim that
is motivating the lawsuits.
“The only bias I see in these lawsuits
is a stereotype by the City Commission of Human Rights that ‘all Hasidim
must be guilty of discrimination because they’re all misogynists,’ ”
said Marc Stern, a civil rights expert who works as counsel to the
American Jewish Committee. Stern said he is informally advising the
attorney representing the businesses. “It reflects a bias on the part of
this commission.”
The stores named in the lawsuits range
from Friedman’s Depot, a grocery store, at one end of the stretch, to
Tiv-Tov hardware store, Lee Avenue Clothing Center, and Sander’s Bakery,
at the other end. Also being sued are Imperial Luggage and Gestetner
Printing.
They have moved, as a group, to have the
lawsuits dismissed, said Devora Allon, the lawyer representing the
businesses. She is an associate in the New York office of the law firm
Kirkland & Ellis.
“The complaints do not allege
discriminatory intent, and that is what the human rights law outlaws,”
she told Haaretz. “The signs do not actually discriminate between men
and women, and apply equally to men and women,” Allon said. “No service
was ever denied on the basis of how somebody was dressed.”
Kirkland is representing the
Williamsburg owners on a pro bono basis because, Allon said, the outcome
of the cases “has implications for religious rights, and for religious
freedoms.”
Stern said that the complaints “were self-generated by the commission.”
“It’s not even clear these store owners ever enforced the signs,” said Stern. “Where’s the evidence?”
But Mulqueen of the commission said that people in Williamsburg “complained to us about having to observe these standards.”
Businesses are allowed to set dress
codes, said Stern, citing as examples private clubs in Manhattan, where
“if you walked in in shorts and a halter top, you’d be tackled by the
old doorman.” He also said that employment discrimination courts have
determined that each gender can have a different dress code, such as
requiring skirts for women and suit and tie for men. “They’ve even
upheld the Hooters dress code,” which requires female servers to wear
skimpy orange hotpants and cleavage-baring tops, he said.
“How is it, within three miles of the
city commission’s office, there are God knows how many restaurants with
different gender-based dress codes, and the city commission doesn’t
pursue them?” said Stern. “If those don’t get challenged why does this?”
http://www.haaretz.com/
Posted @ 16:44
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