http://www.star-telegram.com/business/story/233590.html
SHLACHTER, PEROTION, FUQUAY & CO.
Strike posed quandary for Jehovah's Witness
By Barry Shlachter, Jim Fuquay, Maria M. Perotin
Star-Telegram Staff Writers
Can a Jehovah's Witness participate in a union strike and still remain true to her faith?
That's what a Benbrook train dispatcher wondered when her union leaders ordered her to walk off the job in 2005 at Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway Co.
The ensuing dispute now has landed Jenny Moore and the union, the American Train Dispatchers Association, in court.
Here's Moore's version of events, according to the religious-discrimination lawsuit she filed against the union this week:
Moore, a practicing Jehovah's Witness, was on duty as a dispatcher when the union called for an immediate walkout by members in March 2005. She was unsure whether she could leave, because Jehovah's Witnesses aren't supposed to participate in any political action, including picketing.
Moore asked a union official for time to call a church elder for advice. He refused. She stayed on the job about two hours, and eventually reached a church leader. After the elder gave her the go-ahead, Moore left work. Union officials subsequently brought charges against Moore for disobeying orders and fined her $2,171. Moore believes that amounts to religious discrimination, and she wants the union to pay up.
Union President G.L. Melton said Wednesday that he hadn't seen Moore's suit. "I don't know what it's about or what she's alleging," Melton said. "I thought it was a settled deal."