SAN FRANCISCO — Lawyers for a Christian homeless shelter were in a federal appeals court Friday to challenge a Washington state anti-discrimination law that would require the charity to hire LGBTQ+ people and others who do not share its religious beliefs, including those on sexuality and marriage.
Union Gospel Mission in Yakima, about 150 miles (240 kilometers) southeast of Seattle, is asking the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to revive a lawsuit dismissed by a lower court. The Alliance Defending Freedom, a global legal organization, is assisting the mission.
Washington's Law Against Discrimination prohibits employers with at least eight employees from discriminating based on sexual orientation. Religious organizations are exempt, but the state's Supreme Court ruled in 2021 that the exemption should only apply to ministerial positions.
Yakima's Union Gospel Mission hires only co-religionists to advance its religious purpose and expects ''employees to abstain from sexual immorality, including adultery, nonmarried cohabitation, and homosexual conduct,'' according to court documents.
The Washington state attorney general's office said the mission sued preemptively and prematurely, based on speculation that it might be subject to enforcement one day, and that it is not investigating the Union Gospel Mission.
But members of the three-judge appellate panel on Friday expressed skepticism with the state.
Two judges nominated by former U.S. Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump, both Republicans, pressed Daniel Jeon, an assistant attorney general, to swear his office would not enforce the law against the charity.
Jeon said job descriptions and other information provided by the mission state that all staff employees are ministers to clients, donors and volunteers, and so do not fall under the law. But he said he could not disavow enforcement in the future if his office received other information. Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson is a Democrat and a champion of gay rights.