Remember Hank the Septopus from Disney’s Finding Dory? I found his missing tentacle. And, my son ate it!
Other highlights of Day 3 (Epcot) of the Disney sojourn with the family:
- Breakfast with many princesses: Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, and Belle among others.
- Anna was taken with our Olaf.
- Two of us were mean-muggin‘. [Here’s some music for added effect].
- By mid-day, the kids were getting loopy (and loopier) without lunch.
- The one formerly known as Olaf discovered churros. And mom discovered a much-needed margarita.
- The Churro King almost took a trip to the E.R. (No, Child Protective Services, he regained his balance).
- And, then, the aforementioned tentacle.
Epcot Employment Law: The “Bona Fide Occupational Qualification”
I promised you an employment-law lesson. Here it is:
Ever wish you could just hire someone based on their religion, national origin, or sex? Well, if so, you’re a jerk. Probably.
You see, making employment decisions based on these protected classes is usually unlawful. Except, when religion, national origin, or sex is a bona fide occupational qualification — also known as a BFOQ.
What is a BFOQ? Here’s how I described it back in 2015:
Title VII permits employers to hire and employ employees on the basis of sex if sex is a BFOQ reasonably necessary to the normal operation of that particular business or enterprise. For a BFOQ defense to fly, the employer-defendant has to establish that the BFOQ … is a job qualification that’s essential to the employer’s business and relates to the employee’s ability to perform the job.
The same maxim also applies to national origin and religion — but never race. Hiring based on race is always unlawful.
So, think about Epcot. Specifically, consider the World Showcase, in which 11 countries are represented to give visitors the opportunity to feel what it’s like to eat, play, and drink (but, mostly eat and drink) their way around the world (but, really, around a big lagoon). Yesterday, I had breakfast in Norway, a drink in England (ok, Mexico too, happy?), and lunch in France.
Every employee I encountered in each country was actually from that country; literally traveled overseas or across a border to get to work at Epcot. That’s a long commute! 😉 Still, while being born in Germany is not a requirement to work in Epcot’s Germany, its employees must be “culturally authentic.” Indeed, the essence of the World Showcase is to give us a truly authentic experience. So, if national origin isn’t technically a BFOQ in much of Epcot, it’s pretty darn close.
That said, if you want to hire based on certain protected classes, remember, you need to have a darn good business reason to do so; the BFOQ defense is construed very narrowly.
So, instead, here’s a pro-tip: just stick with hiring the most qualified person for the job.
Have a nice weekend.