, sued after East Lansing in 2017 required sellers at the open-air market to abide by the same nondiscrimination rules imposed on city contractors.and his business in the lawsuit, said the rules were designed “to ban only Tennes from market participation.”said his Catholic faith wouldn’t allow him to host the ceremonies. His attorneys said the apple grower served all customers at the farmer’s market “without issue” as the suit progressed.
A spokeswoman for East Lansing officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the ruling.responded to a question posted on Facebook. He said Country Mill Farms wouldn’t host the ceremonies because of its owner’s faith. That online message came to the attention of city officials, one of whom said those beliefs were “‘bigot[ed],’ ‘ridiculous, horrible, [and] hateful,’” according to ADF senior counsel Katie Anderson, who argued the case in 2021 when the suit was filed.and his firm “were forced to choose between following their religious beliefs and a government benefit for which they were otherwise qualified.”
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