Earlier this month, several DC firefighters and paramedics filed a motion asking that their employer be held in contempt for enacting (and enforcing) a policy that prohibits workers from having facial hair and beards. The four workers that filed the motion have argued they have beards as a result of their religion. According to the complaint, they were removed from field duty in March of 2020 after a policy was implemented preventing workers from having facial hair. (The policy went into place around the start of the Covid pandemic.) In their motion, the workers point to a 2009 decision in Potter v. District of Columbia in which a federal court held that workers have a right to facial hair for religious reasons. Consequently, the workers argue that their employer cannot prohibit them from having a beard under Potter. At the time the policy was issued in 2020, the employer stated its prohibition on facial hair was intended to allow its workers t...