Charee Stanley, a Detroit-based flight attendant for ExpressJet, filed a discrimination complaint today with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
The airline had agreed to give Stanley a religious accommodation, saying she could work out an arrangement with the other flight attendant on duty so they could serve alcohol instead.
She was suspended only after a colleague complained, said Lena Masri, an attorney with the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.
Stanley approached a supervisor in June after learning that her faith forbids not just consuming alcohol but also serving it.
Also Read
When the co-worker complained, Stanley was put on unpaid leave for a year, Masri said.
"She was placed on unpaid leave for following the instructions that ExpressJet airlines gave her," Masri said.
Masri claimed the complaint against Stanley was discriminatory, with the employee noting Stanley carried a book with "foreign writings" and wore a head scarf.
A spokeswoman for ExpressJet said in an emailed statement that the airline values diversity but could not comment on specific personnel matters.
ExpressJet has 9,000 employees, 388 planes and averages 2,200 flights each day, according to the company's website.