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Try CasePortal for FreeJ. Shah partially grants the Chicago Transit Authority’s motion to dismiss a civil rights suit, brought by a former CTA worker who opposed the agency’s mandatory Covid-19 employee vaccination policy. The employee sought a religious exemption to the vaccine based on his beliefs, among others, that vaccines were “unclean” and contained pork products that his biblically mandated diet prevented him from ingesting. The CTA denied his exemption request and fired him after he refused to get the vaccine regardless. The worker subsequently brought a nine-count civil rights suit against the CTA, the majority of which the court now dismisses. The only counts to survive are an allegation that the CTA’s exemption denial violated the state and federal Religious Freedom Restoration Acts, and a Title VII claim under the 1964 Civil Rights Act.