Report highlights generational differences in workplace violence prevention training and reporting
Workplace safety
Federal law requires organizations to provide employees with a safe workplace environment to practice their religion. Additionally, an inclusive workplace where employees can express their religion, spirituality and beliefs creates a more fulfilling work experience and improves job satisfaction, morale and engagement.
Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, employers must reasonably accommodate employees sincerely held religious, ethical and moral beliefs or practices, unless doing so would impose an undue hardship on the employer.
There can be many types of requests for religious accommodation. Examples of modifications to workplace practices, policies or procedures include:
Title VII also protects employees from discrimination and harassment. The law prohibits activities that require or coerce employees to abandon, alter or adopt a religious practice as a condition of employment, as well as unwelcome remarks or conduct based on religion. Employees who profess to have no religious beliefs are also protected from discrimination and harassment under Title VII.
Although companies are not obligated to fulfill religious accommodations if they pose an undue hardship on the employer, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) states that “temporary costs, voluntary shift swapping, occasional shift swapping, or administrative costs” do not constitute undue hardships, even if they technically inflict some burdens on employers.
Recently the threshold to prove undue hardship was elevated by courts beyond more than an out-of-the-ordinary expense to the same level as the Americans with Disabilities Act’s (ADA) definition of undue hardship: an action requiring significant difficulty or expense.
The US Supreme Court’s 2023 Groff vs DeJoy ruling created a new, more rigorous standard for employers before concluding that a proposed accommodation for a religious belief or practice presents an undue hardship. It ruled that employers must accommodate an employee’s religious beliefs unless the burden of granting the accommodation would result in “substantial increased costs in relation to the conduct of its particular business.”
The Groff vs DeJoy decision places a heavier burden on employers who deny requests for religious accommodation. When faced with a request for religious accommodation, employers must consider all relevant factors, including, for example, whether the accommodation would cause sustained, increased monetary costs or decreased efficiency, whether it would detrimentally affect other employees’ schedules or day-to-day work life, and/or whether the accommodation would pose health or safety risks. An employer should only deny an accommodation request if it can point to concrete and substantial increased costs or other hardships that are excessive or unjustifiable.
As a result, employers should:
Retaliation against an employee for requesting religious accommodation constitutes religious discrimination under Title VII and EEOC regulations. If an employee requests not to work on Sundays, for example, and the manager reacts by giving that employee bad shifts the rest of the week, the employee could have a discrimination claim against the company.
Failure to legal comply with religious accommodations requests can have costly consequences to organizations. Employers could pay up to $300,000 to settle religious charges brought to the EEOC. In fiscal year 2023, the EEOC reported that organizations paid approximately $9.1 million to settle religion-based charges of discrimination.
Religious accommodations training can help organizations avoid legal pitfalls and cultivate a workplace where employees of all faiths feel valued and respected. Managers, in particular, have an important responsibility to handle employee religious accommodation requests with sensitivity and respect. Ensuring managers have the proper training, knowledge and tools to properly address requests for reasonable accommodation fosters an inclusive work environment where people feel confident that they will not be treated negatively for expressing their faith.
By implementing thoughtful policies and fostering an environment of understanding, employers can support their team’s spiritual needs and create a more welcoming and respectful workplace culture. Companies can take six steps to create religious diversity at work:
Organizations provide a more fulfilling experience for employees when they support the practice of religion, spirituality and beliefs at work. Traliant’s Disability, Pregnancy & Religious Accommodations training for employees and managers explains the legal requirements for accommodate religious expression and how to comply to reduce the risk of discrimination and harassment claims and fosters a respectful, diverse workplace in which employees can be successful in their jobs without compromising their religious beliefs.