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Guidelines on Religious Freedom and Religious Expression in the Workplace Note: The "Guidelines on Religious Freedom and Religious Expression in the Federal Workplace" were issued by President Bill Clinton whilst in office, and address issues of religious expression and accommodation of religious practices, and forbid discrimination - for example, in hiring, firing, promoting or otherwise favoring or disfavoring employees - on the basis of their religion. These guidelines do not represent South African law, but rather should be read as possibe best practices. As our Courts grapple with the Religious Accommodation measures, we will refine these Guidelines to reflect uniquely South African experiences. Section 1: The basics first: Freedom of … or … Freedom from … Religion in the Workplace? Should the exercise of religion and religious expression in the workplace be prohibited by Corporate policy? Freedom of religion has always been interpreted as freedom from religion, too. And just as all employees have the right to worship as they please, so all have the right to not worship at all. The latter right has been relatively easy to exercise-as a non-worshiper you could always stay away from religious services, not watch television on early Sunday morning, close your front doors to missionaries, and/or escape to your office where proselytizing was forbidden. By permitting and regulating religious exercise and expression in the workplace, are you ready for the following situations? - Do I have to work on the Sabbath if I think it is a sin? - Can my company employ a full-time chaplain for employees? - Do I have to pay union dues if the union supports ...
- Can the stated purpose of my company be to glorify God? How would our law deal with the following scenarios:- -- an orthodox Jew who was fired because he would not work on the Sabbath; -- a Seventh-day Adventist terminated because he refused to work on Saturday; -- a Catholic who lost her job because she would not work on Christmas; -- a Muslim who nearly lost her job as a flight attendant because she wore a head covering. - a Catholic woman comes to work wearing an anti-abortion pin in the shape of a foetus. - inviting employees to a Christmas office party. Some Typical Situations Employers May be Faced With Religious discrimination cases frequently allege that an employer failed to accommodate an employee's need to "spread the word." But proselytizing which creates a hostile environment for other employees may create an undue hardship for an employer. Sometimes the best way to decide what you should do as a supervisor is to turn around and "look" at your options from your employees' point of view. Let's say you're a division chief in an agency which holds office Christmas parties. One of your employees asks if the division will have a party this year. How would you feel if the office had a Christmas party and you were an employee who doesn't celebrate Christmas? In a real case, an employee told a co-worker he dreaded December because employees kept wishing him a Merry Christmas, asking him if he were going away for Christmas, and inviting him to office Christmas parties. He was not Christian, and these questions made him feel that he didn't belong, that he was an outsider. When Denver Nuggets' basketball star Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf refused to stand during the playing of the national anthem before NBA games because of his Islamic beliefs, the public finally got a glimpse of what employment attorneys have known for some time: Religion in the work place is a very sticky issue. Whether it involves a multi-million dollar basketball star, a woman demanding that her employer allow her to wear an anti-abortion pin depicting a 20-week old fetus, Dillards Department Stores facing a class action lawsuit because it allegedly refused to hire individuals who would not work on Sundays, or a teacher's aide demanding the right to keep her hair in dreadlocks, religious discrimination lawsuits are appearing throughout the country in all work environments. The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals recently held that a supervisor's proselytizing created a hostile work environment. In Venters v. City of Delphi, 123 F.3d 956 (7th Cir. 1997), Ives, a born-again Christian, believed that his decisions as police chief should be guided by his faith. He made religious comments during work, routinely asked Venters, a dispatcher, if she had gone to church, and spoke about her salvation. Ives told Venters that "she had a choice to follow God's way or Satan's way, and that she would not continue working for him if she chose the latter." Ives also gave Venters religious materials while referring to her as an at-will employee. These comments were unwelcome by Venters, but she was afraid to ask Ives to stop. When she did ask him, she was fired. The court held that Venters had a right to work without Ives' scrutiny. Further, the Court held that Venters could request an accommodation (i.e., that Ives stop his work-time proselytizing). In another case, employee Wilson, a Roman Catholic, wore an anti-abortion button to work. The button bore a photograph of a fetus. Many employees reacted strongly. It disrupted work -- employees gathered to talk about the button; and some even threatened to walk off their jobs. The employer tried to accommodate Wilson, offering her three option. She could (1) only wear the button in her cubicle; 92) cover the button while at work; or (3) wear a button without a photograph. Wilson claimed that she could not cover or remove the button because she had promised to be a "living witness." She was fired when she continued to wear the button. Finding that the accommodation offered complied with her religious vow and reduced office turmoil, the Court held that even if Wilson's vow required her to be a "living witness," the employer could not reasonably accommodate that request. Wilson v U.S. West Communications, 58 F.3d 1337 (8th Cir. 1995).
Scenario 1 You are in a career ladder position and eligible for your next promotion. Your boss asks you to go to an activity at his church, but you don't go. All of a sudden your "automatic" promotion is held up. Your boss says that you haven't demonstrated that you can perform the duties at the higher level. What if you are the boss in this same scenario and the religious activity was your daughter's First Holy Communion and party afterwards. You are withholding the promotion for the reason stated above. Now the employee files a complaint that you withheld the promotion on religious grounds. How can you prove otherwise? Scenario 2 You have control over the conference rooms in your building. You routinely allow religious groups to use them at lunch time (a practice permitted under the guidelines). You've had Baptists, Buddhists, Catholics, and Muslims request rooms so far. There has been no problem; all of them have been quiet and all have left their rooms as clean as they received them. Today you receive a request for a room from a group of Satan worshipers who have announced they will be sacrificing a small animal as part of their religious ceremony. They assure you they will quiet and will leave the room as clean as they get it. You know that once word gets out about their ceremony there will be hell to pay. What do you do? Scenario 3 You're an Equal Employment Opportunity Officer with a staff of five, all of whom are devout Christians. They all wear crosses, all have Bibles on their desk, and on casual days wear tee shirts with religious expressions. During their breaks they read their Bibles and even have Bible study sessions over lunch. Non-Christian employees of your agency have complained to you that the environment in your own office is hostile to them. They cannot even discuss possible religious discrimination issues with your staff because they feel they won't be given a fair shake. What do you do? Scenario 4 Are you aware, that by allowing and regulating religious expression in the workplace, and in order not to be discriminatory, our constitution would also allow for the legitimate religious expression of all of the following "new" religious groups:- Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormons, Church of Scientology, New Age Activists, Moonies, Eastern Martial Arts practitioners, Free Masons (?), Traditional Healers and Sangomas Questions Should we continue the separation of church and state? Does Freedom of religion also means Freedom from religion. Isn't it easier to prohibit from the outset, religious expression in the workplace? How would you phrase such a policy statement? Section 2: Scope and Application of Guidelines The following Guidelines, addressing religious exercise and religious expression, shall apply to all employees, managers, suppliers and contract employees in the workplace, and shall extend to all business events and occassions. These Guidelines principally address employees' religious exercise and religious expression when the employees are acting in their personal capacity within the workplace and the public does not have regular exposure to the workplace. The Guidelines do not comprehensively address whether and when the Company and its employees may engage in religious speech directed at the public. Nor do the Guidelines define the rights and responsibilities of employees or agents who are employed/contracted or requested by the Company to fulfill specific religious functions or duties or tasks associated with meeting the requirements of specific religious groups. For example:-
Although these Guidelines, including the examples cited in them, should answer the most frequently encountered questions in the workplace, actual cases sometimes will be complicated by additional facts and circumstances that may require a different result from the one the Guidelines indicate. In such instances, any queries should be addressed to the Human Resources Department for advice and guidance in such individual instances. Section 3: General Guidelines for Religious Exercise and Religious Expression in the Workplace. Managers and Supervisors shall permit personal religious expression by employees to the greatest extent possible, consistent with requirements of law and interests in workplace efficiency as described in this set of Guidelines. Managers shall not discriminate against employees on the basis of religion, require religious participation or non-participation as a condition of employment, or permit religious harassment. Managers shall accommodate employees', exercise of their religion in the circumstances specified in these Guidelines. These requirements are but applications of the general principle that managers shall treat all employees with the same respect and consideration, regardless of their religion (or lack thereof). A. Religious Expression. As
a matter of law, managers shall not restrict personal religious expression
by employees in the workplace except where the employee's interest in the
expression is outweighed by the Company's interest in the efficient
provision of services or where the expression intrudes upon the legitimate
rights of other employees or creates the appearance, to a reasonable
observer, of an official endorsement of religion. The examples cited in
these Guidelines as permissible forms of religious expression will rarely,
if ever, fall within these exceptions. (1) Expression in Private Work Areas. Employees
should be permitted to engage in private religious expression in personal
work areas not regularly open to the public to the same extent that they may
engage in nonreligious private expression (see USA
"viewpoint discrimination" principle), subject to
reasonable content- and viewpoint-neutral standards and restrictions: such
religious expression must be permitted so long as it does not interfere with
the Company's or employee's carrying out of their official responsibilities. (2) Expression Among Fellow Employees. Employees
should be permitted to engage in religious expression with fellow employees,
to the same extent that they may engage in comparable nonreligious private
expression, subject to reasonable and content-neutral standards and
restrictions: such expression should not be restricted so long as it does
not interfere with workplace efficiency. Though managers are entitled to
regulate such employee speech based on reasonable predictions of disruption,
they should not restrict speech based on merely hypothetical concerns,
having little basis in fact, that the speech will have a deleterious effect
on workplace efficiency. (3) Expression Directed at Fellow Employees. Employees
are permitted to engage in religious expression directed at fellow
employees, and may even attempt to persuade fellow employees of the
correctness of their religious views, to the same extent as those employees
may engage in comparable speech not involving religion. Some religions
encourage adherents to spread the faith at every opportunity, a duty that
can encompass the adherent's workplace. As a general matter, proselytizing
is as entitled to constitutional protection as any
other form of speech -- as long as a reasonable observer would not interpret
the expression as Corporate endorsement of religion. Employees may urge a
colleague to participate or not to participate in religious activities to
the same extent that, consistent with concerns of workplace efficiency, they
may urge their colleagues to engage in or refrain from other personal
endeavors. But employees must refrain from such expression when a fellow
employee asks that it stop or otherwise demonstrates that it is unwelcome.
(Such expression by supervisors is subject to special consideration as
discussed in Section B(2) of these guidelines.) Where
the public has access to the workplace, all employees must be
sensitive to the Company's requirement that expression not create the
reasonable impression that the Company is sponsoring, endorsing, or
inhibiting religion generally, or favoring or disfavoring a particular
religion. The
Company may not discriminate against employees on the basis of their
religion, religious beliefs, or views concerning religion. No
manager may promote, refuse to promote, hire, refuse to hire, or otherwise
favor or disfavor, an employee or potential employee because of his or her
religion, religious beliefs, or views concerning religion. A
person holding supervisory authority over an employee may not, explicitly or
implicitly, insist that the employee participate in religious activities as
a condition of continued employment, promotion, salary increases, preferred
job assignments, or any other incidents of employment. Nor may a supervisor
insist that an employee refrain from participating in religious activities
outside the workplace except pursuant to otherwise legal, neutral
restrictions that apply to employees' off-duty conduct and expression in
general. The
law against workplace discrimination protects employees from being
subjected to a hostile environment, or religious harassment, in the
form of religiously discriminatory intimidation, or pervasive or severe
religious ridicule or insult, whether by supervisors or fellow workers.
Whether particular conduct gives rise to a hostile environment, or
constitutes impermissible religious harassment, will usually depend upon its
frequency or repetitiveness, as well as its severity. The use of derogatory
language in an assaultive manner can constitute statutory religious
harassment if it is severe or invoked repeatedly. A single incident, if
sufficiently abusive, might also constitute statutory harassment. However,
although employees should always be guided by general principles of civility
and workplace efficiency, a hostile environment is not created by the bare
expression of speech with which some employees might disagree. In a country
where freedom of speech and religion are guaranteed, citizens should expect
to be exposed to ideas with which they disagree. Law
requires that a Company accommodate employees' exercise of their religion
unless such accommodation would impose an undue hardship on the conduct of
the Company's operations. Though a Company need not make an accommodation
that will result in more than a de minimis cost to the Company, that
cost or hardship nevertheless must be real rather than speculative or
hypothetical: the accommodation should be made unless it would cause an
actual cost to the Company or to other employees or an actual disruption of
work, or unless it is otherwise barred by law. Supervisors
and employees must not engage in activities or expression that a reasonable
observer would interpret as a Company endorsement or denigration of
religion or a particular religion. Activities of employees need not be
officially sanctioned in order to violate this principle; if, in all the
circumstances, the activities would leave a reasonable observer with
the impression that the Company was endorsing, sponsoring, or inhibiting
religion generally or favoring or disfavoring a particular religion, they
are not permissible. Diverse factors, such as the context of the expression
or whether official channels of communication are used, are relevant to what
a reasonable observer would conclude. In applying the guidance set forth in section 1 of these policy guidelines, managers should consider the following legal principles.
It
is well-established that the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment
protects employees in the workplace. This right encompasses a right to
speak about religious subjects. The Free Speech Clause also prohibits the
Government from singling out religious expression for disfavored
treatment: "[P]rivate religious speech, far from being a First
Amendment orphan, is as fully protected under the Free Speech Clause as
secular private expression," Capitol Sq. Review Bd. v. Pinette, 115
S.Ct. 2448 (1995) (CAPITOL
SQUARE REVIEW AND ADVISORY BOARD et al. v. PINETTE et al).
Accordingly, in the Government workplace, employee religious expression
cannot be regulated because of its religious character, and such religious
speech typically cannot be singled out for harsher treatment than other
comparable expression. Title
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title
VII, Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended) makes it unlawful for
employers, both private and public, to "fail or refuse to hire or to
discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any
individual with respect to compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges
of employment, because of such individual's . . . religion." 42 U.S.C.
2000e-2(a)(1). The Government also is bound by the equal protection
component of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, which bars
intentional discrimination on the basis of religion. Moreover, the
prohibition on religious discrimination in employment applies with
particular force to the Government, for Article VI, clause 3 of the
Constitution bars the Government from enforcing any religious test as a
requirement for qualification to any Office. In addition, if a Government
law, regulation or practice facially discriminates against employees'
private exercise of religion or is intended to infringe upon or restrict
private religious exercise, then that law, regulation, or practice
implicates the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment. Last, under
the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, 42 U.S.C. 2000bb-1,( Religious
Freedom Restoration Act of 1993) governmental action that
substantially burdens a private party's exercise of religion can be
enforced only if it is justified by a compelling interest and is narrowly
tailored to advance that interest. The
ban on religious discrimination is broader than simply guaranteeing
nondiscriminatory treatment in formal employment decisions such as hiring
and promotion. It applies to all terms and conditions of employment. It
follows that the Government may not require or coerce its employees
to engage in religious activities or to refrain from engaging in religious
activity. For example, a supervisor may not demand attendance at (or a
refusal to attend) religious services as a condition of continued
employment or promotion, or as a criterion affecting assignment of job
duties. Quid pro quo discrimination of this sort is illegal. Indeed,
wholly apart from the legal prohibitions against coercion, supervisors may
not insist upon employees' conformity to religious behavior in their
private lives any more than they can insist on conformity to any other
private conduct unrelated to employees' ability to carry out their duties. Employers
violate Title VII's ban on discrimination by creating or tolerating a
"hostile environment" in which an employee is subject to
discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, or insult sufficiently severe or
pervasive to alter the conditions of the victim's employment. This
statutory standard can be triggered (at the very least) when an employee,
because of her or his religion or lack thereof, is exposed to
intimidation, ridicule, and insult. The hostile conduct -- which may take
the form of speech -- need not come from supervisors or from the employer.
Fellow employees can create a hostile environment through their own words
and actions. Title
VII requires employers "to reasonably accommodate . . . an employee's
or prospective employee's religious observance or practice" unless
such accommodation would impose an "undue hardship on the conduct of
the employer's business." 42 U.S.C. 2000e(j). For example, by
statute, if an employee's religious beliefs require her to be absent from
work, the Government must grant that employee compensation time for
overtime work, to be applied against the time lost, unless to do so would
harm the ability of the agency to carry out its mission efficiently. 5
U.S.C. 5550a. The Establishment Clause of the First Amendment prohibits the
Government -- including its employees -- from acting in a manner that
would lead a reasonable observer to conclude that the Government is sponsoring,
endorsing or inhibiting religion generally or favoring or disfavoring a
particular religion. For example, where the public has access to the
workplace, employee religious expression should be prohibited where the
public reasonably would perceive that the employee is acting in an
official, rather than a private, capacity, or under circumstances that
would lead a reasonable observer to conclude that the Government is
endorsing or disparaging religion. The Establishment Clause also forbids
employees from using Government funds or resources (other than those
facilities generally available to government employees) for private
religious uses. These
Guidelines shall govern the internal management of the civilian executive
branch. They are not intended to create any new right, benefit, or trust
responsibility, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or equity by
a party against the Company, its employees, its officers, or any person.
Questions regarding interpretations of these Guidelines should be brought
to the Human Resources Department (or Manager of each department). Section 6: Non-Compliance or Breach of Guidelines Some questions to
consider:- US Supreme Court Cases - Religion Agostini
v. Felton, 117 S. Ct. 1997 (1997) Boerne, Texas v. Flores , 117 S. Ct. 2157 (1997)Freedom of Religion-- Court agreed to consider the constitutionality of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA). A federal district court declared the act unconstitutional as a violation of the doctrine of separation of powers. However, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit reversed, holding that RFRA is constitutional. Decided June 25, 1997. CITY OF BOERNE, PETITIONER <I> v. <-i> P. F. FLORES, ARCHBISHOP OF SAN ANTONIO, AND UNITED STATES Capitol Square Review and Advisory Board v. Pinette , 114 S. Ct. 2481 (1995)Freedom of Speech/Freedom of Religion -- Whether a private party has the right to display an unattended religious symbol in a traditional public forum, even if the forum is located next to a governmental building. CAPITOL SQUARE REVIEW AND ADVISORY BOARD et al. v. PINETTE et al. -- CAPITOL SQUARE REVIEW AND ADVISORY BOARD, et al., PETITIONERS v. VINCENT J. PINETTE, DONNIE A. CARR and KNIGHTS OF THE KU KLUX KLAN Rosenberger v. University of Virginia , 115 S. Ct. 2510 (1995)Freedom of Speech/Freedom of Religion -- Whether a public university that pays printing costs for a number of student publications can deny that benefit to a student-run religious publication. RONALD W. ROSENBERGER, et al., PETITIONERS v. RECTOR and VISITORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA et al. Board of Education of Kiryas Joel Village School District v. Grumet ,114 S. Ct. 2481 (1994) -- Whether a state may create a special school district designed to serve a distinct religious community. BOARD OF EDUCATION OF KIRYAS JOEL VILLAGE SCHOOL DISTRICT, PETITIONER 93-517 v. LOUIS GRUMET et al. BOARD OF EDUCATION OF MONROE WOODBURY CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, PETITIONER 93-527 Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v. Hialeah , 508 U.S. 520 (1993)-- Whether a city may constitutionally enact ordinances that are designed to prohibit certain religious practices. CHURCH OF THE LUKUMI BABALU AYE, INC. and ERNESTO PICHARDO, PETITIONERS v. Lamb's Chapel v. Center Moriches Union Free School District , 508 U.S. 384 (1993)Freedom of Religion/Freedom of Speech -- Whether a local school district that allows its facilities to be used for social and civic purposes may prevent a religious organization from using the facilities to show a movie that presents family issues from a religious perspective. LAMB'S CHAPEL and JOHN STEIGERWALD, PETI TIONERS v. CENTER MORICHES UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT et al. Zobrest v. Catalina Foothills School District , 113 S. Ct. 2462 (1993)-- Whether a state would violate the Establishment Clause if it, pursuant to the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, provided a sign language interpreter for a child attending a Catholic high school. LARRY ZOBREST, et ux., et al., PETITIONERS v. CATALINA FOOTHILLS SCHOOL DISTRICT Lee v. Weisman , 505 U.S. 577 (1992)-- Whether a public school that includes prayers as part of a graduation ceremony violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. ROBERT E. LEE, individually and as PRINCIPAL OF NATHAN BISHOP MIDDLE SCHOOL, et al., PETITIONERS v. DANIEL WEISMAN etc. Note: The "Guidelines on Religious Freedom and Religious Expression in the
Federal Workplace" were issued by President Bill Clinton whilst in
office, and address issues of religious expression and accommodation of
religious practices, and forbid discrimination - for example, in hiring,
firing, promoting or otherwise favoring or disfavoring employees - on the
basis of their religion. |
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