The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
Facts About Religious Discrimination
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
l964 prohibits employers from discriminating against
individuals because of their religion in hiring, firing, and other
terms and conditions of employment. The Act also requires employers
to reasonably accommodate the religious practices of an employee or
prospective employee, unless to do so would create an undue
hardship upon the employer (see also 29 CFR l605). Flexible
scheduling, voluntary substitutions or swaps, job reassignments and
lateral transfers are examples of accommodating an employee's
religious beliefs.
Employers cannot schedule examinations or other selection
activities in conflict with a current or prospective employee's
religious needs, inquire about an applicant's future availability
at certain times, maintain a restrictive dress code, or refuse to
allow observance of a Sabbath or religious holiday, unless the
employer can prove that not doing so would cause an undue
hardship.
An employer can claim undue hardship when accommodating an
employee's religious practices if allowing such practices requires
more than ordinary administrative costs. Undue hardship also may be
shown if changing a bona fide seniority system to accommodate one
employee's religious practices denies another employee the job or
shift preference guaranteed by the seniority system.
An employee whose religious practices prohibit payment of union
dues to a labor organization cannot be required to pay the dues,
but may pay an equal sum to a charitable organization.
Mandatory "new age" training programs, designed to improve
employee motivation, cooperation or productivity through
meditation, yoga, biofeedback or other practices, may conflict with
the non-discriminatory provisions of Title VII. Employers must
accommodate any employee who gives notice that these programs are
inconsistent with the employee's religious beliefs, whether or not
the employer believes there is a religious basis for the employee's
objection.
See also: How To File A Charge of Employment Discrimination
This page was last modified on June 28, 2002.
The above article was reprinted from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Check the EEOC website for any changes to the article.