By Eric B. Meyer
Do you know what to do if an employees comes into your office asking for a shift change or some other workplace accommodation because of a sincerely-held religious belief?
In Jackson v. Longistics Transportation, Inc., a husband and wife who worked for Longistics, a trucking company, were members of Christian church that adhered to the Jewish Torah. Accordingly, they requested a religious accommodation and asked out of assigned runs from Friday at sundown to Saturday at sundown. Twice, however, the plaintiffs were assigned runs that spanned the Jewish Sabbath and claimed that they were subsequently reprimanded for failing to work. They subsequently sued.
Title VII makes it unlawful to discriminate against an employee on the basis of religion. The Act broadly defines “religion” to mean all aspects of religious observance and practice, as well as belief. To make an initial showing of religious discrimination in a failure to accommodate case, a plaintiff must establish three elements:
If the plaintiff meets this initial burden, the employer must then show that it could not accommodate the request without suffering an undue hardship; i.e., something more than a de minimis cost.
In Jackson, the court determined that the plaintiffs had met the three-part test and, therefore, could present their case to a jury.
First, Longistics did not dispute that the Jacksons were sincere in their religious beliefs. Second, the Jacksons informed Longistics of their religious accommodation issue. Third, the court found that the plaintiffs had, in fact, received written reprimands.
Finally, the court found that Longistics failed to offer evidence that it actually provided an accommodation or that the Jacksons’s requested accommodation would have resulted in an undue hardship.
So how should this go down, if you receive a religious-accommodation request? Here are eight best practices straight from the EEOC.
This was originally published on Eric B. Meyer’s blog, The Employer Handbook.