Prayer Meeting
SENOJ
13 Posts
One of our employees has started a prayer group in the warehouse. We have informed him and others all non-suctioned meetings must be held off the clock. In your opinion, should we even allow a "religious" meeting in the building? HR has offered the EAP to help with the troublesome issues they are facing.
Please respond.
Please respond.
Comments
we have several muslim ee's here that make their prayers every day at the same time each day...we also have groups that meet during lunch hours...weight watchers, walkers, parent's assoc. if we forbid religious meetings, I would think we'd have to forbid all meetings...and then attempt to define what constitutes a "meeting"...no more than 3 ee's may have lunch together???
Private employers do not have to completely neutralize their environment with respect to religion, but the issues that can be created might have a major impact on the companies ability to get to a healthy bottom line.
If you have a diverse workforce, the EEs that do not share the same belief system being promoted in the prayer groups can be put in awkward situations with respect to their fellow co-workers. Especially if it looks like company leadership tacitly approves of the beleif system being practiced. If managers and others in positions of authority are directly involved, it can create a perceived atmosphere of favortism and gentle (or not so gentle) pressure to join in and become a part.
Then what do you do if the the athiests or the satan worshipers want to do the same. Quite suddenly you have started to treat these groups inconsistently and have cracked the lid on Pandora's Box. This could lead you to write some large checks to your attorneys to defend your actions.
So unless your company is ready to take some sort of official stance on these types of issues, I would not allow these types of things to be tacitly approved by having them on site.
The only way I would approach this issue at all is if the group is stopping work to join in prayer, thus violating the work rules of the company. But the prayer would not be the issue. The work stoppage would be.
However, I agree with Don, as well. You would set aside a quiet place for a Muslim employee to pray in your offices as a reasonable accommodation - why not a group of people sharing their faith? As long as it's not on company time or interfering with productivity, I see no reason such a meeting can't be accommodated.
Even if you take the "as long as I don't notice it approach"...then you may find yourself attempting to explain why you noticed the prayer group, but failed to notice the large group of ee's in the lotus position on the front lawn.
The other guy in the meeting was off the hook. He came up with this whole Rastifarian religious view that set them back on their heels. Fortunately for me, they spent all their time discussing his perspective and very little on mine. At the end of the meeting, the President (my boss) said that it had been interesting and informative, but he thought the workplace was not the right forum for this kind of discussion and that the experiment was concluded and thanks for attending.
Just a few months later the Rastifarian was out of work. I refuse to believe there was a connection with this meeting, but my cycnical, evil twin wonders who I think I am kidding.
* If the prayer group or bible study is off work hours
* If attendance is voluntary
* If there are no complaints of evangalicizing (yikes, is that how you spell it?) or loud noises or uncomfortableness for some reason
Then why forbid it? If something does happen and someone becomes upset and tells HR about it, I believe as long as you promptly and thoroughly investigate and resolve it - either tell them to tone it down or stop it altogether (depending on the complaint) - that the courts will be favorable to the employer.
I dunno, just must be my mood this week, that HR is becoming afraid of its own shadow.
Secondly I do not believe religious accomodation would require you to allow a prayer group.
I'm not going to change your mind and your not going to change mine. So, get in the last word and we'll move on to more productive things. I've got some chicken (sorry Pork), a cold beer and some wonderful children waiting at home for me and I'm going there. Don, have a cold one on me.
>victims to start a support group at a plant?
>Talk about ridiculous."
No, my friend, I'm talking about two people, perhaps with AIDS, maybe even three of them for God's sakes, offending others by having the nerve to sit down together discussing their personal situations and plight in life. And they do it every morning on their break. And sometimes they cry and whisper and look funny at others. No different from the two people who are seated in quiet prayer.
"Second, explain to me
how burn victims, the blind and the mentally
>retarded can offend someone the same way that a
>catholic or baptist would (in a prayer group
>that the company allows) stating that if you
>don't believe in Jesus Christ, you are going to
>hell? How would a jew or muslim feel?"
The scenario you now paint is 180 degrees from people quietly praying. The post was about people praying, not having a hellfire and damnation oration, telling others they are going to hell.
>"Secondly I do not believe religious accomodation
>would require you to allow a prayer group."
That would be 'thirdly', your BP is running rampant. This is really not about one of us changing the mind of the other. This is about the law. Perhaps you might have a conversation with a labor attorney.
Lastly, PORK will have your hide for mentioning chicken!
I would rather not pay my attorney to resolve our disagreement, so I'll ask the attorneys in the forum. If I have somebody come to me and ask to start a prayer group and that group would pray and discuss their faith during their 15 minute break, would I have to accomodate? For Ho ho's let's say they are catholic.
We've discussed in the past allowing Muslims a place and a time to say their required daily prayers. Do you allow them to do that? Individually or maybe a small group? If so, then you must allow Christians, Jews, etc. Hey, what about Wiccans - got to include them.
We must be consistent and not show a preference, so either it is acceptable for all or it is not acceptable for all. As an Evangelical Christian, I have very firm beliefs. But, when "on the clock" (and being exempt, that is all day while on premises) my time is my employers. I am being paid to work, not proselytize.
So, the answer depends on your specific company - the culture, the amount of diversity, the willingness to accept or tolerate other faiths. If by allowing one group to meet it will create a problem with others wanting to and your facility feels like it is being turned into an ecumenical worship center and not a place of business, then forbid it. If your ee's are relatively homogeneous and a group meeting, on their own time, for Bible study and prayer will not be disruptive, then allow it. If allowed, it should be private - not our where it could offend others.
"So, the answer depends on your specific company - the culture, the amount of diversity, the willingness to accept or tolerate other faiths.."