minoanmiss (
minoanmiss) wrote in
agonyaunt2021-04-26 11:58 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
Ask a Manager: Where’s the line on religious accommodation?
I was curious about where the line is on religious accommodation, and at what point it’s okay to say an accommodation cannot be made. Also, I know for many things you recommend that candidates let the hiring team know of any accommodations they need at the offer stage (which makes perfect sense) but what if they don’t say anything until their first couple of weeks?
I had an employee who needed an accommodation that allowed them to take lunch at a different time from the rest of the company once a week. This was somewhat inconvenient but I was able to accommodate them. Later they let me know that they were going to need additional accommodations, which again were doable but inconvenient. I also noticed that their work performance suffered during certain times when they told me they needed to fast for their religion. I felt that I couldn’t bring this up as I was worried about being accused of violating a religious accommodation. They didn’t make me aware of any of these needed accommodations until they’d been hired and working for a couple of weeks. At one point it was suggested that in order for me to accommodate this employee I would need to work additional hours (unpaid as I am salaried and exempt). I was able to push back on that but it was stressful and I had to use some capital I don’t think I should have had to use.
I was able to accommodate this employee with minimal frustration, but what if it hadn’t been as easy? What if there’d been a standing meeting that they were needed for during the time they needed to take their lunch that couldn’t be easily moved? I want to be as supportive and flexible as possible but at what point am I able to say “this goes past reasonable”?
The law says employers must accommodate employees’ religious needs unless it would cause “undue hardship.” The bar for undue hardship is pretty high — generally something that’s costly, compromises people’s safety, requires others to do more than their share of difficult or undesirable work, or infringes on other employees’ rights. Moving a meeting likely doesn’t meet that bar, although you having to work more hours probably would.
If the person’s work performance suffered when they were fasting, I’d look at how you handle it when someone else’s work performance suffers because they’re sick, tired, hungry, etc. Presumably you figure that everyone has ups and downs and unless it becomes a pattern, it’s generally just part of working with humans. (I’m assuming the fasting periods were relatively rare. If they weren’t, then you’d address the performance issues just like you would any other — no need to bring the fasting into it.)
But it’s absolutely fine that the employee didn’t address the accommodations they needed until a few weeks on the job. There’s no requirement, ethical or legal, that they address it earlier than that. (Keep in mind that you can’t legally rescind a job offer over it, so there’s no real reason you needed to hear it earlier; it’s fine for them to raise it when they’re comfortable raising it.)
Re: I am not a religious scholar, this is dregs of memory
That being said different rabbis will interpret that differently. Some rabbis will say that the principle (pikuach nefesh) really only applies when a life is on the line, not just someone's comfort, so it wouldn't apply, for, say, prilosec or a painkiller or something that is just a quality of life med. Most rabbinic authorities are very liberal about medical care but it's not unheard of for one not to be.
(Also the Target pharmacists refusing to fulfill oral contraceptive prescriptions are also following a radical interpretation of the rules (which is to say, no papal bull ever said "and by the way you can totally take a job where your job is to police whether non-catholics get to have prescribed horomones and then just refuse to sell them"), so it would be fair turnabout for a Jewish pharmacist to do the same thing.)
Re: I am not a religious scholar, this is dregs of memory
Considering how often under-medicated chronic pain leads to suicide, I would argue that painkillers = lives ARE on the line.
Re: I am not a religious scholar, this is dregs of memory
(Why this doctrine doesn't apply to a married couple using condoms when one partner is HIV+, an interpretation specifically rejected by Benedict's Vatican remains an infuriating puzzle.)
Re: I am not a religious scholar, this is dregs of memory
Re: I am not a religious scholar, this is dregs of memory
Re: I am not a religious scholar, this is dregs of memory
Here's how I found my first ob/gyn, junior year of high school: the whisper network in my class, that said "If you go to Doctor Excellent-ObGyn, and say, I have cramps, it turns out that Doctor Excellent-ObGyn is not stupid about what it means when a 16 year old girl volunteers for a pelvic exam, and she will write you a prescription for the pill for 'dysmenorrhea.'"
Re: I am not a religious scholar, this is dregs of memory
Flash forward to last year when Teenager was having super-bad cramps, and her pediatrician recommended them off the bat (Teenager calls them her "anti-baby meds," which cracks me up, because she still thinks boys are kind of buttheads.). My mother, who had kind of flipped when I left them out on the desk of my dorm junior year, replied that, oh yeah, Oldest Niece had done that. I really wish doctors had thought that way when I was a teen, because I'd have been saved a lot of pain and other problems.
*I was one of about seven women faculty who brought it up during the next contract negotiation. It have never been opposed, just, well, stuffy old men hadn't thought of it.