EEOC Notice N-915.022
- SUBJECT: Policy guidance on "new age" training programs
which conflict with employees' religious beliefs.
- PURPOSE: This policy guidance is intended to provide guidance
in the handling of cases where an employee objects to participating
in a training program because it utilizes techniques or exercises which
conflict with the employee's religious beliefs.
- EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon receipt.
- EXPIRATION DATE: As an exception to EEOC Order 203.001, Appendix
B. Attachment 4, §a(5), this Notice will remain in effect until
rescinded or superseded.
- ORIGINATOR: Office of Legal Counsel.
- INSTRUCTIONS: This notice supplements the instructions in §628
of Volume II of the Compliance Manual, Religious Accommodation, and
should be inserted after p. 628-20.
I. INTRODUCTION
Employers are increasingly making use of training programs designed to
improve employee motivation, cooperation, or productivity through the
use of various so-called "new age" techniques.
- For example, a large utility company requires its employees to attend
seminars based on the teachings of a mystic, George Gurdjieff, which the
company claims has helped improve communications among employees.
- Another corporation provides its employees with workshops in stress
management using so-called "faith healers" who read the "auras"
of employees and contact with the body's "fields of energy"
to improve the health of its employees.
- Specialists in employee training say that "most of the nation's
major corporations and numerous government agencies have hired some consultants
and purveyors of similar 'personal growth' training programs in recent
years."
- The programs utilize a wide variety of techniques: meditation, guided
visualization, self-hypnosis, therapeutic touch, biofeedback, yoga, walking
on fire, and inducing altered states of consciousness.
- These programs focus on changing individual employee's attitudes and
self-concepts by promoting increased self-esteem, assertiveness, independence,
and creativity in order to improve overall productivity.
- Some employees have objected to participating in these programs because
they view them as promoting values different from their own and as conflicting
with their religious beliefs.
- Another employee argued that a training program that "focused everything
on the self" as the center and source of energy conflicted with his
belief that human fate is dependent on the "will of God."
- Although the courts and the Commission have not addressed the particular
conflicts raised by the "new age" training programs, this issue
can be resolved under the traditional Title VII theory of religious accommodation.
While there may be some disagreement over whether the training programs
themselves are religious, an employee need only demonstrate that participation
in the programs in some manner conflicts with his/her personal religious
beliefs.
II. THE NATURE OF RELIGIOUS BELIEF UNDER TITLE VII
The Commission defines religious practices to include moral or ethical
beliefs as to what is right or wrong which are sincerely held with the
strength of traditional religious views.
- This is adopted from the Supreme Court's determination in Seeger
that religion need only be "(a) sincere and meaningful belief which
occupies in the life of its possessor a place parallel to that filled
by ... God [in other religions]."
- Even those religious beliefs that others may find "incomprehensible
or incorrect" are protected under Title VII.
- Therefore, an employer may not judge the veracity or reasonableness
of the religious beliefs of an employee.
- A religious belief or practice need not be based upon a traditional
religion
- and does not have to be a belief held as tenet by others of the same
religion
- Moreover, the Commission has held that protected religious belief also
includes the freedom not to believe.
- The only limitations on a belief protected under Title VII are that
it must be religious as opposed to social, political, or economic in nature
- and it must be sincerely held.
- That the employer or the sponsor of a "new age" program believes
there is no religious basis for, or content to, the training or techniques
used is irrelevant to determining the need for accommodation. If an employee
believes that some aspect of the training program conflicts with his/her
own beliefs, an employer may only inquire as to what the employee's beliefs
are and consider the sincerity with which the employee holds those beliefs.
The employer may not base its decision to accommodate the employee's religious
beliefs on its (the employer's) own evaluation of whether the training
or the techniques used actually conflict with the employee's religious
beliefs. An employer may not reject an employee's request for accommodation
on the basis that the employee's beliefs about the "new age"
training seem unreasonable.
III. EMPLOYER'S DUTY TO ACCOMMODATE
Under §701(j) of Title VII an employer must provide reasonable accommodation
for an employee's or prospective employee's religious needs unless to
do so would create an undue hardship on the conduct of the employer's
business.
-
The need for accommodation most frequently arises where an individual's
religious belief, observances, or practices conflict with a specific task
or requirement of the employee's job. For example, an employee may object
to participating in a training exercise involving self-hypnosis because
his religion teaches that a person should always be in control of his/her
thoughts in order to make correct moral choices. The employer's duty to
accommodate will usually entail making a special exception from or adjustment
to the particular training requirement so that the employee is able to
comply with the dictates of his/her religious beliefs.
Where an employee notifies an employer that his/her religious beliefs
conflict with a particular training technique or method used in a "new
age" training program, an employer may accommodate the employee's
belief by substituting an alternative technique or method not offensive
to the employee's belief or by excusing the employee from that particular
part on the training program. The employer may have to excuse the employee
from the entire program where the employee contends that the program is
based on a concept contrary to his/her beliefs, unless the employer can
show undue hardship.
Because an employer may not impose any religious requirements on the
terms or conditions of employment, an employer who in any way penalizes
an employee who has been excused from participating in a training program
because of religious conflicts discriminates on the basis on religion.
Moreover, an employer may be required to provide alternative training
as part of reasonably accommodating the employee's religious beliefs unless
it can show undue hardship. Exempting an employee from a training program
without providing alternative training may disadvantage the employee with
respect to his/her employment opportunities.
Example: R requires its employees, as part of
a training program, to participate in a form of meditation that involves
emptying one's mind of all thoughts by repeating a meaningless word. CP
objects to participating in this exercise because it conflicts with his
religious belief that a person should always keep his mind open to "divine
inspiration." R must accommodate CP's religious belief by excusing
him from this exercise even though R, the sponsor of the training program,
and other employees believe that this form of meditation does not conflict
with any religious beliefs.
The employer may also be liable where the training program is explicitly
based upon religious beliefs.
- Under Title VII an employer is obligated to maintain a working
environment free of coercion or intimidation based on religion.
In this situation, an employer discriminates not only against employees
and potential employees whose individual religious beliefs conflict
with the training program but also against employees and potential
employees who choose not to have religious beliefs.
Example: R requires its employees, as part of a training
program, to participate in a form of meditation that involves emptying
one's mind of all thoughts by repeating a meaningless word. The employees
are taught that this meditation will bring them into contact with the
"ultimate reality of the universe" which empowers them to reach
the "supreme authentication" of their "True Self"
and to become one with "All That That Is." R must accommodate
the religious beliefs of its employees by excusing from this exercise,
not only those employees who object because this conflicts with their
religious beliefs, but also employees who object because they have chosen
not to have religious beliefs. In addition, R's policy of requiring employees
to attend a religiously oriented program discriminates on its face against
all employees and potential employees on the basis of religion.
The issue of "new age" training programs is Non-CDP. Charges
involving this issue should be sent to Headquarters until further notice.
Contact Coordination and Guidance Services at FTS 634-6423 for instructions.
Approved: Clarence Thomas
Chairman
Date 9/2/88
____________
- Gurus Hired to Motivate Workers Are Raising Fears of 'Mind Control.'
(hereinafter Gurus) N.Y.Times, April 17, 1987, §A at 18;
New Age Harmonies, Time Mag., Dec. 7, 1987 at 62.
- Gurus, supra, n.1.
- New Age Harmonies, supra, n.1 at 62-63.
- Gurus, supra, n.1.
- New Age Harmonies, supra, n.1 at 64, 69.
- Gurus, supra, n.1.
- Id.
- Id.
- Id.
- Guidelines on Discrimination Because of Religion, 29, C.F.R. §1605.1,
"Religious" nature of a practice or belief.
- Commission Decision No. 76-104, CCH EEOC Decisions (1983) 6500 (The
Commission determined that if religion were construed more narrowly
for Title VII purposes than it is in the context of §6(j) of the
Military Training and Service Act, then Title VII's proscription of
religious discrimination would conflict with the First Amendment's Establishment
Clause), citing United States v. Seeger, 380 U.S. 163, 176
(1965) (the Court defines religion under §6(j) of the Universal
Military Training and Service Act, 50 U.S.C.A. App. §456(j) (1968);
see Compliance Manual §628.4(b), "Religious" Nature of
a Practice or Belief, p. 628-4.
- See Commission Decision No. 76-104, CCH EEOC Decisions (1983)
para; 6500, citing Welsh v. United States, 90 S. Ct. 1792,
1796 (1970).
- See Callan v. Woods, 663 F.2d 679, 685 (9th Cir. 1981) (held
"in applying the free exercise clause of the First Amendment, courts
may not inquire into the truth, validity, or reasonableness of a claimant's
religious beliefs,"); United States v. Rasheed, 663 F.2d
843, 847 (9th Cir. 1981) (validity of religious beliefs cannot be questioned);
(note that since the Commission has adopted the standards enunciated
by the Supreme Court in Seeger and Welsh, guidance
can also be obtained from lower courts applying the same rule).
- Commission Decision No. 81-33, CCH EEOC Decisions (1983) para; 6828
(CP who sincerely holds a belief with the strength of traditional religious
views does not have to prove that others hold or share his belief);
29 CFR §1605.1.
- Thomas v. Review Board of Indiana Employment Security Division,
450 U.S. 707, 715-16, 25 EPD 31.622 (1981) (religious beliefs need not
be universally held within religion in order to qualify as religious
or in order to be entitled to protection); 29 CFR §1605.1.
- Commission Decision No. 72-1114, CCH EEOC Decisions (1973) para;
6347 (however, the Title VII protection which is given to those who
have chosen not to believe is only applicable to those who choose not
to believe in a particular religious practice, belief, or in religion
itself); see Young v. Southwestern Savings and Loan Association,
509 F.2d 140, 9 EPD 9995 (5th Cir. 1975) (supervisor told employee that
she had a duty to attend staff meetings at which prayer and devotionals
were conducted; held, employer obligated to accommodate employee's religious
beliefs which include the freedom not to believe).
- See Seeger, 380 U.S. at 173; see also United States v.
MacIntosh, 283 U.S. 605, 633-634 (1931); for an example, see
Compliance Manual §628.4(2), p. 628-6.
- United States v. Rasheed, 663 F.2d 843, 847 (9th Cir. 1981)
("although the validity of religious beliefs cannot be questioned,
the sincerity of the person claiming to hold such beliefs can be questioned,"
citing Seeger, 380 U.S. at 185); see Compliance Manual
§628(b)(2), p. 628-5, for instructions for determining whether
a religious practice or belief requires protection.
- 42 U.S.C §2000(e)(j) (1976); 5 CFR §1605.2(b)(1).
- The mere assumption that many more people with the same religious
belief as the individual may also need accommodation is not sufficient
evidence of undue hardship. See Commission Decision Nos. 81-83
and 72-0606, at CCH EECO Decisions 6828 (1983) and 6310 (1973) and Compliance
Manual §628.7(a), pp. 628-23 & 24.
- See C.D. No. 72-0528, CCH EEOC Decisions (1973) para; 6316
(R has continuing policy of conducting, on its premises and during regular
work hours, a weekly meeting which includes prayer recitals, hymn singing
and sermons from local clergymen; all employees, regardless of individual
religious persuasion or moral code, are urged to attend; R's policy
on its face discriminates against all employees and potential employees
who do not desire to attend such meetings because of their individual
religious beliefs or lack of any religious beliefs); State of Minnesota
v. Sports and Health Club, 392 N.W.2d 320, 41 EPD 36.617 (1986)
(employer permitted only born again Christians to hold management positions,
required managers to attend weekly Bible studies, and suggested that
other personnel also attend, held employer wrongfully imposed religious
beliefs on employees); Young v. Southwestern Savings and Loan Association,
supra n. 16.
- Commission Decision No. 72-1114, CCH EEOC Decisions (1973) para;
6347 (R's failure to provide a working environment free of religious
intimidation is violative of Section 703(a) of Title VII: CP's supervisor
discussed his religious convictions with CP and other employees on the
job).
