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Monthly Archives: July 2023

OVO Energy #1 faith-friendly company in the UK 2023

11 Jul, 2023

No. 10 Downing Street presentation of OVO Energy REDI Index Award by John Glen, Chief Secretary to the Treasury.

IMMEDIATE RELEASE

On 23 May 2023, the fourth annual Corporate Religious Equity, Diversity & Inclusion (REDI) Index was released in Washington, DC. The REDI Index is the Religious Freedom & Business Foundation’s benchmark assessment of the degree to which companies include religion as an integral part of their diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. Among US Fortune 500 companies, the Intel Corporation took first place. Among Global Fortune 500 companies, Accenture to the top spot.

And the top spot in the United Kingdom with to OVO Energy, which has an interfaith employee resource group (ERG) that fosters a diverse, religiously inclusive workplace aligned with the company’s purpose. For example, it has take the lead in a program to develop safety headgear for those who were turbans, hijabs, etc. Also, the company allows employees to substitute 6 of the 8 national bank holidays for other days off, allowing for accommodation of holy days not on the national calendar.

OVO Energy also hosted the first gathering of domestic and multi-national faith-friendly corporations, resulting in a broad faith-friendly coalition that will hold its first national summit on Nov. 20, 2023, to be hosted by Salesforce in their London Tower.

OVO Energy was recognized for this achievement at a ceremony at No. 10 Downing Street.

NATS #2 faith-friendly company in the UK 2023

11 Jul, 2023

IMMEDIATE RELEASE

On 23 May 2023, the fourth annual Corporate Religious Equity, Diversity & Inclusion (REDI) Index was released in Washington, DC. The REDI Index is the Religious Freedom & Business Foundation’s benchmark assessment of the degree to which companies include religion as an integral part of their diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. Among US Fortune 500 companies, the Intel Corporation took first place. Among Global Fortune 500 companies, Accenture to the top spot.

Taking the next-to-top spot in the United Kingdom is the National Air Traffic Service (NATS), which has a Faith Network employee resource group (ERG) that fosters a diverse, religiously inclusive workplace aligned with the company’s purpose. The Faith Network acts as an umbrella for individual Faith sub-networks to be encouraged and flourish. In addition, NATS is a Steering Group member of the Faith Friendly Workplaces initiative that has had over 30 Companies participate in its quarterly meetings. They have used these Quarterly meetings as well as Other Company Inclusion Week meetings and materials to influence and inform our D&I practices.. Also, NATS seeks to reasonably accommodate religious needs of employees, including: Prayer times, Religious dress and grooming requirements, Religious dietary requirements, and Space at work for those who wish to pray, meditate, etc.

NATS was recognized for this achievement at a ceremony at Parliament.

L-R: Jim Shannon, Member of Parliament for Strangford; Helen Fuge, NATS; Sam Matthews, NATS; Sandip K. Verma, Baroness Verma; Ridgely Johnson, NATS; Jodie McMenamin, NATS; Brian J. Grim, Ph.D., President Religious Freedom & Business Foundation.

UK Parliament Looks at Business & Religious Freedom

6 Jul, 2023

Faith-friendly workplaces share their stories at Westminster Palace

On Monday, 10th July, executives from Google, Salesforce, NHS, Rolls-Royce, American Express, Baringa, Thames Water, NATS, OVO Energy, etc. will share with the UK Parliament’s APPG on Freedom of Religion or Belief (FORB) how they build FORB for all through their faith-friendly workplaces. They will also discuss how this can and does have an impact on the communities they serve.

The Religious Freedom & Business Foundation helps many of these companies to transparently benchmark their faith-friendly workplace progress through the Corporate Religious Equity, Diversity &Inclusion (REDI) Index.

UK companies participating in the REDI Index will be honored at the event.

The chair of the event is Baroness Verma, a member of APPG FORB. Lady Verma is an Indian-British politician in the United Kingdom. An appointed member of the House of Lords, she is Ministerial Champion for Tackling Violence Against Women and Girls Overseas, a role who chairs the UN Women’s national committee.

Reflections on the US Supreme Court Decision on Religious Freedom – a Win for ALL

1 Jul, 2023

By Kent Johnson

The recent US Supreme Court opinion in Groff v. DeJoy, ­Postmaster General clarifies the nature and extent of employers’ duties to accommodate religious practice in the workplace. As you’d expect, organizations like ours (the Religious Freedom and Business Foundation) are celebrating this opinion. But some commentators have worried that this decision represents a victory of “religious people” to the detriment of “non-religious people.” It’s not that. In fact, I’d argue, this opinion provides a clarification that people across the spectrum of belief (and unbelief) should welcome enthusiastically.

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 requires employers to “make reasonable accommodations to the religious needs of employees.” An exception applies where an accommodation would create “undue hardship on the conduct of the employer’s business.” The question before the court was: How much “hardship” must employers undertake?

The Court applied a common-sense interpretation of this Title VII language. It said a “hardship” is something that’s “hard to bear;” one that entails “suffering” or “privation.” In addition, the Court said that in order to override a company’s obligation to accommodate religion, the hardship must be “undue.” The difficulty must be “excessive” or “unjustifiable.” The negative effect on the employer’s business must be significant. It’s not enough that employees are uncomfortable with or have an aversion to the particular religious practice in question, or that there is animosity toward a particular religion, or toward religion in general. Those reactions don’t qualify as sufficient “hardship.”

What’s more, before employers impose constraints on the exercise of religion, they must explore other, less restrictive options.

The bottom line economically is that the employer must accommodate the exercise of religion unless doing so would require “substantial increased costs in relation to the conduct of its particular business.”

It’s a pretty demanding standard for accommodation.

So, how does this Supreme Court finding impact atheists, who worry that these required accommodations of “religion” will come at their expense? The answer is, far from disadvantaging them, it helps them.

The Court expressly affirmed the way the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has been treating these questions. The EEOC has said, “An employee’s belief or practice can be ‘religious’ under Title VII even if the employee is affiliated with a religious group that does not espouse or recognize that individual’s belief or practice, or if few – or no – other people adhere to it. Title VII’s protections also extend to those who are discriminated against or need accommodation because they profess no religious beliefs. Religious beliefs include theistic beliefs (i.e. those that include a belief in God) as well as non-theistic “moral or ethical beliefs as to what is right and wrong which are sincerely held with the strength of traditional religious views.”

Webster includes the following definition of religion: “A cause, principle, or system of beliefs held to with ardor and faith.” I’d submit that all humans – whether or not they ascribe to a traditional religion – ascribe to some cause, principle or system of beliefs. Freedom to live in accordance with one’s own core beliefs – at work and elsewhere – is important to the atheist as it is to the devout believer.

All of us are blessed to have a legal system that requires accommodation of that core right. This freedom doesn’t pit “us” against “them.”

A final observation. While it’s comforting to have laws that compel employers to accommodate this broad spectrum of “religion,” forced accommodation can fall flat. If employees feel that management is giving those limited freedoms grudgingly or under compulsion, and that religion is viewed as a necessary but unwanted distraction, they’ll feel unwanted. The companies that excel in accommodating religious freedom – those at the top of the Religious Equity and Diversity (REDI) Index – provide accommodations for “religion” that meet and exceed what’s legally required. They see the value of encouraging people of all faiths (and no faith) to bring their core principles to work. They embrace the business case for religious freedom, and they affirm the value of every human being. This is a very good thing. For all.