When a Costco employee who belongs to the Church of Body Modification insisted that her religious beliefs trumped the company dress code, a legal battle ensued. This in-depth report examines what happens when an employee’s religious beliefs conflict with the company dress code.
By Alison Stein Wellner Comments 0 | Recommend 0
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December, a four-year-long court battle came to an end when a U.S. Court of
Appeals dismissed a $2 million religious discrimination lawsuit brought against
Costco, the nation’s largest wholesale retailer, which logged some $47 billion
in sales last year.
The case, brought by West Springfield, Massachusetts,
employee Kimberly Cloutier, was certainly not your average religious
discrimination matter. Provoked by a change in the wholesaler’s dress code
policy, it pitted facial piercings against professional appearance, and
involved, among other things, an eyebrow ring and a small church that few people
have ever heard of.
Beneath this quirky legal matter is an underlying issue of
growing concern to all employers: balancing an employee’s religious beliefs
against the business interests of a company.
Piercings as religion The story began in 2001, when Costco revised its dress
code to prohibit all facial jewelry, aside from earrings. Costco made this
change in order to promote what the company considered a professional
appearance, court records indicate. (Judy Vadney, Costco’s personnel director,
declined to comment, citing the recent end of "very expensive litigation.")
Kimberly Cloutier, a cashier and an employee since 1997,
had numerous body piercings and tattoos on her upper arms. Soon after the new
policy was disseminated, Cloutier’s supervisor informed her that she had to
remove her facial piercings--in particular, her eyebrow ring, which she refused
to do.
At that point, Cloutier indicated that she was a member of
the Church of Body Modification, and said that her eyebrow piercing was part of
her religion.
The Church of Body Modification, established in 1999, has
about 1,000 members and encourages its adherents to "grow as individuals through
body modification and its teachings" to "promote growth in mind, body and
spirit." It uses a Round Rock, Texas, post office box as its mailing address;
several founding members are in Phoenix.
The church urges its members to be "confident role models
in learning, teaching and displaying body modification," which includes
piercing, tattooing, branding, cutting and body manipulation. Court records
indicate that Cloutier interpreted this to mean that her piercings should be
visible at all times, and believed that she was prohibited from removing or
covering her facial jewelry. The conflict with Costco’s dress code was clear.
Religious diversity growing An employee’s religious beliefs often enter into the
workplace, creating a sometimes awkward--if not potentially litigious--situation
for employers, who are required by federal law not to discriminate on the basis
of religion.
While many employers are more familiar with employees’
requests for work-schedule changes to accommodate religious practice and
beliefs, a growing number are becoming acquainted with complaints about dress
codes on the basis of religion, says Patrick Kilker, an attorney at Eckert
Seamans Cherin & Mellott LLC in Pittsburgh. More dress-code requests will come.
"With growing religious diversity in this country, you can bet on these cases
becoming more common," he says.
Many religions impose some sort of requirement upon their
adherents in terms of appearance: Some require the growing of facial hair, for
example, or the wearing of certain accoutrement, such as a Sikh turban, a Jewish
yarmulke or a Muslim hijab, or head scarf. Other religions require certain
markings, tattoos or, in the case of the Church of Body Modification, a whole
host of practices that might interfere with a company’s dress code.
These religiously motivated practices leave some companies
with a dilemma as to how to accommodate an employee’s religious beliefs if they
conflict with standards of grooming or appearance on the job.
Is it a hardship? The resolution of this dilemma is not entirely up to a
company’s discretion. The law guides a company’s hand, says Patrick H. Hicks,
managing partner at the Las Vegas office of the employment law firm Littler
Mendelson LLP.
According to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, "the employer
has an obligation to reasonably accommodate an employee’s religious beliefs," he
says, which includes making allowances for an employee’s garb or appearance when
it is influenced by religion. "But it's not an absolute," he adds. If an
accommodation would create an "undue hardship" on the employer, the employer is
not obliged to accommodate an employee’s religious beliefs.
"Undue hardship" and "reasonable accommodation" are terms
often sorted out in court, Hicks says. "These cases typically resolve themselves
on a case-by-case, fact-by-fact basis. What might be an undue hardship for one
company might not be an undue hardship for another. The exact same accommodation
might be reasonable for one company and unreasonable for another," he says.
Negotiations break down An employer’s first goal is to stay out of an expensive
and uncertain court battle. The first step toward that goal is to strive for a
reasonable accommodation that works for the individual employee. "Engage in an
interactive process with the employee, ask what it is that the religion
requires, and what the company can do to reasonably accommodate," says Hicks.
Employers can’t always get the reasonable accommodation
they want. The court record shows that early conversations between Cloutier and
Costco could not be considered productive.
A supervisor instructed Cloutier to remove her facial
jewelry. Cloutier refused, and the next day filed a religious
discrimination case with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. When
she returned to work for her next shift, she met with the store manager. During
that meeting, she suggested covering her eyebrow piercing with a flesh-colored
bandage. The store manager rejected this suggestion, and told her to either
remove the piercing or go home. She left.
Several weeks passed, and while Cloutier awaited
resolution of her EEOC claim, she was terminated via a letter, which cited her
unexcused absences resulting from noncompliance with the dress code. The EEOC
mediation process kept the parties in contact, however, and in August, Costco
offered to let Cloutier return to work, wearing either a plastic retainer in her
piercings to keep the holes from healing and closing, or a bandage over her
jewelry.
Although this was an accommodation that she had suggested
earlier, Cloutier now refused. The court records show that Cloutier’s position
was that "the proffered accommodations would be inadequate, because the (Church
of Body Modification’s) tenets, as she interprets them, require her to display
her facial piercings at all times. Replacing her eyebrow piercing with a plastic
retainer, or covering it with a Band-Aid would thus contradict her religious
convictions." (By not accepting Cloutier’s initial offer of accommodation,
Costco missed "a golden opportunity to avoid four years of litigation," points
out law firm Nixon Peabody in its analysis of the case.)
Cloutier now maintained that the only reasonable
accommodation would be to excuse her from Costco’s dress code, allowing her to
wear her facial jewelry to work. Costco’s response: This would interfere with
the company’s ability to maintain a professional image. Negotiations broke down.
Victory for employers If an accommodation can’t be reached with an employee,
the next step is to clearly identify "the legitimate business interests the
company is trying to preserve and protect," says Hicks. The courts often give
employers wide latitude in what is considered an undue hardship.
Several cases, for example, have found that employers are
not discriminating when they require an employee or job applicant to be
clean-shaven, in order to maintain an image of cleanliness, or for safety
matters. For instance, in a 1984 case against Chevron, a court decided that the
company did not have to exempt a Sikh employee from a rule requiring that all
machinists be clean-shaven, because the policy was based on the necessity of
wearing a respirator with a gas-tight face seal.
In Costco’s case, the business interest was in presenting
a neat, clean professional appearance. The court decided that if it forced
Costco to create an exception for Cloutier’s eyebrow ring and other piercings,
it would create an undue hardship on the company.
The court held the following: "It is axiomatic that, for
better or for worse, employees reflect on employers. This is particularly true
of employees who regularly interact with customers. ... Even if Cloutier did not
regularly receive any complaints about her appearance, her facial jewelry
influenced Costco’s public image and, in Costco’s calculation, detracted from
its professionalism. … Costco has made a determination that facial piercings,
aside from earrings, detract from the ‘neat, clean, and professional image’ that
it aims to cultivate. Such a business determination is within its discretion."
With that, Cloutier’s discrimination case ended.
While this was a victory for Costco, and the case was
hailed as a victory for employers seeking to balance
dress codes
against various religious claims, there are a couple of points to keep in mind,
says Hicks. If Cloutier did not work as a cashier, but in a position where she
did not interact with customers, Costco might have found it difficult to make
the same argument against her facial jewelry.
Second, Cloutier’s hard-line, no-compromise approach
worked against her in court, says Kilker. The court cited several cases
involving jewelry where employees have insisted that the only accommodation is
exemption from a dress code policy. In one case, an employee wore a gold cross
pin; in another, an employee took a vow to wear a graphic anti-abortion button
for religious reasons.
Courts take a dim view of the inflexibility of the
employee’s stance. "We are faced with the … situation of an employee who will
accept no accommodation short of an outright exemption from a neutral dress
code. Granting such an exemption would be an undue hardship because it would
adversely affect the employer’s public image," the appeals court held. An
employee that offers several accommodations, even if he or she is later rejected
by the employer, might fare better in court, says Hicks.
Finally, it’s important to note the grounds that the court
did not decide on: whether Cloutier’s religious convictions were legitimate.
First, courts are loath to determine the sincerity of an individual’s religious
beliefs, Hicks says. Second, in the eyes of the EEOC, "it doesn’t take much to
become a religion," Kilker says.
The EEOC, Kilker says, defines religion broadly to include
moral or ethical beliefs as to what is right or wrong. "In order to constitute a
religion, the employee’s belief must be sincere, and it must occupy a place in
the employee’s life that is parallel to the place filled by God, in traditional
religions," he says. "That makes it a low threshold to establish that you are a
member of a religion and that you need an accommodation so you can practice or
observe that religion."
This means that employers shouldn’t get caught in the "is
this really a religion game," says Kilker, when confronted with an employee who
is citing religious grounds for noncompliance with a dress code. "Generally, I
would err on the side of attempting to accommodate someone’s religion, even if
you have doubts that it would constitute a religion, in view of the EEOC’s broad
interpretation of what a religion is," he says.
An attempt to accommodate won’t guarantee that employers
stay out of court, but it’s a start.
The information contained in
this article is intended to provide useful information on the topic covered, but
should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion. Also remember that
state laws may differ from the federal law.
Workforce Management Online, March 2005
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