The Young Men's and Women's Hebrew Association of Washington Heights and Inwood (YMHA/YWHA) is a New York youth services nonprofit. An employee, who is Christian, requested a schedule change so she could attend Sunday services and meetings associated with her role as a church leader.
The EEOC investigation concluded that the organization failed to provide a reasonable religious accommodation and instead retaliated against the employee, ultimately forcing her to resign in 2022.
The EEOC found that these actions violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which requires employers to accommodate sincerely held religious beliefs unless doing so would impose substantial increased costs, and prohibits retaliation for requesting accommodation or participating in the EEO process.
To resolve the charge through conciliation, YMHA agreed to pay $100,200 in monetary relief, revise its religious accommodation policies, provide related training, and post a notice affirming employees' rights and the organization's obligations under federal law.
Source: https://www.eeoc.gov/newsroom/ymha-pay-100200-resolve-eeoc-religious-discrimination-and-retaliation-charge
Commentary
In the above matter, a nonprofit agreed to pay $100,200 and change its practices after an investigation concluded it denied a Christian employee's Sunday worship accommodation request and retaliated when she pursued her rights, leading to her constructive discharge.
For NPO employers, the case illustrates that mission alignment or religious identity does not exempt an organization from Title VII and that scheduling decisions involving religious practice must be managed carefully to avoid both discrimination and retaliation claims.
Title VII requires employers to reasonably accommodate an employee's sincerely held religious beliefs unless doing so would impose significant costs. Title VII prohibits adverse actions against employees for seeking such accommodations.
NPOs that reflexively deny schedule changes for worship or ministry duties, or that treat the request itself as a disruption or disloyalty, can face not only monetary settlements but also mandated policy revisions, training obligations, and monitoring by the EEOC.
Key prevention steps include:
- Adopt a written religious accommodation policy that explains how to request changes to schedules, duties, or dress and how those requests will be evaluated under Title VII.
- Train supervisors, human resources, and volunteer coordinators on recognizing accommodation requests and on their duty to make sure the requests are promptly communicated to those who are authorized to engage in an interactive process. Refrain from issuing immediate denials.
- Centralize review of religious accommodation decisions so that patterns of denial or inconsistent treatment can be identified and corrected early
- Document the analysis of any claimed substantial business costs, including operational needs, costs, safety issues, and effects on other employees, before denying a request
- Prohibit and investigate retaliation by making clear that discipline, schedule cuts, or negative evaluations tied to protected requests or complaints are violations of organizational policy and federal law
- Communicate to staff and volunteers that the nonprofit values both its mission and the diverse faith commitments of its workforce, and that it will seek reasonable ways to honor both where possible
The final takeaway is that nonprofits should treat religious accommodation as a structured compliance process, by building clear policies, training, documentation, and anti-retaliation safeguards that help protect both employees' faith practices and the organization's mission.
Additional Source: https://www.eeoc.gov/laws/guidance/section-12-religious-discrimination
