Workers fired after complaining about company prayer sessions awarded $50K

NxNW

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Every day, employees at Aurora Pro Services, a North Carolina home-repair company, would gather for a mandatory prayer meeting, according to a federal complaint. They stood in a circle while leaders, including the company owner, allegedly read Bible scriptures and prayed. In the circle, the owner required Aurora’s employees to recite the Lord’s Prayer in unison and requested prayers for poorly performing employees, the complaint alleged.

The meetings became “cult-like,” Mackenzie Saunders, a former Aurora employee, alleged in the complaint, filed in June 2022 in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina. Saunders, who is agnostic, attended the meetings after she was hired in November 2020 but stopped going in January 2021.
John McGaha, another former employee, said the prayer meetings were about 10 minutes long when he started in the summer of 2020 and stretched to 45 minutes a few months later. When McGaha, an atheist, asked to be excluded from portions of the meetings, he was rebuked by Aurora’s owner, who said it would be in his “best interest” to attend, the complaint states. Days later, the company allegedly halved McGaha’s pay. When McGaha asked to skip the meetings a second time, he was allegedly told that he did not have to believe in God but that he had to participate in the prayer meetings.

Aurora’s owner, who is not named in the complaint, twice denied McGaha’s requests to be excused from portions of the meetings that involved prayer, according to the complaint. “If you do not participate, that is okay, you don’t have to work here,” Aurora’s owner allegedly told McGaha in front of other employees. “You are getting paid to be here.”

Aurora fired McGaha and Saunders in 2020 and 2021, respectively, after they objected to the prayer meetings — a move that will cost the company $50,000, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced last week. The company has agreed to pay McGaha $37,500 and Saunders $12,500 to settle the religious discrimination and retaliation lawsuit, which the agency said violated the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
 

Paulos23

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A company is not a church; you will get all sorts of believers as your employees. Insisting on having them go through a prayer meeting for a belief they do not hold could be considered a hostile work environment, maybe just have it on the side for the members that share your beliefs.

And 45 minutes? Five or Ten minutes are bearable for a while, but that is over the top. That is clearly a flex of the owner to try to get everyone in their company to believe the way they do. That is 45 minutes of non-productive time for the company.
 
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ThatRobGuy

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And 45 minutes? Five or Ten minutes are bearable for a while, but that is over the top. That is clearly a flex of the owner to try to get everyone in their company to believe the way they do. That is 45 minutes of non-productive time for the company.
Surprised an employer would be paying for people to do that instead of, you know, working...

Although, that 45 minute prayer session maybe less excruciating than the bi-weekly strategy meetings I have to sit through lol

But for the topic at hand...this was obviously a clear encroachment and obviously the court made the right call on this one.

I, for one, hope this court precedent sticks and is used for a template for future cases...
Companies shouldn't be able to compel their employees to sit through what equates to an ideological indoctrination seminar and make them participate in meetings that are done in the name of promoting ideologies that they may disagree with that have nothing to do with the actual job in question.

From a company standpoint, nothing is a bigger waste of time and resources than hauling everyone into a mandatory meeting for the sole purpose of trying to inculcate them with a specific set of ideological values.
 
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FireDragon76

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A company is not a church; you will get all sorts of believers as your employees. Insisting on having them go through a prayer meeting for a belief they do not hold could be considered a hostile work environment, maybe just have it on the side for the members that share your beliefs.

And 45 minutes? Five or Ten minutes are bearable for a while, but that is over the top. That is clearly a flex of the owner to try to get everyone in their company to believe the way they do. That is 45 minutes of non-productive time for the company.

It sounds like this went beyond just some people who happen to be religious in the Bible belt, and went into a form of workplace intimidation and thought-reform. The 45-minute prayer sessions are often a red flag: it's not unheard of in Evangelical culture for this kind of prayer to be used to spread gossip or intimidate people.
 
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