The law also requires employers to reasonably accommodate the sincerely held religious practices of an employee or prospective employee, unless doing so would create an undue hardship. Some common examples of reasonable accommodation are flexible scheduling, voluntary substitutions or swaps, job reassignments, and lateral transfers. These situation most often arise when an employee requests a day off for a religious holiday (such as Good Friday or Yom Kippur), or seeks not to be scheduled to work on the Sabbath. An employer can claim undue hardship if accommodating an employee's religious practices requires more than ordinary administrative costs. For example, hiring a new employee or rescheduling other employees would probably present an undue hardship, while other employees volunteering to cover a shift most likely would not. Moreover, a religion does not have to be traditional to qualify for protection. The Post-Gazette article cites a California case in which a vegan bus driver won a judgment against a county transit agency for firing him after he refused to hand out "free hamburger" fliers for a fast food restaurant.
As workplaces are becoming more culturally, ethnically, and religiously diverse, religious discrimination will continue to be a hot button issue. Employers should not ignore requests for accommodations, no matter how strange they might seem. One person's Mind Body Energy is another person's Christianity. The accommodation may have a small price associated with it, but I can assure you such a price will almost always be less than the price of defending a discrimination lawsuit.