- Let them change their shifts so they either start work earlier or finish work later. That way, you’ll get the best out of your employees when they have the most energy.
- Think about letting them work from home if they have a long commute to and from work.
- Rethink heavy-duty staff tasks and do extra risk assessments, especially for manual workers where tiredness could have serious health & safety considerations.
For 1.6 billion Muslims, Ramadan is a welcome chance to reconnect with religion and family.
It’s also a month of nocturnal eating and sporadic sleeping.
So for Muslim staff fasting in your workplace, energy levels can dwindle towards the end of a long day with no food or drink.
But there are ways your business can help employees throughout the holiest month in the Islamic calendar.
Be flexible
Any employee can make a flexible working request as long as they’ve worked for you for at least 26 weeks, and you can even waive that requirement if you’re feeling generous.
You have to consider flexible working requests, but you can refuse them if you won’t be able to meet your customers’ needs with a staff shortage.
Remember that flexible working requests for religious reasons shouldn’t be treated differently to a flexible working request for any other reason.
Because if you turn down your employee’s request and it stops them meeting their religious needs during Ramadan, then you could risk a claim for religious discrimination.
Are there any workplace changes or tweaks to their working routine you could make to help make Ramadan a little easier?
Flexible working examples
For Muslims, Ramadan means long days without lunch, late nights and very early mornings. To help staff, you could: