Some companies hire chaplains who counsel workers

Sanford, USA - It's noon at the Tyson Foods plant in Sanford, N.C., and Lucrecia Hall stands at an assembly line, straightening plastic bags packed with tortillas.

From the corner of her eye she spots the Rev. David Mateo winding his way through the production floor. She nervously waits until he reaches her station.

"How are you doing today?" Mateo asks.

Without hesitation, the words tumble out. Life's been a struggle, the 32-year-old single mother sighs. It's difficult holding a full-time job and caring for four young children. She confides she's lonely and praying for a husband.

Mateo nods as he listens, staring at Hall's face as a tear trickles down her cheek. Calmly, he reassures her she's doing a good job taking care of her children. Just before leaving, he promises he will pray for her.

"It's a blessing to have someone to talk to," Hall says as Mateo moves on to the next employee working the line.

That's the response Tyson hoped for when it created an in-house chaplaincy program five years ago.

The program now includes 128 chaplains, most part-time, at 78 of the company's more than 300 plants and offices. Nearly all are Christians. One is an imam.

In addition to providing chaplains, Tyson began offering a free downloadable prayer booklet on its Web site in August. Consumers also can request the 20-page pamphlet. As of December, the company had mailed more than 35,000 copies.

"This is an invitation for people to get a better glimpse of who we are as a company and what we stand for," said Bob Corscadden, Tyson's chief marketing officer, who helped create the prayer booklets with Tyson CEO John Tyson and David Miller, director of the Yale Divinity School's Center for Faith and Culture.

Faith-based workplace programs have been around for decades, but exploded in the 1990s. Pressures of downsizing in a global economy is proving fertile ground for spiritual soul searching, those involved in workplace ministry say.

Americans are working longer days. A March survey by the Conference Board, a N.Y.-based corporate think tank showed only 50 percent are happy with their jobs, down from 59 percent a decade ago.

"Religion is important to many people's lives and they want to at least be able to talk about that part of their life and not feel like they have to hide around a corner," said Os Hillman, president of the International Coalition of Workplace Ministries, an Atlanta-based group made up of 1,300 ministries and businesses.

But blurring business and faith is controversial. Some scholars claim companies are using spirituality to sell products. Others criticize chaplaincy programs as proselytizing.

Corscadden said that's not the case with Tyson, the nation's largest processor of chicken, beef and pork. He said the company offers the programs because it cares about employees. The company has not studied the impact of its faith-based programs closely but says morale and worker retention have improved at participating plants.

"This is how we manage the company," he said. "This is part of the fabric of who we are."

No one keeps track of how many U.S. companies have faith-based programs. And they come in a variety of forms.

Some, such as Charlotte's Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Consolidated, offer a lunchtime Bible study. Atlanta-based Chick-fil-a closes on Sundays so workers can attend church. This spring, Starbucks will print spiritual quotes from the Rev. Rick Warren, author of the best-selling "The Purpose-Driven Life," on coffee cups.

Corporate chaplaincy is thought to be one of the fastest-growing faith-based employee programs. Industry groups estimate there are roughly 4,500 workplace chaplains, but the National Institute of Business & Industrial Chaplains in Houston said its likely closer to 25,000.

Companies from food distributors to banks to car dealerships use chaplains for their employees. Most outsource the spirituality, relying on vendors to provide chaplains.

By the end of 2006, Corporate Chaplains of America in Raleigh, N.C., one of the nation's top vendors, expects to employ more than 100 full-time chaplains serving companies in 22 states, said associate vice president Dwayne Reece. He anticipates hiring 1,000 chaplains by 2012. Another vendor, Marketplace Chaplains USA, based in Dallas, has 1,700 chaplains in place at 256 companies.

In contrast, the Springdale, Ark.-based Tyson hires its own clergy.

The chaplaincy program was created by a company that Tyson bought in 1998. At first, Tyson ended the program, but CEO John Tyson resurrected it in 2000. A born-again Christian, John Tyson spent years abusing alcohol and cocaine before becoming clean and sober in 1990.

Since then, he has infused his faith into the company in a variety of ways.

Some executives carry special note cards to use as a "moral compass" when making business decisions. The cards contain Tyson's core values, which include to "strive to honor God."

In Sanford one Wednesday in December, Mateo arrives at the plant shortly before noon. A Baptist minister, Mateo has worked for Tyson roughly a month and is still getting to know employees.

He begins his shift by roaming the administrative offices, greeting those with desk jobs. Then he prepares to enter the production floor, donning a white smock, hair net and mustache net. He grabs earplugs but no Bible. He wears no visible cross or other religious symbols.

The production floor is slippery with oil from the flour and corn tortillas being mixed, pressed and bagged, so he walks carefully. The din of clanking conveyor belts fills the room so loudly it allows for private conversation in a crowded workspace.

As he moves from person to person, Mateo stands straight with his hands clasped behind him, his head slightly cocked to the side.

"Hola, como esta?" he asks a Latina production worker stacking tortillas in piles.

This week, Mateo asks about Christmas celebrations.

Some conversations are short.

"How are you doing today?" he asks a worker opening cardboard boxes. Pleasantries are exchanged and he moves on to the next employee. During the next hour and a half, he will speak with dozens of production employees, most of whom are making $8.60 to $11.15 an hour.

He said he can sometimes tell by looking into a person's eyes if they want to talk more and he suggests they call him. Employees work while they talk. Flour tortillas in a range of sizes whiz by on assembly lines.

Workers will produce more than 950 cases of tortillas during an eight-hour shift.

Frances Elaine Murchison, a 13-year plant veteran, asks Mateo to pray for her 16-year-old daughter, scheduled to have brain surgery in January.

"He stopped and listened to what I have to say," she said. "It made me feel real good."

Some in the workplace chaplaincy industry call Mateo's approach intrusive. But Mateo and human resources plant manager Tamanda Khanga said it's the most effective way to get people to open up.

"They rarely come to talk to me when I'm in my office," Khanga said. "But when I'm out here walking around, they do."

Presbyterian minister and professor Douglas Hicks believes faith in the workplace can be positive.

But Hicks, a professor of leadership studies and religion at the University of Richmond, worries when corporations pay for chaplains to preach to employees.

"They are profit-making institutions," he said. "When they get into the religion business, they can easily favor one group over another."

For example, some companies that provide chaplains that advertise their counseling services can help corporations avoid messy lawsuits during layoffs, Hicks said. Chaplains do that by persuading laid-off workers to deal with their grief in other, non-litigious ways, or by counseling people during a new job search.

That, he added, means the chaplain is clearly taking the company's side - "the side that's paying them."

Tyson angered some in the workplace ministry industry a few years ago when its chaplains publicly praised the company's charitable programs at a time when the federal government was investigating the food-processing giant. Some saw it as a public relations scheme to counter negative press.

In 1999, the government fined Tyson more than $59,000 for violating child labor laws. In 2002, Tyson and several managers were indicted on charges of hiring and smuggling illegal immigrants. The company and employees were later acquitted.

In 2003, dozens of workplace ministry groups wrote Tyson to protest the company's use of chaplains in public roles and called the chaplains "a tool of management."

Tyson spokesman Gary Mickelson said chaplains are "typically seen as a neutral person and not part of the management team," and the company doesn't ask, nor expect them, to speak on the company's behalf.

Confidentiality can also become tricky. Federal law requires a chaplain to inform the company if employees threaten to harm themselves or others. Some must speak up if an employee is stealing from the company.

Rules regarding confidentiality when it comes to employee drug and alcohol abuse, costly medical conditions or potential union activity, are less clear.

Mickelson said Tyson's chaplains "value confidentiality, because that obviously affects their credibility and their ability to do their job."

Keeping conversations confidential is "extremely important to our chaplains," he said, adding, if they learn of something unlawful then they have an obligation to report it. Chaplains are not required to report union activity, he said.

Mateo says he tells employees upfront he's not there to discuss company-related problems. "If they tell me something that will affect the company," he said, "of course the company has to know."

Production worker Alma Martinez perhaps best illustrates why Mateo joined Tyson's chaplaincy program.

Martinez, a 34-year-old with four kids ranging from 12 to 17, speaks only a little English. She enjoys her work, and has been with the plant five years. But, she said, she feels isolated as a single parent.

"I find things overwhelming for my life," she said with Mateo translating, while she stuffed packaged tortillas into boxes. "I need someone to talk to, to get things off my heart."

A Honduras native, Mateo has his own 50-member congregation in nearby Siler City. He also visits patients at the hospital in Chatham County. He spends about 10 hours a week at the plant. Tyson declined to say how much it pays its clergy.

"My motivation," Mateo said, "is helping people, people of different backgrounds. We're not there to promote something with a Christian background. I never talk about religion. I just respect what they think."

After finishing his rounds at the plant that Wednesday, he heads to the parking lot.

He settles into the driver's seat of his Plymouth Grand Voyager minivan and grabs a stylus to jot notes from the day in his Palm Pilot. Afterward, he speaks softly in Spanish into a mini tape recorder, recording details he will use in the e-mails he sends his fellow Tyson chaplains. He will ask them to pray for Frances Elaine Murchison's daughter. And Lucrecia Hall and her struggles with single motherhood. And Alma Martinez, with her ongoing battle with loneliness.

When he finishes, he places the tape recorder on the passenger seat. He touches his chin with one hand and closes his eyes. He bows his head and begins to pray.

---

Picking A Corporate Chaplain

Two companies provide most corporate chaplains in the U.S.:

Marketplace Ministries in Dallas, marketplaceministries.com, or (800) 775-7657.

Corporate Chaplains of America in Raleigh, www.iamchap.org, or (919) 570-0700.

Interested in Embracing Faith at the Workplace?

The law

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits religious discrimination by employers with 15 or more workers. Under Title VII, employers:

May not treat employees or job applicants more or less favorably because of their religious beliefs.

May not force employees to participate in a religious activity.

Must reasonably accommodate employees' sincerely held religious beliefs or practices, unless doing so would impose an undue hardship on the employer.

Must take steps to prevent religious harassment of their employees.

SOURCE: U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

---

A recommendation

Douglas Hicks, author of "Religion and the Workplace," advocates what he calls "respectful pluralism."

He encourages companies to create a "culture of welcome and respect" where the employees, not the company, bring the religion to work.

---

Discrimination complaints

Religious discrimination complaints filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission were up 27 percent between 2000 and 2004, the third-fastest growing complaint, behind sexual harassment and disability.

---

ON THE WEB

Want to learn more about Tyson Foods or download its prayer booklet? Go to www.tyson.comChaplain Training and Skills

Workplace ministries are thought to have originated from shop meetings held in 1931 for the Hoover Dam field crews to receive counseling.

According to Rev. Diana Dale of the National Institute of Business & Industrial Chaplains, chaplains today should:

1. Have a master's of divinity degree.

2. Be ordained or endorsed for chaplaincy by a recognized faith group.

3. Have four units of clinical pastoral education or equivalent.

4. Have completed a year of supervised field internship in chaplaincy.

5. Be a member of a nationally recognized chaplaincy organization.