Current:Home > NewsIntel named most faith-friendly company -WealthMap Solutions
Intel named most faith-friendly company
View
Date:2025-04-17 08:59:21
Intel Corporation is the most faith-friendly workplace in the country according to this year's ranking of large companies by the Religious Freedom and Business Foundation.
The Corporate Religious Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (REDI) Index uses ten measures to determine a company's ranking.
Among them:
- Is religion featured on the company's main diversity page?
- Does the company sponsor faith-based affiliations such as employee resource groups.
- Is religion clearly addressed in diversity training?
- Does the company match employee donations to religious charities.
The index found that 219 of the Fortune 500 companies refer to or illustration religion on their main diversity landing page. That's up from 202 in the previous year.
A significantly smaller number of Fortune 500 companies—just 43—publicly report having faith-oriented employee resource groups, or ERGs, up from 37 in 2022.
The full REDI Index report highlighted what specific company ERGs do to support religious diversity and inclusion.
For example, Ford Motor Corporation includes in its orientation process for all new employees information about the Ford Interfaith Network (FIN). The reports says, "They have eight faiths that make up the FIN." The report then details how each of those eight faith ERGs has its own dedicated budgets and internal resources such as mail groups and executive sponsors.
The report also says that Target Corporation's multiple faith network—Buddhist, Christian, Jewish and Muslim—play an important role in reinforcing the company's "culture of belonging."
One of the more unusual measures in the index is whether a company provides chaplaincy or other spiritual care services. The report draws special attention to Tyson Foods's chaplaincy program. "Tyson has 100 chaplains in a 22-year long program," says the report, "that is available to all U.S. team members 7/24/365."
In order to draw attention to religion ERGs, the Religious Freedom and Business Foundation also named the heads of those groups at Accenture, Equinix, Google, and American Airlines as "Leaders of the Year."
While the overall "most faith-friendly" designation went to Intel, the REDI index also breaks out companies by sector.
Ford Motor Company took the lead in the Automotive Industry. American landed number one in airlines. Target came in first in retail. The index ranks PayPal the most religion friendly financial services company.
The 2023 index is the Religious Freedom and Business Foundation's fourth annual measure of American corporations' DEI initiatives.
veryGood! (663)
Related
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Texas is blocking US border agents from patrols, Biden administration tells Supreme Court
- Mississippi House leadership team reflects new speaker’s openness to Medicaid expansion
- Ukrainian trucker involved in deadly crash wants license back while awaiting deportation
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Hertz is selling Teslas for as little as $21,000, as it offloads the pricey EVs from its rental fleet
- Supreme Court agrees to hear Starbucks appeal in Memphis union case
- 'Get wild': Pepsi ad campaign pokes fun at millennial parents during NFL Wild Card weekend
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Iowa campaign events are falling as fast as the snow as the state readies for record-cold caucuses
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Midwest braces for winter storm today. Here's how much snow will fall and when, according to weather forecasts
- Tragedy unravels idyllic suburban life in 'Mothers' Instinct' trailer with Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain
- AP PHOTOS: 100 days of agony in a war unlike any seen in the Middle East
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Italy’s justice minister nixes extradition of priest sought by Argentina in murder-torture cases
- Arizona governor proposes overhaul of school voucher program
- Mississippi House leadership team reflects new speaker’s openness to Medicaid expansion
Recommendation
What to watch: O Jolie night
They’re not aliens. That’s the verdict from Peru officials who seized 2 doll-like figures
Michigan to pay $1.75 million to innocent man after 35 years in prison
Donald Trump ordered to pay The New York Times and its reporters nearly $400,000 in legal fees
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
New York City built a migrant tent camp on a remote former airfield. Then winter arrived
Is Jay-Z's new song about Beyoncé? 'The bed ain't a bed without you'
Oregon Supreme Court declines for now to review challenge to Trump's eligibility for ballot