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The
Grievance Interview
The key to good grievance
handling is a proper investigation and that process should start with
interviewing the member who comes to you with a problem. Based on this
key interview, you will make a number of important decisions such as
what to do with the problem, whether to investigate it further, and how
to resolve the issue.
We all know that most work problems are not very simple. In order to
get at the heart of the matter, the steward has got to speak with the
member and find out exactly what happened.
That means we have to develop three critical skills: interviewing,
listening and writing.
If a steward is going to follow-up the problem, he or she has to be
sure what happened. We must use the same interviewing skills that any
investigator -- be it an insurance claims officer or a police officer --
uses. We ask and answer the "five W's":
Who -- is involved? Name(s) of the worker(s) and the basic work
information about the member(s) such as department, shift, job title,
seniority, employee number. Most of this information will also be needed
on the grievance form. You also need to find out some other information:
Who witnessed the incident or who else was involved? Who
from management was there?
When -- did the incident or condition occur? Get dates and time as
accurately as possible.
What -- happened or didn't happen? What did the worker(s)
do? What did management do or not do? What happened in the
past?
Where -- did the incident take place.
Why -- did the incident occur? In answering this question, you may
have to sift conflicting opinion to get at the facts.
More Tips
Do it in person and spend time.
Asking the five W's may not be difficult. Getting useful answers is
another story. Your member may be so hot under the collar that you may
have to wait a few minutes before he or she can settle down and tell you
the whole story accurately and factually.
Take notes. Always take notes. You can't remember everything and
taking notes conveys to the member that you are taking this issue in a
serious manner. The member may also take your concern more seriously and
give you more facts and less opinion if he or she sees that their words
are being written down. Some statements or facts may not seem important
at first, but take it all down. Later investigation may make this
unimportant information crucial to your case.
Use the
grievance investigation form. The sheet will help you interview
the member and help you complete a full investigation of the matter.
Your will be one step ahead if you pursue the complaint as a grievance.
Additionally, the worksheet will remain in the union files so if the
grievance is appealed to a higher level of the grievance process, your
investigation work will be preserved for other union grievance officers.
Let the member tell the story. Make sure that you take enough time
with the member. Listen to what the worker says without giving an
opinion or making empty promises. Have them tell the whole story and
make notes as you go along so that you can follow up on specific details
later.
Follow up. Steer the interview back to the specific issue and ask
for greater detail.
Keep in mind two other questions:
What else
-- do I need to conduct a proper investigation? What further information
is needed? The success of any investigation means you start with the
member but you must also consider other sources of information.
How -- should the issue be resolved? A solution to the problem or
complaint may arise in the course of the interview. Give the member a
chance to help resolve the issue. Use your knowledge to guide the worker
by making sure he or she understands the effect of any suggested
solution. Lastly, prepare yourself for the possibility of a full-blown
grievance. Begin to think about the remedy you will seek to correct the
injustice.
There is no magic to interviewing a member. Just make sure that you
have the time to conduct a full interview, listen carefully, and write
things down.
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