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SEVEN WAYS TO LOSE A WINNING GRIEVANCE
What's worse than
losing a grievance? It's losing a grievance that you and everyone else
knew was a 100 percent sure winner.
Losing "sure winners" happens
every day --
not because of the quality of
the grievance, but because of the way the union handles it. Making a
fundamental error or forgetting a basic detail can snatch defeat from
the jaws of victory.
Here are seven sure fire ways
to lose even the best grievance.
1.
Missing a Deadline
If you were management, would you give the union a little slack if they
tiled an appeal too late
--
especially on a case
that was going to cost the employer either a lot of money, authority or
embarrassment? No way.
If you have to do something within a certain time frame, get it done.
It could be filing a document, preparing for a hearing, submitting a
brief or filling out a form. It makes no difference. The longer you
wait, the greater the chance that you'll miss the deadline and lose your
case.
2. Wait
Until Somebody Brings the Issue to You
Just because nobody brought a problem to your attention earlier doesn't
mean the union shouldn't have known about it. If it started happening a
year ago, and nobody made it an issue until recently, it may be too late
to do something.
That's why somebody, preferably a group of stewards, needs to examine
changes in the workplace as they are happening. Can management do that
under the terms of the contract? Does it hurt employees? Is it legal? If
you wait until someone complains about it, it may be too late.
3. Fail
to Arrange for Witnesses to Attend Hearings
You may have a fantastic eyewitness who will verify everything the
grievant alleges. But
if
you wait until the
last minute to notify the eyewitness about a hearing date, you may find
that he or she is out of town, in the hospital, or just plain
unreachable. Then where will you be with no corroborating testimony?
Be sure your witness knows when and where the hearing is, too.
Witnesses aren't much good if they show up at the wrong place or time to
testify.
4. Don't
Prepare Your Witnesses
There's nothing like the sinking feeling you get in a grievance session
when a grievant or witness says something that destroys your case. Go
over every question you will ask beforehand. Witnesses shouldn't
volunteer information. Their answers should be short, factual, and to
the point.
5. Fail
to Cite the Most Compelling Section of the Contract
Some people routinely add the words "other related sections" to the
part of the grievance form that asks you to specify the contract section
that was violated. Later in the grievance process, somebody may figure
out that some other section of the contract provides a stronger
argument. Always check the full contract first. Talk it over with
someone else who knows the agreement. Cite all the articles that
reasonably seem to apply. But if you can hold open your options (by
listing "and other related sections") until you are asked to be more
specific, you may buy some time to strengthen your case.
6. Get
Personal
It lessens your victory if management drags out the grievance process
needlessly long. If they stall things because they think they can win,
there's not much you can do. But when they do it just out of spite and
personal animosity, maybe you could have prevented it by keeping the
grievance process strictly professional and not a grudge match between
two individuals.
Winning is its own reward. You were right and management has to
acknowledge it. Don't give them an unnecessary reason to postpone the
final resolution.
7.
Figure Out What Winning Really Means After It's Too Late
"Winning" is not always as clear as
it
seems. sometimes
winning means getting redress -that is, undoing a wrong or
winning
some sort of compensation for the victim. In other cases winning means
setting a precedent for the future. In yet other cases, winning may be
seen as holding management accountable for its actions
--
an apology, public
acknowledgment that they were wrong or embarrassment of a particularly
authoritarian boss. Know what kind of win you want when you start the
process, because these goals may be competing
--
or even exclusive of
each other. You may "win" the grievance, in the formal sense. But if you
didn't demand the right resolution, it probably won't feel like much of
a victory.
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