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Ten
Mistakes A Steward Should
Never Make
1. Miss your deadline.
You know what the contract says, but somehow you forget to file the
grievance within the specified time. The grievance, in almost every
case, becomes history. Two pieces of advice. Keep a calendar diary with
dates marked in red so you won't miss deadlines. And if you need more
time, ask for an extension from management and get it in writing.
2. Never get back to the grievant. This usually happens when
the steward determines that the member has no grievance. Rather than be
the bearer of bad tidings, the steward disappears. This is
irresponsible. If the issue is not grievable under the contract, see if
it can be resolved in another manner. If not, tell the member that the
issue cannot be written as a grievance, and give him/her the reasons.
3. Bad mouth the union. If you have a problem with the way
things are done or with your leadership, discuss the issue(s) in a
rational manner. Get off the soapbox and see if the difference can be
resolved. There's plenty of room for discussion and disagreement. But
when it spills out on the shop floor or at a meeting when management is
present, such disagreements can permanently weaken the union. A house
divided against itself will fail.
4. Drop the routine fly ball. You are the steward with
responsibilities outlined by the constitution and by-laws. You should
not make basic mistakes. Grievances should be written correctly.
Information should be shared. You should know your rights. If you are
unsure or don't know the answer, ask.
5. Sit down and shut up at meetings with management. In your
role as a steward you are the union advocate. This role is an active
one. You are the equal of management. You may ask questions, ask for and
get records to process grievances, and even raise your voice at meetings
when necessary.
6. Lose control. A major no no. You or a member may be baited
at a grievance meeting so that you will get angry. A steward who argues
out of anger and not facts will lose the grievance. Period.
7. Write long grievances. Grievances should be short and sweet.
Management is being paid big salaries to supervise. Don't do the work
for them. Your grievances should identify the grievant, outline the
problem in a sentence or two, state what article of the contract is
being violated, and what remedy you want to make the grievant whole.
Save the arguments for the meeting. A good poker player never tips
his/her hand.
8. Meet the grievant for the first time at the grievance hearing.
If this is the first time you've met the member, you are inviting
trouble. Big time. You should talk to the grievant face to face when you
investigate the grievance and write it.
You should also talk to the grievant prior to the hearing to
familiarize him/her with the process. When they walk into the room, they
should feel as comfortable as possible. They should know that yes, no,
and I don't know are acceptable answers at a hearing. Describe the room
to them, who will be there, and what they will be asked.
9. Wait for the member to come to you with the problem. If you
do this, you will never gain the respect of the membership you represent
or the management you must deal with. Problems can often be resolved
before they explode into grievances. And members may not be as aware of
contract violations and grievable issues as you are.
10. Forget to take a breather. This is intense work. Stewards
work a full-time job and then take on their union responsibilities. This
kind of existence is rewarding but is fraught with burn-out. Take time
for yourself and your family.
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