What is a grievance?
A grievance is a feeling of dissatisfaction within an employee resulting from behaviour or conditions specifically related to the labour relationship that requires the formal attention of management
State the causes of grievance?
Elaborate on wages being an cause of grievance?
Employees discover that their colleagues in a different department, despite having similar job roles and experience, are receiving significantly higher salaries. This wage disparity causes dissatisfaction and resentment among the employees
Elaborate on dissatisfaction regarding promotion or training being an cause of grievance?
An employee who has consistently performed well in their role and expressed a strong desire for career growth is passed over for a promotion in favor of a less experienced colleague. The employee feels overlooked and undervalued
Elaborate on lack of facilities and non-availability of tools and equipment being an cause of grievance?
Workers in a construction company repeatedly face delays and inefficiencies due to the absence of necessary machinery and tools. They are frustrated by the lack of investment in essential equipment, which affects their productivity and safety.
Elaborate on perceived unfair treatment being an cause of grievance?
A manager consistently assigns the most challenging and undesirable tasks to a particular team member without justification, causing that employee to feel unfairly targeted and singled out
Elaborate on unreasonable instructions being an cause of grievance
An employee is given a task by their supervisor that is clearly beyond their skill set and job description, creating stress and anxiety due to the unrealistic expectations placed on them.
Elaborate on supervision being an cause of grievance
A supervisor is known for micromanaging their team, constantly checking in on their progress and criticizing their every move. Employees feel stifled and frustrated by the lack of autonomy and trust
State the objectives if thed grievance procedures
A properly formulated grievance procedure will:
- Create the opportunity for upward communication from employees
- Ensure that complaints are effectively dealt by management
- Create awareness of employee problems or of problem areas which could be subjected to further investigation
- Prevent dispute from arising
- Make the disciplinary procedure more acceptable, since employees also have a means of objecting to management performance
- Emphasise management’s concern for the well being of employees
Disclose the requirements for effective functioning of the procedure
A grievance procedure should:
- Allow an emoloyee to bring his grievance, in stages, to the attention of top management if necessary
- Permit representation, if the employee so desires
- Oblige management at each stage to give careful consideration to the grievance
- Ensure that managers make genuine attempts to resolve grievances
- State that a grievance will not be resolved until the employee declares himself satisfied
- Provide assurance that the employee will not be intimated or victimized for raising a grievance
How can a grievance procedure be effective?
What training should line managers, supervisors and upwards have?
Concerning grievances
They should be trained in:
- Listening carefully to the grievance
- Clarify any uncertainties
- Distinguish fact from opinion
- Make sure that their understanding of the problem is correct
- Elicit a suggested solution from the employee
- Investigate the grievance
-Verify the facts
- Separate the problem from the person
- Not let their own opinions or prejudices interfere
- Show empathy and not be defensive or hostile
- Find and promote a solution
State the grievance procedure steps
Why is an orderly disciplinary process necessary?
To ensure that discipline is not meted out in an ad hoc manner, that corrective action to avoid dismissals is undertaken and that, when dismissals occur, these are affected in terms of a fair procedure. Ordinarily, this is achieved by providing for a company-wide disciplinary code and procedure
What is the main purpose of a disciplinary procedure? (objectives of the disciplinary code and procedures)
To ensure that:
- All employees are treated in the same manner
- An employee is not disciplined or dismissed at the whim of a manager or supervisor
- Employees are accorded the opportunity of a fair hearing before dismissal occurs
- transgressions of the same kind are treated in the same manner by all managers
- Employees have certainty regarding the type of treatment they will receive
- Managerial representatives obtain certainty about their actions and decisions
What should a disciplinary code and procedure do?
State the types of transgressions (the disciplinary code)
State the system of progressive discipline
What should dismissal be reserved for according to the Code of Good Practice?
For serious transgressions or continued misconduct where the employee has received several warnings.
Provide serious misconduct
Disclose the dismissible transgressions (dismissal without a notice period)
Is participating in legal or protected strike included in failure or refusal to work?
No, but employees engaged in an unprotected (illegal) strike may be dismissed but subject to certain conditions
What is not included in dismissible transgressions in regards deliberate and continued absenteeism?
To absenteeism for illness or another valid illness.
It is referred to employee who is continually absent and can not be proved not have had a valid reason, or to an employee’s absenting himself on purpose when he was expected or instructed to work
Discuss gross negligence
The negligence must have had severe consequences and it must be proved that these consequences resulted from wilful negligence of the employee.