Introduction Chapter1
Introduction Chapter1
FEATURES OF GRIEVANCE
1. A grievance refers to any form of discontent or dissatisfaction with any aspect
of the organization.
2. The dissatisfaction must arise out of employment and not due to personal or
family problems.
3. The discontent can arise out of real or imaginary reasons. When employees feel
that injustice has been done to them, they have a grievance. The reason for such
a feeling may be valid or invalid, legitimate or irrational, justifiable or ridiculous.
4. The discontent may be voiced or unvoiced, but it must find expression in some
form. However, discontent per se is not a grievance. Initially, the employee may
complain orally or in writing. If this is not looked into promptly, the employee
feels a sense of lack of justice. Now, the discontent grows and takes the shape of
a grievance.
Employees will not complain for no reason. By identifying the types of employee
grievances, we can immediately identify the reasons or causes of such complaints.
The types of grievances are based on the nature of the complaint, and we will take
a look at the most common ones.
4. Work conditions
5. Management-employee relations
The supervisor or the person having the talk with the employee should
demonstrate sensitivity and the ability to actually listen to what the employee
has to say. No matter how, initially, the complaint may seem silly or
nonsensical, there is a need to treat it seriously.
If no settlement has been reached at this early stage, the grievance will
proceed to the next step. Often, the employee will be required to submit a
grievance letter to formalize the whole thing.
The formal stage of the process begins and, this time, the grievance committee
will take the reins. You will schedule a formal meeting with the employee, and it
is in that venue where his grievance will be discussed in greater detail.
The meeting should be held private. There are two parties that must be present
during the meeting: you as a representative (and other representatives, if any)
from the grievance committee and the employee who filed the grievance. In most
cases, the employee may be accompanied by another co-worker.
Witnesses may be invited. In the course of conducting the meeting, you may
deem it necessary to call or invite other employees as witnesses that may provide
valuable input regarding the grievance.
Confidentiality is a must. The details about the meeting taking place must be
kept under wraps, strictly among the people involved. Thus, the location of the
meeting should also be kept off-limits to outsiders or uninvolved individuals.
The formal meeting is the appropriate venue to fully discuss the grievance of the
employee, focusing on who, what, where, when, why and how the issue came to
being. All accounts made by the employee as well as those of any witnesses
during the meeting will be the basis in ascertaining whether the grievance is valid
or not.
Depending on its nature and complexity, the grievance may be resolved at this
step. If it’s not solved, the process proceeds to the third step.
Fact and data gathering tasks are going to be conducted by members of the
grievance committee. You may have already obtained more than the bare facts
during the formal meeting, but those are mostly one-sided, since the input was
mainly from the employee. There might be a need to verify some facts that will
support any decision that will be made about validity of the complaint.
Usually, you will be going about it using the typical data-gathering methods, such
as the conduct of interviews with other employees and key personalities to get
more information that may shed some light on the grievance.
The results of the formal meeting, and any further investigations conducted, will
be the basis for the committee to decide whether the grievance is valid or not.
Once a decision has been reached, you must communicate it to the employee.
If the grievance is valid, it may be resolved at this stage and your job is done. If
the resolution is not to the employee’s satisfaction, you may have to take it to the
next step.
The facts will be reviewed, and a decision will again have to be made to resolve
the grievance. If, again, it is not resolved at that stage, it will be taken to another,
higher, level of management. It may even reach a point where an outsider will be
called in to arbitrateand provide a fresh perspective.
The higher the level of management that the grievance goes up to, the more
people will be involved. This is why, at the beginning, all efforts should be geared
to settling the complaint as early as possible. This is because taking it further is
bound to take more time and company resources.
CAUSES OF GRIEVANCES
Grievances may occur due to a number of reasons:
1. Economic:
Employees may demand for individual wage adjustments. They may feel that
they are paid less when compared to others. For example, late bonus, payments,
adjustments to overtime pay, perceived inequalities in treatment, claims for equal
pay, and appeals against performance- related pay awards.
2. Work environment:
It may be undesirable or unsatisfactory conditions of work. For example, light,
space, heat, or poor physical conditions of workplace, defective tools and
equipment, poor quality of material, unfair rules, and lack of recognition.
3. Supervision:
It may be objections to the general methods of supervision related to the attitudes
of the supervisor towards the employee such as perceived notions of bias,
favouritism, nepotism, caste affiliations and regional feelings.
4. Organizational change:
Any change in the organizational policies can result in grievances. For example,
the implementation of revised company policies or new working practices.
5. Employee relations:
Employees are unable to adjust with their colleagues, suffer from feelings of
neglect and victimization and become an object of ridicule and humiliation, or
other inter- employee disputes.
6. Miscellaneous:
These may be issues relating to certain violations in respect of promotions, safety
methods, transfer, disciplinary rules, fines, granting leaves, medical facilities, etc.
But if the grievance is not managed properly, they will create some negative
impacts. Such impacts reduce organization’s output as well as productivity. The
negative consequences of employee grievance are:
Reduced Productivity
Absenteeism Problem
Disobeying of orders
Indisciplined behavior
Reduced quality of work
Reduced co-operation among the employees
Discouragement in employees
Disharmonious relation between management and employees
Therefore, a due consideration should be given towards the proper settlement of
employee grievance instantly when they occur.
Effects of Grievance:
On the production:
On the employees:
On the managers: