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The Grievance Meeting

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
15 views2 pages

The Grievance Meeting

Uploaded by

Rebecca Best
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Grievance Meeting: How to Present a Grievance to Management

The first stages of filing a grievance can be the most important, no matter what kind of grievance
procedure your contract contains. This is the point at which information is gathered and arguments
are tested. It is the time when membership involvement and pressure can make the most difference.
And this is also the point at which mistakes can be avoided.
This fact sheet discusses how to present your grievance to management. The timing and kind of
meeting you have will depend on your contract. This will also likely govern who in management you
will be dealing with. But the skills used around presenting grievances are universal.
While geared to stewards, this fact sheet should also be useful for any member who has to meet with
management over a grievance.
Preparation Checklist
You will want to have your ducks in a row well before you go into the office with management. Here
are some of the things to consider:
 Have you documented your case? You may do this yourself or involve the steward, other members or
the business agent, depending on the grievance.
 Have you made an evidence list, including names of witnesses?
 Have you gotten statements in writing from witnesses?
 Have you or the union made a formal information request, in writing?
 Have you gotten management’s side of the story? What are some of their arguments? What evidence
do they have?
 What are the weak points, if any, in your case. Don’t wait for management to point them out. Be
prepared.
Road map for Presenting a Case
Review the issues, facts and arguments you think will be most helpful to your case.
 Problems. What are the main problems that the grievance is trying to address? In what order will
you present these problems?
 Facts. Who are your witnesses? What documents do you have? Are there pictures or diagrams that
would be helpful?
 Chronology. Write out the dates of events, in order, and of documents that relate to the case.
 Arguments. Write them out. Put them in the order you will want to present them.
 Remedies. Discuss and be prepared to respond to remedies that will solve the grievance.
Common Problems and Surprises
 Changing stories. A witness tells the story as you have heard it — then adds something or tells
another part of the story that you have never heard. What can you do? Call for a caucus. The time out
will give you a chance to regroup.
 Agreeing with management on certain points — or suddenly accepting an inferior offer
to settle the grievance. Stay away from agreeing to anything management says, unless you have
caucused and decided what kind of settlement would be acceptable.
 The steward or union representative will not stand up to management. In the short-term,
ask for a caucus and take them on the side to discuss the problem. Over the long term, you may need to
organize to replace ineffective representatives.
 Management presents new evidence or claims to have evidence but won’t present it. This
is why information requests are so important — we don’t want surprises.
Tips for Grievance Meetings
1. Set Ground Rules.
Union ground rules: A good steward or business agent should agree to some ground rules. A
common one is: never contradict what another union person says or agree to a management
proposal without stopping for a caucus (a private meeting among just the union people).
Ground rules for the meeting: the union has the right to bargain over how the meeting is
conducted, where it takes place and other details. This is important if management is trying to
gang up on a member or otherwise set the tone for the meeting.
2. Use Meetings to Get Information.

Part of your job in a hearing is to find out what management is up to — and what their
arguments are. This is especially important with grievances that may end up at the panel or in
arbitration.
3. Get Agreements In Writing.

You may not do this for every little grievance, but definitely do it with discipline cases and
contract interpretation issues. If management refuses to sign-off on an agreement, write your
own understanding of the terms and give or send it to them.
4. Take Control.
Your goal should be to control the tone, direction and outcome of a grievance meeting. Here
are some basic suggestions:
Ask questions. One strategy is to get management talking and keep them talking. Force
them to explain actions. Take note of lies or discrepancies.
Take your time. Set the pace. Management likely considers grievance meetings a waste of
time. Take the time needed to address everything.
Don’t get angry. Being aggressive and firm is good. But do not let management make you
lose control when you don’t want to.
Do get angry. Stewards have the right to go head to head with management and argue
aggressively.
If the contract is helpful, make management read the contract language out loud or read it to
them.
Take notes. Someone should be prepared to take written notes. Initial meetings are often
used to find out where management stands, what evidence they have and so on. Write down
key management statements. After the meeting take a minute to jot down anything you may
have missed. Make a note of the date and time and who was present.

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