Death of employee - 1st anniversary
14Riley
8 Posts
Last year our office experienced a significant tragedy. One of our employees (with 25 years of service) had a heart attack and died IN THE OFFICE. Many of us witnessed her death and have been affected by the loss. We are approaching the one-year anniversary. I have concerns about our staff and their ability to “cope” with her death. We do have an EAP plan, but I am not sure of how much use it gets. I have been thinking about bringing in a counselor (something we DID NOT do after her death) to talk to/comfort the staff.
In your opinion, will that help the staff, or possibly make them feel worse?
Also, how do I get management to approve the expense of the counselor – they weren’t too keen on the idea last year?
Any other suggestions would be welcome and appreciated.
Thank you, in advance, for your opinions and suggestions!
In your opinion, will that help the staff, or possibly make them feel worse?
Also, how do I get management to approve the expense of the counselor – they weren’t too keen on the idea last year?
Any other suggestions would be welcome and appreciated.
Thank you, in advance, for your opinions and suggestions!
Comments
Please don't take this the wrong way (I may be reading way too much between the lines in your post), but I think you may be personally needing this more than the other employees.
The best advice I can give is to take this as an opportunity to remind all employees (without specifically mentioning the one year anniversary) about the EAP and it's many benefits. I think the message will be loud and clear to those who perhaps need this. This will allow you to fulfill your genuine concern for the other employees without appearing to be imposing or force-feeding something down their throats by bringing a professional in.
Gene
Send out a reminder about benefits the EAP plan has to offer.
In another company, we announced through the management chain that at 10:00 AM on X date, that we would shut down the switchboard for 5 minutes for a silent rememberance of the deceased employee. It worked and everyone who chose to pray did and those that chose to sit quietly for 5 minutes did so. We did not do it again, but the first anniversay was important to many of our employees.
May God assign your deceased employee to overlook the well being of the company and its personnel!
PORK
Just some thoughts.
An aside: I have found this forum to be extremely helpful (and fun). Thank you again!