Vulgar Conversation -
T
175 Posts
I have a department of about 8 women. These women are customer service women who answer phones. Their area is a walk thru area that other employees use to get to their offices. A few of these women are having very distasteful conversations about the men in their lives. I received a complaint from one of the women in the area and I'm hoping that a member has not heard any of this talk in the background; my question is, should I consult with just the 2 women who were accused of doing the talking or should I address each individual separately on our policy of harassment?
Comments
If it was a more formal type of complaint, you should conduct an investigation and take appropriate action as necessary.
Just my thoughts and opinion. Good luck.
LFernandes
Just my thoughts!
Amanda
Thanks again.
Include everyone only if everyone is doing it.
My only concern is that you received a complaint about this group. I think I would still sit down and have a short discussion reminding them about the policy. Tell them that you received a complaint and felt that it needed to be addressed. I would rather do that then end up in court trying to defend myself because I didn't want to insult anyone.
Just my thoughts and opinions.
LFernandes
Those two should definitely be spoken to, and have no right to feel insulted if they did what they are accused of. Document it. It doesn't make sense, though, to remind everyone else. In my opinion, the company-wide reminder would be an indirect and ineffective waste of time.
Don D - I always love to read your replies/input.
The issue, though, is dealing with two employees who had vulgar conversations in the workplace. Apparently, someone did report it, so that is not the problem. There was no indication of retaliation, and a clear desire to avoid even the appearance of retaliation, so that is not the problem, either. To raise those points just clouds the issue.
The issue is two employees with a discipline problem and how to handle that. In my opinion it should be handled directly with the two employees, for reasons stated previously. If you are serious about preventing harassment, you need to take a serious and direct approach, which is individual counseling or discipline and not a group reminder. If I were the guilty party and it were handled in a group or company-wide manner, I would feel that I had gotten off easy and that what I had done must not have been so bad, after all, since there were no repurcussions. "Hmm, they've sent out reminders now about getting to work on time, wearing blue jeans and halter tops, hostile work environments, the company trip to the zoo next weekend..."
Your advice makes me think of someone who is standing in front of a burning building and talking about preventing the next fire instead of calling 911 to take care of the fire right in front of you.
I would have a sit down with the whole group to remind them of your sexual harassment policy. Include their supervisor or manager in the meeting. But, if you received a complaint about a specific person, I would also have a one-on-one discussion with that person (depending on the complaint) and have them read your sexual harassment policy and sign an acknowledgement that they received it. Explain in your meetings that should they continue to have inappropriate discussions at work, they could be subject to further disciplinary action up to an including discharge.
I spoke with each of the members of the department privately, gave them a copy of our EEOC policy. I highlighted the paragraph that states 'no harrassment....and no retaliation....." I then told them there had been a complaint within the department (without telling them what the complaint was about) and asked if they had been approached by another employee or had overheard remarks by other employees that were offensive to them. All but the accused employee had overhead the offensive remarks and several other employees admitted privately they had also been approached by a person (they all named the same person) and were too embarrassed to report it. I would not have known of the other situations if I had not spoken privately with each of them. After the conversations, I met with the accused employee and she was appropriately disciplined. Because of the intimacy of the subject to some employees, I tend not to agree with a group talk.
My reply had to do with why it would be good to include a group discussion when dealing with this issue. I did not address what to do with the specific offenders. Something should be done and that was explained well by you and others.
Paraphrase,"They know how to complain, someone apparently did."
Just because one person knows to complain doesn't mean that others do. What if they are new and have not gone through training? What if they don't remember?
Your advice reminds me of someone who looks at things through a toilet paper roll.
Thanks again for all the feed back.