What Is a Grievance?
Definition:
A grievance is any unjust action, practice or condition committed by
management. It is a statement that an employer, or someone acting on
behalf of an employer, has violated a worker's rights that have been
agreed to under the contract, or through legislation, or through the
employer's past practice, or through the employer failing to meet
management rules or responsibilities, or through lack off fair
treatment. For example:
-
Violations of the contract
These are grievances which are violations of the
contract. They include such matters as seniority, hours of work,
staffing, wages, working conditions, holidays and vacations, and
disciplinary action without just cause.
-
Violations of past practice
No contract can cover every practice on the job.
A practice that has been in place for an extended period of time
and is accepted by both parties either
explicitly (orally or in writing) or
implicitly (neither side has ever objected) may be the basis
for a grievance if it is violated.
- Violation
of fair treatment
There doesn't have to be a contract clause
covering a supervisor's assaults or abuse of employees to make
it possible to grieve this kind of violation. Discrimination and
workers' rights covers a broad range of incidents or practices.
Management cannot legally discriminate on the basis of race,
gender, age, nationality, religion, or union activity.
- Violation
of the law
Laws written to protect workers are
implicitly part of the contract, and violation of municipal,
state, or federal laws can constitute a grievance.
-
Management's violation of rules or responsibilities
Management has the responsibility to provide
safe and healthy working conditions. Likewise, management has a
right to certain policies under the contract. If management
fails to fulfill its responsibilities or violates its own
policies, it may be necessary to file a grievance.
- If you feel you have a grievance or a question about a
situation, Please contact your SHOP STEWARD right away.

Thank You
George Hebert
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