Below is a great article from Patricia Barnes, author of SURVIVING BULLIES, QUEEN BEES AND PSYCHOPATHS IN THE WORKPLACE. She is also one of the people who created the Care2 petition asking for a national answers — please help bring attention to this petition! Sign it and pass it on http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/protect-us-workers/ :
Federal Agencies Urged to Address Workplace Bullying
When an incident of assault, harassment, intimidation, or bullying occurs in a federal workplace, it is usually caused by an employee rather than a customer, criminal, or someone who has a personal relationship with the victim.
This is the conclusion of a study on workplace violence in the federal sector released in September by the U.S. Merit Systems Protectoin Board, an independent federal agency that promotes the efficient and effective use of the federal workforce.
The study, entitled Employee Perceptions of Federal Workplace Violence, recommends that federal managers “foster organizational cultures that do not tolerate violent behavior and that takes reports of such behavior seriously.”
Essentially the board is recommending that federal agencies adopt workplace anti-bullying and harassment policies that cultivate “organizational cultures that treat employees with dignity and respect.”
The study’s definition of workplace violence includes emotional violence – bullying, harassment and intimidation – as well as physical violence.
The study found that overall 13 percent of the federal employees surveyed – which is estimated to be one in eight federal employees – observed an incident of workplace violence in the past two years. The incidence was much higher in certain occupational groups – 26 percent of federal employees in medical/hospital occupations and 21 percent in police/security occupations.
About 54 percent of the violence observed was perppetrated by current or former federal employees; 34 percent was perpetrated by a customer; 7 percent by an individual who had a personal relationship with an employee; and four percent involved criminals.
Overall, the report states that 73 percent of the employees said their agency took sufficient steps to ensure their safety from violence in the workplace. However, that figure shrank to only about one-third of employees who had observed workplace violence by current or former employees or by individuals who had a personal relationship with an employee.
The report recommends that agencies adopt strategies to deal with workplace violence by current and former employees
Specifically, the report recommends the following strategies:
- Foster healthy organizational cultures that do not tolerate aggressive or violent behaviors;
- Complete appropriate pre-employment background checks;
- Train employees on workplace violence issues;
- Resolve serious workplace conflicts before they escalate into violence; and
- Administer human resources programs properly so as not to introduce undue stress into the workplace.
According to the report, conflicts in the federal workplace are fairly commonplace. The survey states that 49 percent of supervisors and 37 percent of all employees indicated that they had dealt with at least one serious conflict during the past two years. This survey defined “serious conflict” as one that the survey participant “felt if not addressed would result in negative workforce consequences such as low morale, low organizational productivity or performance, perceived unfairness, absenteeism, attrition, or even fear.”
The findings in the report are based primarily on an analysis of the MSPB’s 2010 Merit Principles Survey, which surveyed 71,910 full-time, permanent, non- Postal federal employees. The workers were asked about their perceptions of their jobs, work environments, supervisors, and agencies. There was a 58 percent response rate and 42,020 surveys were deemed valid.
The United States lags behind many other industrialized countries that have adopted laws and regulations to address workplace bullying. Last year, the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration passed a workplace anti-bully measure for its own workers. And now the Merit Systems Protection Board is recommending other federal agencies do the same. However, there is no federal or state legislation protecting private sector employees from workplace bullying.
Related articles
- New Workplace Bullying Book Offers Hope! (bullyinworkplace.com)
- Canadian Expert Says Companies Who Condone Workplace Bullying Are Short-Sighted (bullyinworkplace.com)
Why is there no study for postal workers? Why only non-postal federal employees? I am presently being bullied and would like to organize something to stop it for the benefit of myself and co-workers. Do you have a reference that can help me?
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