structuring warning/termination policy
How does your company structure its warning to termination policy and what documentation do you use for the process? Does general wording about "first step is verbal warning, second is first written, third is final written, last step termination" provide good guideline or develop a formal policy that can't be amended very easily. Example: if an employee gets so upset during a conversation that he/she tells his/her coworker to "fxxk off and get the fxxk out of my face," is that really just a verbal warning?
Our current wording seems to be too vague ("disclipline action may include any of the following: verbal or written warning, suspension, probation, termination, or other action") so I feel as if I'm starting from scratch here. Thanks in advance for your help.
Comments
I know I've already answered this specific question on another HR forum. I gave you our specific language verbatim. The three or four posters after me told you theirs was the same as ours. It is a very standard type of policy.
You can also google "employer discipline policy". Here's a great link to an overview of implementing a progressive discipline policy : http://www.fwlaw.com/progressive.html And here is another policy: http://www.elinfonet.com/pickedpol/45.html directly from the Employment Law Information Network. If these don't help you enough, then I suggest consulting with a local employment attorney.
Many companies no longer really say much about "verbal" warnings because they are notoriously poorly- or un-documented.
There are several elements that go into a progressive discipline plan. Here are some of the high points:
We do not generally use 3 or 4 and the language suggests that generally a 3rd violation within the same family of rules will typically result in termination of employment.
"The disciplinary measures applied in any particular context can depend on many factors.
Typically, progressive discipline will result in a Step 1 writetn warning for a first offense, a step 2 written warning for a second offense, amd termination of the employment relationship for a third breach of work rules or other unacceptable conduct or job performance"
"While it is impossible to list every type of behavior that may be deemed an offesne, this policy includes a list of examples of misconduct that may result in disciplinary action up to and including immediate termination of employment." -- Categories include the following, which are bullet point lists that do not include major policies to which they sometimes refer but are covered separately:
I would also include a code of conduct policy and in personal actions and appearance, include a reference to breaching the code of conduct. I've had good results referring to policies from the simplified list because nobody can say they didn't understand the list and it pretty much de-mystifies the wall of smoke and mirrors about alleged confusion in a UI hearing.
1. Voluntary termination
A voluntary termination of employment is a termination initiated by the employee.
2. Retirement.
This may be as a result of the employee’s age (which may vary,
depending on job type and benefits available following retirement) or
else an injury, disability, or other medical condition forcing early
retirement.
3. Involuntary termination
An involuntary termination is any termination of employment initiated by the company.
4. Termination by mutual agreement
Some types of termination by mutual agreement include:
• Mandatory retirement. Some occupations, such as commercial airline pilots, face mandatory retirement at a certain age.
• The end of an employment contract for a specified period of time (such as an internship).
• Forced resignation.
Source: Termination of employment
Best regards