5 Steps Help Prevent Workplace Violence

Business Management Daily's free Workplace Violence Prevention Toolkit contains violence prevention strategies, advice for managers on maintaining a safe workplace, two sample anti-violence policies and checklists to use in case violence does erupt.
By: www.BusinessManagementDaily.com
 
Nov. 23, 2009 - PRLog -- Fort Hood Rampage Kills 13, Wounds 43

1 Killed, 5 Wounded in Orlando Shooting: Officials Say Suspect was Fired from
Firm Where Incident Occurred

2 Dead, Up to 10 Wounded in Portland, Ore., Shooting

In the wake of a spate of workplace shootings, HR professionals and managers nationwide are grappling with the horrific possibility of violence erupting in their own facilities.

____________________

HR Specialist’s free Workplace Violence Prevention Toolkit contains prevention strategies, tips on identifying potentially violent workers, advice for managers on maintaining a safe workplace, two sample anti-violence policies adaptable for use in any company and checklists to use in case violence does erupt.

Download your free copy at http://www.BusinessManagementDaily.com/WorkplaceViolencePrevention.

____________________

An effective workplace violence prevention program starts with employee screening and ends with publicizing a tough anti-violence policy, according to Dennis A. Davis, a former SWAT team liaison who now directs client training for the employment law firm Ogletree Deakins.

Stressed out or mentally unstable people sometimes become violent—and sometimes they do so at work. There’s never been a better time to implement a violence prevention plan with these five elements:

1. Screen applicants

“Your best chance to avoid workplace violence is to avoid letting in a violent person in the first place,” Davis says.

Ask all applicants for personal as well as professional references. Insist on a face-to-face interview so managers can gauge an applicant’s temperament. Ask everyone who comes in contact with the applicant about their impressions.

Then trust your gut. Does this person seem stable?

2. Craft a tough anti-violence policy

You need a policy that stands on its own—not part of some other general policy on professional behavior or misuse of office equipment. That sends the signal that you’re serious about preventing workplace violence.

“Most people will go along with your expectations if you’re clear about them,” Davis says. Having a written policy does that.

Make sure it states you have zero tolerance for any kind of violence—and threats of violence. You can even expand it to cover off-duty threats that might spill back into the workplace later. Prohibit weapons on your premises. Require employees to read the policy and sign a receipt. Ask your vendors to read and enforce the policy when their employees are on your premises or work site.

3. Establish a crisis management team

A crisis management team consists of six to eight people who function as coaches before violence erupts and incident managers if it does. Include staffers from the HR, legal and security functions. There should be a representative from senior management and your employee assistance program if you have one.

The team should track complaints of violent or intimidating employee behavior. That can help identify potentially violent employees before they become physically dangerous. The crisis management team also functions as your liaison to the police if an incident occurs.

4. Train front-line supervisors and greeters

“These people are your eyes and ears, your early warning system,” says Davis. They’ll probably know if someone is about to become violent long before anyone else does.
Instruct supervisors to report every incident. Train receptionists and security how to read aggressive body language and how to use verbal skills to defuse dangerous situations.
Tell everyone to call 911 if they are in danger or believe a situation is about to become violent.

5. Publicize your anti-violence program

Use meetings, newsletters, e-mail and the intranet to get the word out that your organization has a zero-tolerance policy on workplace violence. Be sure everyone knows how to contact the crisis management team and when to call 911.

The HR Specialist family of products helps HR professionals quickly resolve their daily challenges. From state-specific employment law to compensation and benefits, our experts give you the HR advice you need to know.

Whether you’re new to HR or an experienced pro—a department of one or 10—you can trust the practical, plain-English advice from HR Specialist. We’ll save you time and headaches by focusing on what you need to know, when you need to know it. That makes you the HR expert your company can rely on and gets you the recognition you deserve.

For information on the full range of HR Specialist resources in print and on the web, visit http://www.theHRSpecialist.com.

____________________

To help employers prevent tragedies like those that paralyzed communities across the country in the last two weeks, HR Specialist has prepared a free toolkit offering business advice, guidelines and policies aimed at keeping workplaces safe from employee violence.

To download your copy of the Workplace Violence Prevention Toolkit—at no charge—visit http://www.BusinessManagementDaily.com/WorkplaceViolenceP....

____________________


— End —

# # #

BusinessManagementDaily.com is one of the web’s fastest-growing business management portal sites. Our editors update BusinessManagementDaily.com hourly with practical advice that managers can use to save time, improve productivity and make more money.
End
Source:www.BusinessManagementDaily.com
Email:***@nibm.net Email Verified
Zip:22043-2004
Tags:Violence, Policies, Attack, Fort Hood, Workplace, Employee, Shooting, Postal, Assault, Management
Industry:Human resources, Business, Security
Location:Virginia - United States
Account Email Address Verified     Disclaimer     Report Abuse
BusinessManagementDaily.com PRs
Trending News
Most Viewed
Top Daily News



Like PRLog?
9K2K1K
Click to Share