The Northern Advocate

Workplace bullying complaints on the rise

- — NZME

Workplace bullying is an increasing­ly common grievance that employers have to face today. All too often we hear from employers that an employee has quit, or been dismissed, and the employee has then made a claim for bullying, which the employer never knew about.

Disciplini­ng an employee, closely managing their performanc­e, or providing constructi­ve feedback is not bullying. However, disciplini­ng that employee in front of others, setting unrealisti­c performanc­e standards or intimidati­ng, belittling or abusing an employee is.

So, how do employers get the balance right?

The first step is to acknowledg­e that bullying is an issue and can have severe mental health ramificati­ons.

Bullying may be costly to a business, through increased employee leave, low productivi­ty, or distractio­ns to resolve staff squabbles or personal grievance claims.

A bullying allegation must be taken seriously. Employers should talk with the complainan­t about their concerns.

It may be that an employee simply wants a forum to resolve things.

Crucially, an employer should not simply “wave off” a complaint, or favour one employee over another, before any allegation is explored.

WorkSafe has defined bullying as repeated and unreasonab­le behaviour directed towards a worker or a group of workers that can lead to physical or psychologi­cal harm.

This definition does not cover one-off or occasional instances of rudeness or tactlessne­ss, or a single incident of unreasonab­le behaviour.

If an employee wishes to mount a claim, then they must first bring their concerns to the attention of their employer.

Generally, an employee cannot quit their job and later say they were bullied and forced to quit.

We have seen a trend in employees raising the allegation of bullying as a health and safety matter.

However, just last month, Worksafe released a statement determinin­g that bullying allegation­s that involve an employment relations issue should be dealt with in the Employment Relations Authority.

Unless there is a diagnosis of serious mental harm, and that diagnosis can be attributed beyond reasonable doubt to workplace bullying, WorkSafe is unlikely to step in.

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