OP here. This is solid advice, thank you. I appreciate it. |
this whole thread is enraging. I can't believe we piss away tax dollars like this. These people should be fired immediately. |
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I would be extremely wary of the “psychological safety” coaching and the advice to communicate verbally. I’d talk with the coach about how you feel the need to ensure there are no misunderstandings and so you’d like to use email. If the coach pushes back against that, I’d keep the verbal discussions to a minimum and keep written notes about exactly how the conversations go.
I would NOT be comfortable with this kind of coaching - it gives this crazy lady even more opportunity to be crazy. Kind of like how couples counseling is not recommended for abusive spouses. Finding a new job ASAP is truly the only reasonable thing to do here, I’m afraid. |
Yea, this is wildly inappropriate for an employee with performance issues. People learn and absorb things differently so I do think it’s a good idea to communicate requests to low performing employees verbally so they can ask questions. But then you ALWAYS follow up with an email so it’s crystal clear. Why is that not an option here? The follow up email doesn’t just serve as documentation - it’s a reference for the employee while they complete their tasks. And if this person truly is suffering from mental health issues, you focus on reality. Which would be verbal and written communication. |
I have dealt with this. You go through the steps. It takes about two years for someone to be fired or they leave. It's very good that she's already in the progressive discipline process. You also have to go through the process that HR asks you to do, like trying to improve communication. Just do it, but document every conversation and encounter and have witnesses if possible. They need to do this to avoid lawsuits or to win one if they are sued. People sue all the time but don't necessarily win. She will bring up new problems, new issues, deflect and obfuscate; just stay on course. She is not redeemable. (I had someone who brought up wanting physical accommodations for repetitive motion injury that derailed a disciplinary conversion. We had to address that, then go back to it all.) Oftentimes, people quit as the disciplinary process goes further. Or your organization may need to find somewhere for her to go to finish up her career. You "contain" these people and allow them fewer opportunities to disrupt the workplace. Believe it or not, this is good experience for you to deal with this. You will probably encounter other similar situations in the future and you will learn from it. Unfortunately, it's the bad part of managing people. There are good parts too. I hope you have HR and management's support. |
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OP, I have to ask: does anyone in your leadership chain have concerns about your supervisory and/or communication style?
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OP here. I checked in with my supervisor about this last week after the first counseling session. She said no, she feels my leadership style is great. I am very direct with my staff and put most questions or concerns in writing. I minimize meetings, I have monthly/mandatory 1:1's with all my staff and one unit meeting per month. All of my staff have passed the probation period and are independent workers. I don't micromanage or spend a lot of time chit-chatting or doing unnecessary social stuff. The issue is that is what my problem staff is asking for. She is requesting more validation and acknowledgment of her experiences and education, she wants a relationship with "shared power and values" according to the communication coach. This is why she wants me to call her directly so she can chit-chat and feel psychologically safe. My supervisor doesn't like this suggestion because she wants the problem employee gone and a paper trail of all communication; she's attending all 1:1's with the employee too. I told my supervisor I had concerns about the feedback from the communication coach. She is concerned too but said there's nothing we can do about it since the agency director asked me to do it. I'm wondering if it's because the employee filed an internal grievance and despite that it was unfounded, my agency director is trying to show they addressed my direct report concerns about my management style and (if there is future problems) it's on her, not me. It just feels like mind games at this point. |
What awful agency is this that has 6 steps? Mine isn’t like this thankfully. |
"Lead, follow or get out of the way." |
“Get your $hit done and STFU.” |
| Part of being a manager is being the bigger person. Keep your focus on the work, not your ego. Nobody wins these silly spats anyway. Just be extremely professional, no emotion. |
| Is this GAO? Sounds like it from the all around dysfunction. |
The OP said they work in social services. |
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Our taxpayer dollars at work. Best of luck OP.
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| After each call I would summarize in an email so you have it in writing |