| Union-Management Cooperation Philosophy
1. Respect:
Respect for the legitimate roles of both management and the union is
fundamental. Management must accept the basic right of the union to
represent bargaining unit employees. The union must accept management’s
responsibility to have the most effective operation possible. Both
sides must respect the collective bargaining contract as a baseline
agreement between them.
2. Leadership:
Top level management and union leaders sanction and then must sponsor
any joint endeavor and be prepared to implement reasonable
recommendations. Middle level and front line level management and union
leaders must play a significant role in the joint process so that real
change can occur at the operational level.
3. Specificity:
Union and management leaders set direction by specifying the goals and
objectives of their joint effort. Then they develop the plans to
achieve them and measures to gauge their progress. The direction set
reflects a shared commitment to address the present and future
challenges, problems, and opportunities they face.
4. Development:
Leaders and participants often require new skills and behavior to be
successful in their roles in a joint effort. Both parties need to
commit to the education, training, coaching and development necessary
to support their shared success.
5. Attention:
Joint monitoring of union-management activities maintains the momentum
to carry forward successful initiatives. Both parties need to commit to
assess whether the goals and objectives of the effort are being
achieved and to evaluate the impact of the joint effort overall.
6. Results:
Nothing succeeds like success. The final outcomes must be visible and
measurable. Union-management cooperation should make a real difference
in the operation of the organizations involved and the lives of the
people within them. |