Conflict: The word is derived from the Latin conflictus
meaning, “to strike together.” The dictionary defines conflict as a
clash, competition, or mutual interference of opposing or incompatible
forces or qualities, such as ideas, interests, or wills. Destructive
conflict distracts from otherwise productive use of time and energy,
emotional and physical.
Neutral Fact-finding: An investigative process in
which a lawyer/mediator conducts a due process type search for facts and
answers relative to an existing conflict. It allows concerned employees a
medium in which to communicate interests and issues to the employer, while
enabling management to make informed decisions and take appropriate
actions relative to the conflict.
Neutral fact-finding is voluntary and consensual, as
the third party neutral interviews the claimant, respondent, and other
vital personnel with information regarding the conflict. Because fact-finding
is flexible to the needs of the organization, issues such as the scope of
the investigation, specific people to be interviewed, the time to be
allotted, confidentiality, administrative access, union involvement, costs
and expenses, and other relevant concerns are discussed in the beginning.
The Workplace:
Conflict is a natural and normal consequence of
interaction of people over time. Often, conflict can be instructive and
beneficial, if one is capable of finding value in what most consider to be
a negative situation. In cases of alleged wrongdoing, however, the focus
is most often on blame and minimizing liability, with little early
interest in lessons learned or making the best of a bad situation. When an
investigation of alleged wrongdoing is initiated internally and employees
become aware of the proceedings, a certain tension and rigidity transforms
the workplace and vital information and facts can be elusive.
Neutral fact-finding can give the company a different
view of the problem and can be a detriment to litigation. A neutral
factfinder, trained in conflict resolution and knowledgeable in employment
law, can conduct any necessary review, interview employees or others, and
report all findings in a due process approach to investigating wrongdoing.
This is especially required when top management is a perceived target of
the investigation, or the usual investigators, such as human resources,
are tainted by involvement in the allegations, or union officials are
thought to be involved. The perception of an honest, thorough, and
complete investigation is critical to the loyal and watching workforce.
Where an organization’s usual internal investigation process is viewed
as unreliable or biased, for any number of reasons, good faith
participation and honest response to inquiry may be lacking. The outcome
is an unclear picture of what occurred,
along with the notion that somebody got away with something or
somebody became a scapegoat. To compound the original sin with a
inadequate or weak investigation can complicate the desired outcome and
confuse interested parties.
Neutral fact-finding is voluntary, although most
employees will readily participate if the process is viewed as impartial
and fair. The gathering of information through discussion and listening is
conducted with people directly involved, including the accused, who should
have the opportunity to have legal counsel or a union representative
present during the interview. When enough information, facts, and
pertinent data is collected and analyzed, the factfinder prepares a report
of the findings to enable the employer to assess the problem and make
speedy, yet informed, decisions and appropriate actions. This fact-finding
approach allows the employer freedom to maneuver and position itself in an
optimum legal posture, having paid for an independent review, conducted by
a trustworthy neutral in a due process manner, free of over-reaching or
self-serving activities, and remedial and speedy. This is not only the
morally high upper ground, this is a message to the employees that, even
though they do not work in a democracy, neither is it a dictatorship.
Neutral fact-finding is flexible and friendly to the
organization’s conflict culture and can be tailored to particular
requests or requirements. If it is viewed as fair, people will participate
and contribute. To fulfill this perception, the neutral factfinder should
initiate a strategy of involvement of key individuals to sanction the
process. All communications should be considered confidential, pending the
final report, and an internal gatekeeper should be assigned the
responsibility of access to the factfinder. The initial planning meeting
should include the corporate attorney and, if appropriate, the union
president. The investigation should mature at a comfortable pace and be
revised as necessary. The factfinder should be alert to possible
resolutions, even though these options are the responsibility of the
parties most closely involved. The considered judgment of management
officials, after study and inquiry into the findings, through consultation
with legal and human resource advisors, and with accurate and timely
information, cannot be ridiculed as capricious or arbitrary.
Neutral fact-finding can be less painful to the
organization, more cost effective, and highly responsive to
decision-making requirements. It is an effective tool, but requires
individualized adjustments to maximize information gathering while
protecting confidentiality and costs. It is that individualized approach
to this process that gives it the power and purpose to serve the needs of
the organization in a fair and impartial manner, while delivering the
legal requirements of a due process investigation. The California Supreme
Court, in 1998, ruled in a wrongful termination case brought by an
employee, who allegedly harassed another employee, that the governing
standard for deciding whether the employer acted properly is “a reasoned
conclusion, in short, supported by substantial evidence gathered through
an adequate investigation that includes notice of the claimed misconduct
and a chance for the employee to respond.” The California court added
that “the question critical to an employers’ liability is not whether
the terminated employee in fact harassed other employees, but whether at
the time the decision to terminate his employment was made, the employer
acting in good faith and following an investigation that was appropriate
under the circumstances, had reasonable grounds for believing the
terminated employee had done so.”
Often, human resource professionals do not have legal
expertise or adequate interviewing skills to conduct investigations, and
the corporate attorney, by definition, is not neutral. An outside neutral
lawyer/factfinder, with investigative experience, can be the appropriate
response to a difficult workplace conflict.