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Line Manager Isses
20 Answers
I recently had an argument with my line manager after I came to work to find out she had totally re-organised my desk, moved my computer and threw out things she shouldn't. She told her manager I had sworn and shouted at her which is totally untrue and I have a witness to support this. My question is should I take out a grievance against her with HR as I feel my integrity and professionalism has been contravened.
Answers
Yes especially if you can prove you didn't swear her whole argument falls apart.
14:08 Mon 03rd Aug 2015
They may have a right to do these things, bednobs, though I am not totally sure about this....employees also have some rights to privacy in their workplace....but a reasonable person does not go into someone's desk , throw things out and rearrange things while they are away.
If rearrangements etc are thought to be necessary a reasonable manager would do it with the person or ask them to do it themselves under supervision if necessary.
If rearrangements etc are thought to be necessary a reasonable manager would do it with the person or ask them to do it themselves under supervision if necessary.
in the NHS, the desk belongs to the organisation and the line manager has the right to access it at any time, however it would be considered bad management to do so without a good reason. The manager may not own the desk and contents but they would certainly be responsible for ensuring that the desk and contents met any company policies regarding tidiness and health and safety. This is usually done by discussion with the employee but if this has failed then it would be up to them to take action.
The important stuff she threw away, was it important to you or to the company?
The important stuff she threw away, was it important to you or to the company?
The book she threw away which I found in the bin before it was emptied was important, she should have asked me before chucking it, she has only been in the company since April. The desk was re-organised not to satisfy tidiness issues or H&S issued but how she felt it should look without asking me and the waiting until I went home before she did the job. How would anyone like this?
I think the issue is that it was done apparently without discussion rather than what was thrown out or what belongs to whom.
It is poor management practice to go through someone's desk in their absence. and anyone who does this should expect the individual concerned to be very angry.
Only really very serious concerns about an employee would be a good enough reason for rifling through their desk......theft for example or breach of confidentiality....and even then it would be far better to do any searching or whatever in their presence rather than their absence.
It is poor management practice to go through someone's desk in their absence. and anyone who does this should expect the individual concerned to be very angry.
Only really very serious concerns about an employee would be a good enough reason for rifling through their desk......theft for example or breach of confidentiality....and even then it would be far better to do any searching or whatever in their presence rather than their absence.
I would be really miffed too. She should have discussed it with you first, she doesn't appear to have very good management skills.
If you can get passed it, let it go. But if not, write out your grievance in very unemotional and factual terms. The point is to stay calm or it might be assumed you are just being petty.
If you can get passed it, let it go. But if not, write out your grievance in very unemotional and factual terms. The point is to stay calm or it might be assumed you are just being petty.
Your boss may be threatened by your current liklihood of progressing up the ranks and their only line of defence is to ensure you gain the complainer/ troublemaker tag by tricking you into launching formal complaint procedures over an issue which is sufficiently annoying to motivate you to do so yet, ultimately, something trivial.
Things on the same level as race discrimination, sexual harrassment and so on need proper resolution and will not mark you down as one who complains unjustifiably.
If your work efficiency has been harmed (the book was reference material you need in order to perform your functions, say) then I think that justifies a complaint. *
If your work efficiency is unchanged then your case would be weaker, metely one of intrusion on "personal space" and, frankly, the company would regard it as their property, run under their rules. Get these clarified before you start anything which might show you up as ignorant of these rules.
If your work efficiency is improved, because the book was completely unrelated to work and other rearrangements also helped then, obviously, do not go ahead with the complaint: the boss will be getting 'brownie points' out of the situation.
* Showing up your boss, particularly a bad case of being so under-worked that they have time to tidy a desk - a task which could easily be ordered (delegated) later - will, naturally, have permanent and mildly corrosive effects on the team dynamic. If this harms the company's bottom line, ultimately it harms the prospects for you and your colleagues.
I am over-thinking, here, so you don't have to. Simply strike a healthy balance between being a doormat and asserting yourself but not so much so that you damage your employer's profit margin.
Things on the same level as race discrimination, sexual harrassment and so on need proper resolution and will not mark you down as one who complains unjustifiably.
If your work efficiency has been harmed (the book was reference material you need in order to perform your functions, say) then I think that justifies a complaint. *
If your work efficiency is unchanged then your case would be weaker, metely one of intrusion on "personal space" and, frankly, the company would regard it as their property, run under their rules. Get these clarified before you start anything which might show you up as ignorant of these rules.
If your work efficiency is improved, because the book was completely unrelated to work and other rearrangements also helped then, obviously, do not go ahead with the complaint: the boss will be getting 'brownie points' out of the situation.
* Showing up your boss, particularly a bad case of being so under-worked that they have time to tidy a desk - a task which could easily be ordered (delegated) later - will, naturally, have permanent and mildly corrosive effects on the team dynamic. If this harms the company's bottom line, ultimately it harms the prospects for you and your colleagues.
I am over-thinking, here, so you don't have to. Simply strike a healthy balance between being a doormat and asserting yourself but not so much so that you damage your employer's profit margin.
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