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A Steward's Right To Information.
Information which a Steward has a right to ask for during the Grievance Proceedure.
The Right to Information
In processing grievances, the employer is obligated to provide the union information that the union needs in order to process grievances. As a steward, you may request information from the company:
- When you are investigating a grievance
- When you are preparing for a grievance meeting
- When deciding whether to drop or advance a grievance
- When deciding whether to arbitrate a grievance
- When preparing for a grievance
The type of information that the company must provide is broad. It must provide documents, data, and factual information that you request. However, you are not permitted to be on a "fishing expedition". Rather you must make requests for specific types of information.
The types of company records that you are entitled to include:
* accident records
* attendance records
* bargaining notes
* company memos
* contracts
* contracts
* correspondence
* disciplinary records
* disciplinary records
* equipment specifications
* evaluations
* evaluations
* inspection records
* insurance policies
* insurance policies
* interview notes
* job assignments
* job assignments
* job descriptions
* materials records
* materials records
* payroll records
* performance reviews
* performance reviews
* personnel files
* salary/bonus records
* salary/bonus records
* security guard records
* seniority lists
* seniority lists
* supervisors’ notes
* time study records
* time study records
* training manuals
* videotapes
* videotapes
Requests for information can be made orally. However, it is far better if they are made in writing. Be as specific as possible in identifying the documents or the data that you are requesting. By making the request in writing you are documenting what you asked for and when the request was made. The employer may refuse to grant your request based on the notion of confidentiality for employee records that are sensitive, such as medical reports and aptitude tests. To make this defense, the company must have an established personal privacy policy that is:
- Consistently adhered to, and
- Not shown to supervisors or other management personnel.
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