ullying in the workplace is angering enough people these days to be fueling
a nationwide grass-roots legislative effort to force companies to draft and enforce
policies aimed at stopping it.
Requiring such policies, according to those pushing
the legislation, isn’t an attempt to spawn lawsuits, but an effort to force companies
to deal with the problem.
Bullying is blamed for unnecessarily creating high costs
of turnover, insurance claims and thwarted productivity. In his book The No Asshole
Rule, author Robert
Sutton reports one company estimating annual losses of $160,000 in turnover, overtime
and other costs created by handling problems caused by one star salesman’s tantrums
and insulting behavior.
One employer attorney, however, says laws already on
the books to prevent employer discrimination based on sex, race or religion are
now being interpreted in broadened contexts, and offer enough legal coverage to
obviate the need for anti-bullying rules.
Nevertheless, anti-bullying rumbles are breaking out
in state legislatures. Since 2003, 13 states—California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Kansas,
Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, Vermont
and Washington—have introduced 28 versions of the so-called "Anti-Bullying Workplace
Bill," says Bullybusters.org, a Web site tracking the legislation.
Bullying, according to the bill’s original language,
is defined as repeated "health-harming mistreatment" of one or more employees, through
verbal abuse, threats, "humiliating or offensive behavior or actions," or sabotage
that prevents work from getting done.
In Hawaii, a Senate resolution urges—but doesn’t require—employers
to set up anti-bullying policies for managers and employees. The resolution notes
that the National Institute for Occupational Health and Safety recognizes workplace
bullying, defined as "the repeated intimidation, slandering, social isolation or
humiliation by one or more persons against another," as a form of workplace violence.
Gary Namie, director of the Bellingham, Washington-based
Workplace Bullying
Institute, says the original
anti-workplace-bullying legislative language has been changed in various ways by
states introducing it. Some call for studies to determine the prevalence of workplace
bullying, and others dilute the legal power of the original legislation. The goal
of the legislation is to "outlaw any abusive work environment that is health-hazardous,"
he says.
"The real goal of the [proposed] law is not lawsuits,"
Namie says, "but an anti-bullying policy that is enforced. It takes a law to compel
[employers] to act. If the law is on the books, employers that have not bothered
to correct bullying are going to be liable."
So far, the legislation introduced in the 13 states
has yet to result in any new anti-bullying laws.
"That tells me the arguments against it are very strong,"
says Garry Mathiason, a San Francisco-based employer attorney with the firm Littler
Mendelson.
Mathiason has no shortage of arguments against anti-bullying
laws. High on his list is the difficulty in defining harassment. He sees a problem
in defining whether a frustrated boss raising his voice at an employee who continues
coming to work late is harassment—i.e., bullying—or good management.
"How do you distinguish between the two?" he says.
And corporate anti-bullying policies, he adds, "would
make every disciplinary situation open for debate. Employers would be required to
investigate, and when there are emotions, things are remembered differently. People
can view actions as harassment when in fact it is nothing more than getting the
job done."
While anti-bullying policies can be adopted by companies,
notes Mathiason, there is no guarantee they’ll be enforced. Meanwhile, he says,
he’s already seen hundreds of cases of employers disciplining employees with behavior
problems.
"I’m satisfied with where the law currently is and how
it’s evolving, but I would not favor an anti-bullying statute," Mathiason says.
He cites an example of a National Education Association
case two years ago involving a verbally abusive boss who offended all employees
indiscriminately as "an equal opportunity harasser," regarding religion and gender,
and not any select individual or group.
"But this case looks at it a little differently," says
Mathiason, noting that it examined which group the boss offended the most to show
discrimination. "This is where I see the courts trying to push the line for some
broadening of existing law." If bullying, or harassing, is defined by the courts
as a form of discrimination, he argues, existing law already forbids it.
Employer attorney Jim Hall of Los Angeles-based firm
Barlow, Kobata and Denis agrees.
"I don’t see, for a human resources policy, a big difference
between bullying versus any other form of harassment," he says. "It’s subject to
general anti-harassment policy."
With a policy in place forbidding harassment over race,
sex, age or religion, adds Hall, "The employer should treat bullying as a species
of harassment and deal with it on that basis."
But he stresses that companies need to stop bullies
from working for them. "They should be concerned, because today’s bully could be
tomorrow’s mass murderer," Hall says.
Every time there’s a workplace shooting in the news,
says Hall, he gets calls from concerned employers wanting to know how to fire an
employee who has made threats.
In those cases, he says, most companies’ anti-harassment
policies cover what action to take when threats are involved. If the policies don’t
cover threats, he says, they probably should. That’s because as far as he’s seen,
harassment claims aren’t showing any signs of going away.
Nothing new, but a problem
Bullying in the workplace is nothing new, Namie says.
But he figures it has increased "because of pressure for investor-driven goals"
put on companies. "They’re squeezing more production out of fewer folks."
Increased bullying in the workplace takes a toll on
bottom lines, he says, through employee turnover, absenteeism, disability insurance
claims and possible litigation. "The No. 1 impact is the cost to employers," he
says.
Other byproducts of bullying, he says, are eroded morale
and a tarnished reputation to the company as "the worst place to work."
A no-bullying policy, Namie says, will bring visibility
to abusive conduct, and employers will have to deal with it. And that’s good for
both the employer and its employees, Namie argues.
Employer attorney Mathiason sees workplace stress contributing
to workforce bullying cases. "There is intense economic competition worldwide,"
he says. "There are increases in productivity demands, tighter schedules and lower
ratios of managers to employees."
He says that employers are already dealing with bullies
for another big reason. There’s a demographic shift in the workplace in which baby
boomers are retiring, and there aren’t enough qualified replacements to fill the
gap.
"We’re entering into a deep and extreme skill shortage,"
says Mathiason, quoting an estimate that by 2010 there will be 10 million skilled-job
vacancies. In that context, he adds, "An environment that does not respect individuals
is going to be very unwelcome by employers trying to attract and retain talent."
Dealing with it
When a bullying case arises in a workplace, says Barbara
Reeves, an Irvine, California-based mediator and arbitrator, she says the problem
should be mediated as early as possible to prevent either side from digging in for
a protracted fight. A mediator will allow an employee’s grievance to be heard by
a neutral third party, which is a procedure that she recommends employers have in
place to solve the problem before it escalates.
Another approach is to have a complaint hot line for
employees connecting to an outside organization, she says. That organization then
notifies the company’s human resources department to set up mediation.
Reeves is closely monitoring the legislative progress
of anti-bullying measures. The Canadian province of Quebec already has laws in place
on the subject, she says.
Quebec outlaws "vexatious behavior" that affects an
employee’s "dignity or psychological or physical integrity."
Among types of behavior leading to bullying complaints,
Reeves says, are bosses criticizing an employee’s performance in front of other
workers, dirty looks or intentionally ignoring a specific employee. In short, Reeves
says, "These are things we are taught not to do. It’s analogous to the schoolyard
bully: someone who has power who gets a charge out of using it by yelling at people."
The newest generations entering the workforce, Reeves
adds, "don’t want to put up with it." They’re seen as more likely to complain than
older generations.
But Reeves also thinks drafting new laws making merely
rude behavior illegal "is kind of a nightmare. I’d hate to have to legislate a code
of civility."
Meanwhile, Atlanta-based workplace consultant Stephen
M. Paskoff figures employers need to deal with bullying—even if it isn’t illegal
now—to keep it from becoming a costly problem.
Paskoff—who has been a workplace consultant to Nike,
Mayo Clinic, Coca-Cola and other corporations and wrote the book Teaching Bigshots
to Behave—is seeing more frequent cases of workplace bullying these days.
"I think it arises because the behavior is not recognized
as expressly illegal," he says, "so it tends to get ignored until someone’s behavior
hits the front pages."
And employers tend to ignore bullying—particularly if
it is someone who is a great producer, Paskoff says.
But even if the bully is a strong performer, the problem
is that the behavior loses clients and costs the company business, Paskoff says.
Or, in a health care setting, it can cost a life.
An article on bullying in the medical profession, published
in February in the Journal of Vascular Surgery, cited an example of a surgeon with
a reputation for "disruptive behavior" dealing with a new anesthesiologist: "After
the tumor had been removed, the surgeon slipped into his disruptive pattern and
verbally abused the anesthesiologist so aggressively that, in her distraction, she
neglected to turn off the nitroprusside drip. The patient died."
Paskoff has found that companies tend to ignore behaviors
like bullying that aren’t explicitly illegal. "Employment lawyers look at it through
the lens of ‘Is it legal or not?’ " he says. "That’s how lawyers are trained. But
that legal view is missing the whole point. It could be legal, but highly unsavory."
He’s found that in-house attorneys tend to understand
the implications of ignoring the problem better than outside lawyers do because
they get an up-close look at the business consequences of bullying.
Putting an anti-bullying policy in place partly deals
with the problem, Paskoff says. But he stresses it’s just as important to have an
organizational standard of how all employees are to be treated.
"It’s very regrettable if companies don’t address bullying,"
Paskoff says. "If they don’t, laws will jump in and be burdensome."
Workforce Management Online, July 2007 -- Register Now!