Meeting Facilitation
The Labor Management Council offers the services of a Certified Meeting Facilitator in
assisting groups through the process of focusing their energies to accomplish their tasks.
Worksite Labor Management Committees
Worksite Labor Management Committees
can be an effective method to promote and sustain Labor Management Cooperation. They provide a forum whereby both Management and
the Labor Union work together to build a joint decision-making process in which all
employees become involved in building the future of an organization. Employees become
involved in building action plans to implement ideas about how to improve their workplace. Key components of workplace labor management
committees include:
· Both parties must realize that they
have mutual interests and competing goals, and they need to strive for the answer to
serious problems, which would be equitable for all.
· Both parties should measure their
results on long range benefits and recognize the mutual benefits of labormanagement
cooperation, and that serious challenges affecting both labor and management can be
resolved in the cooperative effort with less difficulty than either party can achieve by
working alone.
· A conviction on the part of management
that the union is both willing and able to organize cooperative activity among employees
to achieve lower costs and increased efficiency.
· A willingness on the part of the
employer to share some vital managerial functions with the representatives of the union.
· A willingness on the labor unions
part to be a production-boosting agency in return for tangible and intangible benefits for
the union and its members.
· A resulting relationship in which the
parties assume joint responsibility for solving production problems and eliminating
obstacles interfering with greater efficiency.
The
Labor Management Council of Northeast Wisconsin provides the Facilitation and Training to create an
effective Labor Management Committee and provides the ongoing support to sustain success.
For More Information, contact the
Labor Management Council Office at: |