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National Park Service Leadership Team Explains Zero Tolerance Sexual Harassment Policy

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Outlining steps that will be taken to root out sexual harassment across the National Park Service, the agency's leadership team has laid out its zero tolerance policy to employees, who will be anonymously surveyed this fall to determine how extensive the problem might be.

"Some have asked what it means for the National Park Service to have a zero tolerance policy for sexual harassment," Park Service Director Jon Jarvis said Wednesday in memo emailed system-wide. "I want to clearly state that this means that when incidents of harassment are reported, I expect NPS managers to follow up on those allegations. Specifically, in situations involving alleged harassment, including sexual harassment, I expect NPS managers to initiate an investigation of the allegations and to act promptly to ensure that the harassment, if confirmed, does not continue. I also expect appropriate disciplinary action to be taken if any allegations are verified. To ensure that this can happen consistently across our organization, I have asked a leadership team in Washington, with input from regions, parks and programs, to develop a roadmap that will guide these efforts."

The move to assess the extent of sexual harassment stems from a sordid, long-running episode in Grand Canyon National Park's River District in which male employees pawed and propositioned female workers, some of who at times exhibited their own risqué behavior. An investigation by the Interior Department's Office of Inspector General turned up a tawdry list of inappropriate behavior, from male employees taking photographs up under a female co-worker's dress and groping female workers to women dancing provocatively and bringing a drinking straw "shaped like a penis and testicles" to river parties. The incidents, a September 2014 letter to Interior Secretary Sally Jewell charged, "demonstrated evidence of 'discrimination, retaliation, and a sexually hostile work environment.'”

Back in March, Director Jarvis sent an email to all Park Service employees stating that "no employee has the right or the power by nature of their position to inflict their will or to subject co-workers, regardless of their status, to abuse." He further acknowledged that across the National Park System many employees "have expressed shock and dismay that the serious behavior and practices described have occurred for so long."

While he added that personnel matters and pending Equal Employment Opportunity cases require confidentiality, the director wrote that he wanted to "assure you that we are taking active steps in response to this situation."

In his memo Wednesday, Director Jarvis wrote:

Creating a more inclusive and respectful culture that will not accept incidents of discrimination, harassment, or retaliation requires a combination of actions. As first steps in this emerging roadmap, we will:

Better Understanding the Issue: The National Park Service is finalizing a request for proposals for a company or organization that will conduct a nationwide survey of NPS employees to determine the prevalence of harassment across the bureau. It will be a comprehensive and anonymous survey that measures the prevalence of harassment at all levels of the bureau. We will spend the next month soliciting and reviewing proposals and plan to begin the employee survey by October.

Raise Awareness: As a first step in a broader training effort, every NPS employee should take an existing online training class in DOI Learn that includes the definitions and reporting process for sexual harassment. Supervisors should take Sexual Harassment Prevention for Federal Managers, and all other employees should take Sexual Harassment Prevention for Federal Employees. Building on these basic courses, additional NPS-specific training products and guides will be developed and shared with employees.

Support Victims: The NPS is creating a confidential hotline for individuals who may have witnessed or experienced sexual or other forms of harassment. This confidential hotline will allow individuals to both report harassment and receive support. Employees will be able to speak confidentially to hotline representatives, who can provide counseling and advice on reporting. In addition, employees and managers can also contact their Manager, their Union representative, the Equal Employment Opportunity Office, the Human Resources Office, the Inspector General’s Office, and/or a CORE PLUS neutral.

Empower the Equal Employment Opportunity Office: The NPS Equal Employment Opportunity Office now reports directly to me in the Director’s Office, allowing me to empower the Equal Employment Opportunity Office in their efforts to maintain a robust equal employment opportunity program.

Institutionalize Culture Change: To ensure continued focus on ensuring that employees have a workplace that is free of harassment, discrimination, and retaliation, and to support the development of more inclusive and respectful work environments, I asked a leadership group to develop a short and long term strategy to guide the National Park Service’s response to harassment and to help institutionalize the reforms we are undertaking by utilizing our Operational Leadership and the NPS Safety Strategy management models.

Just as Operational Leadership has empowered employees to speak out when they or their colleagues face a decision that might compromise safety, we must empower employees to speak out, report, and help prevent any form of discrimination, bullying, harassment, or inappropriate comments or actions based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex (including pregnancy and gender identity), age, marital or parental status, disability, sexual orientation, or genetic information. To that end, the National Park Service will not tolerate acts of retaliation against individuals who report discrimination, harassment, or any acts of misconduct or unethical behavior.

The National Park Service enjoys a world-wide reputation for its stewardship of natural and cultural resources and its high standards of public service. I know we can show that same degree of professionalism and respect to each other in the work place.

Comments

'Some have asked what it means for the National Park Service to have a zero tolerance policy for sexual harassment," Park Service Director Jon Jarvis said Wednesday in memo emailed system-wide.'

It takes a brave man to publish such a notion for the world to read. Go the next step Jon and let slip the names of these nitwits. Then we can check their nametags against our list, sending the vulenerable to the tree tops when the menaces lurch into view.  

But perhaps that is a rush to judgement. Maybe there are words which this particular brand of troglodite finds confusing. Let's look.

1. They can't be 'National Park Service.' That name is on their shirt, truck and paycheck.

2. Perhaps in a Clinton homage they are asking what 'means' means. Clinton the he, not the she. Although she is no piker either.

3. Could it be 'tolerence?' Noooo. A Tradespeople know it as wiggle room, others as patience. Both are correct.

4. Zero. The big infinate 'nought.'" That which is the absence of everything. Nope, thats not confusing.

5. So we are left with 'sexual' and 'harassment'.  Terms we admit might need some constraints if discovered in the wild. But in this regard the world is not an untamed place.  For the last 60 years OPM has written reams of guidance.  Real reams of 480 pages each.

Mandatory training has been foisted on the shifty and wide eyed alike. Teachers have taught in kindergarden thru high school and deans have raged in colleges orientations. News accounts are engorged with reports of allegtions, law suits and judgements, each offering excruciating detail of the prohibited acts and the increasingly polioed excuses. The entire U.S. military has transformed its composition and culture in this long time.

And now from benighted creases of the National Park Service we hear 'Who? Me? Is that wrong?'

'Tis to weep.

In tomorrow's exercise we will tease out the plain meanings of the  words 'wrong doing, ''investigate' and 'act' which, according to the Director thereof, bedevil the management ranks of the National Park Service.

 


With the Director's past performance on this issue, one should be excused from being a little skeptical about his words, especially "Zero tolerance".  We've heard it all before, but nothing changes.  And, the last thing we need is another survey, especially when the Director refuses to recognize or act upon the results of previous employee surveys.  These are the ones which have shown very low and declining ratings for his leadership team.  At least, now he has belatedly acknowledged problems which the National Park Service has tried to ignore for years.


There is no such thing in the government sector as "zero tolerance." There are "reams of guidance" as noted by a commenter above, as well as many court cases to guide managers and personnelists. Google "Graham factors." "Sexual harrassment" often tracks a situation into a particular proccess, but anyt eventual discipline does not get some special pass from guidance regarding employee discipline or termination.

"Zero tolerance" is a nice phrase to use in talking points but in the end means nothing, which is why management has such a hard time defining it without spinning in circles.


Correction to comment above: I meant "Douglas Factors." Graham factors deals with something entirely different haha.


Our zero tolerance policy is even more zero tolerance than our previous zero tolerance policy. We're talking totally zero here. And the people who were responsible for the last zero tolerance policy, well, we're not tolerating their zero any more. Sure, they're all still here, but this time, we're really, really, really, really serious about it. Honest.


"Just as Operational Leadership has empowered employees to speak out when they or their colleagues face a decision that might compromise safety?????"  Oh, we're doomed. Just as management has ignored Operational Leadership when it conflicted with management agendas. For example, management totally ignored field opinion on the re-design of law enforcment vehicles in favor of their own design in total violation of Operational Leadership. But that doesn't count. A guess they're really, really, really not serious about either.


Crooked Jarvis has thoroughly embarrassed the agency on its 100th anniversary.  Which is why they aren't firing him presently to bring more scrutiny on the uniform.  I live for the day when his "maintenance backlog" scheme is similarly exposed like all the other scandals currently seeing light. He will be allowed to "retire" at the end of the year.  Which is bullsh...

Shame on Jewell and her REI cronies. No backbone.  I suppose Jarvis put enough money in her pocket when she oversaw the concessionaires under her tenure with them.


You anonymous guys nailed it.  Once again, Jarvis sends out these empty catch phrases, pretending that something is happening when it's just business as usual.  Has there been any disciplinary action against the accused sexual harasser who still works for the Park?  Has anybody been really punished?  This doesn't usually happen unless one is a whistle blower, then they arrest you on bogus charges and ruin your career.  Jarvis and his team have no credibility, and Interior Secretary Sally Jewell made a bad decision in not firing him when presented with just cause.


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