The Librarian said:Perhaps then it was your statement that:
which threw us off then.One's supervisors had better have their ducks in a row
It shouldn't have thrown you off. If the member has kept detailed notes and accounting of all the tasks performed in the past year, and the supervisor hasn't, then the end result is going to be that the supervisor didn't have their ducks in a row. Any successful grievance is based on the premise that the grievor is going to have a better substantiated case than the supervisor, in this situation. If the supervisor doesn't have records of counselling interviews and documented performance, then they're pretty much doomed in the face of a grievor who has kept everything to substantiate their own performance.
Minimum of 2 feedback sessions is the minimal requirement. 3 feedback sessions is the optimal situation.
My bad. I think what I meant to say is that a PER supporting a "problem child" or "boy wonder" is going to need that additional level of substantiation of three feedback sessions.
The previous PER has zero bearing. The yardstick used in the writing of the PER is the current years performance by the member. Period. It is not related whatsoever to what the supervisor (the same supervisor or not) wrote or scored the member as in a previous year. The first thing the Redress authority is going to do is tell the member that "previous years' PERs, assesments and scoring are absolutely irrelevant to this current PER and have NO bearing upon it." They can redress all they want but I can guarantee you that a previous years PER will not come into play WRT the outcome of the redress. They may win a higher score if they have evidence to back up why they earned a higher score for the current years work, but they will NOT win it because that's what they had last year.
In the case you speak of, the point was won because the supervisor did not document this years performance correctly. It was not won because the member had a higher score the year before.
Yes and no. Bringing the previous PER into the grievance eliminates any chance of the supervisor being able to claim that different supervisors might subjectively view the same performance with different ratings. The system isn't perfect, and since humans do the evaluating, there's always a degree of subjectivity to it. If one has the same supervisor for two consecutive years, the grievor can essentially rule out the "subjectivity" aspect.