Marchese Ford Employee Handbook
Progressive Discipline
Every employee has the
duty and the responsibility to be aware of and abide by existing rules and
policies. Employees also have the responsibility to perform his/her duties
to the best of his/her ability and to the standards as set forth in his/her
job description or as otherwise established.
Marchese Ford supports the use of progressive
discipline to address issues such as poor work performance or misconduct.
Our progressive discipline policy is designed to provide a corrective action
process to improve and prevent a recurrence of undesirable behavior and/or
performance issues. Our progressive discipline policy has been designed
consistent with our organizational values, HR best practices and employment
laws.
Outlined below are the steps of our progressive
discipline policy and procedure.
Marchese Ford reserves the right to
combine or skip steps in this process depending on the facts of each
situation and the nature of the offense. The level of disciplinary
intervention may also vary. Some of the factors that will be considered are
whether the offense is repeated despite coaching, counseling and/or
training; the employee's work record; and the impact the conduct and
performance issues have on our organization.
·
Verbal warning:
A supervisor verbally counsels an employee about an issue of concern, and a
written record of the discussion is placed in the employee's file for future
reference.
·
Written warning:
Written warnings are used for behavior or violations that a supervisor
considers serious or in situations when a verbal warning has not helped
change unacceptable behavior. Written warnings are placed in an employee’s
personnel file. Employees should recognize the grave nature of the written
warning.
·
Performance improvement plan:
Whenever an employee has been involved in a disciplinary situation that has
not been readily resolved or when he/she has demonstrated an inability to
perform assigned work responsibilities efficiently, the employee may be
given a final warning or placed on a performance improvement plan (PIP). PIP
status will last for a predetermined amount of time not to exceed 90 days.
Within this time period, the employee must demonstrate a willingness and
ability to meet and maintain the conduct and/or work requirements as
specified by the supervisor and the organization. At the end of the
performance improvement period, the performance improvement plan may be
closed or, if established goals are not met, dismissal may occur.