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Be Directive
By Linda Graff
Excerpted from Well-Centred
Policies should clearly tell people what is expected. While one would hope for complete compliance with all policies, it is obvious that compliance with some policies is much more important than compliance with others. It is appropriate, therefore, that some policies be more strongly worded and more authoritative than others. For example, there are some policies for which the imperative mood - a command - is entirely proper:
Volunteer Centre personnel will never divulge information about individual or organizational clients except when necessary and appropriate in the context of service delivery, and even then, never without ensuring that the required 'Release of Information' form has been completed. Under no circumstance will volunteer centre personnel represent, or act as a spokes- person for, the Centre to the media, unless specifically authorized to do so by the Board of Directors.
In all cases, remember that policies are policies. They must be directive and they must articulate, as Cryderman says, the what.
Emphasize The Positives
Not to diminish the importance
of the three preceding principles, it is recommended that policies
be empowering and enabling wherever possible. That is, wherever
possible, policies should motivate and inspire. They should
articulate outside limits, leaving as much room within them
for flexibility and creativity. The presence of supportive and
enabling policies can provide the encouragement and recognition
that people need to maximize their potential. Policies can demonstrate
just how important the work is, and the very real consequence
of error when standards are not attained or guidelines are not
followed.
Here are some illustrations:
On conflict of interest
Any person who has a conflict
of interest with the work or business of the Volunteer Centre
will be asked to immediately suspend their position (s) with
the Centre until such time as the conflict can be investigated
and resolved.
An alternate might read something like this:
Volunteers
are very busy people who often have many connections in the
charitable community, and who sometimes volunteer for more than
one organization at the same time. It is, therefore, not unusual
for volunteers to find themselves in a conflict of interest
situation, regardless of whether they do administrative (board
or committee) or direct service volunteering. Any volunteer
who suspects that be or she may have a conflict of interest
must notify his/her immediate supervisor to determine what the
next steps should be. A copy of the centre's conflict of interest
procedure is available from ...
On turning volunteers away
The volunteer centre reserves
the right to refuse to refer any prospective volunteer who is
deemed to be 'not ready to volunteer,' or who, in the opinion
of Centre personnel, may pose an unacceptable risk as a volunteer
to placement agency or its staff, volunteers, or clients.
Versus:
From time to time, the volunteer centre may be unable to
refer a prospective volunteer to a placement in the community.
Every care must be taken, in turning such applicants away, to
respect the applicant's sense of self-confidence and dignity.
In the process, emphasis must remain on the absence of a match
between the gifts that the volunteer has to offer and what volunteer
positions and placement agencies require at the present time.
Wherever possible, volunteer centre personnel will recommend
what the individual might pursue in preparation for possible
future involvement in volunteering. (See also, the Anti-discrimination
Policy (sample policies 44 and 91), outlined on pages 63 and
93 respectively.)
For books on this topic in our bookstore, click the link(s) below:
________
Permission is granted for organizations to download and reprint this article. Reprints must provide full acknowledgment of source, as provided:
Excerpted from Well Centred, by Linda L. Graff, 1998, Volunteer Canada.
Found in the Energize website library at: http://www.energizeinc.com/art.html
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