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Violence in the Workplace: Is Your Agency Prepared?

By Steve Oppermann

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

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Steve Oppermann is an HR & EEO consultant/trainer with GRA, Inc. and with Rushford & Associates. He served as Regional Director of Personnel for GSA and advised and represented management in six agencies during his federal career.

To contact Steve about this article or about training or assistance at your agency, click here.

General advice on handling personnel problems may not be applicable to specific situations. Be sure to check with your human resources advisors for guidance in your particular personnel situation.

FedSmith.com recently published an article by my GRA colleague, Bob Gilson (Are You Ready? Federal Managers and Supervisors Should Prepare for Difficult Situations and Events) that provided terrific advice to managers and supervisors on how to deal with a variety of difficult situations. In this article, I'm going to spin off (that sounds so much nicer than "steal") one of Bob's points, which was on dealing with violence in the workplace.

In the aftermath of a bloody 10-day period which included the Virginia Tech mass murders, a killing in an office building in Troy, Michigan and one at the National Aeronautical & Space Administration (NASA) in Houston, the inevitable second-guessing took place as to what, if anything, could have been done to prevent these tragic events from occurring.

Due to the enormity of the Virginia Tech tragedy, virtually every detail of the shootings has been recounted by the media, while somewhat less attention has been paid to the other two incidents.

In Troy, Michigan, a man walked into Gordon Advisors, PC, and opened fire on three coworkers. He had been fired from the firm the previous week, police said.

According to Associated Press accounts, the gunman in the NASA incident, a contractor, somehow managed to get a snub-nosed revolver through security, then barricaded himself in a building that houses communications and tracking systems for the space shuttle. He shot and killed a man and duct-taped a woman to a chair for hours before finally shooting and killing himself.

Houston's Police Chief said William Phillips bought the .38-caliber revolver March 18, two days after receiving an e-mail citing deficiencies in his job performance and advising him that he was going to be reviewed. A copy of the e-mail was found in Phillips' lunch bag on the day of the shootings.

On the day of the incident, Phillips had lunch with David Beverly and another man, police said. Then, early that afternoon, Phillips entered Beverly's office with the gun in his hand and said "You're the one who's going to get me fired." After the two men talked for several minutes, Phillips shot Beverly twice, left the office, returned, and shot Beverly two more times.

One of the ongoing problems in preventing workplace violence is the myth that "It can't happen here." That myth is alive and well, as illustrated by the NASA situation, in which an agency spokesperson said after the incident, "Right now we're trying to understand why this happened, how this happened. But of course we never believed this could happen here to our family and our situation."

As has been tragically demonstrated again and again, it can happen anywhere and at any time. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, workplace violence is so pervasive that the Centers for Disease Control have classified it as a national epidemic:

USA Today ran a series on the subject a few years ago under the headline, "Managers not prepared for workplace violence." The articles noted that:

The USA series debunked another prominent myth -- that violence in the workplace can't be prevented -- but found in its analysis that:

© 2009 Steve Oppermann. All rights reserved. This article may not be reproduced without express written consent from Steve Oppermann.

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Readers' Comments

  • The current philosophy is that we trust our employees and managers to handle these things. Enterprise-level solutions are just "too difficult" for many agencies to handle. All employees should have basic training on workplace violence and those of us who are at risk because we tell people things t...
    Posted: February 19, 2009 12:28 PM
  • You hit the nail on the head. I work at a VA located in a major city, with high crime rates. Our EAP is one person, and that person spends most of the work day on other duties. If it wasn't a disgrace, I'd say it's a joke - but there is nothing funny about failing to put proactive measures into p...
    Posted: February 22, 2008 10:40 AM
  • Doers' never talk. Talkers never do. If a person is willing to die for what they want to do then the only way to stop them is to kill them....
    Posted: July 11, 2007 12:07 PM

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