Anyone having
a personal dispute with any other person within the Barony shall
settle the matter using the following procedure:
SUGGESTED
CHANNELS FOR COMPLAINT AND APPEAL
The Society is
devoted to courtesy, trustworthiness and personal responsibility,
and it sometimes seems that these ideals should be enough to permit
members to work smoothly together. After all, virtually everyone agrees
it is desirable to foster the Society’s goals of encouraging research
and recreation in its chosen period and to promote the welfare and
prosperity of the organization and the education and enjoyment of
everyone in it. Unfortunately, tensions and disputes develop anyway.
The Board is the
final court of appeal for disputes that have escalated beyond the
ability of the participants or the officers to handle. However, it
is reluctant to play that role because its rulings affect the entire
Society – often by restricting everyone’s freedom and reducing their
enjoyment of the organization. Corpora provides an unlimited right
of appeal to the Board, but members should make every effort to work
out their disputes at as low a level in the organization as possible.
While it is not
possible to prescribe a specific list of things to do or people to
consult that will serve in all disputes, the general procedure outlined
here should be adaptable to most of them. If you are directly involved
in a dispute, please go through a process at least as comprehensive
as this one before asking the Board for help. If you are asked to
intervene in someone else’s dispute because of the office or title
you hold, please don’t rush in. First urge the principals to try all
measures recommended for attempting to reach a settlement without
involving your level of the organization.
Then, if you do
intervene, make every effort to find a resolution the participants
can accept, instead of escalating the dispute to higher levels of
the organization.
Principles
- Avoid trouble.
There are many valid approaches to Society activity. Members should
make room for each other to explore anything that supports the Society’s
goals, abides by its rules, and does not actively interfere with
the environment it attempts to create. In many cases, the best way
to deal with a minor problem or disagreement is to act as though
it doesn’t exist. HOWEVER, the advice about ignoring problems in
the hope that they’ll fade away does not apply to breaches of the
law. If you encounter illegal activities, your obligations as a
citizen are the same as in any other aspect of your life. Please
keep the officers of your branch and kingdom informed if you decide
to invoke the assistance of outside authorities in ways that may
require them to answer questions about the matter at hand or about
the Society itself, but do not hesitate to exercise your civic duty
as you see it.
- Look for ways
around hard choices. It may be possible to break a dilemma by taking
up both alternatives, either together or at different times, instead
of wasting energy arguing over which to choose. It may also be possible
to find a third approach that both sides prefer to their original
ideas.
- Try to keep
a sense of perspective. Just because you’re unhappy, it doesn’t
mean you’re right! Make an effort to listen to the arguments of
the other side with good will and honesty, and look for a solution
everyone can live with.
- Go through
channels. If you can’t solve the problem yourself, your requests
for assistance should follow a line of authority without skipping
anyone, and without spreading laterally through the organization
any more than absolutely necessary. For example, when you reach
a level that has royalty or royal representatives, include them
on your copy list, but don’t start out by copying all the royalty
in your corner of the Known World on your initial complaint. Try
to involve as few people as possible–the less you embarrass your
opponent, the likelier you are to get a solution you can live with
and not simply bury the dispute until it can resurface on different
grounds.
- Be patient.
Allow each level time to try to deal with the situation, and avoid
the temptation to attack the people you’ve asked for help if they
don’t seem to be moving fast enough to suit you.
Procedures
- Try to work
things out face to face. When someone does something that interferes
with your appreciation of the Society in a way you can’t ignore,
or that seems to be contrary to the rules, talk it over. Explain
the problem as you see it, and listen to the reply. (Likewise, if
someone comes to you, listen carefully before you frame your answer.)
With luck and good will, the problem will go away. You’ll find ways
to reduce the level of irritation, you’ll stop real rules violations,
or you’ll come to understand why things you thought were violations
were actually legitimate activities. If you can’t communicate, ask
someone you and the other party both respect to help, either by
relaying messages or by moderating a meeting between you. Try not
to go to an officer in charge of the area in question, as such an
officer may be tempted or compelled to make a ruling instead of
letting you reach an informal agreement.
- Write to the
person you’re having difficulty with. Describe the way you feel
you’re being damaged, without indulging in insults or threats. Ask
for the action you feel would set things right, and indicate how
long you feel you can wait for a reply before making further distribution
of the complaint. Keep a copy of the letter, but do not send it
to anyone but the addressee at this time. The written word is often
more effective than the spoken word, so there’s a good chance that
this letter, or a series of direct letters and replies, will eventually
lead you to a solution. As long as you feel you’re making progress
either in understanding or in getting you way, do not go on to step
3.
- Write a more
formal letter to the other party. Outline any new points you may
have thought of and refer to your previous correspondence. Send
a copy to the officer in charge of the area in question, or to the
royalty or royal representative nearest the level where you have
a dispute. Depending on the situation, it may be a good idea to
send copies of the letters you’ve already written or received on
the matter with the copy of the current letter you send to the superior;
if you are doing so, be sure to mention it in your letter. (It is
very important to proceed openly as you pursue your complaint; things
are tense enough already without adding a new–and justified–charge
of sneakiness to the general dispute!) Again, set a reasonable time
for a reply, and consider it carefully when it arrives. As with
step 2, continue at this level as long as it looks like there’s
any progress.
- Write directly
to the officer in charge of the area in question, with copies to
the subject of the dispute, the next higher officer, and the appropriate
royalty or royal representative, if any. Explain how you feel you’re
being mistreated, and ask for specific help. Include the entire
previous correspondence; if you have not already shared it with
the officer–and mention the enclosures in the text. Evaluate the
reply or replies before you decide to go forward.
- Repeat step
4, moving up the organization and including everyone you’ve involved
on your copy list. Follow you correspondents’ advice as to whether
or not anyone else at or below their level needs to be consulted.
Eventually, you run out of levels.
- If no one else
has managed to find a solution, the Board will do so. However, there
is no guarantee that you will like what they come up with, and there
is nowhere else to turn. Even if you get something resembling what
you originally asked for, the effect on the Society may well be
regrettable, as the Board finds it almost impossible to deal with
a specific situation without touching anything else.
While it appears
cumbersome, this technique should reach some sort of resolution
in a matter of months. The greatest number of levels between you
and the Board is five, assuming a dispute between members of a canton
whose barony is part of a principality. The important thing is getting
a solution, NOT getting to the Board, and the approach outlined
in this article will probably let you settle the matter without
involving the corporate administration at all.
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