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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Council
approves violence provisions The
Sisters City Council approved changes to its personnel handbook, including
adding a section about the effects of domestic violence in the workplace.
The council took the action at its Thursday, Ocober 23, meeting. The handbook
gives guidelines for employee/employer management.
Councilor Judy Trego had requested
the addition earlier this month. She said domestic abuse victims often
lose jobs because employers grow tired of dealing with the abuser.
Trego works for the Community
Action Team of Sisters (CATS), which works to help break the cycle of
poverty and does some work with domestic violence cases, she said.
"I've done some research for
work," Trego told The Nugget. "What usually ends up happening is if someone
is harassed by their spouse, the employer gets sick of putting up with
the abuse and the person gets fired.
"I encourage the person who
is abused to let the employer know upfront, even if they are embarrassed,
and to bring in a picture and photo copy of the restraining order," Trego
said. "That way, the employer knows if the guy comes in, because in those
cases, the woman is not only victimized once, but twice."
Every year, domestic violence
costs American business as much as $5 billion in lost worker productivity,
increased health costs, and employee turnover, according to the Central
Oregon Battering and Rape Alliance (COBRA).
Each year, an estimated 2.1
million U.S. women are raped or physically assaulted, according to a recent
report from the Department of Health and Human Resources. Because some
of these women experience victimization more than once, an estimated 876,000
rapes and 5.9 million physical assaults are perpetrated against U.S. women
annually, the report states.
The addition to the handbook
states that employees should inform their supervisor or the city administrator
of any threats they have heard about, witnessed, or received, including
those of domestic violence.
Another change the city made
to the handbook was to extend the time period in which an employee must
work to qualify for medical insurance from 30 to 90 days.
In other business, the council
approved dedication of a strip of land in the Timber Creek Subdivision.
The land is dedicated by the developer, J. Bruce Forbes. On two portions
of land, the water and sewer easement will be vacated with the water and
sewer lines relocated. |
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