Yeah, we had a guy at one dance complain bitterly that other men were being creepy with
his girlfriend. But when I spoke with her, she said there was no problem, they'd done
no more than gypsy and swing her and occasionally speak to her with advice on the dance.
The more I spoke with the two of them the more I wanted to yell at the woman - run fast,
very fast, as far away from this control freak as you can!!!! But I suppose it was not my
place to warn her right in front of him. No surprise they never returned.
Martha
On Sep 9, 2015, at 7:39 AM, Lindsay Morris via Callers wrote:
Appreciate that. Don't think the "where
there's smoke there's fire" issue applies here, though. It would if there
were several different women complaining about one man...
--------------------
Lindsay Morris
CEO, TSMworks
Tel. 1-859-539-9900
lindsay(a)tsmworks.com
On Wed, Sep 9, 2015 at 10:34 AM, Ron Blechner <contraron(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Lindsay,
I realize this is a tricky topic, so apologies in advance if my brevity comes off as
bruskness.
These two suggestions work for Amherst Contra.
As a proxy complaint comes in, a board member would seek out the source. Anonymous
complaints are permitted, and a high level of ensuring that we ask open-ended questions,
and not leading questions.
We also wear board member buttons at dances and make regular announcements about us being
available for any reason. Usually 4-7 members of our board attend any dance.
You might speak privately to Will Loving, our lead organizer, if you're interested in
more specifics.
I would also caution about making such definitive statements as "just an
accusation". In my experience, where there's smoke, there's fire. For every
accusation, there's five people who are too uncomfortable to speak up.
That said, I have seen the success of proactive addressing of issues. The biggest benefit
is simple:
Address it early when it's small, and not a huge deal. Maybe it's a simple
misunderstanding. Maybe the person needed a clear boundary drawn. But wait until
there's a pile of complaints, and you've already lost dancers and the resolution
will need to be more severe for the offender.
Best regards,
Ron Blechner
On Sep 9, 2015 10:08 AM, "Lindsay Morris via Callers"
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Chris Weiler's Positive Solutions on dealing with problem dancers, and the CDU Policy
are thoughtful and useful documents.
We have a different problem here.
One woman often complains to board members about men she sees as creepers or sexual
predators. She reports their misbehavior on behalf of their victims. The victims don't
initiate these reports.*
Many others don't see these men as creepy or inappropriate. Recently one of the
"victims" clarified that her discomfort with the man was a year ago and
she'd long ago dealt with it to her satisfaction. The man in question had heard only
rumors that some nameless woman was unhappy about some nameless thing he'd done.
This woman also publicly asked that young women who feel harassed should talk to her
about it. We feel that's the Board's job, not hers.
It seems that this woman is fishing for - or even inventing - "naughty-dancer"
problems.
When a married man gets accused of being a sexual predator, his wife has to wonder if
it's true. This adds to any marital tensions they may already have. So, while this
woman is not actually punching anybody in the face, it seems to me that she's
committing violence.
How should we handle this?
I think we need a "No proxy complaints" policy - i.e., the victim has to speak
up (and then our process will usually fix simple miscommunication issues).
We need to clearly identify board members, so genuine victims know who to talk to.
But does anybody have other ideas about preventing one person's issues from
poisoning the atmosphere of a mostly friendly dance?
____
* I know, victims often have a hard time stepping up and complaining, so advocacy may be
a good thing. But that's a different discussion. In these situations, there's no
victim; there's no predator; there's just an accusation with little to back it up.
_______________________________________________
Callers mailing list
Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net
_______________________________________________
Callers mailing list
Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net