Ethics &Compliance Matters ™, Navex Global ®
Policy development is part of every organization’s overarching policy management process. The questions posed in this article will help with those efforts.
Having too many policies can burden your organization, but having too few exposes it to unnecessary risk. That means we need to prioritize which policies we will develop (or revise) first. As a rule of thumb, policies are necessary when they define organizational values or mandates, address regulatory obligations or manage potential risk or liability.
Consider the following questions as you prioritize your policy development efforts. Use this list to select the order in which you tackle policy creation or updates, or to identify policies that can be consolidated or eliminated altogether.
Questions originally appeared in The Definitive Guide to Policy Management.
Policy development is part of your organization’s overarching policy management process. This process includes managing your organization’s policies or procedures throughout all stages of the policy life cycle, such as drafting, editing, approving, updating, distributing, gaining employee attestation and maintaining an auditable database of records. So this process should be documented, and documented well.
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I’ve discussed the Privacy by Design principle before, in the Inside Internal Control newsletter. In case you don’t know, PbD is an approach developed by Dr. Ann Cavoukian, the Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, which proactively embeds privacy protection by default in the design of an organization’s practices and products.
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This year’s Ontario Employment Law Conference co-sponsored by First Reference and Stringer Brisbin Humphrey on June 2, 2010, will touch on several topics of importance to employers. The first topic on the Agenda will provide employers with guidance on a significant court decision and changes in court procedures affecting the termination process. Specifically it should help employers minimize claims arising from the termination process.
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I just read a Statistics Canada report stating that the gender wage gap has recently been decreasing. The report briefly noted that between 1988 and 2008, the wage gap narrowed throughout the wage distribution. However, the gap shrank the most at the lowest end of the wage distribution, and the gap shrank the least at the upper end. Also, although women dramatically increased their representation in high-wage occupations such as management, there were still significant gender wage gaps within these occupations.
Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD