Desert Waters Correctional Outreach
How can I as a floor staff be a leader? How are those of us who walk the tier be a team? I have laundry folks who do one thing, I have food service doing something else, property....they are in their own world and the security folks, they are only here when it gets bad (which is a blessing.....). To me, it is reaching out to those other folks, finding a person who cares a little more about things...sort of a professional. That one person who likes or cares about their job enough to take that extra minute to get it done right. Personal pride? I don't know; I just know they do their job and do it well. Those are my team mates. I try to find a way to see what I can do in my area to make their job a little easier. When I do that, I find that they are willing to help me. Maybe some will see that as I'll scratch your back, you scratch mine, but it works. It makes our job easier.
And on the tier, I look for the same ones. And I do the same thing.
That is the team; when I do those things, I become a leader. The more I lead, the easier my job becomes. It begins to look effortless, practiced. Just like the craftsman of old, I have learned my trade and have become a craftsman.
Saturday, September 30, 2006
Monday, September 18, 2006
Desert Waters Correctional Outreach
As CO's we often wonder what Ethics has to do with us. After all, we work in a prison; why should we even care about ethics? The ones we keep watch over certainly did not care. Why in a prison should ethics matter? Isn't that the chaplains job? I think it matters because inmates watch us 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Our fellow officers watch us 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Our fellow officers do because whether we want to acknowledge it or not, we work in teams. How we relate to each other is a matter of ethics. It is fundamental to being a human being. So, yes, even in prisons ethics matter; it matters even more here than in any other job in America.
Ever hear the terms "Fair, Firm and Consistent"? Think that phrase does not go to the core of ethical behavior?
Consistent. To me that means I apply the rules to everybody: inmate or officer; to the staff on the tier, to the office personnel, to the adminstrative staff, to the tier porter; Black, White, Hispanic, Asian, Protestant, Jew, Muslim, Buddhist; I apply the rules equally to each and every one. I try as best as I can to apply the rules consistently, across the board.
Firm. Even in those situations where I feel uncomfortable, where a fellow staff memger was weak and fell down and broke a rule and I have to own up to it, I must be strong in my conviction about being consistent. Every time I interact with an inmate, there are a group of inmates watching. In fact, they watch us 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. In a sense, the tier is a stage and we are the actors on it. They are looking for that moment when we are weak. Some watch us to exploit our weaknesses. They are looking to see if we are weak every time in that situation. They may even create a situation that is similar just to see if that is our weakness. But as a correctional officer, I have to be firm. I can bend, I can have my moment of weakness, but I have to return to that sense of firm as soon as I can. I have to maintain that sense of professionalism in order to be effective.
Fair. We are human. It is hard to be fair. There is the inmate who is always helpful. There are those inmates who get short changed through no fault of their own or anyone elses. But we must be fair. We must treat everybody equally. The only thing that an officer has going is the officers word: can you be trusted to do the right thing. And inmates and fellow staff know what is the right thing. When the system fails and fails in a major way, that is what may save an officer. The inmates will remember that this officer was fair, even when the officer did not need to be.
Fair. Firm. Consistent. When we go out onto that stage, we model for inmates ethical behavior and what is the right thing to do.
As CO's we often wonder what Ethics has to do with us. After all, we work in a prison; why should we even care about ethics? The ones we keep watch over certainly did not care. Why in a prison should ethics matter? Isn't that the chaplains job? I think it matters because inmates watch us 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Our fellow officers watch us 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Our fellow officers do because whether we want to acknowledge it or not, we work in teams. How we relate to each other is a matter of ethics. It is fundamental to being a human being. So, yes, even in prisons ethics matter; it matters even more here than in any other job in America.
Ever hear the terms "Fair, Firm and Consistent"? Think that phrase does not go to the core of ethical behavior?
Consistent. To me that means I apply the rules to everybody: inmate or officer; to the staff on the tier, to the office personnel, to the adminstrative staff, to the tier porter; Black, White, Hispanic, Asian, Protestant, Jew, Muslim, Buddhist; I apply the rules equally to each and every one. I try as best as I can to apply the rules consistently, across the board.
Firm. Even in those situations where I feel uncomfortable, where a fellow staff memger was weak and fell down and broke a rule and I have to own up to it, I must be strong in my conviction about being consistent. Every time I interact with an inmate, there are a group of inmates watching. In fact, they watch us 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. In a sense, the tier is a stage and we are the actors on it. They are looking for that moment when we are weak. Some watch us to exploit our weaknesses. They are looking to see if we are weak every time in that situation. They may even create a situation that is similar just to see if that is our weakness. But as a correctional officer, I have to be firm. I can bend, I can have my moment of weakness, but I have to return to that sense of firm as soon as I can. I have to maintain that sense of professionalism in order to be effective.
Fair. We are human. It is hard to be fair. There is the inmate who is always helpful. There are those inmates who get short changed through no fault of their own or anyone elses. But we must be fair. We must treat everybody equally. The only thing that an officer has going is the officers word: can you be trusted to do the right thing. And inmates and fellow staff know what is the right thing. When the system fails and fails in a major way, that is what may save an officer. The inmates will remember that this officer was fair, even when the officer did not need to be.
Fair. Firm. Consistent. When we go out onto that stage, we model for inmates ethical behavior and what is the right thing to do.
Friday, September 01, 2006
Desert Waters Correctional Outreach
We often think ethics as being really removed from corrections. Afterall, we are working with people who seem to have never heard of the word before or due to gang participation, have an upside down understanding of the word.
But we often practice ethics: we practice firm, fair and consistent on a daily basis. We demonstrate it to the inmates in how we work with each other. And often, it is the way we treat each other that shows inmates, even gang-bangers, how to be ethical people.
They study us 24/7, most often to figure out how to beat us. It is when they are watching us that they see how we treat each other. And they watch us most keenly when we are at odds with each other: they are looking for that opportunity, that chance to isolate one of us.
It is here that our ethics are challenged. It is here that we can become leaders. When we do the right thing (being fair), disagree about how things should be done, but resolve to continue (being firm) to do what needs to be done until an appropriate correction can be made (being consistent), that we have the big impact.
Not every one of the inmates will be impressed by what we do, how many times have we been sworn at, spit at or worse for adhering to a policy we disagree with. But there may be one or two, maybe three who see this. And it is these few who may suddenly resolve to never come back, upon whom the greatest impact is made.
We often think ethics as being really removed from corrections. Afterall, we are working with people who seem to have never heard of the word before or due to gang participation, have an upside down understanding of the word.
But we often practice ethics: we practice firm, fair and consistent on a daily basis. We demonstrate it to the inmates in how we work with each other. And often, it is the way we treat each other that shows inmates, even gang-bangers, how to be ethical people.
They study us 24/7, most often to figure out how to beat us. It is when they are watching us that they see how we treat each other. And they watch us most keenly when we are at odds with each other: they are looking for that opportunity, that chance to isolate one of us.
It is here that our ethics are challenged. It is here that we can become leaders. When we do the right thing (being fair), disagree about how things should be done, but resolve to continue (being firm) to do what needs to be done until an appropriate correction can be made (being consistent), that we have the big impact.
Not every one of the inmates will be impressed by what we do, how many times have we been sworn at, spit at or worse for adhering to a policy we disagree with. But there may be one or two, maybe three who see this. And it is these few who may suddenly resolve to never come back, upon whom the greatest impact is made.
Wednesday, August 09, 2006
Leadership is often associated with a person who has a powerful personality, a person who displays some sort of strength. I am reminded of the picture from Tienamien Square during the Days of Freedom. The communist government had enough of the protestors and were cracking down. The power of the government (wasn't it Mao who said 'All power flows from the barrel of a gun'?) was symbolized in the massive tank rumbling down the road.
But it was stopped in its tracks. No movement. Dead.
Why?
Because one man chose to be a leader at that moment. He had no authority, no power and definitely no official standing. But he became a leader for freedom just as surely as Thomas Jefferson, George Washington or Antigone.....
Leadership is associated with an internal sense of what is right....doing the right thing. In this, anyone can become a leader......you just have to be honest with yourself and do the right thing.
Charlie
But it was stopped in its tracks. No movement. Dead.
Why?
Because one man chose to be a leader at that moment. He had no authority, no power and definitely no official standing. But he became a leader for freedom just as surely as Thomas Jefferson, George Washington or Antigone.....
Leadership is associated with an internal sense of what is right....doing the right thing. In this, anyone can become a leader......you just have to be honest with yourself and do the right thing.
Charlie
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