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At their most basic, grievance procedures provide a formal mechanism for your participants to have their concerns, grievances, and voices heard and taken seriously. Too often, participants are re-traumatized by the provider/participant power imbalance when provider perspectives are given deference—in other words, when providers are automatically believed.

Providing a mechanism for participants to level concerns in harm reduction programs is essential, because providing a formal mechanism for participants to share their concerns gives them power.

In addition to the strong ethical reason for such a mechanism, it’s also a good idea to have this instrument in place for liability concerns. This provides a safety valve that allows people a way to voice concerns before they rise to the level of liability to the organization.

With that in mind, it’s always important to consult with other stakeholders, including board members, legal counsel, and insurers, when making any decision about designing a grievance process, to ensure it conforms to their requirements.

Again, harm reduction leaders suggested involving participants or at least Community Advisory Boards, in making choices for how these processes work and periodically reviewing them to ensure participant buy-in to these important community standards.

For more information on grievance procedures please see the section on restorative and transformative justice.

Featured Hacks

These featured hacks highlight creative, practical solutions from harm reduction leaders on the ground. From DIY tools to clever workarounds, each one reflects the ingenuity, care, and real-world experience that keeps this movement alive. 

The concept of “consent culture” emerged from the sex positive movement of the 1980s and 90s. It was a response to the concept of “rape culture”, a term that had been coined to describe the experience that many people—especially women, queer and trans people—have of sexual violence and harassment.
Community member agreements are shared agreements regarding behavior expected of everyone who participates in a harm reduction site or service. The primary rule all harm reduction leaders talked about was the need to treat everyone with respect.