HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-0843.Osborne.88-12-09OWNTO CROWEMPLOiEES
EMPLOYES 0s LA CO”POWE
DE “ONT*aIO
GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
REGLEMENT
DES GRIEFS
!N THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
tinder
THE C?OWN EtiPLOYEES,COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD .
Far the Grievor: '~
For the Emolcyer! -
OPSEU‘(Bil1 Osborne)
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The Crown in Righg of Ontario
(Ministry of Correctional Services')
E. K. Slone Vice-Chairperson
I. Freedman Member
I.J. Cowan Member'
J. Masher
Counsel
Gowline 8 Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
B. Bowlby
Hicks Morley Hamilton Stewart Storie‘
Barriscets & Solicitors
I_ Nobember le, 1987
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Grievor
Emp 1 oye r
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OSBORNE - INTERIM RULIBG
The Grievor in this case has lung cancer, which he
claims was caused or aggravated by secondhand cigarette smoke
in the workplace. His grievance claims that his employer,
the Ministry of Correctional Services, has failed to take
reasonable provisions for his health and safety, contrary to
Article 18.1 of the Collective Agreement, which reads:
The employer shall continue to make reasonable provisions for the safety and health of its employees during the hours of their employment. It is agreed that both the employer and then ?mion shall co-operate to the fullest extent
possible in the prevention of accidents and~in the reasonable promotion of safety and health
of all employees.
The relief requested is:
1. That all free issue of any form of tobacco cease
immediately;
2. That all subsidized tobacco no longer be sunsidized:
and
3. To be monetarily compensated for his illness.
PRELIMINARY OBJECTION
This decision deals only with a preliminary objection
raised by the employer, to the effect that the grievance is
precluded by S. 14 of the Workers' Compensation A'ct which
reads:
"14. The provisions of this Part are in lieu of all rights and rights of action, statutory or otherwise, to which a worker or the members of his family are or may be entitled against
the employer of such worker, or any executive
officer thereof, for or by reason of any accident happening to him or any industri~al disease contracted by him on or after the 1st day of January, 1915 while in the employment of such employer and no action lies in respect thereof."
Putting the argument into plain terms, it is argued
that the intent of the Workers' Compensation Act is to.create
a noyfault insurance plan that compensate; workers who are
injured or become ill as a result of conditions in the
workplace. It would thwart that purpose if.workers could sue
or otherwise pursue private remedies to compensate them for
such an injury.
In the case of DiCarlo v..DiSimone (1982).14% D.L.R.
(3d) 477, Osler, J..of the Ontario High Court expressed that
point in these words,:
"The.purpose of the Workmen's Compensation Act is to reinove from the Courts 3urasdlctlon to deal with the rights of employees and the liability of employers when personal injuries are suffered by employees of such employers in the course of their employment."
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We.must not lose sight of the fact that the -Workers
Compensation system has alwaye been confined within
boundaries. One must be certain that a~ case falls within the
scope of that system before reaching the conclusion that an
individual is precluded by the law from pursuing his usual
remedies.
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In her written argument counsel for the Grievor has
Rointed us to certain case law which shows that pan&j.s of
this Board in the past have consistently avarded remedies for
breaches of Article 18.1. See for example Gonneau 227101
:(Teplitsky), Km 371104 (Saltman) and, most recently Mysxko
.2511/87 (Verity). In those cases, it is to be noted that the
,issue of the Workers' Compensation Act was not raised, and it
would be wrong to draw too much comfort from those'cases.
Suffice it to say that the parties have never treated the
language of Article 18.1 a8 precatory only. Remedies are
,available in appropriate cases.
Other cases cited, including Re Bendix Autcinotive of
f Canada (1973) 3 L.A.C. (2d) 21 (Weatherill), have debated the
preCiSe scope of S. 14 of the Workers' Compensation Act, and
whether the term "rights of action" extends to rights to
bring a grievance to enforce the provisions of a Collective
Agreement.
Were it clear that the Grievor in this case has a
condition that could attract Mrkera' compensation, this
point vould have to be addressed.
However, we do not necessarily have to draw those fine
or difficult distinctions to decide the issue in,this case.
In our viev, the Workers' Compensation Act is a well
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camouflaged red herring.
For purposes,of this preliminary objection, we must
take the facts as capable of being proved. We must assume
.that the Ministry has behaved unreasonably in providing free
or Subsidized tobacco to prisoners, and in exposing prison
staff to unsafe levels of a generally deleterious and in fact i
carcinogenic substance. We must assume that there is a
causal connection between the Ministry's unreasonable
behaviour and the extent of the Grievor‘s ser%ous illness.
That the Grievor has suffered as a result of his illness can
hardly be doubted. .-
Surely a threshold question to be addressed is whether,
‘or not lung cancer is an industrial disease, Ss that term is
defined by the Worke;s' Compensation Act. T?Ie relevant
section reads:
“s. l(l)(n) "industrial disease' includes,
(i) a 'disease resulting from .exposure to a substance relating-to a
particular process, a-trade,or . ,!occupation in an industry.
(ii) a disease peculiar to or “” characteristic of a particular industrial process, trade or occupation.
(iii) a medical condition that in the opinion of the Board requires a worker to be removed either' 'temporarily or permanently from exposure to S substance because the condition may be a-precur.sor to an
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industrial disease, or
(iv) any of the diseases mentioned in Schedule 3 or 4:"
It would stretch the meaning of any of these:
definitions to include lung cancer caused by cigareste smoke
- a substance that is not peculiar to any particular process,
trade or occupation, but is prevalent throughout our society.
The problem of secondhand tobacco smoke is not restricted to
the workplace. Governments at all levels are grappling with
the delicate issue of balancing the rights of smokers with
those of others (smokers or not) who breathe the same air. A
close look at the Workers' Compensation Act and the
regulations thereto draws one to a conclusion that there is a
particular class of medical conditions caused,by industrial
processes - while not exhaustively listed - that vould
qualify as industrial diseases. Not every illness contracted
or aggravated as a result of conditions at the place of
emgloyment would fit within that class. The Legiklature
could have, but chose not to, define, industrial illness SO
broadly. Implicitly the parties to the Collecti+ Agreement
have recognized that by negotiating freely a covenant to
promote health and safety.
It is only the contracting of an "industrial disease"
that triggers the machinery of the Workers' Compensation Act.
Section 122(l) of the Workers' Compensation Act provides as
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follows:
"122.-(l) Where an employee suffers from an industrial disease and is thereby disabled or his death is caused by an industrial disease and the disease is due to the nature of any employment in which he was engaged, whether
under one or more employments, the employee is or his dependants are entitled to compensation
as if the disease was a personal,injury by accident and the disablement wasthe happening of the accident, subject to the modifications
hereinafter mentioned or contained in the.
regulations, unless at the time of entering
into the employmenthe has wilfully and falsely~ represented himself in writing as not having
previously suffered from the disease."
Thus, it follows ,that the contracting ~of a non-
industrial disease is not treated as equivalent to the
happening of a "personal injury by accident". It is only the ,
happening of such .an event~that triggers the machinery of the
Workers' Compensation Act and, to protect the integrity of
that system, precludes other proceedings to obtqin redress.
It would be a gross failures of our Legal system if it
both denied the Grievor a ~remedy under the Workers'
Compensation Act because he had not contracted an "industrial
disease", yet precluded him from launching another type of
proceeding. -
The preliminary objection,accordingly fails, and the
grievance may proceed to a hearing on the merits.
We would remark in passing, that we are awire of the
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I ;Grievor’s unsuccessful attempt to obtain compensation from
I ithe Workers' Compensation Board. That Board denied benefits
ostensijly on factual grounds. To our knowledge they did not
express any view on whether or not his disease fell within
the definition of "industrial disease". Perhaps in practice
they are prepared to entertain applications that do not
precisely fall within the statute. Perhaps they eventually
would have concluded that he had no legal entitlement to
,benefits. In any event, we do not fault the Grievor for
applying. Nor are we bound in any way by any factual
findings apparently made by the adjudicators. Whi;le~ their
opinion is to be respected it is our understanding that no
hearings took place of the scope contemplated before this
Board, and it would be unfair and prejudicial to give weight
to a decision arrived at under less strict conditions than we
: ourselves are bound to impose, particularly at this
preliminary stage where we are only considering whether the
Grievor's case is precluded by law from being heard on the
merits.
DATED at Toronto this E.K. SLGNE ,' VICE-CHAIRPERSON
9th day of December, .lggB.
Af