HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-1312.Jacobsen et al.91-08-12EMPLOY~S DE LA CO”RONNE DE L’ON%wm
CQMMISSION DE
SEmLEMENT REGLEMENT
DESGRIEFS
IN TEB MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN ENPLOYEEB COLLRCTIW BARGAIN&NG ACT
Before
THE GRIB'VRNCB SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETRREN
OPSEU (Jacobsen et al)
Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community & Social Services)
Employer
BEFORE: J. Roberts Vice-Chairperson
G. Nabi Member
E. Orsini Member
A. Ryder
Counsel
Ryder, Whitaker,
Barristers & Sol
Wright & Chapman
,icitors
FOR TBB
EMPLOYER
C. Slater
Senior Counsel
Human Resources Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Management Board of Cabinet
BEARING March 17, 1987
February 22, 1991
May 22, 1991
July 9, 1991
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INTERIM AWARD
I. INTRODUCTION
This is a very old case. In a grievance filed on October 16,
1986, the griever complained that she was constructively dismissed
without just cause from her position as a Psychometrist I at the
Huronia Regional Centre. A similar grievance was filed at about
the same time by Dr. J. Gilman. a Psychologist at the Huronia
Regional Centre, and the two grievances were joined for purposes of
arbitration.
At the outset of the first day of hearing, March 17, 1987, the
Ministry made a preliminary objection to jurisdiction in which it
was claimed that neither grievance was arbitral because the actions
of the Ministry could not be construed as disciplinary in nature.
In fact, the Board was advised, the Ministry had always taken the
position that there was no discipline. As a result, it was
submitted, the grievances did not raise any matter which was
arbftrable under the Collective Agreement or the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act.
We began to hear evidence relating to this preliminary
objection on March 17, 1987: however, the next day of hearing was
not scheduled until February 22, 1991. Apparently, the parties had
not pressed the grievances forward for two reasons: First, they
were proceeding with a tribunal complaint filed in April, 1986,
which involved, inter alia, essentially the same transaction as
gave rise to the grievances: secondly, they apparently were
involved in settlement negotiations.
The tribunal complaint perhaps deserve some further comment.
It seems that the initial complaint was settled between the parties
on August 12, 1986, which was before the grievances herein were
filed. The settlement, however, called for a review of certain
matters by an eminent psychologist, and there were disagreements as
to the scope of his review. There also was an allegation that MS.
Jacobsen and Dr. Gilman had been penalized or disciplined in
violation of a provisions of the settlement.
These matters came on for hearing before the tribunal in the
first half of 1988, and the Tribunal issued its decision on Qctober
11, 1988. The Tribunal concluded that the review was conducted as
contemplated by the Memorandum of Settlement and that any lack of
compliance with Ministry standards was rectified prior to February,
1988. As to the complaint that Ms. Jacobsen and Dr. Gilman had
been disciplined in violation of the terms' of the Memorandum of
Settlement, the Tribunal found that .there was no breach of that
term because it related only to the period of review by the eminent.
psychologist and the actions of the Ministry which were alleged to
constitute discipline took place after the review was completed.
It seems that after the Tribunal decision, Dr. Gilman settled
his grievance and as a result it was withdrawn from arbitration.
3
The grievance of Ms. Jacobsen, however, was not settled. As a
result, the preliminary objection to our jurisdiction to hear her
grievance came on once again for hearing on February 22, 1991. We
completed our hearing of this preliminary objection on July 9,
1991.
For reasons which follow, the preliminary objection is
allowed. In the opinion of the Board, the matters complained in
the grievance did not constitute discipline, and as a result, the
grievance did not raise any matter which was arbitrable under
,either the Collective Agreement or the Crown Employees Collective
Bargaining Act.
II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The Huronia Regional Centre is located in Orillia, Ontario.
It is involved in the treatment and training of'developmentally
handicapped individuals. As of March 1987, it had about 800 in-
,house residents. It also provided some commun ity support services
for developmentally handicapped individuals who were living in the
community.
In 1985, the Ministry decided to review the role of Huronia in
.the provision of psychological services. A wide variety of
information was gathered, including time studies, surveys,
psychological assessments. etc. This led to a report which
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recommended that the providers of professional services, i.e.,
psychologists and their support staff, be utilized in a different
way.
Up until that time, psychologists had individual assignments
in the Psychology Department. There were three psychologists in
the department and they were assisted by a staff of 10
psychometrists. The department was headed up by a Chief
Psychologist, Dr. A. Kuechler, until his resignation in November,
1984.
Pending the report, Dr. Xuechler was not replaced, and after
the report issued, it was decided to utilize the psychologists and
psychometrists in a different way. Generally,, the 3 psychologists
were to be used on a consulting basis with no support staff to
assist them. Psychometrist positions within the Psychology
Department were to be eliminated but at the same time 8 new
positions were to be added to a related Ministry Agency, Simcoe
Community Behaviourial Services (S.C.B.S.). They consisted of a
Clinical Team Leader and 7 Behaviourial Consultant positions. It
was anticipated that the Dehaviourial Consultant positions would,
in the main, be filled by those persons who had been
psychometirists in the Psychology Department at Huronia.
The grievor, Ms. Jacobsen, was one of these psychometrists.
Her actual position title was Behaviour Therapy Technician, but she
was classified as a psychometrist I (Atypical). The "Atypical"
designation was added apparently, to reflect the fact that the
griever did not possess a university degree in psychology or
related disciplined, which was one of the qualifications for
psychometrists. She had been in this position since March 24,
1980, and had a continuous service date of April 21, 1975, having
started out as a Residential Counsellot.
Apparently, the grievor was notified of the decision to shift
the psychometrist jobs to S.C.B.S. on December 6, 1985.
Thereafter, on December 10, 1985, the griever was sent the
following letter in anticipation of her participation in this move:
MEMORANDUM
To: A. Jacobsen
Psychology
Re: Career Development
As'discussed on December 6, 1985, your assistance in providing
the following information by January 10, 1986 would be most
appreciated.
1. A copy of your transcripts/marks which will be
applied toward completion of a Batchelor's Degree.
2. Written indication of your personal interest and intent
to proceed or not to proceed with an orientation to
S.C.B.S.
3. A written request for assistance toward finishing your
degree so that you may meet the educational qualification
of the Behaviourial Therapist position, S.C.B.S.
A follow-up meeting will be arranged to review these matters
during the week of January 13 - 17, 1986.
Your assistance in this regard would now be most appreciated.
.
6
(signed) Robert Chemiuk
Director,
Clinical Support Services
The evidence left little doubt that if the grievor had responded
favourably to this letter, she would have been assigned to one of
the Behaviourial Consultant positions at S.C.B.S.
The grievor, however, did not respond in ~this fashion. On
January 6, 1986, she sent the following response to Mr. Cherniuk:
MEMORANDUM
To: B. Cerniuk, Director,
Clinical Support Services
Date: January 6, 1986
Re: Your 'Career Development' memo of December lo/85
I regret that I will be unable to accept your invitation for
an orientation to S.C.B.S., because I feel.that this service
is outside Ministry and Professional standards and is not in
the best interest of our clients. This is the same issue,
which management was made aware of in 1981-82, that resulted
in client mis-management in the Behaviour Modification
Program.
Methods for controlling clients are powerful techniques which
can lead to abuse if these methods‘are not used in conjunction
with positive training programs based on Psychological
principles that are integrated with Medical Treatment Plans.
I understand from our meeting of December 6th, 1985, that your
offer to fund my course-work at the University of Waterloo is
contingent on my accepting a position at S.C.B.S. Since I am
unable to do so, I have not included my transcript or a
request for funding.
I would like to have the opportunity to continue providing
Psych. Services to the residents of H.R.C. I look forward to
meeting with you to discuss other options.
(signed) Angela Jacobsen,
Behaviour Technician.
7
This letter indicated that Ms. Jacobsen was very seriously opposed
to the planned move because she -- apparently in agreement with.a
position taken by Dr. Gilman -- felt that the service fell outside
Ministry and professional standards and was not in the best
interests of Huronia's clients. The letter indicated that Ms.
Jacobsen wished to meet with Mr. Cerniuk to discuss options
involving remaining at Huronia.
Both Ms. Jacobsen and Dr. Gilman objected to the,essence of
the change which management was trying to implement. Mr. Cemiuk
testified that the idea behind the transfer to S1C.B.S. was to
change to a behaviourial approach in dealing with clients rather
than the former client-based psychological services approach. The
grievor apparently believed that the new approach would not meet
the requirements of Ministry and professional standards.
After MS. Jacobsen met once again with Mr. Cerniuk, it was
decided by the latter that she should move to a position in 0
Cottage. By February, 1986, this move had been accomplished. In
this position, she retained her salary and classification: however,
her duties were considerably different from those she previously
executed in the Psychology Department.
In her prior position, the grievor worked with Dr. Gilman
developing new programs, making assessments, doing baseline
studies, discussing clients with 0 Cottage staff and providing Dr.
,
.~_,.
Gilman with certain reports.
In 0 Cottage, Ms. Jacobsen was no longer involved in
developing new programmes. Instead, she regularly implemented
two-choice discrimination testing of clients in a repetitive
fashion. No longer did she go to meetings or do in-depth
analysis of'resident behaviour. No longer was she consulted
regarding programme design or requested to perform baseline
studies or observational sweeps.
MS. Jacobsen's reporting relationship also changed. Mr.
Cerniuk became her nominal direct supervisor: however, Mrs. Bridget
Sowieta, a Residential Counsellor 4, who was the Supervisor of all
Residential Counsellors at 0 Cottage, became her first-line
administrative superior. In this capacity, Mrs. Sowieta had
administrative authority over Ms.
Jacobsen, but did not have
authority over Ms. Jacobsen's professional judgements. Apparently,
Dr. Gilman retained jurisdiction in the area of professional
responsibility.
Mrs. Sowieta testified that she became Supervisor at 0 Cottage
on January 11, 1985. The job was a daunting one, she testified,
because at that time 9 employees in 0 Cottage chose to leave and
she had a number of new Residential Counsellors who had no
experience in dealing with persons with emotional illness.
r 9
This had to be rectified, Mrs. Sowieta said, because the
residents in 0 Cottage were the most disruptive at Huronia.
One of the first programmes which she instituted to deal with
this situation, Hrs. Sowieta said, was the one in which the grievor
ultimately became involved. The idea was to have Behaviour
Therapy Technicians like the grievor teach the inexperienced
Residential Counsellors in the behaviourial training of residents.
Between 1986 and 1987, there were 4 Behaviour Therapy
Technicians involved in this work at 0 Cottage, including the
.I grievor. While they were administratively supervised by Mrs.
Sowieta, they reported their professional results to Dr. Gilman.
In the same period of time, Mrs. Sowieta said, 0 Cottage was
being phased out. In fact, it was closed in early 1988.
In order to assist in this phase-out, it was also the
responsibility of the griever. and the other Behaviour Therapy
Technicians to provide individual assessments of the residents.
They would assess 5 to 8 people a day, one at a time, and then
analyze the results and make out their reports.
Once the assessments were completed, the residents were placed
upon individual treatment plans. Initially, the Behaviour Therapy
Technicians administered all the programmes; however, as more and
10
more Residential Counsellors became trained, they began working
side-by-side with the Behaviour Therapy Technicians, collecting
data and reporting it to the Psychologist.
Mrs. Sowieta testified that the assessment and training
programme involving the Behaviour Therapy Technicians was never
intended to be permanent. Initially, she only had wanted the
Behaviour Therapy Technicians to stay for a period of six months
and then return to their original assignments: however, as time
went on it took longer. The number of Behaviour Therapy
Technicians was gradually reduced, with first one leaving and then
another. Ms. Jacobsen and another Behaviour Therapy Technician,
Ms. Debbie Leach, stayed until the Cottage closed.
It is perhaps an understatement to say that the rela~tionship
between Ms. Jacobsen and Mrs. Sowieta was not a smooth one. .There
were several run-ins. Mrs. Sowieta testified~ that when Ms.
Jacobsen initially was assigned to 0 Cottage, she did not know that
previously, MS. Jacobsen had always had an office. This sparked
their first confrontation. Many more were to follow.
Ultimately, the solution to the office problem was to place
MS. Jacobsen and Ms. Leach in a treatment room which adjoined the
-administrative office occupied by Mrs. Sowieta. This was the room
in which both Behaviour Therapy Technicians performed their
assessments and also wrote up their paperwork. Because the room
was intended for treatment purposes, there was a window with a one-
way mirror between the administrative office and the treatment
room.
11
When Ms. Jacobsen and Ms. Leach first occupied this space,
there was a curtain which was drawn over the one-way mirror. One
weekend, however, Mrs. Sowieta caused the curtain to be removed.
This meant that she could observe the two Behaviour, Therapy
Technicians while t,hey were making up their reports. She could
not, however, observe them when assessing residents because this
activity was carried on behind a screen.
There also were run-ins regarding such matters as coffee-
breaks, lunch-breaks and sign-in and sign-out procedures. .I
MS. Jacobsen testified that her duties at 0 Cottage only
involved her in doing,something a psychometrist would do about 25%
of the time. She said that from her confrontations with Mrs.
Sowieta, she became convinced that the latter was treating both her
and Debbie Leach as if they were Residential Counsellots under her
supervision. She indicated that based upon this she became
convinced that management intended to downgrade her to the position
of a Residential Counsellor as punishment for her opposition to the
inove to S.C.B.S. As a result, she said, she filed the grievance
leading to the present arbitration.
12
At the hearing on February 22, 1991, counsel for the grievor
indicated that he intended to introduced post-grievance evidence in
order to substantiate that Ms. Jacobsen's fears were well-founded.
Counsel for the Ministry objected to the admission of this
evidence, and we decided to hear it while reserving upon the
question whether it should be given any weight in our decision.
Essentially, the post-grievance evidence comprised testimony
from MS.
Jacobsen to the effect that ultimately, she was
reclassified to the lower-rated position of Residential Counsellor
2. She said that on January 9, 1988, she. and Debbie Leach had a
meeting with Mr. Cerniuk and Mr. Gilchrist from Personnel. They
were told,~ she testified, that they were going to be red-circled
and reclassified to R.C. 2 and assigned to the Programme Staff in
the Off-Cottage Programme area.
MS. Jacobsen said that in the course of this meeting she asked
about the possibility of bumping a more junior Psychometrist at
S.C.B.S. After all, the resolution of the Tribunal proceedings had
long since allayed her fears regarding S.C.B.S., she had originally
been offered a position there, and at the time of the transfer to
S.C.B.S. she was the second-most senior Behaviour Therapy
Technician holding the classification of Psychometrist 1
(Atypical).
Mr. Cerniuk was called to give evidence in reply. He said
'13
that from time to time after Ms. Jacobsen's transfer to 0 Cottage,
Psychometrist vacancies had opened up, not only at S.C.B.S. but
also at Penetang, Muskoka and Edgar. To the best of his knowledge,
however, Ms. Jacobsen had not applied for them.
Mr. Cherniuk also vigorously denied that he picked January-
February, 1988 to take action with respect to Ms. Jacobsen and MS.
Leach because he wanted to demote Ms. Jacobsen and knew that at
that time there were no Psychometrist's positions available within
a 40 kilometre radius. He said that he picked that date because
the programme in which the two employees were performing work was
coming to an end. Moreover, he added, 0 Cottage was no longer in
existence and the Tribunal complaint which the 'grievor had
initiated in April, 1986 was well behind them.
Hr. Cerniuk also added in re-examination that it is the Human
Resources Department and the Facility Administrator which decides
if a person can be assigned to other positions. The factors which
he gave on cross-examination, he stated, were the factors which
Human Resources looked at in making this determination and were
asked of him to explain in assigning anyone. He emphasized that
‘Ms. Leach, who was not part of any grievances or Tribunal
complaints, was treated in the same manner as MS. Jacobsen.
,...
.
14
III. CONSIDERATION OF THE EVIDENCE AND CONCLUSION
We do not intend to spend a great deal of time in discussing
the relative positions of the parties on the admissibility .of this
post-grievance evidence. In substance, it amounts to a non-issue
because we have reached the conclusion that even if we were to
credit this evidence with full weight, we still would be unable to
find as a fact that management intended to give the grievor a
disciplinary demotion when it assigned her to 0 Cottage in
February, 1986.'
In order to conclude that the griever's assignment to 0
Cottage was disciplinary, we would have to find that in making that
assignment, management intended to punish her for her opposition to
the transfer to S.C.B.S. Moreover, this finding would have to be
based upon an objective review of the evidence and not the
subjective impression of the grievor at the time of her
reassignment. See Re Koh and Ministry of Health (1989) G.S.B.
#1335/88, at pp. lo-11 (Gorsky). In making this objective
' If it were material to determine how much weight to accord
the post-grievance evidence, we would have accorded it only slight
weight. We would have taken it as some degree of confirmation of
the grievor's.fear of demotion: however, we would not have accorded
it any weight in its other aspects, e.g., the intimation that Mr.
Cherniuk purposefully waited until there were no openings for
Psychometrists before terminating the grievor's job. If the
arievor had wished to review at arbitration this asoect of her
treatment. she should have filed another grievanc;. See Re
Williamson and Liquor Control Board of Ontario (1980), G.8.E
#107/80, at pp. 7-8 (Carter); Re Whittle and Ministry of Health
(1981), G.S.B. #271/80, at pp. 9-19 (Jolliffe).
15
determination, regard must be had to the substantive, as opposed to
the formal, effect of management's action. Re O'Keefe and Ministry
of Correctional. Services (1981) G.S.B. #111/32, at p. 8 (Draper).
hn objective assessment of the substance of management's
action in this case cannot help but lead to the conclusion that the
.reassignment in question was not intended as punishment. At the
time, the positions' of all Behaviour Therapy Technicians in the
Psychology Department were being transferred to S.C.B.S. The
grievor voluntarily refused assignment to one of these positions.
She requested to remain at liuronia. while the reassignment did
involve a significant reduction in duties of a professional
calibre, it cannot be said that it was a reassignment to an R.C. 2
position. The grievor became but one member of a team comprised of
,four Behaviour Therapy Technicians holding at least the same
classification as she did. There was no loss in pay. She was not
red-circled.
While it is true that as the programme at 0 Cottage wound
down, only the grievor and Debbie Leach were left'as Behaviour
Therapy Technicians, the undeniable fact is that the grievor was
not singled out. Her experiences in 0 Cottage, including the run-
ins with Mrs. Sowieta, were equally shared by Debbie Leach. On the
evidence, Ms. Leach did not play any part in the opposition to the
transfer to S.C.B.S. initiated by Ms. Jacobsen and Dr. Gilman.
Even on the post-grievance evidence, Ms. Leach shared the same
ultimate fate as the grievor. Yet not one shred of evidence even
hinted at a reason why management might also wish to punish Ms.
Leach.
We have no doubt that the grievor, Ms. Jacobsen, subjectively
believed that she was being punished for having spoken out. While
we understand how this impression came about, and how it must have
been fortified in the course of the encounters between herself and
Mrs. Sowieta, we must base our decision upon the .objective facts
and those objective facts indicate otherwise. It must be concluded
that the reassignment of the grievor to 0 Cottage was not
disciplinary in nature.
Accordingly, we do not have jurisdiction to entertain the
merits of the grievance leading to the present proceeding. The
preliminary objection of the Ministry must 'be allowed and the
grievance must be dismissed.
DATED at London, Ontario, this 12th day of August,
1991.
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/kd.l 4uL
G. Nabi, Union Member
E. J Orsini, Employer Member