HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-1759.Serrao.87-07-BETWEEN:
BEFORE:
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
UNDER
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
BEFORE
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
OPSEU (Anthony Serrao)
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THE CROWN IN RIGHT OF ONTARIO
(Ministry of Revenue)
M.-G. P~icher
I. Freedman
I. Cowan
Vice-Chairman
Member
Member
FOR THE GRIEVOR: R~. Wells
Counsel
Gowling and Henderson
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER: M. Quick
Counsel
Legal Services Branch
Ministry of Health
Grievor
Employer
HEARING: ~~~ 22, 1987
INTERIM AWARD
This is an interim award in respect of a preliminary issue. The Grievor, Mr. Anthony
Serrao, was discharged effective December 24, .I986 from his position as a registered
nursing assistant employed by the Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital. The grounds of
discharge include threatening a patient, use of unauthorized seclusion, verbal abuse and
endangering a patient’s welfare. The Union maintains that the Crown is precluded from
relying on the Grievor’s record and effectively treating the facts which gave rise to
the discharge as a culminating incident. It’s counsel submits that. the position taken by
the employer in its initial decision of December 24, 1986, as well as itsposition at the
second step of the grievance procedure expressly precluded any reliance on the
Grievor’s record. On that basis, the Union seeks a preliminary ruling precluding the
admission of the Grievor’s record in support of the employer’s decision in these
proceedings. Counsel for the Crown submits that in fact the Grievor’s record was relied
upon from the outset as part of the reason for Mr. Serrao’s dismissal and maintains
that it is entitled to treat the event that precipitated the termination as a culminating
incident, with the ability to refer to Mr. Serrao’s prior disciplinary record.
The incident that precipitated Mr. Serrao’s discipline, occurred in December of 1986.
He was immediately suspended pending an investigation. The eventual discharge of the
Grievor was pursuant to section 22(3) of the Public Service Act R.S.O. c.418 which
provides:
22.3 A deputy minister may for cause dismiss from employment in accordance
with the regulations any public servant in his ministry.
The investigation conducted in the instant case was in compliance with section 18 of
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regulation 881 of the Revised Regulations of Ontario, 1980. It provides, in part, as
follows:
18. (1) Where the Deputy Minister suspends a public servant from
employment pending an investigation, the period of suspension
shall not exceed twenty working days.
(4) Where, in the opinion of a deputy minister, there may exist
cause for removal of a public servant from employment or for
dismissal of a public servant from employment, the deputy
minister shall appoint a time for and hold a hearing.
(8) Where a deputy minister delegates to a public servant in his ministry
his powers and duties in respect of a hearing mentioned in this
section, the delegate shall hold the hearing and shall report thereon
in writing to the deputy minister.
(9) The report of the-delegate to the deputy minister shall
include the record of the hearing and the
recommendation of the delegate together with his rearom
therefor.
The employer’s hearing in this case was held on Monday, December 22, 1986 and
chaired~ by Mr. D. Wayne Fyffe, -Administrator of the Hospital. Mr. Fyffe’s account of
the hearing and the reasons for his ultimate decision as the delegate of the deputy
minister are contained in the following letter dated December 24, 1986, sent to the
Grievbr:
Dear Mr. Serrao:
I am writing to record my observations, conclusions and decision
with respect to the predisciplinary hearing held Monday,
December 22, 1986, in the Board Room at Hamilton Psychiatric
Hospital. You were present at this hearing and chose to be
represented by Mr. Jim Tate from the Regional Office of OPSEU
in Guelph, and two Stewards from Local 203, namely, Mr.
Warrick and Mr. Fernandez. Management’s case was presented by
Ms. R. Flandres, Director of Nursing. Also present was your
Ward Supervisor, Mrs. Laird, and the Regional Personnel
Administrator, Mr. Ferguson.
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In presenting management’s case, Ms. Flandres called three
witnesses to testify with respect to the allegations no& against
you. There were no witnesses called on your behalf.
The allegations made against you can be summarized as follows:
1. Threatening a patient.
2. Use of unauthorized seclusion.
3. Unilateral performance of unauthorized duties.
4. Verbal and physical abuse of a patient.
5. Endangering a patient’s welfare.
Management’s recommendation was that based on the evidence
and the seriousness of the allegations,. you should be dismissed
from employment at Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital. Further, it
was stated that should I disagree that the allegations were
proven beyond a reasonable doubt, there was still reason for
dismissal based on the doctrine of culminating incident, where
you have been previously disciplined for inappropriate conduct in
respect to patient care.
Your representative’s submission to me was that the reports
presented by management were contradictory; that you regretted
any problems with the patient and had perhaps been
“overzealous” in trying-to help a patient; that you were acting
in a manner which was acceptable to the Hospital in respect to
the action of other staff members with other ,patients; that you
did not abuse the patient; that you do not deny placing the
patient in seclusion, but feel that it was not an unusual practice
at Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital; and finally, that dismissal was
too harsh a penalty; hbwever, another penalty might be accepted
as a disciplinary measure.
I have concluded that the witnesses’ testimony is believable and
consistent, and that all of the allegations have been proved to
my satisfaction, with the exception of physical abuse. Since no
evidence was presented that the patient actually suffered any
physical injury, it is difficult to determine whether physical
abuse in fact occurred. It is my opinion, however, that
emotional and/or psychological harm did come to this patient.
Therefore, by copy of this letter, I am asking the Director of
Nursing to ensure that this patient is informed of her right to
legal counsel for the purpose of considering whether or not she
wishes to lay a charge of common assault against you.
While I may accept your explanation that you did not intend to
harm this patient, there is no doubt in my mind that harm did
come to this patient as a result of your actions, and by virtue
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of your education, training, professional standards and length of
employment at Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital, you ought to have
known better than to have conducted yourself in this way with
this particular patient.
Therefore, in accordance with authority delegated to,me by the
Deputy Minister under section 22(3) of the Public Service Act, I
am hereby dismissing you from employment for cause, effective
December 31, 1986.
Yours truly,
“D. Wayne Fyffe”
Administrator
The decision of Mr. Fyffe was appealed through the grievance procedure. A stage
two grievance meeting was held on February 5, 1987 with Mr. R. Oss, Director of the
Human Resources Branch of the Ministry of Health, acting as the designee of the ’
Deputy Minister. That stage of the grievance procedure is described in the following
terms in article 27 of the Collective Agreement:
STAGE TWO
27.3.2 If the grievance is not resolved under Stage One, the
employee may submit the grievance to the Deputy Minister or
his designee within seven (7) days of the date that he
received the decision under Stage One. In the event that no
decision in writing is received in accordance with the
specified time limits in Stage One, the grievor may submit the
grievance to the Deputy Minister or his designee within seven
(7) days of the date that the supervisor was required to give
his decision in writing in accordance with Stage One.
27.3.3 The Deputy Minister or his designee shall hold a meeting with
the employee within fifteen (15) days of the receipt of the
grievance and shall give the grievor his decision in writing
within seven (7) days of the meeting.
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The evidence establishes that during the course of the meeting, the Hospital’s
representatives, in the person of Ms. R. Flandres, Director of Nursing and Mr. L.
Ferguson, Regional Personnel Administrator , sought initially to represent to the
designee that the Hospital would be relying, in part, on the Grievor’s record. Union
representative Grant Bruce responded by asking for copies of .the record, and the
management representatives declined to provide them. When Mr. Bruce protested to the
designee, Mr. Oss told the representatives of management that it would be manifestly
unfair for the Hospital to proceed on the basis of the Grievor’s record without
providing copies of that documentation to the Union. He, in effect, .told them that they
must provide the copies, which it appears fhey had present with them, if they intended
to rely on the record. After some consultation with Mr., Ferguson, Ms. Flandres
repiied that the employer did not intend to rely on the Grievor’s record and would ’
justify,the employee’s discharge strictly on the basis of the final incident. C% the basis
of that representation, Mr. Bruce made no further attempt to obtain particulars of the
record or any elaboration of the position which the employer.was then purporting to
abandon.
Thereaftei, however, Mr. Oss issued a written report which appears to contradict
what occurred during the second stage meeting. That report, in the form of a letter
dated February 11, 1987 addressed to the Grievor is as follows:
Dear Sir:
This is further to the meeting held on February 5 concerning your
recent dismissal from the Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital.
I have given careful consideration to all the information available to
me. In reviewing the circumstances which led to your separation I
was obliged to take into account a number of factors. These included
accepted nursing standards and practices, various hospital and
Ministry of Health policies, and the personal work attitudes expected
of staff members looking after mental patients entrusted to our care.
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The conclusion I reached is that the Hospital Administrator had
sufficient grounds to terminate your services. That de&ion was
based on your employment record at the hospital and the culminating
incident of December 18, 1986, as set out in Mr. D.W. Fyffe’s letter
to you dated December 24, 1986.
Yours very truly,
“R. 0%”
Director
Human Resources Branch
(emphasii added)
By letter dated February 19, 1987, Mr. Bruce registered with Mr. Oss the Union’s
strenuous objection to any reference in his report to the Grievor’s prior record in
light of what transpired during the course of the meeting. Thereafter, by letter dated
March 3, 1987, counsel for the Crown asserted the employer’s intention to rely on the
Grievor’s record:
.Dear Mr. Bruce:
Re: Anthony Serrao, RNA 2
Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital
Thank you for your letter of February 19, 1987, to Mr. R. Oss. 1
have been asked to respond on his behalf.
As indicated in Mr. Oss’s letter dated February II, 1987, Mr. Serrao
was dismissed from his employment on the basis of his past
employment record and the culminating incident of December 18,
1986. This is set out in Mr. Fyffe’s letter to Mr. Serrao dated
December 24, 1986.
Mrs. Flandres, who represented local management at the Stage 2
hearing on February 5, 1987, has not had extensive experience in
labour matters. Consequently, she elected to proceed on the basis of
the December 18th incident alone, despite the grounds set out in Mr.
Fyffe’s letter of dismissal. This was done in error. Mr. Oss based
his decision, following the Stage 2 hearing, on the grounds for
dismissal set out in Mr. Fyffe’s letter on the basis that Mr. Fyffe, as
administrator, has the sole delegated authority to dismiss an
individual from employment at the Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital. We
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regret any confusion Mrs. Flandres’s procedural error may have
caused.
If you feel that your client has been prejudiced in any way by the
manner of proceeding on February 5, 1987, then hospital management
would be pleased to meet with you and your client at the earliest
mutually convenient time to go over Mr. Serrao’s. past record
including any relevant documents in his personnel file.
If you have any questions respecting the above, please call me.
Sincerely,
“Mary V. Quick”
Counsel
After some preliminary consideration of the issue, the Board allowed the employer to
adduce evidence on the part of Mr. Fyffe with.respect to the reasons for his original
decision as reflected in his letter of December 24, 1986. In our view, as we indicated
verbally at the hearing, the appropriate principles are described in Brown and Beatty,
Canadian Labour Arbitration, 1983 (Aurora) at page 480:
To the extent that this doctrine relates only to the appropriate
degree of discipline to be invoked, it has generally been held that an
employer could not be considered to have improperly changed ~the
grounds on which it disciplined the grievor when, in the face of a
discipline letter describing only the culminating incident as the basis
for discipline, it subsequently introduced evidence of the grievor’s
record, which it actually considered at the time it imposed the
discipline, to explain the basis on which the particular sanction was
selected. However, an employer may be caught by the general rule
prohibiting it from changing the grounds for invoking the penalty if
it is shown that at the time the discipline was imposed it did not
consider all or part of the prior record of that employee. Indeed, at
least one arbitrator has expressed the view that an employer would
not be entitled to invoke the doctrine of the culminating incident and
rely on the employee’s prior record to support the discipline imposed,
even if it had considered that record at the time of meting out the
discipline, unless it had specifically advised the employee concerned
that it was considering his prior record.
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In the instant case, the issue is whether the Grievor’s record was a factor taken
into account by the employer in its decision to terminate his services. If it was, it
can, of course, be adduced in evidence in support of its decision in these proceedings.
If it was not, however, and in fact the decision was taken entirely on the strength of
the final incident itself, to now introduce the Grievor’s record as an additional factor
would be to effectively enlarge the grounds for his discipline in a manner inconsistent
with the preponderance of arbitral jurisprudence. It is a principle of fundamental
importance that an employee who is disciplined be able to know, as soon as reasonably
possible, the reasons for the discipline, if only to facilitate his or her right to know
and attempt to meet the case against him or her.
A first question to be determined is whether Mr. Fyffe took the Grievor’s record
.into account when making his initial decision. While the Board views Mr. Fyffe as an
honest witness’who did not seek to mislead the tribunal, we have some difficulty with
the sum of his evidence. With three years experience as the Administrator at the
Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital, and several years of prior experience elsewhere in the
health-care field, Mr. Fyffe is not new to the administration of discipline. In this
Board’s experience, when an employer conducts an investigation and decides to review
an employee’s record in assessing the appropriate measure of discipline, that exercise is
normally conducted in a relatively thorough way, with a point-by-point examination of
the documentation that constitutes the record. In this case, that did not happen.
According to Mr. Fyffe’s own evidence, during the course of his hearing, the
representatives of management indicated to him that they were prepared to provide to
him the details of the Grievor’s prior record in the event that he was not satisfied
that the final incident itself justified his discharge. In fact, Mr. Fyffe did not, either
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then or subsequently, take up that invitation and review the entirety of the Grievor’s
disciplinary record. By his own account, he decided on the basis of the material before
him that discipline was justified. He related that as an experienced administrator he
asked himself whether a decision to discharge the Grievor would be upheld upon
arbitral review. According to his evidence, he recalled his own involvement in an
incident one year prior which resulted in discipline being imposed upon the grievor
and, on the strength of that, decided that a decision to discharge the Grievor would be
upheld.
While the Board must obviously take ,great care in dissecting, ex.post facto, the
reasoning of an individual, we have great difficulty concluding in these circumstances
that Mr. Fyffe assessed the final incident in the light of the Grievor’s prior record in
coming to his own conclusion that termination was the appropriate measure of
discipline. No documentary review whatever took place, nor did Mr. Fyffe appear to
advert to the length of the Grievor’s service or the quality of his record prior to the
one incident of which he had some personal recollection. It appears, rroreover, that the
incident of the previous year, in which Mr. Fyffe had assessed the discipline against
the Grievor, was grieved and resulted in a reduction of the measure of discipline by an
external authority. While Mr. Fyffe was apparently aware of that result, it is not clear
from his testimony before this Board whether he took the initial discipline which he
imposed or the reduced measure of discipline into account in considering the Grievor’s
case.
Most importantly, however, it appears on the evidence that the casual advertence to
the incident of the year prior in the mind of Mr. Fyffe was more in the nature of an
afterthought addressed not to the question of whether discharge was appropriate in the
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Grievor’s case, but to the different question of whether it would “stick” when
subjected to arbitral review.
In the Board’s view, that interpretation of the administrator’s thinking is supported
by the content of his letter of September 24, 1986. In that document, he specifically
refers to the argument of management that the doctrine of culminating incident should
be invoked in support of dismissal of the Grievor from -his employment. In that
portion of his letter which explains his conclusion, substantial reference is made to the
incident itself, including the consequences for the patient. There is no reference at
all, however, to the Grievor’s prior record in justification of the decision to terminate
his employment.
Apparently the first notice which the Union had of an intention on the part of
management to rely on the Grievor’s record came at Stage 2 of the grievance
procedure. -As noted above, however, at that stage, being put to an election by the
Deputy Minister’s designate, the Crown’s representatives specifically chose not to rely
upon the Grievor’s record in justification of its disciplinary action. In our view, the
decision taken then, in a clear and considered fashion, was, in fact, consistent with
the approach reflected in the original decision of Mr. Fyffe. In other words, prior to
the letter of Mr. Oss dated February 11, 1987, there is nowhere any clear and explicit
reliance upon the Grievor’s record advanced as part of the reason for the decision to
terminate his services.
It is trite to say that the relatively elaborate procedures for the discharge of a civil
servant under the Public Service Act and its regulations, as well as the provisions of
Article 27 of the Collective Agreement, are intended for a purpose. Section 18(R) of
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regulation 881 specifically requires that the’ finding of the hearing and the reasons for
the recommendation as to discipline be recorded in writing. At a minimum, one
purpose of that requirement is to ensure clarity and consistency in the reasons for an
employee’s termination. In this employment setting, as in others, it is not open to the
employer to make a decision to terminate an employee on certain grounds, and
thereafter, having communicated its decision, to seek other additional grounds to
bolster its decision when those did not enter into its original decision in any
substantive way.
In the instant case, for the reasons related above, we cannot, on the balance of
probabilities, conclude that Mr. Fyffe clearly or consciously intended the Grievor’s
record to form a part of the reasoning for his decision to terminate his services. The
best evidence in that regard is his own letter of December 24, 1986 which, very simply,
makes no such reference. As noted, while we do not believe that he intended to
mislead the Board, we find his verbal testimony on this point equivocal at best and,
at worst, subject to serious doubt because of its ex post facto, self-serving nature.
If there was any doubt about the employer’s reliance on Mr. Serrao’s prior record
after the first stage, that doubt must surely have been resolved by the express
undertaking of management’s representatives at Stage 2 of the grievance procedure. At
that point, and thereafter, the Union was entitled to proceed on the basis that the
employer was not relying on the Grievor’s record. We cannot accept the argument of
counsel for the Crown that the Union was under any obligation to accept the
employer’s invitation, through her letter, to reopen the issue and to effectively allow
the employer to broaden the grounds of discipline beyond what initially appeared in
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Mr. Fyffe’s letter and the subsequent verbal representations of management’s
representatives ar Stage 2.
For these reasons, the preliminary motion of the Union is granted. The grievance
shall proceed on the basis of a consideration of the merits of the discipline assessed
against the Grievor in light of the final incident which gave rise to his dismissal as
related in the letter of Mr. Fyffe dated December 24, 1986.
Dated at Toronto thii day of July, 1987.
M.G. PICHER
Chairman
1. COWAN
Ministry Nominee
I. FREEDMAN
Union Nominee