HomeMy WebLinkAbout1987-0549.Kent.89-11-07IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EAPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEHENT BOARD
Between:
. Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Correctional,Services)
Employer
Before:
For the Grievor:
For the Employer:
Rearing:
OPSEU (Kent)
R.J. Roberts Vice-Chairperson
L. Robbins Member
M. O'Toole Member
C. Wilkey
Counsel
Cornish & Associates
Barristers & Solicitors
J. Whibbs
Regional Personnel Administrator
Ministry of Correctional Services
July 26, 1989
I
1
DECISION
This case arises out of the denial of Union representation to
the grievor during an investigation by a Shift Supervisor into
allegations of professional misconduct made by an inmate against
the grievor. For reasons whi'ch follow, the grievance is dismissed.
At the outset of the hearing, the 'parties enterer? thk
following agreed statement of facts:
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
8)
9)
Mr. J. Kent was employed as a Correctional Officer 2, at
the Lindsay Jail at the time of his grievance.
Mr. J. Kent placed an inmate on misconduct on February
20, 1987.
The misconduct was heard by Mr. P. Campbell.
Superintendent, Lindsay Jail, on February 24, 1987.
Superintendent Campbell found the inn?ate not guilty $33
counselled the inmate regarding expectations of behaviar.
During the misconduct hearing the inmate alleg?d
unprofessional conduct by Mr. Kent.
On February 24, 1987. Mr. D. Goden, Shift Supervisor.
Lindsay Jail, was instructed to investigate th?
allegations made by the inmate against Mr. Kent.
Mr. D. Goden interviewed the inmate concerned and six
staff members including Mr. Kent.
During this interview with Mr. Goden, Mr. J. Kent
requested a union representative to be present. Mr .
Kent's request was denied by Mr. Goden.
Mr. Goden completed his investigation and reported to the
Superintendent on March 23, 1987 that the allegations
made against Mr. Kent were unfounded.
10) Depending on the nature of the information gathered, a
pre-discipline meeting potentially. could have been
..~ --~~~~.._ .-__~~-__~
z.
2.~
2
convened by the Superintendent.
11) An employee may be assisted by a representative of his
choice during the pre-discipline meeting.
According to the evidence, there are three types of
investigations in which the co-operation of Correctional Officers
may be required: local investigations; investigations under Section
22 of the Ministry of Correctional Services Act (sec. 22
investigations): and police investigations.
Local~investigations are the most frequent. Generally they
are conducted by Supervisors under the direction Of
the
Superintendent of a facility. They involve minor occurrences
within the facility and are of a fact finding nature. Once such
an investigation is completed, the Supervisor summarizes his
findings of fact.in a report to the Superintendent. If Iupon
reviewing the report, the Superintendent decides that there may he
cause for discipline, he gives adequate written notice to the
Correctional Officer involved of a pre-disciplinary meeting. The
notice will set forth the allegation and advise the officer of his
or her right to Union representation. Discipline is not an
inevitable consequence of such a meeting. The evidence made it
clear that the purpose of the meeting is to give the officer an
opportunity to respond to the allegation and provide the
Sugerintendent his or her side of the story. The ~information so
provided can have a dramatic impact upon the outcome.
?
, I
A Sect ion 22 investigation is reserved for more ser ,ious
3
matters, e.g., the death of an inmate, a major escape, a fire or
a riot. This type of investigation is instituted under Section 22
of the Ministry of Correctional Services Act, which reads as
follows:
22. The Minister may designate any person as an
inspector to make such inspection or investigation
as the Minister may require in connection with the
administration of this Act, and the Minister may and
has just cause to dismiss any employee of the
Ministry who obstructs an inspection 01
investigation or withholds, destroys, conceals or
refuses to furnish any information or thing required
by an inspector for the purposes of the inspection
or investigation. R.S.O. 1980, c. 215, s.22
While Section 22 indicates that the Minister may designate "any"
person as an Inspector, the evidence indicated that inpractice
this appointment is limited to persons holding the position of
Inspector in the Inspections and Investigation Branch of the
Ministry.
There appears to be a set procedure for instituting a Section
22 investigation. The Superintendent desiring such an
investigation must contact his or her Regional Manager. If the
latter agrees, the Inspections and Investigation Branch .of the
Ministry is contacted and requested to send an Inspector.
Thereafter, the appointment of the Inspector is confirmed in
writing to the Assistant Deputy Minister. The Inspector then cc)mes
to the institution and makes the investigation.
4
Ministry directives provide for limited access to Union
representation during a s. 22 investigation. For the record, this
limited access to representation is described in a Directive of
the Ministry dated July 5, 1985, as follows:
Henceforth, when an inspector is conducting an internal
investigation and requires a statement from staff members, the
following procedures will apply:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The inspector will show a copy of this directive to all
bargaining unit members.
The inspector will give the staff member the opportunity
to provide a voluntary statement.
If the staff member refuses, or does not wish to provide
such a statement, and the inspector is of the view that a duty statement is necessary, then the inspector may
insist that a statement be provided in accordance with
Section 22.
The inspector shall caution the employee and advise them:
of the provisions of Section 22.
The inspector shall permit lawyer or union representaciv?
to be present at the Section 22 interview:
a. if the employee is likely to be the subject of a
disciplinary procedure (as opposed merely to being
a witness);
b. if the representative is readily available so as not
to unreasonably delay the investigation:
C. if the employee expresses a desire to have a
representative present.
It is understood, however. that:
I. A representative must not be a person who was a
participant or a witness to the incident being
investigated.
II. The representative attends as an observer. They may
not coach, direct, or actively participate in the
review process, but may raise concerns for the
5
record about the application of these procedures.
Notwithstanding the above, the investigation may
proceed at the discretion of the inspector.
III. Where there is a representative present for the
employee, the ministry reserves the right to have
a management observer.
Police investigations are reserved for circumstances in which
criminal liability may result. These are not conducted by Ministry
staff but rather, by the Ontario Provincial Police.
It sometimes happens that a local investigation may be
upgraded to a Section 22 investigation. This can occur, e.g., when
what was thought to be a minor incident turns out to be more
serious. At that point, the local investigation is terminated and
a request is made for the'appointment of an Inspector from th+
Inspections and Investigations Branch. Another way in which a
local investigation may become upgraded to a Section 22
investigation might occur when a Correctional Officer refuses to
co-operate in a local investigation. The evidence made it very
clear that the Ministry takes the position that part of the duty
of a Correctional Officer is to give and clarify information in a
local investigation. If a Correctional Officer refuses to do so,
the investigation is liable to be upgraded to a Section 22
investigation so that the Inspector who is called in might impress
upon the Correctional Officer that under the statute he could be
dismissed if he obstructs matters “or withholds, destroys, conceals
or refuses to furnish" the required information.
6
Turning to the facts of this case, the investigation was a
local investigation. It was conducted by Mr. D. Goden, a Shift
Supervisor, who was instructed to investigate an allegation of
unprofessional conduct made by an inmate whom the grievor had
placed upon a misconduct. Mr. Goden testified that he interviewed
all of the witnesses that the inmate listed in his report and the
grievor. There was no indication that Mr. Goden ever suggested
that he had been designated an Inspector under Section 22 of the
Ministry of Correctional Services~ Act. Despite a certain lack of
co-operation on the part of the grievor -- he indicated that he,
with some deliberation, was not a good witness and declined to sign
Mr. Goden's notes of his responses -- the investigation was not
upgraded to a more serious level. When the Superintendent reviewed
Mr. Goden's report of his fact finding, he determined that the
allegations against the grievor were unfounded. As a result no
pre-disciplinary meeting was held. Nevertheless, the grievor filed
a grievance because Mr. Goden denied his request for Union
representation during the course of their interview.
At the hearing, counsel for the Union raised the following
three issues:
1. Was the investigation conducted by Mr. Goden nevertheless
a de facto Section 22 investigation?
2. If not, was the investigation part of the pre-
disciplinary process, so as to estop the Employer from
departing from its prior practice in pre-disciplinary
meetings of allowing Union representation?.
3. In any event, was Section 29(l) of the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act violated when the grievor was
refused Union representation at his interview during the
investigation?
These issues will be the addressed seriatim hereinbelow:
1. THE INVESTIGATION AS A DE FACTO SECTION 22 INVESTIGATION
There was some evidence of confusion on the part of
Correctional Officers as to the distinction between local and
Section 22 investigations. It seems from the evidence that this
confusion may have sprung from their understanding, which was
correct, that the Ministry expected their full co-operaLion in
giving and clarifying information regardless of which type of
investigation was involved. This expectation, however, did not
derive from the nature of the investigation. It derived from the
Ministry's view of the obligation of a Correctional Officer to
assist in the administration of his or her institution.
On the evidence, the distinction between a local and Section
22 investigation is two-fold: (1) a Section 22 investigation must
be conducted by a person who is designated as an Inspector under
Section 22 of the Act; and, (2) in practice, a Section 22
investigation is reserved for what are, in the opinion of the
Superintendent and the Regional Manager, more serious matters.
The investigation in the present case did not meet either of
these conditions. There was no indication that,Mr. Goden ever was
appointed by the Minister pursuant to Section 22 of the Ministry
of Correctional Services Act. The matter under investigation, an
allegation of professional misconduct on the part of the grievor,
was relatively speaking, a minor matter. We cannot find that any
de facto Section 22 investigation occurred here. Accordingly, the --
grievor was not entitled to the limited access to Union
representation which is given to Correctional Officers who are the
subjects of Section 22 investigations.
2. LOCAL INVESTIGATION AS PART OF THE PRE-DISCIPLINARY-MEETING
PROCESS:
It was common ground between the parties that, as a matter of
practice. accused Correctional Officers are permitted full Union
represenxtion in a pre-disciplinary meeting. It was submitted
that a local investigation was. in fact, part of this pre-
disciplinary process and, really, r.:.e distinction between them was
too artificial to survive for purposes of Union representation.
In this regard, Union counsel suggested that a Correctional Off< I-:'
with an allegation against him is placed in jeopardy from t1.: .i
moment be begins his interview in the local investigation. H*
realizes, it was said, that he is expected to give and clarify
information but at the same time his answers may place him in some
:
9
jeopardy. Given the influence that the summary of this information
may have upon the decision of the Superintendent whether to
consider discipline, it was submitted, fairness required Union
representation to be afforded in both steps of the process and not
just the final one. Because management had already recognised this
need for fairness by allowing Union representation at the pre-
disciplinary meeting, counsel went on, the Employer was estopped
from refusing to provide it at the investigation stage.
We found this to be an interesting and innovative application
of the doctrine of promissory estoppel; however, we find that there
are too many obstacles in the way of accepting it. First, there
is the fact that as a matter of practice, a distinction has always
been made between a local investigation and a pre-disciplinary
meeting for purposes of Union representation. There was no
evidence of any previous Union objection to this practice.
Accordingly, there may exist an equity estopping the Union from
challenging the fairness or propriety of this distinction, at least
in the present case.
Secondly, there are in any event some circumstantial
distinctions which we see as obstacles to full acceptance of Union
counsel's characterization of the facts. As counsel for the
Ministry pointed out, discipline is not contemplated when a local
investigation is instituted. It is a fact finding exercise. As
far as we could tell from the evidence, it does not even result in
10
a recommendation one way or the other. Moreover, and perhaps a
related point, the investigation is not conducted by the decision
maker. It is conducted by another person who, as we have already
noted, does not even seem to have the authority to recommend
discipline. Finally, while there is an expectation of co-operation
on the part of even an accused Correctional Officer, it seems at
least from the facts of this case that this expectation is not in
practice enforced to the letter, so long as the officer does not
flatly refuse to answer questions. When we consider these
.
distinctions, we are led to decline the invitation of the Union
counsel to meld into a seamless whole the investigation and pre-
disciplinary meeting stages of the process and thereby estop the
Ministry from refusing Union representation at the investigation
stage.
3. SECTION 29 (1) OF THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
ACT:
Section 29 (1) of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining
Act reads as follows:
No person who is acting on behalf of the employer
shall participate in or interfere with the selection,
formation or administration of an employee organisation
or the representation of employees by such an
organisation, but nothing in this section shall be deemed
to deprive the employer or any person acting on behalf of the employer of his freedom to express his views so
long as he does not use coercion, intimidation, threats,
promises or undue influence.
. .
This provision is in somewhat the same terms as Section 64 of the
Ontario Labour Relations Act, which reads:
No employer or employers' organization and no person
action acting on behalf of an employer or an employers'
organization shall participate in or interfere with the
formation, selection or administration of a trade union
or the representation of employees by a trade union or
contribute financial or other support to a trade union,
but nothing in this section shall be deemed to deprive
an employer of his freedom to express his views so long
as he does not use coercion, intimidation, threats,
promises or undue influence. R.S.A. 1980, c. 228, s. 65.
Both Section 29 (1) and Section 64, above, forbid, inter alia --I
interference in "the representation of employees" by a union
through the use of "coercion, intimidation, threats, promises or
undue influence."
It was this coincidence in language which led to the
submission of still another interesting and innovative argument
by Union counsel. It seems that in a 1984 decision, Ontario Nurses
Association v. Windsor Western Hospital (Riverview Uni&),Nos.
2287-83 U; 2526-83- U (Burkett), the Ontario Labour Relations Board
held that it was contrary to Section 64 for an employer to prevent
meaningful Union representation at a meeting called by the employer
to impose discipline. The Board said:
28. We now turn to the allegations against the Hospital. In
essence it is alleged by the Association and the complainant
that the Hospital interfered with the representation of an
employee within the meaning of section 64 of the Act. We
start by accepting that representation within the meaning of
section 64 of the Act includes the representation of employees
at the time that formal discipline is imposed and during the
processing of any subsequent grievance. Although this Board
--.. _ _-_.
12
has never before been required to articulate the exer+of the
union's right in this regard, it flows naturally from the
overriding purpose of the Act; that is. to redress the
imbalance that exists when an individual employee is forced
to deal with his employer in respect of his employment
relations. The United States Supreme Court in upholding an
interpretation of section I of the National Labour Relations
Act, which gives employees .the statutory right to union
assistance in a disciplinary proceeding, observed that sound
policy reasons support the finding of an independent right to
union representation at such a hearing. (See J. Weingarten
Inc. and Retail Clerks, Local 455, (1973) 485 F. 2d 1135 S4
LRRM 2436 U.S.C.A. 5th circuit) certiorari aranted (1975) 43"
U.S. 251 (Sup Ct.).) Section I of the National Labour
Relations Act entitles employees "t 0 bargain
collectively... and to enoage in other concerted activities for - _ the purpose-of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or
protection". The U.S. Supreme Court in Weinaarten, supra
ruled that: .
. . . Requiring a lone employee to attend an investigatory
interview which he reasonably believes may result in the
imposition of discipline perpetuates the inequality the
Act was designed to eliminate and has recourse to the
safeguards the Act provides to redress the perceived
imbalance of economic power between labour and
management.
(see also Chaodelaine v. Emballaoe Domfar Ltee, 84 CLLC
14,013 (Que. L.C.) for the only Canadian authority in point,
in which the Quebec Labour Court held that an employee was
entitled to union representation at a disciplinary interview
under the "freedom of association" article of the Quebec
Labour Code).
29. The whole scheme of our Act is to reverse the imbalance
that exists between individual employee and employer. The Act
provides for the certification of trade unions to act as
collective representative for all of those falling within a
bargaining unit found to be appropriate for collective
bargaining. It is clear on a reading of the Act as a whole
that the right to collective representation encompasses not
only the negotiation of the collective agreement but the
representation of individual employees in pursuit of or in
protection of their rights under the collective agreement.
It follows that just as under the American and Quebec
statutes, which are designed to serve essentially the same
purpose, the right to collective representation under the
Labour Relations Act (embodied in the right accorded to all
persons under section 3 of the Act to join a trade union and
participate in its lawful activities and the prohibition in
section 64 of the Act against interference with the
representation of employees by a trade union) extends to
13
include union representation at a meeting called by the
employer to charge an employee with misconduct or to impose
discipline. While the statute does not give an employee the
right to choose his union representative, it does protect the
right to representation and prohibits employer interference
with this right. It is not for the employer to decide who
will be the employee's representative at a discipline meeting
or to put impediments in place that cannot be reasonably
justified. Id. at paragraphs 28 & 29.
As can be seen, in reaching this conclusion the Board referred to
a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, Na v.
Weinaarten Inc., 420 U.S. 251, 262 (1974).
Union counsel stressed that in Weinaarten, the Supreme Court
of the United States concluded that it was a breach of Section I
of the National Labour Relations Act for an employer to refuse an
employee union representation at an investigatory interview "which
he reasonably believes may result in the imposition of discipline."
This conclusion was reached, it was submitted, because the
employer's refusal perpetuated "the perceived imbalance of economic
power between labour and management" which the Act was designed to
eliminate. Since the Ontario Labour Relations Act, and in
particular Section 64 thereof, was designed to serve essentially
the same purpose as the American statute, it was submitted, the
Ontario Labour Relations Act likewise required unionrepresentation
at investigatory meetings. In light of this, the conclusion was
inescapable, it was submitted, that s. 29 (1) of the Crown
Employees Collective Bargaining Act, which embodied the essence of
this same right for Crown employees, required union representation
14
at investigatory meetings.
This was a forceful argument: however, we have decided to
leave for perhaps another day the making of what would have been
a new rule of the Grievance Settlement Board with potential
implications for the Labour Relations Board. We say this because
in the Windsor Western case, w, the Board took pains to issue
a very narrow ruling, much narrower than that upheld by the Supreme
Court of the United States in Weinqarten; Whereas .Weinqarten
I upheld a ruling of the National Labour Relations Board which
extended union representation to an employee at "an investigatory
interview which he reasonably believes may result in the imposition
of discipline", the Board in Windsor Western narrowly ruled that
the right to union representation included "union representation
at a meeting called by the employer to charge an employee with
misconduct or to impose discipline." Unlike its counterpart in the
United States, the Board did not extend the right of union
representation to meetings of a fact-finding or investigatory
nature.
Moreover, we were unable to find in the authorities presented
to us by counsel any decision of the Board which broadened this
right of union representation beyond the narrow confines specified
in Windsor Western. In fact, the only other case from the Board
to which we were referred, Canadian Paperworkers' Union, Local 304
V. Sunworthy Wall Coverings (19861, Case #1328/85-U (Tacon),
evinced an intention not to expand the ratio of Windsor Western
beyond the context of disciplinary meetings.
We are not inclined to make an extension of the jurisprudence
of the Labour Relations Board which the Board itself has not made
and then proceed to apply it to our own statute. That, it seems
to us, would be too great a leap in jurisprudence for the facts of
the present case. We are reminded that here we are dealing wizh
a simple fact-finding investigation. Thereafter, discipline was
neither considered nor imposed. Accordingly, we decline to
conclude that the right of union representation provided under
Section 64 of the Labour Relations Act and Section 29 (1) of the
Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act was breached in the
circumstances of the present case.
4. CONCLUSIONS:
The grievance is dismissed.
DATED at London, Ontario,
1989.
16
,
.
ADDENDUM
I concur with the Award in this matter. Nevertheless,
I can certainly appreciate the grievor's desire for Union
representation in such investigatory meetings. The Correctional
Officer, by the nature of his position, is frequently subject to
a variety of allegations of misconduct, some of which may be
justified, others not, as was the case here. Yet once an
investigation is launched, the Correctional Officer who is the
focus may be
in a tenuous position, in that the spectre of
discipline is hanging over his head. Statements made at such an
investigation could conceivably be used against the Correctional
Officer later.
.
In my view, it would increase the confidence of the
Correctional Officers in the system if an expanded role were
provided for Union representation even at a so-called "fact-
finding" meeting. I agree with the statements in Windsor Western
e (supra) and in J. (supra) Hos ita
that there is a great imbalance between the Employer and an
individual employee, especially in the context of disciplinary
proceedings. A wide right to Union representation in such meetings
with Management is an important means of redressing that imbalance.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario the 7th day of November, 1989
LARRY ROBtiNS