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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1987-0901.Mandar.90-12-19SElTLEMENT RkGLEMENT DES GRIEFS IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION Under THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT Before THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD BEFORE: FOR THE GRIEVOR FOR THE EMPLOYER M. Contini Counsel Mathews, Dinsdale & Clark Barristers & Solicitors BEARING: Nay 18, 1988 OPSEU (Mandar) - and - Grievor The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Correctiona. Services) Employer P. Draper J. Solberg W. A. Lobraico Vice-Chairperson Member Member T. McEwan Counsel Gowling, Strathy & Henderson Barristers & Solicitors II : ‘I I DECISION ii I, The Grievor, Howard Mandar, grieves that he has not been ;I credited with the length of continous service to which he is iI entitled under Article 25 of the coliective agreement, the relevant portions of which read: ;' 2 I 'I 25.1 An employee's length oficontinuous service will i/ accumulate upon complet!on of a probationary period of not more thani)one (1) year and shall commence, I: b) from the date on which An employer commences a period of unbroken fulldtime service in the Public Service immediately prior to appointment to the classified service. il :I The grievance is opposed by the Employer on the grounds that it i ! is out of time and, in the alternativ,?, that it must fail on the merits. As to timeliness, the EmLloyer submits that the grievance was not filed in with the provisions of Article 27, the relevant read: 27.2.1. An employee who believe; he has a complaint or a difference shall first discuss the complaint or r difference with his supervisor within twenty (20) days of first becoming aware of the complaint or difference, 27.2.2. If any complaint or difference is not satisfactorily settled by the supervisor within seven (7) days' of the decision, it may be processed within an additional ten (10) days. In our interim decision of October 28, 1988, we-considered only the issue of timeliness, ruling that the final disposition of the matter'must await the decision of the Divisional Court on the application for Judicial review of the Board's decision in Pierre 492/86, a case in which the application of Article 27 was also argued. The Court's decision which upholds the Board's decision, has now been reported: Ontario (Ministry of Correctional Services) v. O.P.S.E.U., 740 R. (2L) 700. In retrospect, we should not so readily have adopted the view that determination of the issue of timeliness must necessarily precede consideration of the merits of the grievance. That practice, we believe, is not inviolable where, as here, the grievance must inevitably be dismissed on the merits even if it were to be found to be timely. It seems to us that, from the perspective of the parties, it is more constructive to give primary to the resolution of the dispute that led to the grievance rather than to the procedural aspect of the case. /;. It is not in dispute that there was a break in the Grievor's I, employment between December 5, 1983 &d October 9, 1984. The II Grievor testified that he left his eiployment by submitting his resignation because he was told that ibecause I of Ministry policy he could not work in the same instit{tion, the Metro West Detention Centre, as his brother. II Th,at information which Ii appears not to have been a deliberate; falsehood, was later II found to be incorrect: there is no su?h policy. The Grievor I felt so strongly about his wish to work near his brother that II he chose to resign. He believes he was misled into resigning by the mistaken information he recei&d. On being re-employed the Grievor rec$sted to be credited with his service prior to the break in em$oyment. The request was denied. il Ii It was unfortunate, to say the least,\:that the Grievor was misinformed about Ministry policy. BF he was not told that he could not be employed anywhere in thel/Winistry, only that he II could not work at the Metro West Detention Centre. He would have had open to him in the normal cobrse the option of continuing in employment by requesting to be transferred elsewhere in the Ministry. i Only if hp had done so and had been refused for whatever reason could it be said that, employment I apparently not being possible at the Wetro West Detention I Centre and not being available to himtat any other Ministry i location, his loss of employment and $0 of credit for prior service was, in fact, occasioned by the incorrect information he was given about Ministry policy. In the circumstances, we must conclude that the Grievor voluntarily resigned because he was not prepared to abandon his preference as to work location in the Ministry. The consequence is that he is not entitled to credit for service prior to the break in employment. The grievance is dismissed. Dated at Toronto this 19th day of December 1990. Vice Chairperson l-5 J. Solberg, Membey /J!2&6& &&&2k&4 W. A. Lobraico, Member