HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-0584.Union.unknown Decision180 DWMS sram wsr. TORONTO. o.wmo. MS IZE -SUITE 2100
BETWEEN :
BEFORE :
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
UNDER
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
BEFORE
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
OPSEU (Union Grievance)
- And -
THE CROWN IN RIGHT OF ONTARIO
(Ministry of Health)
I. Springate Vice-chairman
F. Taylor Member
L. Turtle Member ,
FOR THE GRIEVOR: M. Cornish
Counsel
Cornish and Associates
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER: P. Jarvis
Counsel
Hicks Morley Hamilton Stewart Storie
Barristers and Solicitors
HEARINGS : March 3, 4, 9, 11, 23, 24 and
April 24, 27 and 30, 1987
TELEPHONE* 416/598- 0688
581184
Grievor
Employe 1:
INTERIM DECISION
-1-
This award deals with a procedural issue only, namely whether
the Board should give any weight to the results of a survey of the
views of bargaining unit enployees as well as a statistical analysis
of those results.
When counsel
for the union first indicated that she would be
seeking to rely on the survey results and the analysis, counsel for
the enployer objected to their introduction on the grounds that the
mterial was a form of written hearsay. Union counsel then indicated
that she intended to call a number of expert witnesses for the
purpose of establishing that both the results of the survey and the
statistical analysis were scientifically reliable and hence should be
accepted and relied on by the Board. The Baard ruled that it wauld
hear fran the union's expert witnesses prior to deciding the issue.
In the mrse of hearing fran those witnesses, the Board determined
that a proper understanding of their evidence required that the Board
have before it the survey questions, the results of the survey, and
the report of the statistical analysis performed on those results.
The Board accordingly admitted the mterial in question into
evidence. This left outstanding only the question of whether the
E3oard should give the mterial any weight. Having regard to
counsels' advice that the Board's determination of this issue wculd
likely influence the nature of the additional evidence the parties
might wish to call, the Board indicated that it would release an
interim award dealing with the mtter prior to the resunption of the
hearing .
-2-
These proceedings relate to enployees of the Ministry of Health
employed in the OHIP offices in Hamilton. The union contends that
as a result of various deficiencies in the working conditions at
Hamilton, the enployer is in breach of Article 18.1 of the collective
agreement, which provides as follows:
The Enployer shall continue to make reasonable
provisions for the safety and health of its employees
during the hours of their enployment. It is agreed
that both the Employer and the Union 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.
A grievance filed by the union reads as follows:
STATEMENT OF GRIEVANCE:
The union grieves that the enployer is not making
reasonable provision for the health and safety of its employees employed in the Ministry of Health,
OHIP offices located at 119 King Street, Hamilton,
and is in violation of Article 18.1 of the working
conditions/employee benefits collective agreement.
SETTLEMENT REQUIRED:
The union seeks the correction of those working
conditions that are currently contributing to the
ill-health experienced by employees.
the following: 1. improved air quality. 2.
abatement of noise levels. 3. provision of
properly designed off ice equipment (a ) adjustable
desks for VDT use -provided with split table
surfaces that can be adjusted independently; (b)
appropriately designed hard copy holders; (c)
easily adjustable chairs that can be adjusted
safety and easily fran a seated position. 4. the
provision of a properly designed lighting system.
5. the provision of anti-glare, antistatic
screen filters; the abolishment of the current
quota system and electronic monitoring practices.
These include
-3-
Although the enployer has not yet called any evidence, from the
nature of the cross examination of union witnesses by employer
counsel, we gather that the employer acknowledges that at times
employees have been required to work under conditions of discomfort
due to poor air circulation. It is clear, however, that the parties
disagree as to the extent of the problem and whether it involves a
health and safety issue. The parties also disagree as to certain of
the facts relevant to the other matters referred to in the grievance
and whether those matters involve health and safety concerns. It
follows that the Board will be called upon to make a number of
findings of fact as to actual employee working conditions and whether
those working conditions adversely inpact on the health and safety of
enployees.
The union has not yet led all of its evidence with respect to
the merits of the grievance. It has, however, called a number of
enployees to give first hand evidence as to working conditions at the
OHIP offices, including the quality of the air, air circulation,
temperature levels,
noise levels, lighting, and the various types of
equipment that employees utilize. In the course of giving their
evidence, these enployees referred to certain difficulties they
encountered as a result of their working conditions and also referred
to certain physical symptoms and medical conditions they attributed
to those conditions. When cross-examining these employees, enployer
-4-
counsel questioned them as to the details of the working conditions
they had referred to, the time span covered by their evidence, the
frequency with which they encountered difficulties and the the effect
of certain alterations to the work environment made by the enployer.
Employer counsel also asked them questions relating to physical
symptoms experienced by them away from the work place and any
pre-existing
medical problems. In that all of the employees
testified prior to when union counsel raised the matter of the survey
none
of the employees were questioned concerning their responses to
the survey questions.
On agreement of the parties there were filed in evidence a
number of reports prepared by officials of the Ministry of Labour
following visits by them to the Hamilton OHIP offices. These reports
include the results of several measuremnts taken at various
locations at the OHIP offices relating to the amount of carbon
dioxide, fomaldehyde and ozone in the air, wet bulb and dry bulb
temperatures, relative humidity, noise levels, and illumination
levels. We are also advised that the union is considering calling
expert witnesses for the purpose of showing a causal relationship
between employee working conditions and a number of health and safety
concerns. It is in addition to this evidence that the union seeks to
rely on the results of the survey and the analysis of those results.
-5-
The survey took the form of a questionnaire circulated by the
union among employees in the bargaining unit. Of the approximately
180 employees in the bargaining unit, 145 completed the question-
naire. The survey questions were prepared by Mr. Robert De Matteo,
the union's Co-ordinator of Occupational Health and Safety. The
answers to the questions were analyzed by Dr. Margaret Denton,
President of Social Data Research Limited. Mr. De Matteo and Dr.
Denton were called as witnesses by the union as was Dr. Michael
Ornstein, the Associate Director of the Institute for Social Research
at York University. We are satisfied, on the basis of the testimony
of these three individuals, that the questions utilized in the survey
questionnaire met the generally accepted social science criteria for
use in a survey and that the analysis of the survey results was
performed in accordance with recognized satistical methods for
analyzing social science data.
-6-
Below are set out a number of key questions from the survey
questionnaire:
( 20 IN YOUR PRIMARY WORK AREA (THAT IN WHICH YOU SPEND THE
MOST TIME) Do YOU FEEL THERE IS:
a) too little air movement?
1 never or rarely
2 sometimes
often or always
b) too much air movement? (drafts)
- 3
1 never or rarely
2 sometimes
of ten or always
- 3
c) lighting too bright?
never or rarely
- 1
2 sometimes
of
ten or always
- 3
d) lighting too dim?
never or rarely
- 1
2 sometimes
often or always
- 3
e ) glare on work surf aces?
1 never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 often or always
-7-
f) unpleasant odors?
1 never or rarely
2 sometimes
of ten or always
- 3
g) temperature too cold?
1 never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 - of ten or always
h) temperature too hot?
never
or rarely
sometimes
of ten or always
- 1
2
3
-
-
i) air too dry?
1 - never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 - of ten or always
j) air too mist?
1 - never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 of ten or always
k) air too smokey?
1 never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 often or always
-8-
1) air too stuffy?
1 7 never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 - of ten or always
m) air too dusty?
1 - never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 7 of ten or always
(22) IF YOU WORK ON A VDT/CRT, ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
FOLLOWING BOTHERSOME:
a) flickering of screen?
ARE THE
1 - never or rarely
sometimes 2
3 of ten or always
-
b) brightness of screen?
1 - never or rarely
sometimes 2
3 - of ten or always
-
c) height of screen?
1 never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 often or always
-9-
d) distance to screen?
never or rarely
- 1
- sometimes 2
of ten or always
- 3
e) bright lights above or behind VDT/CRT?
never or rarely
- 1
sometimes
- 2
3 - often or always
f) size of lettering?
1 - never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 - often or always
g) brightness of letters?
1 - never or rarely
2 sometimes
3 7 often or always
h) height of keyboard?
never or rarely
- 1
2 sometimes
3 - of ten or always
i) distance to keyboard?
never or rarely
- 1
2 sometimes
often or always
7
3
- 10 -
j ) reflections?
never
or rarely _ 1
2 sometimes
3 - often or always
k) is the keyboard attached?
- Yes 1
2 no
-
(29) HAVE YOU EVER EXPERIENCED ANY OF THE SYMPTOMS LISTED BELOW
WHILE AT WORK? (CHOOSE ALL THAT APPLY).
a ) headache
once a month or less
- 1
2 once a week
once a week or more
- 3
b) dizziness
1 - once a month or less
2 once a week
once a week or more
- 3
c) fatigue
once a month or less
- 1
2 once a week
once a week or more
- 3
d ) sleepiness
1 - once a month or less
2 once a week
once a week or more
- 3