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ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DEL'ONTARIO
GRIEVANCE CPMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
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2054/90
IN THB HATTER OP AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN BMPLOYEES COLLBCTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Mirosolin)
Grievor
-and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Attorney General)
Employer
BEFORE: R. Verity Vice-Chairperson
M. Lyons Member
H. Roberts Member
FOR THE R. Anand
GRIBVOR Counsel
Scott & Aylen
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE G. Gledhill
EMPLOYER Staff Relations Officer
Human Resources Branch
Ministry of the Attorney General
HEARING July 8, 1991
--------------------------------
2
INTERIM DECISION
Sybil Mirosolin is one of five Criminal Court Clerks who works
for the Ministry of the Attorney General at 80 The East Mall in
Etobicoke. In a grievance dated August 3, 1990, she claims
discrimination by the Employer, contrary to the provisions of
Article A of the collective agreement. In essence, the grievor
claims discrimination by the Employer arising from alleged
differential treatment on the basis of race. The grievor is the
only non-white employee of the five Court Clerks.
Article A is a new provision in the collective agreement which
came into effect on June 15, 1990. Article A reads as follows:
ARTICLE A -NO DISCRIMINATION/
EMPLOYMENT EQUITY
A.l There shall be no discrimination practised by
reason of race, ancestry, place of origin,
colour, ethnic origin, citizenship, creed,
sex, sexual orientation, age, marital status,
family status, or handicap, as defined in
section 9(1) of the ontario Human Rights Code
(OHRC) .
A.2 It is recognized that in accordance with
section 13 of the OHRC, the Employer's
employment equity program shall not be
considered a contravention of this article.
The Union advised the panel that the gist of the grievor's
claim is that her time at work was monitored excessively, that she
was harassed when she made legitimate requests for time off, and
3
that there was an "on-going and continuing practice of favouritism"
in the office with resulting adverse treatment of the grievor and
other non-white employees.
The parties agreed that the Board's jurisdiction under Article
A is limited to the period from June 15, 1990 to the date of the
filing of the grievance on August 3, 1990 (some 49 calendar days).
The parties disagree, however, on the scope of the evidence which
the panel should hear. By way of preliminary objection, the
Employer sought to limit the introduction of evidence which we
would receive to the period between June 15 and August 3, 1990.
The thrust of the Employer's brief submission was to the effect
that it would be improper for us to hear evidence prior to or after
the 49 day period in the absence of jurisdiction to grant a remedy.
The Employer relied upon the following authorities: OPSEU (Union
Grievance) and Ministry of Tourism and Recreation, 756/87 (Fraser);
OPSEU (Van Der Akker) and Ministry of Correctional Services,
2542/87 (Fisher); and OPSEU (Homavazir) and Ministry of Government
Services, 247/89 (Verity).
The nature of the evidence the Union seeks to adduce falls
into three categories within specified time frames as follows:
1) events on particular dates in 1989 and 1990 relating to
start and departure times of employees, together with
attendance sheets and corresponding Court room
4
utilization sheets.
2) the strict monitoring of the grievor's hours of work in
terms of time off and start and departure times,
including six "incidents" between 1986 and 1989.
3) differential treatment by the Court Administrator of
other non-white employees on three occasions between 1988
and 1990.
Counsel for the Union vigorously opposed the Employer's
request to limit the introduction of evidence while at the same
time acknowledging that no remedy was being claimed prior to June
15, 1990. Mr. Anand contended that the panel must hear "background
evidence" in light of the lengthy history of friction, complaints,
alleged management inaction and harassment in order to properly
understand the events being grieved. In the alternative, Union
counsel contends that evidence outside the 49 day time frame is
admissible because this is a continuing grievance, or in the
further alternative, the evidence constitutes' admissible similar
fact evidence or evidence of a pattern and practice. As a final
alternative, it was contended that such evidence was admissible
under the legal inference of presumption of continuance. In
support, we were referred to the following authorities: Re City of
Toronto and Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 79 (1982),
133 D.L.R. (3d) 94 (Ont. C. A.); OPSEU (A. Tay,lor-Baptist) and
5
Ministry of Correctional Services, 163/87 (Kennedy); Sweitzer v.
the Queen (1982), 68 C.C.C. (2d) 193 (S.C.C.); Graesser v. Porto
(1983) 4 C.H.R.R. 0/1569 (ant. Bd.); Zarankin and Johnstone (1984)
5 C.H.R.R. 0/2274 (B.C. Bd.); Olarte et al and Commodore Business
Machines Ltd. and DeFilippis (1983) 4 C.H.R.R. 0/1399 (ant. Bd.);
Re Steinberg Inc. and Commercial Workers Union, Local 486 (1984),
16 L.A.C. (3d) 171 (Fraser); and Prince Albert Co-operative
Association Limited v. Retail, Wholesale and Department Store
Union, Local 496 and Saskatchewan Labour Relations Board [19831, 1
W.W.R. 549 (Sask. C. A.).
On the authorities submitted, the Employer's preliminary
objection is simply without merit. S. 20(8) of the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act gives the Grievance Settlement Board the
statutory authority to determine its own practice and procedure by
giving "full opportunity to the parties ...to present their evidence
and to make their submissions". Clearly, a panel of the Grievance
Settlement Board has a wide latitude to hear evidence and
thereafter to assess the weight, if any, to be accorded such
evidence. In OPSEU (Taylor-Baptist) and Ministry of Correctional
Services, supra, a case of alleged harassment by a supervisor, the
panel was faced with a similar argument whereby the employer sought
to limit the introduction of evidence to matters that had taken
place within 20 days prior to the date of the filing of the
grievance.
6
In rejecting that argument, Arbitrator Kennedy advanced the
following rationale, in part, at pp. 4 and 5:
Once the grievance is properly before us within the
procedures laid down in the collective agreement, the
appropriate scope of evidence is governed by the normal
principles dealing with the admissibility of evidence and
its relevance to the issues to be arbitrated. In the
context of labour relations, matters cannot and ought not
to be determined in a vacuum, and past events are
customarily covered in the evidence in order to place a
particular incident that is the subject matter of a
grievance into its proper context in the light of the on
going employment relationship. It is immaterial that
those past events can no longer form the basis of a
grievance due to the time limit provisions of the
collective agreement. If we were to accept Mr. Benedicts
objection that evidence be limited to events occurring no
earlier than 20 days prior to the grievance, we would in
substance exclude the greater proportion of evidence that
is heard in numerous cases by this board on a day-to-day
basis.
We adopt the Kennedy rationale in the Taylor-Baptist case, as
being equally applicable to the instant grievance. Accordingly the
preliminary objection is dismissed and the hearing on the merits
shall proceed as scheduled for September 10, 1991.
DATED at Brantford, Ontario, this 19th day ofAugUlit, 1991.
. '\":;:. <tiIC~---__--.... ~~ ..
R.:;". VERITY, Q. C >,-VICE-CHAIRPERSON
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M~LYONS -MEM... /
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H. ROBERTS -MEMBER