HomeMy WebLinkAbout2006-0667.Samsone.13-06-18 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB#2006-0667, 2006-0668, 2006-0669, 2006-2409, 2008-0041, 2008-0042, 2008-1184, 2008-1185,
2011-3750, 2011-3751, 2011-3752
UNION#2006-0582-0052, 2006-0582-0053, 2006-0582-0054, 2006-0582-0145, 2008-0582-0023,
2008-0582-0024, 2008-0302-0001, 2008-0302-0002, 2012-0582-0007, 2012-0582-0008,
2012-0582-0009
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Samsone) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Christopher Albertyn Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Craig Flood
Koskie Minsky LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Ministry of Government Services
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING May 28, 2013
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Decision
The issue
[1] The union claims the Ministry has so fundamentally breached, or repudiated, a Memorandum of
Settlement (the Settlement) that I ought to declare the Settlement void and reinstate the grievor’s
grievances that were withdrawn under the Settlement and award monetary and other relief.
Background facts
[2] The parties concluded the Settlement on August 15, 2012. Pursuant thereto, the parties agreed I
was seized for the purposes of interpretation and implementation. A dispute has arisen regarding
implementation.
[3] The grievor formerly worked at the Toronto East Detention Centre (TEDC). He is currently on
WSIB disability absence from work. His disability was occasioned by mental stress from
working at the TEDC.
[4] The Settlement resolved 11 grievances. The parties agreed that the terms of the Settlement were
to remain confidential. I respect their agreement, and I will refer to the Settlement only as strictly
necessary. The confidentiality provision, at paragraph 8 of the Settlement, has a bearing on the
dispute. It reads:
8. This MOS and Release are confidential between the Grievor, the Union and the
Employer and shall not be disclosed by any of them to any other person except to
immediate family, legal and financial advisors of the Grievor and for the purpose of
implementing or enforcing the terms of the Settlement and Release and subject to any
legal requirement.
[5] At some point during the mediation leading to the Settlement, or after the Settlement was
concluded, Pauline Jones, Management Liaison Officer to the Assistant Deputy Minister, made
an undertaking to assist the grievor. The parties disagree on when the undertaking was made (the
union says it was a material condition of the Settlement, a fundamental part of what induced the
grievor to enter into the Settlement; the employer says it was an arrangement concluded after the
Settlement). Given the conclusions reached below, nothing turns on when the undertaking was
made. The last sentence of paragraph 5 of the Settlement contains a general undertaking by the
Ministry to the grievor:
The Employer shall provide assistance where necessary to the Griever with respect to his
claim(s) for benefits for himself or his dependents.
[6] The undertaking arose because the grievor’s spouse was no longer covered for extended health
care benefits through her own employment, and the grievor needed her and their child to be
included under his benefits, so that he could obtain reimbursement of their medical claims from
the Ministry benefits insurer. He had been unable to accomplish this. He had been told he had to
complete various online forms to do so and, for that, he had to access his OPS WIN (Workforce
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Information Network) from a computer at his workplace. The grievor’s disability made him
unable to go to the TEDC to do so.
[7] Although specific reference to Ms. Jones is absent from the written content of the Settlement, the
undertaking was seriously made and it was accepted by the union and the grievor and the
common understanding was that Ms. Jones would be responsible for providing the necessary
assistance.
[8] Ms. Jones offered to assist the grievor to resolve the administrative matter of giving him online
access to his WIN account, so as to ensure coverage for his dependents and to secure
reimbursement of their claims. This was beyond Ms. Jones’s normal responsibilities. She made
the undertaking in order to ensure that all of his outstanding concerns were attended to.
[9] Ms. Jones advised that she would shortly be going on vacation, out of the country, but she would
do as much as she could beforehand.
[10] The grievor’s expectation of the arrangement was that only Ms. Jones would deal with it. Ms.
Jones’s expectation was she would do what was necessary to accomplish the objective of having
the grievor’s dependents covered by the benefits insurer.
[11] On August 16, 2012, the day after the Settlement was concluded, Ms. Jones endeavoured to
accomplish what she had promised. She found that the grievor’s status continued to be
administered from the TEDC. She had no access to his WIN account. To determine the grievor’s
then current medical benefit status, she contacted Gail Warner, the Business Manager /
Administrator of the TEDC, and explained the grievor’s lack of access to his Ministry account to
be able to add his dependents. As part of Ms. Warner’s responsibilities at the TEDC, she was
entitled to access the grievor’s medical benefits status. Ms. Jones asked Ms. Warner to get the
information as soon as possible. Ms. Jones did not receive the information from Ms. Warner
before she left on her two weeks vacation.
[12] When speaking to Ms. Warner, Ms. Jones did not convey the circumstances giving rise to her
request for assistance. She did feel it necessary to explain her request was associated with
Minutes of Settlement concluded between the parties. She anticipated Ms. Warner would
respond to her. She did not convey that Ms. Warner was only to communicate with her and not
directly with the grievor.
[13] On August 23, 2012, Ms. Warner contacted Ontario Shared Services (OSS) and received
confirmation that the grievor was not required to use a work computer to access the required
forms, and that he could contact OSS directly for assistance. On August 24, 2012 she forwarded
this information via email to Ms. Jones and received an out of office reply that she was on
vacation. Unbeknownst to her that there would be any problem doing so, and with the purpose of
expediting matters, Ms. Warner telephoned the grievor and informed him of the OSS contact
numbers to arrange that he access the forms online from his home, and not the TEDC, his
workplace.
[14] The grievor says the information provided to him by Ms. Warner regarding contacting OSS was
generic, which he already possessed.
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[15] The grievor was most upset by being phoned by Ms. Warner. He explains the contact
exacerbated his disability, by making him distraught, angry and confused. He associates Ms.
Warner with the TEDC, the workplace where he was employed, where his grievances arose, and
where his claim of mental stress injury under the Workplace Safety and Insurance Act was
centred. He also interpreted her call as a breach by Ms. Jones of her undertaking, as he
understood it, that she only would deal with his dependents’ benefits issue.
[16] On September 4, 2012, Ms. Jones was made aware that Ms. Warner had contacted the grievor to
provide him with the required information to assist him to access his WIN remotely.
[17] On September 12, 2012, Ms. Warner informed Ms. Jones via an email dated August 24, 2012, of
the procedure to rectify the grievor’s dependents’ benefits problem. Ms. Warner confirmed the
information he had received was incorrect and that he could remotely access his WIN and
complete the required forms. He had first to make arrangements with the OSS contact centre. To
that date the grievor had not accessed OSS or made the changes.
[18] Accordingly, on September 12, 2012 Ms. Jones contacted OSS and dealt directly with a
customer agent. A time sensitive ticket was logged so that this matter could be acted upon
immediately with the grievor’s follow-up. OSS made it clear to Ms. Jones that the necessary
changes could be completed only with the grievor’s signature. Due to the time sensitivity of the
logged ticket Ms. Jones telephoned the grievor on September 12, 2012 to advise him she was
sending him the information via email. The grievor’s spouse answered the phone. Ms. Jones says
left a message for the grievor to call her. The grievor’s spouse says Ms. Jones repeatedly
confirmed she was speaking to the grievor’s spouse and then made reference to the Settlement
regarding the grievor’s benefits claims. The purpose of the call was to have the grievor phone
Ms. Jones.
[19] Ms. Jones also spoke to Bob Gordon, a retired employee from the Ministry who has been the
grievor’s support during the proceedings, to assist her in giving the grievor the “heads-up” of
what had to be done. Mr. Gordon explained that the grievor did not want to talk to her as he felt
Ms. Jones had violated the Settlement. According to Ms. Jones, Mr. Gordon said he would have
the grievor contact Ms. Jones.
[20] Ms. Jones did not receive a call from the grievor. Given the time sensitivity of the ticket issued
by OSS, she again phoned the grievor to relay the OSS information to him and confirm his home
email address. She then sent him an email with attachments, including the forms with step-by-
step directions for remitting the completed forms by fax and mail the originals.
[21] The grievor’s dependents’ benefits issue has been resolved.
Parties’ submissions and decision
[22] The union sees Ms. Jones’s involving Ms. Warner in the resolution of the grievor’s dependents’
benefits issue as a violation of paragraphs 5 and 8 of the Settlement: the employer undertaking to
provide assistance where necessary to the griever with respect to his claim(s) for benefits for
himself or his dependents, and the confidentiality provision.
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[23] Union counsel says the grievor bargained for a secure line of communication for the Crown to
avoid the TEDC, to avoid the locus where his mental stress had been caused.
[24] Union counsel argues there has been a fundamental breach of the grievor’s entitlement to peace
of mind, depriving him of substantially the whole benefit of the Settlement, as in Spirent
Communications of Ottawa Limited v. Quake Technologies (Canada) Inc., 2008 ONCA 92
(CanLII), particularly at ¶¶35-36. For an assessment of the mental distress suffered by the
grievor as a result of the employer’s conduct, union counsel refers to Fidler v. Sun Life
Assurance Co. of Canada, 2006 SCC 30, [2006] 2 SCR 3.
[25] Leaving aside for the moment the question of whether the breach of the Settlement was
fundamental, whether it amounted to a repudiation, entitling the union to have the Settlement
declared a nullity, the first question is whether there has been any breach of the Settlement by the
Ministry.
[26] Ministry counsel argues that any verbal undertaking made by Ms. Jones is unenforceable because
of the provisions of paragraph 7 of the Settlement:
7. This written MOS represents the complete settlement agreement between the parties
in relation to all employment related matters between the parties. The parties agree and
acknowledge that they have not made any verbal or other agreements beyond what is
contained in this written settlement.
[27] Given the conclusion I reach below, it is not necessary for me to decide whether the verbal
undertaking made by Ms. Jones forms part of the Settlement or whether it is unenforceable by
reason of paragraph 7, above, as the employer argues.
[28] On the wording of the undertaking to provide assistance to facilitate the grievor’s benefits
claims, the obligation rests with the Ministry, not Ms. Jones. Had Ms. Jones for whatever reason
been unable to fulfil her verbal undertaking, the obligation in paragraph 5 of the Settlement
would still have rested with the Ministry. In her absence someone else would have had to
accomplish it. Nonetheless, for the purpose of the union’s motion, I interpret the provision to
refer specifically to Ms. Jones, because she made the undertaking to fulfil it.
[29] As the Ministry submits, Ms. Jones took steps to fulfil the Ministry’s obligation under paragraph
5 of the Settlement. She did not have administrative access rights within the government’s
computer system to enable her to obtain the information she felt was necessary to assist the
grievor. Ms. Warner did have such access. Ms. Jones felt she needed Ms. Warner’s assistance to
obtain the information she thought was necessary to fulfil the obligation under paragraph 5 of the
Settlement. That was why she contacted Ms. Warner and asked for her assistance. It was a bona
fide request in an effort by Ms. Jones to fulfil the obligation she had undertaken.
[30] These observations apply also to the union’s claim of a breach of paragraph 8 of the Settlement.
The confidentiality provision allows disclosure as is necessary to implement the Settlement. Ms.
Jones could have mentioned to Ms. Warner that her request for assistance was pursuant to the
Settlement. She did not, though. She made no disclosure of why she needed Ms. Warner to
obtain the necessary information. There was accordingly no breach of paragraph 8 of the
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Settlement and, even had Ms. Jones mentioned to Ms. Warner the reason for her request, that
would have been part of the implementation of the Settlement and so no breach of it.
[31] This case involves a misunderstanding, not a breach of the Settlement. The grievor reasonably
thought that his only contact would be with Ms. Jones. She reasonably thought she could use Ms.
Warner to assist her to accomplish what she had promised the grievor. Neither expected Ms.
Warner to contact the grievor directly. Ms. Warner was not aware that her contacting the grievor
would so upset him, or that he would see her doing so as a breach of the Settlement.
[32] The union says Ms. Jones should never have contacted Ms. Warner. I am not persuaded of that.
Ms. Jones believed her doing so would help to establish the grievor’s benefits claims. Should
Ms. Jones have specifically alerted Ms. Warner that she must not contact the grievor directly?
Should she have had in her mind that the grievor was on WSIB because of his mental stress from
working at the TEDC and should she have drawn the connection that any contact from Ms.
Warner would have caused the grievor’s upset, and should she further have anticipated that Ms.
Warner would speak directly to the grievor before responding to her? I don’t think so. These
were matters that were not close to the concern Ms. Jones had at the time, which was to see that
the necessary steps were taken so that the grievor’s dependents could be added within the OPS
computer system.
[33] Taking all of the above into consideration, what happened was regrettable, though it does not
amount to a breach of the Settlement.
[34] In the circumstances, there are no grounds to set aside the Settlement.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 18th day of June 2013.
Christopher Albertyn, Vice-Chair