HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013-2320.Nichols.14-04-16 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#2013-2320
UNION#2013-0530-0028
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Nichols) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Brian P. Sheehan Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Gregg Gray
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Laura McCready
Ministry of Government Services
Centre for Employee Relations
Employee Relations Advisor
HEARING
EMPLOYER SUBMISSIONS
UNION SUBMISSIONS
February 3, 2014
February 24, 2014
March 11, 2014
- 2 -
Decision
[1] The Employer and the Union, at the Toronto South Detention Centre, agreed to participate
in the Expedited Mediation-Arbitration process in accordance with the negotiated Protocol. It is
not necessary to reproduce the entire Protocol. Suffice to say that the parties have agreed to a
True Mediation-Arbitration process, wherein each party provides the Vice-Chair with their
submissions setting out the facts and the authorities they would respectively rely upon. This
decision is issued in accordance with the Protocol and with Article 22.16 of the collective
agreement and is without prejudice or precedent.
[2] The Mandatory Blood Testing Act (“MBTA”) enables specific workers including
Correctional Officers who have been exposed to blood and/or high risk body fluids in the course
of their work, to apply to the Medical Officer of Health to seek to have the person who exposed
the worker to blood and/or high risk body fluids, provide a blood specimen for the purpose of
testing for Hepatitis B (HBV), Hepatitis C (HCV), and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV).
The Act mandates that the worker exposed to blood and/or high risk body fluids, such as the
grievor, must submit the appropriate application forms within seven days of the date of the
incident associated with the exposure.
[3] The grievor is a Correctional Officer currently assigned to the Toronto South Detention
Centre. On July 5, 2013, while working at the now closed Toronto Jail, the grievor was cut by a
homemade weapon while searching an inmate’s cell. Notwithstanding the fact that the grievor
was wearing her Ministry issued Kevlar gloves, the razor blade fashioned weapon cut through
the glove and the skin of the grievor.
.
- 3 -
[4] The grievor immediately reported the incident to her Operational Manager who, along with
the institutional healthcare staff, instructed the grievor to attend St. Michael’s Hospital. At the
hospital, the grievor had blood drawn for testing and was started on a HIV medication “cocktail”
program, and referred to the hospital’s HIV clinic. The Union claimed that the grievor was
initially advised by her Operational Manager that the two inmates who occupied the cell in
question had volunteered to provide a blood specimen for testing purposes.
[5] Early the following week, the grievor spoke to Operational Manager Croisier. The grievor
claimed that Operational Manager Croisier advised her that the Employer was just awaiting the
results of the blood tests regarding the two inmates. Operational Manager Crosier has denied
ever informing the grievor that the two inmates were tested.
[6] On July 26, 2013, the grievor was informed for the first time by healthcare staff that, in
fact, the inmates involved in the incident had refused to be tested. The grievor, subsequently that
day, spoke to Deputy Superintendent DiNino regarding what had transpired. During that
conversation, Ms. DiNino handed the grievor an envelope package containing information and
the necessary forms associated with submitting an application for testing under the MBTA.
[7] It is the position of the Union that the Employer failed to provide the grievor with the
necessary support with respect to a serious health and safety incident. Specifically, the Union
submitted that the Employer was obligated to advise the grievor of her rights under the MBTA
when the exposure incident occurred, and not three weeks later when the grievor could no longer
submit a timely application. It was further asserted that if the Employer had acted appropriately
and advised the grievor of her rights under the Act, in a timely manner, she would have not
necessarily had to incur the adverse side-effects she experienced as a result of undergoing the
- 4 -
HIV medication “cocktail” program, and the stress and anxiety associated with not knowing
whether she had contracted a blood-borne disease.
[8] The position of the Employer is that the grievor knew, or ought to have known, of her right
to seek to have the inmates’ blood tested, pursuant to the provisions of the MBTA. It was
submitted that the procedures to be followed by Correctional Officers with respect to the MBTA
are outlined in the ADIs, and knowledge of the ADIs is a condition of employment for a
Correctional Officer. Moreover, it was submitted that a memorandum regarding the MBTA
which specifically advised employees of their rights and obligations when an incident of
exposure occurs, had been posted at the Toronto Jail.
[9] Upon reviewing the relevant documentation and the submissions of the parties, it is my
view, that the Employer did not adequately inform the grievor with respect to her rights under
the MBTA to seek to have the inmates in question tested. It is important to note, that reliance has
not been placed on the Union’s assertion that representatives of the Employer had erroneously
advised the grievor and others that the inmates had, in fact, been tested. The issue is not what the
grievor was allegedly told by representatives of the Employer, but rather on what she was not
told. Specifically, the grievor was not informed, in a timely manner, by any representative of the
Employer of her rights under the MBTA.
[10] It is acknowledged that the Employer had undertaken certain steps to generally
communicate to Correctional Officers the impact of the MBTA. Those efforts, however, were
not sufficient given the potentially significant health and safety risks associated with exposure to
blood and/or high risk body fluids that may harbour such blood-borne diseases. It is noteworthy
that on July 18, 2013, shortly after the incident in question took place, Lynn Kenn the Director of
Management and Operational Support Branch forwarded a Memorandum pertaining to
- 5 -
Significant Exposure to Blood and/or Body Fluids, emphasizing that immediate action was
required as set out in the following specific directions:
In order to ensure there is no delay in providing the employee with the
information that is required before he or she seeks medical attention,
Significant Exposure to Blood and/or Body Fluids Information Packages (as
referenced in the policy) are to be pre-assembled, placed in envelopes and
readily available when a package is required.….
As well, when the sergeant provides the information package to the
employee, the sergeant must advise the employee that there are strict
timeframes and criteria associated with the application process and that this
information is outlined in the package.
[11] Turning to the issue of remedy, the Union seeks, on behalf of the grievor, an award of
damages. It is accepted that the grievor was adversely impacted, as a result of undergoing the
HIV medication “cocktail” program, and the stress she experienced as a result of the uncertainty
associated with not knowing whether she had been exposed to one of the relevant blood-borne
diseases, as a result of the incident. In assessing the claim for damages consideration, however,
has to be given to the fact that even if the grievor had, in a timely fashion, exercised her right
under the MBTA to seek to have the two inmates provide a blood specimen, a fair degree of
uncertainty would have likely remained for the grievor. The Act does not provide for the
mandatory compulsion of an individual to provide a blood sample. Moreover, while the Act sets
out an expedited process, if the individual continues to refuse to voluntarily provide a specimen,
a number of potentially time-consuming legal steps would have to be followed to attempt to
further induce the individual to provide a specimen. Accordingly, the grievor may not have been
provided a swift answer or necessarily a definitive answer, as to whether the inmates tested
negative for the relevant blood-borne diseases. Consequently, only a modest award of damages
is warranted in the circumstances.
- 6 -
The Employer is, hereby, ordered to pay to the grievor the sum of $250 as damages.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 16th day of April 2014.
Brian P. Sheehan, Vice-Chair