HomeMy WebLinkAbout2012-4478.Dargavel.15-03-09 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
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Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
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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#2012-4478, 2013-0368
UNION#2012-0313-0039, 2013-0313-0004
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Dargavel) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care) Employer
BEFORE Ken Petryshen Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Tim Hannigan
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Paul Meier
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING January 23, March 3, 2015
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Decision
[1] I have two grievances before me. One is a group grievance dated October 30, 2012,
in which Ms. H. Dargavel and Ms. L. Sheehy essentially claim that the Employer has
contravened the Collective Agreement by failing to provide a scent free work environment. Ms.
Dargavel can experience an allergic reaction causing discomfort when exposed to certain scents.
Ms. Sheehy can experience migraines when she is exposed to certain scents. The second
grievance is an individual grievance dated March 13, 2013, filed by Ms. Dargavel. This
grievance arose out of a meeting held in February 2013, following a complaint she had made
about an exposure to a scent on a co-worker. At the meeting to address her complaint, Ms.
Dargavel alleges that a manager asked her to explain her medical condition and why scented
products are an issue for her in the presence of the co-worker against whom she had made the
complaint.
[2] The grievors are employed at the Georgian CACC at Barrie, Ontario. For a number
of years, Ms. Dargavel and Ms. Sheehy have raised issues about scents in their office
environment. Starting on October 22, 2013, the parties have appeared at the GSB on a few
occasions in an effort to resolve the issues giving rise to these particular grievances. I do not
propose to set out in detail the nature of these issues and the efforts the Joint Health and Safety
Committee (“JHSC”) and the parties have made during this time to resolve them. I simply note
that when the parties appeared at the GSB on January 23, 2015, a nagging issue about wipes was
resolved. On that day the parties entered into an agreement which provided that the JHSC would
meet to address four other matters and that the parties would appear before me on March 3,
2015, to hear and determine any outstanding issues. After some discussions to clarify one matter
at the beginning of the hearing on March 3, 2015, I was advised that many issues had been
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settled and that the parties intended to reference these matters in a written agreement. Union
counsel indicated that there were two outstanding issues and I proceeded to entertain
submissions on these two issues. This decision addresses the two unresolved issues.
[3] Union counsel advised that a remaining issue for each grievance is a claim for
damages. The claim for damages with respect to the group grievance is based on the length of
time it took for the Employer to address the concerns of the grievors about scents at the
workplace. The claim for damages in Ms. Dargavel’s individual grievance is based on a breach
of her privacy rights. Although Union counsel made a considerable effort to convince me
otherwise, I am satisfied that it would not be appropriate to award damages in the circumstances
of this case.
[4] It did take the JHSC and the Employer some time to address some of the issues
which were raised by the grievors. I can appreciate that the grievors became frustrated because it
took a long time to get to where the parties are today on the issue of scents in the workplace.
However, I have no doubt based on the information provided to me that the JHSC and the parties
had been engaged in good faith efforts to address the issues raised by the grievors.
Unfortunately the issues they were raising can be difficult and can take some time to address
satisfactorily for a variety of reasons. If I had the sense that the issues the grievors were raising
were not taken seriously by the Employer I would have taken a different view of the Union’s
request for damages. There is no indication that the Employer did not take the concerns of the
grievors seriously. In my view, the time it took to satisfactorily address the scent issues raised
by the grievors is not a basis in this instance for an award of damages to the grievors.
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[5] On the matter of the meeting in February 2013 and the privacy issue raised by Ms.
Dargavel, I note that the Employer has a different version of what occurred at that meeting. As
well, I note that at the hearing on March 3, 2015, the Employer clarified and agreed that it will
not ask an employee to disclose and explain a medical condition in the presence of a co-worker.
Even on the basis of Ms. Dargavel’s version of what had occurred at the meeting, I have no
doubt that the manager was engaged in a good faith effort to resolve her complaint against a co-
worker who denied wearing a scent. In my view, the alleged breach of privacy was on the lower
end of the scale. Although a declaration of a breach may have been warranted, I would not have
awarded Ms. Dargavel damages for what occurred at the meeting.
[6] Accordingly, for the above reasons, the Union’s request for damages as a remedy for
both grievances is hereby denied. I will remain seized of these grievances.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 9th day of March 2015.
Ken Petryshen, Vice-Chair