HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013-1169.Ranger.15-05-07 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#2013-1169, 2013-1170
UNION#2013-0424-0002, 2013-0424-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Ranger) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Daniel Harris Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Michael Hancock
Koskie Minsky LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Stewart McMahon
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING December 2, 2014
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Decision
[1] The union has filed two grievances on behalf of Robert Ranger. Mr. Ranger is a
corrections officer being accommodated in a position in the Probation and Parole
Office in Ottawa. The union has grieved that a five-day suspension received by
Mr. Ranger was a breach of the collective agreement because the employer
imposed excessive discipline as opposed to progressive discipline. The second
grievance alleges that the employer has failed to provide a workplace that is free
of discrimination and harassment.
[2] The union has provided particulars to the employer, which resulted in this
preliminary motion brought by the employer to strike out aspects of the union's
claims and to limit evidence that the union might call.
[3] The five-day suspension resulted from a verbal and physical exchange between
the grievor and a coworker, Louise Beaulieu on March 4, 2013. In imposing the
suspension the employer took into account a letter of counsel to the grievor
dated December 20, 2010 as a result of a verbal exchange between the grievor
and a different coworker, Catherine McLaren.
[4] The general nature of the employer's submissions is a response to the following
paragraph at page 2 of the union's particulars dated January 21, 2014:
The discipline issued to Mr. Ranger is the latest example of the Employer's
on-going campaign of harassment and discrimination which commenced
when the Employer learned of Mr. Ranger’s sexual orientation. When viewed
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in light of the events which were well documented in the hearing before Ms.
Leighton at the Grievance Settlement Board, the Employer's failure to
address the concerns raised by Mr. Ranger regarding Ms. Beaulieu prior to
March 4, 2013 are yet another example of the same type of managerial
encouragement and/or indifference which permitted harassment against Mr.
Ranger to occur while he was working as a correctional officer.
[5] It is the union's intention to call evidence relating to prior incidents, which it says
are part of a continuing course of harassment/discrimination against Mr. Ranger.
The employer objects to such evidence being called because the incidents relied
upon are subsumed in other, prior litigation before the Grievance Settlement
Board either by way of retained jurisdiction of other Vice Chairs pursuant to
Decisions of the Board or Minutes of Settlement entered into in relation thereto.
[6] The employer specifically objects to the following issues being put before me in
these proceedings:
– Failure to pay relocation pay: this allegation relates to a claim for
relocation expenses from when the jail at L’Orignal closed and the grievor
relocated to the Ottawa Carleton Detention Center. That question was
determined by Vice Chair Leighton in a decision dated May 18, 2000. She
remained seized to deal with any issues of remedy.
– Failure to address issues with Catherine McLaren: both parties intend to
call evidence relating to the grievor's interactions with Ms. McLaren in
December 2010. The union is seeking damages against the employer. The
employer takes the position that the union may call evidence with respect to
that incident in order to attempt to establish a course of harassing or
discriminatory conduct. However, it says that the union may not reach back
beyond 30 days prior to the filing of the grievance for damages.
– Failure to provide proper benefits (safety boots): the grievor has been
denied a claim for a second pair of safety boots in a calendar year. That
matter has been consolidated with other matters before Vice Chair Leighton.
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[7] The union submitted that it was necessary to hear evidence of these previous
incidents in order to properly weigh the grievor's interactions with Ms. Beaulieu.
That is, the grievor's history of being harassed and discriminated against is the
context within which his actions in the Ottawa Probation and Parole Office must
be assessed. It was said that the failure to pay relocation expenses and the
failure to reimburse for the second pair of safety boots in a calendar year were in
and of themselves examples of harassment. The union is not seeking to
establish liability, but wishes to call the evidence in order to establish that the
current allegations of harassment and discrimination are rooted in previous
aspects of the employer's behavior.
[8] Specifically with respect to the allegations involving Catherine McLaren, the
union submitted that the employer’s failure to remedy that situation sounds in
damages. It said that the employer’s submission that limiting liability for human
rights issues to 30 days before the filing of a grievance is to give the offending
party a "free pass", and no remedy at all for such events. The union submitted
that there should be no limit to evidence or relief in a case such as this because
the claims are made under the Ontario Human Rights Code. It submitted that the
Code permits the filing of a claim within one year of the last incident in a series of
incidents. The union said that this timeline applies to the Grievance Settlement
Board and grievances such as this one.
[9] I have carefully considered the submissions of the parties, the documents filed,
including Minutes of Settlement and Decisions of the Board, as well as the
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jurisprudence relied upon. In my view, it would be inappropriate to hear evidence
on matters that have already been determined by the Board, or are the subject of
minutes of settlement entered into between the parties. There must be finality to
such processes. I can well understand that the grievor's experiences have had
an impact on how he approaches situations in the workplace. The Board has
made a number of factual findings regarding the grievor's experiences. The
employer is content that the union may rely upon such previous findings of fact.
In my view, it is not appropriate to, in effect, re-litigate those matters with the
rehearing of evidence relating to them. Accordingly, I will not entertain evidence
relating to such previously determined facts.
[10] As for the scope and impact of the allegations involving Catherine McLaren, it is
settled law that the timeliness provisions for the filing of complaints to the Ontario
Human Rights Tribunal do not apply to grievances determined here at the
Grievance Settlement Board (OPSEU (Nitsotolis) and MGS, GSB 1337/12
(Nairn)).
[11] The Board has held as a general rule that evidence of harassment and/or
discrimination may reach back approximately 3 years. This is in recognition of the
fact that there may be a course of conduct that is not immediately recognized as
harassment and/or discrimination. It is only in the fullness of time that otherwise
apparently innocent actions can be seen as part of such a course of conduct. In
the circumstances of this case, the allegations involving Catherine McLaren fall
within the generally accepted three-year rule.
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[12] It is also my view that it is premature to say that the remedy for these grievances
would extend back only 30 days from the filing of the grievance. This interim
award relates exclusively to the extent of evidence which can be led with respect
to June 2013 grievances. The question of remedy is best left to the end of the
case. The parties will later have the opportunity to make representations as to
what remedy, if any, flows from the evidence led during the course of the hearing
on the merits for grievance.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 7th day of May 2015.
Daniel Harris, Vice-Chair