HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2012-4661.Gronski.15-09-30 DecisionPublic Service
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PSGB#P-2012-4661, P-2013-2207
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE ACT OF ONTARIO
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Ann Gronski Complainant
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Kathleen G. O’Neil Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Gavin Leeb
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING August 13, October 8, 9 & 16,
November 18 & 26, December 19,
2014; February 23, March 13 & 16,
April 20, May 5 & 25, 2015
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Decision
[1] This decision deals with the complaint of Ann Gronski, R.N., contesting her discharge from
her position as Health Care Manager at the Niagara Detention Centre.
Brief overview of the background to this complaint
[2] From the mostly uncontested evidence, it is clear that Ms. Gronski’s job at the helm of the
Health Care Unit had been extremely challenging for some time when she was suspended
pending investigation on November 23, 2012, due to wide ranging concerns about her
performance. The investigator, retired Deputy Superintendent James Hogan, who had at
one point been Ms. Gronski’s supervisor, interviewed Ms. Gronski in March, 2013, which
was the first time she was apprised of the allegations against her. For several of the
incidents in question, going back two years or more, that interview was the first time she
had heard there were concerns about her performance. Those which were found to be
substantiated by the investigator formed the basis for a formal allegation meeting on May
22, 2013 at which Superintendent Dave Wilson gave her an opportunity to respond.
[3] At a second meeting on June 5, 2013, the Superintendent discharged her for cause,
based on the results of the investigation, which he found to be substantiated and his
conclusion that the employer/employee relationship had been irreparably damaged. The
discharge letter details several areas of concern, including medication errors, failure to
abide by ministry policy in respect of handling medication, financial, inventory and
scheduling practices, as well as practicing while her nurse’s license was suspended on
one occasion. Superintendent Wilson came to the Niagara Detention Centre less than two
weeks prior to Ms. Gronski’s suspension in November 2012, and thus was not relying on
his own experience of her work. He relied on the findings of the investigation, together
with Ms. Gronski’s responses at the allegation meeting, which he did not find to be
sufficiently persuasive to dislodge the weight of the substantiated allegations which
touched almost every area of her job. Although he was not relying on previous discipline
in deciding on the termination, he had spoken to previous superintendents and deputy
superintendents who had been her managers and had been given to understand that
previous attempts to manage Ms. Gronski’s performance had been unsuccessful.
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[4] At the time of her dismissal, Ms. Gronski had been a Registered Nurse for 42 years, with
extensive and varied experience in both hospital and long-term care nursing and
management. She had just over 7 years’ service with the Ministry as head of the Health
Care Unit at the Niagara Detention Centre. She asks for the discharge to be overturned
on the basis of a lack of progressive discipline and the very difficult circumstances under
which she had been working for a protracted period of time.
The Issues
[5] There is really only one main issue in this case: Was discharge for cause with no
compensation an excessive response? If the answer to that is in the affirmative, the
remaining issue is the determination of the appropriate remedy. It was not disputed that
there was reason for employer action in light of the situation in the Health Care Unit in the
fall of 2012 and the years leading up to it.
[6] The case for the complainant highlights a number of ways in which it is said the employer
did not treat the complainant fairly: delay in bringing the incidents in question to the
attention of Ms. Gronski, absence of any notice that her job was in jeopardy, and failure to
deal effectively with the serious longstanding problems in the Detention Centre’s Health
Care Unit. Entrenched working relationship troubles of the unit, which pre-dated Ms.
Gronski’s employment, formed the backdrop and partial explanation as to how events
unfolded.
[7] I will deal with the parties’ arguments and more detail about the facts in dealing with these
issues below, in the context of a discussion of the allegations in approximately
chronological order, followed by a consideration of further context and mitigating
circumstances.
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The Allegations
Specific Incidents
a) Practicing while license administratively suspended
[8] The oldest of the specific allegations dates back to February 27, 2011, during a period of
several weeks when Ms. Gronski’s nursing license had been suspended administratively
because she had not paid her fees in time. Ms. Gronski acknowledges that she signed a
pre-operative questionnaire and health care record for an inmate to be admitted to hospital
for surgery on that date. This involved performing some nursing assessment, a function of
a Registered Nurse, when she knew, or ought to have known, that her license was not
valid. Her explanation, when it was brought to her attention during the investigation, some
two years later and after having looked at the records, was that the day in question was
very busy, being methadone clinic day, and that the other nurses were busy. When she
testified about it over three years after the event, although she only vaguely remembered
any specifics of the day, she said she likely did it unthinkingly because the inmate in
question badly needed the surgery scheduled for the following week, for which the hospital
needed the information that she signed. She mentioned that her mother had died recently
and it was generally a bad time in her life and at work. Close to the time of this incident,
she sent an e-mail to the Deputy Superintendent of the day asking for help with the bad
behavior of one of her nurse subordinates and what she described as a dysfunctional unit.
The fact that her license had been suspended was known to the Deputy-Superintendent at
or close to the time, both by her own report to him, and likely by correspondence from the
regulatory body, the College of Nurses of Ontario. It was also information that was
available to the Ministry’s Corporate Health Care office in Toronto, whose staff acts as
supportive consultants to healthcare staff and their managers in correctional facilities
throughout the province. That office receives notices from the College of Nurses of
licensing interruptions, and the Deputy-Superintendent contacted Linda Ogilvie, the
Manager of that office, at the time Ms. Gronski told him about it.
[9] Whether anyone in administration knew before the investigation in 2012/2013 that Ms.
Gronski had performed any nursing function during the suspension of her license is not in
evidence. In any event, there is no doubt that this would have been discoverable had
anyone inquired, which there is no evidence that anyone did prior to the investigation.
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[10] Likening this to evidence acquired after a discharge, which is not generally permitted to be
used unless the employer did not know, and could not have discovered the information
with reasonable diligence at the time, Ms. Gronski’s counsel argues that it is not fair to rely
on it two years later to discharge her. In this regard, reference is made to Arbitrator
Brandt’s decision in Air Canada and CAW, Local 2213 (Desroches), (1999), 86 L.A.C. (4th)
232, relied on in the Ontario Provincial Police decision cited in the Appendix. In the OPP
case, the Grievance Settlement Board took into account that the grievors had not been
asked about the incident there in question for two months after it happened. Further,
relying on Aerocide Dispensers Ltd. and United Steelworkers of America, (1965) 15 L.A.C.
41 (Laskin), cited in the Appendix, counsel submits that the employer should be limited to
the one incident about which there was evidence of practice during the license
suspension. This is the only incident that I have considered in this regard.
[11] The issue of Ms. Gronski’s practicing while her license was under suspension is referred
to in notes of the investigation, from the interview with Dr. Todd Overholt, who provided
doctor’s services to the institution throughout the period in question. There is no evidence
before me about how or when it first came to light that Ms. Gronski had done at least one
nursing function during a period of suspension. As a result, I am not in a position to say
who first became aware of the information, or for how long it was known before anything
was done about it. The fact that it was discoverable two years later on inquiry, suggests it
was at least equally discoverable closer to the time of the event.
[12] Counsel for the employer emphasized in argument that the fact of practicing without a
license put the Ministry at risk from a liability point of view, which was not disputed. The
employer also suggested that Ms. Gronski was less than frank or timely with Deputy
Superintendent Barry McTrach, to whom she reported at the time, about the fact of her
suspension, and about what advice she received from the College of Nurses as to her
scope of permitted work at the institution during the suspension. Neither Mr. McTrach nor
Ms. Gronski had clear recall of the specifics of their exchanges about this at the time, an
unreliable basis for making important findings of fact, and a good example of what
happens to memory with the passage of time. The part that is documented indicates that
Mr. McTrach contacted the Corporate Health Care office about the fact of the suspension,
and there is no evidence of further follow-up. Nonetheless, the information about the
length of the suspension and the hours Ms. Gronski worked during the same period was
available at the time and later, and was not pursued until 2012/2013. There was no
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evidence from Ms. Ogilvie about any conversations with Ms. Gronski about this matter,
although she testified that it was necessary for the Health Care Manager to have a valid
nursing license.
[13] The fact that Ms. Gronski was not called to account for her practice during her license
suspension for over two years left her in a position where she is prejudiced in terms of her
potential for recall of the content and timing of her conversations with the College of
Nurses, the corporate consultants and Deputy Superintendent McTrach, all of which would
have a bearing on the issue of whether the employer condoned the misconduct by
knowing inaction. Practicing without a license is a serious issue, often leading to
discharge for such an offence alone, as several of the cases cited in the Appendix decide.
Nonetheless, the lapse of time involved and the resulting lack of detail about the
information in possession of the employer at the time and since leads me to consider this
incident as part of the context of the overall employment relationship rather than
something for which she was properly disciplined in 2013.
b) Interrupting doctor’s consultation with inmate
[14] Moving forward to the next incident substantiated in the investigation, to April 24, 2011, the
evidence is that Dr. Overholt was seeing an inmate patient in his office in the Health Care
Unit, with the door open and a Correctional Officer close by, consistent with usual practice
in the jail. The doctor’s account is that Ms. Gronski interrupted his consultation, rudely
berating the inmate for wearing his own shoes, rather than the required prison-issue ones.
Dr. Overholt was very concerned that the privacy and confidentiality of his interaction with
the patient had been violated, and consulted his regulatory body, the College of
Physicians and Surgeons, about it. At a subsequent appointment with the same inmate,
he charted that he had advised him of his right to make a complaint, but he did not raise
the matter with Ms. Gronski. He indicated to the investigator that he was concerned about
a negative reaction from her if he had spoken to her. The context for this was what
appears to be a longstanding mutual dissatisfaction between Ms. Gronski and Dr.
Overholt. The most recent manifestation of this had been a conflictive meeting earlier the
same day over how urine testing should be handled for the methadone clinic without
overburdening the workload of nursing staff.
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[15] When the incident concerning the inmate’s shoes was raised with Ms. Gronski almost two
years later for the first time by the investigator, she recalled the incident very differently
from Dr. Overholt, putting it in the context of her ongoing experience with this and other
inmates over the unpopular prison rule that inmates were not to wear their own shoes
unless they were given the doctor’s permission to do so for medical reasons. She had
some recall of the exchange, and acknowledges speaking to the inmate in Dr. Overholt’s
presence, but does not believe she was rude, and says she did not enter the room.
However, she did not remember the exchange in detail, not surprising given the lapse of
time.
[16] The least that can be said of the situation was that the doctor and the nurse manager
found each other difficult to deal with at times, in a working relationship complicated by the
fact that she had the managerial authority in the Health Care Unit, but he had the effective
control over her nurse subordinates in matters related to the care of the inmates because
of their professional requirement to follow doctors’ orders. Dr. Overholt worked with Ms.
Gronski throughout her tenure at the prison, and had had serious reservations about her
performance for years, and eventually brought them forward in a way which propelled
senior management towards the investigation which started in November, 2012. In his
testimony, he mentioned having spoken to previous members of the administration about
Ms. Gronski, but neither he nor any other witness gave details of any interventions by him
prior to that of November 2012. This leaves the record quite ambiguous as to the length of
time the administration was aware of the doctor’s concerns about Ms. Gronski’s
performance, and there is no indication that anyone had heard from the doctor about the
incident concerning the interruption about the inmate’s shoes until the investigation.
[17] Ms. Gronski’s conduct in interrupting the doctor to speak to the inmate about his shoes
does appear to be a breach of appropriate professional practice. Nonetheless, it is one at
the less serious end of the potential spectrum, and one for which Ms. Gronski did not have
a fair opportunity to account given the passage of time. I do not find it to be properly
counted as an incident for which she should have been disciplined in 2013.
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c) Conversations with ombudsman’s staff
[18] The evidence made clear that inmates call the ombudsman’s office very frequently with
concerns of all kinds, but most relevant to this case, with concerns about medication and
other health care issues. It is expected that correctional staff will cooperate with the
ombudsman’s staff in a timely manner and provide the required information when asked.
Members of the ombudsman’s staff complained to Ms. Ogilvie’s Corporate Health Care
office on two occasions to the effect that Ms. Gronski was rude, and/or unforthcoming with
information. Ms. Ogilvie stated that these complaints occurred in September, 2011 and
several months later, which I take to mean sometime in early or mid-2012. Ms. Ogilvie
mentioned to Ms. Gronski that issues had been raised about her manner of dealing with
the ombudsman’s staff, but there is no indication that, prior to the investigation many
months later, she thought anything further needed to be done about it. Ms. Gronski’s
recollection of the exchange was that she and Ms. Ogilvie had an amicable discussion
about the telephone manner of one of the ombudsman’s staff and that Ms. Ogilvie had not
indicated dissatisfaction with her handling of the situation. In evidence, Ms. Ogilvie
acknowledged that an e-mail communication close to the time of Ms. Gronski’s suspension
was an appropriate exchange on Ms. Gronski’s part with the staff member of the
ombudsman’s office with whom there had been prior difficulty.
[19] I do not find that these circumstances provide a proper basis for discipline in 2013. To the
extent that Ms. Ogilvie was warning Ms. Gronski about it when she discussed the
complaint she had received, it had been dealt with, and apparently effectively, as the later
communication was appropriate. There was also an issue with one of the ombudsman’s
staff about Ms. Gronski’s preference for using e-mail to provide information, contrary to his
preference for a phone conversation, but the evidence did not establish that Ms. Gronski
was ever told that communication was only to be by phone or that e-mail was to be
excluded. Nor is it something that is inherently obvious.
[20] Ms. Gronski’s uncontradicted evidence was that she knew that she had an obligation to
communicate and answer questions from the ombudsman’s office and that she had a
good rapport with all but one of the ombudsman’s staff. She described the exception as
having an edge to him, and her experience that emails worked better for giving him
answers, as he became sarcastic if he did not like the answers.
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[21] In the circumstances, I do not find that the evidence substantiated the investigator’s
conclusion that Ms. Gronski failed to see the importance of working with the Office of the
Ombudsman.
d) Failure to complete audit report
[22] The next allegation relates to an incident which occurred in the spring/early summer of
2012, a period in which all the Health Care Units in correctional facilities were audited by
nurse managers of other units. This was an initiative of the Ministry’s corporate health
group in Toronto in which almost all the health care managers in the Ministry participated
as auditors. Ms. Gronski attended two other Health Care Units in this capacity, collecting
the necessary information with another manager. The expectation was that she would
then write a report, which she never did, despite several reminders, nor pass the
information on to the other auditor so it could be done by someone else. She was
reminded about this several times by Ms. Ogilvie and the administration of the Detention
Centre. As late as November 14, 2012, Deputy Superintendent Jones reminded her in
writing noting their agreement that it would be done by November 15.
[23] This was a very current allegation at the time of Ms. Gronski’s suspension, and is quite
indicative of the state of affairs in the period leading up to her last day of work at the
institution. She had participated in the audits along with the other nurse managers in the
province, but did not manage to either produce the follow-up report, pass on the
information to others, or let them know of her predicament so that others could produce it.
The audit initiative, which was intended to produce a snapshot of all the Health Care Units
at about the same time, was delayed as a result, and the units in question had to be re-
audited at a later time. Ms. Gronski acknowledges she should have given the information
to the other nurse managers to complete. Her explanation is that she was working so
much as an R.N., given staff shortages, that she did not have time to complete this, or
many other, administrative tasks. Although, as Ms. Gronski’s counsel argued, it is true
that earlier follow-up and direction from the Deputy Superintendent or Ms. Ogilvie, to
produce the report or return the materials, might have solved this issue much sooner, it is
nonetheless a problem in terms of Ms. Gronski’s own ability to manage the situation.
[24] I find this to be substantiated and a proper basis for discipline.
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e) Behaviour during audit of Niagara Detention Centre Healthcare Unit
[25] As part of the province-wide audit of Health Care Units mentioned above, two nurse
managers conducted an audit of the Niagara Detention Centre Healthcare Unit in June
2012. It is alleged that Ms. Gronski misled the auditors as to the upkeep of emergency
equipment and the whereabouts of outdated medical directives. During the audit, Ms.
Gronski became very upset and left the detention centre. She says this was because one
of the auditors had made a remark about Ms. Gronski’s personal life, which betrayed a
confidence she had shared when they had worked together at another correctional
institution, and that in her upset, she could not answer their questions. The auditors had
asked to see where emergency oxygen equipment was kept, to which Ms. Gronski had
given them an unclear answer just before she left the conversation with them. They
concluded that she was trying to avoid their questions when she left, particularly as the
emergency oxygen equipment appeared to be in an inappropriate location, accessible to
too many staff. As they were unable to complete the audit fully because of Ms. Gronski’s
departure, they called Ms. Ogilvie in Toronto for guidance. Ms. Gronski denies attempting
to avoid showing them the oxygen equipment.
[26] I do not find the evidence sufficient to indicate that Ms. Gronski intentionally misled the
auditors as the investigator concluded. There is no evidence that Ms. Gronski was spoken
to about this any time before the investigation meeting, which was some nine months later,
which creates a problem in terms of ability to recall the details of the conversation, both for
Ms. Gronski and the auditors. One of them testified and could not recall a reference to the
personal issue Ms. Gronski says caused the upset. Nonetheless, it is of great concern
that Ms. Gronski left the situation, and apparently the institution, with no explanation or
provision for the audit to continue in her absence.
f) Medication, charting and related errors
i) Methadone carries incident
[27] In mid-August 2012, Ms. Gronski assessed a patient who had just been admitted to the
Detention Centre and was to be part of the methadone program. Methadone is a highly
controlled substance, both because it can be lethal if administered in the wrong dose, and
because it has a high street value. In the community, methadone patients will be required
to have their intake of methadone witnessed, until they have built up enough reliability to
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be administered weekly “carries”, or doses they can take on their own without a witness.
As the number of carries increases, the number of witnessed doses decreases, as does
the direct evidence that the patient has actually taken the medication, rather than hoarding
it or selling it. If a patient is not taking the methadone as prescribed, he or she can lose
tolerance for it, so that if the prescribed dosage is given again, it can be a potentially lethal
overdose.
[28] In the incident here in question, the inmate was admitted to the Detention Centre with two
carries in his possession, which were identified on his admission form prior to his being
sent to the Health Care Unit to be assessed. There is a form to be filled out by a nurse in
this respect, which identifies the inmate’s regular dose and how it has been handled in the
community. When Ms. Gronski assessed him, and after checking with the pharmacy that
had been dispensing the methadone to him in the community, she indicated two carries on
the form, together with the dosage, which was at the high end of the permitted range. The
information on the form, which Ms. Gronski said would have come from the pharmacy,
also showed that the inmate had been on methadone for 7 years, and was compliant, with
no missed doses. It also indicated that the last dose of methadone was the day before,
with a positive urine test indicating the inmate had recently taken methadone.
[29] This information was faxed to Dr. Overholt, according to regular procedure, on the basis of
which he prescribed on an interim basis, until he actually met with the inmate. When he
saw the inmate approximately 10 days later, the inmate told the doctor that he had in fact
been receiving five, rather than two, carries prior to admission to the jail. The doctor found
him stable, and continued the same dose as he had prescribed on an interim basis. Had
the doctor initially been told the inmate had five carries, he would have substantially
reduced the interim dose so as to reduce the chance of overdosing, until he had more
direct experience with how reliable the inmate was. If the inmate had actually been
consuming the carries as prescribed by the doctor in the community, and Dr. Overholt
reduced the dosage upon admission, there would be withdrawal symptoms, but that is
preferable to overdosing.
[30] Dr. Overholt testified that he felt lucky to see the inmate alive. Despite this, Dr. Overholt
did not mention the incident to Ms. Gronski at any time, or note the discrepancy between
the two and five carries other than to record on the patient chart that the inmate denied
two carries. The doctor testified that he would have had a nurse confirm the five carries
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with the pharmacy or prescribing doctor. There is no documentation of this in evidence,
nor is there any evidence that he or any staff who confirmed that the number should have
been five carries filled out a medication improvement form, as other evidence indicated
would have been the correct procedure for what was presented as a very serious error.
[31] Ms. Gronski was made aware of the incident for the first time during the investigation,
approximately seven months later, at a point when, unsurprisingly, she had no memory of
the details, as there are many patients on methadone in the detention centre. When
shown the form she had filled out, Ms. Gronski testified that she assumed the inmate told
her he had two carries, which was also the number he had with him when admitted. She
testified that if he had said five carries, she would have inquired further as to where the
extra three were, to reduce the chances that they would be misused. She said at times
they have sent police to the inmate’s house to find missing carries, so no one else will take
them.
[32] The information on the form filled out by Ms. Gronski indicates that the last carry
dispensed was six days before the admission, which leads employer counsel to argue that
even the arithmetic should have alerted Ms. Gronski to a problem with the number of
carries, as two carries would not have been enough to cover the intervening five days,
whereas five would have been. This is a valid point, which supports the idea that two was
not the correct number of carries, and that Ms. Gronski did not notice this. But then it
would appear that it was not noticeable enough that Dr. Overholt picked it up either, given
that he prescribed as if the number of carries was two, without further inquiry, on the basis
of the same information.
[33] In any event, I am not persuaded by the evidence, on a balance of probabilities, that it was
Ms. Gronski who is responsible for the inaccuracy. The evidence before me does not
provide a sufficient basis to determine with any confidence whether she received incorrect
information which she recorded, or that she received correct information but recorded it
incorrectly. It was not suggested that the records were unavailable to establish what the
records of the community pharmacy or prescribing doctor showed prior to the date of
admission. As noted, Dr. Overholt indicated he would have had a nurse check the actual
number of carries at the time he saw the inmate, but any records of this were not in
evidence.
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[34] In all the circumstances, this incident remains very troubling, on a number of levels, but is
not one that I find to be properly counted against Ms. Gronski, as other evidence could
have further substantiated the issue one way or the other, and the matter was not brought
to her attention at a time when it was fresh enough to make it more likely that she would
be able to recall the important details of what occurred.
ii. Methotrexate recording error
[35] On September 27, 2012, medication records show that Ms. Gronski initialed an inmate’s
Medication Administration Record, to indicate she had given Methotrexate when she had
not. This was on a day when that particular medication, which was being given once a
week for a skin condition, was not prescribed, but several daily medications were. It
seems clear from the records in evidence that Ms. Gronski gave and charted three daily
medications listed on the same sheet that were prescribed for that day, and kept going
down the column for that date initialing opposite each medication, including on the line for
the methotrexate that she did not give. It appears that Nancy Zuliani, another R.N. in the
unit, noticed this a few days later, when the next dose was due, as she wrote on the form
“states did not receive Sept. 27th”. Ms. Zuliani did not otherwise bring this to Ms.
Gronski’s attention, but filled out an incident report with respect to this, several months
later during the investigation in March 2013. Dr. Overholt testified that he was likely told
about it in October, and confirmed with the inmate that he had not received it on
September 27. This was not brought to Ms. Gronski’s attention until 5 months later during
the investigation, but she acknowledged that the records indicate that she signed when the
medication was not given. Had it been brought to her attention closer to the time, she
could have indicated the correction on the record.
[36] During her evidence, Ms. Gronski was able to point out a number of recording errors other
than her own, apparent on the record. This evidence is consistent with the fact of life that
medication errors do happen. Nonetheless, as the case law sets out, nurses are held to a
high standard in this regard, although not one of perfection.
[37] I find this to be a substantiated allegation of a medication charting error. Although it was
not brought to Ms. Gronski’s attention in a timely manner, the records are clear enough
that I do not find that she is prejudiced as their meaning does not depend on recollection.
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iii) Methadone – failure to record
[38] On October 10, 2012, Ms. Gronski gave an inmate Methadone and did not record it on the
Medication Administration Record. The fact that she gave it was documented on the
record of daily issue, and could be verified by the count done at start and end of shift. Ms.
Gronski testified that when such things happen, nurses often leave a note for the person
who omitted signing, but that did not happen on this occasion. If it had been brought to
her attention she could have corrected the omission. Nonetheless, it is not disputed that
such an error, if not caught in time, is serious. In the worst case, it could have led to an
overdose as it is possible that the fact that the dosage was unrecorded could have
resulted in another nurse thinking the medication had not been given, and unknowingly
giving it a second time. I find this allegation to be substantiated and current enough to be
the proper basis for discipline, as what happened is clear from the records.
g) Assessment of a potentially suicidal inmate
[39] The procedure for admission of a person to the Detention Centre includes a requirement
that correctional staff in the Admission and Discharge area (A and D) ask questions aimed
at assessing the risk for suicide. Those who are deemed at such risk are not placed in the
general population, but in the segregation area where they can be more closely observed.
Once staff in A and D have received answers indicating a risk of suicide, the new inmate is
referred to the health care staff for a professional assessment, which determines the
placement. Part of the reason for the second level of assessment is that it is known that
new inmates may have other reasons than true suicide risk to want to avoid placement in
the general population, and are experienced enough to answer as if they are suicidal in
order to avoid this default placement. The evidence also indicates that a large percentage
of suicides in detention occur within the first hours and days of admission.
[40] On October 2, 2012, Ms. Gronski assessed a new inmate, who had been in custody the
previous year. On the admission checklist form, which she had been provided, the A and
D officer had recorded several indicators of risk for suicide and a proposed placement in
protective custody. She made several entries on the required Health Assessment form,
including that the inmate was crying and wanted to be in segregation, but did not indicate
clearly whether her conclusion was that the inmate was suicidal or not, drawing an arrow
between the choices of “yes” to indicate current suicidal ideation, and “no” for the contrary.
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She did not indicate anything in the area of the form calling for an indication by the nurse
about whether the inmate was thinking about hurting himself, had such a plan, or had
made previous attempts. This is despite the fact that the form from A and D had recorded
a short time earlier that the new inmate was thinking of killing himself, and had tried in the
past.
[41] In her evidence, Ms. Gronski indicated she would have asked the relevant questions, that
the inmate must have been calming down and that he told her he was fearful of going into
the general jail population, but that he was not really suicidal. Nonetheless, she was
unable to remember why the boxes were not checked or any further details of the
conversation with the inmate. As to the indications on the admission form, she indicated
that inmates are often more upset in what she described as a sometimes chaotic
atmosphere in A and D with people screaming, and no time or privacy to allow people to
calm down, and for staff to get a clear idea in private. She said that in the calmer
atmosphere of the Health Care Unit, she would often hear a different story, and could tell if
there was a genuine suicide risk.
[42] The inmate was placed in the general population, presumably because there was no clear
indication otherwise. There is no evidence to indicate whether the admitting officer
clarified the matter with Ms. Gronski after her assessment. Dr. Overholt assessed the
inmate five days later and noted the omission of a conclusion by the assessing nurse on
the inmate’s chart. As Ms. Gronski signed the form, she was readily identifiable as the
person doing the assessment, but he did not bring it to her attention, although he made
the investigator aware of it a few months later. He was also concerned that he had not
been called by Ms. Gronski to alert him of the suicide risk.
[43] As employer counsel submitted, it may be that Ms. Gronski asked the appropriate
questions and made a sound assessment that the inmate did not need to be in
segregation, but no one can tell from the record. Further, the form indicates uncertainty
about the risk level, such that her indication that she would err on the side of caution does
not appear to be what she did in this instance. Employer Counsel termed it lucky that the
inmate did not make any attempt at self-harm in custody. Counsel for Ms. Gronski points
out that it was so long ago that it is possible there was a conversation that no one
remembers, clarifying the matter, and it was smoothed over at the time.
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[44] Regardless of whether there was a conversation closer to the time, the undisputed record
shows a very problematic ambiguity in Ms. Gronski’s charting of the nursing assessment.
The purpose of the assessment by health care staff is to have a clear basis for the
placement of the inmate. It appears that the placement of the inmate in the general
population did not turn out to be dangerous, but the failure to indicate a clear assessment
on which other staff could confidently rely is very troubling and a justified basis for
discipline.
h) Ripping health care documentation
[45] On November 23, 2012, Superintendent Wilson called Ms. Gronski to his office and
suspended her with pay, pending investigation. Deputy Superintendent Green was
assigned to accompany her to gather her personal belongings and leave the detention
centre. Ms. Gronski was very upset, and once in her office, ripped several documents and
threw them in the recycling bin. Ms. Green told her to stop, and she did. Ms. Green’s view
of the situation was that it was an attempt to get rid of documents that showed work
deficiencies. The documents retrieved included many documents related to inmate health
care which were years old. Ms. Gronski testified that she does not know why she ripped
them, that she would never normally do such a thing, and she does not think she had
control at the time. She said she did not pay attention to what she was ripping, that it was
just paper in her eyes at the time. She suggested it might have been a result of her
disbelief at being walked out after all she had given to the job, including many hours of
free time and creating effective ties with community partners.
[46] Ms. Gronski’s counsel submitted that the evidence does not support that this was culpable
misconduct or an effort to destroy documents or hide things as it was done in front of the
Deputy Superintendent, and the documents were easily retrieved. Employer counsel
replies that it must be considered culpable, that it is entirely unacceptable that a
professional would act in such a manner when frustrated with the turn of events. It is also
part of the employer’s case that this is part of a pattern of conduct that Ms. Gronski did not
engage professionally with attempts to call her to account, as in the conduct with the audit
in the spring of 2012 mentioned above, and conversations with Dr. Overholt where she left
meetings or conversations when she did not like how they were going.
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[47] It is not necessary to make a finding about whether the ripping of the documents was
evidence of a larger historical pattern, and thus I have not catalogued the details of all the
incidents referred to in evidence. It is sufficient to say that Ms. Gronski’s conduct on
November 23 was obviously incompatible with the expectation that the employer could rely
on her to take care of things even under difficult circumstances, which arise not
infrequently in correctional institutions. It is said in her defence that it was not culpable
conduct. However, there is no evidence that Ms. Gronski was suffering from some
condition or disability which would relieve her of responsibility for her actions. It is
understandable that she would be upset in the circumstances of being walked out of her
job, but this does not justify her undisputed behavior. It is highly relevant to the
assessment of the potential for reinstatement that the person in charge of the Health Care
Unit lost control to this extent with no explanation or evidence as to how the employer
could be confident that similar loss of control would not happen again if she were to be
returned to work and new frustrating circumstances arose.
[48] I also find this incident to be relevant to the argument made by her counsel that there was
no culminating incident which would justify the initiation of proceedings leading to
dismissal, something referenced in particular in the City of Vancouver decision cited in the
appendix. At the time she was suspended, the employer had not decided to discharge
her, although the superintendent’s advice from Ms. Ogilvie, the Corporate Health Care
Manager, was that it was not safe to leave Ms. Gronski in control of the Health Care Unit,
in light of the new information from Dr. Overholt. Even without the new information, the
ripping of the documents is certainly sufficient reason and appropriate occasion to look
into whether a manager should be continued in employment, making it essentially a
culminating incident.
Allegations of a more continuing nature
i) Medical Directives, Medical Order Sheets and Health Condition Lists
[49] Ms. Gronski acknowledges that she was behind in many of the administrative duties of the
Health Care Manager. One element of these relates to procedural directives from the
Corporate Health Care group in Toronto, which includes a review of medical directives, or
standing doctor’s orders, at least every two years. Dr. Overholt was aware of the delay in
dealing with these things, and tried in a number of ways to get Ms. Gronski to move them
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along. At the time the Medical Directives were updated in June 2012, on the eve of the
audit of the Health Care Unit, they had not been updated for seven years. Dr. Overholt
had earlier offered directives from another correctional facility as a model to be used, and
reminded Ms. Gronski on a number of occasions, including three written reminders in the
fall of 2011, the last of which was sent to the superintendent since the earlier ones had not
been answered.
[50] The reminders also referred to overdue implementation of new Medical Order Sheets and
Health Condition Lists, which were supposed to have been implemented not later than
November 15, 2010. Ms. Gronski implemented them in March 2012, some 16 months
late.
[51] The fact that the superintendent of the day knew of these longstanding issues for over a
year before Ms. Gronski’s discharge calls into question their currency as a basis for
discipline so much later. Nonetheless, they are properly considered as part of the context
of the employment relationship. This is particularly so as the reminders she was given are
examples of the kind of inter-professional reminding that Ms. Gronski preferred, and found
lacking in regard to other instances. Although it was her preferred method of direction, it is
undisputed that Ms. Gronski was not able to respond to the reminders in a timely manner,
which she attributes to the staffing situation, which will be addressed below.
j) Record Keeping: Narcotic count discrepancies, failure to maintain reserve counts, filing of
inmate health care information
[52] The week after Ms. Gronski’s suspension, a narcotic audit was performed by a Program
Adviser from Corporate Health Services together with an Operational Manager. Eleven
discrepancies were noted, meaning that the actual count of the narcotic supply did not
accord with the previously recorded amount. As well, the records indicated that the
tracking of the reserve supply of drugs, from which the nurse manager issues drugs to
other nursing staff for regular medication administration, was not maintained consistently.
Ms. Gronski testified that sometimes an R.N. would need a medication quickly and she
would make a note of it to remind herself to record it but sometimes did not do so. A
related example is that reserve sheets were not found with expired oxycontin, as they
should have been. Ms. Gronski acknowledged these deficiencies, saying that she was
planning to look after it all the night she was suspended. It is understandable that Ms.
- 19 -
Gronski did not remember the specifics of some these issues, such as the oxycontin
reserve sheet, when spoken to by the investigator some four months after her departure.
Nonetheless, there is no evidence that the employer knew of the specific problems with
the control and documentation of medications, including narcotics, prior to her suspension.
[53] As well, the evidence of the informality of recording the dispensing of medication from the
reserve room is very troubling, especially since it is one of the roles of the nurse manager
to mentor and supervise others in respect of charting and control of narcotics.
[54] There was a dispute in the evidence of Ms. Gronski and Ms. Zuliani as to whether a
separate recording sheet needed to be started and placed in the reserve room when a
quantity of the narcotic analgesic oxycontin had been removed for waste. In the overall
scheme of things, the matter of whether a new form was needed is a minor issue, which is
not of consequence in the determination of this case. The more important issue here is
the overall lack of control and consistency, which lead to senior management’s loss of
confidence in the safety of the situation under Ms. Gronski’s leadership.
[55] Another related issue is that filing of inmate health care information was not adequately
kept up. Multiple pieces of inmate health forms and information were found in Ms.
Gronski’s office after her departure, rather than in the individual health file where they
belonged. Ms. Gronski told the investigator that some of it was in her office as she had
talked to the public health department about concerns about lack of information that she
would have preferred public health provide for tracking purposes. Nonetheless, it was not
disputed that it was required that inmate health files be kept up to date, especially as the
health file goes with the inmate when they are moved from one correctional facility to the
next, as is frequently the case. As there are multiple health professionals making
decisions on the basis of the information in the file even within one Health Care Unit,
currency and completeness of health information accessible to all with access to the file is
obviously very important. There are confidentiality concerns as well, because the material
was lying out unsecured except for the door lock, and potentially visible to others with
access to the room, such as cleaners and security officers. This was one of the many
issues Ms. Gronski acknowledges, but explained as a result of lack of time, principally
because of the hours she was working as an R.N.
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[56] Although some delay in filing may be expected in a busy unit, some of the documents
were several years old, which goes well beyond the acceptable level.
k) Failure to secure or dispose of expired medications
[57] After Ms. Gronski’s departure in November 2012, several outdated medications, with
expiry dates from 2010 and 2011, were found out on the table in the reserve room, when
they should have been double locked. Ms. Collier, who did the first audit after Ms.
Gronski’s departure, did not recall seeing them there. Further, Ms. Gronski told the
investigator that she did not take them out of the cupboard, and that perhaps the other
nurse who had been helping out in the reserve room would know how they got there.
Exactly how and when they got there, and why they were not secured better by staff after
Ms. Gronski’s departure, are matters not resolved by the evidence. However, the
existence of long expired medication in the reserve room is further evidence of serious
systemic issues in the consistency of practice in regards to the reserve room, for which
Ms. Gronski was directly responsible as manager of the Health Care Unit. The reserve
room is an area normally reserved to the health care manager, so that, unless Ms. Gronski
alerted her superiors to issues in this respect, it is unclear how they would know, except
through an external audit. Although there was an external audit in June 2012, the nurse-
auditor who testified could not recall if they had looked at the reserve room at that time. In
any event, even if no issues were found in June 2012, there is no dispute that there were
important discrepancies in the reserve room in November, for which Ms. Gronski was
responsible as Nurse Manager.
l) Issues in regard to Corporate Health Care: Medication Improvement and Infection Prevention
and Control Reports, Failure to attend teleconferences
[58] Medication Improvement Reports are forms that are to be filled out when medication errors
are discovered. It is expected that they will be sent to the nurse manager and to the
superintendent, as well as to the Corporate Heath Care office, so that there is awareness
and tracking of errors and whether there are patterns that could benefit by a more
systemic solution. There is to be a timely conversation with the staff involved to discuss
how the error occurred, and what might prevent similar errors in the future.
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[59] In the five years prior to her suspension, Ms. Gronski had sent no Medication
Improvement Reports to the corporate office, as was her duty. Many of them, as much as
five years old, had accumulated in her office, awaiting attention. They were one of many
things that she had not attended to because she was working long hours as an R.N. Ms.
Gronski told the investigator that she had a pile of them in her office “ready to go”. That
may be, but it is clear that many of those in her office were so old that the moment had
long passed for a conversation with the staff involved at a time when the staff might
remember the details, or for there to be much potential that the error could be corrected at
a time relevant to the care of the inmate concerned. Although systemic issues might still
be revealed by an examination of older errors, any needed improvements would be
correspondingly delayed.
[60] Although Ms. Ogilvie raised this issue with the investigator, and had access to the tracking
of submissions throughout, she had not spoken to Ms. Gronski about it despite the lengthy
time with no submissions of reports, and the fact that it is very unlikely that there had been
no errors at all during such a long period of time.
[61] Similarly, Infection Prevention and Control Reports are to be submitted monthly to
Corporate Health care, and Ms. Gronski had submitted none for five years. These forms,
introduced in the wake of the SARS outbreak in 2003, are important for tracking infections
and controlling their spread. There is no evidence of effective follow-up about this, despite
this longstanding failure to submit the forms, even though the expectation is that a “nil”
report will be filed if there are no infections to be reported that month. The only follow-up
indicated in the evidence was that Ms. Ogilvie said that her assistant would have sent
e-mail reminders. There is no evidence of any timely consequences for failure to respond.
[62] Another issue related to the expectation that all health care managers participate in
regional teleconferences, at which Ms. Gronski’s attendance appears to have been spotty.
Her explanation, as with most of the issues, is that she was working too many hours as an
R.N. However, her uncontradicted evidence was that she was never spoken to about this
in a way that would have indicated that there was dissatisfaction with this, even though
she occasionally asked Ms. Ogilvie about what she had missed.
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m) Methadone disposal build-up
[63] Like everything else to do with methadone, its disposal is highly controlled. Suppliers
deliver a week’s worth of methadone to the Detention Centre at a time, and anything
unused is to be wasted. As there are a large number of inmates on methadone, and the
turnover due to transfer and release of inmates is significant, it is expected that there will
be wastage, which is intended to be cleared weekly. During the investigation, 493 bottles
of methadone were found in the reserve room of the Health Care Unit, which represents,
by Ms. Gronski’s estimate, a couple of months’ worth. The general concern raised by this
fact relates to the risk of misappropriation, by inmates or staff, as it is lethal in the wrong
dose, and has a very high street value. The risk was not just theoretical at the detention
centre, as earlier in Ms. Gronski’s tenure, an R.N. working there had taken some
methadone for her own use. Ms. Gronski acknowledged that it was dangerous for the
methadone to be left out, and that the length of time that the methadone had been left
undisposed of significantly exceeded the appropriate time line.
[64] Ms. Gronski’s Counsel submitted that her testimony showed that she had a well-
developed and strict method of disposing of methadone, which she learned from her
predecessor in 2005. She would do the requisite count and documentation with another
nurse, box up the methadone to be wasted, and take it to the pharmacy in a Ministry
vehicle. The pharmacy had an arrangement with someone to pick it up and dispose of it
safely. To increase security and her safety, Ms. Gronski arranged for an Operational
Manager to go with her to return the methadone, which was one of the reasons she gave
for the build-up, as there was not always someone available to go with her when the left-
over methadone was ready. As well, Ms. Gronski testified that she was working so many
hours as an R.N. that she did not have time to take the methadone to the pharmacy.
[65] There were also issues with the pharmacy which supplied the methadone, concerning
space for the volume of used methadone generated by the detention centre. There was a
change of vendors at some point as well. The new vendor would not take the left-overs
from the previous vendor’s time as contractor, which may also have contributed to the
build-up. When the change took place was not clear, but the current preferred practice,
which is that the pharmacy picks up the unused methadone at the time of the weekly
delivery of fresh methadone, was not in place when Ms. Gronski was suspended.
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[66] Methadone is supposed to be double locked, meaning in a locked cupboard inside a
locked room, carefully tracked and counted. Ms. Gronski testified that she had pulled the
expired methadone out of the cupboard to package it up earlier in the afternoon of the day
she was suspended, and then was called away to an emergency situation. She testified
that she had every intention of coming back to finish boxing it up, and get caught up on
other medication issues, but she was called down to the Superintendent’s office before
she had time to do that. The employer’s witnesses were very critical of the fact that the
waste methadone was not properly secured, and was in bags on the floor. Ms. Gronski
testified at one point that she did not leave it on the floor, and there is a gap in time of at
least a week between her departure, and when other personnel started dealing with the
state of the Health Care Unit’s medications, so that it is not entirely clear how the expired
methadone came to be in the state it was found in the reserve room in early December.
However, I find that particular detail to be less important than the main point: the
methadone needing disposal had been allowed to build up for months, and at least for
several hours on her last day of work, Ms. Gronski had left it out not properly double
locked, albeit behind a locked door.
[67] The evidence is that some of the methadone was disposed of in December, 2012 and
some in January, 2013, meaning that six weeks passed after Ms. Gronski’s departure
before the situation was fully rectified, leading her counsel to query how it was thought
appropriate to leave it there, and why it was not secured or disposed of immediately, if it
was so serious to have it out. Employer counsel replies that there were many issues to be
dealt with given the state of the Health Care Unit, and that the staff who had to deal with it
prioritized issues. The time-consuming process of wasting the methadone safely by hand
was started in December, but could not be finished until January.
[68] It is certainly curious that the situation was not rectified more quickly, at least to the point
of further securing the large quantity of methadone until qualified staff could be assigned
to dispose of it properly, and it may be an indication that some involved did not see the
issue as seriously as the investigator and the Superintendent. Nonetheless, the
undisputed evidence convinces me that methadone is lethal in the wrong hands and that
the way it had been left by Ms. Gronski, both as to quantity of build-up and security, was
seriously unacceptable. There is no evidence that management knew of the build-up and
security issue prior to the investigation, or to suggest that Ms. Gronski had communicated
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to her superiors that she needed them to assist with a solution to remove the methadone
in a timely manner. Thus, I am of the view that this was a proper basis for discipline.
n) Checking emergency equipment and oxygen supplies
[69] There are supposed to be weekly checks on emergency equipment and oxygen supplies,
documented so that other staff know they are up to date. Ms. Gronski said that she was
keeping up these checks, but there is no available documentation of this between 2009
and her departure in late 2012, although she said she had noted some on the computer.
She had arranged for another nurse to do them at one point, but when that person left the
workplace in 2010, there was no further follow-up about this issue.
[70] Other equipment such as eyewash stations are to be checked monthly, as well, as they
are important to have available, if, for instance, a confrontation with an inmate results in
unwanted substances in a guard’s eye. Ms. Gronski’s response is similar to the above,
that she did the checks, but they were not recorded in the binder. As well, she had
purchased some new eyewash stations to replace worn ones, but they had not all been
installed due to time worked as a R.N., and what she saw as senior management’s lack of
help with the staffing issue. One particular eyewash station, which had not been properly
maintained for a lengthy period, became the focus of an allegation during the investigation.
Her counsel points out that this station was in plain sight so that anyone could have easily
pointed it out, but no one thought it serious enough to do so, until Ms. Zuliani showed it to
the investigator.
o) Financial accountability issues
[71] Ms. Gronski acknowledges that she should have been purchasing oxygen cylinders and
related equipment, rather than renting it, as well as controlling drug inventory costs better,
by purchasing from the vendor of record, rather than the local pharmacy. She attributes
these issues to being behind in everything, as well as the fact that not all the doctors were
cooperative in prescribing from the list available from the vendor of record.
[72] In a related issue, it is alleged that Ms. Gronski failed to accept assistance offered by
Corporate Health Care in order to set up a proper inventory management system and
procurement of medications from a wholesaler. It is her position that she did not refuse,
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but that she had not found a good time to schedule it yet, given that she was working 80 to
90 hours a week.
p) Scheduling issues
[73] Ms. Gronski is alleged to have not used the required scheduling software, known as
HPRO, consistently or correctly. She does not deny this, but says that she did not have
proper training or consistent support in using it, as well as that the responsibility for using it
was taken away, and then given back on a number of occasions, and that it was difficult to
use consistently when she was working so many hours as an R.N. Although, as her
counsel argued, there were no grievances in evidence from bargaining unit nurses about
scheduling, this does not minimize the increased potential for them if the software is not
being used. I find it to be a substantiated issue, which had been dealt with as recently as
November 14 by Deputy Jones, confirming in writing that he would be monitoring the use
of HPRO, and that it was Ms. Gronski’s duty to monitor and fill R.N. staff shortages.
Although this letter indicates that the employer was not at the point of formally disciplining
Ms. Gronski for her inconsistency with HPRO, it remains part of the narrative of current
expressions of concern about performance.
q) Other issues
[74] There were some allegations which were not made out on the evidence in sufficient detail
to rely upon. These include Dr. Overholt’s allegation that for years he had not felt
comfortable relying on Ms. Gronski’s assessments of inmates communicated on the
phone, so that he had been relying on other nurses’ assessments to mitigate this problem.
There is evidence of the instances of the assessments of specific inmates in regard to
suicide risk and methadone carries discussed above, which fall into this category.
However, there is no evidence that the doctor or any of the nurses involved ever
mentioned these or a more general issue to Ms. Gronski, as one would have expected if it
was an ongoing safety issue. As well, there are no other specifics for the Board to assess,
or for Ms. Gronski to respond to, so that I am not prepared to make a finding against Ms.
Gronski of such a general nature.
[75] Another allegation which lacks specifics is the investigator’s finding that Ms. Gronski
contravened the Statement of Ethnical Principles when she admitted to discussing Dr.
- 26 -
Overholt’s physician contract in a joking manner. The context is that Ms. Gronski had
become aware that the contract for physicians’ services in the methadone program was of
interest to at least one other potential contractor in the community. Ms. Gronski’s evidence
was that she thought Dr. Overholt would like to know, and acknowledges mentioning it to
him when other potential providers inquired of her. She said Dr. Overholt would laugh, but
never indicated he did not want to know or that he thought it was a threat as he testified.
Dr. Overholt’s evidence was that he took her comments as a nuanced threat, presumably
that she would influence his losing the contract, but he gave no specifics of date or content
for these conversations.
[76] Counsel for the employer submitted that contracts with the Crown are not something to be
joked about, in reference to the investigator’s finding that Ms. Gronski had admitted talking
jokingly. In my view, whether joking about things such as a contract is appropriate or not
entirely depends on the circumstances at the time and the quality of the relationship
between the participants in the conversation. Although I was urged to prefer Dr.
Overholt’s evidence over Ms. Gronski’s, I do not find I have a sufficient basis to do so, as
Dr. Overholt focused on how he took the comments, and did not give enough specifics for
me to even determine if their recollections of the conversations, perhaps years old, were
consistent with each other. In the circumstances, I am unable to find on the evidence that
Ms. Gronski did anything inappropriate in this instance.
Further context
[77] Important to Ms. Gronski’s complaint is the idea that the work environment in the health
unit had been toxic for a long time, basically sapping her ability to do her job well, and that
the unit was seriously understaffed. It is clear that there were very longstanding issues. A
report of a consultant in 2004, before Ms. Gronski arrived, noted the group as very difficult
to manage and predicted that it would become toxic if action was not taken. I accept
employer counsel’s submission that this and other reports, which were not the subject of
oral evidence by the author, are hearsay. Nonetheless, the report of the consultant,
commissioned by the employer, is admissible hearsay, at least for the fact of the report’s
findings. Further, I find it of a sufficiently reliable sort to corroborate Ms. Gronski’s
uncontradicted evidence that there was a history of problems in the Health Care Unit that
were not of her making, which she inherited when she took on the job in 2005.
- 27 -
[78] In 2009, Ms. Gronski was the respondent in a complaint under the Workplace
Discrimination and Harassment Prevention Policy (WDHP). The complainant, a
bargaining unit nurse, alleged that Ms. Gronski had treated her improperly in a scheduling
matter by reason of the bargaining unit nurse’s spousal relationship with a Correctional
Officer. Ms. Gronski took the occasion of the investigation into this complaint to chronicle
the difficult working environment. Ms. Gronski noted that the fact-finding process was in
its seventh month, and that it had taken its toll on her physical and mental health. She
wrote that her hands were tied as manager as two problematic nurses went behind her
back to complain to other managers, refusing to follow the chain of command, and being
enabled to do so by others not referring them back to her. I make no findings of fact about
these issues, other than that this was a formal, direct instance of Ms. Gronski’s reporting
the extent of the problems in the Health Care Unit over three years before she was
suspended. Sounding a theme that echoes throughout this case, Ms. Gronski ended her
submission with the statement that she needed the “ongoing support (not control)” of the
management team. The outcome of the 2009 investigation is not in evidence, and Ms.
Gronski said she never received any information about how it was resolved, as required by
the WDHP policy.
[79] On November 3, 2009, then Acting Superintendent Brlek gave Ms. Gronski a letter of
expectations dealing with several issues, many of which were still ongoing in the fall of
2012, including taking direction from her supervisors, meeting deadlines for inventory and
reports, medication counts, and fiscal responsibility. It was noted that she had been
directed in May 2009 not to work overtime as a Registered Nurse without prior approval
from a senior manager. As well, the letter notes that, due to her lack of initiative in regards
to hiring staff, the lead for an RN competition had to be assigned to another manager.
She was also criticized for being late in submitting her weekly attendance reports and
leaving work on a number of occasions without speaking to her supervisor.
[80] In February 2010, Ms. Gronski was formally reprimanded for failing to provide an inventory
of personal protective equipment and supplies and for failing to direct one of her
subordinates to submit an occurrence report detailing her failure to report for duty, both
contrary to directions in July, 2009. To the extent that inventory may be considered a
mundane matter, I note that one of the reasons for heightened attention to inventory in a
correctional facility is illustrated by an occurrence report in 2009 by an Operational
Manager involved in an inventory of the Health Care Unit supplies, which notes as
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background that scalpels had gone missing a few months earlier. This is obviously of
great concern for security in a correctional setting, where anything that can be used as a
weapon can be very dangerous in the wrong hands. Further, the evidence showed that the
issue of inventory control in the Health Care Unit has been of concern to the union health
and safety committee for related reasons.
[81] In March 2011, Ms. Gronski sent Deputy Superintendent McTrach an e-mail referring to a
poisoned work environment and bad behavior of one employee, but with no other
specifics. In late June 2011, Ms. Gronski wrote a letter to then Acting Superintendent
McTrach, copying the acting Deputy of Administration and Superintendent Neville,
referring to the Health Care Unit as having been a toxic, poisoned, work environment for
many years, and alerting senior management to the escalation of the scenario. She noted
that a number of staff had left the workplace in a distraught state. Further, she noted that
another R.N. worked 14 hours and that she herself worked 29 hours that weekend to
cover. She referred to it as “an unsafe environment” and a “dangerous situation”. She
noted the bullying behavior of one nurse, and its effect on retention of new staff.
[82] About six months later, in late 2011, Deputy Regional Director Barry McDonnell engaged
Ms. Green, to do an investigation of a management-initiated WDHP complaint about the
central person named by Ms. Gronski as doing the bullying. This was prior to Ms. Green’s
taking up her post as Deputy Superintendent at Niagara, when she was working at another
correctional facility. Ms. Green’s investigation did not include an interview with Ms.
Gronski, who was off on sick leave for two months, which appear to have coincided with
the interviews conducted by Ms. Green. Nonetheless, Ms. Green wrote in her report,
issued in early April 2012, that the situation was “easily described as toxic”. The nurse in
question was found to have openly and pervasively acted unprofessionally towards her
peers and Ms. Gronski, including repeated remarks referring to her with derogatory terms,
questioning Ms. Gronski’s competence and leadership abilities. This was despite formal
and informal attempts to call the bargaining unit nurse to account. The behavior of this
nurse was found to have directly contributed to difficulties integrating and retaining new
nurses in the Health Care Unit. It is not clear from the evidence exactly when this nurse
last worked in the Health Care Unit, but it appears to have been between the release of
Ms. Green’s report in April 2012 and August 2012, when a competition to hire new nurses
closed. Ms. Gronski said she agreed wholeheartedly with Ms. Green’s report, but believed
it came too late.
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[83] The staffing issues in the Health Care Unit were also long-standing. The unit is funded for
seven full-time nurses, but, at the time of Ms. Gronski’s suspension, it had been operating
below that complement for a long time. The evidence indicates that, through much of Ms.
Gronski’s tenure, the unit was short at least three full-time nurses. In addition, at various
points in the period spanned by the evidence, more than one full-time nurse was off on
leave, including stress leave, which Ms. Gronski attributes to the toxic work environment.
As inmate care must continue, the gap was filled by part-time and agency nurses, and
most significantly for our purposes, by a great deal of time worked as an R.N. by Ms.
Gronski, to the detriment of her duties as manager.
[84] There were also varying levels of disagreement and mutual allegations of non-cooperation
in hiring staff between Ms. Gronski and senior management, dating back to 2007. This
issue was not part of the allegations which formed the basis for the dismissal, but its role
in the sequence of events that lead to the dismissal is nonetheless important to the
context.
[85] In early November 2012, a number of issues had come to a head between Ms. Gronski
and senior management. These included a difference of opinion over how the hiring
process for new nurses should be handled, together with how a valued retired nurse could
be rehired at the same time. The competition for the new nurses had closed in August,
and Ms. Gronski had been tasked with setting up interviews. By early November, she had
not done so, partly because she was adamant that the retired nurse should be hired,
despite the fact that the latter was not properly part of the competition, according to
Ministry Human Resources policy. As well, she said she was studying and researching
the applicants, so as to build the best possible team so the Health Care Unit could
continue to recover from the difficult period working with the nurse who had been bullying
others.
[86] Other issues included a disagreement between Ms. Gronski and non-nursing management
over the supervision of a nursing student while giving medication to inmates, the
outstanding reports of the nursing audit of the two institutions that Ms. Gronski was
responsible for, as well as delay in handing in reports of her own attendance.
[87] Part of the context here is that the fall of 2012 was a time of change in the senior
management team at the Detention Centre. Deputy Superintendent Green, who had done
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the investigation in the Health Care Unit the previous winter/spring before coming to
Niagara Detention Centre, had started in September, and Superintendent Wilson replaced
Superintendent Neville in early November. Also, early in November, Ms. Green and the
other Deputy Superintendent, Tracy Jones, who was Ms. Gronski’s direct supervisor, held
a meeting with her concerning the above issues.
[88] The upshot of the meeting was a letter from Deputy Superintendent Jones, dated
November 14, 2012, which I will characterize as a letter of expectations, direction and
warning. It stated clearly that Ms. Gronski was not to perform work of the R.N. staff
without the prior approval of one of the Deputy Superintendents, in order to allow them to
review other available resources for covering the work. They discussed support
mechanisms to assist her in improving her workload and to ensure that work assigned to
her was processed in a timely manner and deadlines could be met. The letter notes that
moving forward with the competition for new nurses would allow her to complete
outstanding tasks. However, it states that due to Ms. Gronski’s refusal to participate in the
hiring panel, she was being replaced on the selection panel, which I take as a serious
expression of loss of confidence. She was directed to improve her focus on her role as
department head, as well as her communications between her department and senior
staff. It is clear that the tone was one of warning, but there is no explicit mention of its
being disciplinary, or any indication that she was days away from being relieved of her
duties pending investigation.
[89] What changed the picture presented in that letter is that, on November 11, Dr. Overholt
approached Deputy Green with a number of concerns relating to Ms. Gronski’s
performance, which were mostly new to senior management, although none was more
recent than a month old. This lead to a meeting on November 23, with the doctor, new
superintendent Wilson, and Linda Ogilvie from Corporate Health Care. Ms. Gronski was
suspended with pay the same afternoon, on the basis of the combination of concerns
presented by Dr. Overholt and advice of Ms. Ogilvie.
Considerations and Conclusions
[90] With that background, I turn to the question as to whether the employer’s decision to
discharge for cause should be upheld. I have carefully considered all the case law
provided by counsel. Although none of those authorities deal with facts similar to those
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before me, they set out the principles to be applied, which can be briefly summarized: a
higher standard is expected of both health care professionals and managerial employees
than other employees. Nonetheless, unless the misconduct or deficient performance is so
serious as to justify summary dismissal, such employees are entitled to notice of the
employer’s dissatisfaction and a chance to improve. Progressive discipline is the usual
mechanism for achieving this end, but what is sufficient notice of the employer’s
dissatisfaction depends on the facts of each case. As well, if the employer has condoned
the conduct in issue, or unreasonably delayed in imposing discipline, the employer is
generally not permitted to rely on it as the basis for summary dismissal. Further, as
discussed by the Supreme Court of Canada in McKinley, cited in the appendix to this
decision, the entire context of the employment of the person in question is to be
considered in order to determine whether summary dismissal is proportional to the
misconduct in question.
[91] There is no dispute in this case that the Health Care Unit had been in a lamentable state,
and that Ms. Gronski was seriously behind in her administrative duties in the fall of 2012.
There was some discussion in argument as to whether the deficiencies in performance
established in evidence should be considered culpable or not. Counsel for Ms. Gronski
argued that either way, an employee is entitled to notice that one’s employment is in
jeopardy and an opportunity to improve. Employer counsel argued that there was no
evidence sufficient to establish that Ms. Gronski’s behavior was not culpable misconduct.
As there is no evidence that Ms. Gronski was subject to a condition or disability that
relieved her of being responsible for her actions, I have treated the situation as one in
which she is responsible for the deficiencies noted as substantiated above. Nonetheless,
as discussed below, I am also of the view that responsibility for the situation is shared.
[92] Counsel for Ms. Gronski argued that the employer’s handling of the difficult circumstances
in the Health Care Unit and delay in discipline amounted to acquiescence in the situation
in which Ms. Gronski was doing the best she could for years with the toxic, understaffed
situation, to the point that it was effectively condonation, and reason to find that the
discharge was not justified. I have carefully considered whether all the circumstances of
this case justify an inference of condonation.
[93] The evidence of the arc of Ms. Gronski’s employment relationship shows that senior
management was aware of many of the issues affecting the Health Care Unit throughout
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her period of employment. There were intermittent attempts to change certain aspects of
her practice as manager, most clearly in 2007 and in 2009, leading up to the letter of
reprimand in 2010. Whether the employer considered things had improved or not, no
further formal action was taken in regards to Ms. Gronski’s performance until 2012. There
was some general reference in Superintendent Wilson’s evidence to attempts by former
superintendents which had been unsuccessful, but the only specifics before me are those
described above. As well, the management-initiated WDHP complaint in late 2011 was an
initiative dealing with some of the longstanding issues concerning the working environment
of the Health Care Unit, but Ms. Gronski’s performance was not dealt with by that report.
[94] It is clear from Deputy Jones’ letter of November 14, 2012, that he was attempting to
formally “pull in the reins” in regards to several important issues, but it is also clear that he
was not at the point of threatening discharge. The thrust of the letter was that Ms.
Gronski’s loss of focus on the leadership of the department involved in working excessive
hours as an R.N., with its attendant effects on outstanding tasks, had to improve, and was
no longer going to be tolerated. I find that the letter effectively deals with past deficiencies
of the administrative variety by giving her time to catch up on administrative tasks and
improve her communication with senior management. Ms. Gronski’s evidence indicated
that she was aware that the way she had been working from the spring through the fall of
2012 was unsustainable. Nonetheless, her evidence was to the effect that things were
improving in the Health Care Unit with the departure of two very negative staff, and that
she was looking forward to rebuilding the nursing team in a healthier work environment
with new hires and getting caught up.
[95] The history of the Health Care Unit, and the lack of evidence of prompt attention given to
many of its problems by senior management makes condonation a useful analytical
framework. Nonetheless, as Arbitrator Bendel put it in the University of Ottawa decision,
cited in the appendix, condonation requires knowledge of facts that, if true, warrant
discipline. What prevents this case from being resolved in Ms. Gronski’s favour on the
basis of condonation is the fact that, after the meeting which lead to the above letter,
senior management learned of elements of Ms. Gronski’s performance directly related to
care of inmates and security of narcotics and methadone, of which there is no evidence
that they had previously been aware. The fact that Dr. Overholt did not raise the serious
issues of which he was aware sooner, either with Ms. Gronski directly or with senior
management, lamentable and largely unexplained though it is, was not argued to bind the
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employer in terms of condonation. And, as employer counsel argued, the employer was
“not sitting on her shoulder”, as it was her job to manage the Health Care Unit, and make
senior management aware of issues. Where the delay in this respect was sufficient to
inherently prejudice Ms. Gronski in defending herself, it has been noted above as affecting
the weight or use of some of the incidents in question. In any event, Ms. Gronski’s actions
on the day of her suspension in ripping up health care documentation was a current
incident, which added a significant additional concern relating to her reliability under
pressure, and her ability to act in a manner which showed appreciation of the necessity for
the employer to investigate the concerns raised in light of its responsibility for inmate care.
[96] The administrative matters dealt with in Mr. Jones’ letter of November 14 are all ones that
were readily apparent to senior management because of the personnel and/or cost
implications. Among the ones that the employer became aware of for the first time after
that are several that they would not have known about if Ms. Gronski or other healthcare
professionals did not make them aware. These include several serious ones that I have
found to be substantiated by the evidence. There is the state of the narcotics records with
several discrepancies and the inconsistencies in medication reserve counts which seemed
to be a result of Ms. Gronski’s haphazard method of documenting medications which she
removed from the reserve room into the general medication supply. As well, there is the
build-up of methadone waiting for disposal and the unexplained presence of long expired
medications in the reserve room. Further, there is the disarray in Ms. Gronski’s office,
indicating longstanding failure to keep inmate healthcare records current, rather than just
lack of tidiness. These represent chronic deficiencies in important duties directly within Ms.
Gronski’s responsibility as manager of the Health Care Unit. It is not disputed that it is the
duty of the manager of the Health Care Unit to make sure that the procedures for drug and
narcotic controls are followed and to oversee the administrative structure that supports
quality healthcare for the inmates. As the senior health care employee in the Detention
Centre, it was Ms. Gronski’s responsibility to keep senior management apprised of
problems in this respect and to ensure that her subordinates followed proper procedure.
[97] There are specific incidents of problems with Ms. Gronski’s performance while acting as
an R.N. as well, of which the employer was unaware until after the meeting which lead to
the November 14, 2012 letter. This category includes the charting of Methotrexate as
given, as well as the ambiguous reporting of the assessment of the potentially suicidal
inmate in October 2012. Although these are not as directly related to the core of the
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manager’s job, they are errors of a kind that support a finding that reliability in the areas of
assessment and medication documentation fell below required standards. The evidence
makes clear that Ms. Gronski was fully aware of those standards and responsible for
enforcing them within the Health care unit.
[98] There are other issues that are substantiated and were known to Corporate Health Care
from the results of the audit in June 2012 as well as its ongoing tracking of reporting, but
perhaps not specifically to senior management at the Detention Centre. These include the
unrecorded checks of safety equipment and oxygen supplies, problems with updating
medical directives and submitting medication improvement and infection control reports,
and failure to purchase from the vendors of record who provide favourable pricing. These
are difficult to categorize in terms of condonation, since the corporate health care staff is
not directly responsible for supervision of health care employees, but do play an important
role in alerting senior correctional management to health care practice issues. Although
these issues would not likely provide justification for discharge, given they were tolerated
for a long period of time, they are part of the context bearing on the question of whether
the employment relationship is salvageable.
[99] The approach to the issue of just cause articulated by the Supreme Court of Canada in
McKinley, cited in the appendix, requires a contextual analytical framework that examines
each case on its own particular facts and surrounding circumstances and considers the
nature and seriousness of the conduct for which the person has been discharged, in order
to assess whether it is reconcilable with sustaining the employment relationship. If it is,
then dismissal may be found to be a disproportionate response. If not, then there is just
cause for dismissal. Where there is just cause, the law does not require the employer to
provide compensation for losses or pay in lieu of notice. Nonetheless, dismissal without
claiming cause, but with notice, remains an option for this employer for excluded
employees, as noted in Dyson, cited in the appendix.
[100] As to the managerial duties, Ms. Gronski’s main defence is that she was working so many
hours as an R.N. that she could not keep up with them. Employer counsel characterized
her working so much as an R. N. as evidence that she was incapable of managing the
unit, and supportive of just cause. Ms. Gronski’s counsel referred to it as part of the
problems stemming from the toxic working environment, which caused serious problems in
retaining nurses, and Ms. Gronski’s often working 16 to 18 hour days. The evidence is
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very persuasive that working excessive hours as an R.N. negatively impacted Ms.
Gronski’s work as a manager. The question is how that should be viewed in the balance
of whether there was just cause for summary dismissal.
[101] In deciding to terminate for cause, Superintendent Wilson took into account that there
were opportunities to hire other nursing staff which would have prevented the situation,
and that subsequent to her departure, new staff were hired in short order, so that the
current health care manager, with very similar resources and staff complement as were
available to Ms. Gronski, has not had to work as a nurse. He concluded that in respect of
staffing, Ms. Gronski was the “author of her own misfortune”. Her counsel submitted that
this amounts to firing her for grounds that were not in the discharge letter. It is true that
failure to hire staff is not one of the grounds for discharge. However, the idea that
understaffing lead to her working so many hours as an R. N. was Ms. Gronski’s main
defence, during the investigation and at the hearing, so it is an entirely relevant
consideration as part of the context. The evidence is persuasive that it was reasonable for
the superintendent to look at the fact that the current manager of the Health Care Unit has
been able to staff the unit with the same resources without resorting to working as an R.N.
except in an infrequent emergency. There is no evidence before me to suggest that this is
an unfair comparison, or that the resources were not approximately the same as when Ms.
Gronski was in charge.
[102] Ms. Gronski testified at one point that she begged for more staff, with the implication that
senior management was not forthcoming. The written record indicates that several of her
supervisors held the contrasting view that she was the one largely responsible for the
delays in hiring permanent staff or securing staff through other means. There is also
evidence in the material that at times Ms. Gronski wanted more assistance from senior
management concerning hiring, and at other times wanted to be left alone to run the
competitions as she saw fit. Nonetheless, beyond the above comparison with the period
after Ms. Gronski left, neither party attempted to explore the details of the shared
responsibility for hiring, or the merits of Ms. Gronski’s stand in 2009 and 2012, when she
disagreed with the approach of her superiors to hiring and was replaced on the hiring
panels so that hiring could go forward.
[103] Ms. Gronski’s counsel submitted that senior management condoned her working
excessive amounts of largely unpaid overtime. It is clear that senior management knew
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about the issue. For instance, the record indicates that Ms. Gronski was directed to stop
working as a nurse in 2009. In order to find condonation. I would have to find, not only that
the employer knew how many hours she was working as a nurse, which is not in dispute,
but that it is responsible for the delay in finding a solution that would have left Ms. Gronski
freer to attend to the managerial duties of her job. To the extent the evidence dealt with
the responsibility, it is clear that it was shared. Nonetheless, it is insufficient for me to find
that the proportion of responsibility of the employer was so predominant that it justifies the
deficiencies in Ms. Gronski’s performance.
[104] In this regard, the evidence for the period between 2005 and 2012 is too general to
establish that senior management was responsible for the delay in hiring. In respect of the
more recent instance in 2012, of which there is clearer evidence, Ms. Gronski took from
August to November to study resumes before arranging interviews. Taking this long had
the predictable result that several of the candidates had found other work in the interim. It
is true that management played a part in this delay by not insisting on a result sooner, but
it is also true that it was primarily Ms. Gronski’s responsibility as Health Care Manager to
look after the hiring. As well, there is evidence that Ms. Gronski was maintaining that hiring
should not proceed without including the retired nurse she wished to hire, despite the
assertion in the written materials, which was not contradicted in evidence, that this nurse
was not properly included in the competition. Much of the evidence about the delays in
hiring supports the overall impression that Ms. Gronski was unable to fulfill her duty as
manager to act to alleviate the staffing shortage in a more effective way than assigning
herself to work as an R.N. Altogether, the evidence is not persuasive that the employer
created or condoned the problematic staffing situation to an extent that would relieve Ms.
Gronski of responsibility for the other shortcomings which have been established.
[105] There is also the element of the seriously difficult working environment in the Health Care
Unit which occasioned Ms. Green’s report in April 2012, and its conclusions that the
atmosphere was easily described as toxic. In the end, it was not argued that the
documented fact that Ms. Gronski was the target of serious undermining from one of her
subordinates justified the substantiated incidents dealt with above, although her counsel
submitted that it was an impossible situation creating the context for mistakes, big and
small. In any event, the more recent incidents occurred in the fall of 2012, a significant
time after the departure of the nurse identified as the main problem in this respect.
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[106] The general context in which the seriousness of the deficiencies must be assessed is the
heavily regulated environment of a correctional institution, which is characterized by a
higher level of public scrutiny and accountability than most workplaces, and has security
has once of its primary purposes. As well, the manager of the Health Care Unit is
responsible for maintaining not only her own professional standards, but assuring those of
her subordinates, as well as integrating the management of the Health Care Unit into the
overall operation of the Detention Centre by cooperating with, and taking direction from,
senior management. At the same time, the position operates with a special kind of
autonomy, as it is the highest level health care employee in the institution, and is
responsible to external authorities such as the College of Nurses as well. The non-
healthcare managers rely on the manager of the Health Care Unit for many things related
to the care of the inmates’ health which are beyond their expertise. It is particularly
important, given the difference in expertise, that the senior managers who are not health
professionals are able to have a high degree of confidence in the judgment and practice of
the manager of the Health Care Unit.
[107] In this context, the nature of the deficiencies in the control and management of narcotics
and other medication with a high street value are of particular concern and seriousness.
Especially given the history of misuse of methadone by one of the staff of the health unit,
the build-up of at least two months’ worth of methadone needing to be wasted is
particularly striking. Although, in her evidence Ms. Gronski acknowledged this created a
“scary” situation, there is no evidence that at the time it was building up, she was able to
act on her knowledge of the potential for negative human and legal ramifications to
effectively deal with the problem, even to the extent of making her superiors aware of the
situation so that additional staff could be arranged to allow time to deal with it, or some
other solution devised.
[108] The deficiency in record-keeping as to infection control reports and medication
improvement reports is not as immediately dangerous, but is nonetheless of great
concern, as they are essential pieces of the medical safety net for the inmates in the
Detention Centre. The haphazard nature of Ms. Gronski’s recording of drugs issued from
the reserve room when she was in a hurry, and the acknowledged medication errors,
although not intentional, add significantly to the concern. And then there is the incident of
ripping up health care documentation on the last day of work. Taken together, these
incidents are very serious, and Ms. Gronski did not suggest that she was unaware of her
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obligations to have acted otherwise. They are certainly worthy of discipline, as
acknowledged by her counsel. The remaining question is whether discharge was a
proportionate response. Answering that question requires a consideration of the balance
of the record of Ms. Gronski’s employment.
[109] It is clear that Ms. Gronski has many strengths and a great deal of nursing knowledge,
both in regards to theory, management and practice. Her performance evaluation in 2007
noted that she worked well in the first couple of years of her job in improving the working
relationships in the difficult group she inherited. She ran the unit for seven years in a
manner which appears to have prioritized hands–on patient care, and advocated for better
staffing and for action on the dysfunctional relationships in the Health Care Unit. She
established partnerships with community agencies such as public health and worked on
remedying gaps in mental health care for inmates, arranging for a mental health nurse to
be hired. She kept up to date on Methadone practice by attending conferences and
managed an outbreak of Norwalk virus effectively. It is to her credit that she acknowledged
that the deficiencies found were of significant concern, apologized for the medication
errors and wished she could take back signing as a nurse when her license was
suspended. She gave the job much of her free time, and suffered stress and frustration
over the many difficult challenges.
[110] Despite the positive aspects of Ms. Gronski’s performance, there were significant issues
over the course of her seven years, about which senior management was sufficiently
concerned to commence formal documentation on a number of occasions and issue a
letter of counsel in 2007 and 2009 and discipline in 2010. Thus, one cannot view her
record as clear, even though Superintendent Wilson was not relying on past discipline in
discharging her. Issues formally brought to her attention included difficulties keeping
inventory, taking direction, scheduling nurses, completing administrative tasks,
communicating with management and other colleagues, and fiscal responsibility. As noted
above, similar issues were coming to a head again in early November 2012.
[111] The incident of practicing without a license, although not resulting in discipline in a timely
manner, is one that Ms. Gronski herself recognizes as very serious. Although the
suspension was administrative, rather than for problematic practice, it stands as an
example of allowing herself to get into a predicament which, had it been nipped in the bud
by paying the fees after one of the College’s reminders, would have been easily handled,
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with no impact on the Health Care Unit. Even when the suspension happened, more
prompt and detailed communication with her supervisors and provision for other staff to
perform the assessment involved, would have meant the problem was managed and
minimized. It is one example of several where a short-cut, in this instance signing the
assessment because other nurses were busy, resulted in much larger problems later. It is
also a problem in regards to the confidence that her non-health care professional
managers need to have in the reliability of the judgment of the nurse manager, even under
pressure of staffing challenges, the particular pressures of nursing in a correctional setting,
or personal issues.
[112] Ms. Gronski was aware for years that the state of affairs was not acceptable, testifying at
one point that the deterioration was self-explanatory, and always looking forward to the
time when she would be able to implement better strategic plans for the Health Care Unit.
She was not able to get on top of the challenges to prioritize in an effective way to deal
with the situation. The evidence is very persuasive that her stopgap method of taking on
the R.N. role for years, though no doubt responding to short-term needs for inmate care,
ultimately worked to the detriment of an effectively run Health Care.
[113] Ms. Gronski’s evidence communicated that she felt deeply that she was unfairly dealt with,
that the investigation was “looking for things”, a “witch hunt”, as she put it to the
investigator. It is clear that the impact on her of the discharge has been very difficult. She
expressed her dismay at how things ended up when she had “taken the heat” in the Health
Care Unit for years, and had always been dedicated to standards of practice and
educating herself and others in whatever she was working on. She recalled that she had
always been looked up to as a nursing leader and that she had great respect in her
previous career in hospital nursing.
[114] I have carefully considered the idea expressed by Ms. Gronski that the investigation was
unfair, and that management was just trying to dredge things up to justify the termination,
or to get a clean slate, as her counsel put it, after the departure of the two problematic
bargaining unit nurses. There are some aspects of Mr. Hogan’s investigation that appear
unusual, such as that he had earlier supervised Ms. Gronski, and formulated the
allegations as part of the investigation rather than being asked to investigate specific
incidents. As well, there was almost no consideration of positive aspects of her
performance, or the job’s challenges, other than her working substantial hours in the R.N.
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role, which the investigator did not find to be a mitigating factor. Nonetheless, Ms. Gronski
was advised of the allegations and given two opportunities to respond, first to the
investigator and then to the superintendent before he made his decision, affording basic
procedural fairness. The majority of the items substantiated were not denied by Ms.
Gronski, and are objectively serious concerns, a significant number of fairly recent vintage.
As well, the lengthy hearing of this matter provided a full opportunity to challenge the
employer’s conclusions and provide further context. I have noted above where I disagree
with those conclusions or their use.
[115] Ms. Gronski’s counsel emphasized that arbitral jurisprudence such as Arbitrator Hope’s
decision in Re City of Vancouver, cited in the appendix, has held that a minimum
requirement for just cause is that the employee be put on notice that her employment is in
jeopardy if her poor work performance continues. It is common ground that this did not
occur in any formal way. Arbitrator Hope noted that arbitrators have long taken a
jaundiced view of evidence critical of the conduct of an employee led in support of a
dismissal which is neither formalized nor brought to the attention of the employee. He
cited two reasons for this: the failure of the employer to formalize the matter invites the
inference that the employer placed little significance on the conduct, and that the failure to
document and formalize criticism of an employee’s conduct denies to the employee the
right to challenge the factual basis of the criticism.
[116] By contrast, employer counsel argues that progressive discipline has been held to be
tempered by other considerations in the case of health care professionals, as in Re Owen
Sound General and Marine Hospital, cited in the appendix. In that case, arbitrator Abbot
found that counselling or criticism may well amount to an “oral warning” in the context of a
nurse and her supervisors, albeit in that case the supervisors were also nurses. As well,
the arbitrator found that because of the danger to patients, and the potential legal liability
of nurses’ employers, high standards are enforced, and any medication error must be
treated as a very serious matter. In general, arbitral case law allows dismissal without
notice or full progressive discipline where the conduct is serious enough to be
incompatible with the continued employment relationship.
[117] The City of Vancouver decision relied on by the complainant, found that, especially in
deficient performance cases, a warning that one’s job is in jeopardy is a pre-condition to
just cause. In that case, the grievor was a clerk, and Arbitrator Hope found that her
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managers had simply failed to bring home to her their dissatisfaction with her work,
describing the manager’s attempts as intermittent. As well, there was evidence that the
grievor in that case had been suffering personal and health problems that were resolving,
that she had responded to direction in the past, and that the supervisor who had trained
her thought that some form of discipline would improve her performance. Central to
Arbitrator Hope’s decision is the idea that employees should have the opportunity to
defend their jobs before being discharged – that it is only when an employee knows the
job is in jeopardy, and still does not meet the standards, that it can really be seen that she
cannot sufficiently improve. This is indeed the main weakness of the employer’s case.
[118] Nonetheless, most of the arbitral jurisprudence addresses bargaining unit employees,
rather than a manager, with the responsibility to enforce performance standards herself.
And it cannot be said that Ms. Gronski was unaware of senior management’s
dissatisfaction with her performance, or the areas in which her practice was not in line with
Ministry policy or professional standards. Further, the formulation of the Supreme Court of
Canada in McKinley, a case of a non-bargaining unit employee, does not require explicit
notice in all cases. Where conduct, whether involving a single or several incidents, rises
to a serious enough level to be inconsistent with the employee’s obligations to the
employer, so as to be incompatible with the employment relationship, notice is not
required. For instance, the Court cites with approval earlier case law such as R. v.
Arthurs, Ex parte Port Arthur Shipbuilding Co. (1967), 62 D.L.R. (2d) 342, where the
Ontario Court of Appeal stated that an employer’s right to summarily dismiss an employee
is triggered by “serious misconduct”, which was recognized as including habitual neglect of
duty, incompetence, willful disobedience or “conduct incompatible with his duties, or
prejudicial to the employer’s business.” Even so, the lack of prior notice that the employer
was considering discharge at least heightens the scrutiny I have given to the employer’s
conclusion that the employment relationship was irreparable, leading to the question of
whether the mitigating factors, such as her seven years’ service, dedication to inmate care
and difficult working environment, mean that Ms. Gronski should be reinstated, or
compensated for the lack of notice, as both counsel argued in the alternative, albeit for
different reasons.
[119] There is much that is deserving of sympathy in Ms. Gronski’s situation, in light of the very
challenging circumstances of her position at the Detention Centre. She was clearly very
stressed by the significant issues she faced. Nonetheless, having carefully reviewed the
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evidence and arguments in this matter, in the framework recommended by McKinley, I find
that the bond of trust with senior management, which is a fundamental condition of the
employment relationship of the manager of the Health Care Unit in the context of the
Detention Centre has become objectively irreparable. While, as argued by her counsel,
seven years of stressful service is a considerable investment in the Ministry, I am
persuaded by employer counsel’s submission that in order to reinstate Ms. Gronski, it
would be necessary to find not only that she was not negligent or guilty of misleading the
employer, but that the conduct would change, so that the liability of the Ministry would not
continue, and that senior management could have confidence that the Health Care Unit
would be run in a way that does not create additional liability for the employer.
[120] There is shared responsibility for the situation that existed in November 2012 in the Health
Care Unit, as discussed above. There was significant changeover in her supervision,
including perhaps 6 or 7 different Deputy Superintendents, which no doubt contributed to
the fact that the problems went unchecked and unsolved as long as they did. There is
also the factor of the indirect oversight of the Corporate Health Care office and the doctor
who provides medical services to inmates, which did not result in timely information to
senior management regarding a number of the ongoing issues in regards to inmate care or
error and infection tracking.
[121] Nonetheless, I am persuaded by the evidence that the portion of the responsibility for the
situation properly borne by Ms. Gronski, together with the cumulative weight of the
substantiated incidents gave sufficient grounds for the termination. This is not the case of
a bargaining unit nurse who might be able to be returned to work with extra supervision or
a refresher course. This case involves the manager charged with supervising the
bargaining unit nurses, upholding standards, and coordinating activities with the
correctional managers to ensure the health of the inmates, in the context of a secure
facility. The common thread running through the evidence is that, under pressure, Ms.
Gronski has great difficulty being reliable in fulfilling the duties of Health Care Manager in
the very challenging correctional context. Further, and importantly, Ms. Gronski’s
evidence gave little comfort that anything has changed in her appreciation of the situation
that would give confidence that things would be different if she were to be returned to the
position. The evidence displays an ongoing problem in the exercise of judgment as a
manager as to priorities, which include the problems in the control and documentation of
medications and the extreme amount of hours worked as an R.N. I find that the recent
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substantiated incidents set out above, in the context of the issues over the years for which
Ms. Gronski was warned, including continuing difficulties meshing her leadership with that
of the senior management of the Detention Centre, make it very difficult to reasonably
expect senior management to be able to have the necessary confidence in her to run the
Health Care Unit. In all of the circumstances, I find that the employer’s conclusion was
reasonable, i.e. that the nature and seriousness of her behaviour was irreconcilable with
sustaining the employment relationship and the confidence necessary to it.
[122] In the circumstances, I find that discharge was a proportionate response, and the onus of
proving just cause on a balance of probabilities has been met. Accordingly, the complaint
is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 30th day of September 2015
Kathleen G. O’Neil, Chair
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APPENDIX
Case law
Cited by counsel for the employer
1. Gregory Dyson and The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety
and Correctional Services), 2014 CanLII 8245 (ON PSGB) (Carter)
2. Leisureworld Nursing Home and S.E.I.U., [1995] O.L.A.A. No. 594
3. National Grocers Co. v. United Food and Commercial Workers Union, Local
1000A (O’Brien Grievance), [2003] O.L.A.A. No. 385 (Nairn)
4. Oshawa General Hospital and Ontario Nurses’ Assoc., [1976] O.L.A.A. No. 59
5. Oshawa General Hospital and Ontario Nurses’ Assoc. Oshawa General, [1975]
O.L.A.A. No. 16
6. Owen Sound General and Marine Hospital and Ontario Nurses’ Association,
[1977] O.L.A.A. No. 82
7. Religious Hospitallers OP Hotel-Dieu of St. Joseph of the Dioceses of London
and Service Employees’ Union, Local 210, [1974] O.L.A.A. No. 97
8. St. Peter’s Hospital v. Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 778 (Male
Grievance), [2005] O.L.A.A. No. 65
9. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario and Dr. Albert Ross Deep,
[2010] O.C.P.S.D. No. 19
Cited by counsel for the complainant
1. Aerocide Dispensers Ltd. and United Steelworkers of America, (1965) 15 L.A.C. 41
(Laskin)
2. Cardoza and The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services), (O’Neil) 2011CANLII 86404 (ON PSGB)
3. City of Vancouver and Vancouver Municipal and Regional Employees Union, (Gushue
Grievance) (1983) 11 L.A.C. (3rd) 121 (Hope)
4. McKinley v BC Tel, [2001] S.C.R. 161
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5. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Seguin grievance) and The Crown in Right of
Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services), (Brown) 2005 Can
LII55218 (ON GSB)
6. Ontario Provincial Police and Ontario Provincial Police Association (Phinney and Poole)
(Petryshen), unreported decision dated January 15, 2015
7. University of Ottawa v. International union of Operating Engineer’s, Local 796-B
(Lanthier Grievance) (1994) 42 L.A.C. (4th) 300 (Bendel)