HomeMy WebLinkAbout2015-0599.Clarke.16-01-11 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB#2015-0599
UNION#2014-0704-0005
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Clarke) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ontario Clean Water Agency) Employer
BEFORE Joseph D. Carrier Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Jesse Gutman
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Ferina Murji
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING December 10, 2015
- 2 -
Decision
[1] The subject matter of the grievance before me dated October 28, 2014 is an
allegation by Alan Clarke, a Process and Compliance Technician for the Ontario
Clean Water Agency, that his layoff on or about October 21, 2014 was improper.
During their Joint File Review the corporate parties agreed that the issue be dealt
with pursuant to Section 22.16 of their Collective Agreement. I do not propose to
reproduce those provisions in this Award except to note that the procedure calls for
mediation failing which an expeditious arbitration process follows.
[2] There was an attempt at the initial day of hearing to mediate the matter which effort
was unsuccessful. As previously agreed between the parties, the Employer then
brought a preliminary motion that the matter be dismissed due to an untimely
referral to arbitration. It is that dismissal motion which is presently before me and
which I propose to determine in a relatively brief but reasoned manner.
[3] As noted earlier Mr. Clarke received his layoff notice on or about October 21, 2014.
According to documentation received from the Employer, the layoff of Mr. Clarke
followed his receipt of a surplus notice alert on or about October 9, 2014 which
was premised on a diminished work load in the Northwestern Ontario Hub.
[4] It was the Union’s position on behalf of Mr. Clarke that his layoff was improper in
that the work he had been performing until his layoff continued to be performed
thereafter and that another individual was retained thereafter as a replacement and
continued to perform the duties that had previously been done by the Grievor
himself. In the circumstances, it was the Union’s position that the net effect of the
- 3 -
surplus notice and his layoff was a termination of Mr. Clarke which was without just
cause.
[5] With respect to the Employer’s preliminary motion that the matter be dismissed for
delay the following sequence of events was identified by Ms. Ferina Murji, counsel
for the Employer:
1. On September 24, 2014 the Employer wrote to Mr. Warren (Smokey) Thomas,
President of OPSEU to advise that the Northwestern Ontario Hub had lost
three significant clients and that “as a result, one (1) Process and Compliance
Technician position in the Northwestern Ontario Hub will be eliminated”.
2. On or about October 9, 2014 Mr. Clarke was provided with a surplus notice.
3. On or about October 21, 2014 Mr. Clarke was provided with a notice of layoff.
4. On October 28, 2014 Mr. Clarke grieved his layoff.
5. On January 22, 2015 the Employer provided its final reply denying Mr. Clarke’s
grievance of October 28, 2014.
6. On April 29, 2015 the grievance was formally referred to arbitration by the
Union.
[6] The Collective Agreement requires that grievances be referred to arbitration within
fifteen (15) days (exclusive of weekends and holidays) following receipt of the
Employer’s reply which was dated January 22, 2015. In the result, the Union itself
was late referring the matter to arbitration by just over fifty (50) working days that is
approximately ten (10) calendar weeks or two and one-half (2½) calendar months.
[7] By way of explanation union counsel, Mr. Jesse Gutman, advised that there had
been a somewhat related union Policy grievance pending and which itself was
referred to arbitration while the Grievor’s, by mistake, was not. Upon settlement of
the Union Policy Grievance on or about April 23rd, union representatives realized
- 4 -
that Mr. Clarke’s had not been pursued to arbitration. This accounts for the April
29th referral date.
[8] While settlement discussions are most often considered confidential, it is relevant
to the matter before me that during the course of exchanges concerning the Union
Policy Grievance there was included in an e-mail dated April 2, 2015 from the
Employer representative to the Union the following comment:
We would also be looking for the MOS to cover both of the grievances related to Alan Clarke’s
PCT position.
THE DECISION
[9] The Parties to the Collective Agreement before me have specifically agreed that
the Grievance Settlement Board has jurisdiction to apply Section 48(16) of the
Ontario Labour Relations Act to extend time limits set out in the Collective
Agreement during both the grievance and arbitration processes. That provision in
the Act grants jurisdiction to an arbitrator to extend the time limits in the Collective
Agreement “where the arbitrator or arbitration board is satisfied that there are
reasonable grounds for the extension and that the opposite party will not be
substantially prejudiced by the extension”.
[10] In the circumstances before me, I have not been advised that there is any specific
prejudice to the Employer should I grant the extension here nor is it likely that an
extension of something less than three (3) months would substantially prejudice
the Employer in this case in any event.
- 5 -
[11] Accordingly, the issue to be determined is whether or not there are reasonable
grounds to extend the fifteen (15) day time limit from early in February to the end of
April of 2015. I emphasize that the issue is not whether or not the explanation
advanced by the Union was reasonable but whether or not I am satisfied that there
are reasonable grounds to extend those time limits. In assessing that issue the
most often cited Award is that by arbitrator Burkett in Re Becker Milk Company and
Teamsters Union, Local 647 (1978), 19 L.A.C. (2d) 217 (Burkett). At page 220 of
his Award arbitrator Burkett expressed his view of the application of that discretion
(formerly identified in section 37(5)a of the Ontario Act) as follows:
The exercise of the equitable discretion vested in an arbitrator under s. 37(5)a of the Act
requires consideration of at least three factors. These are (i) the reason for the delay
given by the offending party; (ii) the length of the delay; (iii) the nature of the grievance. If
the offending party satisfies an arbitrator, notwithstanding the delay, that it acted with due
diligence, then if there has been no prejudice the arbitrator should exercise his discretion
in favour of extending the time-limits. If, however, the offending party has been negligent
or is otherwise to blame for the delay, either in whole or in part, the arbitrator must
nevertheless consider the second and third factors referred to above in deciding if
reasonable grounds exist for an extension of the time limits. In so far as Re Pamour
Porcupine Mines Ltd. (Schumacher Division) and U.S.W. (1976), 12 L.A.C. (2d) 122
(Dunn), stands for the proposition that the only factor to be considered is “the
reasonabless of the excuse” for the delay, I respectfully disagree. The purpose of the
section is to alleviate against technical bars. If the offending party has been negligent in
its processing of the grievance but the delay has been of short duration an arbitrator
would be permitted to rely on the short period of delay as constituting reasonable
grounds for an extension. If the grievance involves the termination of an employee as
distinct from some lesser form of discipline, this is also an equitable consideration which
must be taken into account in deciding if there are reasonable grounds to extend the
time-limits.
[12] Applying those criteria to the matter presently before me I find as follows:
1. The delay was not brief such as a couple of days or even a couple of weeks.
Rather, the referral to arbitration was approximately 2 ½ months after the date
it ought to have been dealt with. I view that delay standing alone as excessive
against the requirements of the Collective Agreement.
2. Mr. Clarke was not responsible for the delay; rather, it was the Union that erred
in processing the Union Policy Grievance to arbitration while omitting, perhaps
inadvertently, that of Mr. Clarke.
- 6 -
3. While the issue on the merits relates to the Grievor’s layoff after his position
had been surplused, the net effect was that the Grievor lost his job.
Accordingly, while it is not technically a termination case, it is akin to a matter
of that nature in that it had serious employment repercussions for Mr. Clarke.
4. As indicated earlier, there was no indication or evidence that the Employer
would be substantially prejudiced by an extension.
[13] Taking all these elements into consideration it is my view that, on balance, the
extension should be granted to allow the matter to proceed on the merits. Of the
elements considered, it is my view that those weighing most heavily in favour of
Mr. Clarke relate to the nature of the issue here which is akin to termination as well
as the fact that the Grievor was not responsible for the delay in the referral to
arbitration. Had the Grievor been responsible for the delay and/or if the delay had
been more extensive such that the Employer might reasonably have assumed the
grievance had been abandoned, the result might have been the dismissal of the
grievance. However, that was not the case before me and I am satisfied instead
that it is reasonable here to grant the extension.
[14] Accordingly, it is my Award that the Employer’s Motion to Dismiss the grievance as
untimely does not succeed. I retain jurisdiction to deal with the matter on the
merits. Any issues concerning productions and particulars as well as the
scheduling of continuation will be dealt with in the ordinary course.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 11th day of January 2016.
Joseph D. Carrier, Vice Chair