HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-1309.Singh.89-07-27 · ONTARIO EMPLOY£S-DE LA COURONNE
'~ ' ~ ; ' CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ONTARIO
· GRIEVANCE C,OMMISSlON DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
1SO DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO, ONTARIO, M6G 1Z8- sUITE 2100 TELEPHONE/T~L~-PHONE
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST, TORONTO, (ONTARIO,} MSG 1Z$ - BUREAU 2100 (416} 598-0688
1309/88
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
OPSEU (P. Singh)
Grievor
- and - ~
The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Transportation)
Employer
Before:
N.V. Dissanayake Vice-Chairperson
S. Hennessy Member
H. Roberts Member
For the Grievor: R. Ross Wells
Counsel
Gowling, Strathy & Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
For the Employe~: M. Failes
Counsel
Winkler, Filion & wakely
Barristers & Solicitors
Hearing: May 4, 1989
AWARD
This grievance reads:
I grieve that the employer has re-imposed a
previously withdrawn disciplinary memo by making
reference to it in a memo dated 1988 - 11 - 09.
The relief requested is:
that the memo dated 1988 - 11 - 09 be rescinded and
removed from all files.
The evidence indicates that the griever has had
attendance problems for some time due to health reasons. The
Employer issued the following memorandum to the griever on
March 30, 1988:
RE: Attendance
This will acknowledge receipt of a statement from
your physician dated 88-03-22, stating that you are
· it for work, and that you are able to maintain
regular attendance.
I am plea. sec to learn that the health problems you
experienced previously have cleared up, and that
yOU will be able to attend to all of your duties on
a regular basis.
As we do for' all of our employees, we will continue
to monitor your attendance record, and I caution
you that should you be unable to maintain regular
attendance, a review of your situation will be
carried out, which may lead to your im'mediate
termination by the Ministry for excessive
absenteeism.
This memorandum was grieved as being "an unjust
disciplinary warning memo" A£te~ the second stage meeting
o'f the grievance procedure the grievance was settled, with
3
the Minister's designee confirming by letter to the grievor
dated May 2, 1988, that the ~emorandum "has been removed from
your file"
On November 4, 1988, a further attendance review meeting
was held between the Management and the grievor, who was
accompanied by a union representative. The Employer witnesses
recalled that during this meeting specific reference was made
to the Memorandum of March 30, 1988. On the contrary, the
grievor and the union representative testified that no such
reference was made. For our purposes, it is not necessary to
resolve this apparent conflict in the evidence. The Board is
satisfied that, if the memorandum itself was not referred to
during the meeting, the gist of its content including the fact
that continuing attendance problems will put the grievor's
employment in jeopardy, was the subject of discussion at the
meeting on November 4, 1988.
Following the meeting, the Employer issued the following
memorandum dated November 9, 1988 to the grievor:
RE: Attendance Review
An Attendance Review Meeting was held in Boardroom
"B" at 5000 Yonge St. on 88-11-04 at 10:30 a.m.
it was indicated that your attendance from
January/88 to July/88 was good but that from
August/88 to October/88 you had been away sick quite
a bit. ~
4
January - July 2.5 days off
August - October 15.1 days off
TOTAL 17.6 days Off
I strongly emphasize tho need for regular attendance
and refer you to P. Martin's memo of 88-03-30. A
copy of the memo is attached.
It is the reference in the last paragraph of this
memorandum, to the memorandum of March 30, 1988 that is being
objected to by the griever.
The Employer raised a preliminary objection to the
Board's jurisdiction to hear this grievance on the basis that
the memorandum being challenged does not. constitute
discipline, but is simply a confirmation of the review of the
griever's attendance record that took place at the meeting,
and notification to the griever that failure to improve will
result in termination of his employment The Employer .
concedes that the memorandum of March 30, 1988, was removed
from the grievor'~ file pursuant to the settlement of the
previous grievance. The evidence is that while the Minister's
designee's letter to the grievor'was copied to his supervisor,
'the latter did not read it carefully. As a result, at the
time the Memorandum of November 9, 1988 was drawn up, the
supervisor was not aware that the prior memorandum had been
removed from the griever's files ah part of a settlement.
5
Nevertheless, Counsel for the Employer submits that the
reference was made solely with the intention of communicating
to the grievor that failure to regularly attend work may
result in his dismissal. Instead of spelling that out again
in the second memorandum, the grievor was referred to the
i~formation contained in the previous memorandum~ The Counsel'
for the grievor on the contrary submits that the memorandum
is a disciplinary warning and that therefore, this Board has
jurisdiction to hear the grievance relating to it.
This Board has held on many prior occasions that even
where the conduct involved may be culpable, a mere
communication by the Employer to an employee expressing
dissatisfaction with or disapproval of the conduct and
counselling the grievor on the need for improvement will not
" constitute discipline, unless it can be used in subsequent
disciplin~r~ action to the detriment oX the grievor. See,
Naik 108/77 (Swinton); Zuibrycki, 425/81; Sundberc, 1998/86
(Devlin), In Nai;: the letter issued to the grievor read in
part:
'I wish to advise you that any further outbursts Of
this nature will not be tolerated in this office and
I can assure you that if it does the necessary
action will be taken against you ....... Please be
guided accordingly."
In concluding that the letter was not a disciplinary
warning ~he Board stated:
6
" ..... , one cannot characterize every communication
from an employer to an employee as disciplinary
action. Only if the warning will have a prejudicial
effect on the employee's position in future
grievance proceedings, in the sense that it is being
used to build up a record against the employee, can
it be characterised as disciplinary action. To
conclude otherwise would be to allow an employee to
grieve any communication which he believed to be
unfounded, with unfortunate results for the
grievance procedure and for the employer trying, to
give guidance to an employee without engaging in
formal disciplinary action."
Here, the impugned memorandum does not refer to any
culpable conduct on the part of the grievor. The reference
is to health related absences. It is now firmly established
in arbitral jurisprudence that innocent absenteeism is not a
matter of discipline. See, Brown and Beatty, Canadian Labour
Arbitration (3rd Ed.) Section 7:3200 and the awards cited
therein. As the arbitrator in De Hawilland Aircraft of Canada
?
Ltd., (1964), 15 L.A.C. 41 (Laskin), stated, "In such cases
it is not a question of punishing an employee for any fault,
or negligent or deliberate dereliction of duty, but rather of
finding that he is unable to meet the reasonable expectations
of continuous availability for work" Nevertheless, the
Employer has not been left without remedy where an employee,
through no fault of h~s, is unable to avail himself for work
on a regular basis. The E~.:ployer may terminate employment
provided i5 can be established that the absenteeism is
excessive and that the prognosis .~ for ~uture attendance is
poor.
7
Over the years, this Board has routinely adopted and
applied the doctrine of innocent absenteeism as developed in
the. private sector arbitral jurisprudence. In Richardson,
517/81 (Barton) at pp. 9-11, the Board made the following
observation:
The "arbitral jurisprudence" if I may. Call
it that concerning innocent or blameless absenteeism
in the private sector has been accepted by this
Board in such cases as Stewar~ 27/76, Temple 12/76,
Moss 62/76, and others. Such private sector cases
as Re Victoria Hospital (Weatherill 1979) 2~ LAC 2nd
172, Re United Automobile Workers and Massey~
Ferguson Ltd. (Shime 1972) 24 LAC 3-44, have been
accepted by this Board. These cases and others
establish the proposition that in certain serious
situations excessive absenteeism may warrant
termination of the employment relationship. Such
termination is on the basis that the employee is
not able to satisfy his side of the bargain to come
to work on m regular basis. It is quite clear that
such dismissal is not discipline in the sense of a
dismissal for blameworthy conduct, rather it
primarily.because the interests of the employer arq
substantially impaired by such absenteeism.
(Emphasis added)
In Cardone, 783/84 (Samuels) the Board stated:
The critical point is that the employee is
unable to work. The employer in these circumstances
is entitled to terminate the employment. This is
not a disciplinary matter. It is not a question of
fault. The grievor is not being punished for his
misfortune. But due to the employee's inability to
continue working on a regular basis, the employment
relationship can be terminated.
The Board's jurisdiction to hqar this grievance depends
whether the memorandum of Nov~mb~r 9, 198~, can properly
8
be characterized as a disciplinary warning as claimed by the
grievor. While recognizing that this Board has ~enerally
accepted the basic principle that innocent absenteeism is not
a matter of discipline, counsel for the grievor made a novel
legal argument, in an attempt to convince us that in the
Ontario Government Service, at least in certain circumstances,
innocent absenteeism should be regarded as a matter of
discipline. ~
Counsel's submission is based on Section 18 (3) of
.Regulation 881 under the Public Service Act, which states:
~i~!' I8 (3) Where a public servant,
C (a) habitually fails to comply with attendance
· .~ regulations or directives~
(b) absents himself without permission during his
prescribed hours of duty;
: ~' (c) reports for duty while incapable of
~:~ performing his duties;
(d) misuses government property or uses
government property or services for purposes
other than government business; or
(e) fails to obey the instructions of his
superior,
and where, in the opinion of his deputy minister,
the circumstances do not amount to cause for removal
- from employment or dismissal under section 22 of the
Act, the deputy minister, o~: an official of his
~:-~ ministry who is authorized by him, may after a
hea~ing, impose a fine equal to not .?.ore than five
days pay.
9
Counsel draws our attention to the title under which
sectio~ 18 appears, "Offences and Penalties" The "offence"
set out in ss. 3(a) is "habitually fails to comply with
attendance regulations or directives" For that offence a
"penalty" of a monetary fine or dismissal from the public
service may be imposed. .From the tenor of this terminology,
counsel urges us to conclude that section 18(3) treats
irregular attendance, including innocent absenteeism, as a
matter of discipline. Counsel for the Employer submits that
': section 18(3) does not have that effect and contends that in
any event section 18(3) is irrelevant for this proceeding
" because it pertains to a procedure for dealing with non-'
bargaining unit employees and therefore is totally irrelevant
for purposes of this proceeding.
In our considered opinion, this issue can be decided on
a very narrow basis. Assuming, without finding, that the
provision applies to a situation where, ks here, the
employment relationship is governed by a collective agreement,
in our view, section 18(3) (a) does not include instances of
innocent absenteeism. That provision speaks of a failure to
comply with a regulation or directive. By its very nature,
innocent absenteeism is devoid of any fault on the part of the
g:.-ievor. The most common situatior~ is where a gricvor i.s
prevented from attending work becaqse of recurring or chronic
illness, in th~s circun.stanc~ it would be absurd for an
10
employer to issue a directive to the employee that he attend
work, and expect compliance. The provision permits fines for
failure to comply with the enumerated sub-sections including
section 18'(3) (a). It is inconceivable that the legislature
intended to permit the Employer to punish an employee by
monetary fines, for failure to regularly attend work because
of health problems which are completely beyond his control.
In our view, section 18(3) (a) does not refer to situations of
innocent or' blameless absences.
Since the subject of the memorandum of November 9, 1988,
' ' as well as of the earlier memorandum, was a non-disciplinary
matter, neither could be considered to be disciplinary action.
';?' ~ The memoranda in question are in the nature of a notice of the
Employer's concerns about the grievor's inability to attend
.~ ~? work on a regular basis. In our view, the Employer is
entitled, and indeed may be obligated, to apprise the grievor
of those concerns and of the consequences which may follow if
the attendance does not improve.
The purpose of the reference to the pri'or memo must also
' be kept in context. The Employer was not relying on the
earl~er memorandum to the detriment of the grievor. The
reference was ~oz infc~r::.atlor .... purpos~s ,:~n]y. ~h6.
re~erred to tt~ .in~erm~Lion co~t,~i, nyd ~'~ :l~e prior
II
condone the Empioyer's action. It was improper for the
Employer to have made a reference to a memorandum, which ~or
all intents and purposes no longer existed. The fact that the
grievor's supervisor, despite being copied the letter of
settlement, was unaware that the memorandum had been removed
from the record simply demonstrates sloppy management.
However, that.impropriety does not confer on this Board any
jurisdiction that it does not otherwise have.
For all of the above reasons, it is our conclusion that
the Board has no jurisdiction to hear this grievance and the
same is hereby dismissed.
Dated this ?.7th day of July, 1989 at Hamilton, Ontario
Ni.~al V. Dissanayake
Vice-Chairperson
Y~ember
H. Eob~;r t.s