HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-1299.Wong.90-05-24 ~ ~ ONTAF~iO EMPLOY~$IT/ELA COURONNE
~,~ ~ ' CROWN EMPLOYEES ' DE ~L 'ONTARIO
' GRIEVANCE C,OMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
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1299/89
IN THEm ATTE~ OF AN AI~BITRATION
Under
THE C~OWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN:
OPSEU (Wong)
Grievor
-- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Attorney General)
Employer
BEFORE: R.J. Roberts' Vice-Chairperson
E. Seymour Member
D. Walktnshaw Member
;
FOR THE C. Paliare
GRIEVOR: Counsel -
Gowling, Strathy & Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE D. Costen
EMPLOYER: Counsel
Human Resources Secretariat
Management Board of Cabinet
HEARING: February 23, 1990
INTERIM DECISION
This matter arose by way of motion for adjournment. The
majority of the Board grante~ the adjournment, delivering oral
reasons at the hearing. Counsel for the Ministry requested that
our reasons be issued in the form of an interim award and we
granted this request.
The circumstances giving rise to the motion for adjournment
may be shortly sta~ed. It was agreed that the grievance herein
complained of the denial by an insurer of medical benefits secured
under the Collective Agreement. The Ministry indicated that if we
went forward it intended to raise a preliminary objection on the
ground that the Board did not have jurisdiction to hear a grievance
of this nature.
This was precisely the same issue.as.was before another panel
of the Board. It seems that on October 27, 1989, a'panel of this
Board, chaired by Vice-Chair M. Saitman heard final argument on a
preliminary objection to jurisdiction in Re Sekhon and Ministry of
Health, G.S.B. No. 418\83. A pre.vious panel in Sekhon, chaired by
Vice-Chair Jolliffe, had upheld a preliminary objection to
jurisdiction on the ground that the grievor did not have a right
to pursue in arbitratiQn under the Collective Agreement a Claim for
medical benefits. Such a claim, it was held, had to be pursued
against the insurer. The Divisional Court quashed this award cn
the ground that it failed to consider new wording Of the Collective
Agreement which might have operated to confer jurisdiction over ~he
grievor's claim. The matter was remitted to a new panel of The
Board--ultimately the panel chaired by Vice-Chair Saltman--for
redetermina~ion of the preliminary question. As indicated, this
panel heard the matter in October but as of the date of our hearing
their award had not issued.
It was submitted on behalf of the Ministry that'in light of
the fact that the identical issue had already been heard by another
panel in a prior hearing, we should adjourn the matter until the
issuance of its award. Reference was made to' Re Blake and
Amalgamated Transit Union {1988), G.S.B. No. 1276/87 (Shime),
wherein the learned Chairman stated:
In.the private sector ad hoc boards of arbitration have a
separate and distinct capacity to decide each case on its own
merits. Recognizing that individual, but different, decisions
on the same point or issue may create confusion, arbitrators
have balanced the interests of individual decision making with
predictability by generally adopting a policy that they will
not depart from earlier decisions unless such decisions are
manifestly in error.
But the Grievance Settlement Board is one entity - it is not
a series of separately constituted boards of arbitration.
Under Section 20(1) of The Crown Employees Collective
Bargaining Act there is "a Grievance Settlement Board" - that
is, one Board. Under Section 20(4) the Grievance Settlement
Board may sit in two panels and under Section 20(6) a decision
of the majority of a panel is "the decision" of the Grievance
Settlement Board.
Thus each decision by a panel becomes a decision of the Board
~nd in our opinion the standard of manifest error which is
appropriate for the private sector is not appropriate for the
Grievance Settlement Board. The Act does not give one panel
the right to overrule another panel or to sit on appeal on the
decisions of an earlier panel. Also, given the volume of
cases that are currently administered by this board, the
continuous attempts to persuade one panel that another panel
was in error only encourages a multiplicity of proceedings and
arbitrator shopping which in turn creates undue administrative
difficulties in handling the case load. ..Id. at
It was submitted that in order to ensure that the Board speak with
one voice, as emphasized by Chairman Shime in the above award, it
would be appropriate to adjourn this matter pending the issuance
of the Saltman award in Re Sekhon.
It was submitted on behalf of the grievor that wh~le the
foregoing was a valid policy consideration, there were other
e~ually valid considerations which militated against granting the
requested adjournment. The most Dressing of these, it was
submitted, was that the grievor herein had a right to speedy
consideration of her grievance. It was emphasized that because of
the denial of her medical benefits, the grievor was not in receipt
of any income therefrom, leading to a manifest and real prejudice
which was compounded with every day's delay.
After giving the foregoing submissions of the parties serious
consideration, the majority of the Board decided to grant the
adjournment. It did not appear to the majority that it would be
productive to enter into a situation which presented a real danger
of the issuance by the Board of two different decisions upon
precisely the same jurisdictional issue. We informed the parties
that there was some indication t'hat the award of the Saltman panel
would be forthcoming in the not too distant future. It seemed to
us that the determination of the issue in tha~ case might assist.
in resolving the preliminary matter in the present case. We also
acknowledged the hardship to the: griever of delay in the
proceedings and suggested to counsel for the Ministry and the
griever that it might be advisable to meet and attempt to work out
an interim arrangement to assist the griever in this regard.
Counsel indicated that they would enter into such discussions.
For the foregoing reasons, the adjournment was granted. After
the issuance of the Saltman award, this matter should be scheduled
for hearing on a priority basis. We note for the record that the
hearing need not be scheduled before this panel. By reason of our
decision herein, we have not taken jurisdiction of the merits of
the case.
DATED at London, Ontario, this 24th day of May,
1990.
icevChairperson
"I dissent" (Dissent attached)
E. Sey~r, Member
/ /
alkins~aw, Member
pg. §
RECEIVED
990
CR ~WN EMPLOYEES
GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT
BOARD
GSB FILE 1299/89: OPSEU - WONG AND I~INISTRY C~F THE ATT~3RXtEY (~EN~RAL
EMPLOYEE NOMINEE: EDWARD E. SEYMOUR
D I S SENT
With respect: I must dissent from the ~ajority ~ward which grants
the adjo,lrnment in this case ~lnti! a decision is rendered in:
RE SEKHCN AND MINISTRY OF HEALTH G.S.B. NO. 4~"~3, chaired by
Vice-Chair ~. Sa!tman. In reaching its decision, the majority in
this case, cited RE ~LAK5 AND A~ALGAMATED TRANSIT UNION
G.S.B. NO. i275/'87 (Shime) as .justification for granting the
requested adjournment.
To proceed with this case, it was not necessary to overrule' the
decision of another panel because, at the time of the hearing into
~his matter no decisio~ was rendered.
As it currently stands, the granting of the adjournment has
resulted in unaecessary delay. The Saltman decision cannot prevent
the union from proceeding with this case. There. is nothing in the
Blake decision to prevent a party from submitting a case to the
GSB. I% only prevents contradictory rulings by the panel.
if this panel heard the merits of the case on the ~ay scheduled,
and reserved its ruling until the Saltman award was released, the
decision would not necessarily have been contradictory to that
award. Had this approach been taken, the grievor would at least
have known the results soon after the Saltman decision, win or
lose.
All ~s panel has done in granting this adjournment, is to
effeckiveiy delay a decision from being rendered. Having said
that, we are appreciative of the efforts by the majority to seek
for the grievor, a speedy hearing when the Saltman decision is
rendered.
At! of which is respectively submitted by,
E.lward E.