HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-1978.Marinelli.90-10-11 .. '. ONTA,qlO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
~ : CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ONTARIO
....... GRIEYANCE C,OMMISSlON DE
SE'I-I'LEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
?,~0, ;RUE DUNDAS OUEST, ~UREAU 2 lO0, TO~IOhlTO (ONTARIOJ. MS~ tZ8 FACS.~t~4'~E/T~-LECOP~E · 14 ~6) 3£6- ~396
1978/89
IN THE MATTER OF ~%N ARBITRATION
Un,er
THE C~OWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Marinelli)
~rievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Natural Resources)
Employer
BEFORE: B.-.Kirkwood Vice-Chairperson J. C. Laniel Member
D. Montrose Member
FOR THE R. Blair
~RIEVOR Counsel
Cavalluzzo, Hayes & Lennon
Barristers & Solicitors -
FOR THE M. Farson
EMPLOYER- .. Counsel
Fraser &'Beatty
Barristers & Solicitors
HEARIN~ June 27, 1990
Page 2
INTERIM DECISION
The Grievance Form stated the'grievance as follows:
I grieve that the employer is violating the
collective agreement by its negative treatment of
me.
The settlement desired was stated as:
That I be treated in the same manner as any other
employee and be allowed to Perform the full range
of duties of my position.
During the course of the grievance procedure the
Union and the grievor reviewed 18 incidents which formed the
grievor's allegations of his negative treatment. The basis
of the Union's position during the grievance procedure, as
presented by the Ministry and not disputed by the Union, was
that the grievor was being discriminated against by the
incidents, which included, allegations of improper work
assignment.
During the grievance procedure, the Ministry took
the position that many of the incidents were inarbitrable and
asked the Union for the particulars upon which it would be
relying.
The Union informed the Ministry of its position, on
Friday June 22, 1990, three working days prior to the
hearing, by letter stating:
Further to your request for particulars in this
matter, we can inform you that the position of the
union will be that the assignment to Mr. Marinelli
to his current duties, which was announced on
December 4, 1989, constitutes a disciDlinary
demotion for which there was no just cause. Mr.
Marinelli was informed on December I1, 1989, that
the assignment was the result of his alleged
inability to work with other people. In the
Page 3
alternative, should the matter not be considered
disciplinary, it is our position that in any event
the reorganization resulting in the assignment and
the assignment itself were not a bona fide exercise
of a management right, and were improper and
discriminatory treatment of the grievor.
At the outset of the hearing, the Ministry's
counsel objected to the scope of the grievance set out in the
Union's letter of June 22, 1990. She alleged that the ~Union
was attempting to alter the grounds of the grievance from
discrimination ih the 'Ministry's assignment of duties to
unjust demotion.'
The Ministry's counsel argued that although the
assignment of dut'ies was one of the 18 incidents referred to
above., both parties had proceeded through the gri~vanc~
procedure discussing changes to the ggievor"s duties, but not
changes to his position.
The Minis~rY's counsel submitted that the new
grounds ought not to form part o~ the grievance and the
grievance ought to be restricted to the ground's set out in
the grievance form. -In'support of her position, she relied-
on the cases of Q.P.S.E.U, (MacPherson) and The Crown in
R{ght of Ontario (Ministry of Community And Social Se'r¥~ces)
G.S.B. #83/84 (Brandt) and O.T..g.~:U.{Gwi~) and ThD Crown JiB'
R~ht o~ D~tar{o ~.i~uor Control Ro~rd of Ontarib) G.S.B.
27/83 (DraPer). "
The Union'~ counsel also 'c~aracterized the dispute
as a dispute over whether the employer~acted properly in. the
assignment of duties to the grievor. He stated that the
grievor perceived that the assignment of duties had a
negative impact upon him.
He argued however, .that the groun~ of discipline
was included in the original grievance and was not an
Page 4
enlargement of the grievance. He submitted that that the
circumstances relied on are the same, and the remedy, bo get
back the grievor's duties is substantially the same.
The Union's counsel argued that whether discipline
ca~ be raised is a procedural and not a substantive matter.
He submitted that it is merely a difference in the
characterization of the facts.
The Union relied on the Re B]ou~n ~rywai]
ContractOrs ?.t~= and Uqited Brot~herhoop O~ Carpenters and
Joiners. Local 2{~6 8 0.R. (2d) 104, R~. United Steelworkers,
T.o~ 3998 and Dunh~~Bush (Canada~ Ltd. 15 L.A.C. 270
(Lang), Re International ~or~ers Qf America and Canadian
GyDsum Co. Ltd. 19 L.A.C. 341 (Weiler), Be El~ctrohome Ltd.
and Internat~°~a] Bro~erhoo~ of Electrical. Workers, I.o'ca]
~ 16 L.A.C. (3d) 78 (Rayner), Be ~arvey Woods Tran~or%
~d~ and Teamsters Union. Local 141 15 L.A.C. (2d) 140
(Weatheritl), O.~.S.~.U. (Price. JohDs, !.eigh) and The Crow~
~n R~ght of Ontario {~nis. try of Community ~nd Social
Serv4c~) G.S.B. 25/81 (Verity), O.P~S.K.U. (Thadan~) and ~
CrQwn in R~ght of Ontario (Ministry of Revenue) G.S.B.
1686/87, 1688/87, 1689/87 (Saltman), O.P.S.~.U. CRoxborough)
and The Crqwn 4n R~ght of Ontario (M~nistry of Community ~n~
Social Servicesl G.S.B. 1289/87 (Samuel), O.P~S.E.U~ (T~lor-
R~tiste) and T.he Crown ].n Righ~ of Ontario (Ministry o~
~orrection~] Services) G.S.B. 0163/87 (Kennedy) cases.
The Court of Appeal in the Blouin (supra) decision
articulated the Court's perspective of the approach to be
taken by boards of arbitration.
Mr. Justice Brooke stated at page 108:
...No doubt it is the practice that grievances be
submitted in writing and. that the dispute be
clearly stated, but these cases should not be won
Page 5
or lost on the technicality of form, rather on the
merits and as provided in the contract and so the
dispute may be finally and fairly resolved.
When a board of arbitration ks satisfied on the
evidence, that a party to a collective agreement is
in breach thereof, it is the board's obligation to
-render its decision accordingly. However, that
decision is~ not simply a statement of the finding
of the board with respect to the allegation made in
the grievance.,' but is a consequential order or
award, if.any, that is required to give effect to
the agreement. Certainly the board is bound by the
grievance before it but the' grievance should be
liberally construed §o that the real complaint is
dealt with and the appropriate remedy provided 'to
give affect to the agreement.provisions, and this
whether by way of declaration of rights or duties,
in Order to provide benefits or performance of
obligation or a monetary 'award required to restore
one to the proper position he would have been in
had the agreement been performed.
The Canadian Gypsum (supra) case applied the same
approach as the Court in the Blouin (supra) 'de~ision, and
allowed the company tO argue at the arbitration that it had
just cause.to discharge the grievor, when a{'~he'first "~tage
of the grievance procedure the company had characterized'the
circumstances as a "quit" by' the employee. However, Mr.
Weiler emphasized the importance that the parties be made
aware of the issues that are before them as early as
possible. He stated at page 34'6:
...there must be a duty .imposed on each party to
disclose the factual grouqds, and legal bases, on
which it proposes to rely as soon as they can
reasonably be discovered and advanced.
~ · Arbitrator Rayner-in the ~lectrohome (supra).
decision adopted the ~Qui~ appro.ach, but pointed out that
the parties' rights to resolve issues between them through
the grievance procedure is endangered by expanding a
grievance to' include new grounds to be heard at the. hearing.
Page 6 ~ o
Arbitrator Rayner stated at page 82 of the
decision:
...If the issue raised at the arbitration hearing
is in fact part of the original grievance, a board
of arbitration should not deny itself jurisdiction
based on a technical objection as to the scope of
the original grievance. To do so would be to deny
the value of flexibility and would be to compel the
parties to draft their grievances with the nicety
of pleadings. On the other hand, if the issue
raised by one of the parties is not inherent in the
original grievance, for the. board to permit the
party to raise that i~sue as part of the original
grievance would be to deny the parties the benefit
of the grievance procedure in an attempt to resolve
the issue between themselves. In fact, it would be
to permit one party to substitute a new grievance
for the original grievance.
The principle espoused in the Blouin decision has
not been interpreted and applied so that any issue that may
involve the same facts is to be heard by the board of
arbitration formed to resolve the original issue. Although
boards of arbitration have adopted a flexible approach to the
subject matter before them in order that the real dispute
between the parties can be resolved, as in the Du~ham-~ush
(supra) case, many boards have limited the scope of the
hearing to the subject matter outlined in the grievance.
(M~cPherson, (supra) ~in (supra), Electrohome (supra)
decisions.) In other words, as Arbitrator Saltman stated the
issue in the Th~d~[ (supra) case, are there new grounds
raised.
The Board is of the opinion that we should not
apply an overly technical approach to the arbitration process
in order tha't the issues between the parties can be dealt
with. However, at the same time: we must honour the
collective agreement that the parties have entered into and
not allow that parties to circumvent the grievance procedure,
which is allows the parties to resolve fssues between
Page 7
themselves without third party intervention. As a result, we
must consider whether the characterization_of the issues as
suggested by the Union,. is inherent in the grievance or do~s
it raise a new ground.
The original ~rievance indicated that the grievor
was receiving allegedly negative treatment. The relief
sought was the return of duties which the grievor had
previously performed. The allegation 'which flows from the
~ statement of the grievance and from the relief sought is that'
the Ministry was not assigning duties to the grievor
properly. Both the Ministry and the Union agreed that was an
issue.
The Union claimed that the facts also support the
claim that the grievor was unjustly demoted.
We find that the' claim of unjust demotion is not
inherent in a claim of improper work assignment which
constituted alleged negative treatment. Discipline suggests
that the grievor had done something wrong for which he was
being, penalized. There was no allegation made by the Union
at any time that the Ministry had unjUstly found the grievor
committing a wrong for which he was being sanctioned.
The Union's present .claim is contradictory to the
remedy sought in the grievance form. 'A demotion goes beyond
the reassignment to prior duties, as it involves a return to
a prior position which includes ~the return to prior duties.
In this grievance, the grievor sought to ~egain the ability
to do the full range of duties of his Position, but there was
no suggestion in the grievance form, nor ~ven in argument
that the grievor lost his position.
The Union is therefore seeking- not only a
procedural change in the process, but a substantive change to
Page
the grounds. The grievance on its face places the onus on
the union to prove that the grievor suffered discrimination
and the employer acted improperly. The affect of presenting
a claim for unjust discipline is to shift the onus to the
employer to prove that the Ministry did not unjustly demote
the grievor. If the board was to find that unjust demotion
was incorporated within the claim of negative treatment, the.
Board would in effect be changing the onus from the Union to
the Ministry.
In our view, although the grievance is not to be
technically construed as would a pleading in a civil
litigation, in order that the real issue between the parties
can be resolved, the grievance still must determine the scope
of the issues that are to be brought before the Board.
Therefore, a matter which is inherent to the original
grievance can be raised at the hearing, but not a new issue.
We find that the claim now presented that the grievor was
unjustly demoted is a separate claim from the original claim
of negative treatment.
The converse situation arose in the MacPherson
case. The grievance had proceeded on the basis that the work
assigned was disciplinary and the Union sought to raise an
alternative position at the hearing that the assignment was
improper. The Board did not allow the alternative argument
to be raised, but limited the Union to the grounds set out in
the original grievance.
Similarly, in the Gwin (supra) decision, the Union
abandoned its claim that the grievor had been disciplined
without just cause and wished to proceed on the dispute
between the parties on attendance credits, which it said was
the basis of the grievance, although 'it was not referred to
in the grievance. The Board did not allow this argument on
the basis that the grievance as initially stated and
" · . Page 9 ~-
proceeded upon through the~ grievance procedure defined the
nature and the scope of the grievance, and held that the
request 'by the union ~fundamentally altered the original
grievance, as it raised different issues.
Furthermore, unlike the Canadian GyPsum case and
the glectrohome case, the Union did not make the Ministry
aware of its position until shortly before the hearing. Some
matters can be accommodated by granting an adjournment in
order that the parties can be prepared to meet an unexpected
matter, but in this case, an adjournment will not allow the'
parties to use the grievance procedure to attempt to resolve
a substantive issue.
Therefore the Board holds that the preliminary
objection is uph'eld. The arbitration on the merits of the
grievance shall be continued on dates to be set by the
Registrar.
Dated at Toronto, this ilch day of 0c~ober , 1990.
B. A. Kirkwood, Vicechairperson
J , Member
D. Montrose, ~4ember