HomeMy WebLinkAbout1992-3715.Dyer.93-10-12
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~, ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ONTARIO
'>r GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
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SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREE:T WEEST SUITE: 2100, TORONTO, ONTARIO, M5G lZ8 TE:LEPHONEITELI~PHONE (416) 326-1388
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST BUREAU 2100 TORONTO (ONTARIO) M5G lZ8 FACSIMILE ITELECOPIE (416) 326-1396
3715/92
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Dyer)
Grievor \
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health) Employer
BEFORE G Charney Vice-Chairperson
FOR THE J storey
GRIEVOR Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
FOR.THE P Toop
EMPLOYER Employee Relations\bffic~r
Management Board Secretariat
HEARING September 27, 1993
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AWARD
The facts in this case are as follows. The grievor,
Dr. Anne Dyer, a psychologist at Whitby psychiatric Hospital,
requested a leave under Article 49.2 of the collective agreement to
attend a funeral, which was granted.
ARTICLE 49 - BEREAVEMENT LEAVE
49.1 An employee who would otherwise have been at
work shall be allowed up to three (3) days
leave-of-absence with pay in the event of the
death of his spouse, mother, father, mother-
in-law, father-in-law, son, daughter, stepson,
stepdaughter, brother, sister, son-in-law,
daughter-in-law, sister-in-law, brother-in-
law, grandparent, grandchild, ward or
guardian.
49.2 An employee who would otherwise have been at
work shall be allowed one (1) day leave-of-
absence with pay in the event of the death and
to attend the funeral of his aunt, uncle,
niece or nephew.
49.3 In addition to the foregoing, an employee who
would otherwise have been at work may be
allowed up to two (2) days leave-of-absence
without pay to attend the funeral of a
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relative listed in sections 49.1 and 49.2
above if the location of the funeral is
greater than eight hundred kilometers (800 km)
from the employee's residence.
The funeral ended at around 4:00 p.m. and together with her
father, she attended a family gathering. During this time it
started to snow and the grievor made a decision that the roads were
too dangerous/for her to drive that night
In the morning, she drove her father from Woodstock, the place
of the funeral, to orillia/ where her father lived. Her father has
bad eyesight and is not capable of driving himself or of taking
public transportation
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She then continued on to Whitby where she works.
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As a result, she missed six hours work and applies for
compassionate leave for that six hours under Article 55.1 of the
collective agreement.
ARTICLE 55 - SPECIAL & COMPASSIONATE LEAVE
55.1 A Deputy Minister of his designee may grant an
employee leave-of-absence with pay for not
more than three (3 ) days in a I year upon
special or compassionate grounds.
Her immediate supervisor first interviewed her and recommended
that she be granted the leave. It, was then handed to Mr. Sumner
who then passed it on to Mr Ballantyne who is the final decision
maker under 55.1 of the Act. The leave was turned down.
The employer turned the lea~e down for a number of reasons.
1) The Employer said that if a compassionate leave is granted in
conjunction with a leave under 49 it has to be for extraordinary
circumstances not the usual circumstances for which leave is
granted because that is, part of their policy.
2) That in all the circumstances in this case, namely that the
roads were passable the night before and she could have driven
them, and secondly, she could have come right to work the following
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morning, they would not grant compassionate leave.
The employer additionally argued that if they granted the
compassionate leave, she would be better off than an employee under
49.3 who had to travel more than 800 kilometres to a funeral who
would then only be granted a day off without pay
The employer I s legal position is that the decision maker
considered all the facts and the absence of a finding by this board
that his decision was arbitrary, discriminatory or in bad faith,
the case law supports the proposition that the board should not
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interfere with the employer's decision
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The u~ion's position is that in similar circumstances, namely
driving ) neighbour,
her father to the funeral of a this same
decision maker, in considering all the facts, granted her a leave, (
and in this case refused her a leave, which could only be as a
result of a knee-jerk policy reaction to not granting leaves in
connection with bereavement leave. Therefore, his decision is
arbitrary, and as a result is reviewable by the board.
It should be pointed out that in other cases cited to the
board in similar circumstances, Mr. Ballantyne was found to have
considered all of the facts including a case where there was a
bereavement leave followed by a request for a compassionate leave.
The union cites a number of cases that make it clear that the
decisions cannot be arbitrary and that the decision maker must
consider relevant facts. I agree that proposition is not be
doubted.
The employer cited the case of OPSEU (Dennis F. Mailloux) and
The Crown in Riqht of Ontario (Ministry of Correctional Services
(Picher), who says on pages 16 and 17,
That concern is prompted in part by the union in this
case, the thrust of which is that in a grievance of this J
kind the burden is upon the employer to establish that it
has conducted a full investigation, has considered all
relevant material, and has exercised his discretion in
keeping with the standards that govern the decision of
persons exercising statutory powers of decision.
In our view; the approach urged upon this board by the
union risks unduly judicializing decision making in the
day to day management of the employer's operations.
Acceptance of the union's approach would be perilously
tantamount to the requiring the employer to conduct an
inquiry, on quasi jUdicial lines, every time a request is
made by an employee which requires the exercise of the
employer's discretion. The consequence of such an
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approach should not be minimized. The exercise of
statutory powers of decisions and the making of decisions
by an employer in the contractual framework of a
collective agreement in the day-to-day operation of
enterprise, be it private or public, are two very
different things. The prospect of boards of arbitration
striking down management's decisions on the basis that an
officer or manager fail to conduct a SUfficiently
thorough investigation, asked himself or hers~lf the i
wrong question or misdirected himself or herself in some
material way, to borrow the well known phraseology of
administrative law, ris~s converting a collective
agreement into an instrument for management by
arbitrators. In our view such broad powers of review
should not be foupd unless they are supported by the (
clear terms of the collective agreement.
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I agree with the views above.
In result, I find that management made a decision that, though
I do not necessarily agree with, is not one which I can
legi timately review. I Allor most of the relevant factors were
considered and the decision maker decided not to grant
compassionate leave in part no doubt because compassionate leave
will not easily be granted in conjunction with bereavement leave
and that though the situation might have attracted a compassionate
leave in other circumstances, it is not a situation in which
management wished to exercise its discretion in favour of the
grievor.
In result then, the grievance is dismissed.
j DATED at Toronto this 121: h day of octobe~;/.
~W~
Gerald J. Charney, Vice-Chaipperson,