HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-1009JOLY98_09_02
ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ONTARIO
_ _ GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST SUITE 600, TORONTO ON M5G 1Z8 TELEPHONE/TELEPHONE (416) 326-1388
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST BUREAU 600, TORONTO (ON) M5G 1Z8 FACS/MILE/TELECOPIE (416) 326-1396
GSB # 1009/97
OPSEU 97E024
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontano Pubhc ServIce Employees Umon
(Manus Joly)
Gnevor
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The Crown m RIght of Ontano
(Mimstry of the SohcItor General and CorrectIOnal ServIces)
Employer
BEFORE RIchard Brown Vice-ChaIr
FOR THE LIse Leduc
GRIEVOR Counsel
Carolme Engelmann Gottheil
Bamsters & SohcItors
FOR THE Andre Champagne
EMPLOYER Counsel
Emond Harnden
Bamsters & SolIcItors
HEARING August 21,25, 26, 1998
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The umon contends the employer's treatment of Manus Joly contravened
artIcle 3.2 of the collectIve agreement winch states
There shall be no mscnmmatIon or harassment practIced by reason of
an employee's memberslnp or actIVlty m the umon.
The WrItten gnevance, dated May 9, 1997, reads as follows
I, Manus Joly, gneve that I am bemg a VlCtIm of mscnmmatIon and
harassment contrary to the collectIve agreement. There shall be no
mscnmmatIon or harassment practIced on employees solely because of
bemg actIve or bemg a member m the uruon (3.2) WorkIng m a pOlson
envrronment, bemg the VlCtIm of abuse of power for years IS seen, felt
and called "mental cruelty"
I need to speak out and be heard by government offiCials, who
really should want and need to be aware of what happened exactly I
want to meet WIth R. RunclIDan. N McKerrell, L.D DIpalma, D
Newman, A. Roberts, B Roy and R. LaVOIe FURTHERMORE I
definItely will need to be compensated for all past, present and future
emotIOnal pam and suffenng due to the dtscnmmatlOn, harassment and
bemg completely Ignored for the past years by everybody m the cham
of command.
The employer ralsed a prehmmary objectIon to the tImehness of the
gnevance Counsel agreed tins Issue should be deCIded based only upon Mr
Joly's eVldence Insofar as the Issue of tImelmess IS concerned, employer
counsel elected not to cross-examme the gnevor Employer counsel contends
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hIs eVIdence demonstrates the gnevance should be dIsrmssed as untnnely A
snmmary ofMr Joly's testunony and supportmg documents IS set out below
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Manus Joly began workmg as a correctional officer at the L'Ongnal Jail ill
October of 1980 He resIgned ill the summer of 1985 and was rehrred one
month later The gnevor contmued to work as a correctional officer until he
went on sIck leave ill August of 1996 He has been under the care of a
psycInatnst ever Sillce Sometune ill 1989, Mr Joly was elected to a two-year
term as a umon steward. While Ins testmlOny suggests he held tlns posItion
agam after the exprration of Ins first term, the eVIdence does not dIsclose
precIsely when he was re-elected or for how long.
Mr Joly testIfied about how he was treated by two supervIsors In
1980, he was ordered by one supervIsor to dellver a food tray, Wlth cutlery
and chma, to an mmate who had slashed Ins wnsts Wlth an ashtray the
preVIous day The gnevor compIled under protest and the mmate used the
spoon ill an attempt to remove Ins stitches. In 1992, the same supervIsor
illstructed Mr Joly to accompany an mmate to the hOSpItal Wlthout asSIstance
from a second correctional officer A gnevance was filed and settled, Wlth an
expreSSlOn of regret by management, on the understandmg all future escorts
would be ill accordance Wlth Mimstry pollcy In 1994, the same supervIsor
completed Mr Joly's performance and plannmg reVIew He gneved and the
assessment was reVIsed to ills satisfaction. As to the supervIsor's motive, Mr
Joly testIfied. "He doesn't like me I don't know why I thmk It IS because of
the umon."
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Mr Joly smd another supervIsor gave bun a "hard tune" from 1980
onwards. The first performance apprmsal done by tins supervIsor, at an
unspecIfied date, caused the gnevor to "file a complamt" In 1983, the
supervIsor failed to respond to Mr Joly's request for assIstance when he
dIscovered an mmate hangmg m a cell. From May 8 to May 25, 1988, the
gnevor kept 11 log detailing ills mteractIOn WIth tins supervIsor Mr Joly sent
a wntten complamt to the Supenntendent, Robert Lacombe, on June 3, 1989
As a result, the supervIsor was drrected to take a course on human relatIons
Matters dId not lll1prove from the gnevor's perspectIve In November of
1990, tins supervIsor demed Mr Joly's request for vacatIOn, on the ground
two officers should not be on holIday at the same tune Documents showmg
tins had occurred m the past were subnntted by the gnevor to the
Supenntendent, but to no avail. In 1993 or 1994, the supervIsor m questIon
was mvolved m an altercatIon WIth another supervIsor An mvestIgator was
appomted to deal WIth tins mCIdent, whereas no such appomtment was made
to address the gnevor's concerns.
Mr Joly testrfied that labour relatIons at the Jail were "very bad" by
1989 In December of 1988, he had requested a leave of absence for one
year He wanted to work elsewhere m order to mcrease ills earmngs and
resolve ills finanCIal c:hfficultIes His request was demed m February of 1989
Also m 1989 Mr Joly had concerns about the smokmg polIcy at
L'Ongnal Jail. In April he asked to be allowed to smoke when workmg alone
m the arr condItIoned control module The Supenntendent suggested he wnte
to the Deputy MinIster The Deputy replIed the matter was for Mr Lacombe
to deCIde It appears permISSIOn to smoke m the control module was never
r" granted. CorrectIonal officers, mcludmg Mr Joly, were repnmanded for
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smokIng ill the mfirmary, even though the doctor smoked there The doctor
stopped smokmg shortly after Mr Joly complamed about unequal treatment.
When protectIve custody mmates performed constructIon work at the
Jail sometnne ill 1989, Mr Joly objected on the grounds tins actIVIty put the
pnsoners, staff and general pubhc at nsk. His objectIon went unheeded.
In 1990, the MimstIy of CorrectIonal ServIces conducted an
operatIonal reVIew of the L'Ongnal Jail, The resultIng report records that
seven of thrrteen correctIonal officers rated staff-management relatIons as
below average, four ass1gned a ratIng of average and three ass1gned a ratIng
of above average
In June and July of 1993, Mr Joly wrote three memos to management
about dtfficultIes encountered ill the scheduhng of mmates to work ill the
latchen. Matters eventually unproved as a result of weekly meetmgs held to
address the problem.
Mr Joly wrote to Mr Lacombe ill January of 1995 about a failure to
screen mmates WlShmg to attend AA meetIngs, a shortcommg whtch the
gnevor feared would result ill the cancellatton of the AA program at the Jail.
The memo went unanswered.
On May 14, 1996, ill the wake of the OPSEU strike, Mr Joly rece1ved
the followmg memo from Maureen Martmsen, then a supefVlsor at the Jail.
Please be adVIsed that any comments derogatory refemng to the recent
strike 1S agamst the return to work agreement. Today's Chppillg makes
reference to pUIllshmg the "scabs" whtch 1S posted on the UIllon board.
Any further derogatory ChppillgS posted will result ill the
removal of the UIllon board. Thts 1S none dtSC1phnary ill nature
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On June 16, 1996, Mr Joly wrote to Mr Lacombe complammg about
the safety hazard posed by telephone access not berng available to
correctional officers After Mr Joly's complamt, the SItuation was rectrfied.
Accordmg to hun, Mr Lacombe had preVIously objected to telephone calls
made by the local umon presIdent.
A letter dated August 8, 1996, sIgned by most of the correctional
officers at the Jail, was sent to the SohcItor General. The letter states labour
relations had sunk to "an all tune low" and attributes the problem to the
Supenntendent. The correcbonal officers also filed a group gnevance dated
October 9, 1996 The remedy sought was "that management exerCIses Its
nghts rn a reasonable and non-iliscnmmatory manner towards members of the
bargammg umt." A document detailing the specIfic complamts underlymg the
group gnevance refers to four correctional officers, all umon OffiCIalS at some
pornt, who were currently on SIck leave for stress The entry about the gnevor
reads as follows "former uruon steward--basIcally a good hearted guy that
Just cracked under the pressure and frustratIOn."
On November 8, the AsSIstant DIStrIct AdmImstrator, Mr R. LaVOIe,
met With several correcbonal officers and theIr OPSEU representatIve to
iliscuss the group gnevance The gnevor, who was on SIck leave, ilid not
receIve notice of tIns meetrng until a few days after It occurred. By letter
dated November 13, Mr LaVOIe proposed the estabhshment of a umon-
management cOID.llllttee to address the employees' concerns Two uruon
stewards objected to Mr Lacombe servmg as a member of tIns cOID.llllttee,
but Mr LaVOIe lllltIally rnsIsted on the Supenntendent's parbCIpation.
However, rn February of 1997 Mr Lacombe was reassIgned to a post outsIde
r the L' Ongnal Jail.
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In April of 1997, Mr loly learned that Robert Ranger, another
correctIonal officer, had been granted a one-year leave of absence ill 1995 (It
appears Mr Ranger d1d not actually take the leave) Leammg someone else
had been granted the type of leave demed to the gnevor prompted lnm to file
the gnevance at hand. Mr loly ralsed the matter WIth IDS supervIsor on May
1, 1997 and filed the wntten gnevance on May 9
II
The relevant tIme Inmt IS found ill artIcle 22.2 1 of the collectIve agreement:
It IS the mutual deSIre of the partIes that complamts of employees be
adjusted as qUlckly as possible and It IS llilderstood that If an employee
has a complamt, the employee shall discuss it with the employee's
immediate supervisor withm thzrty (30) days after the circumstances
giving rise to the complaint have occurred or have come or ought
reasonably to have come to the attention of the employee ill order to
gIve the nnmechate supervIsor an opportumty of adJustmg the
complamt. (emphasIs added)
Mr loly chscussed IDS complamt WIth lus supervIsor on May 1, 1997
DId tlus chscusslOn occur WIthm the penod of tlurty days specIfied by
artIcle 22.2 I? All of the events about wluch Mr loly complams occurred far
more than tlurty days before May 1, 1997 Some happened as early as 1980
and none happened later than August of 1996 when he went on SIck leave In
short, the CIrcumstances gIvmg nse to the gnevor's complamt occurred more
than tlurty days before he d1scussed the gnevance WIth lus supervIsor
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TIns observatIon does not end my mqurry under artIcle 22.2 1 The test
estabhshed by that artIcle takes account not only of when events occurred but
also of when they came, or should have come, to the attentIon of a gnevor
F or tins gnevance to be tnnely, the eVIdence must demonstrate that the
CIrcumstances gIVlllg nse to the complamt chd not come, and ought not
reasonably t6 have come, to Mr loly's attentIOn until sometnne WIthm thuty
days of the date when he chscussed the matter WIth Ins superVIsor
Mr Joly rehes upon one pIece of mformatIon obtaIned dunng tIns
tlnrty-day penod. On April 17, 1997, the gnevor learned that Robert Ranger
had been granted a one-year leave of absence m 1995 If the grantIng of leave
to Mr Ranger, coupled With the demal ofleave to Mr Joly, was a VIolation
of the collectlve agreement, alone or m even m combmatlon WIth other
events, at least part of the gnevance llllght be rendered tImely by what the
gnevor learned m April of 1997 Conversely, IT the way leave requests were
handled chd not contravene the agreement m any way, the entrre gnevance IS
untImely
DId the employer's treatment of leave requests VIolate artIcle 3.2 of the
collective agreement? The eVIdence does not estabhsh exactly when m 1989
Mr Joly became a steward, but he conceded Ins election to tins post may
have occurred after Ins leave request was demed m February Moreover, Mr
Ranger also served as a urnon steward at some unspecIfied tIme Both of
these correctional officers were members of the umon. Accordmgly, It can not
be SaId that the demal of leave to Mr Joly and the grantIng of leave to Mr
Ranger was m any sense "chscnmmatIon or harassment practiced by reason of
an employee's membersmp or aCtiVIty m the umon." Accordmgly, the
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mformatIon obtaIned by Mr Joly ill April of 1997 cannot render hIs gnevance
tnnely
In summary, the gnevance was not lodged WIthIn the thrrty-day penod
specIfied ill artIcle 22.2 1
ill
Dmon couns'el urges me to extend the tnne lnmt found ill the collectIve
agreement by utihzmg the dIscretIonary power conferred upon me by s
48(16) of the Labour Relations Act, 1995 The dual cntena to be applIed
under that sectIon are the eXIstence of reasonable grounds for an extenslOn
and the absence of substantIal prejudIce to the party OpposIte
The factors to be consIdered ill detenmnmg whether there are
reasonable grounds for an extenslOn were addressed by Mr Burkett ill Becker
Milk Co and Teamsters Union (1978), 19 L.A.C (2d) 217
These are (i) the reason for the delay gIVen by the offendmg party; (Ii)
the length of the delay; and (ui) the nature of the gnevance If the
offendmg party satIsfies the arbItrator, notwIthstandmg the delay, that It
acted WIth due diligence, then If there has been no prejudIce the
arbItrator should exerCIse hIs dIscretIon ill favour of extendmg the tnne-
lnmts If, however, the offendmg party has been neglIgent or otherWIse
to blame for the delay, eIther ill whole or ill part, the arbItrator must
nevertheless consIder the second and thrrd factors referred to above ill
decIdmg whether reasonable grounds eXIst for an extenslOn of the tnne
lnmts (page 220)
ThIs decIslOn was CIted WIth approval and followed ill Corp of City of
Toronto and Canadlan Union of Pub lie Employees (1990), 17 L.A.C (4th)
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420 (Spnngate) and Ferranti-Packard Transformers Ltd and United
Steelworkers of America (1993),36 L.A.C (4th) 307 (Haefung) The tune
lumt was extended ill all of these cases
The reason for delay advanced by counsel for the umon IS that Mr Joly
was not aware until April of 1997 that Mr Ranger's request for leave had
been granted ill 1995 As I already have determmed the treatment of leave
requests lid not contravene the collectIve agreement, tlus reason does not
asSIst the gnevor Employer counsel contends the real reason why the gnevor
delayed was to see whether he was satIsfied WIth the resolutIon of the group
gnevance filed ill the fall of 1996 Whatever the gnevor's true motIve, the
UIllon has not advanced any reason for the delay weIghmg m lus favour
As to the length of the delay, the events about wluch Mr Joly
complams happened between 1980 and August of 1996, but the gnevance
was not liscussed WIth lus supefV1sor until May 1, 1997 Dmon counsel
argues that, where liscnmmatIon or harassment takes the form of a course of
conduct, there IS no smgle moment when the gnevance crystallizes and tIme
begms to run. While I agree tune may not run from the first event m a course
of conduct, It does start to run no later than the last event m the senes In tlus
case, the last event occurred no later than August of 1996 As Mr Joly lid
not approach lus supefV1sor until May of 1997, the delay IS at least ten
months
The grounds for extendIng a tIme lnmt are not as strong m tlus case as
they were ill the cases cIted by umon counsel where an extensIOn was
granted. The facts m Becker Milk and City of Toronto are sunilar to those at
hand ill one sense--no compellmg reason for delay eXIsted there or here
However, those cases are dIfferent than thIs one ill two sIgmficant respects
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(1) the gnevors there had been dIscharged, and (2) and the delay was only
three weeks ill Becker Milk and seven weeks ill City of Toronto Ferranti-
Packard also illvolved a dIscharge gnevance The delay of tlnrteen months ill
that case was longer than the delay here, but Mr Haeflmg thought the gnevor
may have had a valId reason for Waltmg so long. She had ceased workmg
because of an illJury and thought she mIght be offered modrlied work ill the
future
The cases cIted by the umon where a tune lnmt was extended mIght be
contrasted WIth Bakery Glaco and Canadian Association of Automobile
workers (1991),21 L.A.C (4th) 265 (Waman) where a dIscharge gnevance
was filed four and one-half months late and the uruon offered no explanation
for the delay GIVen the length of the delay and the absence of any excuse or
JustlficatIon, ArbItrator Waman refused to extend the contractuallnmtatIOn
penod, even though the gnevor had been chscharged. The grounds for
extendmg a tune lnmt ill the illStant case are weaker than those ill Bakery
Glaco because Mr Joly has not been dISmIssed and he delayed at least ten
months ill filmg ills gnevance
Tlns analysIs leads me to conclude no extenSIOn should be granted of
the tlme lnmt contaIned ill artIcle 22.2 1 The gnevance IS chsnnssed,
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RIchard M. Brown, Vice-Charr
Ottawa, Ontano
September 2, 1998
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