HomeMy WebLinkAbout2016-2306.Barrett.17-09-21 Decision
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB# 2016-2306
UNION# 2016-0219-0041
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Barrett) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Education) Employer
BEFORE Janice Johnston Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Indika Chandrasekara
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Omar Shahab
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING September 12, 2017
- 2 -
Decision
[1] At the hearing scheduled to deal with this matter, it was agreed that we would
proceed pursuant to the expedited process set out in Article 22.16 of the
collective agreement. It was agreed that I would issue brief reasons for my
decision and that this decision shall have no precedential value. Article 22.16
states in part:
22.16.2 The mediator/arbitrator shall endeavour to assist the parties
to settle the grievance by mediation. If the parties are unable to settle
the grievance by mediation, the mediator/arbitrator shall determine
the grievance by arbitration. When determining the grievance by
arbitration, the mediator/arbitrator may limit the nature and extent of
the evidence and may impose such conditions as he or she
considers appropriate. The mediator/arbitrator shall give a succinct
decision within five (5) days after completing proceedings, unless the
parties agree otherwise.
22.16.7 Decisions reached through the mediation/arbitration process
shall have no precedential value unless the parties agree otherwise.
[2] The issue in this case is the employer’s denial of the grievor’s request for Special
and Compassionate Leave pursuant to Article 49 of the Collective Agreement.
Article 49 reads:
ARTICLE 49 - SPECIAL AND COMPASSIONATE LEAVE
49.1 A Deputy Minister or his or her designee may grant an employee leave
of absence with pay for not more than three (3) days in a year upon special
or compassionate grounds.
49.2 The granting of leave under this article shall not be dependent upon or
charged against accumulated credits.
[3] The parties provided me with will say statements and some documentary
evidence. It was agreed that the documents and will says would form the basis
for any factual conclusions necessary to deal with the grievance.
- 3 -
[4] The will say provided by the grievor states:
1. I am currently on secondment as an Administrative Manager with the Ontario
Correctional College in Hamilton.
2. At all times relevant to the grievance, I was employed as a Student Support
Counsellor with the Provincial Schools Branch of the Ministry of Education,
working at W. Ross Macdonald School for the Blind in Brantford.
3. The W. Ross Macdonald School for the Blind is a community-based School
for students who are blind, visually impaired and deafblind.
4. As a Student Support Counsellor, my job duties included providing
supervision, guidance, intervention and instruction for students who are
blind, and/or visually impaired in planned and organized programs in a
residential setting and providing sound physical care and maintaining a
safe/secure environment for residential students. My job involved physical
work.
5. I was a Fixed Term unclassified employee. I worked 25 hours a week,
Monday to Thursday. As such, I did not have sick leave entitlements.
6. I underwent total hip-replacement surgery in or around November 11, 2015.
7. On October 6, 2016, I injured my hip. I had severe mobility issues and
excruciating pain in my hip area. As a result, I could not attend work for three
days on October 7, 11 and 12, 2016. I missed a staff training day on Friday,
October 7, 2016; school was closed thanksgiving weekend; I missed
Tuesday, October 11 and Wednesday, October 12, 2016. I missed 24 hours
of pay as a result.
8. I submitted two medical notes to substantiate the fact that I was unable to
attend work on these three days due to hip pain/medical issue.
9. I requested special and compassionate leave for the three day's absence.
10. I explained my situation and the financial difficulties I faced as a result of not
receiving pay for three days, to my Program Manager, Glenna Young.
11. Glenna Young suggested that if I could prove through my bank/financial
institution, that this unpaid absence caused me financial hardship, the
employer may grant me the special/compassionate leave.
12 I requested and received a bank statement indicating that my bank account
did not contain sufficient funds to make my mortgage payment that month,
and that the payment was made through my line of credit. However, I did not
provide the bank statement to the employer, because I felt that the employer
- 4 -
was being overly intrusive and feared that the employer would breach
confidentially.
13. The employer denied my request for special compassionate leave on or
about November 7, 2016.
14. I filed the attached grievance on December 5, 2016.
15. The Formal Resolution Stage meeting was held on February 23, 2017. The
Employer's position was:
1) No evidence of financial hardship;
2) My injury was not work related;
3) Superintendent denied the leave request;
16. This was a personal emergency and an unforeseeable circumstance. Losing
three day's pay caused me and my family much financial hardship. In
addition to not having money to make my mortgage payment, I now have to
pay interest on my line of credit withdrawal.
17. I believe the employer should have granted me special compassionate leave
for these three days, as this was an extenuating circumstance warranting
compassion.
[5] The will say provided on behalf of the employer by Ginette Faubert states:
1. I am currently the Superintendent at the Provincial Schools Branch with the
Ministry of Education. At all relevant times for this grievance, the Grievor
reported indirectly to me through his Residence Coordinator (Glenna Young)
and his Residence Manager (Emily Ricker).
2. The Grievor is employed in a fixed-term position as a Student Support
Counsellor at the provincial school at the W Ross MacDonald School for the
Blind in Brantford.
3. On October 20, 2016, the Grievor submitted a “Request for Leave of
Absence” form to request three Special and Compassionate Leave days with
pay to cover his absences on October 7, 11, and 12 (Attachment A). The
following written explanation was provided by the Grievor in the form:
I was off Friday, Oct 7, 2016, Tuesday Oct 11, 2016, and Wed Oct
12, 2016. I had hip replacement surgery Nov 11, 2015, I injured/
had physical trauma to my hip on Oct 6. Required a week to
recover and medical treatment to regain my mobility. Physician
notes submitted. Requesting Three Paid Special/Compassionate
days. No sick credits.
- 5 -
4. I understood that the request form was accompanied by two medical notes
indicating that the Grievor would be off work until October 17, 2016.
5. I was aware that on October 24, 2016, Ms. Young discussed the request for
paid special & compassionate days with the Grievor. I understood that the
Grievor had indicated that he will experience financial hardship, specifically
that he required the paid days to pay his mortgage. I further understood that
as follow-up to the conversation, Ms. Young emailed the Grievor on October
28, 2016 to request any related documentation on the financial hardship that
the Grievor stated he would suffer if he did not receive payment for his
absence (Attachment B).
6. I understood that the Grievor did not provide any documentation to support
his claim of financial hardship, despite the request by Ms. Young. When no
documentation was forthcoming from the Grievor, I directed Ms. Ricker to
respond to the Grievor to deny his request. The denial was communicated by
Ms. Ricker to the Grievor by email on November 7, 2016.
7. In making the decision to deny the request for paid special & compassionate
days, I reviewed the “Request for Leave of Absence” form and the
subsequent exchanges between Ms. Young and the Grievor. I considered the
following factors:
- A lack of attendance credits is not an automatic qualifier for
approval of special or compassionate leave. The situation,
regardless of credits, requires it to be above and beyond
regular illness or injury that most employees suffer. Employees
ought to know that when they run out of attendance credits,
anytime missed due to illness or injury will not be paid.
- The Grievor presented no evidence that his financial hardship
was different or above and beyond the financial hardship other
employees without credits would face.
8. In my view, the Grievor’s situation did not rise to the extraordinary
circumstances that would justify the granting of special & compassionate days
to extend sick leave benefits.
9. I understood that in response to Ms. Ricker’s email on November 7, 2016, the
Grievor sought information from Ms. Ricker as to why his request was denied.
In the subsequent exchanges, Ms. Ricker by email dated November 14, 2016
offered the Grievor another opportunity to provide any related documentation
that he would like the Employer to consider as part of his request (Appendix
C). As the Grievor did not provide any new documentation, I saw no reason to
reverse my earlier decision to deny the leave.
- 6 -
[6] The request for Special and Compassionate Leave was based on a medical
condition which rendered the grievor unable to work. The grievor claimed that
his inability to work and receive wages caused him to undergo financial hardship.
Therefore there were two reasons for the request. The grievor provided medical
documentation and the employer accepted the legitimacy of the injury suffered by
the grievor. The employer requested documentation to substantiate the grievor’s
claim that he would suffer financial hardship. Based on the grievor’s will say, it
appears that he did receive a bank statement but chose not to give it to his
employer “because I felt that the employer was being overly intrusive and feared
that the employer would breach confidentially.”
[7] Counsel for the Ministry argues that the employer asked for relevant information
from the grievor who refused to cooperate. In Stubbs and Ministry of Attorney
General GSB#2014-3674 (Dissanayake) in paragraph 10 of the decision VC
Dissanayake observed:
It must be noted that the leave under article 75 is at the discretion
of the employer, to be granted on “special and compassionate”
grounds. When requesting leave under article 75, it is up to the
employee to provide all information supporting the existence of
special/compassionate grounds. If it is not provided, the employer
is entitled to request for that information. When an employee
refuses or fails to do that, he/she does so at his/her own peril.
[8] I agree with this observation. Although in a sense the issue of financial hardship
is a secondary issue to the medical reason in this case, having raised it as a
justification for the request, the grievor must provide all available information to
justify reliance on this as a basis for the granting of the leave. He chose not to
and the employer denied the request based on the information it had before it.
[9] There is no dispute that the appropriate standard of review in this situation is
reasonableness. Based on the information before me, I cannot conclude that the
decision to deny compassionate leave was unreasonable.
- 7 -
[10] Accordingly, I am satisfied that there has been no breach of the collective
agreement and the grievance is hereby dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 21st day of September 2017.
Janice Johnston, Arbitrator