HomeMy WebLinkAbout2006-0325.Poirier.07-01-15 Decision
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas Sl. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission de
reglement des griefs
des employes de la
Couronne
Nj
~
Ontario
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tel. : (416) 326-1388
Telec. : (416) 326-1396
GSB# 2006-0325,2006-0326,2006-0377,2006-0378
UNION# 2005-0704-0006,2006-0704-0001, 2005-0704-0007, 2006-0704-0002
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
BETWEEN
BEFORE
FOR THE UNION
FOR THE EMPLOYER
TELEPHONE
CONFERENCE
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Poirier)
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ontario Clean Water Agency)
Owen V. Gray
Jim Gilbert
Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Simon Heath
Counsel
Ministry of Government Services
January 10,2007.
Union
Employer
Vice-Chair
2
Decision
[1] The grievor was disciplined on or about November 22, 2005. In December 2005
she filed two grievances: one alleged harassment and discrimination, the other alleged
that the grievor had been unjustly disciplined. In March 2006 the grievor filed a further
grievance alleging violation of Article 3, in that she had not been accommodated "under
'duty to accommodate' and the Ontario Human Rights Code." In an exchange of
correspondence with management in mid April 2006, the grievor said she would resign
with June 2, 2006 as her last day of work if the employer did not give her certain time
off, as vacation or otherwise. The employer responded by denying the time off and
purporting to accept the resignation effective the day it had been offered. The grievor
then filed a grievance alleging unjust dismissal. The employer says it was entitled to
accept the grievor's resignation with immediate effect and that, accordingly, there was
no dismissal.
[2] Having agreed that all these grievances shall be heard together in some fashion,
the parties were in dispute about the order of proceeding at hearing (should mediation
fail) and had difficulty with their requests for a pre- med-arb exchange of particulars
and productions.
[3] Having regard to the nature of the issues and the history of these proceedings to
date, I direct that each of the parties provide the other with full written particulars of
the allegations of fact on which it relies in these matters. Each party shall also provide
the other with copies of any documents in its possession, custody or power (and, in the
case of the union, any document in the possession, custody or power of the grievor) on
which that party may wish to rely in these proceedings.
[4] With respect to each act or omission alleged, each party's particulars shall
indicate what was done or not done, when, where, by what means and by whom.
Conclusory statements based on unparticularized allegations of fact are not sufficient.
The allegations of fact set out in a party's particulars should be sufficiently
comprehensive that it would be unnecessary for that party to call any evidence at
arbitration if the opposite party were to admit that all of the allegations of fact therein
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were true. It is not necessary for a party to include in its particulars a description of the
evidence by which it will seek to prove any of the allegations of fact set out. It is not
necessary for a party to identify in its particulars any witness to an event in question,
unless the presence of that individual is a material fact on which the party relies.
[5] The union's particulars shall set out the remedies sought with respect to each of
the gnevances. Except as to the bifurcated issues described in the balance of this
paragraph, the union's particulars shall include any allegations of fact on which it
intends to rely in support of its claim for those remedies. The parties agree that the
issues in dispute will be bifurcated, in that issues relating solely to the amount of
compensation claimed in respect of any loss of wages and benefits caused by allegedly
will not be addressed in these proceedings unless and until the issue of liability to pay
compensation is determined. Accordingly, the parties are not required to include in
their particulars any allegations of fact on which they may wish to rely solely on the
issue of compensation and any related issue of mitigation, or to produce documents on
which they may wish to be able to rely solely with respect to those deferred issues. (The
parties should, however, be prepared to discuss those issues in the mediation phase of
this med-arb proceeding.)
[6] The aforesaid particulars and productions shall be delivered in accordance with
the following agreed -upon timetable:
a) On or before 5:00 p.m., Friday, January 26, 2007, the employer shall
deliver to the union's representative particulars of the facts on which it
will rely in its case-in-chief on the unjust discipline grievance and the
grievance alleging unjust dismissal, and copies of any documents upon
which it may wish to rely in that respect.
b) On or before 5:00 p.m., Friday, March 2, 2007, the union shall deliver to
employer counsel particulars that
1. with respect to the allegations in the particulars delivered by the
employer pursuant to paragraph a), identify the allegations with
which the union agrees, if any, and the allegations with which it
disagrees and, as to the allegations with which it disagrees, the
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version of the facts on which it relies in that connection, and set out
its allegations of fact with respect to any other issue it proposes to
raise with respect to its grievances about the discipline and alleged
dismissal; and,
ll. set out the allegations of fact on which the union will rely in its
own case-in-chief on the harassment and failure to accommodate
gnevances,
together with copies of any documents upon which the union may wish to
rely in those respects.
c) On or before 5:00 p.m., Monday, March 19, 2006, the employer shall
deliver to the union's representative particulars that
1. with respect to issues first raised by the union in response to the
employer's particulars of its case-in-chief on the discipline and
alleged dismissal grievances, set out any additional allegations of
fact on which it may wish to rely in reply in respect of those issues,
and
ll. with respect to the allegations in the particulars delivered by the
union with respect to its case-in-chief on the other grievances,
identify the allegations with which it agrees, if any, and the
allegations with which it disagrees and, as to the allegations with
which it disagrees, the version of the facts on which it relies in that
connection, and set out its allegations of fact with respect to any
other issue it proposes to raise with respect to the other grievances,
together with copies of any (additional) documents upon which the
employer may wish to rely in those respects.
d) On or before 5:00 p.m., Friday, March 30, 2007, the union shall deliver to
employer counsel particulars setting out any additional allegations of fact
on which it may wish to rely in reply on issues first raised by the
employer in response to the union's particulars of its case-in-chief on the
5
other grievances, together with copies of any (additional) documents upon
which the union may wish to rely in that respect.
[7] The deadlines specified in this order may be varied by written agreement of the
union and employer.
[8] A party who fails to produce a document or to provide particulars of an
allegation in accordance with this order may not introduce that document or present
evidence about that allegation in the arbitration of these grievances without leave.
[9] The provisions of this order with respect to production of documents do not
preclude further application by either party, once the issues in dispute have been defined
in accordance with those directions, for an order requiring the production by the opposite
party of documents it does not produce in accordance with the foregoing directions.
Dated at Toronto this 15th day of January, 2007.