HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013-3363.Davis.17-11-20 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#2013-3363
UNION# 2013-0527-0047
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Davis) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Citizenship and Immigration) Employer
BEFORE Daniel A. Harris Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Avril Dymond
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Benjamin Parry
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
HEARING DATES June 18, 2015, July 11, December 9, 2016,
January 19 and July 10, 2017
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DECISION
[1] These matters include allegations by the Union (OPSEU) arising from a
grievance dated October 18, 2013 that the grievor, Arlene Davis, has been
harassed and discriminated against by her employer, the Ministry of Citizenship
and Immigration and International Trade. Her claims rest on various heads of the
Ontario Human Rights Code. She has testified that she has been denied various
career progression opportunities, despite her years of loyal service to the Ontario
Public Service. Her allegations also include that under a new manager she had
her responsibilities diminished to the point of what the common law would
characterize as constructive dismissal. Further, the union alleges that these
purported actions of the employer have damaged her mental health.
[2] The hearing into these matters began on June 18, 2015 with an attempt to
mediate a solution, which efforts bore no fruit. A further mediation attempt by a
different Vice-Chair of the Grievance Settlement Board (GSB) was also
unsuccessful.
[3] The hearing continued on July 11, 2016, with opening statements and the
commencement of the grievor’s examination-in-chief. The examination-in-chief
continued on December 9, 2016 and continued on January 19, 2017. The cross-
examination of the grievor began late that day. Early in the cross-examination, at
mid-afternoon, the Employer requested production of the clinical notes and
records of the grievor’s medical practitioners. After a brief union caucus, the
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union said that the grievor was in agreement with providing those documents to
the union, which would then provide them to the employer.
[4] The hearing resumed on July 10, 2017. The grievor had failed to provide the
union with the promised clinical notes and records of her medical practitioners.
Four issues were addressed that day:
1) an employer request for on Order that the grievor produce her medical
practitioners’ clinical notes and records
2) clarification of the caution given to the grievor that she was not to discuss
her evidence with anyone because she was under cross-examination
3) continuation dates
4) the grievor’s ability to attend further hearings because of her mental frailty
[5] The employer renewed its request that the grievor provide access to her medical
practitioners’ clinical notes and records; the union indicated that the grievor had
not provided the necessary written consents to release the documents.
[6] Leading up to the July 10, 2017 date the Union requested an adjournment of a
previously scheduled date. The Employer consented on the basis that the
agreed-upon production would be provided prior to that date. Nothing was
forthcoming.
[7] In June, 2016 the employer advised the union that it had no concerns with the
caution given to the grievor regarding her ability to review the clinical notes and
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records with union counsel. Nonetheless, no medical documents were
forthcoming.
[8] The employer submitted that it met the standard tests for the production of the
documents it seeks. It said that they were arguably relevant, were particularized,
were not a fishing expedition, had a nexus to the dispute and provided no undue
hardship to the grievor or the Union. It carefully reviewed the grievor’s evidence
and submitted that the union had clearly put the grievor’s purported health issues
into the context of the employer’s management of the workplace as a central
theme of its allegations that such management was contrary to the collective
agreement and the Ontario Human Rights Code. The employer reserved its right
to make a further production request for a decoded OHIP list that would
catalogue her attendances for medical consultations, because of what it alleged
to be inconclusive.
[9] The employer said it was entitled to sufficient temporal information so that it
could assess the grievor’s alleged health decline. It said that the appropriate
time-line would include the year and a half prior to the commencement of a
secondment of the grievor out of her unit. She returned to her unit in June 2012.
The Employer seeks production for this time period, which commences June 9,
2010, from the grievor’s current family physician, her retired family physician, any
walk-in clinics, her attendance at the hospital following her episode at work and
CAMH.
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[9] The Employer relied upon Kulpinski and Toronto Transit Commission, [2000] O.J.
No. 169; Sysco Food Services and Teamsters Local 419 (Holden) 2006,
Carswell Ont 10857, [2006] O.L.A.A. No 340 (Briggs); OPSEU and Ontario Clean
Water Agency (GSB #2000-1220, June 20, 2005, Abramsky); OPSEU and
Ministry of Community Safety and Correction Services, (GSB #2003-1881, July
11, 2011, Leighton).
[10] The union submitted that it was not opposed to an Order from the Board to
provide the documents requested. It said that the grievor is in possession of the
documents requested on January 19, 2017. It said it was concerned with how far
back an Order should extend. It said that the period that the grievor was on the
secondment would be an adequate baseline. It also submitted that it would
require an opportunity to redact any portions of the documents that are not
arguably relevant.
[11] In reply, the employer submitted that the union’s backdate for production was not
sufficient because it did not capture the period before the secondment, a time
that the grievor had testified did not have the pressures that subsequently
caused her illness and thereby her damage claim.
[12] As for the grievor’s ability to attend the hearing, the union said that it will provide
medical substantiation. It was agreed that the next hearing day would be
adjourned.
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[13] I have carefully considered the evidence heard to date, the submissions of the
parties and the authorities relied upon.
[14] The general approach of the Board, in situations where a course of conduct is
said to be relevant, is to permit a party to reach back three years from the date of
the grievance to establish such a course of conduct. Here, the grievance is
dated October 18, 2013. The grievor was out of her unit, in a secondment, from
approximately June 9, 2010 until June 2012. She said that upon her return, the
unit felt like a hurricane had struck it. It took her 16 months to grieve the effect of
the reorganization of the unit.
[15] Applying the three year yardstick, which is not a hard-and-fast, immutable
measure, the employer would be entitled to production of documents back to
October 2010, which would not capture the pre-secondment period from her
home unit. On her evidence, there was a marked difference in the unit before
and after her secondment. It is the union that has drawn the distinction between
these two periods. In my view it would be unfair to the employer not to permit an
exploration of the differences between these two periods as it relates to the
grievor’s mental health and the damages she is alleged to have suffered at the
hands of the employer.
[16] Fairness requires the inclusion of part of the period before her secondment in
order to provide a basis of comparison for the pre and post secondment periods.
However there must be limits to how far back a hearing can reach into such an
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historical period. This case involves different managers in the two periods and
an admitted, significant reorganization of the workplace. In these circumstances,
a one-year reach-back before the secondment will provide a sufficient basis to
assess the grievor’s condition, before, during and after the secondment.
[17] I order that the grievor and the union provide the medical documentation from the
practitioners listed above, subject to the union’s opportunity to redact any
portions that are not arguably relevant. If there is any disagreement about the
redactions, they may be brought back before me at an oral hearing for resolution.
[18] This matter is to continue on dates to be fixed by the Registrar.
Issued in Toronto this 20th day of November, 2017.
_____________________________
Daniel A. Harris, Arbitrator