HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013-3791.Plouffe.17-11-22 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#2013-3791; 2014-3127
UNION# 2014-0234-0021; 2014-0234-0452
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Plouffe) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Daniel A. Harris Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Ed Holmes
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Felix Lau
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING DATES October 7, 2015, December 8, 2016 and May
16, 2017
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DECISION
[1] This matter came on for hearing on October 7, 2015, December 8, 2016 and May
16, 2017. At this stage, we are dealing with requests for production.
[2] The merits of these matters are rooted in an allegation in that Mr. Plouffe, a
correctional officer (CO), was assaulted by a female correction officer in May
2010. The allegation is that she had been denied overtime. She blamed the
grievor and kicked him. A further allegation of fact is that she assaulted another
CO while on escort duty.
[3] Her overtime dispute was said to have flared up again in January 2014 when
she, and then her husband, had altercations with the grievor. In the result, the
grievor filed these two grievances and a number of occurrence reports over the
next number of months regarding allegations of their purported, continued
misbehavior.
[4] The grievor is said to have received a number of assurances from management
that he would be kept apart from this purportedly antagonistic female CO.
[5] There are two grievances; one against the purported threats by the female CO’s
husband in January 2014 and one in September 2014, when it is alleged that she
came into the control module to provoke him.
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[6] The grievor applied for, and was granted, Worker’s Compensation in February
2015. There may be a connection with the foregoing narrative, based on the
May 2010 alleged assault and the alleged ongoing bullying since January 2014.
[7] The Employer’s opening position is that the grievor ought to have filed
occurrence reports in 2010 regarding the alleged assault, yet nothing was
forthcoming until January 2014.
[8] In or about August 2015 the grievor received from the WSIB recognition for a
post-traumatic stress disability, which has been appealed by the Employer.
Issues have been flagged with respect to the impact on these proceedings of any
WSIB award.
[9] As for production of documents from the Employer to the Union, the Union says
that there is some indication of differential treatment on a gender basis in cases
of assault. In response the Employer suggested that such a distinction may not
be inappropriate.
[10] The Employer agreed to some of the Union’s requests for production. The
contested matters were dealt with at the hearing on May 16, 2017 and fall into
two categories. The disclosure requests by the Union are set out in
correspondence dated November 29, 2016.
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1. The first category was documentation relating to complaints made about other
incidents that did not involve Mr. Plouffe, the grievor nor the two COs he has
complained about, H. Murchison and D. Murchison.
2. The second category related to documents relating to any other complaints
made by other employees against the Murchisons.
[11] The issue is whether these materials are arguably relevant.
[12] I have carefully considered the submissions made by the parties. The argument
advanced by the Union is that there was differential treatment of the grievor as
opposed to the situations set out above in its letter of November 29, 2016. That
differential treatment is on the basis of gender. That is, because a female CO
and her husband harassed the grievor, the Employer did not treat the situation as
seriously as it would have if a male CO had harassed a female CO.
[13] At this stage of the proceedings, the Union’s claims are devoid of the level of
granularity that would permit a conclusion that the situations enumerated in the
letter of November 28, 2016 are at all comparable to the facts alleged here.
Further, the allegations amount to a claim that the Employer has a propensity to
such discriminatory treatment without grounding the claim in any specific
particulars as would allow the order for production sought.
[14] The Union would be free to call other members of the bargaining unit to establish
the facts in issue in these grievances, but the production sought would mire
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these grievances in unrelated matters. In my view the probative value of such
production is far outweighed by its prejudicial effect in unduly extending these
proceedings and does not reach the threshold of being arguably relevant. The
production request set out in the first category from the Union’s letter of
November 29, 2016 is denied.
[15] The second category from the letter relates to specific materials that arguably
may establish the extent of the Employer’s knowledge of incidents involving the
two COs who are central to the grievances allegations and may arguably go to
the issue of the Employer’s obligation to provide a harassment and violence free
workplace. The Employer is hereby ordered to produce those documents.
Issued in Toronto this 22nd day of November, 2017.
_____________________________
Daniel A. Harris, Arbitrator