HomeMy WebLinkAbout2017-0685.Maxwell.18-03-20 DecisionCrown Employees Grievance Settlement
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB# 2017-0685
UNION# 2017-0586-0030
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Maxwell) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community and Social Services) Employer
BEFORE
Gail Misra
Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
Andrew Mindszenthy
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Caroline Cohen
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
HEARING March 15, 2018
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DECISION
[1] The parties referred this Grievance to mediation/arbitration in accordance with
Article 22.16 of the collective agreement. At the outset of the proceeding the
parties agreed that I had the jurisdiction to deal with this matter. It was agreed
that I would issue brief reasons for my decision, and that the decision would have
no precedential value.
[2] Ms. Natoye Maxwell filed a grievance on May 16, 2017 alleging that despite
having provided “large amounts of information to management” she was not
granted three days of paid Special and Compassionate Leave (“SCL”), and that
the Employer should have acted with compassion and understanding. Among
other things, the remedy sought is payment for the three days.
[3] Special and Compassionate Leave is addressed in the collective agreement at
Article 49, which states as follows:
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.
[4] The Grievor is a caseworker. There is little dispute that most of the facts in this
case are captured in email exchanges between Ms. Maxwell and her manager.
In an April 21, 2017 email to her ODSP Manager, Louise Greco, the Grievor
requested to move her compressed work week day from May 15 to May 23,
2017, and at the same time, also requested three SCL days for May 24 to 26,
2017 “to deal with some personal issues”. The days would have given the
Grievor a full week off following the Victoria Day holiday.
[5] Ms. Greco responded on April 24, 2017 indicating she had been asked to gather
some more information regarding the SCL request, and outlined in detail what
information was needed. The Grievor was also advised that she should be
prepared to make alternate arrangements should her request not receive
approval, or only receive partial approval.
[6] The Grievor responded on April 26, 2017 indicating that she was requesting the
SCL because the dates were the anniversary of her murdered brother-in-law, and
it was “a tough time for me but also my family”. She offered to provide a copy of
the death certificate.
[7] On May 2, 2017 Ms. Greco and the Grievor met to discuss the request. There is
no dispute that Ms. Greco, who was new to that ODSP office, had explained to
the Grievor that from her review of the records it appeared that the Grievor’s
brother-in-law had died on May 14, 2015; the funeral had been held on May 21,
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2015 in Trinidad; and, the Grievor had taken bereavement leave on June 9, 11,
and 12, 2015, when her husband had returned to Canada from his brother’s
funeral. There is some dispute about what was said thereafter, but it would
appear that Ms. Greco wanted to get a better understanding of why the Grievor
wanted the SCL. However, the Grievor became upset because she felt that her
manager was “investigating” her, and left the meeting before Ms. Greco could
ask her that question.
[8] As a result, Ms. Greco sent the Grievor a respectful follow up email that day in
which she explained that she had not asked Ms. Maxwell to the meeting to make
her upset, but to see if there was additional information that she wanted to
provide to support the SCL leave request. Ms. Greco explained that she was
simply trying to get a better understanding of whether there was a reason for
requesting the specific May dates. Ms. Greco asked the Grievor to let her know
if she wanted to continue the discussion, and that otherwise, the decision would
be based on the information already provided. The Grievor emailed back that
Ms. Greco should base her decision on the information already provided.
[9] On May 4, 2017 Ms. Greco emailed the Grievor advising her that the information
provided to support the SCL request had been insufficient, that Ms. Maxwell had
been told that on May 2nd, and that she had chosen not to provide any further
information. Based on the available information, the SCL request was being
denied. Ms. Greco explained that the onus is on the employee to disclose
relevant facts to the Employer when seeking SCL so that management would be
in a position to make an informed decision. She granted the Grievor’s request to
move her compressed work week date, and indicated she would also approve
the use of vacation days should the Grievor wish to use them for the three days
sought.
[10] On May 12, 2017 the Grievor emailed Ms. Greco that she would be providing
additional information to have the Employer reconsider her request for SCL.
[11] On May 15, 2017 the Grievor left a doctor’s note for Ms. Greco indicating that
Ms. Maxwell needed to have May 24 to 26, 2017 off work to support her spouse,
who would be starting a new medical treatment. She also submitted a “Toronto
Region – Vacation and Leave of Absence Request Form”, dated May 15, 2017,
indicating she was seeking SCL with full pay for May 24 to 26, 2017. The
“Request for leave and reason” section on the form was left blank.
[12] Ms. Greco asked the Grievor to meet to discuss the matter, but Ms. Maxwell
responded that she wanted to know what needed to be discussed, and
questioned whether her request for the three days off had been approved.
[13] On May 16, 2017 Ms. Greco again sent the Grievor a long email explaining that
she was confused by the undated doctor’s note as it stated that the Grievor
needed the time off to support her spouse regarding a medical issue, but the
original request had indicated it was the anniversary of her murdered brother-in-
law, and a tough time for her and her family. Ms. Greco indicated she wanted to
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meet to understand the connection between the two. If Ms. Maxwell’s request
was for the reasons in the doctor’s note, Ms. Greco needed the Grievor to
disclose all the relevant facts as the basis for the new request, and Ms. Maxwell
was again advised what information was required. Ms. Greco offered to meet
with the Grievor to discuss this matter, and also indicated that if the Grievor did
not want to discuss this further, the Employer stood behind its original decision,
but was still willing to grant the Grievor vacation days instead.
[14] On that same day the Grievor responded indicating it was not a new request; that
the doctor’s note was from May 12, 2017; and that the personal reasons for her
seeking the SCL were related to her brother-in-law’s death. Ms. Greco advised
Ms. Maxwell that she still did not see the connection between the original request
and the doctor’s note, and therefore maintained her denial of the leave request.
In the circumstances, the Grievor then decided to take the three days as
vacation, and this grievance was filed.
[15] It was only in preparation for the mediation/arbitration in 2018 that the Grievor
advised the Union that the reason she wanted the SCL was because her
husband was about to start bereavement/grief counselling regarding the death of
his brother two years earlier, and that was the reason she wanted to be home
that week to support him. Whether or not that information would have been
persuasive, this rationale had never been provided to Ms. Greco at the time the
SCL request was being considered.
[16] The Union argues that the Employer considered irrelevant factors in making its
decision to deny the request for SCL because Ms. Greco had looked at the
Grievor’s pay records to ascertain when she had taken bereavement leave for
her brother-in-law’s death. It argues that even if Ms. Greco did later consider
relevant factors, her decision was tainted by her earlier consideration of when
Ms. Maxwell had taken the related bereavement leave.
[17] The Employer argues that the onus is on an employee seeking paid SCL, and
that such requests perforce require that the employee ground the request in
particular facts, which may be of a personal and private nature. It is only when
management has been told the reasons for the SCL that it can consider whether
to exercise its discretion to grant this exceptional leave. In this instance, the
Grievor was seeking the maximum annual amount of SCL and was unwilling to
provide a sufficient and clear factual basis for her request. The information she
had initially provided appeared inconsistent with the doctor’s note that was later
provided, and the Grievor refused to explain any of it to Ms. Greco.
[18] Ontario Public Service Employees’ Union v. Ontario (Ministry of Health and Long-
Term Care) (Thurman Grievance) [2002] O.G.S.B.A. No. 25, 2003 CanLII 52897
(J. Johnston) addressed the considerations in special or compassionate leave
cases. The relevant paragraphs of the decision are as follows:
15. In reviewing the situations which warrant the granting of compassionate leave
by management, the cases generally articulate that it is appropriately utilized
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when an employee is in a situation deserving of sympathetic treatment or makes
a request in extraordinary circumstances which merit sympathetic treatment (see
in this regard Elesie and Ministry of Health, GSB #24/79 (Swinton) (the “Elesie
case”) and Sahota and Ministry of Correctional Services, GSB #2454/87 (Verity)
(the “Sahota case”)).
16. There is no doubt that in this case the grievor lost someone who was very
close to her and that this loss was very upsetting to her. The employer did not
dispute the fact that the grievor had lost one of her closest and dearest cousins.
Mr. Ballantyne was sympathetic to her loss and never questioned the sincerity of
her request. However, the fact that an employee is in a situation deserving of
sympathetic treatment does not automatically result in the granting of a
compassionate leave request. Although in a sense it may be a threshold factor,
it is only one of many factors appropriately considered by management.
17. The employer accepted and I agree that in exercising the discretion found in
article 49 of the collective agreement, it must comply with the criteria which are
set out in its policy on handling special/compassionate leave requests. In other
words, the employer must make a decision in good faith, free from arbitrariness
and discrimination. The employer must exercise its discretion in a reasonable
manner having regard to the individual merits of each case and not simply resort
to a rigid application of policy. An effort must be made to obtain all the relevant
facts prior to making a decision and management must endeavour to act
consistently in similar cases.
18. In considering the decision of management, the appropriate standard of
review to be applied by an arbitrator to the decision making process is that of
reasonableness. An arbitrator should consider the reasonableness of the
process that led up to the decision which was made by management. It is not my
role to substitute my views for that of management or enter into an assessment
of the correctness of the decision even if I might have come to a different
conclusion (see in this regard Young and Ministry of Community and Social
Services (1979), 24 L.A.C. (2d) 145, O’Brien and Ministry of Correctional
Services, GSB #1157/86 (Gandz), Malyon and Ministry of Revenue GSB
#1129/88 (Roberts), the Sahota case and the Elesie case.)
[19] In Ontario Public Service Employees’ Union v. Ontario (Ministry of Attorney
General) (Stubbs Grievance) [2015] O.G.S.B.A. No. 116, (N. Dissanayake), the
Board addressed the denial of a special or compassionate leave request by an
FTP employee governed by the SCL provision of the collective agreement at
Article 75. In the case before me, the Grievor is a regular full time employee, and
her request is governed by Article 49 of the collective agreement. Articles 75 and
49 contain identical language, and as such, this decision is helpful. Vice Chair
Dissanayake stated at para. 10 as follows:
10. … It must be noted that the leave under Article 75 [or 49 for full time
employees] is at the discretion of the employer, to be granted on “special and
compassionate” grounds. When requesting leave under article 75 [or 49 for full
time employees], 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
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entitled to request for that information. When an employee refuses or fails to do
that, he/she does so at his/her own peril.
[20] I agree with the jurisprudence outlined above that an employee seeking SCL is
required to provide all available information supporting their request for this type
of leave, and if they do not do so, the employer is entitled to request that
information. If an employee fails or refuses to provide sufficient, or any, factual
support for a request, the employer has to make a decision based on the
information before them, which may lead to denial of a SCL request.
[21] In this case, Ms. Maxwell provided very little information to support her original
request, and when asked for more, chose not to provide anything further. Once
her request had been denied, she provided a medical note that on its face
appeared to have nothing to do with her original basis for the SCL request. As a
consequence, Ms. Greco sought further information or explanation from the
Grievor, which she did not provide, so the original denial was maintained.
[22] In the circumstances, I am satisfied that Ms. Greco tried to address the Grievor in
a compassionate manner; that she understood that the Grievor had been upset
in the May 2, 2017 meeting, and therefore wanted to give the Grievor a further
opportunity to provide information to ground the SCL request; and that ultimately,
having made all efforts to gather the relevant facts, Ms. Greco had to exercise
her discretion based on what she had before her.
[23] I do not find troubling that Ms. Greco had looked at the Grievor’s bereavement
leave history as she was a new manager in that office and was not aware of the
history or circumstances of Ms. Maxwell’s loss of her brother-in-law. Given the
dearth of information provided by the Grievor herself in her request for SCL, it is
not surprising that Ms. Greco felt the need to understand more about Ms.
Maxwell’s situation before she met with her to discuss the SCL request.
[24] In the circumstances of this case I find that there was nothing arbitrary or
unreasonable in the Employer’s decision-making process and the exercise of
discretion, or in the decision itself.
[25] For the foregoing reasons, the grievance is hereby dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 20th day of March, 2018.
“Gail Misra”
___________________
Gail Misra, Arbitrator