HomeMy WebLinkAbout2012-3907.Grievor.18-09-17 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# 2012-3907; 2017-0647
UNION#2013-0338-0001; 2016-0338-0002
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Grievor) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Ken Petryshen Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Christopher Bryden
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Felix Lau
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
TELECONFERENCE
September 7, 2018
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Decision
[1] The Claimant, the Grievor, has filed an appeal regarding the denial of Long
Term Disability Benefits. This matter has been through the Joint Insurance Benefit
Review Committee (“JIBRC”) process and, in accordance with a Memorandum of
Settlement dated June 15, 2015 (“the Memorandum”) and the Terms of Reference
agreed to by the parties, it is now before me as Chair of the Claims Review
Subcommittee (CRS).
[2] The Employer has raised a preliminary issue. It takes the position that I am
not permitted to hear submissions in this proceeding on the viva voce medical evidence
that was called before me during the hearing of the Grievor’s termination grievance.
This issue was addressed during a conference call held on September 7, 2018.
Employer counsel filed written submissions on the issue in advance of the conference
call and he and Union counsel also filed material for me to review prior to the
conference call.
[3] The Grievor’s employment as a Probationary and Parole Officer was
terminated on January 14, 2013. A grievance was filed challenging the termination
which included the allegation of discrimination based on human rights grounds. The
arbitration proceeding required many hearing days throughout 2013, 2014 and 2015,
during which I heard extensive evidence of the Grievor’s medical conditions. The
parties resolved the grievance by entering into the Memorandum. The parties agreed
that the Grievor shall be reinstated for the purpose of LTIP and that the date of eligibility
commenced on January 14, 2013. The Grievor’s application for LTIP was denied. For
the purposes of this motion, the relevant paragraphs of the Memorandum are as
follows:
4. Should the Grievor’s LTIP benefits be terminated at any time she retains all
rights of appeal, including an appeal to the Claims Review Subcommittee, in
accordance with the terms of the Collective Agreement and the settlement…
5. The parties agree that Vice-Chair Ken Petryshen shall be appointed as the
independent third party of the Claims Review Subcommittee established by s. 6
of Appendix 4 of the Collective Agreement to hear and determine any appeal,
grievance or any other claim regarding the Grievor’s entitlement to LTIP benefits
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and, in so doing, he may consider and rely upon the medical evidence heard to
date in these proceedings.
[4] The essence of the Employer’s position on this preliminary issue is set out in
the following paragraphs of Employer counsel’s written submissions:
1. The preliminary issue before you, as the Chair of the Claims Review
Subcommittee (CRS), is the proper interpretation of paragraph 5 of a
memorandum of settlement dated June 15, 2015 between the parties…
2. The Employer submits that paragraph 5 does not permit you to hear
submissions on the viva voce medical evidence from the GSB hearing relating to
the termination grievance. In accordance with paragraph 5 of the settlement, this
hearing sits as a meeting of the CRS and therefore is governed by the Terms of
Reference for the CRS. These Terms of Reference specifically limits the scope
of the parties’ CRS presentations to the information/record on file before the
insurance carrier at the time the matter is removed from the JIBRC, with one
other narrow exception. The language of Paragraph 5 does not override this
restriction. Rather, the reference to “consider and rely” upon the evidence is
simply giving effect to the practical reality that viva voce evidence heard at the
GSB cannot be “unheard.”
3. The Employer’s interpretation is also consistent with the jurisprudence that the
JIBRC/CRS process is a process that is concurrent but separate from a claim
that is made under the Grievance Procedure of the collective agreement.
Therefore, any application of paragraph 5 of the June 15, 2015 settlement should
be interpreted in such a way as to avoid the commingling of the separate
Grievance and JIBRC/CRS processes.
[5] I note that the Terms of Reference provides that “Presentations by both
parties will be based upon the information/record on file before the insurance carrier at
the time the matter is removed from the JIBRC, the employee statement if any and
MBS’s response to the statement.”
[6] The Union’s position on this preliminary matter is simply that I am bound to
give full effect to the agreement of the parties as contained in paragraph 5 of the
Memorandum. The Union does not disagree with the Employer’s characterization of the
JIBRC/CRS processes. However, it maintains that paragraph 5 of the Memorandum
creates an exception for the purposes of this proceeding. The Union maintains that it
was precisely because I heard extensive medical evidence relating to the Grievor during
the GSB hearing that the parties agreed that I would be the Chair of the CRS and could
consider and rely on that medical evidence when determining the Grievor’s entitlement
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to LTIP benefits. Union counsel referred me to Collective Agreement, statutory and
general administrative law principles to support the Union’s position that I can entertain
submissions on the viva voce medical evidence that I heard during the GSB arbitration
proceeding. Counsel also argued that the language of paragraph 5 of the Memorandum
indicates that parties intended that I could hear submissions relating to that medical
evidence.
[7] Employer counsel relied on OPSEU (Dales) and Ministry of Correctional
Services (2002), GSB No. 1280/00 (Mikus). Union counsel relied on the following
decisions: OPSEU (Union) and Treasury Board Secretariat (2017), GSB No. 2017-1802
(Parmar); OPSEU (Union) and Treasury Board Secretariat (2018), GSB No. 2016-0901
(Briggs); Quebec Labour Relations Board v. Canadian Ingersoll Rand Co. Ltd. et al.,
[1968] S.C.R. 695; Re Downing and Graydon, 92 D.L.R. (3d) 355 (Ont. CA); and,
Construction Workers Union, Local 151 v. Saskatchewan (Labour Relations Board),
2017 SKQB 197.
[8] In considering this preliminary issue, I have carefully reviewed the material
provided to me by counsel, including article 22.9 and Appendix 4 of the Collective
Agreement, the Terms of Reference dated July 20, 1999 and the Addendum dated
September 2000. I have also considered the submissions of counsel. It is my
conclusion that the Employer’s motion on this preliminary matter cannot succeed.
[9] It is clear that this is a CRS proceeding and that as a general matter it is
governed by the Terms of Reference and the Addendum. I say as a general rule
because it is always open to the parties to make exceptions to the usual procedures if
they feel it is appropriate to do so in a given case. In my view, this is precisely what the
parties did when they agreed to paragraph 5 of the Memorandum. They agreed that I
would be appointed as the independent third party of the CRS and that I may consider
and rely on the medical evidence I heard in the GSB proceeding when determining a
claim about the Grievor’s entitlement to LTIP benefits. That evidence consisted of oral
testimony and documents. Although the Terms of Reference does not permit the
reliance of information that was not on file with the insurance carrier at the time the
matter is removed from JIBRC, it is clear that the parties agreed in paragraph 5 of the
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Memorandum that I could consider and rely on the type of medical evidence that the
CRS process would not normally entertain. The wording in paragraph 5 of the
Memorandum does more than simply give “effect to the practical reality that viva voce
evidence heard at the GSB cannot be unheard.” In the normal course in a CRS
proceeding, the parties would be entitled to make submissions on the evidence that is
properly before the Chair. As a result of paragraph 5 of the Memorandum, the medical
evidence, including the viva voce medical evidence that I heard in the GSB hearing is
properly before me in this CRS proceeding. It would be quite odd for the parties to
agree that I can consider and rely on such medical evidence but that the parties could
not make submissions with respect to that evidence. The requirement for procedural
fairness dictates that the Employer and the Union should have the opportunity to make
submissions on any evidence before me upon which I can rely and consider. In my
view, this includes the viva voce medical evidence relating to the Grievor that I heard
during the GSB hearing.
[10] It is for the above reasons that the Employer’s motion on the preliminary
issue is hereby dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 17th day of September, 2018.
“Ken Petryshen”
Ken Petryshen, Arbitrator