HomeMy WebLinkAbout2017-0553.Finn.19-03-11 DecisionCrown 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# 2017-0553; 2017-1286; 2017-1287; 2017-1288; 2017-1289; 2017-1290; 2017-1312; 2017-1313
UNION# 2017-0201-0006; 2017-0201-0009; 2017-0201-0010; 2017-0201-0013; 2017-0201-0014;
2017-0201-0015; 2017-0201-0011; 2017-0201-0012
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Finn) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs) Employer
BEFORE
Nimal Dissanayake
Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
Jennifer Micallef
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Caroline Cohen
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
HEARING February 27, 2019
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DECISION
[1] The Board is seized with eight grievances filed by Mr. Fred Finn, who is employed
as a Meat Hygiene Officer. File 2017-0553 relating to a letter of discipline was
filed on May 7, 2017. All of the other grievances include allegations relating to
accommodation and discrimination and were filed on June 30, 2017. This decision
relates to a motion by the employer that certain aspects of two of the grievances
filed on June 30, 2017 are untimely. The two grievances are as follows:
File 2017-1287 (Hereinafter “COI grievance”)
Statement of grievance
I grieve that the employer has failed to provide me with the requested full disclosure
on a Conflict of Interest (COI) form that the employer requested that I fill out. After
this COI investigation, the employer decided to relocate my headquarters, due to
a “perceived” conflict of interest. The employer insisted that I use CTO credits
while they investigated. The employer has shown callous disregard for my
disability by assigning me to locations outside my medical restriction for driving,
namely Newmarket in 2016 and Georgetown in 2017, despite my doctor’s notes
and recommendations from WSIB.
- Violation of Article 3 and others of the Collective Agreement, Ontario Human
Rights Code, Occupational Health and Safety Act, and any other acts, legislations
or codes that may apply
Settlement desired
1. That I can be assigned to Sargent Farms & receive the disclosure 2. Be
accommodated & compensated for all lost wages (with interest) retroactively,
including credits, etc. 3. Damages for injury to my dignity, feelings and self -respect
pursuant to the Code. 4. Any other remedy deemed by an arbitrator to make me
whole.
File 2017-1312 (Hereinafter “sick leave grievance”)
Statement of grievance
I grieve that I have been forced to use sick credits for a time period that I was not
sick.
- In 2016. I was off sick, then able to return to work and the employer put
me on paid leave while they were arranging for my return to work.
- In 2017, I was off sick and notified my manager that I was able to return to
work January 23
- My manager insisted that I stay off using sick credits, even though I was
not sick, while they were arranging for my return to work, which did not
happen until March
- Violation of Article 3 and others of the Collective Agreement, Ontario
Human Rights Code, Occupation Health and Safety Act, and any other
acts, legislations or codes that may apply.
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Settlement desired
1. That I be put on paid leave for this period 2. Be accommodated & compensated
for all lost wages (with interest) retroactively, including credits, etc. 3. Damages for
injury to my dignity, feelings & self-respect pursuant to the Code. 4 any other
remedy deemed by an arbitrator to make me whole.
[2] Article 22.2.1 of the collective agreement provides:
It is the mutual desire of the parties that complaints of employment be adjusted as
quickly as possible and it is understood that if an employee has a complaint, the
employee shall discuss it with the employee’s immediate supervisor within thirty
(30) days after the circumstances giving rise to the complaint have occurred or
have come or ought reasonably to have come to the attention of the employee in
order to give the immediate supervisor an opportunity of adjusting the complaint.
It is well established, that if a grievance is not filed within the time limits in the
collective agreement between these parties, it is not arbitrable unless the Board
exercises its discretionary power under section 48(16) of the Labour Relations Act
to extend time limits.
[3] Employer counsel submits that the grievances include challenges to the following
employer actions:
(1) The employer’s finding that the grievor was in a position of conflict of interest
due to a personal friendship with an employee of the meat packing company
which had been assigned as his headquarters.
(2) The employer’s failure to comply with the grievor’s request for disclosure
relating to the conflict of interest process.
(3) The employer’s decision to change the grievor’s assigned headquarters
following the finding of conflict of interest.
(4) The employer’s decision to deny the grievor’s request that a specific period of
absence be treated as paid leave, and its direction that the period be treated as
sick leave.
It is the employer’s position that these specific allegations relate to discreet
decisions by the employer which were communicated to the grievor on specific
dates. The grievor, therefore, was required by the collective agreement to file a
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grievance within 30 days of the date each of the decisions by the employer was
communicated to him. This was not done.
[4] Citing Re Halsall 2007-1045 (Briggs), counsel submitted that in any event, the
Board has no jurisdiction to review the employer’s decision finding a conflict of
interest itself, although the Board may review the operational decision to move
the grievor to a different headquarters which the grievor claims was inconsistent
with his medical restrictions.
[5] The union’s primary position is that the issues raised in the two grievances are
not untimely because they are part of a continuing grievance. Counsel argued
that the larger issue in all of the grievances filed in June 2017 is about
accommodation, discrimination and harassment (“hereinafter “the larger issue”).
Counsel pointed out that these two grievances explicitly refer to accommodation.
The employer is attempting to carve out as untimely, four issues which are “part
and parcel” of that larger issue.
[6] Counsel argued that by their very nature accommodation, discrimination, and
harassment violations rarely result from one discreet act by the employer. They
involve a pattern of conduct over a period of time. A grievor is not required to
grieve each time an act that forms part of that pattern of conduct is committed, in
order to avoid timeliness objections. Counsel submitted that the aspects of the
two grievances employer counsel objects to as being untimely are part of the
larger issue, which is a continuing violation, and not grievances alleging isolated
discreet violations.
[7] In the alternative, counsel submitted that if the Board concludes that the
grievances are untimely with respect to the issues in question, it should exercise
its statutory discretion to extend time limits. She argued that the circumstances
of this case meet the test in s. 48(16) for the exercise of the Board’s discretion,
i.e. the existence of reasonable grounds for extension of time, and the absence
of prejudice to the employer by such extension.
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[8] The Board agrees that failure to accommodate, discrimination, and harassment
grievances may, and often do, involve a pattern of conduct, and that each
employer action forming such a pattern need not be grieved as they occur, to
comply with the timeliness requirements. In pursuing accommodation/
discrimination/harassment grievances, a grievor would not be precluded from
leading evidence relating to employer action, which he/she claims form part of the
pattern of conduct, because they took place more than 30 days prior to the date
of filing.
[9] In Re Poblete, 2017-0709 (Herlich) the Board described its approach as follows
at para.5:
[5] A brief comment on the strategic manner in which the employer chose
to order its motions will be useful. Without unnecessarily surveying the
jurisprudence, it is fair to say that this Board (and other arbitrators) have
exhibited some flexibility in relation to the strict application of time limits or
the adducing of evidence regarding events which significantly pre-date the
filing of a grievance in cases where an ongoing pattern of improper
discrimination or harassment is alleged. For example, in OPSEU (Lunan)
and Ministry of Labour, GSB Nos. 2013-0513 et al, May 15, 2015
(Leighton), this Board confirmed a guideline that permits a grievor alleging
an ongoing pattern of harassment and discrimination to adduce evidence
covering a period of three years prior to the filing of the grievance (it is a
guideline, not a rigid rule – each case is to be considered on its particular
facts). It is clear, however, that the consideration of time limits or the
adducing of evidence regarding what might otherwise be stale events may
be very different in a case alleging ongoing discrimination as compared to,
say, a more conventional job posting case.
[10] In the instant case, if the union is asserting that the facts underlying the four issues
support its grievances on the larger issue, subject to relevance, it would not be
precluded from leading that evidence because of the 30 day time limit in article
22.2.1.
[11] However, that is not what the union has done. It has grieved the employer
decisions themselves. The decision that a conflict of interest exists; that it would
not be providing any further disclosure relating to the COI process; that the grievor
is required to use CTO credits pending the completion of the investigation; that as
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a result of the finding of conflict his headquarters is changed; and that a specific
period of absence will not be treated as a period of leave with pay and must be
treated as sick leave. It may be that the two grievances raise some factual
assertions relevant to the larger issue, which the employer agrees is properly
before the Board. If so, the union may rely on those facts in support of that larger
issue. What it is not entitled to do is to file grievances outside the time limits
grieving employer conduct as discreet violations, and seeking remedies with
respect to those alleged violations. For example, the COI grievance states “I
grieve that the employer has failed to provide me with the requested full disclosure
on a COI form”. The sick leave grievance alleges that the employer required the
grievor to use sick credits for a period when he was not sick. In the COI grievance
the remedial request challenges the employer’s decision that a conflict of interest
exists and the decision to change the grievor’s headquarters as a result. In the
same grievance, the grievor seeks an order that he receive the disclosure relating
to the COI process denied by the employer. He seeks a finding that he can be
assigned to the location where the employer had concluded a conflict existed. In
the sick leave grievance he seeks an order that “I be put on paid leave for this
period”. Thus discreet allegations are made and most importantly, redress is
sought with respect to those allegations. These aspects of the grievances are not
insulated from the timeliness requirements in the collective agreement, simply
because the larger issue is also referred to in these grievances.
[12] For those reasons, I find that the two grievances are untimely as they relate to the
four issues objected to by the employer.
[13] The next issue then is whether the Board should exercise its discretion to extend
time limits. For the Board to exercise the discretion to extend time limits, two
conditions must be met. Thus in Re Smith et al, 2006-2107 (Gray) after setting
out s. 48 (16) of the Labour Relations Act, at para.13 the Board wrote:
While the employer does not allege that the delay has caused it any specific
prejudice, the absence of substantial (or any) prejudice is not a sufficient basis for
exercising this discretion. The Legislature has required that there must also be
“reasonable grounds for the extension”.
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A more recent decision Re Liantzakis 2012-3997 (Tims) confirms at para. 74 that
both requirements must be met before the Board can exercise its discretion under
s. 48(16). It wrote:
[74] The parties addressed as well whether the Employer would be “substantially
prejudiced” by the extension of time limits in the present circumstances. While it
is not necessary for me to make such determination here given my conclusion
that there are no reasonable grounds for such extension, I shall nonetheless
comment on the parties’ positions.
[14] I turn next to consider whether reasonable grounds exist for extension of time
limits. In Re Becker Milk, (1978) 10 L.A.C. (2d) 217 (Burkett) at pp. 220-221, the
arbitrator set out three factors to be considered in determining whether
“reasonable grounds” exist for extension. They are: (i) the reason for the delay
given by the offending party; (ii) the length of the delay, (iii) the nature of the
grievance.
[15] The reason offered for the delay in filing grievances relating to the issues in
question, was that the union was of the view that these issues were part and
parcel of the larger issue, and therefore part of a continuing grievance which is
not subject to the 30 day time limit. Employer counsel had asserted that the
grievance as it related to the change of headquarters was filed 10 months late,
the failure to disclose issue grieved 7 months late; the requirement to use CTO
credits grieved 17 months late, and the denial of paid leave and requirement to
use sick leave late by 3½ months. Union counsel did not dispute these time
estimates, and conceded that these delays are not minimal. However, she
submitted that the period of delay must be considered “in context”. The context
she relied on was that the delay caused no prejudice to the employer. She
submitted that even if the issues themselves are held to be inarbitrable, the union
would still be relying on the facts underlying those issues as evidence supporting
its primary allegation of the larger issue. Therefore, there would be no saving of
hearing time. Counsel disagreed with the employer’s assertion that absence of
prejudice is irrelevant, if the union has not first established reasonable grounds
for extension of time.
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[16] On the nature of the grievance criterion, union counsel cited paragraph 67 of the
decision in Re Liantzakis (supra) to the effect that allegations of harassment and
discrimination contrary to the Human Rights Code, raise matters of import.
[17] Having carefully considered the respective submissions of the parties, the Board
upholds the employer’s motion. The union’s view that the four issues, as grieved
are part of a continuing grievance, however honestly held, was not correct for the
reasons set out above.
[18] It also follows that the nature of the grievances as they relate to the issues in
question are not about human rights. They are about specific decisions the
employer made with regard to conflict of interest, CTO credits and how to treat a
specific period of absence by the grievor; matters that fall in the lower end of the
spectrum of seriousness.
[19] Finally, as for the length of delay, the union’s reliance on the lack of prejudice to
the employer is of no assistance to it. Counsel conceded, and I find in any event,
that the delays are not minimal. Counsel’s submission is to the effect that despite
that, the Board may extend time limits since there is no prejudice to the employer.
This submission is inconsistent with the authorities. The authorities cited above
at para. 13 are clear pronouncements that both “reasonable grounds for
extension” and “absence of substantial prejudice” are pre-requisites for the
exercise of arbitral discretion to extend time limits under s 48(16) of the Labour
Relations Act. Section 48(16) clearly states that. Indeed in Re Liantzakis, (supra)
Arbitrator Tims explicitly states that, it is not necessary for her to determine
whether the employer would be substantially prejudiced by the extension of time
limits “given my conclusion that there are no reasonable grounds for such
extension …” Since I have concluded that the union has not established
reasonable grounds for extension, there is no basis to exercise the Board’s
statutory discretion.
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[20] In all of the circumstances, I decline to exercise the Board’s discretion to extend
time limits in relation to the issues in question. However, as observed earlier in
this decision, the union is not precluded from relying on any relevant facts related
to those issues in support of its allegation in the grievances on the larger issue
which the employer has agreed is properly before the Board. The Board remains
seized.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 11th day of March, 2019.
“Nimal Dissanayake”
______________________
Nimal Dissanayake, Arbitrator