HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2013-3116.Alemu.19-03-22 Decision
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PSGB# P-2013-3116
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Alemu Complainant
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services) Employer
BEFORE Marilyn A. Nairn Vice-Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Zelalem Alemu
FOR THE EMPLOYER Thomas Ayers
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
WRITTEN
REPRESENTATIONS
February 11 and 22, 2019
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DECISION
[1] By decision dated January 31, 2019 the Board dismissed two complaints brought
by the complainant, Zelalem Alemu. The Board determined that those complaints were
untimely and that the Board therefore had no jurisdiction to entertain those complaints.
However, Board File #2013-3116 remained outstanding.
[2] This complaint seeks to challenge a letter of discipline provided to the
complainant on August 29, 2013 alleging insubordination. The Employer takes the
position that this complaint is now moot. Further to direction contained in the January
31, 2019 decision and by email to the Board dated February 11, 2019 the complainant
confirmed that he wished to pursue this complaint. On February 13, 2019, the Board
issued the following direction to the parties:
…The Employer has taken the preliminary position that the issues raised by the
complaint are now moot and that the complaint ought not to proceed further. While
the Employer has provided some indication of its position, I hereby direct the
Employer to provide its full position in respect of this issue in writing by no later
than Friday, March 1, 2019.
The complainant continues to take the position that he is medically unable to
participate in the conduct of his complaint in any way. As indicated in the January
31, 2019 decision, the medical and other evidence currently before the Board does
not support a conclusion that the complainant is medically unable to participate
except in the context of an oral hearing. No further medical evidence has been
filed in support of the complainant’s assertion, notwithstanding the direction
contained in the Board’s October 30, 2018 interim decision. The complainant has
further and since indicated that he was able to obtain assistance and support from
“qualified professionals and knowledgeable individuals” in the preparation of his
response to the timeliness issues that were the subject of the January 31, 2019
decision.
Upon receipt of the Employer’s full representations with respect to its preliminary
position in Board File No. P-2013-3116, the Board will establish a timetable for the
complainant’s response and any reply submissions.
[3] The Employer’s submission was received on February 22, 2019. On February
25, 2019, the Board forwarded those submissions to the complainant and directed that
the complainant provide his full written response to the Employer’s position by no later
than March 13, 2019. That direction also provided:
Should you take the position that you are medically unable to respond, sufficient
and reliable medical evidence is required to be filed in support of any such
assertion.
[4] To date, the complainant has not responded to the Board’s direction. Nor has
the complainant filed any medical evidence in support of his assertion that he is
medically unable to respond and/or participate in the conduct of this issue.
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[5] I therefore turn to consider the Employer’s unopposed submission that this
complaint is moot and ought to be dismissed at this stage. Those submissions are in
writing and I do not intend to reproduce them here.
[6] As noted, this complaint seeks to challenge a letter of discipline issued to the
complainant on August 29, 2013. The two complaints that have been dismissed as
untimely each sought to challenge subsequent discipline issued to the complainant,
involving a 1-day suspension dated November 21, 2013 and a 3-day suspension dated
February 12, 2014, respectively.
[7] The decision in OPSEU v Ontario (Ontario Realty Corporation/Management
Board Secretariat)(Union Grievance), dated May 19, 1998 (GSB File #1997-2024)(Vice-
Chair Abramsky) reviews in detail the relevant considerations in assessing mootness
with reference to the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Borowski v. Canada
(Attorney-General) [1989] CanLII 123 (SCC).
[8] As set out by Mr. Justice Sopinka in Borowski, supra, at page 5, a court or
tribunal may decline to decide a case that raises merely hypothetical or abstract
questions. Essentially the question is, has the issue become academic? However,
even where that question is answered in the affirmative, a court or tribunal may still
exercise its discretion to proceed if it is satisfied that collateral consequences exist that
warrant the pursuit of litigation.
[9] The complainant has not taken issue with any of the factual assertions made by
the Employer. The relevant circumstances therefore include the following. The
complainant has apparently been absent from the workplace since April 2014 and has
been in receipt of long-term disability since October 2014. There is no information as to
whether he will return to active employment. The Employer confirms in its submission
that the letter of discipline was removed from the complainant’s file three years after it
issued and that it is not in the complainant’s personnel file, nor will it be at any point in
the future. (The delay in tabling this information is perhaps attributable to the fact that
prior hearing dates were adjourned on consent and only recently has this complaint
proceeded.) The complainant suffered no loss of pay as a result of the letter having
being issued.
[10] In these circumstances, I am satisfied that this complaint is now moot. The
remedy sought by the complaint, the removal of the letter, has been achieved. The
letter of discipline has been removed from the complainant’s personnel file and
therefore has no impact on his employment. It has no bearing on the subsequent
suspensions that are no longer subject to challenge due to the untimely filing of those
complaints. The issue between the parties concerning the letter of discipline is now
academic, as the letter no longer has any impact or effect on the complainant in his
employment.
[11] I am further satisfied that there is no basis on which to properly exercise a
discretion to proceed. There is no employment purpose to be served by proceeding,
and no overriding legal issue or principle is at stake. The question of whether the
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Employer had cause in the circumstances to discipline the complainant is a limited
factual question, specific to these parties. It is the case that the specific issue of whether
the Employer had cause in this instance to discipline the complainant will not be
determined. However, as in Abramsky’s decision, supra, (see page 14) any such
decision would be academic and have no practical effect on the parties, as the
Employer has already removed the letter of discipline from the complainant’s file and
has expressly confirmed that it neither can nor will have any impact on the
complainant’s employment should he return to work.
[12] Having regard to the above, I find that this complaint is now moot. It is therefore
dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 22nd day of March, 2019.
“Marilyn A. Nairn”
_______________________
Marilyn A. Nairn, Vice-Chair