HomeMy WebLinkAbout2017-1413.Cooper.19-04-15 Decision
Crown 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#2017-1413
UNION#2017-0584-0005
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Cooper) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ontario Clean Water Agency) Employer
BEFORE Ian Anderson Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Allison Vanek
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Felix Lau
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING April 1, 2019
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Decision
[1] The grievance before me alleges failure to accommodate and harassment. By
decision dated May 1, 2018, I issued certain case management directions. Of
particular note, the Union was directed to:
file full written representations which shall include: a statement of all issues which
the Union intends to raise; the remedies it seeks; and full particulars in support of
its positions. The Union’s representations shall be accompanied by declarations
from each of its intended witnesses and the documents on which it intends to
rely.
The May 1, 2018 decision also specified that a declaration would constitute, in
essence, the evidence in chief of the declarant.
[2] The Union filed 14 pages of representations, a 75 page single spaced declaration
from the Grievor and 100s of pages of exhibits. Those materials refer to events
which the Grievor considered to have been harassing and bullying incidents
dating back to 2008.
[3] The Employer moves to have many of the Union’s particulars struck on the basis
that they pre-date the grievance by more than three years, lack sufficient
particularity or both. This decision determines that motion.
[4] The Employer starts from the basic principle that grievances are to be filed
promptly and in accordance with the time limits in the collective agreement. It
notes that when the grievance alleges harassment, the GSB has permitted the
union to lead evidence of earlier events in order to prove a pattern of
harassment. At the same time, the GSB has generally limited such evidence to
the three years before the grievance so that the employer will be able to defend
itself. This has become known as the “three year rule”. The “rule” is not really a
rule but rather a guideline which is flexibly applied depending on the
circumstances of a particular case. The Employer relies on the following
statement in Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Akintunde) v Ontario
(Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2018 CanLII 55850 (ON GSB),
(Watters):
In deciding whether, and how, to apply the rule, the Board has considered the following
matters:
i) whether the grievor was aware of the right to challenge or
grieve the earlier events which the Union seeks to rely on;
ii) whether the hearing would be unduly protracted by the
application of the rule, as a result of the need to present and
consider voluminous evidence relating to the past events; and
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iii) whether extending the period of arbitral review would raise
concerns from both an equitable and procedural standpoint.
[5] The Employer argues that application of those three factors to this case, as
detailed in the Union’s particulars, provides no basis for departing from a three
year limitation on earlier evidence. With respect to awareness of rights, the
Grievor had complained to managers and/or the Ministry of Labour at the time of
many of the earlier events which he now seeks to rely. That is, he considered
those events to have been improper at the time they occurred and voiced
concerns. The Grievor was specifically aware of his right to grieve, having
previously done so with respect to an unrelated matter. With respect to whether
the hearing would be unduly protracted, approximately nine of the fourteen pages
of particulars relate to events which predate the grievance by more than three
years. A number of additional witnesses would be required if the Union were
permitted to lead evidence with respect to these earlier events. With respect to
equitable and procedural concerns, the Employer argues that most of the Union’s
particulars are not about harassment at all, and thus do not attract the three year
rule. Rather, the case is principally about accommodation and to a lesser extent
health and safety. Further, to the extent the case is about harassment, the
allegations are of overt harassment, not the kind of subtle behaviour which may
be recognizable as harassment only when viewed within the context of a
longstanding pattern of behaviour. It is the difficulty of proving the latter type of
conduct which gave rise to the three year rule: Hotel-Dieu Grace Hospital v.
ONA, (1997) 62 LAC (4th) 164 (Picher). Reference was also made to Ontario
Public Service Employees Union (Calder) v Ontario (Community Safety and
Correctional Services), 2017 CanLII 77176 (ON GSB) (Wacyk).
[6] The Employer also identified certain paragraphs of the Union’s particulars as
being insufficiently particularized.
[7] The Union notes the Grievor alleges harassment at the hands of numerous
individuals since his transfer to the South Peel Region in 2008. This led the
Grievor to experience anxiety and depression and post traumatic stress disorder.
Ultimately, in October 24, 2014, the Grievor had to go off on sick leave as a
result. When the Grievor’s short term disability and long term disability benefits
came to an end, he attempted to return to work. The Grievor alleges the
Employer failed to accommodate him which exacerbated the harassment he had
experienced. The Grievor also alleges that there was ongoing harassment
through out his attempts to return to work.
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[8] Counsel for the Union drew my attention to the decision of Arbitrator Bendel in
OPSEU (Lee) v. George Brown College of Applied Arts and Technology, 2106
CarswellOnt 14658, [2016] OLAA No. 77, 128 CLAS 260 in which Arbitrator
Bendel took issue with the three year rule, characterizing it is a mechanism by
which otherwise relevant evidence is excluded, and arguing that an arbitrator has
no discretion to exclude such evidence. Counsel acknowledged that Arbitrator
Bendel’s decision is not a decision of the GSB. She referred to it only to highlight
the “seriousness” of what the Employer was seeking through the imposition of
the three year rule. In these circumstances I do not find it necessary or advisable
to comment further on Arbitrator Bendel’s decision.
[9] The Union argues that restricting the evidence with respect to harassment to the
period of three years prior to the date of the grievance would eliminate all
evidence of harassment other than during the three month period before the
Grievor commenced sick leave in October 2014. This is an insufficient period of
time to permit the establishment of a pattern of harassment. Such an extended
period of sick leave is the kind of special circumstance which caused Arbitrator
Leighton to extend the three year period in Ontario Public Service Employees
Union (Lunan) v Ontario (Labour), 2015 CanLII 36166 (ON GSB).
[10] With respect to the first factor discussed by the Employer, awareness of rights,
the Union argues that the Grievor’s failure to previously file a grievance reflects
the fact that various Local Union officials, including the then Local president were
among those he alleges harassed him. Only at a later point did he realize he
could file a grievance directly with the Union. With respect to the second, impact
on the hearing, the Union argues there is no suggestion that any of the additional
witnesses are not available to the Employer. Further, the Grievor’s absence on
sick leave means that there would be little evidence with respect to harassment
for the three year period. The extension of the that period simply offsets this lack
of evidence. With respect to equitable and procedural, the Union notes the
Grievor’s absence on sick leave for much of the three years. Reference was also
made to Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Patterson) v. Ontario (Ministry
of Public Safety and Security), 2003 CanLII 52902 (ON GSB) (Leighton) and
Ontario Public Service Employees Union (O’Brien) v. Ontario (Community Safety
and Correctional Services), 2011 CanLII 10242 (ON GSB) (Leighton).
[11] As argued by the Employer, the “three year rule” arises from the unique nature of
harassment cases. Harassment sometimes can only be seen by viewing
incidents within a larger context of a pattern of conduct. Evidence with respect to
earlier events may, therefore, be relevant to proving that the incident (or
incidents) which gave rise to a grievance constitute harassment. The three year
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rule is directed to how far back in time the Union may go in adducing such
evidence. The “exceptions” to the rule may be understood in part as ensuring
that probative relevant evidence not be excluded on the basis of the application
of an arbitrary time limit.
[12] The three year rule, however, does not provide a basis to expand the grievance
before an arbitrator. It also does not render what would otherwise be irrelevant
evidence relevant. Evidence is not admissible simply because it falls within the
three years (or such other period as is appropriate in the circumstances), it must
be relevant to proving the incident or incidents which form the basis of the
grievance constitute harassment. Further, to the extent that evidence with
respect to earlier events is relevant, the three year rule does not provide a basis
for granting a remedy with respect to those events per se.
[13] In this case, the grievance is dated July 31, 2017. The Grievor was not in the
workplace at the time, having left on sick leave on October 24, 2014 and not
returned. The particulars in relation to 2017 are with respect to attempts to
accommodate the Grievor in returning to work. These are the only allegations
which fall anywhere in the proximity of the time limits for filing a grievance. The
question is whether the allegations of harassment which pre-date 2017 are
relevant to the grievance.
[14] The Union argues that they are relevant to understanding why the Grievor was
off on sick leave in the first place. The Grievor would not have needed to be
accommodated but for the Employer’s failure to provide a safe workplace free
from harassment. I do not accept this argument. The Employer’s duty to
accommodate arises from the existence of a disability at the time the
accommodation request is being considered, not the reason for that disability.
[15] The Union asserts that the Employer’s failure to accommodate has lasted for
over two years and that this is unduly protracted. The unduly protracted nature
of the accommodation process, the Union asserts, is harassment. While
conceding that some of the alleged harassment which pre-dates the Grievor’s
sick leave is not a similar nature, the Union asserts that some of it is. In
particular, the Union refers to incidents in which managers refused to assist the
Grievor or failed to listen to him, such as when he requested a move off night
shift or required paper work for his level 3 certification. So, the Union asserts,
the Employer’s failure to properly and promptly accommodate the Grievor, is just
another instance of the Employer failing to provide the Grievor with assistance
when requested to do so.
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[16] I pause to note that I understand the period during which the Union asserts the
Employer has failed to accommodate the Grievor to commence in or about
February 2017 when the Grievor started receiving communications advising him
that his long term disability benefits would be coming to an end as of April 30,
2017 (i.e. the end of the “own occupation” period of disability benefits) and
seeking information about his ability to perform other occupations, and continuing
up to and including at least January 21, 2019 when the Grievor was advised a
temporary position had been identified for him outside OCWA through the Health
Assignment Process. While most of these events post date the grievance, as
noted in the June 29, 2018 case management decision, the parties had agreed
that I would have jurisdiction to deal with the Grievor’s allegation of a continuing
course of conduct since he filed the grievance. (I would also note that in order
for the Employer to know the case which it has to meet, there has to be some
defined end point to the Union’s evidence. Absent some further agreement by
the parties, that end point is the date of the Grievor’s declaration, that is March 1,
2019.)
[17] Because of the process adopted in this case, I am able to assess the relevance
of the particulars which the Employer seeks to strike by reference to what would
be in essence the Union’s entire case in chief were those particulars permitted to
stay. Having carefully reviewed the Union’s particulars and the Grievor’s
declaration, it is not apparent to me how the events which pre-date 2017 would
be relevant to proving the events which post date 2017 constitute harassment.
The earlier events relate to very different issues, not accommodation. Further,
there is no overlap between those involved in the accommodation process and
those involved in the earlier incidents.
[18] By contrast, the events during the period February 2017 to March 2019 all relate
to the accommodation process. To the extent the Grievor asserts the Employer’s
actions during this period constituted a subtle form of harassment arising from a
course of conduct, the period is of sufficient length for the Union to attempt to
prove its case.
[19] The Employer, however, did not object to all particulars which pre-dated
February 2017. Rather it objected to all particulars which pre-dated the
grievance by more than three years. The Union, therefore, has not had an
opportunity to make submissions with respect to the relevance of particulars with
respect to the events from October 2014 to February 2017. Accordingly, prior to
deciding whether to strike those particulars, the Union shall have the opportunity
to make such further submissions as it may wish to make. Any such
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submissions shall be filed in writing no later than May 24, 2019. The Employer
shall have until May 31, 2019 to file any submissions in reply.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 15th day of April, 2019.
“Ian Anderson”
Ian Anderson, Arbitrator