HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2018-3036.Hasted.19-07-10 Decision
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PSGB# P-2018-3036; P-2018-3303; P-2018-3304; P-2018-3803
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Hasted Complainant
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE Kathleen G. O’Neil Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
John Hasted and David Ruttle
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Caroline Cohen
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
HEARING Teleconference April 8, 2019, Hearing
April 25, 2019
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DECISION
[1] This decision deals with preliminary objections to three of four complaints brought
by John Hasted in 2018 and 2019. The employer takes the position that the
subject matter of one of the complaints is the same as a complaint filed in 2017
and then withdrawn, and that there is not a viable or prima facie case to be heard,
so that the three complaints discussed below should be dismissed without further
hearing. The complainant takes the contrary view, asking that they all proceed to
be heard in full.
[2] During a case management conference call, Mr. Hasted provided particulars of the
fourth complaint, after which employer counsel advised the Board that there would
be no preliminary objection regarding the fourth complaint, which has not yet been
set down for hearing.
Factual/Procedural Overview
[3] On a motion such as this, if there is any dispute, the facts asserted by the
complainants are assumed to be true and provable, although if the matter
proceeds to a hearing, the evidence introduced may lead to factual conclusions
different from the facts asserted at this stage. However, accepting the facts
alleged by the applicant does not necessarily include accepting the complainant’s
opinions about the legal conclusions that should be drawn from those facts.
[4] It is important to note that on a preliminary motion such as this, it is the viability of
the complaint that is in issue, rather than the strength of the employer’s defense.
Thus, I have not set out facts alleged in the employer’s defense, as that is not the
focus of this decision, but would, of course, be an integral part of any full
consideration of the complaints on their merits.
[5] In a complaint dated January 9, 2017, [file #P-2016-2188], the complainant
alleged that he had been subjected to ongoing targeting and humiliation at the
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hands of a senior administrator at the Ontario Correctional Institute (OCI),
causing health concerns and personal stress. It was withdrawn by the
complainant by email to the Board dated February 21, 2017, after a positive
meeting with his superintendent in the spirit of considering there to be a “clean
slate” under the premise that issues would improve. This will be referred to as
the 2017 complaint to distinguish it from the four complaints filed in 2018 and
2019.
[6] The Complainant was in receipt of benefits under the Workers’ Safety and
Insurance Act [WSIA] from March 24, 2018 to October 22, 2018 relating to
matters arising in the workplace which were the subject of the withdrawn
complaint, referred to above. Mr. Hasted was off on WSIA benefits for
approximately 7 months, returning to work with some accommodation in
November 2018.
[7] The complaints mention the Policy to Support a Respectful Workplace and
Prevent Workplace Harassment and Discrimination effective October 1, 2017,
[referred to below sometimes as the WDHP policy or the Respectful Workplace
Policy], and the Ontario Correctional Services Code of Conduct and
Professionalism Policy (COCAP), dated August 2014.
[8] The three recently filed complaints in issue here will be summarized just below,
together with the related preliminary objections.
Complaint #1, P-2018-3036, dated December 21, 2018
[9] This complaint starts with an allegation of loss of pay, due to the fact that Mr.
Hasted no longer had vacation credits available to top up WSIB [Workers’ Safety
and Insurance Board] benefits. His complaint letter to the Deputy Minister relates
this loss to incident reports regarding events in November and December 2016,
and approximately 3 years of targeting and bullying by the same administrator
whose behavior was the focus of the withdrawn complaint. Additionally, he refers
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to the code of conduct and alleges the ministry and its representatives have been
negligent in their duties to ensure a respectful workplace. He claims full redress;
all vacation credits lost, and damages for lost opportunities - promotional and to
work overtime - and financial hardship due to being off.
[9] The employer poses a twofold preliminary objection: anything that was a part of
the withdrawn complaint should not be allowed to be brought back before the
PSGB, and any remedy that relates to compensation for any condition
compensable by the WSIB is beyond the PSGB’s jurisdiction. The employer
considers anything raised in the complaints that arose as of Mr. Hasted’s return
to work at OCI in November 2018 as “current”. Anything prior to that time is
“historical”, and would be covered by the withdrawn complaint, in the employer’s
view.
Complaints #2 and 3 - file #P-2018-3303 and 3304, both dated January 23, 2019
[10] These complaints followed on an incident on December 12, 2018 where Mr.
Hasted claims that a Deputy Superintendent was disrespectful in addressing him
in front of others about his accommodation needs and yelling at him when he
was trying to disengage.
[11] The Deputy asked for an occurrence report, which Mr. Hasted provided. Given
the content of the report, the Deputy sent Mr. Hasted’s occurrence report to a
WDHP advisor. That advisor asked the Deputy Superintendent to find out from
the Complainant whether the latter intended to file a formal complaint under the
Policy, despite the fact that the Deputy Superintendent was the potential
respondent. The Deputy Superintendent in turn posed that question to Mr.
Hasted by email.
[12] Mr. Hasted wrote an email to the Superintendent objecting to the involvement of
the Deputy Superintendent. The Superintendent then asked Mr. Hasted via
email what his intentions were concerning a WDHP complaint, and Mr. Hasted
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replied that he intended to file a PSGB complaint instead since the Deputy, the
potential respondent, had already contacted the W DHP advisor.
[13] In complaint #P-2018-3303, the complainant states he wishes to bring concerns
to the PSGB around the Ministry Division that oversees WDHP (Respectful
workplace policy) complaints, i.e. the respondent had full access to Mr. Hasted’s
complaint, the WDHP advisor advised the respondent to contact the complainant
directly, the Deputy Superintendent, then a potential respondent, sent an email
that the complainant construed as possible intimidation based on the direction of
the WDHP advisor. The complaint alleges that the WDHP advisor and the
respondent have violated the Respectful Workplace Policy, and that
confidentiality has been broken by the WDHP advisor by discussing the
complaint with the potential respondent.
[14] In the related complaint #P-2018-3304, Mr. Hasted claims the conduct of the
Deputy Superintendent - confronting him about his accommodation needs and
yelling at him in front of staff and inmates - was a continuation of the harassment
complained of in the withdrawn complaint. As well, the complainant references
the COCAP policy and the fact that it applies to all employees, regardless of rank
and claims that the request that he tell the potential respondent his intentions
about a formal complaint can be considered intimidation.
[15] For these two complaints, the employer maintains that there is no viable case for
the PSGB to hear, in that the complainant has not identified any provision of the
WDHP policy that has been breached, and thus there is no basis for the
remedies he claims. Further, there are no particulars of the alleged breach of
confidentiality or harassment. In sum, it is the employer’s position that there is
no viable or prima facie case of any breach of any term or condition of
employment.
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Considerations and Conclusions
[16] The Board’s rules allow consideration of motions such as the one brought by the
employer in this case. Rule 12 reads:
Where the Board considers that a complaint does not make out a case for
the orders or remedies requested, even if all the facts stated in the
complaint are assumed to be true, the Board may dismiss the complaint
without a hearing or consultation. In its decision the Board will set out its
reasons.
[17] The issues arising in respect of the above-noted facts are as follows, which will
be dealt with in turn:
a) Is the subject matter of the first complaint the same as the one
withdrawn?
b) Are the remedies requested in the first complaint unavailable from the
PSGB because they are in the exclusive jurisdiction of the WSIB?
c) Has the complainant established a viable case in respect of the three
complaints here in issue?
a. The effect of the withdrawn complaint
[18] Withdrawals are a form of resolution of a complaint, and it is very important that
they be respected. Once a complaint is withdrawn or a settlement finalized,
parties must feel confident that they can rely upon them, or there would be much
reduced incentive to resolve things without the additional time, stress, expense
and uncertainty of litigation. Therefore, anything that is properly considered part
of the earlier complaint, withdrawn on February 21, 2017, should not be allowed
to be the subject of the more recent complaints.
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[19] Mr. Hasted does not accept that his complaints should be dismissed as covered
by the withdrawal of his previous complaint, stating that he has well over fifty
incidents of ongoing chastisement, as recently as a week before the hearing.
[20] It is necessary to review the earlier complaint to determine what was covered by
it, and what is not, in relation to what is alleged in the first of the recent
complaints. There are few particulars in the 2017 complaint, and the matter
never came to a decision which would have clarified what incidents were
covered. However, as noted above, it is clear that the 2017 complaint alleged
that Mr. Hasted had been subjected to ongoing targeting and humiliation at the
hands of a senior administrator at the Ontario Correctional Institute (OCI),
causing health concerns and personal stress.
[21] As a starting point then, the complainant would not be permitted to call into
question the behavior of the senior manager covered by the 2017 complaint, or
ask for any remedy in respect of any incident with that manager on or before
February 21, 2017.
[22] The employer proposes the complainant’s return to work at the Ontario
Correctional Institute [OCI] in November 2018 as the appropriate dividing line
between the current and historical complaints. Given the absence of details
before me at this time, and the fact that the withdrawal occurred more than a
year and a half before Mr. Hasted’s return to work at OCI, that may well be the
appropriate dividing line. There do not appear to be any specific incidents relied
on in the 2018/2019 complaints from before the fall of 2018, but any disputes
about the appropriate scope of the evidence at any resumed hearing will need to
be dealt with if they arise.
[23] These conclusions also need to be seen in conjunction with the discussion in the
next section concerning any claim for compensation that is within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the WSIB.
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b. Exclusive jurisdiction of the WSIB?
[24] The law is clear that the PSGB has no jurisdiction to award compensation or
damages for matters properly before the WSIB. See, for instance, the decision
of the PSGB in Parrack v. Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional
Services), 2008 CanLII 70546 (ON PSGB), and the decisions cited therein.
[25] These decisions are consistent with the jurisprudence relied on by employer
counsel in this respect, including the Monk decision of the Grievance Settlement
Board (GSB): Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services v.
OPSEU (Monk), 2010 CanLII 28621 (ON GSB - Gray), application for judicial
review dismissed by the Divisional Court, reported at 2012 ONSC 2348 (CanLII),
appeal dismissed by the Court of Appeal, reported at 2013 ONCA 406 (CanLII),
and the decisions that have followed it. These include Ontario Public Service
Employees Union (Foley et al) v. Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services), 2018 CanLII 119566 (ON GSB), Ontario Public Service
Employees Union (Rosati) v. Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services), 2018 CanLII 7264 (ON GSB) and Ontario Public Service
Employees Union (Patterson) v. Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services), 2017 CanLII 25459 (ON GSB), recently affirmed by the
Divisional Court: OPSEU v. The Crown in Right of Ontario, 2019 ONSC 1077
CanLII, The Association of Management, Administrative and Professional Crown
Employees of Ontario [AMAPCEO] (Wilson) v. Ontario (Ministry of Natural
Resources and Forestry), 2017 CanLII 71789 (ON GSB) , Ontario Public Service
Employees Union (Grievor) v. Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services), 2017 CanLII 92683 (ON GSB), and Maple Leaf Foods
Inc. v United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 175 (Singh), 2018 CanLII
69918 (ON LA).
[26] However, it is also clear from the relevant jurisprudence that not all aspects of
incidents which may be compensable are beyond the PSGB’s jurisdiction. In
Parrack, the potential compensability of the complainant’s claims in respect of
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asbestos exposure did not preclude consideration of claims of breach of the
Occupational Health and Safety Act that were an additional focus of that
complaint. In Charlton v. Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services),
2007 CanLII 24192 (ON PSGB), the fact that the complainant had received WSIB
benefits for stress related to serious incidents of racial harassment did not
preclude damages for the breach of her dignity interests under the Human Rights
Code. In the AMAPCEO decision cited above, the fact that the GSB found it had
no jurisdiction to award monetary compensation for matters that were found to be
within the WSIB’s jurisdiction, did not prevent it from remaining seized over other
aspects of the grievance relating to complaints of a toxic work environment, and
the employer’s alleged failure to investigate allegations the grievor had made
about another employee’s stealing and misuse of government resources.
[27] In the instant case, the employer notes that Mr. Hasted has not alleged any
breach of the Ontario Human Rights Code.
[28] Counsel notes that some of these decisions were made before the significant
amendments to the WSIA, effective January 1, 2018, which clarified coverage for
chronic or traumatic mental stress arising out of and in the course of the worker’s
employment. Notably, sections 13 (4) and (4.1) of the WSIA now make clear that
benefits for chronic or traumatic mental stress arising out of and in the course of
the worker’s employment are available as if the mental stress were a personal
injury by accident. However, section 13 (5) details an exception in that such
benefits are not available for mental stress caused by decisions or actions of an
employer relating to the worker’s employment, including a decision to change the
work to be performed or the working conditions, to discipline the worker or to
terminate employment. Although the new provisions obviously need to be
applied as necessary, it does not appear at this juncture that the amendments
change anything for the case now before me.
[29] In addition to the unavailability of any remedy within the jurisdiction of the WSIB,
the employer also maintains that the PSGB is precluded from awarding even a
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declaration regarding the alleged harassment that was the subject of the 2017
complaint referred to above. Consistent with my conclusions above in respect of
the effect of the withdrawn complaint, I accept that submission. However, that
does not deal with things that occurred after the period encompassed by the
2017 complaint.
[30] As noted above, Mr. Hasted maintains that he has evidence of recent incidents of
chastisement which should not be considered to have been part of the withdrawn
complaints. However, even if they occurred after the withdrawal of the 2017
complaint, to the extent that he is claiming any compensation for impacts on his
health, such as stress from harassment that would be compensable under the
WSIA, they would be beyond the jurisdiction of the PSGB because they would be
in the exclusive jurisdiction of the WSIB.
[31] The question remaining is whether there are other aspects of the first complaint
which are not within the exclusive jurisdiction of the WSIB, and thus are open to
the complainant to pursue. As noted above, Mr. Hasted claims full redress; all
vacation credits lost, and damages for lost opportunities, and financial hardship
due to being off. The concept of “full redress” is a broad one, and in the
complainant’s submissions he made reference to both financial and policy
violations.
[32] In his remarks at the hearing, the Complainant indicated that the financial
aspects of the first recent complaint about top-up of his WSIB benefits had been
rectified. Nonetheless, he made reference to the WDHP and COCAP policies,
and the fact that he had worked in another institution in 2017, where he
considers the negative impact of previous events to have continued. He
considers the events to be a continuum, that the previous problems had started
up again since his return to work and emphasized that his current complaint was
about policies not being followed. He maintains that policy requires that when it
is alleged to have been violated, an investigation is required, and alleges that no
such investigation has occurred.
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[33] There is a mention in the complaint letter to the Deputy Minister of the code of
conduct, presumably a reference to the COCAP policy, and that the
Administrator in question had not been taken to task for ongoing behavior. The
letter states that the ministry and its representatives have been negligent in their
duties to ensure a respectful workplace for the complainant. There are very few
details in the complaint, but the general theme appears to overlap with the fourth
complaint, filed on March 19, 2019, to which no preliminary objection has been
made.
[34] In light of all the above, the first complaint - P-2018-3036 - may proceed to the
extent that it does not deal with incidents covered by the earlier complaint or
claims for compensation for matters within the jurisdiction of the WSIB, such as
health issues for which the complainant has received WSIB benefits in the past.
c. Is there a prima facie case in respect of the second and third recent
complaints?
[35] As to what constitutes a prima facie or viable case before this Board, the
employer refers to Allen v Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional
Services), PSGB# P-2007-2921, 2009 CanLII 43639 (ON PSGB) and its
description of a viable case as a chain with at least three links: the identification
of an existing term or condition of employment, followed by facts that could
establish that the employer has breached that term or condition of the
employment contract, and third, a connection between the breach and the
remedy requested, or at the very least, some remedy within the Board’s
jurisdiction.
[36] The second and third complaints, as indicated above, relate to an incident in
which Mr. Hasted alleges that a Deputy Superintendent yelled at him in an
unprofessional way in front of staff and inmates and that his report of it was then
handled in a way which was not consistent with the WDHP policy or the COCAP.
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[37] It is true, as employer counsel notes, that Mr. Hasted did not identify a specific
section of the WDHP policy that was breached, when he complains of the
process used, or initially identify a breach of confidentiality, in circumstances
where the incident report was prepared at the request of the same person who
Mr. Hasted asserts should not have seen it in the first instance. On the other
hand, he indicated at the hearing that the confidentiality issue referred both to
discussion of his need for accommodation in front of others, and that the incident
report was sent in a confidential envelope to the Superintendent’s secretary, with
the expectation that it go to the Superintendent rather than the Deputy.
Moreover, the facts as he asserts them do appear to make out a viable case in
relation to his allegations of management’s failure to respond to what Mr. Hasted
characterizes as harassment, in accordance with sections 8.1 (g) and 9.17 of the
WDHP, as well as of unprofessional behavior towards Mr. Hasted which was
arguably not handled as intended by the COCAP policy’s provisions about
removal of managers from any process they may be involved in. The latter may
apply to the involvement of the Deputy Superintendent in the consultation with
the WDHP office, brief though it may have been. I emphasize that, at this stage,
the Board is not weighing the strength of the employer’s defense, but merely
assessing the matter on the basis of the complainant’s assertions, assumed to
be true and capable of proof.
[38] Although it is not clear what remedy beyond a declaration would be available on
the second and third complaints, I am not persuaded, at this stage, that there is
no viable case to be heard in respect of complaints #P-2018-3303 and 3304,
subject to the above noted limitations.
Summary
[39] In summary, the employer’s motion is allowed to the extent indicated above, but
the complaints may proceed to hearing on the issues that were not the subject of
the 2017 complaint and are not within the exclusive jurisdiction of the WSIB.
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[40] In the result, the Board will offer dates for mediation of the remainder of the four
2018 and 2019 complaints.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 10th day of July, 2019.
“Kathleen G. O’Neil”
_______________________
Kathleen G. O’Neil, Chair