HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2019-1111.Laforest.21-01-04 Decision
Public Service
Grievance Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission des
griefs de la fonction
publique
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
PSGB# P-2019-1111
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Laforest 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
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Mario Laforest
Ann Fowler
Treasury Board Secretariat
Employee Relations Advisor
HEARING
SUBMISSIONS
December 3, 2020 (by teleconference)
Written submissions completed December
10, 2020
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Decision
[1] This decision deals with a complaint filed by Operational Manager Mario
Laforest, claiming that his terms and conditions of employment related to
overtime were breached on an occasion where the employer decided not to fill an
overtime shift. The employer’s position is that there has been no breach of any
term or condition of the complainant’s employment, and thus the complaint
should be dismissed.
Factual and Procedural Overview
[2] On the morning of the hearing set for this matter, the Board received an email
indicating that Mr. Laforest was experiencing technical difficulties being able to
access the teleconference, which had been scheduled in that mode on consent
of both parties. He indicated that he would like the matter to proceed in his
absence and allow for the facts presented to stand on their own merit. In that
email, he provided comments on documents that the employer representative
had provided in advance of the hearing as evidence the employer was intending
to rely on. In coming to the decision below, the Board has considered those
written submissions together with post-hearing written submissions, the oral
submissions made by the employer, Mr. Laforest’s written complaint and the
documents submitted by the employer, including its Form 2 response.
[3] There was no dispute about the basic facts underlying this complaint. On May
21, 2019 at 8:21 a.m., Mr. Laforest was called with an offer of a twelve-hour
overtime shift for the overnight shift beginning on the same day, and ending on
the following date, May 22. He did not return the call at any time prior to the start
of the shift. He had worked a twelve-hour overtime shift ending at 6 a.m. on May
21, so may have been sleeping when the call came in. No one else answered a
call either, and the employer’s response to the situation was to run the shift with
one less manager than usual. As a result, no one worked the overtime shift
which Mr. Laforest was offered, and for which he is claiming compensation.
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The Parties’ Positions
[4] Mr. Laforest’s current complaint is based on his assertion that he was entitled to
a second phone call, and a secondary offer of overtime, according to the rules
established in the overtime distribution system called HPRO, wherever there is a
partial or full shift available. Although that system was initially designed for
bargaining unit correctional officers, Mr. Laforest asserts that it has been applied
to managers for some time and is therefore a term and condition of his
employment. The secondary offer of overtime that he claims he also should
have been offered was an opportunity to work an 8-hour shift from 2200 hours to
600 hours starting on May 21 and ending on May 22.
[5] The employer’s position is that, although Mr. Laforest would have been assigned
the shift if he had called at any time prior to the start of the shift, it was within its
rights to decide not to fill the vacancy when no one called back. In essence,
there was no overtime shift given to anyone that night, so there can be no finding
that someone worked the shift when Mr. Laforest was in line for it, in the
employer’s view. The employer submits that Mr. Laforest would need to show
why the shift needed to be filled, and since he has not provided documentation or
evidence that would show that to be the case, the complaint should be
dismissed.
[6] Mr. Laforest also did not provide any explanation in his submissions for why he
never replied to the phone message offering the shift, other than that he was
likely asleep when it first came in.
[7] Both parties referred to a decision of the Board in respect of an earlier complaint
from Mr. Laforest about overtime opportunities reported as Laforest v. Ontario
(Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2009 CanLII 66349 (ON PSGB).
The employer refers to the portion of the decision dealing with unfilled shifts,
noting that the grievances were dismissed where the shift remained unfilled and
there was no evidence that a manager worked overtime.
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[8] For his part, Mr. Laforest refers to the previous decision as demonstrating that
being bypassed for overtime opportunities has been a problem for many years,
and that the overtime protocol should be considered a term and condition of his
employment, since the employer expects everyone to adhere to it.
[9] Specific to the current complaint, Mr. Laforest maintains that past practice and
employer expectation in the process of following the HPRO Overtime protocol is
that two calls are made, the first being for coverage for the full shift and the
second offer is for any partial hours of the shift in excess of 4 hours, and that this
was not done in his case.
[10] In the submissions that Mr. Laforest forwarded on the morning of the hearing, he
asserted that the employer had not implemented the remedies flowing from the
earlier complaint dated April 1, 2009, which resulted in the decision cited above.
He asked for monetary compensation in respect of the older grievance, stating
that he believed the employer continued to act in bad faith. As that was not a
submission the employer could have anticipated from the current complaint, the
Board asked for written submissions from the employer on that point and Mr.
Laforest was given an opportunity to reply.
[11] The employer’s position in response to Mr Laforest’s suggestion that the 2009
decision was not implemented is that the decision was fully complied with and
thus Mr. Laforest’s allegations are unfounded, as well as being an expansion of
the scope of his current complaint. Furthermore, the employer submits that since
the prior decision is 11 years old and Mr. Laforest is an experienced complainant
at the PSGB, it is reasonable to conclude that if there had been non-compliance,
he would have raised this concern earlier.
[12] In any case, the employer submitted that if there were concerns with the
implementation of the 2009 decision, the appropriate process to be followed
would be to pursue his allegations of non-compliance in the context of the earlier
complaint, rather than raising it with the current complaint. The employer
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reserved its right to raise and rely on any and all preliminary objections that may
apply if he pursued that route, including timeliness, delay and waiver.
[13] By contrast, Mr. Laforest asserts that it is unfair of the employer to suggest that it
is reasonable to conclude that had there been non-compliance with the 2009
decision, he would not have waited 11 years to voice his concern. Rather, Mr.
Laforest notes that he pursued his career as an Operational Manager and
applied his focus on his endeavors at a number of institutions, and that the
employer was aware of the errors indicated by the PSGB in the prior decision.
Considerations and Conclusions
[14] The main issue to be determined is whether any term or condition of Mr.
Laforest’s employment were breached when he was not called a second time or
offered a secondary opportunity to work overtime on May 21, 2019. Although the
HPRO protocol was not in evidence, I will assume for the purposes of this
decision that the overtime distribution protocol is a term and condition of his
employment, and that it provided what Mr. Laforest asserts that it did, as the
employer did not directly take issue with that assertion at the hearing of this
matter.
[15] In order to succeed in this complaint, Mr. Laforest would have to show that the
overtime protocol was not followed, and that he suffered some damage as a
result. In overtime complaints, the damage is usually that someone else worked
the overtime that would have rightfully belonged to the complainant if the process
had been followed. That is the crucial piece missing here; although an overtime
shift was offered, no one accepted it, and no one worked it. There is no evidence
before me that overtime was worked by someone else on the night of May 21
when it was Mr. Laforest’s turn to work it. Much like the case from 2009, there is
no evidence that the employer was obliged to fill the shift with overtime. More
specific to the facts of the current complaint, there is also no evidence which
would permit me to conclude that the employer was required to fill it at all.
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Although the facts of the situation in 2009 were somewhat different, the following
portion of the decision cited above, at paragraph 26, still applies:
It is common ground that the Operational Manager running a shift, or
doing the scheduling for another shift, has a significant amount of
discretion in how to staff a shift to get the necessary work done.
There is nothing in the material before me sufficient to find that the
unfilled shifts were required to be filled with overtime, so that the
grievances are dismissed in regards to claims for unfilled shifts or partial
shifts on which no manager worked overtime.
[16] In this case, Mr. Laforest has not established that it is a term and condition of his
employment that, even if no one responds to calls offering an overtime shift, that
the employer is required to continue to offer that shift, or part of it. I have no
basis on the material before me to find that the employer breached any term or
condition of Mr. Laforest’s employment when it was decided that the institution
could run without filling the offered overtime shift. Accordingly, I find that Mr.
Laforest has not established that he is owed anything from the employer in
respect of the shift on May 21, 2019.
[17] For the above noted reasons, the complaint in respect of the overtime shift of
May 21, 2019 is dismissed.
[18] As for the allegations concerning the implementation of the 2009 decision cited
above, I agree with the employer that this is an expansion of the case beyond
what could reasonably be inferred was in dispute from the complaint filed in
2019. Further, 11 years is too long to wait to bring forward an allegation that a
previous decision was not complied with. After a much shorter time that that, the
employer would be reasonably entitled to conclude that there were no further
issues in respect of that case. Accordingly, the complainant is not entitled to
anything in respect of his allegations in respect of the 2009 decision.
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[19] In summary, for the reasons provided above, the complaint is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 4th day of January, 2021.
“Kathleen G. O’Neil”
________________________
Kathleen G. O’Neil, Chair