HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-0227.Cosulich.21-03-23 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# 2002-0227
UNION# 2001-0234-0016
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Cosulich) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE
Gail Misra
Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
Dan Sidsworth
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE
EMPLOYER
Michelle LaButte
Treasury Board Secretariat
Employee Relations Advisor
HEARING September 28, 2020, February 18 and
March 19, 2021
-2-
DECISION
[1] Since the spring of 2000 the parties have been meeting regularly to address matters of
mutual interest which have arisen as the result of the Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services (now, the Ministry of the Solicitor General) as well as the Ministry
of Children and Youth Services restructuring initiatives around the Province. Through
the MERC (Ministry Employment Relations Committee) a subcommittee was established
to deal with issues arising from the transition process. The parties have negotiated a
series of MERC agreements setting out the process for how organizational changes will
unfold for Correctional and Youth Services staff and for non-Correctional and non-Youth
Services staff.
[2] The parties agreed that this Board would remain seized of all issues that arise through
this process and it is this agreement that provides me the jurisdiction to resolve the
outstanding matters.
[3] Over the years as some institutions and/or youth centres decommissioned or reduced in
size others were built or expanded. The parties have made efforts to identify vacancies
and positions and the procedures for the filling of those positions as they become
available.
[4] The parties have also negotiated a number of agreements that provide for the “roll-over”
of fixed term staff to regular (classified) employee status.
[5] Hundreds of grievances have been filed as the result of the many changes that have
taken place at provincial institutions. The transition subcommittee has, with the
assistance of this Board, mediated numerous disputes. Others have come before this
Board for disposition.
[6] It was determined by this Board at the outset that the process for these disputes would
be somewhat more expedient. To that end, grievances are presented by way of
statements of fact and succinct submissions. On occasion, clarification has been sought
from grievors and institutional managers at the request of the Board. This process has
served the parties well. The decisions are without prejudice but attempt to provide
guidance for future disputes.
[7] Don Cosulich was a Correctional Officer (“CO”) at the Maplehurst Correctional Complex
(“Maplehurst”) when he filed a grievance on July 16, 2001 claiming that his Continuous
Service Date (“CSD”) has been incorrectly calculated. By way of remedy, the Grievor
sought to have his hours recalculated, his CSD changed, and all monies owed as a result
of the miscalculation.
[8] As is obvious from the date of the filing of this grievance, it has been outstanding for a
very long time. Since then, much has happened as a result of the Employer’s having
miscalculated Mr. Cosulich’s CSD, and in fact the grievor has now retired effective
December 2020. At the time, the grievor contended that his CSD should have been
January 16, 1995.
-3-
[9] By a letter dated January 18, 2002 the grievor was advised that he had been declared
surplus at Maplehurst. He believed that if his CSD had been recalculated, he would not
be on the surplus list. In a letter dated February 8, 2002 to the Regional Director for
Adult Institutions, Central Region, the Grievor noted that had his CSD been recalculated,
he would not have been negatively affected when there was a redeployment of COs from
Maplehurst to other institutions as the decision of who was moved was based on
seniority. According to the Union, some of those Maplehurst COs were assigned to the
Toronto West Detention Centre (“TWDC”) and others to the Ontario Correctional Institute
(“OCI”). The grievor was assigned to the TWDC and was told to start there on June 24,
2002. It is noteworthy that the grievor was on the dividing line between those who were
reassigned and those who were able to stay at Maplehurst. He was the last name on
the list of those who had to transfer to other institutions.
[10] The grievor went to some effort to raise his concerns with the Employer about having
been moved, but to no avail. In addition, despite his raising the status of the 2001
grievance with the Union in 2005, it appears that it continued to languish. When the
TWDC closed, the grievor was moved to the Toronto South Detention Centre.
[11] The grievor asked for lateral transfers to get back to Milton. In December 2017 he was
able to get a temporary assignment to the Vanier Centre for Women (“Vanier”), and
effective July 30, 2018, he was granted a lateral transfer to Vanier.
[12] In the meantime, this grievance had been advanced at the MERC Transition Committee.
It would appear that in May 2017 the Employer had been working on determining the
grievor’s claim that his CSD was incorrectly calculated. At that juncture it appears to
have calculated that the grievor should have had 332 weeks counted in total, which
would have put his CSD at January 13, 1995. It is worth noting that is very close to what
the grievor himself had believed that his CSD should have been – January 16, 1995.
[13] This grievance was addressed on April 3, 2018 before Arbitrator Felicity Briggs. The
parties had again reviewed Mr. Cosulich’s CSD and determined in principle that he
should have had 335 weeks of service counted, making his CSD tentatively December
26, 1994. However, as the Union advised the grievor in May 2018, the issue of damages
for having been incorrectly surplussed to the TWDC/TSDC had not been resolved. The
main issue was that as a result of the incorrect surplussing, the grievor had to travel from
his home in the Milton area, which had been a few minutes’ drive from Maplehurst, to
the TWDC (and later to the TSDC) in Toronto. Thus at issue were both kilometrage and
time credits for the travel involved as the grievor had to travel 35.5 km. more in order to
get to the TWDC, and it took him 30 minutes longer to drive one way to Toronto.
[14] The Union has prepared a detailed calculation of the grievor’s losses based on the
various collective agreements in place from the time of the grievor’s redeployment in
2002 until he was able to get back to the Milton area at the end of 2017. It also reduced
the claims based on periods that the grievor had taken approved leaves of absence.
Based on its calculations, it is claiming $125,852.23 as the grievor’s losses.
-4-
[15] The Employer maintains that since it took about 15 years for this grievance to come to
the MERC Transition table, it has been disadvantaged by the delay. It believes that the
grievance was first raised officially in April 2018.
[16] The Union states that it has been in active discussion with the Employer since around
2016, when in the course of the med-arb process at Maplehurst this grievance was
identified as one that should be handled at the MERC Transition Committee. It further
argues that it was only more recently that the Employer has raised any concern about
delay. It notes that it received information about this grievor from Greg Gledhill, copied
to Al Quinn, (both Employer representatives) on May 16, 2017, which proves that the
parties were in discussion about this before April 2018. Furthermore, the Union submits
that timeliness was not raised before Arbitrator Briggs when this matter was first
addressed formally in April 2018.
[17] The Employer also argues that the grievor did not make enough attempts to mitigate his
losses during the period in question as he did not seek a lateral transfer to Maplehurst
or Vanier until 2013. It notes that while Mr. Cosulich applied for a lateral transfer on April
13, 2013, he let it lapse one year later in April 2014. He then applied for another lateral
transfer on October 27, 2017, and was temporarily assigned to Vanier on December 8,
2018. As noted earlier, that assignment was made permanent on July 30, 2019.
[18] Based on the facts and submissions of the parties, it is clear that had the grievor’s CSD
been recalculated in 2001, when this grievance was filed, or even at the time that the
grievor was begging the Employer to do so before the re-deployment of COs from
Maplehurst, this issue would not have arisen, and the grievor would not have been
moved in 2002. I am satisfied that Mr. Cosulich tried in the early years to get the matter
resolved in his favour. There is nothing before me to explain why this grievance took so
long to be addressed, nor why Mr. Cosulich himself did not seek a lateral transfer back
to Milton earlier. Nonetheless, I accept that by 2013 the grievor had decided that trying
for a lateral transfer may be his only way of getting back to the Milton area, and eventually
he was able to get such a transfer in December 2018.
[19] I also accept that the Employer did not raise the timeliness issue at or before this issue
was first argued before Arbitrator Briggs. It had taken fresh steps to try to resolve the
CSD issue, and in fact the parties had reached an understanding of what that should be.
The only issue that appears to have remained unresolved at that point was that of the
damages owing to the grievor as a result of the incorrect CSD having been used to
assign him to TWDC in 2002.
[20] This is a case where there is no way in which, almost twenty years later, it is possible to
correct the situation that occurred. At this juncture, the CSD is of no use to the grievor
since he has retired. However, in my view this is a case which calls for a damages award
to recognize the significant disruption that the grievor suffered by having to leave his
preferred workplace when the proper exercise of seniority would have let him remain at
Maplehurst, which was close to his home. There is no explanation for why, when Mr.
Cosulich was raising his concern about his CSD before the reassignment occurred, the
Employer did nothing, especially in light of the fact that he advised them that he had filed
a grievance in July 2001 about this issue.
-5-
[21] I recognize that the grievor could have sought a lateral transfer earlier, and therefore
attempted to mitigate his losses. That would not however have changed the fact that for
some years the grievor had to accept what in retrospect was an incorrect reassignment
because of the Employer’s faulty calculation of this grievor’s CSD. I therefore award the
grievor $10,000 in general damages, and direct the Employer to make the payment to
the grievor forthwith.
[22] I will remain seized in the event that there are any disputes that arise out of this
decision.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 23rd day of March, 2021.
“Gail Misra”
_____________________
Gail Misra, Arbitrator