HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2021-0288.Preston.21-07-29 Decision
Public Service
Grievance Board
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Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
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Commission des
griefs de la fonction
publique
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
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PSGB# 2021-0288
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Preston Complainant
- and –
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Education) Employer
BEFORE Brian Smeenk Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Ernest Coetzee & Emma Hrajnik
RZCD Law Firm
Co-Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Regina Wong
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
WRITTEN SUBMISSIONS Employer: July 7, 2021
Complainant: July 15, 2021
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Decision
[1] Howard Preston was dismissed for cause on March 5, 2021 from his position as
Manager, Maintenance Buildings and Grounds in the Provincial and
Demonstrations School Branch of the Ministry of Education (the “Employer”). He
asserts that the Employer did not have just cause to dismiss him. He seeks
reinstatement and full compensation. He filed this Complaint with the Board on
May 10, 2021.
[2] The Employer takes the preliminary position that the Board does not have
jurisdiction to hear Mr. Preston’s complaint. It says the Complaint was not filed
within the mandatory 14-day window following the expiry of the dispute resolution
period under Ontario Regulation 378/07 (“the Regulation”) under the Public
Service of Ontario Act, 2006 (“the PSOA”). Mr. Preston disagrees. Through
counsel he says that his Complaint was filed in a timely manner, within the
required 14 days. He asserts that “days” for this purpose must be interpreted as
“business days”, excluding holidays, Saturdays or Sundays. He does not dispute,
however, that if his Complaint was filed outside the required time frame, the Board
is without jurisdiction to hear it.
[3] The issue before the Board is thus whether the Complaint was filed within the
required 14 days following the dispute resolution period. That in turn requires me
to decide the proper definition of “days” for purposes of the timelines under the
Regulation.
[4] For the reasons that follow, I have concluded that the Complaint was filed outside
of the mandatory 14-day window for the filing of the Complaint. Unfortunately for
Mr. Preston, that means that this Board does not have jurisdiction to hear his
Complaint.
Background
[5] The relevant facts are not in dispute. On March 5, 2021, the Complainant was
dismissed from employment, allegedly for cause. On March 18, 2021, the
Complainant’s counsel wrote to the deputy minister advising of his intention to file
a complaint with the Board regarding the dismissal. There is then a 30-day
dispute resolution period. The deputy minister responded by email of April 21,
2021 that the Ministry would not be meeting with the Complainant. No meeting
took place. On May 10, 2021, the Complainant filed the Form 1 Application with
the Board. In it, he disputes that the Employer had cause to fire him and seeks
reinstatement and full compensation.
[6] A Case Management Meeting with counsel was convened on June 8, 2021. On
June 24, counsel for the Employer confirmed its position that the Board, “has no
jurisdiction to hear this complaint because it was filed to the PSGB outside the
timelines required by the Ontario Regulation 378/07…” As agreed during the Case
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Management Meeting, written submissions regarding the Employer’s preliminary
objection were then exchanged by the parties.
The Timelines Under the Regulation and Their Effect
[7] There is also no dispute about the basic framework of the timelines for complaints
and the dispute resolution process under the Regulation (as opposed to how to
calculate the times, which will be discussed below). It is agreed that the
jurisdiction of the Board to consider complaints about dismissal for cause starts
with section 2(1) of the Regulation, which provides:
2. (1) A person who is aggrieved by his or her dismissal for cause under section 34
of the Act may file a complaint about the dismissal for cause with the Public Service
Grievance Board,
(a) if the person is eligible under sections 5 and 6 to file such a complaint;
(b) if the person gives notice in accordance with section 8 of his or her proposal to
file the complaint; and
(c) if the person complies with the filing requirements set out in section 10.
[8] Section 8(4) of the Regulation provides that a complainant in Mr. Preston’s
position must give notice of his complaint to his deputy minister within fourteen
(14) days of receiving the notice of discipline. Mr. Preston met that requirement.
[9] Following the notice, there is a dispute resolution period. Section 9(1) of the
Regulation provides that one “is not entitled to file a complaint” with the Board until
expiry of that period as defined under the section. Since the deputy minister
declined to meet with Mr. Preston, it is agreed that the relevant dispute resolution
period is that described in Section 9(5) of the Regulation, which provides:
(5) If the deputy minister… or his or her delegate does not meet with the
complainant within 30 days after receiving the notice, the period provided for dispute
resolution expires 30 days after the notice was given to the deputy minister….
[emphasis added]
[10] A complainant may then file a complaint with the Board in compliance with the
filing requirements set out in section 10. It provides:
10. (1) Within 14 days after the expiry of the period, if any, provided for dispute
resolution under section 9, the complainant may file the complaint with the Public
Service Grievance Board by delivering it to the chair of the Board. [emphasis added]
[11] This is what I have referred to as the mandatory 14-day window for the filing of the
Complaint. While the parties agree that the Complaint must be filed within 14 days
of the expiry of the dispute resolution period, they disagree on whether that was
done.
[12] There is also no real disagreement regarding the implications of the failure to file a
timely complaint with the Board. The Employer submits that this Board has held
that the timelines prescribed in the Regulation are mandatory; that the Board does
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not have jurisdiction to expand them; and compliance with the mandatory timelines
“is a precondition to the Board having jurisdiction”. The Employer cites this
Board’s previous decisions in St Amant v Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services), 2013 CanLII 4673 (Carter) at paras 8, 10; Bourgeault v Ontario
(Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2013 CanLII 84294 (O’Neil) at para
28; and Hamilton v Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services, 2019
CanLII 42439 (Tremayne) at paras 68-75.
[13] The Employer further submits that the Board has no jurisdiction to entertain a
complaint filed more than 14 days after the expiry of the dispute resolution period,
citing its previous decisions in Bourgeault, above at paras 19-35; Burkholder v
Ontario (Government Services), 2013 CanLII 84293 (Carter) at paras 8-11; and
Telford v Ontario (Finance), 2016 CanLII 36364 (O’Neil) at paras 8-9, 32-37. Again,
Mr. Preston does not take issue with this general proposition.
Submissions
[14] The parties disagree as to how the 30-day dispute resolution period and the 14-day
window following its expiry should be calculated.
[15] The Employer argues that the “days” referred to in the Regulation refer to calendar
days, not business days. They do not exclude weekends or statutory holidays. They
argue that the Legislation Act, 2006, S.O 2006, c21 Sch. F (“Legislation Act”) applies
to all regulations, and that its sections 88-89 “provide a clear implication that the
reference to ‘days’ in the legislation refers to calendar days.”
[16] The Employer addresses the Board’s Rules and Practice Notes, which have their own
definition of “day” as meaning “any day of the week Monday to Friday, excluding a
statutory holiday and any other day the Board is closed”. It is argued that such rules
cannot be used to interpret the Regulation in a way that is inconsistent with the
Legislation Act. In any event, the Rules are not inconsistent with the Regulation,
because the definition of “days” in the Rules only apply to the Rules and not to the
interpretation of the Regulation. Moreover, argues the Employer, pursuant to Section
25.1(1) of the Statutory Powers Procedure Act, RSO 1990, c. S.22 (the “SPPA”), “a
tribunal may make rules governing the practice and procedure before it.” The Board’s
Rules thus only have application to how the administration and hearing of complaints
before it once those complaints are properly before the Board. Those Rules cannot
provide it with jurisdiction when the enabling regulation does not do so. The Employer
cites Fan v. Hamilton (City), 2015 CanLll 47123 (ON CONRB), a decision of the
Conservation Review Board, as an example where a similar issue was addressed.
That board found that the definition of “day” in its Rules of Practice and Procedure
could not be used to interpret how “day” is defined in the applicable legislation.
[17] The Employer also argues that this Board has been consistent in treating the timelines
in the Regulation as calendar days, citing Laforest v Ontario (Solicitor General), 2020
CanLII 10543 (Morgan) at paras 45 & 49; Doyle v Ontario (Ministry of Municipal
Affairs), 2017 CanLII 52705 (O’Neil) at paras 21-23; Morris et al v Ontario (Community
Safety and Correctional Services), 2018 CanLII 109220 (Nairn) at para 13; Hamilton v
Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2019 CanLII 42439
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(Tremayne); and Stricko v Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services),
2018 CanLII 88984 (Morgan), at paras 20-22, 41.
[18] Applying this definition of “days” as calendar days, the Employer submits that the
dispute resolution period expired 30 days after Mr. Preston’s notice was given to the
deputy minister, in accordance with section 9(5). As his notice was given March 18,
the resolution period expired April 17. The Complainant then had 14 days to file his
Complaint with the Board. Fourteen days from April 17 is Saturday May 1, 2021. As
the Board is closed on Saturday and Sunday, in accordance with the computation of
time provisions of Section 89(2) of the Legislation Act, Mr. Preston was required to file
his complaint with the Board by Monday May 3.
[19] The Employer concludes that, as this complaint was filed with the Board on May 10,
2021, it is untimely, and the Board has no jurisdiction to hear it.
[20] Mr. Preston responds that “days” in the Regulation refers to business days and thus
excludes weekends and holidays. He argues that the Legislation Act does not
define “days” at all; nor does the PSOA. Therefore, we “must defer to” the Board’s
Rules for the definition of “days”. The Board has the power to enact such Rules,
pursuant to section 25.1 of the SPPA, and it has done so. Again, those Rules have
a definition of “day” as meaning “any day of the week Monday to Friday, excluding a
statutory holiday and any other day the Board is closed”. Mr. Preston argues that those
Rules do not contradict the PSOA, the SPPA or the Legislation Act. Therefore, in
determining whether the Complaint was filed within the required 14-day window, one
must use the definition of “day” in the Rules.
[21] Applying that definition of “day” and that approach to the computation of time, Mr.
Preston asserts that the dispute resolution period expired on April 29, 2021, which
is thirty days after March 18, when the deputy minister received notice of his
intention, excluding weekends and holidays. Mr. Preston was required to file his
complaint within 14 days after that. That is May 19, 2021 if one again excludes
weekends and holidays. The Complaint, having been filed with the Board on May
10, 2021 is timely, argued the Complainant.
Analysis and Decision
[22] This case turns on how one calculates the 30-day dispute resolution period and the
subsequent 14-day window for the timely filing of the Complaint. What is the
meaning in Section 9(5) of the Regulation of the phrase, “the period for dispute
resolution expires 30 days after the notice was given to the deputy minister…”? And
what is the meaning in Section 10(1) of the phrase, “within 14 days after the expiry
of the period… for dispute resolution…”?
[23] This is a matter of statutory interpretation. We must therefore apply the Legislation
Act. Sections 46 and 47 make it clear that Part VI of the Legislation Act applies to
all provincial regulations unless the contrary intention is clear. They provide as
follows:
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Application to Acts and regulations
46 Every provision of this Part applies to every Act and regulation.
Contrary intention or context requiring otherwise
47 Section 46 applies unless,
(a) a contrary intention appears; or
(b) its application would give to a term or provision a meaning that is inconsistent
with the context.
[24] Section 89 of Part VI of the Legislation Act deals with the computation of time for
the purposes of all provincial legislation. It provides:
Holidays
89 (1) Time limits that would otherwise expire on a holiday are extended to
include the next day that is not a holiday.
Days on which offices closed
(2) Time limits for registering or filing documents or for doing anything else that
expire on a day when the place for doing so is not open during its regular hours
of business are extended to include the next day the place is open during its
regular hours of business.
Number of days between events
(3) A reference to a number of days between two events excludes the day on
which the first event happens and includes the day on which the second event
happens, even if the reference is to “at least” or “not less than” a number of days.
Specified day excluded
(5) A period of time described as beginning before or after a specified day
excludes that day.
[25] Section 89 says nothing about excluding Saturdays, Sundays or holidays when
computing time periods set forth in legislation. Instead, sub-section (3) makes it
clear that “reference to a number of days between two events excludes the day on
which the first event happens and includes the day on which the second event
happens”. Sub-section (2) provides that when time limits for filing documents
expire on a day when the place for doing so is not open, the time limit is “extended
to include the next day the place is open.” These are the explicit legislative
directions as to how days are to be computed and what days are to be excluded.
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[26] Such explicit legislative directions do not allow for the further exclusion of
Saturdays, Sundays and holidays when computing timelines under the Regulation.
It is a well accepted principle of statutory interpretation that when a statute
expressly provides for one approach, it excludes a different approach (the “law
Latin” principle, expressio unius est exclusio alterius).
[27] The Regulation contains no definition of “days”. Nor does it contain provisions about
how time is to be computed. Nor does the PSOA contain such a definition or
provisions.
[28] The exceptions contemplated by Section 47 of the Legislation Act therefore do not
apply. There is no contrary intention in the PSOA or the Regulation. Nor would
counting days in the manner set forth in Section 89 give any provision of the
Regulation a meaning that is inconsistent with its context. While Mr. Preston relies
on the absence of a definition or a time computation provision in the Regulation,
this is not the same as an inconsistency. The void is filled by the Legislation Act.
[29] Do the Board’s Rules and Practice Notes affect this interpretation? They do not
and cannot.
[30] Again, the definition relied on by Mr. Preston is found in Section 1 of the Board’s
Rules. It provides:
1. In these Rules,
…
(d) “Day” means any day of the week Monday to Friday, excluding a
statutory holiday and any other day the Board is closed…
[31] This definition in the Rules does not and cannot affect or govern the calculation of
“days” under the Regulation for two reasons.
[32] Firstly, it does not purport to do so. Section 1 makes it clear that the definitions
that follow apply “in these Rules”. Nowhere is it suggested that such definitions
apply to the Regulation. The time periods at issue here are found in the Regulation
and not in the Rules. The definition of “days” in the Rules is inapplicable.
[33] Secondly, the Rules do not affect or govern the calculation of “days” under the
Regulation because they cannot legally have that effect. As argued by the
Employer, Section 25.1(3) of the SPPA requires that the Rules be consistent with
the SPPA and any other Acts to which it relates. Subsection (1) states that a
tribunal may make “rules governing the practice and procedure before it.” The
Board’s Rules cannot alter the application of the computation of time provisions of
the Legislation Act to the Regulation, so as to give the Board jurisdiction that it
would not otherwise have. As the Conservation Review Board observed in Fan v.
Hamilton (City), above, at para. 81:
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Review Board Rule 3 is prefaced with the qualifier “In these Rules” and although the
Review Board has jurisdiction to control its own timelines, it has no jurisdiction
whatever to control statutory ones or to redefine the terms of the Act.
[34] As was the Conservation Review Board, I am therefore compelled to find that
“days” under the Regulation are not “business days” as submitted by Mr. Preston.
Rather they are calendar days subject only to the exclusions and qualifications set
out in the Legislation Act.
[35] This in turns leads to the conclusion that Mr. Preston’s complaint was not filed
within the mandatory 14-day window following the expiry of the dispute resolution
period. In the result, the Board does not have jurisdiction to hear this Complaint
on its merits.
[36] The implications of such a ruling based on the Regulation’s strict time limits have
been commented on frequently by the Board. For example, the Board’s comments
in Burkholder, above, at para. 11 are applicable here:
Given the mandatory nature of these time limits and the lack of any express
statutory authority to relieve against these mandatory time limits, the Board must
conclude that it has no power to alter the jurisdictional consequences of a failure to
comply with the 14 day time limit to file the Form 1 Application. It is for this reason
that this complaint must be dismissed. This conclusion is in no way a reflection on
the merits of the complaint itself but merely a determination that the Public Service
Grievance Board, as a tribunal created by statutory enactments, can only stay within
the limits of these enactments.
[37] Before concluding, I feel compelled to observe that while this case cannot proceed
before the Board, that may not be the end of the road for this dispute. Other
avenues of recourse, whether in the courts or other tribunals, likely remain
available to Mr. Preston, as those forums may well have concurrent jurisdiction.
[See for example Burgess v. Ontario (Ministry of Health), 2001 CanLII 24073, 55
D.L.R. (4th) 295 (Ont. C.A.) and Guenette v. Canada (Attorney General) 2002
CanLII 45012 (Ont. C.A.).] Given the continuing availability of those potential
forums, and the resulting time, complexity and costs involved, in cases like this
one serious consideration ought to be given to the Board’s ability to provide an
expeditious and cost-effective dispute resolution mechanism through mediation
(which can be conducted without prejudice to the parties’ respective positions on
jurisdictional questions or on the merits), as a means of reaching finality for the
benefit of both parties.
[38] In any event, for the above reasons the Employer’s preliminary objection is upheld,
and the Complaint is dismissed as untimely.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 29th day of July, 2021.
“Brian Smeenk”
___________________
Brian Smeenk, Chair