HomeMy WebLinkAbout2019-0852.Grievor.22-01-27 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
GSB# 2019-0852
UNION# 2019-0263-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Grievor) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE
David Williamson
Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
Anjana Kashyap
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Joohyung Lee
Treasury Board Secretariat
Counsel
HEARING January 12, 2022 (by video conference)
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DECISION
[1] This decision arises out of a request made by the union to consolidate a grievance
dated November 9, 2021 with a grievance filed by the same grievor on May 14, 2019
that is already before this Board and set to be heard at arbitration. The employer
opposes this motion to consolidate the two grievances.
[2] The factual context for evaluating this consolidation request was provided by the
two grievances and by statements of particulars prepared by and exchanged
between the parties.
[3] The first of these grievances was filed May 14, 2019, at which time the grievor held
a position as a Probation and Parole Officer (PPO2) based in Mississauga, but
working on a temporary assignment as Sergeant at the Barrie office. The grievance
states:
I grieve that my rights and entitlements under the Collective Agreement have been
violated including but not limited to Articles 2, 3, and 9 and any other legislation/policies.
The employer has not provided me with a proper accommodation. The employer has
not adequately addressed concerns that I have raised within the workplace which have
continued to contribute to a toxic and unfair workplace.
The stated settlement desired is:
To be made whole, to work in a toxic free and fair environment which supports my
medical condition and anything else deemed fair by an arbitrator.
[4] In its statement of particulars with respect to the first grievance, the Union sets out
that the remedy sought will be to have the grievor placed into a permanent full-time
PPO position at a Simcoe/Muskoka location, an award of general damages, and an
acknowledgement from the employer that the grievor experienced discrimination in
the workplace and was not adequately accommodated.
[5] The particulars provided in connection with this first grievance allege that from 2014
there has been discrimination based on race in the Mississauga office that gave rise
to a toxic workplace, and that to work in that toxic environment in Mississauga has
brought on anxiety with effects on the grievor’s mental health. The particulars show
that she directly reported to Ms. C., the Area Manager, and that her accommodation
specialist was Ms. R. The grievor’s work history discloses that from 2013 she had
taken up a number of temporary positions away from her home base of Mississauga.
In November 2018, during a temporary assignment at the Central North Corrections
Centre, the grievor took a medical leave of absence. On January 21, 2019, while
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still on this sick leave, the grievor was notified that her temporary assignment was
expiring due to her lack of attendance. She was then asked to return to her home
office in Mississauga on February 11, 2019.
[6] In a conversation with Ms. C. at the end of January 2019, the grievor expressed her
concerns about returning to work in the Mississauga office because of both the toxic
work environment as well as the commute on a multi-lane highway from her home
in Barrie to Mississauga. There is no reference in the particulars that at any time
prior to this conversation with Ms. C. that the grievor had any issues associated with
highway driving. From February 28, 2019 the grievor worked in the Mississauga
office and then from April 2019 obtained a temporary position in Keswick. She filed
her first grievance on May 14, 2019. This grievance explicitly references there being
a toxic work environment in the Mississauga workplace, but makes no reference to
highway driving issues. From September 2019 Keswick became the grievor’s
permanent work location as the result of a three way job trade.
[7] On November 9, 2021, the grievor filed the second grievance some two and a half
years after the first. At this time she was working as a Probation and Parole Officer
(PPO2) in Keswick. This grievance states:
I grieve that my rights and entitlements under the Collective Agreement have been
violated including but not limited to Articles 2 (Management Rights), 3 (No
Discrimination), and 9 (Health and Safety), and any other relevant legislation/policies
that may apply. The employer has not provided me with a proper accommodation and
has violated the collective agreement by minimizing my medical health concerns. I have
provided documentation of my medical health and was not given any accommodation.
The stated remedy desired is:
To be made whole, to work in a toxic free and fair environment which supports my
medical condition and anything else deemed fair by an arbitrator.
[8] In relation to this second grievance, the particulars show that the grievor’s physician
had sought medical accommodation for her in September 2021 to work from home
three days a week, with two days in the office, because of her driving anxiety and a
lengthy commute. This request for accommodation was not granted by the employer
and gave rise to this second grievance dated November 9, 2021. Later in November
the grievor’s physician, Dr. L., notified the employer that the grievor had been
evaluated by a specialist and diagnosed with a situational reaction with associated
anxiety. The particulars show that the issue in focus in this grievance is that of
accommodating the grievor’s driving anxiety and making a lengthy commute to
work. On December 15, 2021 the employer denied the November 9, 2021 grievance.
The particulars disclose that the grievor, in her permanent position at Keswick,
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reported directly to Ms. T., the Area Manager, and that Ms. W. was the Disability
Accommodation Specialist who assessed her situation. In its particulars the union
has notified the employer that at the arbitration of this grievance it will be seeking as
remedy, in part, that the grievor be placed into a permanent full-time Probation and
Parole position in Barrie.
[9] It is the submission of the union that the two grievances ought to be consolidated,
as the second grievance flows from the first and is based on the same issue and
facts, have the same grievor, and seek the same remedy. It is the submission of
the union that while the grievances filed relate to two different geographical
locations, there is one underlying condition impacting the grievor that gave rise to
the grievances. The union submits that consolidation will also result in the best and
most efficient use of resources in addressing the grievances.
[10] The union relies upon the following Board decisions: OPSEU (Auguste) & Ministry
of Government and Consumer Services, (2019), Dissanayake, GSB #2017-2268;
OPSEU (Scott) & Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services, (2004)
Mikus, GSB #2002-3166; OPSEU (Kennett) & Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services, (2014), Misra, GSB #2013-2620; OPSEU (Union) & Ministry
of Natural Resources and Forestry, (2019), Petryshen, GSB #2018-1629; and
OPSEU (Hunt et al) & Ministry of the Attorney General, (2004), Abramsky, GSB
#2001-0534.
[11] The employer submits that the two grievances before the Board ought not to be
consolidated and heard together in that the events associated with the two
grievances are spatially separated by a period of over two years, relate to different
work places, and with the grievor reporting to different management personnel. It is
submitted by the employer that for over two years the grievor had no difficulty
working in the Keswick position, and that this time break severs any connective link
between the events underlying the two grievances. In addition, the accommodation
specialists associated with each of the grievances are different, and the employer
asserts that the medical information existing for 2021 in Keswick cannot be seen to
retroactively apply or pertain to the grievor’s work situation in 2019 for Mississauga.
Nor, it submits, can the information contained in the 2021 report of the medical
specialist apply to other than the 2021 situation. As such, the employer submits that
with different circumstances underlying the two grievances there are few, if any,
efficiencies to be obtained from consolidation and that the matter should go forward
by having the two grievances heard separately.
[12] The employer relies upon the following Board decisions in support of its submission:
OPSEU (Samsone) & Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services,
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(2006), Harris, GSB #2004-2855; and OPSEU (McClelland/Ward) & Ministry of
Community Safety and Correctional Services, (2013), Briggs, GSB #2006-2524.
[13] The GSB’s Rules of Procedure provide as follows:
3. Consolidation of Cases
Where two or more proceedings are pending before the GSB and it appears to the
GSB that,
(a) they have a question of law or fact in common;
(b) the relief claimed in them arises out of the same transaction or
occurrence or series of transactions or occurrences; or
(c) for any other reason an order ought to be made under this rule,
the GSB on such terms as it considers advisable, may abridge
the time for placing a grievance on the hearing list, and may
order that:
(d) the proceedings be consolidated, or heard at the same time or
one immediately after the other; and/or
(e) any of the proceedings be stayed until after the determination
of any other of them.
[14] Additionally, several of the referenced GSB decisions have noted the underlying
beneficial purpose of consolidation is to enable outcomes such as the efficient use
of the Board’s resources, the orderly and efficient disposition of grievances, and the
avoidance of conflicting findings of fact, and that these are pertinent considerations
when assessing whether one or more grievances ought to be consolidated.
[15] The matter to be determined here in the instant matter is whether the grievance
dated November 9, 2021 ought to be consolidated with the grievance put forward
by the same grievor on May 14, 2019 that is presently before the Board. In my view
the parameters of the two grievances the union seeks to consolidate do not match
up to meet the test set out in the above rule. The grievances are spatially separated
in time and not part of a continuum, having been made some two and a half years
apart and where the grievor is working in different locations and without having had
any issues of the type referenced in the second grievance in the intervening time
period. This includes the time frame from April 2019 to July 2020 when the grievor
commuted to her work in Keswick from her home in Barrie without any stated issues.
[16] Second, the issues raised in the two grievances are not identical. The particulars
associated with the 2021 grievance focus on the stress experienced by the grievor
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of driving the highway to work in Keswick, and for which there are related medical
reports. By way of contrast the complaint specified in the 2019 grievance is that of
a toxic work environment. While the stress of highway driving was also referenced
by the grievor when she spoke with her manager in early 2019, there is no medical
documentation of such for that time period. Thus, while there is medical
documentation that pertains to the circumstances of the 2021 grievance, there is
none referenced that would provide continuity with the grievor’s asserted condition
from the time of the much earlier 2019 grievance.
[17] Further, with there being different managers and different accommodation
specialists involved in addressing the matters that gave rise to each of the two
grievances, it is not apparent that a consolidation of the grievances would bring
about an improved and more efficient use of the Board’s resources.
[18] Accordingly, the union’s request to have the November 9, 2021 grievance
consolidated with the May 14, 2019 grievance presently before the Board is denied.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 27th day of January 2022.
“David Williamson”
______________________
David Williamson, Arbitrator