HomeMy WebLinkAbout2009-1107.Mance.10-09-20 Decision
Commission de
Crown Employees
Grievance
règlement des griefs
Settlement Board
des employés de la
Couronne
Suite 600 Bureau 600
180 Dundas St. West 180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
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GSB#2009-1107
UNION#2009-0504-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Mance)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care)
Employer
BEFOREBram Herlich Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNIONTim Hannigan
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYERPeter Dailleboust
Ministry of Government Services
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING
September 17, 2010.
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Decision
[1]This matter was scheduled to continue on Monday, September 13, 2010. The grievor,
who was to continue providing his evidence in chief, failed to attend.
[2]In a decision dated the same day, I noted the parties? agreement to adjourn the hearing on
that day.
[3]That adjournment, however, was peremptory upon the grievor's attendance at the next
scheduled hearing date, Friday September 17, 2010. In addition, the employer had reserved its
right to seek a justifiable explanation for the grievor's failure to attend on Monday as a condition
of the matter proceeding on Friday.
[4]The hearing commenced at 11 AM on Friday, September 17, 2010. It commenced one
hour after the normal time so as to afford trade union counsel the opportunity to confer with the
grievor who arrived at the Board premises shortly before 10 AM. When the hearing convened,
however, union counsel advised that the grievor was no longer in attendance and would not be
available to continue his evidence.
[5]The union sought a further adjournment which the employer opposed.
[6]Union counsel advised that the grievor?s failure to attend on the previous day as well as
his decision to depart on the Friday were a result of the frustration he has experienced with the
instant process. Apart from that reference to grievor?s frustration, counsel advised that the
grievor had not indicated the presence of any specific event or other reason for his non-
attendance on the prior day or for his departure prior to the formal commencement of the hearing
on the Friday.
[7]Union counsel advised that the grievor wished to have the matter rescheduled to another
day and to have all of the managers (and former managers) and union officials who had any
involvement in the matters giving rise to the grievance present on that day.
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[8]Before dealing with the adjournment request, I will note that I might well have been
amenable to an employer motion to dismiss the grievance simply on the basis of the grievor?s
failures to attend. The adjournment previously granted was contingent on his attendance at the
subsequent day of hearing. When the matter convened the grievor was, for the second time,
nowhere to be seen.
[9]No reason, apart from the reference to the ?grievor?s frustration with the process?, has
been advanced to explain or justify his absence. No doubt the grievor is not unique in his
frustration in relation to the instant process. That, however, is not a license to appear or not
appear as one sees fit in the middle of one's evidence or to seek to require other persons?
attendance as a condition of continuing to attend.
[10]Counsel, on either side, are free to make the determination as to what witnesses are (or
are not) required to testify in the proceedings. And summonses are available to enforce any such
attendance. It is simply not for an individual grievor to determine who shall or shall not attend a
hearing before the Board (and certainly not to do so as a condition of the hearing?s continuation).
More importantly, this grievor has clearly and now repeatedly, demonstrated his disdain and lack
of respect for this Board and its process, not to mention his utter lack of courtesy to all of the
many people who have now been required, on two separate occasions, to assemble at this Board
for the purposes of continuing the hearing only to have that continuation thwarted by the
grievor?s failure to attend.
[11]As I say, in those circumstances, and echoing the comments in my prior award in this
matter, I might well have favourably entertained any motion to dismiss the grievance on the basis
of the grievor?s repeated failures to attend.
[12]The employer, however, was sufficiently generous to permit me to consider the merits of
the adjournment request.
[13]The union based its adjournment request on two factors. First, it relayed the grievor?s
?request? detailed earlier about adjourning and convening a larger group of individuals at a later
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date. But the union also submitted that it was seeking an adjournment because, in view of the
grievor?s failure to attend, it was unable to proceed with the case.
[14]I have already outlined my view regarding the propriety of the grievor?s request. As to
the second ground, there is no doubt that the grievor?s conduct has placed the union in an
untenable position and compromised its ability to advance his case. The grievor had begun (but
not completed) his examination-in-chief. Obviously, it has not been subject to cross-examination
(and, thus, cannot yet be considered or relied upon by this Board). In the absence of an
adjournment, the union advised that it had no further or other evidence to proffer and effectively,
if somewhat grudgingly, acknowledged that, again in the absence of an adjournment to attempt
to secure the grievor?s attendance for a third time, I would have little alternative but to grant any
employer motion to dismiss the case.
[15]While the impact on the union is unfortunate, the grievor is clearly the author of his own
misfortune. No grievor before this Board should expect its indulgence when s/he simply fails to
attend without any reasonable justification. The employer consented to that indulgence once for
this grievor (albeit subject to certain conditions). This Board will not countenance this conduct a
second time.
[16]It was for these reasons that I advised the parties orally at the hearing that the
adjournment request was denied. Following upon the denial and the union?s indication that it
was unable to call any evidence, the employer moved to dismiss the grievance and I indicated to
the parties that I would do so.
[17]The grievance is hereby dismissed.
th
Dated at Toronto this 20 day of September 2010.
Bram Herlich, Vice-Chair