HomeMy WebLinkAbout2019-0051.Walji.2023-04-12 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#2019-0051
UNION#2019-5112-0026
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Walji) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE Kevin Banks Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Farnaz Talebpour
Ryder Wright Holmes Bryden Nam LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Regina Wong
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING January 25, 2023
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Decision
Introduction
[1] Ms. Walji’s grievance alleges that the Employer has systemically discriminated
against her on the basis of race in filling temporary vacancies that she says
represented career development opportunities.
[2] The Employer brings a non-suit motion, contending that the Union’s evidence, even
at its highest, would not be sufficient for the grievance to succeed. In the event that
the motion fails, the Employer reserves its rights to call evidence.
[3] The Union contests the motion.
Test on a Non-Suit Motion
[4] The Employer submits that on a non-suit motion the Board must determine whether
the evidence presented could be sufficient to lead it to rule in favour of the Union,
assuming the Union’s witnesses to be credible and drawing in its favour all inferences
reasonably supported by direct evidence: Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Asztemborski et al) v. The Crown in Right of Ontario (Treasury Board Secretariat)
GSB# 2014-4402 (Briggs) at paragraph 46. In applying this test, the Employer
submits, sufficiency is assessed by asking whether the Board could rule that the
Union has proven its case on the balance of probabilities, if its witnesses are believed
and it is granted the benefit of all reasonable inferences: Ontario Public Service
Employees Union (Martin)and The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Natural
Resources and Forestry) GSB#2011-3796 (Dissanayake) at paragraph 10, and the
decisions cited therein. The Employer notes that in determining whether to believe a
witness at this stage, the Board can distinguish conclusions of fact from evidence,
and that the mere fact that someone asserts something to be true does not support
an inference that it is if the assertion is no more than a bald allegation: Martin, supra,
at paragraph 11.
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[5] The Union contends that in a non-suit motion, the standard of proof expected from a
responding party is that of a prima facie case, which is significantly lower than the
standard of proof on a balance of probabilities; that in determining whether a prima
facie case has been made out, the test is simply whether some evidence exists to
support the claim; that in applying the standard of a prima facie case, any conflicts in
or doubts about the facts must be determined in favour of the party responding to the
motion; and that in examining the evidence before it, the Board will not assess the
quality, reliability or the credibility of the evidence. The Union refers me to Ontario
Public Service Employees Union (Pacheco) and The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) GSB# 2010-2654 (Petryshen) at paragraphs 9 and
10; Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Del Casale) and The Crown in Right of
Ontario (Ministry of Government & Consumer Services) GSB# 2019-0222 (Hewat) at
paragraphs 3 and 4; Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Couture et al) and The
Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Government Services) GSB#2008-3329
(Dissanayake) at paragraph 12.
[6] The different authorities cited to me by the Union and the Employer do not in my view
set out different approaches to the test on a non-suit motion. As the Arbitrator
Dissanayake explained in Martin, supra, at paragraph 9:
It is now clearly established that the standard applied in assessing the evidence in
determining a non-suit motion is considerably lower than the usual standard in civil
matters, i.e. “on a balance of probabilities”. See, Cahoon, Ont. Div. Ct. (supra).
While some authorities have stated that the plaintiff must have adduced “sufficient
evidence”, others such as Cahoon (supra) have used the phrase “some evidence”.
This Board has reasoned that there is no substantial difference between the two
terms. Thus in Re Gareh, 1665/98 (Brown), the Board reviewed the decision of the
Divisional Court in Cahoon (supra) and wrote at p. 6 as follows:
The Divisional Court’s comment that a motion for non-suit should be
dismissed if there is “some evidence to support the claim” must be
interpreted in the context of the immediately preceding passage from
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Sopinka’s The Trial of an Action saying the issue to be determined by the
judge is whether “no jury acting judicially could find in favour of the plaintiff”.
Based upon the Divisional Court’s apparent approval of this passage, I
understand the Court’s reference to “some evidence to support the claim”
to mean evidence which could lead a jury (or some other trier of fact) to rule
in favour of the party opposing the motion, if the trier of fact found that
party’s witnesses to be credible and made all reasonable inferences in its
favour. This standard is no different in substance than the test of “sufficient”
evidence utilized by the Court of Appeal in the Hall and Gallant case.
[7] Similarly, while the standard of proof on a non-suit motion is lower than the balance
of probabilities, this is only insofar as evidence is assumed to be credible and the
respondent is granted the benefit of all reasonable inferences supported by direct
evidence: see Martin, supra at paragraphs 9 to 11. As Arbitrator Dissanayake pointed
out in Martin, supra, at paragraph 11, quoting from Arbitrator Anderson’s decision in
Re Bharti, 2013-2789:
In determining whether a prima facie case has been made out, the test is whether
the evidence presented by the party responding to the motion is sufficient to allow
the Board to rule that it has proven its case on a balance of probabilities, if the
Board assumed its witnesses to be credible and drew in its favour all inferences
reasonably supported by direct evidence.
As Arbitrator Dissanayake had explained earlier at paragraph 10 of Martin, quoting
from Arbitrator Brown’s decision in Gareh:
It is not logically possible to make this determination without taking into account
the applicable standard of proof which is on the balance of probabilities. The
question to be decided is whether could rule that the union has proven its case on
the balance of probabilities, if its witnesses are believed and it is granted the benefit
of all reasonable inferences. The decision-making process on a motion for non-
suit cannot ignore the standard of proof, but this process entails an application of
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that standard which differs markedly from the way it would be applied after both
parties had closed their case. At that point, in determining whether the union had
proven its case on the balance of probabilities, I would scrutinize the credibility of
witnesses, and I would not draw inferences so as to resolve doubts in favour of the
union, because the benefit of doubt should not be granted to the party bearing the
onus of proof.
[8] Finally, as Arbitrator Petryshen points out in Pacheco, supra, at paragraph 10, while
the Board will not assess the quality, reliability or credibility of the responding party’s
evidence on a non-suit motion, the test of whether there is some evidence to support
the claim assumes that the evidence meets a minimum threshold of credibility. In
determining whether the evidence meets that threshold, the Board can consider the
type of questions identified in Martin, supra at paragraphs 11 and 12, such as whether
alleged facts were patently ridiculous or incapable of proof, or whether they represent
a bald assertion or conclusion of fact unsupported by any evidence.
[9] Accordingly, for the purposes of this motion I will assume that the evidence submitted
by the Union is credible and reliable, and will draw in its favour any inference
reasonably supported by evidence. I will then determine whether the factual record
is sufficient to allow a Board member acting judicially to rule that the Union has proven
its case on a balance of probabilities.
Evidence
[10] The Union’s evidence was submitted via will-say statement subject to cross-
examination. Ms. Walji provided a statement and answered questions about it in a
hearing held on December 5, 2022. In addition, the Union tendered will-say
statements from Chanda Mansueto, who also answered questions in cross-
examination, and from Ms. Joan Marshall-Wilkinson, whom the Employer declined to
examine.
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[11] Assuming its credibility and reliability, the Union’s evidence, including the testimony
of witnesses under cross-examination, would be sufficient to demonstrate the
following material facts.
[12] Ms. Walji works as a Personnel Clerk, which is an Office Administrator position
classified OAG9, at the Toronto South Detention Centre (“TDSC”). She has been
employed by the Ministry of the Solicitor General since 1989. As a Personnel Clerk,
her duties include, among other things, reviewing, preparing and processing a variety
of human resources and payroll documents related to new hires, terminations,
benefits, changes in status, transfers, fixed-term time sheets/hours worked,
Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) claim documents, and leaves of
absence; recording and verifying of employee attendance; calculating amounts and
coding input documents for salary purposes; preparing fixed-term contracts; and
organizing, maintaining, updating and ensuring the safekeeping of personnel files and
databases. This work includes reconciliation of payroll, which, as Ms. Walji put it,
involves a lot of “figure work”.
[13] Ms. Walji’s experience with the Employer also includes two years as an Assistant
Manager at the Toronto Jail, from 2009 to 2011.
[14] In her time at TDSC, Ms. Walji has trained and mentored at least four other
employees.
[15] In 2014 Ms. Walji competed for an Assistant Business Administrator position at
TDSC. The main function of this position is to supervise the processing of financial
transactions. There are two such positions at TDSC. Each reports to a Business
Administrator, who in turn reports to the Deputy Superintendent of Finance. She did
not get the position. In her oral evidence, she conceded that “I did very badly, I was
told” in that competition.
[16] In 2015, Ms. Nadine Persaud, a racialized woman, was successful in a competition
for an Assistant Business Administrator position at TDSC. Ms. Walji said that she did
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not apply for the position in question because “I know what is going to happen”. Ms.
Walji expressed frustration at not being given developmental opportunities that she
said would have enabled her to do better in such competitions.
[17] Ms. Persaud later left her position for personal reasons. When she vacated her
position, a few individuals expressed an interest in filling it. One of those individuals
told Chanda Mansueto that the manager to whom Ms. Persaud had reported told
them that the position would have to be posted. The position was vacant on and off
between 2014 and 2016.
[18] In May of 2016, the Employer, through Deputy Superintendent of Finance John
Mackinnon, offered to an individual to whom I will refer as MK an opportunity, without
competition, to work at its Regional Office as a Finance Clerk, classified at level OAG
10.
[19] MK had served since March of 2015 as a Finance Clerk at TDSC. In cross-
examination Ms. Walji agreed that this experience was relevant to the position
opportunity that he was given in May of 2016, and that it included accounts payable
and inmate trust responsibilities that she did not have as a Personnel Clerk. She also
agreed that the systems dealing with such matters had changed since she had last
acted as an Assistant Manager in 2011.
[20] MK is a non-racialized male.
[21] The Employer did not ask any of the racialized staff at Ms. Walji’s work location, who
included two racialized women in addition to the grievor, whether they were interested
in the position. Each of these three women had more years of service than MK.
[22] In 2018 the Employer gave MK an opportunity, without competition, to work as a
Business Administrator at its Vanier location. The Employer did not ask Ms. Walji or
other racialized staff whether they were interested in this opportunity.
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[23] In December 2018, the Employer gave MK an opportunity without a competition to fill
the position of Assistant Business Administrator. The form authorizing this opportunity
was signed by Regional Director Lou Anne Lucier. Ms Walji alleged that Ms. Lucier
and MK are related but provided no evidence of this. Ms. Walji had previously asked
several times that Mr. MacKinnon give her the opportunity to fill this position. Each
time he had told her that the position would be posted for competition.
[24] When MK vacated this position and left TDSC in May of 2019, Ms. Walji again asked
Mr. MacKinnon for the opportunity to fill it. He again told her that it would be posted
for competition.
[25] That same month, Ms. Joan Marshall Wilkinson, who is a racialized woman and was
one of two Assistant Business Administrators at TDSC, was given an acting
opportunity as a Business Administrator. As a result, her Assistant Business
Administrator position became temporarily vacant. Ms. Walji asked Mr. MacKinnon
for the opportunity to fill Ms. Marshall-Wilkinson’s position as a developmental
assignment. Mr. MacKinnon told her that the position would be posted. It was not
however posted over the next two years.
[26] Ms. Walji believes that had she been given this opportunity she would have been a
more competitive candidate in subsequent job competitions.
[27] In 2019, the TDSC was short staffed with respect to Personnel Clerks. Ms. Walji said
that TDSC was always short staffed in this way, and that she was always busy in her
position.
[28] In May of 2019, the Employer gave TF, a non-racialized person, the opportunity for
an Acting Personnel Clerk position at level OAG9. Ms. Walji’s evidence, not
challenged in cross-examination, is that TF was a friend and family member of a
member of TDSC management. TF had been hired on contract as a file Clerk at level
OAG3 on October 17, 2017. Mr. MacKinnon asked Ms. Walji to train TF after she
was placed in the Acting Personnel Clerk position. Four months later there was a
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competition for this position. TF and another non-racialized person were found to be
the top two candidates. TF eventually was offered the job.
[29] MK returned to TDSC in June 2019 and the Employer returned him to the Assistant
Business Administrator position at TDSC.
[30] In October of 2019, FW, a non-racialized person, was hired at TDSC without a
competition. She was originally hired for a short period of time, but is still working at
TDSC. Ms. Walji’s says that FW is a family member of a person who was a member
of management at the time that she was first hired. The Employer did not challenge
this assertion in cross-examination.
[31] In March 2020, MK resigned from the Assistant Business Administrator position to
pursue a different career path. Ms. Walji again requested an assignment to the
position as a development opportunity. The Employer again advised her that the
position would be posted for competition.
[32] The Employer posted the position for competition on July 31, 2020. Ms. Walji applied
for it but withdrew from the competition for personal reasons. There were two
successful candidates in this competition. Both were racialized women.
Arguments of the Parties
Employer arguments
[33] The Employer submits that there is insufficient evidence to draw the conclusion that
race was a factor in its decisions to staff the Regional Finance Clerk position in 2016,
or in its subsequent decisions with respect to staffing the Assistant Business
Administrator position in 2018 and 2019. It maintains that the fact that a single
individual who is non-racialized received opportunities that a racialized woman is not
is sufficient to establish, in the circumstances of this case, that she was denied career
opportunities on the basis of race.
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[34] The Employer notes that: (1) Mr. MacKinnon was not Ms. Walji’s manager at the
facility where she served as an Assistant Manager from 2009-2011, and that his only
gauge of her abilities was her poor performance in a competition for such a position
in 2014; (2) in 2016 MK was a Finance Clerk at TDSC, a position that he had
competed for; (3) Ms. Walji admits that when in 2016 the Employer placed him in the
acting Finance Clerk position MK had experience in finance that she did not have,
including recent experience in accounts payable and with inmate trusts; (4) Ms. Walji
also admits that the systems for dealing with such matters had changed since she
had last acted as an Assistant Manager in 2011; and (5) when MK was placed into
the Acting Assistant Business Administrator position in 2019, he had very recently
served in an Acting Office Manager position that gave him additional relevant
experience.
[35] The Employer maintains in addition that the grievor would have needed extensive
training to take on the positions in question.
[36] Further, the Employer notes that by Ms. Walji’s admission she was a busy clerk in a
busy department that was always short staffed, so that operational needs justified
keeping her in that position.
[37] Finally, the Employer notes that Ms. Marshall Wilkinson, a racialized employee, was
placed in an Acting Business Manager’s position, and that two racialized women were
eventually successful in a competition for Assistant Business Administrator position
in which Ms. Walji had sought to serve in an acting capacity.
[38] The Employer submits that the evidence supports the conclusions that MK was
placed in the positions in question because he was more qualified to fill them on a
temporary basis, and that the acting positions that Ms. Walji sought would have been
posted had MK not been placed in them. It maintains that it was entitled to consider
operational needs in filling these positions rather than treating them simply as
developmental opportunities.
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Arguments of the Union
[39] The Union submits that its evidence meets the minimum threshold of credibility and
that therefore I must assume that it is true and draw all reasonable inferences that
flow from it.
[40] The Union maintains that the evidence supports an inference that Ms. Walji’s race
was a factor in the Employer’s decisions to deny her a series of temporary
developmental opportunities that became available when higher level positions
became vacant. It says that each time such positions became available the Employer
told Ms. Walji in response to her request to temporarily fill the position that it would
be posted, and then turned around and gave the opportunity to a non-racialized staff
member without competition. The Union also points out that Ms. Mansueto was
similarly informed by the Employer that a position would be posted, but the Employer
then did not post it even though it remained vacant on and off for some time. The
Union insists that these situations are “red flags” that require some explanation, and
that without such explanation it is reasonable and appropriate to infer that race was
a factor in the Employer’s decision-making. It submits that any doubts in this regard
must be resolved in the Grievor’s favour.
Decision
[41] The Employer filled the acting positions in question without competition. The Union
accepts that the Employer was not required to post or hold a competition for them.
The question is simply whether the Employer acted without discrimination.
[42] To establish a prima facie case of racial discrimination, the Union must prove that a
grievor is a member of a group protected by the Human Rights Code; that she was
subjected to adverse treatment; and that her race, ancestry or colour was a factor in
the alleged adverse treatment: Cross, supra, at paragraph 34.
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[43] There is no disagreement between the parties that Ms. Walji is a racialized person
and that she was adversely impacted by the Employer’s decisions not to place her in
temporary acting positions that she sought in order to advance her career. This
motion turns on whether the evidence could allow the Board to find on a balance of
probabilities that Ms. Walji’s race was a factor in those decisions.
[44] I agree with the observations of Arbitrator Tims in Morgan, supra, at paragraphs 40
and 41 that:
[40] … discrimination on the basis of race or gender may be subtle in nature, and
that there may be no overt conduct which can be relied upon to substantiate such
a claim. I accept this to be true. This was noted by the Board in Ministry of the
Environment (Dobroff), supra, a case in which anti-union animus was in part
alleged. The Board there stated as follows:
I agree that an admission or a “smoking gun” would rarely be found in anti-
union animus cases or cases of discrimination on the basis of a prohibited
ground. Thus in appropriate circumstances, anti-union animus may be
inferred from circumstantial evidence. However, as Vice-Chair Gray
observed in Re Damani, 1581/95; 1703/98, proof is nevertheless
necessary. Anti-union animus will not be inferred merely because a grievor
believes that it exists.
At para 17-18, Mr. Gray wrote:
(17) I accept as a general matter that racism “is out there,” as the grievor
put it at one point. I agree with union counsel’s submission that racism often
is latent, in the sense that those whose conduct is influenced by racist
attitudes may not openly acknowledge it…. The presence and effect of
racist attitudes may be difficult to detect and prove. It does not follow, and
the union does not suggest, that proof is therefore unnecessary, or that the
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mere allegation of racial discrimination shifts the burden of disproving the
allegation to those accused of it. (para 43)
[41] I am mindful as well of the comments of the Court of Appeal in Re Peel Law
Association, supra, as quoted in Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional
Services (Bonneveld), supra, as follows:
Respondents are uniquely positioned to know why they refused an
application for a job or asked a person for identification. In race cases
especially, the outcome depends on the respondent’s state of mind, which
cannot be directly observed and must almost always be inferred from
circumstantial evidence. The respondent’s evidence is often essential to
accurately determine what happened and what the reasons for a decision
or action were. (para 38)
[45] A trier of fact can thus, in appropriate circumstances, infer from the differential
treatment of a member or members of a protected group, in the absence legitimate
business reasons accounting for that treatment, that protected characteristics were a
factor in adverse impacts resulting from it.
[46] In this case however, the evidence in its totality is in my respectful view not sufficient
to support an inference that it is more likely than not that race was a factor in the
Employer’s actions. I have reached this conclusion after carefully reviewing the
evidence, and without in any way doubting the sincerity of Ms. Walji’s view of how
she was treated by the Employer.
[47] MK received a series of acting opportunities that Ms. Walji sought. She is racialized,
and he is not. This is of course not in itself sufficient to support an inference that her
race was a factor in the Employer’s decisions. The question is whether the
circumstances of these decisions support such an inference.
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[48] In May of 2016 MK had experience that Ms. Walji did not have that was relevant to
the temporary Regional Finance Clerk position that he was placed in at that time.
Moreover, Ms. Walji had by her own admission not performed well in a recent
competition for a similar position. Each subsequent acting position then gave MK
additional experience relevant to the temporary Assistant Business Administrator
position. Contrary to Ms. Walji’s assertions in her written particulars and in her will-
say statement, there is no evidence that MK has a family relationship to anyone in
the Employer’s management. The evidence pertaining to MK and Ms. Walji’s
respective professional experiences thus does not suggest that the Employer lacked
sufficient business reasons for its decisions in staffing the temporary positions that
Ms. Walji sought.
[49] While the evidence indicates that in May 2016 the Employer did not bring the
temporary Regional Finance Clerk position opening to the attention of three racialized
women with more years of service than MK, there is no evidence as to the nature of
their work experience or of its relevance to the position. There is also no evidence
as to the nature of the work experience of racialized staff or its relevance of the
temporary Assistant Business Administrator position that MK filled in 2018. These
were not openings that the Employer was obligated to post or advertise. In this
context there is no basis in evidence to suggest that race was a factor in differences
in how people were informed of temporary openings.
[50] Further, there is no race-based pattern or tendency discernable in the evidence of
who obtained acting assignments that could represent career development
opportunities. The evidence shows that Joan Marshall-Wilkinson, a racialized woman,
obtained a temporary Business Administrator position in May of 2019, and that TF, a
non-racialized woman obtained a temporary Personnel Clerk position in May of 2019.
I note that in October of 2019 FW, a non-racialized woman, was hired at TDSC
without competition. But there is no evidence that this last hiring was into the sort of
position that could be described as a career development opportunity. In any event,
even if it was, this would not have been sufficient to establish a pattern or tendency
towards favouring non-racialized persons in such temporary staffing decisions.
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[51] Finally, there is no evidence of any race-based pattern or tendency in hiring through
competitions. The evidence shows that in 2015, Nadine Persaud, a racialized woman,
was hired into an Assistant Business Administrator position following a competition;
that in the fall of 2019 TF (as noted above, a non-racialized woman) was similarly
hired into a Personnel Clerk position; and that in 2020 two racialized women were
successful in a further competition for an Assistant Business Administrator position.
[52] The evidence thus does not establish that racialized persons were less likely to obtain
acting assignments or other forms of career advancement than non-racialized
persons. Nor does it suggest that racialized persons obtaining these opportunities
had to meet higher standards than non-racialized persons. There is no evidence
suggesting that Ms. Walji’s particular characteristics as a racialized person were
different in any relevant way from those of the racialized persons who received acting
opportunities or won competitions. There is therefore no basis in evidence upon which
to consider her treatment separately from that of other racialized persons in her
workplace.
[53] The Union emphasizes that Ms. Walji was repeatedly told that positions that she
sought would be posted, only for those positions to be given to MK, or not to be posted
at all. It says that this kind of treatment raises a “red flag” that requires an explanation.
In a different context, this might well do so. I can understand how Ms. Walji would be
frustrated with the pattern of communication and non-communication that I am
required on this motion to assume is established in evidence. But given the context
described above, I cannot infer that it is more likely than not that her race was a factor
in that pattern.
[54] I therefore conclude that in its totality, even if accepted as true and given the benefit
of all reasonable inferences, the evidence cannot support a conclusion on the balance
of probabilities that Ms. Walji’s race was a factor in the Employer’s decisions to deny
her the temporary acting opportunities that she sought.
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[55] Accordingly, the grievance is denied.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 12th day of April 2023.
“Kevin Banks”
________________________
Kevin Banks, Arbitrator