HomeMy WebLinkAbout2007-0514.Finnan.10-11-24 Decision
Commission de
Crown Employees
Grievance
UqJOHPHQWGHVJULHIV
Settlement Board
GHVHPSOR\pVGHOD
Couronne
Suite 600 Bureau 600
180 Dundas St. West 180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388 7pO
Fax (416) 326-1396 7pOpF
GSB#2007-0514, 2007-0515, 2007-0628, 2007-0899, 2007-2415, 2007-2416, 2010-1176,
2010-1177
UNION#2007-0429-0001, 2007-0429-0002, 2007-0429-0003, 2007-0429-0004,
2007-0429-0006, 2007-0429-0007, 2010-0429-0002, 2010-0429-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Finnan)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Transportation)
Employer
BEFOREVice-Chair
Reva Devins
FOR THE UNION
Jennifer Fehr
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Susan Munn
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARINGNovember 15, 2010.
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Decision
[1]The parties entered into Minutes of SettlHPHQW³026´
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seized and an issue now arises with respect to compliance with the terms of the MOS. The
Grievor has also filed two additional grievances, which, although not technically arising
from the implementation of the MOS, the parties have agreed should be determined in these
proceedings. The parties further agreed that this matter should be determined as a true
mediation/arbitration pursuant to Article 22. 16 of the collective agreement and that this
decision is to be without prejudice or precedent.
Facts
[2]The relevant provisions of the MOS are as follows:
Whereas the Grievor initiated a series of allegations under the WDHP Policy and the
Conflict of Interest and Post-Service Directive; and
«
Whereas the Employer terminated the Grievor on October 30, 2007; and
«
Whereas the Grievor was granted entitlement to long term disability benefits and
continues to be in receipt of benefits as of the date of signing; and
Whereas due to HR Transformation and revisions to the scope of the OPSEU bargaining
XQLWWKH*ULHYRU¶VSUHYLRXVSRVLWLRQDV+5$ssistant in the Ministry of Transportation is
no longer available within the Ministry nor is it included in the OPSEU bargaining unit;
and
«
Whereas the parties wish to settle all of the above noted grievances; therefore
THE PARTIES AGREE to a full and final settlement of the above-noted grievances
without precedent and without prejudice to any future and/or similar matter on the
following terms:
7KH(PSOR\HUDJUHHVWRUHVFLQGWKH*ULHYRU¶VGLVPLVVDODQGZLOOUHPRYHWKH
OHWWHURIGLVPLVVDOIURPWKH*ULHYRU¶Vpersonnel file within 30 days of the
ratification of this agreement.
2. It is understood that the Grievor shall continue to receive Long Term
Disability payments pursuant to Article 42 of the Collective Agreement subject to
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the qualification that rehabilitative employment under Article 42.7 shall not be
with the OPS unless the terms set out in paragraph 3 are fulfilled. It is understood
WKDWWKHJULHYRU¶VHQWLWOHPHQWWRUHFHLYHLTD payments shall continue until she is
no longer eligible as determined by the Insurer.
3. The parties agree that before the Grievor can return to rehabilitative or full-time
employment with the OPS, she shall provide the Employer medical evidence
satisfactory to the Employer that she is able to return to work and, if the Employer
is not satisfied with the medical evidence provided, the Employer shall have the
right to require the Grievor to submit to an independent medical examination at
the expense of the Employer.
4. If the Employer is satisfied that the Grievor can return to work, the Grievor
shall be entitled to return to a position in the OPSEU bargaining unit in
accordance with the applicable provisions of the collective agreement in force at
WKHWLPH«
«
12. The parties agree that this written settlement constitutes the complete
agreement between the parties in relation to the above noted grievances and any
related matters. The parties agree and acknowledge that they have not made any
verbal or other agreements beyond what is contained in this written settlement.
«
14. The Grievor acknowledges that by signing these minutes of settlement, she
understands them, and that she signs them having been fully and fairly
represented by union counsel.
15. The parties agree that Vice-Chair Devins will remain seized to deal with any
issues regarding the implementation or interpretation of this agreement.
[3]It was understood by the parties that, in accordance the MOS, Ms. Finnan would be
reinstated and that she would be eligible for health and welfare benefits effective October
30, 2007. Ms. Finnan submitted receipts for payment, some of which were paid, whereas
others were not. In her correspondence with the insurer she initially received letters
advising that she was allowed $0 because she was terminated. Ms. Finnan questioned
whether the Employer had advised the relevant insurers that she had been reinstated. The
Union asserts that the Employer has breached the MOS insofar as it failed to advise the
insurers that Ms. Finnan was reinstated.
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[4]The Grievor returned to work in February of 2010. She was assigned to rehabilitative
employment with the Ministry of Natural Resources. She completed that assignment in
March 2010 and was ready as of that date to return to a full time assignment. On March 8,
2010, she met with Alan Hogan, Director of Human Resources for the Ministry of
7UDQVSRUW³072´
+HDGYLVHGKHUWKDW her former position was no longer with the
Ministry and that she was being surplused. Her effective surplus date was March 23, 2010,
which was a full year after her former position was transferred to HR Ontario. Many of her
former colleagues had moved to HR Ontario in non-bargaining unit positions and at a
higher classification.
[5]Ms. Finnan elected to be redeployed within the Ontario Public Service. On April 19, 2010
the Grievor was matched to a position in Municipal Affairs and Housing as an OAG 8, her
former classification in MTO. Ms. Finnan has been in her new position since April 26,
2010. On March 24, 2010, the Grievor filed a grievance alleging discrimination in the
assignment of her new position and that she was incorrectly surplused.
[6]Ms. Finnan asked to review her corporate file during the redeployment process. It was
requisitioned from storage and Ms. Finnan reviewed it in the presence of Christy Moreland,
HR Advisor. The Grievor stated that when she reviewed her file, it contained an unsealed
envelope containing an IME report from several years ago. The Employer acknowledged
that the file included a copy of this report but Ms. Moreland, who did not attend the
arbitration, had reported that thHHQYHORSHZDVVHDOHG0V)LQQDQJULHYHGWKH(PSOR\HU¶V
failure to protect her confidential medical information. She filed the grievance on May 19,
2010, citing MTO as her Employer/Ministry.
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[7]By letter dated June 9, 2010, the Employer advised that the grievance was improperly filed,
as Ms. Finnan was no longer an employee of MTO. The Employer further confirmed that
WKHPDWWHUVKRXOGEHUDLVHGZLWK0V)LQQDQ¶Vcurrent manager in accordance with Article
22.3.1 of the Collective Agreement. Finally, the Employer stated that a Stage Two meeting
would not be convened and that it intended to object to the grievance as inarbitrable if it
was advanced any further.
Submissions
[8]The Union submits that the Employer would be in breach of the MOS if it had failed to
advise the relevant insurers that Ms. Finnan had been reinstated. The Employer maintains
that it notified the relevant insurers of thH*ULHYRU¶VRQJRLQJHPSOR\PHnt status. For the
sake of clarity, however, the Employer also agreed that the Benefits Policy Branch of MGS
would provide further clarification to Great West Life and Manulife, advising them that the
Grievor was reinstated effective October 30, 2007 and should be treated accordingly for the
receipt of benefits. The Union accepts this as an adequate response.
[9]With respect to the second grievance, in which the Grievor alleges that she was improperly
surplused and that the Employer acted in a discriminatory manner, the Union does not take
LVVXHZLWKWKH(PSOR\HU¶VFRQGXFWRUWKHDVVLJQPent of the Grievor to a position within the
bargaining unit. To the extent that Ms. Finnan is challenging the adequacy of her Union
representation, the Union submits that that is not an issue that can be put before the GSB
and must be dealt with in another forum.
[10]The Grievor believes that she was treated differently than her colleagues and that the
differential treatment was a result of anti Union animus. She further believes that the
elimination of her original position after it was the subject of her previous grievance was a
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form of retaliation. The Grievor maintains that she did not fully understand the
consequences of signing the MOS and that she has concerns with her representation at
mediation.
[11]The Employer says that it acted in accordance with the terms of the MOS and offered Ms.
Finnan a position within the bargaining unit as required by paragraph 4. With respect to the
elimination of her position at MTO, the position was eliminated as result of HR
Transformation, an OPS wide restructuring plan. The reorganization took place over a long
period, affected many employees and was not speciILFWRWKH*ULHYRU¶VSRVLWLRQRUWR072
No particulars were offered nor was any evidence led to support the *ULHYRU¶VFODLPWKDW
WKH(PSOR\HU¶VDFWLRQVZHUHE\ZD\RIUHWDOLDWion or were discriminatory. The Employer
agrees with the Union submission that this is not the proper forum to determine the
*ULHYRU¶VFRQFHUQVUHJDUGLQJ8QLRQUHSUHVentation. The Employer requests that the
grievance be dismissed.
[12] Finally, in respect of the third grievance, the Union submits that the Employer has failed to
adhere to the policy set out in the Health Information Manual. Paragraph 4.3, Best
Practices, includes the directive that a sealed health information envelope should be
PDLQWDLQHGLQDQHPSOR\HH¶V&RUSRUDWH+XPDn Resources File. The Grievor discovered
her personal health information in an unsealed envelope. She found this terribly upsetting
and it had a negative impact on her mental health. By way of remedy, the Grievor is
seeking damages for pain and suffering. She is also seeking an order that the IME report be
destroyed. In the alternative, the Union asks for a declaration that the IME be maintained in
a sealed envelope in the Corporate HR File and that access be restricted to individuals who
have signed the envelope stating why access is required.
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[13]The Employer argues that the grievance was inarbitrable and should be dismissed. The
grievance procedure contemplates that grieYDQFHVZLOOEHUDLVHGZLWKWKHHPSOR\HH¶V
immediate supervisor. Ms. Finnan did not do so. She was put on notice that she had failed
to follow the grievance procedure and that the Employer would raise a preliminary
objection that the grievance was inarbitrable. The Employer relies on OPSEU (Samsone) v.
Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services, GSB No. #2005-3698
(Petryshen). In the alternative, the Employer submits that it has not breached any policy
directives and has maintained the confidentialityRIWKH*ULHYRU¶VKHDOWKLQIRUPDWLRQ7KH
(PSOR\HUDJUHHVWKDWWKH*ULHYRU¶V,0(VKRXOGbe kept in a sealed envelope and submits
that this was done.
Decision
[14]The first issue raised by the Union is the breach of the MOS. The Union alleges that the
Employer would be in breach of the agreement if it failed to notify the relevant insurers that
Ms. Finnan had been reinstated. Ms. Finnan was particularly concerned that only some of
the receipts that she submitted were reimbursed after her reinstatement. The Employer
maintains that it has advised the insurersRIWKH*ULHYRU¶VRQJRLQJHPSOR\PHQWVWDWXV
[15]The evidence does not support a finding that the Employer breached the MOS as alleged.
The Grievor submitted a number of receipts for expenses incurred during her period of
termination. She acknowledges that she was reimbursed for some, but not all, of these
claimed benefits after the MOS were signed. I regard the fact that some receipts were
reimbursed as confirmation that the Employer notified the insurers that Ms. Finnan was
reinstated. If the insurers had not been advised that Ms. Finnan was reinstated, she would
not have been eligible to receive any benefits. In any event, the Employer has agreed to
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provide further clarification to the insurers and the Union accepted this as sufficient. In the
circumstances, I dismiss the grievance regarding the breach of the MOS.
[16]I would also dismiss the second grievance. The Grievor alleges that the Employer acted in
a discriminatory manner when she was assigned to a different position than her former
colleagues and that they eliminated her position as retaliation for filing grievances. The
8QLRQGRHVQRWWDNHLVVXHZLWKWKH(PSOR\HU¶VFRQGXFW
[17]In my view there is no evidHQFHWRVXSSRUWWKH*ULHYRU¶VDOlegations. The Grievor was
terminated in October 2007. In June 2009, she signed MOS that required the Employer to
reinstate her to a position in the OPSEU bargaining unit. The MOS also acknowledged
WKDWDVRI-XQHWKH*ULHYRU¶VSUHYLRXVposition as an HR Assistant in MTO was no
longer available in the Ministry or included in the OPSEU bargaining unit. It was thus
abundantly clear at the time the MOS was signed that Ms. Finnan could not be returned to
her former position. Moreover, it was also manifestly clear that her position was subject to
OPS wide corporate restructuring, as were many other positions.
[18]Ms. Finnan remained on LTD and only returned to work several months after entering into
the MOS. She was subject to the normal surplus procedure, electing for redeployment. The
Employer subsequently acted in compliance with the terms of the MOS and the Grievor
was redeployed to a position within the OPSEU bargaining unit. She was assigned to a
position at her former classification in the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing.
[19]I accept that Ms. Finnan was disappointed when she returned to work and discovered that
her colleagues that were transferred to HR Ontario did so at a higher classification.
Nonetheless, those are excluded positions and could not have been offered to the Grievor
under the terms of the MOS. I accept the submissions of both the Union and the Employer
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that any dispute that Ms. )LQQDQPLJKWKDYHZLWKWKHDGHTXDF\RIWKH8QLRQ¶V
representation is properly dealt with elsewhere. I do not have jurisdiction to entertain those
arguments.
[20] With respect to the final grievance, the Employer has asked that it be dismissed as
inarbitrable. Having carefully considered the arguments, I have determined that it would be
inappropriate to dismiss it on this basis. The facts of this case are not like those in
Samsone,which was relied upon by the Employer. In Samsone, Vice-Chair Petryshyn
found that there had been a complete failure to comply with the grievance procedure. The
grievor made no effort to discuss the matter with his supervisor or file the grievances with
management. Rather, the grievances were prepared and sent directlyWRWKH8QLRQ¶VKHDG
office, and then referred by the Union to the GSB. The grievor in Samsone thus wholly
disregarded the collective agreement, making no efforts whatsoever to follow the grievance
procedure or resolve the matter with the Employer. Vice-Chair Petryshen stated his
conclusion as follows:
Arbitrators have consistently found that a failure to comply with the grievance procedure
will deprive the arbitrator of jurisdiction to hear a grievance. What has occurred in the
instant case goes beyond a mere technical breach of the grievance procedure. It is my
conclusion that the complete failure to comply with the grievance procedure, particularly
the failure to file the grievances with the Employer, deprives the GSB of jurisdiction to
1
hear the grievances
[21]Unlike the facts before Vice Chair Petryshen, in the case before me, I regard the procedural
failure to be a technical breach without import. Ms. Finnan had recently returned from
LTD, was surplused by MTO and redeployed to another ministry. She had also grieved her
surplus and redeployment. The issue that was the subject of the instant grievance arose in
1
At paragraph 29.
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the context of her redeployment and she brought it to the attention of the HR manager with
whom she had been dealing in that process. Although technically not in strict compliance
with the grievance procedure set out in Article 22, dismissing it on this basis does not serve
sound labour relations interests. Rather, in my view, it is more appropriate to address the
issue on the merits.
[22],WZDV0V)LQQDQ¶VHYLGHQFHWKDWVKHUHYLHZed the contents of her Corporate Human
Resources File in the presence of an HR Advisor and discovered an old IME in an unsealed
envelope. The Employer confirmed that the Grievor reviewed the file with Ms. Moreland
and that the IME should be kept in a sealHGHQYHORSH,WZDVWKH(PSOR\HU¶VSRVLWLRQ
however, that they had kept the report confidential. The Employer did not allege that Ms.
Finnan herself opened the envelope and could not explain how she would have discovered
the contents of the envelope if it were sealed.
[23]On the limited evidence before me I conclude that the IME was in a separate envelope that
was either unsealed or inadequately sealed. I accept, however, that the Employer had made
reasonable efforts to comply with its policy as set out in the Health Information Policy. I
would allow the grievance in part and direct the Employer to follow the Best Practices set
out at paragraph 4.3 of the Health InformaWLRQ0DQXDOWKHUHSRUWRIWKH*ULHYRU¶V,0(
should be put in a sealed envelope; access to the report should be restricted through a
designated custodian; and the person seeking access should be required to sign the envelope
stating why and what they are accessing. In the circumstances, I do not think this is an
appropriate case to award damages.
th
Dated at Toronto this 24 day of November 2010.
Reva Devins, Vice-Chair