HomeMy WebLinkAbout2005-3884.Cox.10-12-16 Decision
Commission de
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
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Board
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Couronne
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Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
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GSB#2005-1443, 2005-3884
UNION#2005-0530-0022, 2005-0530-0077
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Tardiel et al)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
Employer
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services)
BEFOREChristopher J. Albertyn Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNIONDavid Wright, Ryder Wright Blair &
Holmes LLP, Barristers & Solicitors
Jim Paul
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Melissa Nixon & Cathy Phan
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARINGFebruary 19 and May 27, 2010.
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Decision
[1]This decision concerns an individual grievance heard pursuant to the agreement of the
parties under the procedures of Article 22.16 of the collective agreement. The Grievor claims
substantial damages and other relief as a result of various incidents at the Toronto Jail during the
period 2005 to 2008, including his being referred to in certain anonymous hate mail. This
decision addresses the request by the Grievor to withdraw his grievance.
[2]The parties agreed upon a comprehensive procedure to address the grievances of those
who received hate mail or who experienced racism, discrimination or harassment as
contemplated under the Ontario Human Rights Code, or who worked in a poisoned work
environment, while employed at the Toronto Jail during the period 2005 to 2008. This grievance
was addressed under that procedure. Systemic remedies were addressed collectively by the
Employer and the Union on behalf of all of the many affected grievors. The agreed procedure
and the systemic remedies are more fully described in the companion decision to this. The
Grievor in this case, Mr. Cox, benefited from the systemic remedies determined as appropriate
by the parties.
[3]Mr. Cox himself was given the opportunity to make a private statement and he was not
subjected to cross-examination. Accommodation arrangements had been made for him before he
made his private statement. These were adjusted to meet his circumstances once his needs were
explained in the private session. An endeavour was then made to mediate his damages claim,
which failed. The parties then argued what damages and other relief the Grievor was entitled to
receive.
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[4]%HWZHHQWKHILUVWDQGVHFRQGGD\RIDUJXPHQWRQ0U&R[¶VJULHYDQFH0U&R[JDYH
notice to the parties that he sought to withdraw his grievance. A separate request was made to
PHE\0U&R[¶VSHUVRQDOO\Dppointed solicitors. A scheduled hearing, on April 26, 2010, was
postponed because the request came shortly beforeDQGWKH8QLRQZLVKHGWRFRQVLGHU0U&R[¶V
request. The Employer opposed the request. After consideration, the Union decided not to
ZLWKGUDZ0U&R[¶VJULHYDQFH$VDUHVXOWERWh the Union and the Ministry declined to accept
0U&R[¶VUHTXHVWWRZLWKGUDZKLVJULHYDQFH7KH8QLRQSURFHHGHGWRDUJXHRQ0U&R[¶V
behalf for relief under his grievance.
[5]The request to withdraw was argued before me by counsel for the Employer and for the
8QLRQRSSRVLQJ0U&R[¶VUHTXHVW,declined to give standing to0U&R[¶VSHUVonal solicitors,
although they were permitted to sit in as an observer.
[6]7KHEDVLVRIWKH*ULHYRU¶VUHTXHVW to withdraw his grievance is that he has lost faith in the
ability of this process to provide meaningful remedies. He wishes to have his claims adjudicated
by the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario (HRTO).
[7]As Employer and Union counsel argue, a grievor has no standing in an arbitration
proceeding under the collective agreement. The Union has carriage of the grievance and it is for
the Union to decide whether to proceed with the grievance. It has chosen to do so in this case.
[8]As both parties contend, the GrievoU¶VUHTXHVWFRPHVYHU\ODWHLQWKHSURFHVV,WLVDWWKH
end of nearly two years of fashioning appropriate systemic remedies for the Toronto Jail, and at a
well advanced stage in the considHUDWLRQRI0U&R[¶VJULHYDQFH
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[9]As Employer counsel argues, the Grievor is trying to forum shop. He thinks he may
obtain a better result from HRTO. Employer counsel argues that this is an abuse of process and
that an individual, if he had carriage of his grievance, has no entitlement to forum shop once a
process has been seriously undertaken and advanced, as has occurred here. Employer counsel
points to the considerable investment by the parties in the workplace restoration process of which
this case is a part. The parties have spent a lot of time and money thus far. There have been a
series of orders to accomplish the organizational objectives to which the parties have committed
themselves. The parties have tried to address every concern raised by the various constituent
groups within the workforce at the Toronto Jail, especially those dealing with discrimination,
harassment and conflict resolution. 7KH*ULHYRU¶VJHQHUDOUHTXHVWVIRr systemic relief have been
addressed by the parties on a collective basis through the process they chose to use.
[10]Employer counsel submits it is too late in the process to seek to withdraw the grievance
without prejudice in order to pursue the same issues, in search of the same remedies, in a
different forum.
[11]Employer counsel refers to the following cases as authority for not permitting the
withdrawal of the grievance where the case has advanced to a hearing or where forum shopping
is the purpose: Great Atlantic & Pacific Co. of CanadaLtd. And R.W.D.S.U., Loc. 414, Re
(1991), 22 L.A.C. (4th) 72 (M. Picher), [1991] O.L.A.A. No. 107; OPSEU (Armes) and The
Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Health) Halton-Mississauga Ambulance, GSB No.123/93
of August 17, 2004 (Kaplan). In Guelph General Hospital and O.N.A., Re (1992), 25 L.A.C.
(4th) 260 (Burkett), [1992] O.L.A.A. No. 48, the board of arbitration VDLGWKLVDW??
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«WKHUHDUHVWURQJSROLF\UHDVRQVIRUQRWpermitting such a unilateral withdrawal. If
either party is permitted to unilaterally withdraw a grievance after the completion of the
hearing, thereby avoiding the risk of loss on the facts relied upon, there is a twofold
negative policy implication. First, the effect is to lessen the incentive to settle prior to the
hearing thereby running counter to the statutory preference for two-party settlement
where possible. Secondly, the effect is to prevent the issuance of an award that might
provide a definitive interpretation of the contract language at issue thereby sowing the
seeds for future conflict in respect of that issue either in the administration of the
agreement or in the negotiation of its renewal.
5 Having regard to the foregoing I find that, once the parties decide to proceed to
arbitration and have been put to the time and expense of a hearing, it is too late to
XQLODWHUDOO\ZLWKGUDZWKHJULHYDQFH«
[12]Union counsel refers to Ontario Public Service Employees Union v. Ontario (Ministry of
Municipal Affairs and Housing) (Ross Grievance), 2009 CanLII 15413 (Gray). That decision,
relying on 1RsOY6RFLpWpG
, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 207, makes clear that the
trade union, as the exclusive bargaining agent of the employees in the bargaining unit, has
carriage of every grievance. The decision refers to Ontario Public Service Employees Union v.
Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2008 CanLII 32795 (ON G.S.B.)
(Lynk), which affirms that a union has exclusive carriage of a grievance. By implication, an
individual cannot withdraw a grievance if the union with carriage of the grievance refuses, as is
the case here.
[13]InJamal v. Crown Employees Grievance Settlement Board, 2006 CanLII 45942 (ON
S.C.D.C.), the Divisional Court made clear that an individual has no right of standing to process
a grievance:
[5] The jurisdiction of the GSB is restricted to resolving and/or arbitrating
JULHYDQFHVDULVLQJIURPGLIIHUHQFHVDQGGLVSXWHVEHWZHHQWKH³SDUWLHV´WRDFROOHFWLYH
agreement, that is, the union and the employer (see s.7(3) of the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act, 1993, S.O. 1993, c.38. The Divisional Court in Smith v.
Ontario Public Service Employees Union, [2003] O.J. No. 2139 at paragraph 9, held that
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a member of the bargaining unit represented by OPSEU does not have standing in his or
her own right to process a grievance respecting employment. Only the union may do so.
«
[14]Accordingly, my jurisdiction is restricted to disputes between the Union and the
Employer. They decide what grievances proceed and which are withdrawn. They have decided
not to withdraw this grievance. In these circumstances, the Grievor is bound by their decision.
He has no independent standing to withdraw.
[15]What is more important, though, is the advanced stage of the process when the request to
withdraw was made. The Grievor SDUWLFLSDWHGIXOO\LQWKHSURFHVV±LQLWVV\VWHPLFDQGLWV
LQGLYLGXDODVSHFWV±XQWLOYHU\ODWH in the hearing of his grievance.
[16]7KHSURFHVVKDVDOVRZRUNHGWRWKH*ULHYRU¶Vadvantage in that it is being adjudicated on
a best case standard because he has not been subject to cross-examination and his allegations are
treated as being true. Further, there is no need for him to withdraw because human rights
statutes and principles are being adjudicated as part this grievance, just as would occur before the
HRTO.
[17]While the Union does not concede that the Employer has achieved all of the systemic
remedies that the Union considers necessary, the Union does accept that the process undertaken
since 2008 has progressed and made advances. The orders obtained from the Board are systemic
orders that apply also as remeGLHVWR0U&R[¶VJULHYDQFH
[18]Union counsel points out that Mr. Cox wants the criminal investigation of the letters to be
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pursued. The matter remains with the police, but the status of the investigation, the
appropriateness of it, and the extent of it, remain live issues between the parties that the Union
continues to address. The task remains incomplete, although one being pursued by the
Employer. Union counsel submits it would be inappropriate for this, and other incomplete
systemic issues, which the Union is addressing through this process, to be taken to another
forum.
[19]The parties have made a considerable investment in a process to remedy the wrongs at
the Toronto Jail over the past several years. They have made much progress in doing so. In
FRXQVHO¶VZRUGVZHDUHQRZDWWKHHQGVWDJHVRI that process, including with respect to Mr.
&R[¶VJULHYDQFHDQGLWZRXOGEH wasteful and duplicative to start the process afresh before a
different tribunal with the same adjudicative powers.
[20]In these circumstances, since systemic remedies form part of the relief required for the
UHVROXWLRQRI0U&R[¶VJULHYDQFH it would be disruptive to have his grievance hived off and
dealt with separately, rather than as part of the general process of resolving all of the grievances
that arose out of the poisoned work environment during the period 2005 until 2008.
[21],QWKHFLUFXPVWDQFHV,GHQ\0U&R[¶Vrequest to withdraw his grievance.
th
Dated at Toronto this 16 day of December 2010.
Christopher J. Albertyn, Vice-Chair