HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-0523.Grievor.23-04-24 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#2021-0523; 2022-8627; 2022-8628; 2022-11745; 2022-11859
UNION#2021-0533-0005; 2022-0533-0023; 2022-0533-0024;
2022-0533-0031; 2022-0533-0032
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 Public and Business Service Delivery) Employer
BEFORE Bram Herlich Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Ed Holmes
Ryder Wright Holmes Bryden Nam LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
HEARING April 11, 2023
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Decision
[1] The grievor will be referred to as the “grievor”, rather than being identified by
name.
[2] Three grievances (Board Files 2021-0523; 2022-8627 and 2022-8628) were
scheduled for hearing before me on April 11, 2023. Two further grievances were
subsequently filed on behalf of the grievor. The parties have now agreed that
those two grievances (Board Files 2022-11745 and 2022-11859) ought to be
heard together with the others. Further, approximately one week prior to the
scheduled hearing date, the union filed an application for interim relief in respect of
some or all of the grievances.
[3] When the hearing convened, the employer had not yet filed a full reply to the
interim relief application. It had, however, filed a summary of events it felt might be
useful in the circumstances. Although the application for interim relief was not
formally listed for hearing on the day, the parties devoted time to discussions
aimed at resolving the interim relief application. Those efforts were successful, at
least to the following extent. The parties entered into an interim agreement, the
result of which is that (at least) it is not currently necessary to schedule, consider
or dispose of the interim application and (at best) it may never be necessary to do
so.
[4] While much of the hearing day was devoted to the parties’ consideration of the
interim application, there was time to deal with the union’s request for production,
filed in relation to the grievances that were actually scheduled to be heard that
day. I turn to that request.
[5] While the earliest of the grievances currently before me dates to April, 2021, the
grievor’s workplace dissatisfaction is of considerable vintage. Indeed, in March
2013, the parties entered into a lengthy Memorandum of Settlement (“MOS”)
resolving grievances that were previously outstanding. In the MOS, the parties
explicitly acknowledged that it was “a full and final settlement of the above noted
grievances and all issues related to the Grievor’s employment to date [March 12,
2013]”.
[6] The union has filed some 20 pages, 108 paragraphs, of particulars in support of its
case. These were not reviewed in detail in the union’s submissions regarding the
outstanding production request. And neither do I propose to do so. It is sufficient to
note that the grievances relate primarily, though by no means exclusively, to
allegations of failure on the part of the employer to abide by its obligations under
the terms of the MOS.
[7] There are some additional thematic wrinkles emerging from the particulars,
including, among others, allegations of bad faith with respect to both the execution
and implementation of the MOS by the employer; allegations of reprisal, failure to
accommodate, and harassment. I note, however, that although it is alleged that the
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employer entered into the MOS in bad-faith, the union is not seeking to vitiate its
terms, but rather, is seeking to have them enforced.
[8] The production order sought by the union is broad and far ranging. The scope of
the order sought is evident in some of the union’s written submissions regarding
production. Among the items sought by the union are:
• …all communication in any format from Management regarding
the Grievor’s medical information to and from HR, any agents,
Sibley and other assessors, meeting notes where his medical
was discussed, any phone call records where his medical was
discussed.
• … all contracts executed between the Employer and Sibley’s
and / or its agents including Dr. Zielinsky including the specific
contract engaging Sibley / Dr. Zielinsky relevant to the Grievor’s
IME. Any contracts relating to other employees should have any
identifying information redacted.
• The contracts between Manulife and the Employer.
[9] I note too that the employer has agreed to provide the following, subject to its
objection to produce any documents pre-dating the 2013 MOS (the union submits
that production orders should apply to all documents sought, including those that
pre-date the MOS):
• … electronic copies of the Grievor’s personnel file(s);
• … a copy of medical files in relation to the grievor in its
possession, upon receipt of a duly executed consent to release
by the Grievor;
• … a copy of WDHP files relating to the grievor subsequent to
March 12, 2013. For clarity, the Employer will not disclose any
active WDHP files.
• … [the employer] file[s] relating to the accommodation of the
Grievor which are subsequent to March 12, 2013. The Employer
advised that it did not think such files existed.
[10] The employer uniformly objects to the production of documents which pre-date the
MOS; the union makes little or no distinction in the treatment of documents based
on their temporal relation to the March 12, 2013 MOS. And while the employer
objects to the production of pre-MOS documents, it has, by and large, raised no
objection in principle to the production of documents which postdate the MOS.
[11] I agree with the employer. Documents which pre-date the MOS ought not to be the
subject of any production order. There are essentially two reasons for that, either
of which would, in my view, be sufficient to preclude the production of these
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documents: they are too old and they relate to a period in time in respect of which
all issues related to the grievor’s employment have, by agreement of the parties
and the grievor, been resolved.
[12] I understand the union’s urging that I be cautious in foreclosing access to arguably
relevant documents. And, in the context of a requested production order, it is true
we are dealing only with pre-hearing disclosure of documents. Such disclosure
does not, in any way, guarantee that documents disclosed will, ultimately, be
viewed as relevant and admissible or otherwise received into evidence.
[13] However, I am unable to ignore the fact that the production of these vintage
documents runs the risk of guiding our litigation into historical periods which,
simply by virtue of their remove, should be beyond the scope of the instant
proceedings. Indeed, even with respect to the production, let alone the conduct of
the actual litigation, the employer enumerated many of the legitimate concerns
which naturally arise (availability of witnesses or participants; employee/witness
turnover; workplace reorganizations; difficulties in document location, etc.) when
we attempt to look back further than a decade. This is one of the reasons there are
time limits on the filing of grievances. And even in cases where evidence of a
repeated course of impugned conduct may properly be relied upon to support
conclusions of discrimination or harassment, this Board, while it has, from time to
time, reached back as far as six years in exceptional cases, has never reached
back a decade or more.
[14] For that reason alone, the union’s request for production of pre-MOS documents
must be rejected.
[15] But there is more. The MOS resolved all of the grievor’s employment issues up to
its execution. The importance and the sanctity of settlements are an integral part of
the bedrock of the labour relations regime. This proposition has become axiomatic.
Settlements ought not to be lightly disturbed and the facts which were previously at
issue ought not to be re-litigated. To countenance the production of documents
which predate the MOS is to open the door to a re-litigation of facts and legal
issues, which, though they may have previously given rise to competing legal
claims, have now been fully and finally resolved. I will not permit that detour.
[16] For these reasons the union’s request for a production order, at least insofar as it
pertains to pre-MOS documents, is hereby denied.
[17] I turn now to the union’s request insofar as it pertains to more recent documents
(in our context, that appears to mean documents not more than a decade old, or,
more precisely, those dating back not later than March 13, 2013, the day following
the execution of the MOS).
[18] I am unable to deal with this request, except at a very high level. And at that high
level I can offer the following general conclusions:
• The union has made its request in fairly general terms,
identifying classes of documents more so than the specific
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individual documents it seeks to have produced.
• The employer has not raised any principled objection to the
production of the documents sought.
• The employer advises that it has made the necessary internal
inquiries to secure access to the documents being sought
resulting in the location of some, but not all of those documents.
What it has succeeded in locating, it has produced to the union.
If the documents continue to exist and can be located within the
employer’s possession, they have been produced to the union.
• The grievor is of the view that there is more out there.
[19] In these circumstances, I see no value or utility in directing any further production
on the employer’s part. Counsel has advised that the employer has produced that
which it was able to locate. The employer need not be directed to produce that
which it cannot locate, that which is not or is no longer in its possession.
[20] Accordingly, the union’s request for a production order, insofar as it relates to post-
MOS documents, is hereby denied.
[21] However, despite this latter ruling, should the union be able to identify a specific
(rather than a class of) arguably relevant document which is in the employer’s
possession or should a proper evidentiary basis be formed to support a request for
the production of a particular specific document, I may entertain a subsequent
request from the union.
[22] Having regard to all of the foregoing, the union’s request for a production order is
denied.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 24th day of April, 2023.
“Bram Herlich”
_________________________
Bram Herlich, Arbitrator