HomeMy WebLinkAbout2003-1881.O'Brien.11-01-21 Decision
Commission de
Crown Employees
Grievance
UqJOHPHQWGHV
Settlement Board
griefs
GHVHPSOR\pVGHOD
Couronne
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Bureau 600
Toronto, Ontario M5G
180, rue Dundas Ouest
1Z8
Toronto (Ontario) M5G
Tel. (416) 326-1388
1Z8
Fax (416) 326-1396
7pO
7pOpF
GSB#2003-1881
UNION#2003-0999-0026
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Union
2¶%ULHQ
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services)
Employer
BEFOREVice-Chair
Deborah J.D. Leighton
FOR THE UNION
David Wright
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER
George Parris
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARINGOctober 20 and November 24, 2010.
- 2 -
Decision
[1]0V&KHU\O2¶%ULHQKDVWKUee grievances before the board filed in 2003 and
2009 alleging, that the ministry has violated her rights under Articles 2,
inter alia,
3, 9 and 20 of the collective agreement and breached the minutes of settlement
(MOS) signed in 1995 and the board orders made pursuant to this settlement. She
seeks to return to work and to be made whole. This is the fourth interim decision
in the matter and addresses two preliminary motions made by the employer argued
on October 20 and November 24, 2010, seeking that the board restrict the scope of
the evidence.
[2] In the first motion the employer submits that evidence of events of the
period of time between December 11, 2000 and February 19, 2001 should not be
admitted. Counsel argued that there is no rational basis to admit this evidence,
because it is not material to the 2003 grievance as plead. The union argues that it
is necessary to show a pattern of discrimination against the grievor and the
particulars make it clear that those are the allegations.
[3] The first interim decision in this matter addressed, amongst other issues, the
scope of the evidence for the 2003 grievance and I decided that the union could not
rely on evidence which predated grievances settled by an MOS executed on June
20, 2001. However since the MOS did not specifically purport to settle all the
JULHYRU¶VRXWVWDQGLQJFRPSODLQWVWRWKHGDWH of these minutes, I was not prepared to
exclude the evidence after the filing date of the settled grievance. I am also
persuaded that it would not be appropriate to exclude this evidence at this time,
without fully appreciating its content and the context so as to properly assess
whether it is relevant. I am of the view that it is more appropriate to do this during
the hearing on the merits of the case. 7KXVWKHHPSOR\HU¶VPRWLRQWRH[FOXGHWKH
- 3 -
evidence of the time period between December 11, 2000 and February 19, 2001 is
premature.
[4] In the second motion the employer seeks to limit the scope of the evidence
for the 2009 grievances to three years before the date of their filing or back to May
2006. The 2009 grievances allege that the employer has breached the 1995 MOS,
ZKLFKVHWWOHG0V2¶%ULHQ¶VRUiginal complaints filed in 1993 and 1994, while she
was an unclassified correctional officer at the Windsor Jail. The union seeks to
tender evidence of events since the 1995 MOS, which allegedly show a pattern of
discrimination and harassment of the grievor.
[5] Counsel for the employer argued that the same principle which I applied to
the 2003 grievance in the first interim decision in this matter applies here as well.
+HVXEPLWWHGWKDWLWLVQRZZHOOHVWDEOLVKHGLQWKH*6%¶VMXULVSUXGHQFHWKDW
evidence of matters which are the subject of a settlement, should only be permitted
in exceptional circumstances. Since grievances filed in 1999 and 2000 were settled
by an MOS in June 2001, the union should not be permitted to tender evidence of
events which predate the filing of these grievances. He argued that there were no
exceptional circumstances to support a decision to allow the evidence.
[6] Counsel for the employer argued further, that in balancing the interests of
the parties, the board has consistently held that evidence of events for three years
before the date of the grievance should be enough to establish a pattern of
harassment in these cases and avoids making the case longer than is necessary.
Thus, counsel submitted that the evidence, which might be admissible for the 2003
grievance, of events between December 2000 and February 2001, when the grievor
went back on LTIP, should not be admitted for her 2009 grievances.
- 4 -
[7] Counsel for the employer relied on the following cases in support of his
submission:
OPSEU (Fletcher) and Ministry of Community Safety and
(2006) GSB 2004-0083 et al. (Leighton);
Correctional Services OPSEU (Hawkes)
(2009) GSB 2007-
and Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services
2388 (Leighton);
OPSEU (Patterson) and Ministry of Children and Youth Services
(2006) GSB 1989-1546 et al.(Abramsky);
OPSEU (Patterson)and Ministry of
(2003) GSB 2001-0925 et al. (Leighton);
Public Safety and Security Hotel-Dieu
th
(1997) 62 L.A.C.(4) 164 (M. Picher).
Grace Hospital and ONA
[8] Counsel for the union argued that the evidence of events beginning after the
026WR)HEUXDU\ZKHQ0V2¶Brien went on LTIP are crucial to
showing what happened to her in the workplace, made her sick. Further, evidence
from the time that the grievor went on LTIP to the date of the 2009 grievances
should also be admitted. He noted that0V2%ULHQ¶VJULHYDQFHVVSHFLILFDOO\
allege a breach of the 1995 MOS, which her 2003 grievance does not raise. He
also emphasized that the MOS in 2001 VHWWOHGPDWWHUVJULHYHGE\WKH0V2¶%ULHQ
that did not address an alleged breach of the 1995 MOS.
>@:LWKUHJDUGWRWKH³WKUHH\HDUUXOH´FRXQVHODJUHHG with the principle that
the board must strike a fair balance between the union and the employer in
deciding what evidence is admissible. He argued that in the circumstances it
would be fair to allow the evidence from 1995 until the date of the 2009 grievance.
Moreover, it would be arbitrary to draw the line at May 2006; especially given Ms.
2¶%ULHQZDVRQ/7,3IURP)HEUXDU\DQGis to this day. Counsel pointed to
the particulars that allege that the employer harassed and discriminated against Ms.
2¶%ULHQWKURXJKRXWKHUWHQXUHZLWKWKH233 This treatment which is rooted in the
history of her original grievance and the MOS that resulted in her transfer to the
- 5 -
OPP is what lead to the grievor becoming so ill that she could not function, in
FRXQVHO¶VVXEPLVVLRQ,WLVDOOSDUWRIthe pattern which resulted in her not being
able to work for almost 10 years.
[10] Counsel argued in summary that there are exceptional circumstances here to
allow the evidence from after the 1995 MOS to the date of the 2009 grievance. It
would be fair to allow the evidence subject to a finding of actual prejudice if the
employer can prove it during the hearing. Counsel for the union relied on
OPSEU
(2004) GSB 2003-0187 (Watters) in support
(Waraich) and the Ministry of Labour
of his submission.
[11] There are two questions for me to address in deciding the second motion.
The first is whether it is appropriate and fair in the circumstance to allow evidence
before the date of the grievances settled by minutes in 2001. I have already held in
an earlier decision that this evidence is not admissible for the 2003 grievance
before me. The rationale for this decision is clear and has been repeated often by
this board. The parties to an MOS must be able to rely on it, knowing that matters
that are the subject of the settlement will not be admissible in a later proceeding.
[12] I am persuaded that this principle also applies to the 2009 grievances.
Counsel for the union argued that the 2009 grievances were fundamentally
different to the 2003 grievance and that the matters settled in the 2001 MOS did
not address the same issues as alleged in 2009. However a review of one of the
grievances, filed December 11, 2000, settled by the 2001 MOS, shows that the
JULHYRUFRPSODLQHGDERXWD³YLRODWLRQRIP\ULJKWVXQGHUWKH:'+3´:RUNSODFH
Discrimination and Harassment Policy) amongst other things. The allegations in
the particulars for the 2009 grievances are WKDW0V2¶%ULHQZDVGLVFULPLQDWHGDQG
- 6 -
harassed throughout her tenure with the OPP which ended in February 2001. It is
clear by the wording of the December 11, 2000 grievance that the grievor was
complaining about her treatment with the OPP. Since the MOS signed in June
LQGLFDWHVWKDW0V2¶%ULHQDJUHHGWRZLWKGUDZ³DOORXWVWDQGLQJJULHYDQFHV´
she cannot revisit events which occurred before December 11, 2000, in her 2009
grievance. Thus I must conclude given the facts here and the case law of the board
that evidence before December 11, 2000 is not admissible. Evidence of events
between December 11, 2000 and February 21, 2001, when she was still working
for the OPP, may be admissible if they are relevant and otherwise reliable.
[13] The second question then is should the evidence between December 11,
2000 and the April 27, 2009 be admissible to support the 2009 grievance. In
balancing the interests of the parties in deciding the scope of evidence for a
grievance alleging a pattern of harassment over a number of years, this board must
WDNHLQWRDFFRXQWWKHXQLRQ¶VQHHGWRDGduce enough evidence to prove the alleged
pattern of harassment, and fairness to the employer in having to defend allegations
of events that have occurred many years before its filing. In , the
Hotel-Dieu, supra
union wished to introduce evidence going bDFNWRWKHJULHYRU¶VKLUHGDWHVRPHVL[
years before the grievance. In considering the motion the board noted that the
grievor was not unaware of her rights in that case and could have grieved the
events early in her employment, but did not. The board also was concerned about
the equity and procedural challenges of allowing six full years of what they called
voluminous evidence. These concerns lead the board to allow a scope of three
years of evidence before the grievance.
[14] The GSB has held similarly in the decisions of 2003 and 2006,
Patterson
, and others, that a three year scope is normally fair in all the circumstances;
supra
- 7 -
that is, it should be enough time to allow the union to show a pattern of harassment
and the events should not be so old as to be difficult to defend. Finally, the hearing
is somewhat contained.
[15] While three years before a grievance of this nature will normally be fair in
all the circumstances, each case must be considered on its facts. In considering the
circumstances here, I am persuaded that it would be arbitrary in this case to limit
the evidence of the 2009 grievance to 2006. 6LQFH0V2¶%ULHQKDVEHHQRXWRIWKH
workplace since February 2001 and on LTIP since late 2001, there will not be
YROXPLQRXVHYLGHQFHGXULQJWKLVSHULRG7KHXQLRQ¶VSDUWLFXODUVEHWZHHQ
DQGLQGLFDWHRQO\WKDW0V2¶%ULHQ³UHPDLQHGXQGHUDGRFWRU¶VFDUHDQG
XQDEOHWRZRUN´
[16] Further, there is some commonality in the 2003 and 2009 grievances. In
both the grievor seeks to return to work and she complains in her particulars, in
part, that her efforts to do so have been thwarted by the employer. In 2003 her
medical condition improved and her doctor said that she could return to work. The
XQLRQ¶VSDUWLFXODUVVWDWHWKDWWKHHPSOR\HUGLGQRWKLQJWRUHWXUQKHUWRZRUN
Incidents which occurred during this time OHDGWR0V2¶%ULHQEHFRPLQJYHU\LOO
again. The grievor tried again in 2008 to return to work and was fit to return to
work on a trial basis in January 2009.The union alleges that the employer has
continued to refuse to return the grievor to work. The refusal to return the grievor
to work is alleged to be part of a pattern of discrimination and harassment by the
employer.
[17] There are unique circumstances here which justify a departure from the
normal practice of allowing three years as WKHVFRSHRIHYLGHQFH7KHJULHYRU¶V
- 8 -
long period of illness and thus the inability to further her return to work for many
years is one. The overlap of the grievances in claiming to be thwarted in her return
to work also distinguishes this case from others before the board. Finally, the
rational for limiting evidence that could become voluminous if many years of
incidents were permitted, does not apply in the circumstances here. Thus, I have
decided that it would be fair to allow the evidence back to December 11, 2000,
subject to a finding of actual prejudice if the employer can prove it during the
hearing.
[18] For the reasons noteGDERYHWKHHPSOR\HU¶VVHFRQGPRWLRQWRUHVWULFWWKH
scope of the evidence in the 2009 grievances is granted in part. The first motion is
premature.
st
Dated at Toronto this 21 day of January 2011.
Deborah J.D. Leighton, Vice-Chair