HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013-1169.Ranger.23-10-25 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# 2013-1169; 2013-1170; 2016-0302;
2016-2388; 2018-0102; 2018-0615
UNION# 2013-0424-0002; 2013-0424-0003; 2016-0424-0001;
2017-0424-0001; 2018-0424-0008; 2018-0424-0010
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Ranger) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE Daniel Harris Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Craig Flood
Koskie Minsky LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Jonathan Rabinovitch
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING October 24, 2023
- 2 -
Decision
[1] The matters addressed in this decision begin with grievances filed in 2013 and
after. There are two other grievances before me between these parties, involving
this grievor, one filed in 2021 and one filed in 2022. The hearing procedure to be
followed in the latter grievances was addressed in a decision dated August 17,
2023. For ease of reference, and given its brevity, that decision is set out in its
entirety as follows:
[1] This decision deals with two grievances filed by OPSEU on behalf of
Robert Ranger, who is employed by the Ministry of the Solicitor
General at the Ottawa Centre Probation and Parole Office.
[2] Chronologically, the first grievance, dated November 17, 2021, relates
to allegations of a failure to ensure a safe workplace and a poisoned
work environment in breach of the Collective Agreement, the Ontario
Human Rights Code and the Occupational Health and Safety Act.
This grievance is OPSEU File No. 2021-0424-0002. Although it is
before the Board, it had not been assigned to me as of August 17,
2023.
[3] The second grievance, dated March 16, 2022, relates to allegations
that the employer breached the collective agreement and the Ontario
Human Rights Code by not returning the grievor to work promptly
enough from a leave of absence due to illness. This grievance is
OPSEU File No.2022-0424-0001 and GSB File No. 2022-1666. It is
the matter that was referred to me and scheduled for hearing by the
Board on August 17, 2023.
[4] At the hearing on August 17, 2023 the parties agreed that I would hear
and determine both grievances together. For the sake of clarity, they
are not being consolidated.
- 3 -
[5] The parties' made representations with respect to the procedures to
be followed in the hearing of these two cases. Having considered
those representations, I hereby give the following directions:
a) Although the union bares the onus of proof, the employer will
call its case first;
b) The parties are to exchange arguably relevant documents and
provide particulars of their cases to each other;
c) The parties are to explore entering into an agreed statement of
facts in order to expedite the hearing of these matters. The
employer will present a proposed statement to the union for its
consideration and as the basis for further discussion between
the parties in order to try to reach agreement upon the salient
facts;
d) It is acknowledged by the parties that I am hearing ongoing
litigation between them dealing, in part, with the contentious
work relationship between the grievor and a co-worker, Janine
Sarrazin, which may, in part, also be raised by the facts in issue
in these proceedings. Nonetheless, the facts in issue in the
instant matters are to be limited to events that took place
between July 12, 2021 and March 14, 2022, being the first day
worked by a co-worker, Diane Cave, and the date that the
grievor returned to work from the sick leave referenced in the
second chronological grievance in these proceedings. Should
such evidence advert to an event prior to this time-frame, its
relevance and admissibility may be raised at that juncture as in
the normal course of a hearing. However, subject only to the
dictates of natural justice, this time frame is to be honoured;
e) Either party may contact me to arrange a meeting if necessary
for my assistance by way of further directions or otherwise with
respect to the foregoing.
[2] The agreement of the parties and the subsequent decision of August 17, 2023
only relate to the hearing together of the 2021 and 2022 grievances. It is not the
case that they were to be heard with the instant (2013 et al) matters.
- 4 -
[3] Accordingly, the instant matters will proceed to their conclusion as in the normal
course, subject to the following. Early on in these proceedings the parties
addressed the procedural niceties that arise because, in some of the instant
matters, the Union bears the onus and in others the Employer bears the onus.
The procedure settled upon was that the Union would proceed first and call its
evidence on those matters where it bears the onus. The Employer would then
call its evidence in response to that of the Union and call its evidence on the
disciplinary matters where it bears the onus. These proceedings are complete to
this stage. Next, the Union may call its evidence in reply on those matters where
it bears the onus. Its reply evidence, as is the norm, is restricted to issues arising
out of the Employer’s case on those matters and is not to supplement the
evidence it called in the first instance; that is, the Union is not to split its case. At
that juncture the Union may also call any evidence in response to the Employer’s
case on the disciplinary matters. Following the completion of that stage of the
evidence, the Employer may call evidence in reply to the Union’s case on the
disciplinary matters. Again, this is subject to the normal restrictions on the scope
of reply evidence. Absent any proper need for rebuttal or sur-rebuttal evidence,
these matters will then proceed to final submissions on the issues raised by all of
the evidence.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 25th day of October 2023.
“Daniel Harris”
_____________________
Daniel Harris, Arbitrator