HomeMy WebLinkAbout2015-1711.Rizzo.23-11-06 Decision
Crown 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# 2015-1711
UNION#2 015-0618-0013
Appendix A attached
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Rizzo) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services) Employer
BEFORE Nimal Dissanayake Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Ed Holmes
Ryder Wright Holmes Bryden Nam LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Ferina Murji
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
HEARING October 20, 2023
-2 -
Decision
[1] The Board is seized with multiple grievances filed by Ms. Sonya Rizzo, (“grievor”)
a Youth Service Officer at the Cecil Fraser Youth Centre in Sudbury, Ontario.
The Board first convened on this file on October 15, 2018. That day and three
more days were spent reviewing the issues raised by the grievances, exploring
possible settlement options, and dealing with case management and process
issues.
[2] When the Board convened for a fifth day on February 1, 2023, the parties agreed
that the grievances have to proceed to arbitration. Employer counsel at this time
informed that the Board had discovered five more grievances filed by the grievor
in 2022, which had not been referred to arbitration. Counsel discussed that
those grievances (“new grievances”) make allegations similar to those in the
grievances before the Board, and that it would sense to have the same arbitrator
decide them also. I indicated that I was not prepared to take jurisdiction over
grievances not even referred to arbitration, and that if the parties want to have
me decide those as well, the proper process would be for the union to formally
refer the new grievances to the Board and for the parties to then agree to put
them before me to be dealt with together with the other grievances presently
before me (“original grievances”).
[3] The union referred the new grievances to the Board on February 6, 2023, and
the employer indicated that it was also in agreement to consolidate them with the
original grievances before me. At that time, the employer gave notice that it will
be moving that all of the grievances before me, including the new grievances, be
summarily dismissed on some or all of a number of grounds including the
following: no prima facie case, inarbitrability, mootness, and untimeliness. On
August 26, 2022, the union had provided its particulars with respect to the
original grievances. In it the union had included a specific caveat that these
particulars were provided solely for the purposes of dealing with the employer’s
preliminary motion. Employer counsel agreed that for the motion only, the factual
assertions in the union’s particulars may be deemed to be true.
-3 -
[4] On June 2, 2023, employer counsel commenced her submissions on the
preliminary motion. Those submissions were continued on September 15 and
26, 2023 and further dates had been scheduled for continuation. When the
Board next convened on October 20, 2023, employer counsel informed that a
dispute had arisen between the parties, and that they agree that the ongoing
submissions on the motion ought to be interrupted to resolve that dispute.
Employer counsel asserted that on October 16, 2023, the union counsel for the
first time sought to provide particulars with respect to the five new grievances,
and the same day employer counsel objected to that. This interim decision is
solely with regard to the dispute as to whether the union should be entitled to
provide particulars for the new grievances.
[5] Counsel put in a book of documents titled, “Correspondence prior to Union’s
request to provide particulars for grievances 31 and 36”. It consisted of the
following exchanges between counsel: (Numbers added for ease of reference)
(1) On January 7, 2022, union counsel sought the employer’s consent to
consolidate grievance 31 (GSB 2021-2795), stating that the union will
also be seeking consolidation of 30 plus additional grievances in these
proceedings. He wrote, “The consolidation request is without prejudice
to the legal positions of the parties, including the right of the employer
to raise any preliminary objections and the right of any response by
the union”.
(2) On January 11, 2022, grievance 31 was referred to arbitration. That
grievance dated December 21, 2021, states, “I grieve an abuse of
management rights, harassment, and discrimination. I grieve all
matters relating to Monday November 22/21 and November 23.”
(3) On August 12, 2022, the Board issued a notice of Proceeding for
grievances 1 to 31 (“The original grievances”).
(4) On January 12, 2023, employer counsel provided to the union a
“Notice of anticipated preliminary objections”. It set out each of the
original grievances, and the preliminary objections to be raised in each
-4 -
grievance. It also reserved the employer’s right to provide “further
information/documents regarding the preliminary objections.”
(5) On February 6, 2023, union counsel forwarded to employer counsel
the new grievances (31 to 36). He wrote, “My client is agreeable to
having them consolidated with those presently before arbitrator
Dissanayake. As agreed, this would be without prejudice to all legal
positions of the parties in relation to the grievances”.
(6) On June 6, 2023, union counsel wrote to the employer, asking
whether those additional grievances not included in the Board’s
August 12, 2022, Notice of Proceeding should be consolidated with
the original grievances. He wrote that he is agreeable to do so, since
he understood from “our conversations today, that both the employer
and the arbitrator are also agreeable”, and that accordingly he would
be advising the Board to consolidate the grievances, and requesting
that a new Notice of Proceeding including all 36 grievances be issued.
He wrote accordingly to the Board, and also referred the new
grievances (GSB 2022-11844, 2022-11845, 2022-11846, 2022-11847,
2022-11848) to arbitration.
(7) The same day employer counsel wrote to the union reminding that s
the arbitrator had taken the position that he has no jurisdiction over
grievances not referred to the GSB for arbitration. Therefore,
employer did not object to the union referring the new grievances to
arbitration at that time for the limited purpose of conferring jurisdiction
on the arbitrator over the new grievances. She wrote with underlining.
“The employer agreed to the referral on that specific basis and
reserved its right to pursue its preliminary objections with respect to
those grievances”.
(8) On October 12, 2023, union counsel wrote to employer counsel,
confirming that the new grievances had been referred to the Board,
and that the union agrees to consolidate those with the other
grievances before the arbitrator. Counsel wrote further that, “The
union will be providing particulars in relation to those grievances as
-5 -
soon as possible and the union understands that the employer has
reserved its right to advance preliminary objections in relation to
those”.
(9) On October 16, 2023, four days before the October 20th hearing,
employer counsel responded that the employer does not object to the
consolidation of the new grievances, “but reserves its rights to argue
both procedural and substantive objections with respect to the
grievance itself”, and that it maintains its right and ability to present
procedural and substantive objections with respect to each of the
above referenced grievances”.
(10) In the same communication on October 16, 2023, employer
counsel objected to the union’s stated intention of providing particulars
for the five new grievances. She went on in detail setting out the
employer’s reasons for the objection. Finally, counsel requested that
the Board issue a ruling that the union is not entitled to file additional
particulars. She wrote that if the Board is not prepared to do that, “this
issue will need to be argued comprehensively, with the benefit of
some time to prepare and prior to the employer restarting its ongoing
submissions”. (in bold)
[6] No such order was forthcoming from the Board, and this dispute about the
union’s entitlement to provide particulars with respect to the new grievances was
argued on the next scheduled hearing date of October 20, 2023.
EMPLOYER SUBMISSIONS
[7] After reviewing, the foregoing exchanges between the parties prior to October
20, 2023, employer counsel reviewed the particulars the union had provided on
August 26, 2022. She pointed out that the union’s willingness to consolidation of
the new grievances was communicated on September 7, 2022. The employer
agreed the next day, and gave notice of its preliminary objections seeking the
summary dismissal of all grievances before the Board.
-6 -
[8] Counsel submitted that the employer understood that the parties agreed to
consolidate the new grievances only for the “technical purpose” of conferring
jurisdiction on the arbitrator to hear all of the grievances together. At the time the
employer asserted that while it had agreed to consolidation, that agreement was
subject to its right to argue that the referral of the new grievances to arbitration
was untimely, and union counsel agreed. She submitted that it was very
significant that at the time the union did not reserve any right to provide further
particulars with respect to the new grievances.
[9] Employer counsel stated that on June 2 ,2023, she commenced submissions on
the motion. Using a chart she had prepared, she reviewed all 36 grievances
including the new grievances, and the preliminary objections she had for each.
She submitted that even at this point the union did not raise anything about
providing additional particulars.
[10] Counsel submitted that the union should not be allowed to provide further
particulars, after the employer had already made submissions on its motion over
three hearing days, and almost after eight months from the time it filed its initial
particulars. She asserted that prior to her commencing submissions on June 2,
2023, there had been no discussion at all about consolidation of any new
grievances. When, union counsel interjected and referred to an email he had
sent, which commences with “Further to our conversation on Friday”, employer
counsel accepted that there had been prior discussion about consolidation.
However, she argued that the conversation was about consolidation for the only
purpose of conferring jurisdiction on the arbitrator.
[11] Counsel submitted that allowing the union to provide further particulars in the
middle of the employer’s submissions is not how particulars are normally
provided. Particulars are normally provided at the time grievances are filed, or at
least before the commencement of the hearing. To allow further particulars at
this late stage is not reasonable and not fair to the employer.
[12] Employer counsel submitted that her objection to adding particulars is not a
technical objection. She referred to an email sent by her on June 6, 2023 (No.7),
-7 -
where she wrote that the employer agrees to the consolidation in order to give
jurisdiction to the arbitrator. Therefore, the employer’s objection to further
particulars should not have come as a surprise to the union. The employer
argued that the union sought to add further particulars for the first time on
October 16, 2023, after the employer had made submissions over three hearing
days. Employer counsel pointed out that while the union had stated that the
additional particulars would be provided “as soon as Possible,” it had not done so
to date.
[13] Counsel pointed out that the union’s particulars on the original grievances filed
on August 26, 2022, were not set out separately for each grievance. The
particulars were one long story over a seven year period. She submitted that the
union is seeking to add to those particulars, after hearing the employer’s
submissions on the inadequacy of its original particulars. She stated that the
union was attempting to get “another kick at the can”, and “fill in the gaps” in the
particulars the employer had pointed out during its submissions.
[14] Counsel submitted that if the Board allows the union to provide additional
particulars, any particulars it provides will be “more of the same” personal
perceptions of the grievor about violence, intimidation, discrimination etc. Like
the initial particulars, there would be no facts about “who, when what, where”
violations occurred. There would be few factual assertions on the four “w’s”.
The particulars will not have facts that could possibly substantiate a prima facie
case. Hearing all those additional grievances would therefore be an
unnecessarily waste of valuable hearing time.
[15] Employer counsel then made an alternate submission that the Board should
order the union to provide particulars for the new grievances, hear submissions
from the parties on the employer’s preliminary objections as they apply to each of
the new grievances and issue its decision on the employer’s motion as it relates
to the new grievances. Then the Board can continue with hearing to receive
submissions on the motion as they apply to the original grievances together with
any of the new grievances that are had not been dismissed.
-8 -
UNION SUBMISSIONS
[16] Union counsel also reviewed the exchanges between the parties during the
period from February 1, 2023, when the employer informed about the discovery
of the new grievance, and when they were referred to arbitration and
consolidated. He submitted that it does not matter what motivated the parties to
agree to consolidate. The fact is that now the Board is properly seized with all
thirty six grievances, and is obligated to deal with all of them, including any
preliminary issues. This phase of the hearing is only about the union’s
entitlement to provide particulars with respect to the new grievances.
[17] Union counsel submitted that the present dispute about particulars is about
process. There are no rules or regulations that govern this dispute. The Board
has discretion to do what it deems fair and reasonable in the particular
circumstances of each case. He pointed out that the new grievances were not
referred to arbitration consolidated and put before the arbitrator until 16th of
October 2023 when the employer finally confirmed its agreement to consolidate
subject to conditions. The union’s initial particulars had been provided in August
2022, at a time when the new grievances had not even been discovered.
Therefore, those particulars could not have been about the new grievances. In
those circumstances it would be very unfair to the grievor and the union if it is not
allowed to adduce evidence to support the allegations in the new grievances,
either after providing particulars or directly during the hearing.
[18] Counsel submitted that the arbitral best practice of requiring unions to provide
particulars to the employer was adopted for two reasons. First, particulars
disclose at the outset the issues in the grievance, which allows the arbitrator to
determine the appropriate process. Secondly, it allows the employer to decide
whether to raise any preliminary issues/motions. Usually it is employers that
demand that unions provide particulars. If unions do not, it is common for
employers to seek orders for particulars from the arbitrator. This dispute is
unique. It is a “reverse request” from the employer seeking an order from the
arbitrator prohibiting the union from providing particulars. Counsel submitted that
the union stands prepared to provide particulars with respect to the new
-9 -
grievances which have not been particularized to date. However, if the employer
does not want particulars the union does not care, provided it is allowed to
adduce evidence to substantiate its grievances, as was the arbitral practice in
“the old days”.
[19] Counsel submitted that the current arbitral practice is to require that unions
provide particulars with respect to grievances, and it is improper to prohibit the
union from providing particulars consistent with that arbitral practice. He
suggested that the Board instead should find that the union is entitled to file
particulars that with respect to the new grievances, and address the union’s
failure to provide particulars to date by issuing an order that the union do that as
soon as possible, or by a specific date.
[20] Counsel submitted that the employer’s alternate proposal to first hear and
determine the employer’s preliminary motion as they pertain only to the five new
grievances would not be workable. As an example, he pointed out that if the
Board concludes that a grievance was untimely, that does not end the matter.
The Board has discretion in certain circumstances to extend time limits. The
Board will have to hear evidence the union may have to support its request for an
extension of time limits and submissions before deciding whether to exercise its
discretion.
EMPLOYER REPLY
[21] Counsel submitted that union counsel’s assertion that the Board became seized
with the new grievances only on October 16, 2023 because the employer
confirmed its agreement to consolidation only on that date, is a technical one.
She stated that as soon as those grievances were discovered, it was clear that
both parties shared a common desire to consolidate those with the original
grievances to be heard by the arbitrator seized with the original grievances.
[22] Counsel disagreed that the union had reserved a right to provide additional
particulars anytime before October 12, 2023. The union’s reliance on its general
reservation in exchanges numbered 1 and 5 to the effect that its agreement to
consolidation of the new grievances is without prejudice to the legal positions and
-10 -
the rights of the parties to raise and defend against preliminary objections is also
a “technical argument”. The employer made its preliminary objections explicitly
and clearly. If the union wished to provide additional particulars for the new
grievances it also should have reserved that right explicitly.
[23] Counsel agreed that usually it is employers that demand particulars from unions.
However, that usually happens at the start of a hearing, not after three days of
hearings as here.
DECISION
[24] I commence by noting that there is no rule in law or in the parties’ collective
agreement stipulating a deadline beyond which a union is not entitled to provide
particulars. It is a matter of process over which arbitrators have discretion.
While unions are, as a general practice, required to file particulars prior to the
commencement of the hearing, arbitrators have the discretion to depart from this
best practice, if satisfied that it is fair and reasonable, and does not cause
prejudice to the employer in the particular circumstances.
[25] Employer counsel repeatedly submitted that it was not fair to the employer, and
would disadvantage it, if the union is allowed to provide particulars on the new
grievances at this point. The only specific disadvantage I could discern from the
employer’s submissions is as follows. The union has listened to the employer’s
submissions as to what preliminary objections (no prima facie case, untimeliness,
mootness, etc.) it was raising against each of the grievances before the Board.
Having that knowledge, the union will be able provide additional particulars to
supplement those it had already filed. The union will be able to fill the gaps to
correct the inadequacies and flaws the employer had raised during the three
days of submissions. Counsel anticipated that in the guise of providing
particulars for the new grievances, the union could “slip in” additional particulars
to bolster the flawed particulars it had filed.
[26] If the union attempts to slips in additional information to bolster its original
particulars by correcting flaws the employer had pointed out in the three days of
submissions, the employer is not left disadvantaged. It is open to it to raise with
-11 -
the Board that the union has added to the particulars it had filed and request that
any such particulars be struck. It is not uncommon for employers to seek orders
striking down parts of union particulars which are improper.
[27] This phase of the proceeding is only about the new grievances. At the time the
employer made three days of submissions on the preliminary motion, the parties
were only aware that there were five new grievances filed by the grievor in 2022.
At most they would have seen only the grievance forms, which only set out the
violations alleged. There were no facts about what the employer did to commit
the alleged violations. The submissions employer counsel made over the three
days, therefore, were only about the original grievances. It could not have
pointed out flaws in particulars relating to any new grievances because none had
been provided. In order to even consider the employer’s argument, the Board
would have to speculate, the employer does, that any particulars the union files
in the future with regard to the new grievances would be “more of the same”, that
is, subjective perceptions of the grievor. The Board is not prepared to make
decision based on speculation. Moreover, while the employer has lodged
objections on each of the original grievances, the union has not conceded on any
of those grievances. Nor has the Board at this point ruled whether it upholds or
rejects any of the objections, including whether the allegations are merely
personal perceptions not supported by objective facts.
[28] Returning to the issue of prejudice to the employer, I review below the areas
employer counsel has dealt with in the three days of submissions in support of its
motion. On June 2, 2023, counsel commenced submissions by presenting a
“road map” of her submissions. The first item on that road map was “a review of
the book of charts” which had been marked as exhibit 1. Counsel stated that
next she would review the union’s particulars, followed by a review of the
employer’s objections to each of the 30 grievances. Next was a review of the
case law and apply the law to each grievance and submit way they should be
dismissed.
[29] Counsel then commenced submissions. She reviewed the Book of Charts in
detail that the book of Charts which set out when the grievor was at work and
-12 -
when she was absent. She pointed out that the grievor commenced filing
grievances “eight years ago” and that in those 3 years the grievor was absent for
58 months and continues to be off at present.
[30] Next counsel turned to the union’s particulars. She pointed out that although the
grievances were filed separately, they were not particularised separately. The
particulars were written as a long story by the grievor. She submitted that
despite her 239 paragraphs of particulars, they fall far short of substantiating an
arguable case to be tried. In other words, they were not capable of supporting a
prima facie case for the allegations in any of the 30 grievances. The particulars,
accepted as true for purposes of the motion, do not show that the grievor was
subjected to any discrimination, bullying violence, etc. as alleged, by
management or her co-workers. She submitted that the particulars instead show
that the grievor was extremely sensitive and was bordering on being paranoid.
Her belief that everyone was targeting her was a product of her own sensitivity.
She started going through the particulars and set out the objections for each of
the grievances before the Board based on those particulars.
[31] At this point counsel deviated from her review of the union particulars and raised
her concerns with each of the grievances recently discovered, and explicitly
reserved “the right to raise preliminary objections including failure to refer them to
arbitration or untimely referral to arbitration.
[32] At the hearing on September 15, 2023, employer counsel continued her review of
the union’s particulars from where she had left off on September 2, and covered
up to 189 of the 239 paragraphs of the particulars.
[33] On September 26, 2023, employer counsel completed her review of all 239
paragraphs of the particulars, and advised that on the next day she would be
dealing with the next item on her road map, the case law, and that she would
need at least two more days following that to complete her submissions on the
motion.
[34] However, as described above, on the next hearing date October 16, 2023, the
employer submissions on the original grievances were interrupted to receive
-13 -
submissions on the present dispute about the union’s entitlement to provide
particulars with respect to the five new grievances, which by then had been
referred to arbitration, and consolidated with the original grievances.
[35] I have set out in detail the submissions employer counsel made on the first three
days of hearing, before the instant dispute was raised before the Board and
argued on October 20, 2023. That review clearly establishes that any
submissions and reservations the employer made could not and did not have
anything to do with the new grievances. They were only about the original
grievances. The only time the new grievances came up was, when employer
counsel reviewed each of the five grievance forms, which only contained the
provisions alleged to have been violated and the remedies sought. As employer
counsel pointed out herself, the grievance forms did not set out any facts as to
who did what, when and where to give rise to the alleged violations. Therefore,
the employer could not have made any submissions pointing out flaws or
inadequacies in the new grievances.
[36] The union had throughout accepted, including in several of the email exchanges
set out above, that following the consolidation, the employer retains the right to
raise any preliminary objections against the grievances, subject to the union’s
right to respond to them. I understood that acceptance related to all grievances
before the Board following the consolidation. If I am wrong, I find that, whether or
not it made any reservation, the employer will have the right to raise any
preliminary objections against any of all grievances now consolidated, and the
union would have the right to defend against those objections.
[37] Having regard to all of the foregoing reasons, I find that while the hearing
process will have to be changed to suit the unique circumstances of this case,
the employer will not be disadvantaged or prejudiced if the union is allowed to
provide particulars for the new grievances.
[38] Therefore, this dispute has to be determined by a consideration of whether there
are circumstances in this case, which justify the Board allowing the union to
provide particulars for the new grievances. Grievances not referred to arbitration
-14 -
and not particularized were discovered while submissions were on-going on
other similar grievances. Those grievances were subsequently referred to
arbitration and consolidated on agreement. The union could not have provided
particulars of the new grievances prior to the Board being seized with jurisdiction
over them by the agreement on October 16, 2023, to consolidate. In those
circumstances, the union obviously could not have provided particulars before
the hearing commenced, as per the usual practice in labour arbitration.
[39] If the union is not allowed the opportunity to provide particulars for the new
grievances, with only the grievance forms to rely on, it would have no way to
defend against a no prima facie case motion, even if it has strong information to
support the alleged violations. That would not only be unfair, but it will also be a
denial of natural justice. Any inconvenience and delay that results is a small price
to pay to avoid that denial of a fundamental right.
[40] Given my finding that allowing particulars will not disadvantage or prejudice the
employer, the reasonable exercise of the Board’s discretion is to allow the
employer to make any preliminary objections it wishes to argue with regard any
of the 36 grievances before the Board, with the union getting the opportunity to
defend those. This would put the two parties on equal footing, consistent with
what happens under the usual best arbitral practice. Therefore, it is so ordered.
[41] The union accepted that it failed to comply with its commitment to provide
particulars for the new grievances as soon as possible. To address that undue
delay and to ensure that the employer has the opportunity to make submissions
on any preliminary objections it chooses to put forward against the new
grievances before closing submission, the Board hereby orders that the union
provide its particulars on the new grievances no later than November 13, 2023,
unless there is agreement between the parties on a different date.
-15 -
[42] The Board remains seized. The hearing will resume on the next schedule date,
November 17, 2023.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 6th day of November 2023.
“Nimal Dissanayake”
Nimal Dissanayake, Arbitrator
-16 -
APPENDIX A
Grievor OPSEU Union # GSB # Date of Grievance
Rizzo, Sonya 2015-0618-0013 2015-1711 07/15/2015
Rizzo, Sonya 2015-0618-0014 2015-1712 07/15/2015
Rizzo, Sonya 2016-0618-0003 2016-0524 04/07/2016
Rizzo, Sonya 2016-0618-0004 2016-0525 04/07/2016
Rizzo, Sonya 2018-0618-0019 2019-0205 07/19/2018
Rizzo, Sonya 2019-0618-0002 2019-0500 03/29/2019
Rizzo, Sonya 2019-0618-0003 2019-0520 01/24/2019
Rizzo, Sonya 2019-0618-0004 2019-0521 03/29/2019
Rizzo, Sonya 2019-0618-0005 2019-0522 03/29/2019
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0002 2021-2118 11/12/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0003 2021-2119 11/12/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0004 2021-2120 11/12/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0005 2021-2182 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0006 2021-2183 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0007 2021-2184 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0008 2021-2185 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0009 2021-2186 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0010 2021-2187 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0011 2021-2188 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0012 2021-2189 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0013 2021-2190 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0014 2021-2191 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0015 2021-2192 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0016 2021-2193 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0017 2021-2194 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0018 2021-2195 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0019 2021-2196 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0020 2021-2197 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0021 2021-2198 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0022 2021-2199 09/19/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2021-0618-0023 2021-2795 12/21/2021
Rizzo, Sonya 2020-0618-0005 2022-11844 02/10/2020
Rizzo, Sonya 2020-0618-0006 2022-11845 01/28/2020
Rizzo, Sonya 2020-0618-0007 2022-11846 10/01/2020
Rizzo, Sonya 2020-0618-0008 2022-11847 11/13/2020
Rizzo, Sonya 2020-0618-0009 2022-11848 12/12/2020