HomeMy WebLinkAbout2022-7434.Taylor.23-12-07 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# 2022-7434; 2022-10697; 2022-12105
UNION# 2022-0290-0028; 2022-0290-0043; 2023-0290-0007
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Taylor) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services) Employer
BEFORE Kathleen G. O’Neil Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Ed Holmes
Ryder Wright Holmes Bryden Nam LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Jackson D. Lund
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING October 6, 2023
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Decision
[1] This decision deals with two preliminary motions in respect of three grievances
filed on behalf of Ms. Andrea Taylor, a Youth Services Officer (YSO) reassigned
for health reasons to a clerk’s position. The first motion concerns the employer’s
request that one of the grievances be dismissed for lack of a prima facie case,
and the second is the union’s request that a grievance be consolidated with two
others that have already been agreed to be consolidated.
[2] The employer reserved the right to bring other motions, regarding an expansion
of scope of one of the grievances or the jurisdiction of the GSB in relation to
matters relating to the grievor’s case before the WSIB.
Background to the dispute
[3] The two grievances that the parties have agreed to consolidate relate to the
grievor’s permanent reassignment from a YSO classification to that of Medical
Clerk [GSB #2022-7434], and secondly, to her allegations of a breach of Article 9
of the collective agreement, regarding her contracting of Covid-19 at work [GSB
#2022-10697]. This second grievance is the one which the employer seeks to
have dismissed for want of a prima facie case. The union’s request is to
consolidate a third grievance related to improper pay [GSB #2022-12105].
[4] Particulars were filed in respect of all of the grievances, from which I have taken
the asserted facts, which are assumed to be true for the purposes of these
motions, although the evidence and findings of fact at an eventual hearing might
be different.
[5] The parties each filed briefs of relevant case law, listed in the Appendix, all of
which I have carefully reviewed, even if not specifically referred to below. There
is little dispute about the legal principles at play; it is their application to the
specific facts that divides the parties.
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Lack of a prima facie case for the Article 9 grievance?
[6] The grievance which the employer wishes dismissed relates to the grievor’s
contracting Covid-19 at work. The grievance alleges that there was a breach of
article 9, among others, in that the employer failed to take reasonable
precautions regarding Covid safety in relation to the grievor. The union maintains
that only registered nurses received PCR tests, contrary to policy, and that the
grievor was not sent home as a close contact when she should have been, and
that she has suffered irreversible health effects from contracting Covid at work.
[7] In very brief summary, the union’s particulars include the following asserted facts,
which, for the purpose of this motion, I assume to be true and provable:
While working as a medical Clerk, during a Covid outbreak in a youth correctional
facility, the grievor worked in close contact with nurses and other health
professionals. The Deputy Administrator set out a memo on April 8, 2022, stating
that the Peel Medical Office of Health recommended all staff to be Polymerase
Chain Reaction (PCR) tested for Covid. On April 14, 2022, the grievor learned
that a nurse with whom she had worked a few days earlier had tested positive for
Covid-19. A second nurse was deemed a close contact and sent home that day.
When the grievor inquired about being sent home as well, she was advised by a
manager that she was fine because she was wearing a mask. The grievor
decided to use her personal leave to get tested. The testing centre advised her to
quarantine at home for 5 days as per Peel Public Health’s “close contact” criteria.
Despite a negative result from that first test, the grievor experienced worsening
symptoms, and sought medical attention on April 22, 2022. She then tested
positive, and later developed long Covid. She was off work as a result from April
22 until May 9, and then from June 8 to July 21 when she returned to work on a
gradual basis. She did not return to a regular work schedule until January 2023.
She received WSIB benefits for contracting Covid at work.
[8] There is no dispute that the applicable test is that the employer’s motion should
succeed if the facts asserted in support of the grievance, if accepted as true, are
incapable of establishing the elements necessary to substantiate the violation
alleged, otherwise known as failure to make out a prima facie case.
[9] The employer’s position is that the union’s asserted facts do not make out a
prima facie case. Citing Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Press) v.
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Ontario (Health and Long-Term Care), 2007 CanLII 46151 (ON GSB) (Mikus),
counsel maintains that the onus is on the union to prove the degree of risk and a
causal link between the risk and the harm to the individual grievor. Even when
the union has established a degree of risk, the employer emphasizes that its
obligation is not to protect against every risk, but to maintain an appropriate
balance between safety of employees and the care and custody of inmates.
[10] Further, the employer maintains that it is not enough to show that other
precautions would have improved safety; the onus is to show that the employer
failed to take reasonable precautions. Employer counsel argues that the union
has failed to establish even the first necessary element - an elevated degree of
risk - for three reasons, i.e.:
- There was no increased health and safety risk when the manager did not
permit the grievor to leave, in that there is no nexus to the grievor’s being
more likely or not to get Covid from the failure to send her home;
- There is no assertion that the employer failed to take precautions prior to
the call in which the grievor learned that her colleague had tested positive,
no allegations about failure to provide Personal Protective Equipment or
take other precautions.
- As the particulars show, the grievor tested negative prior to returning to
work such that the particulars are silent about an unreasonable risk.
[11] In the employer’s view, a careful review of the particulars shows they are not
capable of supporting the union’s theory of the case. I am urged to find that the
particulars submitted by the union do not establish a failure on the employer’s
part to prevent her contracting Covid, or that anything in the employer’s actions
or inactions exposed the grievor to unnecessary risk.
[12] Further, the employer argues that neither a quarantine or test is a preventative
measure; in the employer’s view, the union would need to have particularized a
failure on the employer’s part that happened before she was advised that her
colleague had tested positive on April 14. The employer sees nothing in the
particulars about failing to take preventative measures, or provide PPE, the
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employer argues that the grievance should therefore be dismissed as lacking the
necessary elements for a viable case, i.e. any assertion of what the employer
failed to do.
[13] Citing Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Laderoute) v Ontario
(Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2018 CanLII 55847 (ON GSB)
(Gee) the employer argues that it would be unreasonable to infer that failing to let
the grievor off with pay created an unreasonable risk. Further, it is the specific
workplace, rather than a public health advisory which should be in issue here. In
the employer’s view, any allegations of what others were told is not relevant since
this is an individual rather than a group or policy grievance.
[14] By contrast, counsel for the union argues that the grievance should not be
dismissed. Citing Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Martin et al) v
Ontario (Community and Social Services), 2015 CanLII 60449 (ON GSB)
(Anderson) the union is of the view that if the facts could reasonably lead to the
conclusion that there had been a breach, in light of the totality of the facts
pleaded, rather than any specific one in isolation, the matter should proceed to a
hearing.
[15] Further, union counsel relies on the oft-cited findings in Blouin Drywall and United
Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, (1975) 8 O.R. (2d) 103 (Ont. C.A.), 1975
CanLII 707 (ON CA), 57 DLR (3d) 199, to the effect that arbitration cases should
be addressed on the merits, and not dismissed for technicalities. In this light, it is
the union’s view that the grievance should not be dismissed unless the finding is
that its case is so weak as to warrant dismissal at this early stage of proceedings.
In the union’s view, if it is possible that there is a breach, then the grievance
moves on to hearing. This is not the appropriate time to weigh the evidence,
credibility or the strength of the employer’s case.
[16] Counsel also refers to Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Martin) v
Ontario (Transportation), 2022 CanLII 35398 (ON GSB) (Dissanayake) for an
example of the fact that the GSB can take judicial notice of the dangerous and
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contagious nature of Covid-19, as well as of public precautions such as
vaccination, masking, social distancing and limiting numbers taken to lessen
potential exposure. Here, the public health advice was that If employees thought
they had exposure, they should remove themselves from the workplace and get
tested. In counsel’s submission, a reasonable precaution for an employer would
be ensuring equal access to those precautions for the grievor.
[17] Union counsel emphasizes the fact that the grievor was exposed to nurses while
working five days a week, and that the local Medical Officer of Health had
recommended PCR testing for all staff. That advice is employer policy as it was
issued in an employer memo, in the union’s view. Union counsel frames the
issue as whether the employer followed its own policy concerning precautions to
this particular grievor.
[18] Further, another nurse who had close contact with the nurse who had tested
positive was sent home to self-isolate. The grievor asked to go home but was
treated differently, and was not provided access to the same reasonable
precaution aimed at the prevention of developing Covid; she had to use her own
credits to go off. As well, even though her first test was negative, she continued
to have symptoms, which significantly worsened, so that she had to be
hospitalized overnight, by which time she had tested positive. The union submits
that it should be assumed that the employer has a higher duty of care in this type
of health care setting during a Covid outbreak because employees are potentially
exposed to the virus on a regular basis.
[19] Union counsel compares the situation to the Board’s decision in Laderoute, cited
above, where a prima facie case was found to have been established on the
basis that access to standing orders was necessary to the safe performance of
correctional officer jobs and that the alleged facts could support a finding that
access to the standing orders was extremely difficult. In the union’s view, the
grievor’s difficulty in accessing PCR testing and being sent home from the
workplace as a close contact in the same manner as the nurses in the same
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workplace is an analogous set of facts. In the union’s submission, the
employer’s policy and actions had already identified the risk of transmission and
the reasonable precautions of PCR testing and being sent home if a close
contact.
[20] In response to the employer’s submissions about reference to other employees
not being appropriate in an individual grievance, union counsel emphasized that
the claim in the grievance is specific to the grievor and her own rights, and the
application of policy to her, rather than a claim of a group or policy nature.
[21] The employer disagrees, replying that the issue of any differential application of
employer policy to the other nurses is outside of the scope of an individual article
9 grievance, and has no bearing on the issue of how the grievor was put at an
elevated risk.
***
[22] In considering the above asserted facts in light of the parties’ submissions, it is
essential to emphasize that it is the viability of the union’s theory of the case that
is to be evaluated, as opposed to the potential availability of a strong defense on
the employer’s part. In that light, I find the union’s particulars sufficient to allow
the matter to proceed to a hearing. The union’s summary of the theory of its
case included the background circumstances of a Covid outbreak, and the
issuance of an employer memo, stating that the public health recommendation
was that all staff be PCR tested. At this preliminary stage, without having seen
the whole memo, I accept that the union’s assertion that this was employer policy
may be considered a reasonable inference from the asserted facts. The
particulars further state that only registered nurses received PCR tests, and were
sent home if considered a close contact, while the grievor was not. The union’s
argument is that this differential treatment is capable of establishing a failure to
take reasonable precautions for the grievor’s safety. Union counsel notes that,
had there been preventative PCR testing, positive cases would have been
reported. I infer from this that those reports might have reached the grievor
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earlier than her colleague’s report to her that she had tested positive. This allows
for the viability of the union’s theory that if the grievor had been regularly PCR
tested, and treated in the same manner as her nurse colleagues, she may not
have developed Covid or the long-lasting health effects she has suffered.
[23] At the same time, I acknowledge the employer’s concerns about the sequence of
events being that the grievor initially tested negative, after she took personal
leave to get tested, and other reservations about the union’s case, discussed
above. In my view, these will be part of the employer’s defense, the weight of
which will be assessed at the end of the day, if the parties are unable to settle the
matter. Part of the assessment will be to discern what to make of the fact that the
grievor is asserted to have had symptoms throughout, despite the negative test.
[24] As for the employer’s argument about an individual grievance needing to focus
on the grievor, rather than other employees, it is my view, at this preliminary
stage, that evidence of the employer’s actions toward others appears arguably
relevant to the issue of the reasonableness of the employer’s actions towards the
grievor. As I understand the union’s theory of the case in its simplest form, it is
that, if it was reasonable to apply the public health advice to provide PCR testing
to nurses, and to exclude nurses who were close contacts from the workplace, it
was unreasonable not to apply the same to a clerk who was exposed to the
same outbreak conditions.
[25] As to the employer’s view that a PCR test is not preventative, in one sense I can
accept that to be true, as its purpose is to test what has already occurred. On
the other hand, in the sense of its part to play in an ensemble of preventative
measures in the workplace in general, proactive PCR testing may be inferred to
play a preventative role by catching infections, particularly asymptomatic ones,
earlier, together with quarantining of the infected employees and their close
contacts, in order to minimize the chance that colleagues would be infected.
[26] For the above reasons, the grievance related to contracting Covid at work may
proceed to a hearing. Whether or not the grievance ultimately succeeds will
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depend on the strength of the union’s evidence, assessed in light of the evidence
presented by the employer, and both parties’ submissions.
Consolidate the improper pay grievance?
[27] The third grievance, which the union would like to have consolidated with the
other two, alleges a contravention of Article 7 of the collective agreement, relating
to pay administration, as well as a violation of the Employment Standards Act for
improper deduction and withholding of wages.
[28] The standard to be applied, found in the Board’s Rule 3, gives the discretion to
consolidate grievances when there is a question or law or fact in common. There
is also the option of hearing them together, or one after another.
[29] The union argues that the facts and relief claimed overlap, justifying
consolidation. Counsel for the union notes that the facts asserted in the
particulars include that it was the employer’s practice to pay YSO’s the same
salary when performing duties as a records clerk, and that the WSIB confirmed
that job as a good placement. When she was reassigned to a medical clerk
position, the employer unilaterally changed her classification from YSO to
support staff, in the medical clerk’s job, which had a lower rate of pay than would
have been approved by the WSIB. The employer did not advise the WSIB of the
change in position until November 2022, several months after the reclassification.
When the 6 months wage protection provided by the collective agreement
expired, the grievor’s pay dropped sharply, given the lower wages and fewer
hours in the new position. Given that the employer had not advised the WSIB of
the change in a timely manner, they did not adjust her partial loss of earnings
benefits, and the grievor was underpaid as a result. The problem was not
rectified for months, causing financial strain and resulting stress for the grievor.
[30] In the union’s view, the wage mix-up is directly related to the assignment and
failure to accommodate complained of in the first grievance. There are common
facts, and overlap in respect of the remedies. Further, the union argues that
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consolidation will be more efficient, avoiding multiple proceedings and the related
costs. Counsel observes that there has been no indication of any prejudice or
procedural complications that would arise if the matters were consolidated.
[31] Union counsel relies on the Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Overdevest) v Ontario (Public and Business Service Delivery), 2022 CanLII
124194 (ON GSB) (Petryshen) decision, as close to this case as it dealt with
issues of accommodation as well as pay, in which the GSB found a sufficient
factual and legal link to make it practical to hear the matters together.
[32] By contrast, the employer opposes the consolidation of the grievance related to
wages. Counsel for the employer argues that the issue of underpayment from
the WSIB will require a different stream of analysis than the accommodation
grievance. The wages grievance, in the employer’s view, is essentially a
negligence claim, in that the employer failed to notify the WSIB. In the
employer’s view, this is an entirely different and discrete issue, separate from the
grievance about the reassignment of the grievor to the medical clerk position.
[33] The employer invites a conclusion that none of the circumstances laid out in the
Board’s rule are sufficiently present to warrant consolidation. Employer counsel
summarized the employer’s position as follows:
- there is no common legal issue between the allegation of failure to
accommodate and the wage grievance; the two grievances are only tangentially
related.
- the two grievances do not arise out of the same transaction; the decision to
place the grievor in the medical records position is its own incident, with a
separate timeline from the allegations in the wage grievance.
- consolidation could potentially preclude the employer from bringing a successful
motion concerning the expansion of the scope of the grievance.
- the wages grievance can be heard as its own separate grievance.
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- Although counsel acknowledges some inefficiency in briefing other counsel, he
submits that the same counsel could be retained to minimize that result.
[34] In reply, union counsel indicated that it had already been agreed, that if all three
grievances were consolidated, it was without prejudice to the employer’s
potential expansion argument.
***
[35] Rule 3 provides as follows: Where two or more proceedings are pending before
the GSB and it appears to the GSB that,
a. They have a question of law or fact in common;
b. The relief claimed in them arises out of the same transaction or
occurrence or series of transactions or occurrences;
c. For any other reason an order ought to be made under this rule,
the GSB, on such terms as it considers advisable, may abridge
the time for placing a grievance on the hearing list, and may
order that:
d. The proceedings be consolidated, or heard at the same time or
one immediately after the other; and or
e. Any of the proceedings be stayed until after the determination of
any other of them.
[36] I have carefully considered all of the asserted facts, in light of the parties’
submissions and the provisions of the rule.
[37] Although the accommodation grievance and the pay grievance ask for different
remedies, and cover different periods of time, I am persuaded that the remedies
claimed arise out of the same series of incidents. They are related in that the
sequence of events complained of in the accommodation grievance enabled the
situation complained of in the pay grievance to occur. The interplay between the
WSIB approved return to work, and the subsequent employer actions in
reclassifying the grievor, complained of in the accommodation grievance, was a
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precondition to the effect on the grievor’s pay that is complained of in the third
grievance. I endorse the idea that it makes more sense from an efficiency point
of view to hear them together, rather than separating them and running the risk
that two different arbitrators would be hearing the cases arising out of the same
sequence of events, and potentially face different evidence on overlapping facts,
leading to different findings.
[38] Employer counsel expressed the view that consolidating the grievances would
muddy the waters as to which grievance was which. Although that is not a
necessary result of consolidation, the equally available option of hearing them
together addresses that concern, and keeps the identity of the two grievances
separate.
[39] I therefore am of the view that there is sufficient reason to hear the pay grievance
together with the other two grievances.
***
[40] For the above-noted reasons, the employer’s motion to dismiss the grievance
related to the grievor’s contracting Covid-19 at work for want of a prima facie
case is dismissed, and the union’s motion to consolidate the pay grievance with
the other two is allowed to the extent that the pay grievance will be heard
together with the other two.
[41] Dates will be set to continue the above matters as soon as possible.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 7th day of December, 2023.
“Kathleen G. O’Neil”
_______________________
Kathleen G. O’Neil, Arbitrator
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Appendix
Authorities cited by the Parties
By the Employer
1. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Press) v. Ontario (Health and Long-Term
Care), 2007 CanLII 46151 (ON GSB) (Mikus);
2. OPSEU (Taylor-Baptiste) and Ministry of Correctional Services, GSB # 1988-469,
(April 15, 1992), (Dissanayake);
3. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Martin) v Ontario (Transportation), 2022
CanLII 35398 (ON GSB) (Dissanayake);
4. OPSEU (Brown-Bryce) v. Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional
Services (2016), GSB No. 2014-1158 (Dissanayake) 2016 CanLII 41675 (ON GSB)
5. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Martin et al) v Ontario (Community and
Social Services), 2015 CanLII 60449 (ON GSB) (Anderson)
6. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Laderoute) v Ontario (Community Safety
and Correctional Services), 2018 CanLII 55847 (ON GSB) (Gee)
7. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Samsone) v. Ontario (Ministry of
Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2006 CanLII 31467 (ON GSB)
(Harris)
8. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Ferraro) v. Ontario (Ministry of
Community, Family and Children's Services), 2002 CanLII 45779 (ON GSB)
(Mikus)
9. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (McClelland) v Ontario (Community
Safety and Correctional Services), 2013 CanLII 73996 (ON GSB) (Briggs)
10. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Upson) v Ontario (Community Safety and
Correctional Services), 2013 CanLII 56967 (ON GSB) (Harris)
By the Union
1. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Kennett) v Ontario (Ministry of
Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2014 CanLII 64819 (ON GSB)
(Misra)
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2. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Cartier) v. Ontario (Ministry of Health
and Long-Term Care), 2006 CanLII 17525 (ON GSB) (Stephens)
3. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Pozderka) v Ontario (Transportation),
2019 CanLII 97258 (ON GSB) (Leighton)
4. Ontario Public Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Overdevest) v Ontario
(Public and Business Service Delivery), 2022 CanLII 124194 (ON GSB)
5. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Martin et al) v Ontario (Community and
Social Services), 2015 CanLII 60449 (ON GSB) (Anderson)
6. Association of Management, Administrative and Professional Crown Employees of
Ontario (McCallum) v Ontario (Attorney General), 2021 CanLII 26597 (ON GSB)
(Anderson)
7. Ontario (Ministry of Finance) and OPSEU (Greenbank), 2005 CarswellOnt 11325,
83 C.L.A.S. 155 (GSB Mikus)
8. Blouin Drywall and United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners (1975) 8 O.R.
(2d) 103 (Ont. C.A.) 1975 CanLII 707 (ON CA), 57 DLR (3d) 199
9. Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Martin) v Ontario (Transportation), 2022
CanLII 35398 (ON GSB) (Dissanayake)