HomeMy WebLinkAbout2010-0939.Reinhardt et al.11-10-04 DecisionCommission de
Crown Employees
Grievance
UqJOHPHQWGHVJULHIV
Settlement Board
GHVHPSOR\pVGHOD
Couronne
Suite 600 Bureau 600
180 Dundas St. West 180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388 7pO
Fax (416) 326-1396 7pOpF
GSB#2010-0939
UNION#2009-0526-0043
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Reinhardt et al)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Attorney General)
Employer
BEFOREBram Herlich Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNIONEric del Junco
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Jamie Kneen
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARINGJuly 6, 2011.
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Decision
[1]The grievance (dated October 2, 2009) and settlement requested in this matter are as
follows:
I grieve that the Employer has breached specifically, but not limited to,
Articles 2.1 (Management Rights), 3.2 (discrimination for my Union
membership/activity) and 3.3 (Employment Equity) of the Collective
Agreement.
7KH(PSOR\HUKDVGHFLGHGWRXVHD³ORWtery system" to allocate the next
DYDLODEOH³ODUJHUGHVNZLWKLQP\office, without offering the desk to
myself as the next most senior classified employee, which has been the
usual practice in the past. Presently, no male employee (Court Reporter or
Monitor) has been offered or occupy any of the larger desks within my
office.
Full redress:
I request that I occupy the larger desk that was awarded to a less senior
classified employee than myself today, and any other remedy deemed
appropriate by the Grievance Settlement Board.
[2]Prior to the hearing in this matter reconvening on July 6, 2010, the union filed the
following particulars:
1.7KHFRXUWUHSRUWHUV¶RIILFHDW2OG&LW\+DOO2&+
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workplace with a female to male ratio of around 5/1. Since 2003, 13 of 13
new reporters hired in this office have been female.
2. The lead grievor, Warren Reinhardt, is the oldest and most senior male
reporter with a hire date of [19]87 as a fee-for-service reporter and a CSD
of 1990 as an FPT. He is 64 years of age.
3. The larger desks along the north and west walls of the office are desirable
relative to other desks and have traditionally been offered to female
reporters based on seniority and/or service.
4. Around 2001, Mr. Reinhardt was passed over for a larger desk when the
manager Maureen Bowman re-organized the office. Larger desks were
assigned to females [sic] reporters based on their seniority relative to each
other. Several younger female reporters with less seniority/service than Mr.
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Reinhardt were assigned larger desks and his gender and age were factors
in his being passed over for a desirable desk.
5. Around 2005, a senior female reporter retired and vacated her larger desk.
Again, Mr. Reinhardt was passed over and this desk was offered to Sandra
Richardson as the most senior female reporter without a larger desk.
6. In late 08/early 09, 2 female reporters with less seniority than Mr.
Reinhardt, Tara Brown and Janice Law were offered desirable desks which
were not offered to Mr. Reinhardt. 0U5HLQKDUGW¶VDJHDQGJHQGHUZHUH
factors in the employer's decision not to offer one of these desks to Mr.
Reinhardt.
7. Around Oct/09, a desk became vacant along the north wall. Rather than
offer it to Mr. Reinhardt in accordance with past practice as the most senior
UHSRUWHUZLWKRXWDGHVLUDEOHGHVN0U9DOHULRGHFLGHGWRKROGD³ORWWHU\
8. There were no witnesses to verify the lottery process which was concluded
privately by Mr. Valerio and the announFHG³ZLQQHUZDV(ODLQH6DNRUDIDV
who is quite junior to Mr. Reinhardt with a CSD of around 2006-08. She is
much younger than Mr. Reinhardt, appearing to be in her mid-20s.
9. Some reporters, including Mr. Rinehart and Paolo Evangelista, refused to
participate in the lottery process because of their view that it was unfair
and discriminatory not to offer the vacant desk to Mr. Reinhardt based on
his seniority.
10.0U5HLQKDUGW¶VDJHDQGJHQGHUZHUHIactors in the employer's decision not
to offer the vacant desk by seniority. This would have been the first larger
desk offered to a male reporter ever.
11.The only rationale offered by Mr. Valerio for using the lottery rather than
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12.None of the larger desks are currently occupied by male reporters.
13.The employer has assigned long trials to senior female reporters based on
seniority but has not done the same for senior male reporters.
14.The employer has allowed female reporters to reserve drawers in the office
fridge for their food but has not provided the same opportunity to male
reporters despite this issue being raised by Mr. Evangelista.
15.Several senior female reporters have been provided with private computer
terminals while all the senior male reporters are required share 2 terminals.
16.Several senior female reporters have been provided with private phones at
their desks while all the senior male reporters are required to share phones.
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17.In a recent training session offered by the employer on a new digital
transcription system, a training DVD shown by the employer used
exclusively female voices and images of female reporters.
18.There is a general culture within this office whereby male reporters are
PDGHWRIHHOOLNH³VHFRQGFODVVHPSOR\HHVUHODWLYHWRIHPDOHUHSRUWHUV
19.The employer's decision not to offer the vacant desk to Mr. Reinhardt
caused him and other employees, both male and female, significant stress
and embarrassment and has created a poisoned work environment.
20.The union alleges that the employer's conduct was contrary to the
collective agreement including ss 2 and 3, and the Human Rights Code,
including s. 5.
[3] The employer disputed the propriety of a number of aspects of the particulars. First, they
ZHUHSURYLGHGODWH±EH\RQGWKHWLPHIUDPHVWRZKLFKWKHSDUWLHVKDGDJUHHG6HFRQGFHUWDLQ
portions of the particulars improperly state legal conclusions rather than the asserted facts (which
might support such conclusions). Further, the particulars are said to represent an effort to
improperly expand the scope of the grievance. And finally, the employer submitted that even if
(all of the properly received) particulars are assumed to be true and provable, the union has failed
to make out a prima facie case.
[4] The apparently late provision of particulars is unfortunate, particularly since the parties
had agreed to a timetable in that regard. However, there was no asserted prejudice flowing from
the late production of the particulars (as distinct IURPWKHXQLRQ¶VHIIRUWVWRUHO\RQHYHQWVGDWLQJ
back up to eight years prior to the filing of the grievance).
[5] The union conceded that some portions of the particulars include and express the legal
conclusions it is urging in the case. It accepts, however, that, at least for the purposes of the
LQVWDQWGHFLVLRQ±ZKLOH,PD\DFFHSWWKHIDFWVDVVHUWHGDVWUXHDQGSURYDEOH±,RXJKWQRWWR
make the same assumption with respect to the legal conclusions the union will ultimately urge in
the matter (should it proceed to a consideration on its merits). Whether the facts asserted support
or lead to the legal conclusions urged is this BoDUG¶VGHWHUPLQDWLRQWRPDke. In the context of a
hearing on the merits, the Board will typically determine what the facts are (based on the
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evidence) and whether those facts fit with the legal theories advaQFHG,QWKHSUHVHQWFRQWH[W±
where the employer asserts that the facts alleged cannot possibly form the basis for any finding
RIOLDELOLW\±WKH%RDUGDVVXPHVWKHIDFWVDVVHUWed to be true and addresses the question of
whether those facts could possibly support a finding of liability. In this context the union has
acknowledged that I must ignore the legal conclusions set out in paragraphs 4 (the latter portion
of the last sentence), 6 (the last sentence) and 10 (the first sentence). Thus, those portions of the
paragraphs are hereby struck.
>@7KHHPSOR\HU¶VFRQFHUQUHJDUGLQJWKHH[SDnsion of the grievance is not difficult to
comprehend. The grievance, on its face, contests the use of a lottery system to assign an
available preferred desk. That appears to have occurred in or about October 2009. And the
grievance clearly seeks relief in respect of that impugned assignment. Thus, both the subject and
the object of the grievance appear to be quite straightforward and cRQWDLQHG7KHXQLRQ¶V
particulars, however, include and refer to events dating baFNWRUHODWLQJWR³GHVN
DVVLJQPHQWV´7KH\DOVRUHIHUWRRWKHULPpugned employer workplace practices which bear no
relation to desk assignments, per se, present or past.
[7] Arbitrators have, as a general matter, been disinclined to preclude the litigation of the
³UHDOLVVXH´UDLVHGE\DJULHYDQFHon the basis of technical limitations in its formulation. On the
other hand, they have also been reluctant to require employers to meet a case which is
formulated for the first time at arbitration and which could not reasonably have been anticipated
by the employer to be the essence of the grievance as formulated.
[8] In the context of resolving that kind of tension, it is sometimes important to distinguish
between changes or additions to the facts alleged to give rise to a collective agreement violation
and circumstances where the union may seek to advance a new or revised legal theory of liability
in relation to the very same facts previously identified by the grievance. The instant case
provides illustrations of both.
[9] With respect to the latter, it is curious that there is no reference in the grievance to either
the provisions of the Human Rights CodeWKH³&RGH´
RUWR$Uticle 3.1 of the collective
agreement (which, in its prohibition of discrimination on the basis of, inter alia, sex and age,
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mirrors and refers to the provisions of the Code ). There is no doubt, however, as reflected in the
particulars set out and in its submissions before PHWKDWWKHXQLRQ¶VFDVHrests on allegations of a
violation of Article 3.1 and the Code. No mention was made of Article 3.2 or 3.3 before me
(and, indeed, there are no facts alleged which could support any allegation of a violation of those
provisions). The employer, sensibly, made no issue of this. I VD\³VHQVLEO\´EHFDXVHLQP\
view, a dismissal of the grievance on the basis that it refers to Articles 3.2 and 3.3 rather than 3.1
would be a textbook example of the unfairness to be avoided by an overly technical approach.
The grievance clearly challenges the propriety of a recent desk assignment and explicitly
identifies gender (though not age) as a factor.
[10] However, while a technical shortcoming in the formulation of the grievance is thus not
fatal to its prosecution, different considerations apply to the expanded facts and further alleged
violations formulated in the particulars.
[11] This Board has considered this type of issue before. In OPSEU (Jones et al) and Ministry
of Labour (2010), GSB No. 2006-1204 (Abramsky), the Board, at paragraph 13 and following
reviewed a number of leading authorities and summarized its approach as follows:
«LQGHWHUPLQLQJZKHWKHUDQLVVXHUDLVHG by a party at arbitration is properly
before a board of arbitration, the board determines whether, on a liberal reading of
the grievance, the issue in dispute may be viewed as part of or inherent in the
original grievance or is essentially a new grievance. If the issue was part of or
inherent in the original grievance, the lack of precision in the written grievance
should not be a technical bar to a board ofDUELWUDWLRQ¶VMXULVGLFWLRQ&RQYHUVHO\LI
the matter is truly a different, new issue, the board will decline jurisdiction. In Re
Greater Sudbury Hydro Plus Inc. and CUPE Local 4705 (Armstrong Grievance)
(2003), 121 L.A.C. (4th) 193 (Dissanayake), Arbitrator Dissanayake determined
WKDW³>W@RLQFOXGHDQLVVXHWKURXJKDµOLEHUDOUHDGLQJ¶,PXVWEHDEle to conclude that
the employer reasonably should have understood upon reading the grievance that
the issue in question was part of the grievance."
[12] In applying this approach to the instant case, it appears to me that the impugned portions
of the particulars fall into two distinct categories: those that do and those that do not relate or, to
use the above cited language, are, or are not, either part of or inherent in the original grievance.
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[13] The references to prior desk assignments (3 instances dating back as far as 2001) clearly
bear a thematic connection to the instant grievance. And while their vintage may be such as to
preclude the seeking of any relief in relation to those events, I am satisfied that evidence in
respect of the manner in which prior desk assignments were effected is arguably relevant to the
XQLRQ¶VFDVH,DPWKXVQRWSHUVXDGHGZKDWHYHUthe ultimate proper use of evidence in respect
of these events might be) to strike these portions of the particulars at this stage of the
proceedings.
[14] By contrast, the assertions found in paragraphs 13-18 bear no direct relation to the core of
the grievance, whose characteristics are discussed further below. (It may well be that these
allegations are, in large measure, so devoid of particularity or, like paragraph 18, little more than
legal conclusions, as to warrant being struck on that basis alone.) However, even apart from the
parenthetical concerns, the subject matter of these paragraphs is so removed from the tidy,
concise and identifiable ambit of the grievance that was filed, that I am satisfied that the
employer could not reasonably have understood or anticipated that the hearing in this matter
would be required to branch out in all of the various directions to which these paragraphs point.
To do so would be to unfairly permit the union to expand the scope and nature of the grievance
and I decline to do so. Paragraphs 13-18 are hereby struck.
[15] This brings me, finally, to the heart of the grievance ±WKHJULHYRUVDVVHUWWKDWWKH
employer, by using a lottery system to assign an available preferred desk, has violated the terms
of the Code and Article 3.1 of the collective agreement by engaging in improper discrimination
on the basis of age and gender.
>@(YHQDFFHSWLQJWKHXQLRQ¶VIDFWXDODVVHUWLRQVas true and provable, the road to its legal
argument is somewhat curious. It claims that on three or four occasions in the eight years
preceding the filing of the grievance, the employer made preferred desk assignments on the basis
RIJHQGHUDQGVHQLRULW\±WKHXQLRQchallenges the propriety of gender as a factor, but cherishes
the consideration of seniority. The pleadings do not indicate whether the three or four prior
incidents over eight years represent a comprehensive history of preferred desk assignments or are
isolated occurrences. In any event, the grievors now urge that the employer continue to assign
preferred desks as it has in the past except that it eliminate any reliance on gender.
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[17] This claim is curious in a number of respHFWV±ILUVWLWLVQRWDWDOOFOHDUWKDWWKH
articulation of a practice based on seniority and gender is consistent with the implication of
paragraph 7 of the particulars and portions of the JULHYDQFHZKLFKDSSHDUWRVXJJHVW±
inconsistent with the current claim and other portiRQVRIWKHSDUWLFXODUV±WKDWWKHSUDFWLFHZDV
based solely on seniority.
[18] More significantly, it less than apparent to me that the employer, in implementing a
lottery system, has preserved any improper reliance said to have previously been placed on
JHQGHU±WKHIDFWVDVSOHDGHGDUHLQFRQVLVWHQWwith any such conclusion. The real principal
complaint here is that the employer failed to consider seniority in the desk assignment. Nothing
in the collective agreement requires it to do so. The use of a lottery is, on its face, a violation of
QRWKLQJ$QGWKH³OHDG´JULHYRU¶VDEility to contest the results of the lottery is simply not
enhanced by his refusal to participate.
>@,WLVDOVRVRPHZKDWP\VWLI\LQJWKDWLWLVWKHHPSOR\HU¶VYHU\UHSXGLDWLRQDJDLQRQWKH
facts as pleaded by the union) of the improper consideration of gender as a factor which is the
JULHYRUV¶IDFWXDOVSULQJERDUGIRUDFODLPWKDW the resulting assignment constitutes improper
discrimination on the basis of gender.
[20] Finally and perhaps more telling, a simple mathematical reduction (subtract gender from
(seniority + gender) and one is left with seniority) of the union¶VSRVLWLRQZRXOGWUDQVIRUPLWV
urging that the employer ought to be required to continue to assign preferred desks as it has in
the past except that it eliminate any reliance on gender into the much simpler assertion that
preferred desks ought to be assigned on the basis of seniority. We are left with the curious claim
that the failure to assign a desk on the basis of seniority is a human rights violation.
[21] That mathematical reduction perhaps brings us full circle, returning to the form of the
grievance. It may explain why no reliance was placed initially in the grievance on the
discrimination provisions (of Article 3.1) of the collective agreement or the Code. Rather, the
grievance referred to Article 3.2 which prohibits discrimination on the basis of union activity.
I have already indicated that, ultimately, no argument was advanced that would support any
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specific collective agreement obligation to make these assignments by seniority. But if the
HVVHQFHRIWKHH[HUFLVHIURPWKHJULHYRUV¶SHUVSHFtive, is to achieve that result, it is perhaps
not surprising that Article 3.2 was initially cited rather that Article 3.1. While neither Article
3.2 nor 3.1 provide any real coherencHWRWKHJULHYRUV¶OHJDOWKHRUy, if the true object is to
advance seniority rights, it is not surprising that they might have cited a provision relating to
union matters rather than one relating to (statutorily based) prohibited forms of discrimination.
[22] In any event, and having regard to the foregoing, I am satisfied that, even assuming the
facts alleged by the union are true and provable, there is no case for the employer to meet.
[23] The grievance is hereby dismissed.
th
Dated at Toronto this 4 day of October 2011.
Bram Herlich, Vice-Chair