HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-0523.Grievor.24-01-22 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# 2021-0523; 2022-8627; 2022-8628; 2022-11745; 2022-11859
UNION# 2021-0533-0005; 2022-0533-0023; 2022-0533-0024;
2022-0533-0031; 2022-0533-0032
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Grievor) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Public and Business Service Delivery) Employer
BEFORE Bram Herlich Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Ed Holmes
Ryder Wright Holmes Bryden Nam LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
HEARING January 8, 2024
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Decision
[1] On agreement of the parties the grievor (who will be referred to as such) has been
anonymized.
[2] By email dated January 17, 2024, I advised counsel that I would not be granting
the union’s request for an adjournment. These are my reasons.
[3] At the time set for the hearing to commence, the grievor had not yet made an
appearance. The matter was stood down for 30 minutes in the event the grievor
had been unavoidably detained. At the conclusion of the 30-minute period, he had
still not appeared and the hearing commenced in his absence. The union
proceeded to make the motion detailed below. Approximately one hour later, after
the union concluded its submissions on the motion but before the employer had
commenced its submissions in response, the grievor made his appearance and
had the opportunity to confer with union counsel before we heard the employer’s
submissions.
[4] This matter has six further days of hearing scheduled between now and May 24,
2024. The union has made what it acknowledges is a highly unusual and perhaps
even unprecedented request. It asks that the hearing in this matter be adjourned,
pending the result of proceedings which have been commenced at the Human
Rights Tribunal of Ontario (the “HRTO”).
[5] The case before me is factually complicated. There are five grievances. They
encompass claims that the employer has failed to abide by the terms of a
settlement executed in March 2013. There are also claims of more recent vintage
that relate, broadly speaking, to questions of the grievor’s capacity to work,
whether and to what extent he is in need of accommodation and, if so, whether the
employer has offered appropriate accommodations. But for a small number of
days, the grievor has been out of the workplace for a period approaching four
years.
[6] Counsel advised that the grievor has also filed a complaint with the HRTO. It is
common ground that there is significant overlap (but not necessarily complete
identity) as between the territory covered in that complaint and that of the
grievances before me. The employer is the sole responding party in the complaint
before the HRTO and advises that it has formally sought the mirror image of what
the union now seeks before me. The employer has asked the HRTO to defer its
consideration of the grievor’s complaint pending the disposition of the grievances
before me. The HRTO’s response to that request is pending.
[7] The union’s request to defer to the HRTO is borne of its view that the relationship
between it and the grievor is “broken”, to the point where the union cannot
meaningfully or effectively represent the grievor at this Board. The union asserts
that the grievor has lost all confidence in his union, in its counsel, in this Board and
in the instant arbitration process. Any respect he may have once had for any of the
above has been latterly replaced by contempt and indignation. This conclusion is
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evident from the many emails the grievor has forwarded, up and down the
corporate ladders of both parties. It is not necessary to review all of those
communications. I note that, among the various verbal tirades launched by the
grievor are email communications which included employer counsel as a recipient
and included copies of previously private communications between the grievor and
union counsel. The latter expressed understandable frustration at the strategic
impact of such a tactic on the part of the grievor. The grievor has also copied me
on some of these communications and has also once emailed me directly,
following an inappropriate and rebuffed telephone effort to discuss the case
directly with me. In addition to the above the union also advises that the grievor
has been erratic and unreliable in his contact and communication with the union,
further hampering its efforts to properly represent him.
[8] For the purposes of this decision, I accept, at face value, the union’s description of
the challenges it has faced in working with the grievor. Indeed, it would not have
been surprising, given the difficulties as described, if the union had considered
simply withdrawing the grievances, once and so long as it was persuaded that the
relationship between it and the grievor was utterly irredeemable. Perhaps
influenced by the care required to meet its statutory obligation (an obligation not
monitored by this tribunal) the union has not chosen this course, opting instead to
attempt to craft an approach that preserves the grievor’s options. Similarly, it would
appear that the grievor has not taken any active formal steps to forsake these
proceedings in favour of those pending at the HRTO. And to close this circle of
what has not happened, the employer has not sought to have the instant matters
dismissed by virtue of the grievor’s participation or, rather, lack thereof (although it
did indicate that, depending upon future events, it might opt to pursue just such a
result).
[9] So we are left then to consider the union’s request for an adjournment. The union’s
request certainly is unusual, but it is not entirely unprecedented. In Ontario Public
Service Employees Union v. Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional
Services), 2008 CanLII 32795 (ON GSB) (Lynk), the union sought to adjourn the
GSB proceedings pending the determination of complaints the grievor had filed at
the HRTO. While the facts of that case are different, the union’s request to adjourn
was grounded in similar considerations. In some respects, however, the conflict
between the union and the grievor was more marked and acute than is the case
before me. In that case, according to the union, it was being required to advance a
position in the grievances that was in direct conflict with the position it was
advancing at the HRTO; the conflict in our case, while real, is different and does
not exhibit the same kind of legal conflict of interest.
[10] The union in the cited case was the responding party in one of the two HRTO
complaints filed by the grievor. The facts relied upon in that complaint overlapped,
to some extent, with those at issue in at least one of the four grievances that were
before the GSB. And in respect of those facts, the union, in defending the HRTO
complaint, which impugned the conduct of the local union president, disputed the
facts alleged by the complainant. Those facts, as alleged by the grievor/
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complainant would likely have to form part of the union’s case in one of the
grievances. As union counsel submitted in that case:
…Ms. Therrien [the grievor] asserts that Mr. Johnson,
the president of Local 108, acted towards her in a
discriminatory fashion based on her disability and marital
status. Mr. Eady stated that the Union has denied her version
of the facts, and plans to defend itself vigorously, but it is now
in an impossible position because the evidence that it is
attacking in the human rights complaint process overlaps
significantly with the evidence that it has to consider when
advancing her four grievances before this Board …
Consequently, a number of the facts that Ms. Therrien has
alleged against the Union in her human rights complaints
would have to be led by the Union in advancing her
grievances, facts that are presently in significant dispute in the
human rights process.
[11] While acknowledging that “the relationship between [the union] and the grievor is
presently marked by tension and strain” the Vice-Chair concluded that the union
had not met the onus of establishing that an adjournment was warranted or
necessary.
[12] In arriving at that conclusion, the Vice-Chair formulated a taxonomy
of factors relevant in the consideration of adjournment requests. And,
in the particular cases where issues overlap with those in another
forum, the Vice-Chair enumerated the following (at p. 12):
I. Which forum has the broader jurisdiction to resolve all of the
issues at play;
II. Which forum is further ahead in the proceedings;
III. Which forum has more expertise;
IV. The likelihood of inconsistent decisions and duplicative
efforts;
V. The degree of overlap in the issues;
VI. The existence of human rights issues, and the particular
importance attached to their efficient resolution;
VII. The degree of prejudice to the parties; and
VIII. The impact on the efficient determination of fact-gathering and
legal issues.
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[13] After weighing the various factors, the Vice-Chair concluded that while the
determination was not an easy one, the factors leaned towards denying the
adjournment. Perhaps uppermost in the consideration was that ultimately, the
conflict pointed to by the union, while real, was less dramatic or significant than
earlier suggested. The contested facts formed an integral part of the HRTO
complaint against the union, but were merely the starting point in the narrative of
the grievances which complained, for example, about how the employer handled
the grievor’s subsequent complaints. A determination of the disputed facts was not
necessarily required or otherwise critical to the litigation of the grievances.
[14] When I consider the specific factors cited above, I see none that clearly favours
the union’s adjournment request and some which favour forging ahead with the
instant proceedings. Indeed, the union did not seriously suggest that a global
consideration of these factors would advance its case. Thus, I need not review the
factors in individual detail. I will consider only the first two, very briefly.
[15] Despite the glacial pace of progress in this matter (although I note that there has
already been an interim settlement of a request for interim relief in this case as
well as an agreement to focus on the litigation, at least initially, on the grievor’s
most current employment circumstances), the instant proceedings are well-
advanced in comparison to those at the HRTO. We have hearing dates scheduled,
some already held, we have heard some viva voce evidence; the HRTO has yet to
determine whether and when hearing dates will be held and that determination
alone may yet take some time.
[16] Further, there is undeniably a very high degree of overlap in the adjudicative
competence and jurisdiction of the GSB and the HRTO to deal with the complaints
in question, at least to the extent that they raise issues of human rights, disabilities
and accommodation whether under the collective agreement or the Human Rights
Code. Although the parties have agreed that this will not be the immediate focus of
our proceedings, the grievances include a complaint that the employer has failed
to comply with the terms of a prior settlement between the parties. The employer
reminds us that the alleged breach of a settlement is essentially a contractual
matter not likely to form part of the HRTO’s inquiry.
[17] But while a consideration of the enumerated factors, does not support its request,
the union, in its submissions, eschewed those factors in favour of a consideration
of what it submitted was the central principle underlying a proper determination, as
the Vice -Chair in the cited case observed: “The onus in this case is on the Union
to establish that fairness is ultimately on its side…”
[18] And the union argues that fairness dictates that it not be required to proceed with
the litigation of these grievances when the relationship between the union and the
grievor has become so utterly dysfunctional. In the circumstances, the union
asserts, it is impossible for it to responsibly and adequately represent the grievor.
And to require it to do so would be equally unfair to the grievor. The grievor
appears to have far greater confidence in the HRTO than in the instant process.
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He should be permitted to pursue that avenue of adjudication and then, possibly,
return to this Board to address matters not dealt with by the HRTO.
[19] I do not find the union’s appeal to fairness to be persuasive. There is no doubt that
the relationship between the union and the grievor is in a lamentable condition. But
it is not the function of this Board to monitor, regulate, repair or correct relations
between members and their bargaining agents. Those are matters inter se. Should
the union justifiably feel that the grievor’s conduct has made it impossible for it to
properly represent him, there are options available to it which do not require the
imprimatur of this Board. Similarly, if the grievor prefers to have his complaints
dealt with by the HRTO, there are avenues available to him to effect that result.
Neither the union nor the grievor have taken any such formal steps.
[20] The union’s request for an adjournment is denied.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 22nd day of January, 2024.
“Bram Herlich”
_________________________
Bram Herlich, Arbitrator