HomeMy WebLinkAbout2008-3694.Williams.12-03-09 DecisionCrown Employees
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GSB#2008-3694
UNION#2009-0546-0006
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Williams) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community and Social Services) Employer
BEFORE Daniel Harris Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Jane Letton
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER Kevin Dorgan and Suneel Bahal
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING April 27, September 20 and October 21, 2011.
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Decision
The Proceedings
[1] In this matter the Union alleged that the Employer caused various breaches of
the collective agreement in holding a “Staff Learning Day” on December 4,
2008. The issues narrowed to the single allegation that the Employer was in
violation of the Human Rights Code in its treatment of the grievor, hereafter
Sharon Williams, in regard to her participation in the Staff Learning Day. At
the close of the Union’s case, the Board invited submissions on whether there
was a case for the Employer to answer. This decision deals with that issue. In
the result, the grievance is dismissed, as the Union did not make out a prima
facie case.
The Evidence
[2] The grievor was a caseworker with the Ontario Disability Support Program, part
of the Ministry of Community and Social Services. She was employed at the
1140 Burnhamthorpe Road office at the material time. Effective in or about
December 2007 the grievor’s hours of work were accommodated to assist her in
caring for an adult child. Her hours of work were set at 7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
[3] The Central West Region of the Ministry sponsored an annual Staff Learning
Day. In 2008 it was scheduled to take place on December 4, 2008 at the
Mississauga Living Arts Centre. It is a mandatory session. The grievor’s
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manager was Dave Schottmann. On Monday November 17, 2008 he sent the
following email to his staff:
Hi Everyone,
According to the attached memo, A communication to all staff will also be sent in
the near future. I am not sure if this happened as I did not notice a memo to all
staff.
Anyway, as in previous years the Staff Learning and Recognition day is a
mandatory event and as we do not require office coverage you should all plan to
attend.
What I will require ASAP is any dietary requirements you have.
For those traveling by bus, I need to know which bus pick up location you will
use.
Thanks,
Dave
[4] The grievor, who was a Union Steward at the time, replied on November 19,
copying Carole Durrant, another Steward and LERC Co-chair and Lorne
Woodhouse, the Local Union President. The reply was as follows:
Dave,
Can you please advise management’s travel and time plan? That is, all staff who
are traveling from further than1140 may be either leaving or returning in excess
of their 7.75 hours – depends on the hours of the bus travel.
Also, for staff who are headquartered at 1140 Burnhamthorpe, can you please
advise what management is approving for travel – that is, if people are expected
to attend to their office and then get to the meeting location, and how
management will be arranging transportation for those who do not wish to drive
their personal automobiles.
Thanks,
Sharon
[5] The grievor testified that she got no response to this email. She also said that on
December 2 staff received an email generally describing the event. Also that day,
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two managers called staff to a meeting known as a “huddle”. At that time
management made a number of announcements pertaining to the event, including
a change of working hours from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Also, staff at the
Burnhamthorpe office were asked to report to the office before and after the
event. The grievor said that the latter requirement was said to be “the Union’s
fault”.
[6] On December 3, 2008, one-half hour before the grievor left for the day, she sent
the following email to five representatives of the Employer and copied it to two
Union Stewards:
Subject: Travel – Collective Agreement
We have conferred with our Local 546 pres on the above item. We are writing
only because persons were advised yesterday that without exception scheduled
hours of work had been changed for this Thursday.
We are advised of the following:
That a change of work hours (shift scheduling) can be effected, under Article 5,
with 120 hours of notice. Otherwise, “he or she shall be paid time and one half (1
½) for the first eight hours worked on the changed shift…”
Persons who have accommodated hours are accommodated under Human Rights
Legislation, not the collective agreement, and therefore the above does not apply.
Regards,
Sharon
[7] The grievor testified that she was getting desperate about the change in her hours
and included the last paragraph to remind someone that she had accommodated
work hours. She hoped that Ms. Braybrook, the human resources consultant
copied on the email, would follow up. The grievor was asked in her examination-
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in-chief why she did not just ask directly about her accommodated hours. Her
reply was that her accommodation was a private matter, not to be disseminated.
She also said that just prior to sending the email she had spoken to Laura Correa,
who was also a recipient of the email. She had a very brief conversation with Ms.
Correa in the hallway when the grievor told her she had accommodated hours.
Ms. Correa told her to contact her manager, Dave Schottmann. The grievor sent
Mr. Shottmann the following email at 3:56 p.m., minutes before she left for the
day:
Dave,
I will attend tomorrow as instructed. I will be traveling by public transportation,
as no transportation was arranged for this address. If however, the weather is bad,
which it may be, I will not be walking outside. My intent is to email you in the
morning for instruction if I need to.
Regards,
Sharon
Ps the previous email was because mgmt rescheduled the hours of work for
tomorrow, and there are prescribed conditions for this. Otherwise they have to
pay time and a half for the whole shift. Sure they don’t want to do that. S
[8] The grievor had no further communication with members of management. The
following day she attended the event, which ran late. By the time she returned to
the office and left work it was 5:11 p.m. She said she was not able to leave the
event discretely and feared retribution if she did so. She said that the whole
process caused her considerable stress.
[9] In her cross-examination the grievor agreed that the information at the “huddle”
included advice to speak to your manager if there were any questions about the
event’s requirements. She said that she wrote the emails above to Mr.
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Schottmann because he was seldom on-site and she spoke to Laura Correa who
was on-site. It was the grievor’s evidence that those communications were a
request that her hours at the event be accommodated in accordance with her
previous ongoing arrangement. She believed that the email of December 3 was
“exceedingly clear”. She also testified that she saw Mr. Shottmann at the event
but did not speak to him because she had written to him. She said, “At some
point one accepts that he has chosen not to talk to me.” She also said, “Had Dave
had a change of heart I was there waiting to hear it.” When asked why she did not
speak to Mr. Schottmann directly she said, “I had written to him and been
extremely clear. I had mentioned Human Rights legislation. It is not my job to
educate management about Human Rights. It was my job to remind them there
was an agreement [on my hours] and that needed to be honoured.” In short, she
never tried to call Mr. Schottmann or speak with him at the event. She relied on
the emails set out above.
[10] The Union closed its case following the grievor’s evidence. The Board asked for
submissions on non-suit. The parties agreed that the Employer would first call
one witness, Nadia Mustillo, the Central West Regional Program Manager. She
provided a copy of the script which was provided to all managers in the Region.
It was read at the “huddle” at the Burnhamthorpe office. It is as follows:
We/I want to clarify travel arrangements for the Staff Development Day
on December 4
As you know, the event will be held at the Living Arts Centre.
Activities for the day will begin promptly at 9:15 am and will end
promptly at 4:00 pm.
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For staff working a flex work schedule, your hours of work on December
4 will be changed to 8:30 am – 4:45 pm. The agenda for the day includes
one hour lunch.
Staff are expected to begin the day by arriving at the office (1140) at 8:30
am. This means that you will be traveling directly to the Living Arts
Centre from the office.
Approved travel choices include the following:
1. You may choose to drive your own car (this is up to you). If so, you can
travel directly from the office to the Living Arts Centre and then return to
the office when the activities conclude at 4:00 pm. Mileage will be paid
for the round trip from 1140 to the Living Arts Centre and return.
2. The Ministry vehicle is also available for some staff to travel together
from 1140 to the LAC and return.
3. For those who do not wish to drive their own vehicle, you can take the
Burnhamthorpe Road bus from the office to the LAC and return. The trip
will take approximately 15 minutes. You will be reimbursed for the bus
fare through the normal expense claim process.
Regardless of your travel choice, since activities end at 4:00pm, there
should be sufficient time for all staff to return to the office (1140) after the
event, and from there finish the day and go home.
Given the timing of the day’s events, travel from staff homes directly to
the Living Arts Centre will not be authorized unless there are special
circumstances that you have discussed with, and have been approved by
your manager prior to December 4.
Please see your manager if you have any issues of questions regarding this
information.
The Submissions of the Parties
[11] The Employer submitted that the email of November 19 was responded to by way
of the “huddle” meeting on December 2, 2008. The evidence was said to
establish that the grievor heard Jackie Watts say employees were to speak to their
manager if there were any issues or questions. The Employer submitted that the
grievor never clearly spoke to her manager regarding the proposed hours and her
ongoing accommodation. It was an essential element of her claim that she
communicate her concerns to Mr. Schottmann. Not having done so, the Employer
cannot be liable for the purported breach of the Human Rights Code.
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[12] The Employer submitted that if all of the facts asserted by the grievor are true, the
essential elements of her claim are not made out. It submitted that the Union did
not discharge its onus of establishing a link between the grievor’s family status
and the decision to change the hours. Without notification to the Employer from
the grievor that she could not comply with the change in hours, management was
entitled to change the hours. Nothing in the emails provided the necessary
notification.
[13] The Employer relied upon the following authorities: OPSEU and Ministry of
Government Services (Union) 2010-0405 (Abramsky); OPSEU and Ministry of
Government Services (Couture) 2008-3329 (Dissanayake); McGill University
Health Centre v. SHGM, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 161 (S.C.C.); Veillette v. Canada
Revenue Agency, [2010] C.P.S.L.R.B. No. 26 (Paquet); Byfield v. Fresh Start
Foods, [2009] O.H.R.T.D. No. 765 (Scott).
[14] The Union submitted that the grievor’s emails were cast in broad terms in order to
have general application to her and to others. The Union said that it has made out
a prima facie case. The grievor had an accommodation for her work hours which
was unilaterally changed by the Employer. She tried to communicate with
management but did not get a proper response. It said that there was a legitimate
business need to change the working hours that day. However, where that change
clashes with an established accommodation, the onus is on the Employer to
communicate with the affected employee.
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[15] Here the grievor tried to communicate her needs to no avail. It said that the script
used at the “huddle” did not identify accommodated schedules as a category of
concern. Also, it was not appropriate to refer employees to managers other than
the manager reading the script.
[16] The Union also submitted that it is premature to find no violation of the Code
without hearing what actions the Employer undertook to discharge its duty. It
unilaterally changed the hours of work knowing that the grievor’s hours were
modified as a family status accommodation.
[17] The Union relied on the following authorities: Policy and Guidelines on
Discrimination Because of Family Status, Ontario Human Rights Commission,
March 28, 2007; Ontario Human Rights Commission v. Simpsons-Sears, [1985] 2
S.C.R. 536 (S.C.C.); Catholic District School Board of Eastern Ontario and
OECTA (Elderkin Grievance), (2008), 176 L.A.C. (4th) 193 (Newman); OLBEU
and LCBO (French Grievance), [2002] ).G.S.B.A. No. 32 (Marszewski).
[18] In reply, the Employer reiterated that the evidence supports a finding that it was
prepared to remove any barriers created by the change in hours. However, it was
the grievor’s obligation to clearly ask, which she did not. It was also submitted
that Mr. Schottmann was the appropriate contact, since he was her manager and
knew the details of her accommodation.
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Reasons for Decision
[19] The event in question was a one-day, annual affair. The Employer may be taken
to know that some employees might be unable to comply with the changed hours.
Indeed, it anticipated such a possibility and invited anyone with any issues or
questions to speak to their manager to resolve them. The grievor testified that she
clearly brought her concerns to her manager’s attention, but the evidence was to
the contrary.
[20] A review of the grievor’s emails reveals that they are general in scope and
intended to apply to the whole bargaining unit. They were from the grievor, a
union steward, and were copied to the LERC Chair and the Local President, and
others in management. There is nothing in those emails that can be taken as the
grievor’s personal request to her manager that she be exempted from the event’s
changed hours.
[21] The duty of accommodation is an ongoing obligation and changes as
circumstances change. In my view it was not unreasonable for the Employer to
make such a time change for a special event provided it was willing to
accommodate those for whom such a seemingly benign rule had a negative effect.
It invited dialogue. Dialogue is the hallmark of accommodation, and dialogue
requires the Union, Employer and employee to candidly and clearly communicate
with each other. There is no explanation on the record as to why the grievor did
not see fit to make a clear request to her manager to leave the event early. What
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is clear is that she did not do so and had no intention of doing so. She relied on
her general emails.
[22] The grievor understood her obligation, as is clear from her formulation set out in
her evidence summarized above. It was to remind the Employer that she had an
accommodation agreement that needed to be honoured or temporarily adjusted in
the circumstances. She failed to do so. In Byfield, supra, the Human Rights
Tribunal held that an employee is obligated to state clearly their request for
accommodation. In my view that is an essential element of a claim that there has
been a breach by the Employer of its duty to accommodate. The evidence is that
there was no clear request. Lacking that essential element, the Union has failed to
make out a prima facie case.
[23] The grievance is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto this 9th day of March 2012.
Daniel Harris, Vice-Chair