HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-0050.Reed.80-09-08Between:
Before:
For the Grievor:
For the Employer:
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under The
CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOAR0
Mr. William Reed
And
The Crown/Ontario
Liquor Controls Board of Ontario
Professor J. R. S. Prichard Vice-Chairman
Mr. George Peckham Member
Mr. Henry Weisbach Member
Mr. S. John Page, Page & Strange
Suite 17, 2885 Jane Street
Cownsview, Ontario
Ms. Janis Baker
Hicks, Morley, Hamilton
Hearing:
%;.?ghH,%'~O
Suite 2100
180 Dundas St. W.
Toronto, Ontario
M5G 128
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In this case, Mr. William Reed alleges that he was unjustly
dismissed as an employee of the Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO).
Mr. Reed, a Clerk, was dismissed by the LCBO by a letter dated September
14, 1978 which stated:
Careful consideration has been given to the
events which caused your suspetiion from
duty on September 2, 1976 and to your behaviour
while at work during the past several months.
It has become increasingly apparent that your
attitude and conduct while at work are
incompatible with your obligations as an
employee of the Board.
The decision, therefore, has been reached to
terminate your employment with the Board,
effective September 2, 1978.
Termination documents will follow in due
cou.?se .
As the letter suggests, the culminating incidentin ~Mr. Reed's
relationship with the Board occurred on September 2, 1978 and he was
suspended from that date until the termination decision was taken.
Mr. Reed began work with the LCBO in 1965 but since.1971
his employment relationship has deteriorated such that the case before us
now is a tragic one. Since 1971,lMr. Reed has beendischarged three
times, has brought his case at various times to the LCBO, to his MPP, to
the Ombudsman and twice to the Grievance Settlement Board (for the
previous decision, see ee Reed 97177). He has been reinstated twice.and
now seeks reinstatement a third time before us.
After considering all of the evidence adduced before us in two
days of hearings and after considering our responsibilities:.under Sections
I7 and 18 of The crown employees Collective Bargaining Act and The Collective
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Agreement between the parties, we are unable to accede to his request.
We have concluded that the grievance must be dismissed since we concur
in the LCBO'S judgment that Mr. Reed's attitude and conduct are incompatible
with continued employment with the LCBO. In the pages which follow, we.
have attempted to summarize Mr. Reed's employment history, to describe
the incident on September 2, 1978 so far as we are able toreconstruct it from the
evidence and to state our.reasons:for dismissing the grievance. In doing so,
however, we must acknowledge~that this decision merely summarizes the facts
put before us and that many details and nuances have been left out, However
at the hearing we were provided with the complete story and it is based on
the totality of the evidence that we have reached our decision.
II
Mr. Reed first began work with the LCBO in 1965 and worked
until he was terminated in 1971. While we heard only a summary of the
reasons for that termination, it related to Mr. Reed's illness, his
subsequent failure to attend at work and his alleged failure to communicate
and co-operate fully with the LCBO.
In any event, following unsuccessful
approaches to two MPP'S, the Labour Board, lawyers and others, Mr. Reed met
with success after his taking his case to the (Xnbudsman of Ontario. He was
reinstated to employment with the Board in June, 1976 as a Clerk Two.
Unfortunately, the period of reinstatement was not a happy one, being marked
by his being disciplined on a number of occasions. From March 2, 1977 to
May 2, 1977, Mr. Reed took an unpaid leave of absence in an effort to
"pull himself together". While scheduled to return to work on May 2, he
did not in fact do so and that failure plus subsequent events led to his
discharge on May 27, 1977.
s i.
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Mr. Reed grieved his May, 1977 discharge to this Board and in
an award dated October 25, 1977 a different panel of this Board ordered
that he be reinstated in employment without pay "upon the certification
Iwithin six months? of a duly qualified medical practitioner specializing
in psychiatric medicine that the grievor is fit to return to work with
the LCBO and that such a return to work is in the best interests of the
grievor". Mr. Reed was so certified in December, 1977 and was reinstated
at a new store in January, 1978.
This history would be incomplete without reference to a
matter which is fundamental to Mr. Reed's employment relationship. He
perceives that he was done a grave injustice by the LCBO, and indirectly
by his Union, in 1971 when he was first terminated. Despite his two
subsequent reinstatements, he does not believe that the wrong has been
fully righted and his life appears to have been dominated by his obsessive
desire to correct the record. This obsession continued after his
January 1978 reinstatement and his subsequent discharge was largely,
in an indirect way, due to it.
In January, 1978,.following his reinstatement, Mr. Reed was sent
to work at Store 14 under the supervision of the Store Manager, Mr. Jack
Bonnett, and, indirectly, the District Supervisor, Mr. Sam Scowcroft.
In reconstructing the events leading up to Mr.. Reed's discharge in
September 1978, we have the evidence of Mr. Bennett, Mr. Scowcroft and
Mr. Reed. There is some considerable divergence between the testimony
of Mr. Scowcroft and Mr. Bennett and that of Mr. Reed. Based on an
assessment of their respective credibility, their apparent ability to recall
the events and the corroborative documentary evidence, where the evidence
diverges we prefer that of Mr. Bennett and Mr. Scowcroft.
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Mr. Bonnett reported that during February, March and April, Mr.
Reed got off on a "fairly good'note" although there were some minor
incidents involving customer service requiring correction but not
discipline. At the same time, Mr. Bonnett quite quickly became aware
of Mr. Reed's perceptions of the LCBO's previous conduct towards him as
Mr. Reed from time to time came to the Manager's office to go over his
tale of woe. Mr. Reed often carried with him a folder of documents
concerning his case, a folder which he appeared to have at the first
hearing day in this,case. Prior to July. the~re was a small
number of occasions on which Mr. Reed was corrected bye the Manager or
the Assistant Manager concerning the handling of inventory control slips.
This apparently led to a written warning on at least one occasion. Mr.
Scowcroft also testified that on occasion Mr. Reed raised his grievances
concerning the LCBO's past conduct with Mr. Scowcroft during his store
visits, and partly as a result Mr. Scowcroft concluded that Mr. Reed
was obsessed with his prior problems with the LCBO.
Mr. Bonnett also testified that several times during their discus-
sions of the past, Mr. Reed made threats about the LCBO saying he would
"get even" and "revenge" the wrongs done to him, and that he had "nothing
left to live for." On at least one occasion these threats included
reference to getting "his shotgun", a matter which was reported by LCBO
headquarters to the police.
At the beginning of July, Mr. Bonnett prepared his six month perfor-
mance evaluation of Mr. Reed in which he judged Mr. Reed to be an average
employee and added the following written comments:
MANAGER'S REMARKS AND'RECOMENDATIONS
During the past six months, Mr. Reed has proven to be an
average employee in most areas. However he continues to show
some weakness with regards to serving the counter, as to
errors on slips, or slips that have not been paid for.
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Mr. Reed apparently does not enjoy good health, as he
is frequently absent through illness. His sick credits for
the year have been used since his re-instatement in February.
Recommendation: Ni 1
Upon being shown this evaluation, Mr. Reed became angry and upset and
refused to sign it, apparently viewing it as part of the LCBO's continuing
campaign against him.
Following normal procedures, Mr. Scowcroft then added his evalua- ~_
tion which rated Mr. Reed as below average in dependability, work attitude
and quality of work and included the following written comments:
Mr. Reed has become sd engrossed in his past problem that
it is affecting his job performance. His attendance credits
for the year are exhausted as of this writing - this is a
direct result of his negative attitude towards his job.
Mr. Reed has little respect for the Board, is not dependable
and cannot be relied upon to execute the duties assigned him
without supervision.
If his present performance is not improved I would recommend
further disciplinary action be taken.
Receiving maximum salary for classification - Recco: No Change.
When the evaluation was shown to Mr. Reed sometime just prior to September
2, he became further incensed, rejecting the evaluation of his work and
'seeing it as evidence that his position with the LCBO was "untenable".
On August 21, 1978 there was an incident at the store in which an
apparently angry Mr. Reed was slamming bottles in the storage bins.
Upon being challenged, Mr. Reed'entered into a verbal tirade against the
LCBO, including a repetition of his threats.
On September 2, 1978, a day he was scheduled to work, Mr. Reed did
not appear at starting time but instead telephoned Mr. Bonnett saying he
was "on strike". Later in the morning he came in and demanded an oppor-
tunity to speak to Mr. Scowcroft to discuss his evaluation. Mr. Bonnett
telephoned Mr. Scowcroft, advised him of the situation and then put Mr.
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Reed on the line. In the short conversation which followed, Mr. Reed
uttered a variety of obscenities at Mr. Scowcroft, then slamned down
the receiver and left the premises. According to his evidence, Mr. Reed
then went to the Ombudsman and the Labour Board seeking help and was later
referred to this Board.
Following the September 2 incident, Mr. Reed was first suspended
and then discharged. Mr. McDougall, the LCBO's Staff Relations Officer,
testified that this decision was taken in light of Mr. Reed's entire
employment record with the LCBO once they were satisfied that the September
2 incident required a disciplinary response.
One further matter of evidence which ran throughout the proceedings
must be recorded in order to complete the factual background to this case.
Despite the objection of counsel for the LCBO, we decided to admit evidence
relating to Mr. Reed's original discharge in 1971. We did so on the basis
that it was offered as evidence of the LCBO's motives in dismissing Mr.
Reed in 1978. In essence, Mr. Reed's position was that in July, 1978
he found in the Union's files certain notes written by a Dni~on
official in 1971 but previously unknown to Mr. Reed or the LCBO. Mr.
Reed interpreted these notes as corroborative of his version of the 1971
events and therefore sought to re-open the 1971 case based on this "new
evidence". He wanted the matter re-opened since he viewed the 1976
settlement achieved for him by the Ombudsman as only a partial success
since it did not, in his view, entirely absolve him of responsibility
for the 1971 termination. In August, he therefore made representations
to various LCBO officials, hoping to bring the matter to the Chairman of
the LCBO's attention. Mr. Reed,.prior to the date of the hearing, had not achieved
a resolution acceptable to him of this issue. Indeed, he indicated in his
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I
testimony that he viewed the hearing before us as an opportunity to
air the matter.
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Turning to our conclusions, we wish to deal first with Mr. Reed's
"new evidence". We have absolutely no doubt that Mr. Reed honestly
believes these notes to corroborate his story and to indicate bad faith
on the part of the LCBO. His intensity of concern could lead us to no
other conclusion. At.the same time, however, we find absolutely no
evidence that in reaching its decision to terminate Mr. Reed in September,
1978, the management of the LCBO was motivated by any concern whatsoever
that this "new evidence" might expose or embarrass them. In the result,
we find the LCRO's decision to terminate Mr. Reed in September 1978 was
based exclusively on an assessment of the seriousness of his conduct on
September 2 and his total employment record.
We are left therefore with deciding whether or not in all the
circumstances the LCBO's decision to terminate Mr. Reed in September,
1978 was other than just and reasonable. As we stated at the outset of
this award, we have concluded that it was not. We cannot disagree with
the LCBO's decision to terminate Mr. Reed since we find that despite
his testimony to the contrary, Mr. Reed is not able to maintain a
responsible and viable employment relationship with the LCBO. His
grievances against the LCBO run too deep and are beyond repair. He is
obsessed with the past in such a way that he cannot divorce it from the
present. In the result, if we were to order Mr. Reed reinstated
we could not do so in the expectation that despite past
difficulties, the new relationship would be a successful one. Rather,
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the only reasonable conclusion we can draw from the evidence is that any
attempt at a new relationship will be doomed to suffer from the same
disabilities as the previous two.
In such circumstances it would, in our opinion, be irresponsible
for this Board to overturn Mr. Reed's discharge. There was clearly an
incident on September 2; 1978 warranting a disciplinary response;
counsel for the grievor acknowledged this fact. Thus, the LCBO
quite properly considered the entire employment record in assessing the
remedy. As we have just stated, the only resonable penalty in the circum-
stances must be discharge since any prospect of a successfuly employment
relationship is now foregone. The LCBO is not required to provide endless
repeated opportunities to Mr. Reed to repair his employment relationship.
At some point it is entitled to demand a resonable work performance or
'terminate the relationship and we cannot disagree that that point was
reached on September 2, 1978.
We do not consider our conclusion inconsistent with that of the
previous panel of this Board which adjudicated Mr. Reed's prior termination.
That panel stated that it reinstated Mr. Reed "very reluctantly" but did
so in the hope that with medical assistance the employment relationship
might be re-established. However, that panel quite clearly did not view
it as a certainty that the relationship could be successfully re-established.
As the evidence we have heard amply demonstrates, the new relationship has
not been successful. That, of course, does not mean that the previous
attempt was not worthwhile, but it does mean that we are unable to
conclude that another attempt is ~warranted.
The tragedy of this case is that we suspect that this decision
will be no more successful 'than any of the previous proceedings
at relegating the past to history in Mr. Reed's mind.
.
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Although Mr. Reed testified that he believed we heard all the evidence
required to decide this case and that he had had an opportunity to say
everything he wished to say, we would be deceiving ourselves if we were
to think that by confirming the'termina~tion of the employment relationship we
are ending Mr. Reed's concerns with the LCBO. However, the other route -
to reinstate - would,.in our opinion, be no more successful and indeed
would be very likely to lead to even greater difficulties.
In sum, the grievance is dismissed.
Finally, we wish to thank Ms. Baker and Mr. Page for their
assistance in this matter. As our award no doubt betrays, this was not
an easy case but it was made manageable through counsel's skill, cooperation
and courtesy.
Dated at Toronto this 8th day of September 1980.
Prof. 3. Robert S. Prichard Vice-Chairman
I concur
Mr. G. Peckham Member
I concur
Mr. H. E. Weisbach Member