HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-0094.Beckles.83-09-07Between:. OPSEU (Uiril Beckles)
Before:
94/83
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before i
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
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The Crown in Rieht of Ontario
Grievor
(Ministry of Correctional
Services) Employer
A.M. Kruger
S.D. Kaufman H. Roberts
Vice Chairman
Member
Member
For the Grievor: J. Hayes, Counsel
Cavalluzzo, Hayes & Lennon
For the Employer: J.F. Benedict
Manager, Staff Relations
Ministry of Correctional Services
Hearing: July 27, 1983
This matter comes before this Board as a result of the
grievance launched bv Mr. U. Beckles against a two day suspension
imoosed for alleged insubordination. The parties agreed that the
Board was orooerly constituted and had jurisdiction to. hear this
matter.
Fortunately there is agreement on most of the relevant
facts. Mr. Beckles has been employed as a Corrections Officer at
the Toronto Jail since March 3, 1975. The Toronto Jail is a
maximum security institution housing prisoners awaiting trial.
Many of the inmates are charged with serious offences and are
considered to be dangerous. The jail houses far more inmates than
its rated capacity.
Mr. Be Grandis, the Super-intendant of the Toronto Jail told
the Board that all Correctional Officers receive Standing Orders
which inform them of proper procedures. All employees are
required to familiarize themselves with these orders and to keep
abreast of any changes in the Standard Order Book. Every employee
has his own cozy of this book. Copies of the Forward and of
Orders # I and #42 were filed with the Board.
Included in the Standing Order #l are instructions to staff
to inform their supervisors of any unusual incidents that occur
while they are on duty. Written reports on such incidents are
required before the officer completes his tour of duty. This is
necessary to assist the supervisors in anticipating problems so
that action can be taken to prevent trouble. Another part of that
order requires officers to be cooperative and courteous in
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dealinq with fellow members of staff.
Standing Order #42 requires an on-duty employee who
witnesses any unusual incident to report the matter verbally to
his suQervisor and to "QreQare and submit a comprehensive written
occurrence report outlining the events" prior to the completion
of his shift. It qoes on to explain in item 4 how such reports
are to be prepared. We reproduce this item in full here:-
4. Preparation of Written Reports
The following will apply to all officially submitted
occurrence reports:
They must be legible.
They must be recorded on the prescribed form (9902)
unless this particular form is unavailable at the
time.
They must accurately describe in detail factual
information relating to the when, how, where and who
of the incident being communicated.
Occurrence reports will not be prepared in the
immediate area of assignment, but will be done so in
accordance with instructions of the Shift or Unit
Suvervisors, or the Senior investigating officer.
Reports will be completed and submitted to the Jail
at shift conclusion.
.RmQloyees experiencing difficulty in the preparation
of any official report should consult with the Shift
or Unit Supervisor in order that necessary assistance
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is obtained prior to the report commencement.
The Board also received copies of a document headed
Deleqations Under Public Service Act And Public Service Act and
Requlations. It is siqned by the Deputy Minister and the Minister
of Correctional Services and in Section 22(l) states the
followinq:-
Section 22(l) Suspension Pendinq an Investiqation
- Suspension for up to twenty (20) working days with
or without pay:-
Assistant Deputy Ministers;
Executive Directors:
- Suspension up to and including twenty (20) work
days with pay:-
Branch Directors;
Branch Administrators;
:ing
- Suspension up to and including three (3) working
davs with pay:-
Suoerintendents of Institutions;
DeDUty Superintendents Of InStitUtiOnS;
Supervising Probation and Parole Officers;
- Authority to relieve employees for one (1) working
shift:-
Management employees with line supervisory
reoonsibilities;
Senior Probation and Parole Officers
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All the witnesses agree that on November 26, 1982 Mr.
Beckles worked the shift from 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. in section 4C.
That section of the Jail houses prisoners considered to be
difficult or danqerous. At about 10 o.m., Mr.- Beckles called his
wmervisor Mr. Thompson to,report that the inmates in 4C refused
to obev his order that they return to their cells. That niqht the
inmates were to watch television until 10 p.m. at which time they
were to be locked up in their cells. On some occasions, the sound
on the television was turned up after the lock up so the
orisoners could hear the programme in their cells.
Mr. Thompson and Mr. Turner, supervisors on that shift,
came to 4C and were admitted by Mr.' Beckles. There is a
difference of opinion concerning whether they came alone or were
accompanied by ,Mr. John, a Correctional Officer. Mr. Beckles
testified that Mr. John came with the supervisors. Mr. Thompson
denied this. The written reports submitted by Messrs. Turner and
Thomoson do not mention Mr. John. We find that nothing important
turned on this conflict in the evidence.
The inmates were asked by the supervisors why they had
refused to qo to their cells. In response they denied refusing
and said that they had not been asked to do SO. When the
suuervisors told them to return to their cells, the inmates
coooerated fullv. Mr. Thompson instructed Mr. Beckles to fill out
and Occurrence Report and the supervisors left. Near the end of
his shift, Mr. Beckles'wrote the following Occurrence Report:-
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26/H/82 1050 hrs.
To: Mr. C. De Grandis
Re: Lock DQ
Sir:
On the above mentioned date around 1050 hrs. I informed
CDl. Thompson that the inmates in 4C were reluctant to go
into their cells.
He qave this reoort to Messrs. Thompson and Turner. One of
the '.suQervisors told Mr. Beckles to elaborate on the incident.
Mr. Beckles then added the following to his report:-
"Went into their cells without any incident."
On November 30, 1982 in the afternoon, Mr. Leithead, then
the Senior Assistant Superintendent at the Toronto Jail was look-
ing through the recent file of Occurrence Reports. Se came across
Mr. Beckles' report. Mr. Leithead felt that the incident reported
was serious and that the Occurence Report was inadequate because
it failed to provide sufficient detail of what had transpired.
Mr. Leithead knew that Mr. Thompson and Mr. Beckles would be on
the afternoon (3 Q.m.-11 p.m.1 shift that day. He asked Mr.
Thomoson to request a more complete report from Mr. Beckles.
Around 4:30 o.m., Mr. Beckles was called to Mr. Thompson's
office. Another suoervisor, Mr. Kennedy was in the office when
Mr. Beckles arrived. Mr. Thomoson asked Mr. Beckles to rewrite
his ReDOrt and Qrovide more detail on what had transpired. Mr.
Beckles indicated that he had nothing to add and that if they
insisted on a re-written Report, his new report would be
substantially the same as the one he had already submitted. He
stated that Mr. Thompson knew of what had transpired after he had
arrived on the scene and could report that himself. He also
complained that Messrs. Thompson and Turner had failed to make a
reoort in the log book on November 26. He saw no reason to place
the entire responsibility for reporting on him.
Mr. Kennedy then asked Mr. Beckles to write a new report
that was different from his earlier one. Mr. Beckles repeated
what he had said to Mr. Thompson. Mr. Kennedy repeated his
request for a fuller Report but Mr. Beckles refused to comply.
Mr. Kennedy warned the grievor that if he persisted, he would be
suspended with pay. Mr. Beckles refused to alter his Report. At
this uoint, Mr. Kennedy ordered the grievor to carry out his
request and again, Mr. Beckles refused to change the Report.
Mr. Kennedy told Mr. Beckles that for refusing to carry out
the order, Mr. Beckles was ~suspended for the balance of the
shift. He asked the grievor to leave the premises. Mr. Beckles
refused to obey, stating that Mr. Kennedy lacked the authority to
suspend him. Mr. Beckles insisted on seeing Mr. De Grandis but
was told that the Superintendant was not on the premises, While
there is some dispute concerning when Mr. Beckles asked for a
union representative, this Board accepts the griever's evidence
that he made his first request before Mr. Kennedy suspended him
and reseated it a number of times during the meeting both before
and after Mr. Leithead intervened.
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There is also some dispute concerning whether Mr. Beckles
shouted at this meeting. The grievor denies it. Messrs. Kennedy
and Thompson told the Board that he did shout. Mr. Leithead whose
office was next door states that he heard the grievor shouting.
This is of some significance because the meeting took place near
the kitchen where a number of inmates work. Management at the
iail prefers not to have inmates aware of disagreements among
staff because inmates may try to take advantage of this by
olayinq staff members off against one another.
The Board concludes that Mr. Beckles was upset by the
oressure exerted on him at that meeting and did shout when
resoonding to his superiors. We received no evidence that inmates
heard him shout or that they were influenced by the argument.
After Mr. Beckles refused to leave the premises, Mr.
Kennedy went next door to inform Mr. Lei.thead of what had
transpired. At the,time Assistant Superintendent Nicholson was in Mr.
Leithead's office. After Mr. Kennedy explained what had
transpired, Messrs. Leithead and Nicholson accompanied Mr.
Kennedy back to the office next door. Mr. Leithead informed Mr.
Beckles that Mr. Kennedy had the authority to suspend him with
oav and asked the grievor to leave. Mr. Leithead then told Mr.
Beckles that he (Mr. Leithead) had suspended the grievor and he
order him to leave the premises. Mr. Beckles replied that none of
those present had such authority. He demanded a meeting with Mr.
De Grandis. He also asked to see a union representative. Mr.
Leithead told Mr. Beckles to leave and to return the next morning
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at 10 a.m. to see the Superintendent.
At about 5 p.m. Mr. Beckles decided to leave and was
escorted out by Mr. Thompson. On the way out, Mr. Beckles met Mr.
Vidal, a union steward and told Mr. Vidal what had happened. The
steward oroceeded to the supervisor's office to discuss the
matter. It appears that any conversation there was brief and Mr.
Vidal left.
Mr. Leithead wrote a report on the incident for Mr. De
Grandis that evening.
When Mr. Beckles was in the parking lot after leaving the
oremises that day, he met Mr. De Grandis. Mr. Beckles began to
relate the events of that day to the Superintendent who told the
qrievor that he would prefer to discuss it the next morning.
Mr. Beckles came to see Mr. De Grandis the next day,
December 1, at 10~ a.m.:sndheeiKas~~told to go home and to come to a
meeting on Friday December 3 at 10 a.m. in Mr. De Grandis'
office. The grievor had been scheduled for his day's off duty on
December 1 and 2 and there is no suggestion that the suspension
continued on these days.
At the meeting on December 3, 1982, a union representative
was oresent. Mr. De Grandis invited the various people involved
in the incidents on November 26 and November 30 to relate what
thev had seen or heard. After that meeting Mr. De Grandis
considered the written reports he had received from Messrs.
Leithead, Kennedy and Thompson as well as the oral evidence
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oresented at the December 3, 1982 meeting. On December 9, 1982,
Mr. De Grandis wrote Mr. Beckles and informed him that he would
be suspended without pay for two days for insubordination on
November 30, 1982 when the griever had refused to comply
immediately with Mr. Kennedy's order to leave the institution.
It is that decision that the grievor has challenged before
this Board.
The Board has considered the evidence and argument
concerning differences in the facts as they appear in the various
reoorts of the suoervisors. We also heard in argument that these
reports, particularly that of Mr. Turner, were inadequate. In our
view, nothinq turns on this and we see no point in rehearsing
theses matters at length here.
The Board is satisfied that, while there is conflicting
evidence on such matters as the role, if any, of Officer John on
November 26, some details of. the November 30 meeting, and the
reports of the supervisors concerning the events on November 26
and 30, on the crucial questions before us, the evidence is not
in dispute. These questions are:-
1. Was the order to Mr. Beckles to write a new report
reasonable?
2. Did Mr. Beckles have legitimate reason to challenge
that order?
3. Did Mr. Beckles have the right to have a union
steward present at the November 30 meeting?
4. Did Mr. Kennedy have the authority to suspend ~Mr.
Beckles with pay and order him off the premises on
November 30?
5 - . Did Mr.
Beckles have good reason to challenge that
order?
6.. Did Mr. De Grandis have reason to discipline Mr.
Beckles? If he did, was a two day suspension without
pay a reasonable form of discipline considering all
the circumstances?
The Board has carefully considered the evidence and
argument and we find as follows:-
1. The order to write a new report was reasonable. If
Mr. Beckles felt unable to "name names" because no obvious
rinqleaders were involved, that could have been stated in his
reoort and might have been helpful to his supervisors. Only Mr.
Beckles witnessed the events that led to his calling for
assistance and onlv he could have adequately described for his
suoervisors what had transpired.
2. Mr. Beckles had no good reason to challenge that
order. It was not for him to judge that adequacy of the actions
taken by his superiors. Furthermore, he was not aware of their
reports. No one asked him to provide false information. All he
was asked to do was to provide more complete information as
txovided for in the Standing Orders.
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3. Nothing in the collective agreement required the
Employer to call in a union steward when Mr.
Beckles was
susoended with pay. A suspension with pay was not a disciplinary
measure although it did indicate that discipline was possible. It
might have been helpful to have had a union representative there
but it was not required.
4. It is clear that any of the supervisors had the
authority to suspend Mr. Beckles with pay under Section 22(l) of
the Delegations document cited earlier. If Mr. Beckles had reason
to doubt this, he could have objected and included it in his
qrievance; It might have been wise for those members of
management who met with Mr. Beckles to have made clear to him the
basis for their action, but they were not required to do so.
5. Mr. Beckles had no good reason to refuse the order to
leave the premises. He knew he would be paid for the entire shift
and would suffer no loss in income. In the military-like setting
of a prison, there is stronger reason to be concerned about
insubordination than there would be in the private sector. Had
Mr. Beckles stood his ground, it would have undermined the
authority of Messrs. Kennedy and Leithead in his own eyes. Had
other officers or inmates learned of his successful refusal to
follow orders, the consequences could have been significant.
Arbitrators have concluded that employees issued. orders
should obey and grieve later unless:-
(a) the order would involve them in performing an illegal
act;
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(b) the order could endanger the health and safety of
the employee or of others:
(cl obeying the order could result in some significant
damage to the employee that the grievance procedure could
not rectify.
Cd) the order relates to some aspect of the employee's
behaviour that bears no relationship to his work
oerformance.
The Union does not suggest that obeying the order to leave
the premises would lead Mr. Beckles to commit an illegal act or
that it would have endangered anyone. Nor can any other form of
damaqe to Mr. Beckles be shown. The order certainly related to
his work performance.
6. Mr. De Grandis had good reason to discipline Mr.
Heckl.es. Mr. Beckles repeatedly refused to obey a reasonable
order to imorove his report. ,Nhen he was suspended with pay, he
reoeatedly refused to obey the order to leave the premises. His
action was unreasonable and there is no support in the collective
aqreement for what he did.
Mr. De Grandis provided Mr. Beckles with a full opportunity
to exolain the reasons for his behaviour before any decision on
discipline was made. The Superintendent thoroughly investigated
the matter before coming to his decision.
A two day suspension was a modest penalty under
these circumstances. The Board sees no reason to inter-
fere with Mr. De Grandis' decision.
For all these reasons, this grievance is dismissed.
DATED at Toronto, Ontario this 7th day of September, 1983.
A.M. Kruger
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S.D. Kaufman 0 Member
H. Roberts Member
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