Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1987-1609.Klassen.89-04-06GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE SEITLEMENT RkGLEMENT BOARD DES GRIEFS Between: 1609/87, 1297/08 IN TEE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION Under TRE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT Before TEE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD OPSEU (Klassen) - and - The crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Education) Grievor Employer Before: J.W. Samuels T. Browes-Bugden - Vice-Chairperson - Member M.F. O’Toole - Member APPEARING FOR N. Roland THE GRIEVOR: Counsel Cornish ti Associates Barristers & Solicitors APPEARING FOR C. Taylor TEE EHPLOYER: Staff Relations Officer Staff Relations Branch Management Board of Cabinet HEARING: February 1, 1989 *i _. 2 For sixteen years, Iona Klassen was a Resource Brailhst at the W. Ross Macdonald School in Brantford. Her job was to convert books and other printed materials into braille ,for blind students, using a Perkins Brailler, a manual device which imprints dots on paper. In 1981, by most unfortunate accident, Ms. Klassen’dropped liquid solvent into her eyes. This damaged her cornea and made her especially sensitive to ultraviolet light and glare. Thereafter, she has needed special dark glasses to shield her eyes from ultraviolet light. Her impairment has meant that she has difficulty working if special lighting is not available which cuts down on the production of ultraviolet light. This has resulted in many days off sick from her job. In 1986, Ms. i(lassen was involved in an automobile accident. She was struck from the rear and she suffered damage to the soft tissue around her spine. This injury means that she cannot work for extended periods of time on the Perkins Brailler, because of the muscular force needed to operate the machine. There are computerized braillers now, and in early 1987 Ms. Klassen began training to operate them. However, she and her employer have a difference of opinion concerning her ability to complete this training, and concerning the possibility of her transferring to the computerized braillers. In April 1987, Ms. Klassen filed the first grievance before us. Under “Statement of Grievance”, she wrote “Discrimination because of my handicap”. Under “Settlement Desired”, she wrote “To be properly trained. To be able to continue work with Computer Brailling in the proper environment”. In November 1987, she went off work because of.illness and she has not been at work since then. On October 5, 1988, Ms. Klassen filed the second grievance before us. Under “Statement of Grievance”, she wrote 3 I grieve the employer’s continued actions demonstrates a refusal to allow me to operate a computerized brailler upon my return to work and that their refusal to offer complete training and practical assignments sufficient to allow me to perform to the employer’s standards which is a contravention of Article 18, but not exclusively. Under ~“Settlement Desired”, she wrote That the employer provide a complete and comprehensive training package on the computerized brailler with appropriate and sufficient practical assignments sufficient to allow me to perform to the employer’s standard with full back pay and benefits including seniority, pension and attendance credits, etc. retroactive to September 6, 1988 and the current bank rate of interest be paid on all moneys owing. On October 25, 1988, Mr. J. A. Ryder, of the law firm Gowling & Henderson, wrote to Ms. J. Shirlow, Registrar of this Board, as follows: Re: Grievances of Iona Klassen GSB File No: 1609/87 (First Grievance) (Second Grievance dated October 5, 1988 but not yet numbered) OPSEU File No: 87R87 (First Grievance) (Second Grievance dated October 5, 1988 but not vet numbered) Attempts to mediate the captioned grievances have thus far been unsuccessful. writer and Ms. We therefore request that you contact the Christina Taylor, Human Resources Secretariat, at 965-2002 to arrange a mutually convenient date for arbitration. We expect that you will receive the second grievance shortly. Thank you for your attention. - 4 Though Mr. Ryder wrote this letter in late October 1988, the second-stage grievance meeting concerning the second grievance was not held until December 1, and the .Miiistry’s reply came on December 8. The grievance was denied by the Deputy Minister’s designee, Mr. K. Whittaker. In his letter, Mr. Whittaker noted that the first grievance was scheduled for hearing on February 1, 1989, and he said “It appears that the grievance is related to the one filed by yourself on April 22, 1987..........Given this, the Board should hear and deal with both grievances at the same time”. It is to be noted that, in his letter, Mr. Ryder referred to the second grievance as “Second grievance dated October 5, 1988 but not yet numbered” and he told Ms. Shirlow that he expected thatshe would receive the second grievance shortly. In fact, Ms. Shirlow did not see the second grievance until January 20, 1989, when she received a letter from Ms. M. Comish of the.law firm Comish & Associates, informing the Board that now Ms. Comish represented the grievor. Ms. Comish attached a copy of the second grievance. Ms. Comish went on to say: At the present time the only grievance scheduled for hearing is the April, 1987 grievance which is scheduled for February 1st, 1989. As the matters involved in these two grievances have similar factual circumstances and arguments, we are prepared to agree to the employer's request to have them heard and dealt with at the same time. Whittaker, In this regard I enclose a copy of Keith Deputy Minister's Designee's letter dated December Sth, 1988. The employer is now being represented by Christina Taylor from the Human Resources Secretariat.. On January 26, Ms. Shirlow wrote to the Union concerning the second grievance. She said: A copy of a grievance dated October 5th, the 1988 was filed as part of correspondence received from Ms. Cornish. In checking the board's files it was found that there is no ~record of an application being filed by the union for this grievance. Therefore the board would appreciate re mceiving instructions rementioned gr from you as to . ievance should be processed as a new whether the afo application. - 5 That same day, Mr. I. Oram, the Union’s Acting Co-ordinator of Grievances, responded to Ms. Shirlow as follows: Phaee be advised that OPSEU view6 the letter 6mt to you from Mary Cornislh datlrd January 10 , 1989 as an application for hearing before the Grievance settlement Board. Plea6e prooe66 aouording to Ids. the letter. CO~i8h'S raquoet a6 6et out in On January 30, two days before our hearing commenced, Ms. Shirlow wrote to Mr. Oram to say: Receipt copy of is acknowldeged of your letter dated January 26th, which has been forwarded to the 1989 information. employer for its grievance Further to your request, the board is processing the form dated October 5th, 1988 a6 a new has assigned the file application and number of correspondence 1297,aa. future pertaining to this Any matter should be accordingly. addressed A copy of this letter went to Ms. C. Taylor, the Ministry’s Staff Relations Officer who was handling Ms. KIassen’s file. Ms. Taylor immediately wrote to Ms. Shirlow as follows: Further to your letter to Mr. Ivor Oram of today's date, it is the Employer's position, that pursuant to Article 27.4 of the collective agreement, the Union's application to the Grievance Settlement Board for a hearing in this matter is untimely. The stage 2 response to this grievance was dated December 8, 1988. May I draw your attention to Article 27.13 of the collective agreement under which provision this grievance is deemed to have been withdrawn. Clearly on this basis this grievance can neither be scheduled separately or consolidated with any other grievance. 6 In the meantime, on January 26, Ms. Cornish wrote to Ms. Taylor to clarify the Union’s position with respect to the substance of the two grievances. Ms. Comish said: WC intend to allege that the employer has engaged in a pattern of conduct in dealfng wfth the grievor*s disabilities which has resulted in the follOWlng violations of the COllectiVe agreement: a. failure to make reasonable provieionr for the grievor's safety and health contrary to Article 18; b. c!lscriminatory and unlawful exercise of managementle right ta assign work, classify, train and deploy teeources and equipment; C. unjust disciplinary action by penaiizing her for her lagitlmate' health absences and harassing and ultimately effectively suspending her arising from her attempts to assert her right to a safe workplace free of discrimination on the basis of disability. The April 23, 1987 grievance deale with these violations up to that data while the later grievance of October 5, 1988 deals with the pattern of conduct subsequent to April 23, 1988 Which culminated in the refusal to allow the grievor to return to worlc and be accommodated in September, 1988. At our hearing, Mr. Roland confirmed that he would make the case as outlined in Ms. Cornish’s letter of January 26. At the commencement of our hearing on February 1, .the Ministry raised a number of preliminary objections concerning the two grievances. In a nutshell, the objections are: 7 With resuect to the first grievance That it complains of “discrimination because of handicap”, which is a matter falling under the Ontario Human Rights Code, and must be dealt with by the process established in the Code, and is beyond the jurisdiction of this Board. That it does not complain of a violation of Article 18, nor does it complain about unjust discipline, and the grievor cannot now expand the grievance to encompass these matters. That this Board does not have jurisdiction to deal with a complaint about lack of training, because this is a matter exclusively within management’s rights. With respect to the second grievance l That it was referred to arbitration out of time, and must be considered to have been withdrawn. l That it does not complain of a violation of Article 18, nor does it complain about unjust discipline, and the grievor cannot now expand the grievance to encompass these matters. l That this Board does not have jurisdiction to deal with a complaint about lack of training, because this is a matter exclusively within management’s rights. With respect to the first grievance, in our view, it raises only one complaint-discrimination on the basis of handicap. Mr. Roland suggested to us, by a remarkable feat of semantic legerdemain, that the’ grievor’s words in fact raised Article 18 and also complained of unjust discipline. Article 18.1 of the collective agreement provides: The Employer shall continue to make reasonable provisions for thesafetyand healthof itsemployees during the hours of their employment. It is agreed lhatboth the EmployerandtheUnionshallco-oper- ate to the fullest extent possible in the prevention of accidents and in the reasonable promotion of safety and health of all employees. 8 While we acknowledge, as this Board has done before, that a grievance is not to be construed overly strictly, and that the Board can give some meaning to the words chosen by the grievor (see, for example, Heffering, 504/80 (Delisle), at page 3-4), the grievor cannot change the substance of the grievance at the hearing. In this case, the first grievance did not complain of a violation of management’s obligation to make reasonable provision for the safety and health of its employees. Nor did the grievor ,suggest she was being disciplined unjustly. She complained of discrimination on the basis of handicap, and that was all. The remedy she sought was an accommodation which would permit her to continue gainful employment with the Ministry. And this is a complaint which is beyond our jurisdiction. It is a matter for the process established under the Ontario Human Rights Code, and the grievor has in fact made a complaint to the Ontario Human Rights Commission which is now being considered. This Board has dealt with this point many times before. While at the outset, the Board was willing to entertain a complaint of a violation of the Ontario Human Rights Code (in Singh, 240/79 (Eberts), at pages 6-ll), later decisions have uniformly ruled that this is beyond our jurisdiction (see Noah, 767/85 (Draper), at page 4; Aubin, 1044185 (Gandz), at page 4; Mousseau, 1182185 (Jolliffe), at page 10; MacKenzie, 1243187 (Ran&my), at pages 9-10; and again, in a decision released only days before our hearing commenced, Beintner, 1841 and 1842187 (Roberts), at pages 7-18). There is no point in our rehashing the reasons given in this line of cases. For our purposes, the matter is settled. We find that we do not have jurisdiction to hear the first grievance. 9 With respect to the second grievance, firstly, in our view it was referred to this Board in a timely fashion, though somewhat inelegantly, when Mr. Ryder wrote to the Board on October 25, 1988. Article 27.4 of the collective agreement provides: If the grievor is not satisfied with.the decision of the Deputy Minister or his designee or if he does not receive the decision within the specified time the gdevormayapplytotheGriavanceSedlement Board for a hearing of the grievance withih fifteen (15) days ofthedate he received thedecisionorwithin fifteen Wdaysof thespecified time limitforreceivingfhe decision. In his letter of October 25, Mr. Ryder, as the grievor’s counsel at the time, clearly applied to the Board for a hearing of && grievances. It may be that there was some confusion about this at the Board and in the offices of the Union and Ms. Comish, because the Board had not yet received .the actual grievance, and did not get the piece of paper itself until Ms. Comish forwarded it on January 20, 1989 (which resulted in the January correspondence between Ms. Shirlow and the parties), but this does not detract from Mr. Ryder’s clear language. He identified the grievance sufficiently as “Second Grievance dated October 5, 1988 but not yet numbered”, and he said that he wanted a hearing of “the captioned grievance$ (emphasis added). Furthermore, while Mr. Ryder jumped the gun, because the second- stage grievance meeting had not yet taken place, in our view this does not defeat the effect of his letter. His request would remain latent until the second-stage meeting took place and the grievor received a reply which was unsatisfactory. Mr. Ryder’s premature action caused no prejudice to the Ministry. Indeed, Ms. Taylor received a copy of Mr. Ryder’s October 25 letter. It ought to have been clear to the Ministry and the Grievance Settlement Board that the grievor wanted to proceed to arbitration on the second grievance. Once before, this Board has ruled that taking. a step in the grievance procedure prematurely d.oes not render the grievance ‘:: . . ,a 10 inarbitrable, provided there has been no real, prejudice (see Myszko, 2511187 (Verity), at pages S-9), and we agree with this ruling. The purpose of Article 27.4 is to ensure that a grievor does not sit on his hands. The grievor must decide in good time whether to proceed to arbitration before the Grievance Settlement .Board, so that the employer will know where it stands. In this case, the grievor did decide to go to arbitration in good time. While there can be no arbitration hearing before a second-stage grievance meeting, the grievor can decide before the second-stage meeting that the matter will proceed ‘to arbitration if the second-stage reply is not satisfactory. Now, what is the substance of the second grievance? On its face it speaks of a violation of Article 18. The grievor is entitled to try to prove her allegation. From what we heard at our first day of hearing, it appears that this complaint raises the following issues, with which we will deal when we hear the evidence and argument on the merits: l What is the employer’s obligation with respect to the grievor under Article 18? 9 What is the relevance of the Ontario Human Rights Code in the determination of the employer’s obligation under Article 18? l Have the grievor’s rights under Article 18 been violated? l If her rights have been violated, what is the appropriate remedy? l Can this Board order that the employer provide training for the grievor? l Can this Board order a particular assignment of duties for the grievor? .5 ;i 3 11 Finally, in our view, the second grievance does not raise a complaint of unjust discipline. Again, Mr. Roland tried to fit such a claim within the language of the grievance, but we simply do not agree with him. We will reconvene .to hear the grievor’s second grievance, viewed as a complaint of a violation of Article 18. Done at London, Ontario, this 6th day of April , 1989. “Ahdendum attached” ADDENDUM .--._-._.-.- I agree with the decisl.nn on the preli.minary i~~zues. IHcx‘$ever ~ I feel it nec~sswy to comment nn the Human Right-, Isrue. - . ' l-he di‘ssent ,fI.lec1 by W. Wal,sh in the GSB decision (1182/l35 8. Mauswxw) Vice-Chairman - E.R. Jnll.if~fe, the dissen-t filed by J. Mci'lanus j.. the GE33 decision (i&44/85 !:. ktbin) Vice--Chairman- ,5 . Gandz and the addendum .filf by I. Js Thnmson in the GSB decisiw (1.243/B? L... MacKenziej Vice-Chairman ~- E. J.Katurhny clearly outline the comments I have tn make on the Human Rights I Ei5U@ ~