SHP561D
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
BETWEEN:
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY
AND
NATIONAL AUTOMOBILE, AEROSPACE, TRANSPORTATION AND GENERAL WORKERS UNION OF CANADA
(CAW/TCA), LOCAL 101
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE GRIEVANCE
OF J.D. MARTENS (DISMISSAL)
SOLE
ARBITRATOR:
J.F.W. Weatherill
A hearing in this matter was held at
Winnipeg on April 30, 2003.
B. McDonagh, for the union.
J. Bate, for the company.
AWARD
The Statement of Fact and Issue in
this matter is as follows:
Dispute:
Dismissal of Carman James D. Martens, from Winnipeg Car Shops on July 2, 2002.
Statement of Fact:
On July 2, 2002 Carman James D.
Martens’ record was debited 15 demerits for:
“ - - reporting for work unfit for
duty; failing to advise your supervisor that you were unfit for duty; sleeping
while on duty and failure to manage your medication in a manner consistent with
the instructions received from the Regional Physician, thereby placing your own
personal safety and the safety of your fellow employee at risk, Winnipeg Car
Department May 30, 2002.”
On July 2, 2002, Carman James D.
Martens was advised that he was dismissed from Company Service for:
“- - the accumulation of demerit
marks under the Brown System of discipline, Winnipeg, July 2, 2002.”
Statement of
Issue:
It is the contention
of the Union that:
-
the Company violated J.D. Martens’ rights in regard to the accommodation of his disability under the
Canada Human Rights Act.
-
the Company violated J.D. Martens’ rights in regard to the accommodation of his
disability under Rule 17 of the Collective Agreement and the Company Return to
Work Policy.
-
the Company did not establish wrong doing on Carman James Martens’ behalf
sufficient to give the Company cause to discipline him and subsequently dismiss
him.
-
Carman James Martens was treated in an arbitrary, discriminatory and an
excessive manner in regard to the 15 demerits debited against his record and his
dismissal.
Therefore, with
regard to the foregoing, it is the position of the Union that:
-
the discipline of 15
demerits debited against Carman James D. Martens should be removed from his
record; and
-
Carman James D. Martens
should be returned to duty forthwith without loss of seniority, with full
redress for all lost wages, benefits and losses incurred as a result of his
dismissal, including, but not limited to, interest on any moneys owing.
The Company denies
the Union’s contentions and claim.
From the material before me, I am
satisfied that the grievor was indeed asleep while at work on the day in
question. The grievor’s shift began at 16:00. The supervisor’s
account of the matter, prepared later that day and confirmed at the hearing, is
as follows:
I arrived at the tank track trailer
at approximately 16:30 and I handled L. Weise [the grievor’s workmate] a list of badorder cars
as he was seated close to the door and asked how they were, then proceeded to
where [the grievor] was seated. As I got no response from [the grievor] I
moved right in front of him and still did not get response as his eyes were
closed. He woke as I fanned the sheet of paper in front of him and he
said it was 9:30. I stated it was 4:30 and he stated he had taken a
couple of his pills this afternoon as he had a panic attack and he would not be
able to work and shouldn’t work around any heavy machinery, but he needed to
cut a couple of straps which he measured out.
I informed him he could not work or
cut any straps as he tried to explain the project.
I again stated he could not do
anything as the possibility of him hurting himself or someone else.
He said “should not have fallen
asleep” but he needed to make couple of cuts to some strapping for his
project. I repeated I could not let him do anything, as he was aware he
was not to take any pills before coming to work, again he stated he should not
have fallen asleep.
He got up from his chair and went to
the back of the Trailer and started to undress from his work clothes; I went
back to ask him what had happened this afternoon that caused him to take the
pills, he stated he had a thing with his son.
He asked if he was going to get
escorted off the property, I said that was not necessary and at that point I
returned to Larry Weise and discussed the change in work assignments and left
to quickly reassign everyone else. I returned to the Tank Track Trailer
at 1700 hours to find [the grievor] gone.
When asked at the investigation for
his comments on the supervisor’s report, the grievor first corrected the
spelling of his medication (referred to at the beginning of the report, not
cited here), and denied that he asked whether he was going to be escorted off
the property. Later in the investigation, however, he denied having said
he had taken medication in the afternoon because of a panic attack (although
the medical evidence is clear that the grievor is subject to panic attacks),
and then went on to say that the supervisor’s whole statement was
incorrect. Asked for an explanation of that, he replied that he did not
remember, as he had been incoherent. He had, he explained, been assaulted
when getting out of his car in front of his home at the end of his shift on the
morning of the previous day.
The grievor had come to work that
previous day, but in “a clouded state”, so that his workmate operated the
forklift and trackmobile when that was necessary. The clouded state of
the previous day may well have been attributable to the assault which the
grievor described, and to the prescribed medication which he took during that
day. The grievor denies taking his medication at other than the regular
times on May 30, but whether that is true or not it remains that he was asleep
on the job and, as he said, incoherent.
The grievor was, I find, asleep
while on duty on May 30, and for that he was subject to discipline.
Fifteen demerits is not an excessive penalty for such an offence.
It was argued in a general way that
the company was under a duty to accommodate the grievor because of his
disability. The grievor does, indeed, suffer from clinical anxiety, for
which he takes prescribed medication on a daily basis. He takes an
antidepressant and an anxiolitic. He is restricted from taking such
medication during a certain time before reporting to work. The grievor’s
condition would appear to be reflected in (whether or not caused by) problems
of interaction with certain fellow-employees and certain supervisors. The
evidence is that the company has, to a degree, attempted to accommodate his
condition by a shift change, by changes in work areas and immediate
associates. There is no precise allegation as to the way in which either
Rule 17 of the collective agreement (which deals with disabled employees) or
the provisions of the Canada Human Rights Act may have been violated.
In any event, while accommodation of
the grievor’s condition, whether or not it constitutes a “disability” under the
collective agreement or under the Act is desirable, even an employee who has
been accommodated must adhere to accepted rules of the shop and of workplace
conduct. Where it is open to the grievor to control his condition or
certain of its symptoms through a regular course of medication, then it is, in
this workplace situation at least, his responsibility to do so. I do not
consider that a lack of responsibility - at least in the case of an
intelligent, skilled tradesperson such as the grievor - constitutes a
“disability”, and it is certainly not an excuse for sleeping on the job.
Accordingly, the grievance in
respect of the imposition of 15 demerits must be dismissed.
At the time that penalty was
imposed, the grievor’s discipline record appeared to stand at 59
demerits. The addition of fifteen meant that he was subject to discharge
in accordance with the Brown system. In an arbitration decided just
before the present case, however, one of the elements of the record - 40
demerits for leaving without permission and for uttering threats - was altered,
it being found that the grievor had not in fact uttered threats as alleged, and
that the 40 demerits should be reduced to 20. Thus the grievor’s record
would have been considered as standing at 39 demerits, which with the addition
of the 15 in the present case would bring the total to 54.
The grievor’s discipline record is
not, then, such as to subject him to discharge under the Brown system. It
will be my award that he be reinstated in employment. It does not
necessarily follow that he is entitled to full redress for time lost.
Although the “countable” points under the Brown system have been accumulated
since February, 2001, the fact is that the grievor had a long and serious
discipline record before that. He was discharged in October, 1996, and
was reinstated in employment by the award of arbitrator Michel Picher in April,
1998. The reinstatement was without compensation, and was conditional
upon a physical and medical examination by a physician mutually acceptable to
the parties or appointed by the arbitrator failing their agreement, and a
determination that the grievor is fit to return to his duties. In my
view, a similar disposition is appropriate in the instant case. If it is
determined that the grievor is disabled within the meaning of the collective
agreement, then the company and the union have a joint obligation to review the
matter pursuant to Rule 17.2.
For all of the foregoing reasons,
the grievance is allowed in part. The grievor is to be reinstated in
employment forthwith, without loss of seniority, and with compensation for loss
of earnings from the date of the hearing of this matter, April 30, 2003, until
the date the grievor actually returns to work or any other arrangement is made
acceptable to the parties. Reinstatement is, as in the previous case,
conditional upon the grievor’s being medically examined in respect of his
physical and medical condition by a physician mutually acceptable to the
parties, or appointed by the arbitrator failing their agreement, and found fit
to return to his duties. I retain jurisdiction for the purpose of dealing
with any issues relating to the implementation of this award, and its
completion.
DATED AT OTTAWA this 16th
day of May, 2003.
,
Arbitrator.