Date: 20071221
Docket: T-1428-06
Citation: 2007 FC 1362
Ottawa, Ontario, December 21,
2007
PRESENT: THE HONOURABLE MADAM JUSTICE DAWSON
BETWEEN:
CANADA POST CORPORATION
Applicant
and
CAROLYN POLLARD and
ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF CANADA
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1] Prior to 2004, it was not uncommon in rural
or semi-rural areas to see vehicles delivering mail while driving on the wrong,
or left, side of the road. This practice allowed the driver to reach through
the driver-side window in order to pick-up or deposit mail in a rural mailbox
(RMB). In June of 2004, Canada Post Corporation (Canada Post) advised its
delivery personnel that they were no longer permitted to drive on the left
shoulder of roadways to deliver mail because this violated highway traffic
laws. Delivery routes were restructured in order to ensure that a Rural and
Suburban Mail Carrier (RSMC) was not required to deliver mail on the left
shoulder of a roadway.
[2] This
was the genesis of this application for judicial review.
[3] In
November of 2004, Carolyn Pollard was employed by Canada Post as a RSMC in Brampton,
Ontario. After her delivery route was restructured and she was instructed to
drive on the right side of the road and deliver mail through the front passenger-side
window of her vehicle, Ms. Pollard, without attempting to perform her duties,
exercised her right under Part II of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C.
1985, c. L-2 (Code), to refuse dangerous work. She explained her refusal in
the following way:
The main safety concern is
that the route is absolutely impossible to deliver from the driver’s side
across my flyers, my parcels and my tray of mail out the window and open the
door to the mailbox put the mail in and lift the flag. I cannot get my legs even
out from under the steering wheel to lift myself up and over mail. Also to undo
my seatbelt I am at risk. I deliver to 740 homes by one day I would be in pain
never mind every day. Also in the window slipping on the mail when it gets wet
changing it from back to front and when the winter you cannot even get close to
the boxes.
[4] A
Health and Safety Officer (HSO) designated under the Code investigated Ms.
Pollard's refusal to work and determined, pursuant to subsection 129(4) of the
Code, that no danger existed for Ms. Pollard. The HSO did, however, direct
Canada Post to complete a hazard assessment of the work of all RSMCs who worked
alone under the authority of the Brampton Hale Road Postal Station in order to
determine any known or foreseeable safety hazards the RSMCs might be exposed to
while delivering or picking-up mail. Canada Post was also instructed to
develop safe work procedures and to train relevant employees in those
procedures.
[5] Ms.
Pollard appealed the finding of no danger to the Canada Appeals Office on
Occupational Health and Safety (CAOOHS) and a hearing proceeded before an
appeals officer. The appeals officer allowed the appeal and rescinded the
decision of the HSO. Specifically, the appeals officer found that a danger
existed for Ms. Pollard in connection with the in-vehicle RMB deliveries and
pick-ups made through the front passenger-side window of her delivery vehicle
in the following two circumstances:
First, C. Pollard has to stretch
and twist her body to reach from her driver’s seat through the front passenger
side window of her vehicle to deliver mail to approximately 700 RMBs stops per
day, 5 days a week, without having received instruction and training in an
ergonomic work procedure appropriate to her physical condition, the conditions
of her vehicle and the conditions of the different delivery and pick-up work
places (the mail boxes’ positions). In addition, several of the RMBs along her
route are not in compliance with [Canada Post] positioning and placement
specifications, such that the distance to deliver mail to the RMBs is greater.
Secondly, a danger exists when C.
Pollard has to make rural mail delivery stops where the shoulders of the road
are too narrow or non-existent due to curbs, such that she cannot pull her vehicle
off the traveled part of the roadway. Also, a danger exists because her vehicle
is not equipped with warning devices to warn other drivers that her mail
vehicle is stopped on the shoulder of the roadway for mail delivery. As a
result, she is exposed, in fair and inclement weather, to the hazard of being
struck by other cars and heavy trucks on roadways where speed can vary between
40 and 80 kilometres per hour.
[6] In
consequence, the appeals officer issued a direction to Canada Post in the
following terms:
Therefore, you are HEREBY
DIRECTED, pursuant to subparagraph 145(2)(a)(i) of the Canada Labour
Code, Part II, to take appropriate and immediate measures to correct these
two hazards that constitute a danger.
Furthermore, you are HEREBY
DIRECTED, pursuant to paragraph 145(2)(b) of the Canada Labour Code, Part
II, to cease RSMC in-vehicle RMB delivery activity carried out by C. Pollard
until such time as you have complied with the present direction, which does not
prevent you from taking all measures necessary for the implementation of the
direction.
[7] Canada
Post brings this application for judicial review of that decision and
direction. The Attorney General of Canada did not participate in this
proceeding.
The issues to be determined
[8] In
their memoranda of argument, the parties raised a number of issues. In my
view, four substantive issues must be resolved. They are:
1. Did the appeals officer err by giving no weight to a
settlement agreement signed by Ms. Pollard in which she agreed to withdraw her
appeal to the CAOOHS?
2. Did the appeals officer exceed his jurisdiction by considering
issues of traffic safety?
3. Did the appeals officer breach the duty of fairness that he
owed to Canada Post by failing to provide it with an opportunity to adduce
evidence and make submissions about two issues raised in his decision?
4. Did the appeals officer err by finding that the ergonomic
hazards faced by Ms. Pollard constituted a danger under Part II of the
Code?
Summary of the Court's
conclusions
[9] In
these reasons, I find that:
1. The appeals officer did not err by giving no weight to the
settlement agreement signed by Ms. Pollard in which she agreed to withdraw her
appeal to the CAOOHS.
2. The appeals officer did not exceed his jurisdiction by
considering traffic safety issues.
3. The appeals officer breached the duty of fairness that he owed
to Canada Post in one respect only. The officer failed to provide Canada Post
with an opportunity to adduce evidence and make submissions about issues of
traffic safety.
4. The appeals officer did not err by finding that the ergonomic
hazards faced by Ms. Pollard constituted a danger under Part II of the
Code.
5. No costs are awarded to any participating party because
success was divided on the application.
[10] Throughout
these reasons, reference is made to provisions of the Code. Various relevant
provisions are set out in Schedule A to these reasons.
Standard of review
[11] The
standard of review applicable to a substantive decision of an administrative
tribunal is determined by resort to the pragmatic and functional analysis,
which considers the presence of a privative clause, the purpose of the
governing legislation, the nature of the question under review, and the
expertise of the decision-maker. The Supreme Court of Canada has cautioned
that “reviewing courts must be careful not to subsume distinct questions into
one broad standard of review. Multiple standards of review should be adopted
when there are clearly defined questions that engage different concerns under
the pragmatic and functional approach.” Given that the presence or absence of
a privative clause is likely to be the same for all aspects of an
administrative decision, the possibility of more than one standard of review
will “largely depend on whether there exist questions of different natures and
whether those questions engage the decision maker’s expertise and the
legislative objective in different ways." See: Lévis
(City) v. Fraternité des policiers de Lévis Inc., [2007] 1 S.C.R. 591 at
paragraph 19.
[12] I
now turn to the elements of the pragmatic and functional analysis.
a. The existence of a privative
clause
[13] The
Code contains two privative causes in respect of appeals officers. They are
contained in sections 146.3 and 146.4, which provide as follows:
146.3 An appeals officer’s decision is final and shall not
be questioned or reviewed in any court.
146.4 No order may be made, process entered or proceeding
taken in any court, whether by way of injunction, certiorari, prohibition,
quo warranto or otherwise, to question, review, prohibit or restrain
an appeals officer in any proceeding under this Part.
|
146.3 Les décisions de l’agent d’appel
sont définitives et non susceptibles de recours judiciaires.
146.4 Il n’est admis aucun recours ou
décision judiciaire — notamment par voie d’injonction, de certiorari, de prohibition ou de quo warranto
— visant à contester, réviser, empêcher ou limiter l’action de l’agent
d’appel exercée dans le cadre de la présente partie.
|
[14] These
provisions have been described as "strong privative causes", and they
reflect Parliament’s intent that great deference be paid to the decisions of
appeal officers. See: Martin v. Canada (Attorney General), [2005] 4 F.C.R.
637 at paragraph 16 (C.A.) (Martin C.A.).
b. Purpose of the governing
legislation
[15] The
purpose of Part II of the Code is set out in section 122.1 of the Code: to
prevent accidents and injuries in the workplace. The provisions of the Code
relating to appeals officers give the officers broad investigative powers to
determine whether a situation of danger exists and, if required, give appeals
officers extensive remedial powers. See: section 145.1, subsection 146.1(1),
and section 146.2 of the Code.
[16] As
the purpose of the legislation is to protect employees, greater
deference should be shown to decisions of appeals officers. See: Martin v.
Canada (Attorney General), [2004] 1 F.C.R. 625 at
paragraph 36 (T.D.) (Martin F.C.).
c. The nature of the question
[17] Three
questions put in issue by Canada Post attract the application of the pragmatic
and functional analysis.
[18] The
first question puts in issue the officer's decision to give no weight to the
settlement agreement signed by Ms. Pollard. Canada Post argues that this issue
required the officer to interpret the settlement agreement, which raises a
question of law. On the other hand, Ms. Pollard argues that the question
before the officer was whether she properly rescinded the settlement agreement.
I agree that the appeals officer was required to hear and consider evidence
concerning the agreement, its purported rescission, and the conduct of the
parties. Thus, the question of whether, notwithstanding the settlement
agreement, the appeal should have proceeded before the appeals officer is one
of mixed fact and law.
[19] The
second question of whether the appeals officer had jurisdiction to address the
traffic safety issues is said by Canada Post to be a jurisdictional issue.
However, such characterization is not, in my view, helpful. What is in issue
is the appeals officer's finding that Ms. Pollard did raise traffic safety
concerns as part of her work refusal. That finding is one of fact.
[20] Finally,
the question of the existence of a danger under the Code is a question of mixed
fact and law.
d. The expertise of the
decision-maker
[21] The
question of the effect of the settlement agreement has a legal component and,
in my view, an appeals officer does not have greater expertise than the Court
when applying general principles of contract law. To the extent that the
officer was required to consider evidence about the rescission of the agreement,
evidence of this sort strays from the core competence of an appeals officer,
whose expertise relates primarily to workplace health and safety.
[22] The
question of whether the traffic safety issues were properly before the appeals
officer is intensely fact driven. Appeals officers are required to consider
work refusals and to administer the health and safety provisions of the Code.
They are granted broad investigative and remedial powers. An appeal before an
appeals officer is de novo. See: Martin C.A., cited above, at
paragraph 28. On this basis, I find that an appeals officer’s expertise
is greater than that of the Court when determining what hazards or dangers are
put in issue when an employee refuses to work.
[23] The
determination of whether circumstances in a workplace constitute a danger as
defined in the Code engages the expertise of appeals officers. They are able
to assess firsthand the workplace and their expertise is superior to that of
the Court on questions of this kind.
e. Conclusion with respect to
the standard of review
[24] The
question of the effect of the settlement agreement is one of mixed fact and law,
and lies outside of the core competence of an appeals officer. Weighing those
factors against the existence of the privative clauses and the purpose of the Code,
I find that this issue should be reviewed on the standard of reasonableness.
[25] The
appeals officer's decisions with respect to whether the issue of traffic safety
was properly before him and whether a danger existed under Part II of the Code
were fact-based, and they fell within the officer's area of expertise. When
this is considered together with the privative clauses present and the purpose
of the legislation, I believe that these findings should be reviewed on the
standard of patent unreasonableness.
[26] Finally,
no pragmatic and functional analysis is required with respect to the issue of
the alleged breaches of procedural fairness. It is for the Court to determine
whether, in the specific circumstances of this case, the appeals officer
complied with the requirements of fairness. No deference is owed to the
appeals officer on this issue.
[27] Having
identified the appropriate standards of review to be applied to the decision of
the appeals officer, I turn to the specific errors asserted by Canada Post.
Did the appeals officer err by giving
no weight to the settlement agreement signed by Ms. Pollard in which she
agreed to withdraw her appeal to the CAOOHS?
[28] I
have chosen to deal with this issue first because, logically, it is capable of
being dispositive of the entire application. I note, however, that neither
party strenuously pursued this issue in significant detail in their oral or
written submissions.
[29] The
parties agree that, prior to the hearing before the appeals officer, Ms.
Pollard, her union, and Canada Post signed a settlement agreement in which she
agreed to withdraw her appeal from the decision of the HSO. Canada Post raised
the issue of the settlement agreement at the appeal hearing, advising at the
outset that it would be pursuing the issue in the course of the hearing but
that it was "content with that [issue] going through evidence."
[30] The
appeals officer gave no weight to the agreement because, in his opinion,
"the agreement was inadequate for [Canada Post] to meet its duties under
Part II and it is therefore to be ignored."
[31] It
is, I believe, well-settled law that a tribunal is not bound to accept the
terms of a settlement negotiated between the parties, particularly where the
tribunal's constituting legislation imposes upon it a broad statutory mandate.
See, for example, Re Consumers' Distributing Co. Ltd. and Ontario Human
Rights Commission et al. (1987), 36 D.L.R. (4th) 589 (Ont. Div. Ct.).
[32] In
this case, the Code grants a broad mandate to CAOOHS to further the purpose of
the prevention of accidents and injuries in the workplace. The settlement
agreement appears to be confined to the redress of Ms. Pollard's various
grievances. While the agreement does refer to training to be provided to
Ms.Pollard, it does not address or resolve the broader safety issues raised by
Ms. Pollard in her appeal from the HSO’s decision. That fact distinguishes the
circumstances of this case from those in Walton and Canada
(Correctional Service), [2005] C.L.C.A.O.D. No. 7 (QL), relied upon by
Canada Post.
[33] In
my view, because the settlement agreement did not resolve the broader safety
issues, the appeals officer's decision that the settlement agreement did not
meet all of Canada Post's duties under Part II of the Code withstands a
somewhat probing examination. It was not, therefore, unreasonable.
[34] In
the event that I erred in determining the proper standard of review to be
applied to this question and the proper standard of review is patent
unreasonableness, because the decision withstands scrutiny on the
reasonableness standard, it follows that it also withstands scrutiny on the
more deferential standard of patent unreasonableness.
[35] Finally,
and in any event, the evidence before the appeals officer included a letter
dated September 20, 2005, from the CAOOHS to Ms. Pollard. This letter
acknowledged receipt of the settlement agreement, but noted that Ms. Pollard’s
right to appeal the decision of the HSO was a personal right and that the
settlement agreement expressed what the CAOOHS characterized to be "an, as
yet, unfulfilled intent" to withdraw the appeal. The CAOOHS therefore
advised that it required Ms. Pollard to supply her written confirmation of
withdrawal of the appeal before it would proceed to close the file. Ms.
Pollard replied by letter dated September 26, 2005, advising that she felt
that she was coerced into signing the agreement and that she wanted to proceed
with the appeal.
[36] When
questioned at the hearing by counsel for Canada Post about the settlement agreement,
Ms. Pollard testified that the settlement "was cancelled" and that she
had "a letter from Mr. Gilbert [of Canada Post] stating that the
memorandum was cancelled." Ms. Pollard agreed that this letter was sent by
Canada Post after she had notified the CAOOHS that she did not intend to be
bound by the settlement agreement. No contrary evidence on this point was
adduced before the appeals officer by Canada Post.
[37] This
uncontradicted evidence that the settlement agreement was cancelled or
rescinded supports the reasonableness of the officer's conclusion not to give
any weight to the agreement.
Did the appeals officer exceed
his jurisdiction by considering traffic hazards?
[38] As
set out above at paragraph 5 of these reasons, the appeals officer found that a
danger within the meaning of Part II of the Code existed for Ms. Pollard in
respect of both the ergonomic and traffic hazards related to her work. Canada
Post says that Ms. Pollard's refusal to work, the HSO’s investigation, and the
appeal of the HSO’s decision were limited to Ms. Pollard's refusal to deliver
mail to RMBs due to ergonomic issues. It follows, Canada Post argues, that the
appeals officer's decision that he had jurisdiction to consider traffic safety
issues was patently unreasonable and that he exceeded his jurisdiction.
[39] The
appeals officer's reasons on this point begin at paragraph 79 of his decision.
In brief, the officer found, as a fact, that the refusal to work was not
related only to the ergonomic hazards associated with rural mail delivery and
that, in any event, he had jurisdiction to consider the issue of traffic safety
even if it was not raised in Ms. Pollard’s refusal to work complaint.
[40] In
order to find that traffic safety concerns were part of the basis of Ms.
Pollard’s refusal to work, the appeals officer relied upon:
(i) Exhibit D-6, which included Ms. Pollard's letter of
October 6, 2004, to the HSO that enclosed correspondence between Ms. Pollard
and Canada Post. The correspondence confirmed that Ms. Pollard's concerns
dealt with both ergonomic and highway traffic hazards.
(ii) Exhibit D-5, which included the HSO’s notes of a meeting held
on November 25, 2004, to investigate Ms. Pollard's refusal to work. The notes
confirmed that both ergonomic and traffic hazards were discussed.
(iii) Exhibit D-5, which included Ms. Pollard’s refusal to work
registration form, quoted above at paragraph 3 of these reasons. This form
recorded the following concern: “[A]lso to undo my seatbelt I am at risk.”
(iv) Exhibit D-4, which included the HSO’s investigative report,
decision, and direction to Canada Post. The decision recorded the HSO’s
finding that there was no evidence regarding formal safe work procedures on issues
such as signage on delivery vehicles, the use of four-way lights, and whether a
RSMC should get out of the delivery vehicle while stopped on the shoulder of
the road. The direction issued by the HSO required Canada Post to complete a
hazard assessment in respect of both health and safety hazards.
(v) Exhibit D-1, which included the notice of appeal from the
HSO’s decision. In the notice of appeal, Ms. Pollard stated "[i]f I am
involved in an accident while not being in the correct seated safety belted
position this could result in serious bodily injuries or death … ."
[41] From
this evidence, the appeals officer concluded that Ms. Pollard's refusal to work
related to traffic safety concerns (as well as ergonomic concerns) and that the
HSO ought to have been aware that Ms. Pollard's health and safety concerns
related to both ergonomic and traffic-related hazards.
[42] A
patently unreasonable decision is one based upon an erroneous finding of fact
made in a perverse or capricious manner or without regard to the material
before the decision-maker. See: paragraph 18.1(4)(d) of the Federal
Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7. As Mr. Justice Binnie, writing for the
majority, explained in Canadian Union of Public Employees (C.U.P.E.) v. Ontario
(Minister of Labour), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 539 at paragraph 164:
[L]ike the correctness standard,
the patently unreasonable standard admits only one answer. A correctness
approach means that there is only one proper answer. A patently unreasonable
one that means that there could have been many appropriate answers, but not the
one reached by the decision maker.
[43] Applying
that standard of review to the appeals officer's decision, I have verified that
the evidence was as stated by the officer. I find that such evidence supported
the officer’s conclusions that traffic safety issues were identified by Ms.
Pollard and that the HSO ought to have been aware of this. In the result, the
officer's conclusions were open to him and they cannot be said to be patently
unreasonable.
[44] It
is not, therefore, necessary for me to consider the appeals officer's alternate
finding that he could have dealt with the traffic safety issues even if they
were not raised in Ms. Pollard’s refusal to work complaint.
Did the appeals officer breach
the duty of fairness by failing to provide Canada Post with an
opportunity to deal with two issues raised in his decision?
[45] Canada
Post asserts that the appeals officer breached the duty of fairness in two
respects:
(a) Canada Post argues that the officer erred by failing to
provide it with an opportunity to make submissions and adduce evidence in
respect of the officer’s reliance upon the provisions Part XIV (Materials
Handling) of the Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations,
SOR/86-304 (Regulations). Canada Post says that the relevant provision was not
raised by the parties or the appeals officer during the hearing.
(b) Canada Post argues that the officer erred by failing to
provide it with an opportunity to make submissions and adduce evidence in
respect of traffic safety issues, which were found to form part of the
officer’s inquiry. Canada Post says that the appeals officer specifically
advised that it would be afforded such an opportunity.
[46] The
Supreme Court of Canada considered the nature of the participatory rights
required by the duty of fairness in Baker v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817. At paragraph 30
of its reasons, the majority explained that the heart of this analysis is
"whether, considering all the circumstances, those whose interests were
affected had a meaningful opportunity to present their case fully and
fairly."
[47] In
the present case, it is accepted by the parties that the appeals officer owed a
duty of fairness to the parties and that this duty included the right to be
informed of the case to be met and the right to adduce evidence and make submissions
on relevant issues.
[48] What
is at issue is whether the appeals officer deprived Canada Post of a meaningful
opportunity to present its case fully and fairly. I turn to each instance of
alleged unfairness.
a. The Regulations
[49] With
respect to the Regulations, Canada Post had argued at the hearing that Ms.
Pollard had an existing back injury so that any danger she would experience was
the result of her own personal health situation. The appeals officer, on the
evidence, rejected the submission that Ms. Pollard had an ongoing health problem
that required formal job accommodation. The appeals officer went on, at
paragraph 97 of his reasons, to find that the "average person"
concept contemplated a range of physical and mental frailties normal to the
human condition. The appeals officer found further support for this view in
section 14.48 of the Regulations.
[50] Canada
Post complains that the appeals officer failed to advise the parties that he
was considering the application of this provision, thereby denying Canada Post
of the opportunity to make submissions as to its applicability in this case.
[51] In
my respectful view, the appeals officer did not breach the requirements of
procedural fairness by referring to section 14.48 of the Regulations. This is
so because it was proper and foreseeable that the appeals officer would have
regard to regulations enacted pursuant to the legislation that he was charged
with administering. Moreover, the officer's reference to the Regulations was
incidental to the officer's decision that an ergonomic danger existed. The
Regulations were relied upon by the appeals officer only to buttress his
opinion that any danger that Ms. Pollard faced was not the result of her personal
health situation.
[52] In
this context, the failure of the appeals officer to advise the parties that he
intended to mention a particular regulatory provision in his reasons did not
deprive Canada Post of a meaningful opportunity to present its case fully and
fairly.
b. Traffic Safety Issues
[53] Canada
Post argues that, during the course of the hearing, its counsel expressed
concern as to the relevance of evidence received by the appeals officer
concerning traffic safety. It says that “on virtually every occasion when
Counsel for Canada Post raised its concerns, the Appeals Officer clearly stated
that if he considered that the issue of traffic safety would be a material
consideration in his deliberations, he would so advise the parties and provide
them with an opportunity to present evidence and argument on the issue”.
Subsequently, the appeals officer rendered his decision and a direction on
traffic safety. Canada Post asserts that it was not provided with an
opportunity to adduce evidence and make submissions on the traffic safety issues
and that this constitutes a breach of procedural fairness.
[54] Ms.
Pollard responds that no breach occurred because:
(i) she and her representative raised traffic safety issues at
the appeal hearing and led evidence relating to traffic hazards;
(ii)
in considering whether to admit this evidence, the appeals
officer stated on a number of occasions during the hearing that he would have
to determine whether his appeal mandate extended to consideration of traffic
safety issues;
(iii)
on April 25, 2006, during the hearing, the appeals officer gave
notice to the parties that he considered the traffic safety issues to be relevant
and indicated that they needed to be considered; and
(iv) the appeals officer invited the parties to make submissions on
the traffic safety issues.
[55] Ms.
Pollard also argues that a number of references to the transcript relied upon
by Canada Post in support of it submission do not relate to the traffic safety
issues (for example, the exchange on page 38 of the transcript of the hearing
on April 26, 2006, which is found at page 708 of the applicant’s record).
[56] A
review of the transcript reveals that, throughout the hearing, there was a
tension between the parties as to the proper scope of inquiry before the
appeals officer. To illustrate, Ms. Pollard, in her opening statement,
sought to raise a number of matters that were outside the jurisdiction of the
appeals officer (see pages 23 through 29 of the transcript of the hearing on February
16, 2006, which are found at page 544 of the applicant’s record and
following). By contrast, Canada Post argued that a narrower focus was
appropriate, stating that the appeals officer was to put himself in the shoes
of the HSO in order to determine whether the HSO’s decision was sound in law.
[57] The
tension was elevated because, while Canada Post was represented by counsel,
Ms. Pollard was not. She was represented by a union representative, who
candidly admitted to his lack of familiarity with the process. As a result,
Ms. Pollard was not always clear on the nature of the issues she was
raising before the appeals officer. For example, at one point, her
representative described the act of stretching while not wearing a seatbelt to
be an ergonomic issue (see pages 135 through 136 of the transcript of the
hearing on February 16, 2006, which is found at page 572 of the applicant’s
record).
[58] The
tension was also compounded by the appeals officer's desire to provide a degree
of latitude to Ms. Pollard and her representative, and by his failure to make a
definitive ruling during the hearing on the scope of the issues properly before
him. These matters are reflected, I believe, in Schedule B to these reasons.
Schedule B is a brief survey of the evidence and submissions at the hearing concerning
the issues of traffic safety and procedural fairness.
[59] Dealing
more specifically with the evidence, the hearing proceeded on February 16,
April 25, and April 26, 2006. On February 16, 2006, counsel for Canada
Post objected to the relevance of certain documents referred to during Ms.
Pollard's direct examination (particularly a list of mailboxes that were said
to be unsafe for delivery). The documents were received by the appeals
officer, notwithstanding that, with respect to the list of unsafe mailboxes, he
was "uncertain, still in my mind, what this is relating to and what is
relevant" (page 153 of the transcript of February 16, 2006). The appeals
officer went on to advise the parties that:
THE CHAIRPERSON: Exactly.
But given that I’m authorized by the Code to issue a direction pursuant to
145.2, it leaves the question in the Tribunal’s mind as to what is their
responsibility should in the evidence they become aware of a hazard in
connection with essentially the issue that they’re looking at.
In other, in
evidence, if I suddenly am convinced that a danger existed with regard, I’ll be
specific, with regard to somebody smashing into the back of a vehicle.
I’ll leave it for
your argument as to what I should be doing with that in terms of should I be
looking at it? Should I interpret my powers under the Code, to address it?
Now, to try and
make certain that we don’t leave parties with a sense of unfairness, often in a
case, once I’ve heard it, if I feel that I’m going to be going into another
area that would not have necessarily come to the understanding of the parties
during the hearing, then what I’ll do is reconvene the hearing and I’ll be
saying to you, I am considering something that perhaps you didn’t appreciate
and therefore I’ll take an opportunity to give you time to give evidence and
argumentation with that.
We’re not at that
stage but I’m just going to indicate to you that when I’m deciding whether to
take a document, part of it is so that I have [a] picture of the complete
situation so that, at the end of it, I can say to myself, I’m satisfied that I
looked at all of the aspects of the hazards that were involved in the
circumstance and that if I have concerns, then I’ll raise it with parties.
And I think when I
repeat the phrase from time to time, that you’ll have an opportunity to argue
its weight in summation, that I’m taking you into an area that I think that you
may not have fairly anticipated, then I give you a full opportunity to
readdress it.
I don’t know how much
more I can say than that. In fact, one of the challenges in a hearing where
you have a party that’s unrepresented by counsel is that you help with the
process but you not wander into the case and it’s a tightrope and I think I
walked it as far as I want to. [underlining
added]
[60] On
April 25, 2006, counsel for Canada Post again objected that evidence with
respect to traffic safety was not relevant (page 70 of the transcript of April
25, 2006). The appeals officer responded as follows:
THE CHAIRPERSON: I will certainly agree with you that there is
an issue that I’m going to have to resolve in my decision, and that’s with
regard to the matters of the other – about the safety concerns off the road.
Certainly, Health and Safety Officer Manella
had concerns that he ended up issuing a direction. He found no danger but he
still issued a direction and I’m satisfied by his direction that he was looking
at other things than just the ergonomics. He simply decided that that didn’t
constitute a danger.
Now, one of the things that I think you have
an opportunity in arguing this is to address that very thing as to what
consideration I should be giving to that.
I think given that the review by an appeal
officer is (inaudible) and I certainly accept the fact that what precipitated
the appeal is an appeal under Section 129(7), which is the refusal to work and
not the direction issued under 145(1) of the Canada Labour Code.
But at the same time, there is a totality of
circumstance here that I just feel, at least in gathering evidence here that
I have to listen to, and certainly make some decision in my final decision with
regard to whether I should be venturing in on those other aspects.
Certainly one of the things, whenever there is
a review pursuant to Subsection 129(7) is to decide if the danger existed and
what direction ought to have been, and what direction is required, if there is
a finding of danger.
And I certainly, just sitting here, I’m kind
of thinking that I would want to hear the evidence with regard to the total
situation so that I can decide later in my mind whether or not the danger did
extend to the things that Health and Safety Officer Manella perhaps had not
properly reviewed, or given weight.
I’m not quite sure where I’m going with it,
but it certainly strikes me that I should hear the evidence and hear the
arguments from both parties as to my mandate under the code, under my review
here as to whether or not I should be looking beyond the ergonomic issue.
I’m certainly willing to take your argument on
that but I will give you advance notice that I’m considering it. It’s an issue
that I think needs to be considered.
And I’m saying that to an extent too because
some of the evidence that was provided by way of documents and the reports, the
various reports, certainly indicate that Health and Safety Officer Manella was
aware of some other issues ongoing. And so as I say, I just think I have to
look at the evidence and then make some decision as to where my mandate is with
the final decision on this.
[underlining added]
[61] Later
that day, the appeals officer repeated his uncertainty as to the proper scope
of the hearing in the following terms:
THE CHAIRPERSON: Okay. As I’ve
indicated to Mr. Bird already, I have some question in my mind as to whether or
not my mandate for reviewing an appeal under Section 129(7), Ms. Pollard’s
appeal, includes all of the evidence that I’m going to receive with regard to
safety issues around that situation.
I know that, and I can’t cite a case, but I
know the federal court has said in the past that safety officers cannot be
expected to go in and essentially do fishing expeditions. If an employee were
to say there’s a danger here and not really identify what the danger is, just
say I’m not sure but I’m certain that there’s a danger here.
The federal court has said, no, you can’t turn
it as that vague.
They have not come up with anything that goes
to the opposite, which would be employee complains about a danger, a safety
officer goes in, there are several dangers around them, they focus only on the
one that the employee raises with them and leaves.
Whether or not that is, whether or not the
federal court would be saying, or whether or not any review body would say
well, you ought to have looked at it and not just been limited to what the
employee said. It’s something that’s there and you could see that it was a
contravention or even more seriously, a danger, then I’m not so certain that
anybody, if it ever was reviewed in a court, would say no, you shouldn’t have
looked at that.
It goes a little bit to that. It goes a little
bit to exactly what the issue is before me, and that is how Safety Officer
Manella was, as I’m saying, from the evidence, was made aware of a certain
situation that was evolving, suggested a solution, which was internal complaint
resolution, and then, upon her refusal, decided one matter was not constituting
a danger and felt obligated to issue a direction in the other.
Since my review brings me into face with all
the facts, the question I have to ask myself is would anybody expect me not to
look at other areas that through the evidence I’m receiving that might
constitute a danger, even though Health and Safety Officer Manella did not.
[underlining added]
[62] During
final argument, counsel for Canada Post reiterated its position that Ms.
Pollard's complaint dealt strictly with ergonomic issues. After hearing the
final arguments of both parties, the appeals officer made the following
comments:
THE CHAIRPERSON: All right then.
With that, we have completed this portion, this
part of the appeal process.
As I indicated, what I’ll do now is I’ll return
to my office and I’ll be going over the material and making my analysis.
If I have any questions I’ll relay them through
Madame Paris or if there are issues that I wish to, that I am going to
indicate to parties that I’ll be pursuing in my direction, then I will certainly,
as I indicated to Mr. Bird earlier, provide parties with an opportunity to
provide new evidence on that. [underlining added]
[63] A
fair reading of the transcript shows, in my view, that the appeals
officer, during the course of the hearing, advised the parties that:
·
he had not resolved in his own mind whether the traffic safety
issues were properly before him;
·
he wanted to receive evidence from Ms. Pollard so that he could
later decide whether the danger extended traffic safety issues;
·
after hearing the evidence and argument as to his mandate, he
would consider whether he should be looking beyond the ergonomic issue; and
·
if he decided that he would deal with the traffic safety issues,
he would reconvene the hearing and allow the parties to adduce evidence.
[64] With
the benefit of hindsight, it would have been prudent for Canada Post to
adduce at least some evidence about traffic safety. Nevertheless, by concluding
only in his final decision that the issue of traffic safety was properly before
him, without advising Canada Post of that conclusion and allowing it to adduce
evidence as to traffic safety, the appeals officer deprived Canada Post of the
opportunity to present its case fully and fairly. In so doing, the officer
breached the duty of procedural fairness that he owed to Canada Post.
Did the appeals officer err by
finding that the ergonomic hazards faced by Ms. Pollard constituted a danger
under Part II of the Code?
[65] For
the purpose of Part II of the Code, “danger” is defined in subsection 122(1) in
the following terms:
"danger"
means any existing or potential hazard or condition or any current or future
activity that could reasonably be expected to cause injury or illness to a
person exposed to it before the hazard or condition can be corrected, or the
activity altered, whether or not the injury or illness occurs immediately
after the exposure to the hazard, condition or activity, and includes any
exposure to a hazardous substance that is likely to result in a chronic
illness, in disease or in damage to the reproductive system;
|
«danger
» Situation, tâche ou risque — existant ou éventuel — susceptible de causer
des blessures à une personne qui y est exposée, ou de la rendre malade — même
si ses effets sur l’intégrité physique ou la santé ne sont pas immédiats — ,
avant que, selon le cas, le risque soit écarté, la situation corrigée ou la
tâche modifiée. Est notamment visée toute exposition à une substance
dangereuse susceptible d’avoir des effets à long terme sur la santé ou le
système reproducteur.
|
[66] As
a matter of law, in order to find that an existing or potential hazard
constitutes a “danger” within the meaning of Part II of the Code, the facts
must establish the following:
(1) the
existing or potential hazard or condition, or the current or future activity in
question will likely present itself;
(2) an
employee will be exposed to the hazard, condition, or activity when it presents
itself;
(3) exposure
to the hazard, condition, or activity is capable of causing injury or illness
to the employee at any time, but not necessarily every time; and
(4) the
injury or illness will likely occur before the hazard or condition can be
corrected or the activity altered.
[67] The
final element requires consideration of the circumstances under which the
hazard, condition, or activity could be expected to cause injury or illness.
There must be a reasonable possibility that such circumstances will occur in
the future. See: Verville v. Canada (Correctional Services)
(2004), 253 F.T.R. 294 at paragraphs 33-36.
[68] In
Martin C.A., cited above, the Federal Court of Appeal provided
additional guidance on the proper approach to determine whether a potential
hazard or future activity could be expected to cause injury or illness. At
paragraph 37 of its reasons, the Court observed that a finding of “danger”
cannot be grounded in speculation or hypothesis. The task of an appeals
officer, in the Court’s view, was to weigh the evidence and determine whether
it was more likely than not that the circumstances expected to give rise to the
injury would take place in the future.
[69] In
the present case, the appeals officer concluded that the ergonomic hazards
faced by Ms. Pollard constituted a danger. The following evidence was
before the officer:
• Canada Post required that all RSMCs deliver mail from the
right-hand side of the road and instructed Ms. Pollard that delivery was to be
made through the front passenger-side window of her vehicle;
• Ms. Pollard testified that, working alone, she would have to
stretch and twist from her seat in order to deliver mail through the front
passenger-side window of her vehicle;
• Ms. Pollard testified that the stretching and twisting
required would cause wear and tear on her back, arm, shoulder, and hip;
• Ms. Marsh, a RSMC who had delivered mail on Ms. Pollard's
rural mail route, testified that delivering mail from the right-hand side of
the road put a lot of strain on her upper back, lower back, the right side of
her arm and the left side of her body, which generally corroborated
Ms. Pollard’s testimony;
• Ms. Pollard indicated that she twisted her back and bruised
her leg on the one occasion that she tried to deliver mail through the front
passenger-side window of her vehicle;
• Ms. Pollard’s doctor provided a note that indicated that she
would not be fit to deliver mail through the front passenger-side window of her
vehicle due to the twisting involved;
• Ms. Pollard testified that she delivered to approximately 675
mailboxes each day and that it took her approximately four hours to complete
delivery of her route;
• An ergonomic study, which was conducted by Canada Post's
internal ergonomist, concluded that ergonomic concerns faced by RSMCs increased
as the delivery rate increased;
• The ergonomic study expressed concern that there were
long-term injury implications where the delivery rate exceeded 37-40 mailboxes
per hour;
• A video-tape confirmed that a number of RMBs along
Ms. Pollard’s route were leaning away from the roadway; and
• Documentary evidence indicated that, in order to meet Canada
Post’s standards, a RMB must be positioned where the RSMC can reach it, and the
post of the mailbox must be fixed at such a point to ensure that the opening of
the mailbox is at the outside edge of the shoulder of the road.
[70] When
the above-noted facts are considered in light of the requirements for finding
that a danger exists under Part II of the Code, it is my view that the
determination made by the appeals officer was open to him on the evidence and
was therefore not patently unreasonable.
[71] I
now turn to the errors asserted by Canada Post. They may be summarized as
follows:
a. The appeals officer erred by determining that a finding of
danger could be made based upon an ergonomic movement that was within the total
control of the employee.
b. The appeals officer erred by determining that a finding of
danger could be made on the basis that Canada Post had a duty under Part II of
the Code to inform its employees of the options to perform the work in question
and to provide them with the necessary training.
c. The appeals officer erred by finding that there was an
inherent risk of injury for delivery frequencies in excess of 40 RMBs per hour
to the point that it constituted a danger under any and all potential
circumstances.
[72] Each
asserted error is considered in turn.
a. Did the appeals officer err
in law by determining that a finding of danger could be made based upon an
ergonomic movement that was within the total control of the employee?
[73] Canada
Post submits that, given the following circumstances, the appeals officer
erred:
(i) the work environment, body positioning, and type of ergonomic
movement performed were solely within the discretion of the employee;
(i) Ms. Pollard's inability to complete the duties of her
position was caused by a medical condition specific to her;
(iii) Ms. Pollard did not specify which movement or motion
constituted a "danger"; and
(iv) the ergonomic movements constitute a "normal condition of
employment" and are therefore exempt from the provisions related to
dangerous work pursuant to paragraph 128(2)(b) of the Code.
[74] Each
circumstance is considered in turn.
i. Ergonomic movement
within the discretion of the RSMC
[75] Canada
Post relies upon the decisions of Canadian National Railway Co. and Tetley,
[2001] C.L.C.A.O.D. No. 21 (QL), and Johnson and Canadian National Railway
Company, [1999] C.I.R.B.D. No. 41 (QL), to argue that there was no danger
for Ms. Pollard because she controlled her environment and decided what
body positions or movement to use in order to effect delivery. Canada Post
also says that Ms. Pollard controlled the type of vehicle and vehicle options
that she used for her route.
[76] The
appeals officer rejected this submission for the following reasons:
[94] In
my decision, I give no weight to [counsel for Canada Post’s] argument that C.
Pollard could have avoided injury because she had the option of buying any
vehicle she wished. Nor do I give weight to his argument that she could have
altered the methodology of delivery relative to the mail trays. At the time of
her refusal to work, C. Pollard was employed by [Canada Post] as an
indeterminate employee and not as an independent contractor. Under section 124
of the Code, the employer is responsible for ensuring the health and safety of
all its employees. Therefore, if injury was preventable through options
relative to the selection of a vehicle or the work procedures, [Canada Post]
had the duty under Part II to inform its employees of these options and to provide
them the necessary training on them. For reference, section 124 reads:
124.
Every employer shall ensure that the health and safety at work of
every person employed by the employer is protected.
[95] In
connection with this, I note that the ergonomist in the [Canada Post] ergonomic
4 study recommended the following measures in line with this to reduce RSMC
exposure to ergonomic risk factors:
• in the
short term, [Canada Post] should develop best ergonomic practices for shuffling
across the seat, manipulating the letter containers and reaching RMBs. [Canada
Post] should deem any situation where a RSMC cannot park within 25 inches of
the RMB to be an impediment to mail delivery. Additionally, [Canada Post]
should inform RSMC drivers about vehicle features that are advantageous from an
ergonomic point of view; and
• in the
long term, [Canada Post] should investigate alternative delivery modes that do
not require RSMCs to slide across their vehicles.
[77] The
appeals officer had heard the evidence of Ms. Pollard and Ms. Marsh about the
strain and risk of injury inherent in delivering mail through the front passenger-side
window. In my view, the appeals officer did not err by concluding that,
if there was any way that injury could be avoided through the use of different
movements or vehicles, Canada Post had a duty to inform Ms. Pollard of those
options and to provide any necessary training.
[78] To
the extent that Canada Post argues that Ms. Pollard controlled her delivery
environment, I note that passenger-side delivery was the method of
delivery required by Canada Post at the relevant time. Canada Post has not
pointed to any contrary evidence to suggest that this method of delivery could
have been done safely by Ms. Pollard from an ergonomic standpoint.
[79] Finally,
I accept Ms. Pollard’s submission that the Tetley case, cited above, is
distinguishable on its facts and that the Johnson case, cited above, is
distinguishable because it turned on a pre-2000 definition of “danger”. It is,
however, relevant to note that, in Johnson, the member did note that the
frequency of exposure to a hazard could result in a situation evolving into one
of danger.
ii. Ms. Pollard's
inability to complete her duties was caused by her medical condition
[80] Canada
Post submits that it was Ms. Pollard's underlying medical condition that made
the activity difficult for her and that the work was not dangerous within the
meaning of the Code. It follows, Canada Post argues, that the ergonomic impact
of the work on Ms. Pollard's pre-existing medical condition is outside the
ambit of Part II of the Code. Canada Post further submits that, while it may
have had an obligation to accommodate Ms. Pollard pursuant to the Canadian
Human Rights Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. H-6, her complaint does not give rise to a
danger because it relates to her medical condition.
[81] The
appeals officer rejected this submission for the following reasons:
[96] [Counsel
for Canada Post] argued that C. Pollard had an existing back injury and so any
danger she would experience was due to her own health situation. Therefore, he
held that [Canada Post’s] only responsibility may have extended to
“accommodate” C. Pollard. I do not assign any significant weight to this
because I found reliable and credible C. Pollard’s testimony that she had an
arthritic condition in her back, as opposed to an on-going back problem that
required the formal job accommodation referred to by [counsel for Canada Post].
I further interpret from her physician’s note that the problem for C. Pollard
was the twisting involved in delivering mail through the passenger side of her
vehicle.
[97] While
I am not taking a position here relative to the application of the “average
person” concept for interpreting the definition of danger in Part II, I would
expect that the “average person” concept referred to by [counsel for Canada
Post] includes a range of physical and mental frailties normal to the human
condition. These physical and mental frailties typically may get magnified
with age without requiring a formal job accommodation by the employer.
[98] In
this perspective, there is evidence in section 14.48 of Part XIV, Materials
Handling, of the Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations that
the employer is required to develop procedures that take into account the
employee’s capabilities. I see little difference in principle relativel [sic]
to the handling of mail. Section 14.48 reads:
14.48
Where an employee is required manually to lift or carry loads
weighing in excess of 10 kg, the employer shall instruct and train the employee
(a) in a
safe method of lifting and carrying the loads that will minimize the stress on
the body; and
(b) in
the work procedure appropriate to the employee’s physical condition and the
conditions of the work place.
[99] Based
on the evidence, I believe that the back problem referred to by C. Pollard’s
physician falls within the context of the “average person” and is not
associated with a job accommodation obligation under another statute than Part
II. [underlining in original]
[82] Thus,
the appeals officer found as a fact that Ms. Pollard had an arthritic condition,
as opposed to an ongoing back problem that required formal job accommodation,
and that the central problem was the twisting motion involved in delivering
mail through the front passenger-side window.
[83] Ms.
Pollard's testimony was that she did not have ongoing back problems, but she
would develop a back problem due to the twisting required to deliver mail
through the front passenger-side window. Ms. Pollard's doctor also
provided a note that attributed her difficulties to the twisting involved in
delivering mail through the front passenger-side window of her vehicle. Ms. Marsh
also testified that delivering mail through the front passenger-side window put
a lot of strain on her upper and lower back. As a result, Ms. Marsh filed an
injury report and refused to deliver mail because of health and safety issues.
[84] Therefore,
the factual findings of the appeals officer were supported by the evidence and
were not patently unreasonable. In my view, those findings justified the
appeals officer's rejection of Canada Post’s submission that any danger Ms.
Pollard would experience was due to her personal medical condition.
iii. Specific movement
[85] Canada
Post argues that Ms. Pollard did not specify which movement or motion
constituted a danger and that no danger can be found in the circumstances of
this case because there are nearly an infinite number of possible motions and
positions available to effect delivery, but no evidence that any one of those
positions has the potential to injure.
[86] Canada
Post also argues that the definition of “danger” requires an impending element;
that is, the injury or illness has to occur before the hazard or condition can
be corrected or the future activity altered. It says, however, that there is
no impending element with respect to the delivery of mail through the front
passenger-side window.
[87] The
appeals officer dismissed the first argument for the following reason:
[100] In
is my further opinion, there is no basis for [counsel for Canada Post’s]
contention that there can be no finding of danger because C. Pollard had not
specified what movement would cause injury to her. To the contrary, C. Pollard
indicated that she had to reach from six to eight feet to deliver mail to RMBs
through the front passenger side window, to pickup mail from the RMBs and to
raise the flag on the RMBs. She specified that the required stretching and
twisting injured her back and leg. She complained that this was made worse by
the fact that she made approximately 700 RMB stops each day, 5 days a week, and
that her route took approximately 4 hours to complete.
[88] In
my view, Ms. Pollard identified the activity in question with sufficient
precision as to allow the appeals officer to evaluate her refusal to work, and
the appeals officer did not err in rejecting Canada Post’s submission. To
require an employee to provide a more technical description of the movement
said to give rise to a danger would place an onerous burden on an employee and,
in my view, frustrate the objective of Part II of the Code.
[89] As
for the impending element, the appeals officer reviewed the applicable
jurisprudence and concluded that the definition of danger "only requires
that one ascertains in what circumstances the potential hazard could be
expected to cause injury and that it be established that such circumstances
will occur in the future, not as a mere possibility but as a reasonable one."
[90] The
appeals officer then reviewed the evidence that:
· whereas
the ergonomic study prepared for Canada Post cautioned that long-term injury
was a concern where the rate of mailboxes exceeded 37-40 per hour, Ms. Pollard
had to make 700 stops in approximately 4 hours;
· Canada
Post had not provided Ms. Pollard with training to safely carry out deliveries through
the front passenger-side window of her vehicle; and
· several
mailboxes along Ms. Pollard's route leaned away from the road so that the distance
she was required to reach was even greater than normal.
[91] The
appeals officer went on to observe that the required impending element was
confirmed by the following:
- there was no evidence that Canada
Post had consulted with its health and safety committee regarding the
change to the practice of delivering mail from the left shoulder of the
road;
- the evidence showed that the
complaint resolution process at Canada Post was inadequate;
- Ms. Pollard's route was not
inspected on an annual basis as required by Canada Post’s policy, and no
action was taken to correct hazards on her route;
- Canada Post did not proactively
consult its employees on health and safety studies as required by the
Code; and
- contrary to the requirements of
the Code, the manager who testified at the hearing on behalf of Canada
Post had not received any training regarding her responsibilities.
[92] The
officer then concluded as follows:
[112] All
of this suggests that the internal responsibility system at [Canada Post] was
somewhat dysfunctional at the time. Based on this, and on the totality of the
evidence, I find that it is reasonable in the circumstances to expect that C.
Pollard would have been injured by exposure to the ergonomic hazards connected
with delivering mail through the front passenger side window of her vehicle
before the hazards could be corrected.
[93] In
my view, the officer committed no error of law in setting out the applicable
test and, on the evidence before him, did not err in concluding that there was
an impending element to the danger faced by Ms. Pollard.
iv. Normal condition of
employment
[94] Paragraph
128(2)(b) of the Code provides an exception with respect to a finding of
danger where the danger is a normal condition of employment:
128(2) An employee may not, under this section, refuse to
use or operate a machine or thing, to work in a place or to perform an
activity if
[…]
(b) the danger referred to in subsection (1) is a normal
condition of employment.
|
128(2)
L’employé ne peut invoquer le présent article pour refuser d’utiliser ou de
faire fonctionner une machine ou une chose, de travailler dans un lieu ou
d’accomplir une tâche lorsque, selon le cas :
[…]
b)
le danger visé au paragraphe (1) constitue une condition normale de son
emploi.
|
[95] Relying
upon decisions such as François Lalonde and Canada Post Corporation, [1989]
C.L.R.B.D. No. 731 (QL) [Translation] and Robitaille and VIA Rail Ltd., [2005]
C.L.C.A.O.D. No. 54 (QL), Canada Post argues that the requisite twisting and
bending to deliver mail through the front passenger-side window is a normal and
inherent condition of a RSMC’s work. Thus, these activities are said to be
exempt from the right to refuse work under the Code.
[96] The
appeals officer rejected this submission on the basis of this Court's decision
in Verville, cited above. In that case, my colleague Madam Justice
Gauthier considered what was contemplated by paragraph 128(2)(b) of the
Code. At paragraph 55 of her reasons, she wrote:
The customary meaning of the words in paragraph
128(2)(b) supports the views expressed in those decisions of the Board because
"normal" refers to something regular, to a typical state or level of
affairs, something that is not out of the ordinary. It would therefore be
logical to exclude a level of risk that is not an essential characteristic but
which depends on the method used to perform a job or an activity. In that
sense and for example, would one say that it is a normal condition of
employment for a security guard to transport money from a banking institution
if changes were made so that this had to be done without a firearm, without a
partner and in an unarmoured car? [emphasis
added]
[97] From
this, the appeals officer concluded that "a normal danger is not a danger
connected with the methodology that could usually be altered in order to
eliminate or avoid the danger. This would apply in respect of C. Pollard."
[98] Canada
Post has not argued that Justice Gauthier was in error when she interpreted
paragraph 128(2)(b) to exclude from the concept of "normal
condition of employment" a risk that is not inherent, but rather depends
upon the method used to perform a job. I find no error in the appeals
officer's interpretation of Justice Gauthier's decision in Verville,
cited above.
[99] Turning
to the application of that principle to the evidence before the appeals
officer, Ms. Marsh testified that, after she filed her injury report,
Canada Post provided her with a helper who sat in the passenger seat of her vehicle
and delivered mail out the front passenger-side window. This avoided all
ergonomic concerns raised by Ms. Pollard. There was also evidence that the use
of community mailboxes or right-hand drive delivery vehicles were alternate
methods of mail delivery that would avoid the ergonomic hazards.
[100] In
light of that evidence, it was not, in my view, patently unreasonable for the
appeals officer to find that the “danger” was not an essential characteristic
of rural mail delivery and therefore paragraph 128(2)(b) of the Code did
not apply. The “danger” arose from the methodology of requiring RSMCs to drive
on the right-hand side of the road, delivering mail through the front passenger-side
window without a helper.
[101] Moreover,
the evidence before the appeals officer established that, even following
Ms. Pollard's refusal to work, her delivery route continued to include a
number of mailboxes that did not meet Canada Post's specifications. I have
difficulty accepting that delivery to mailboxes that do not comply with Canada
Post's own policies is a normal condition of a RSMC’s employment.
b. Did the appeals officer err
in law by determining that a finding of danger could be made on the basis that
Canada Post had a duty under Part II of the Code to inform its employees of the
options to perform the work in question and to provide them with the necessary
training?
[102] Canada
Post submits that a "major area of concern" for the appeals officer
was the lack of training provided to RSMCs with respect to delivery from
right-hand side of the road. It further submits that implicit in the appeals
officer's reasoning is that, if an employee can choose to perform an ergonomic
movement in a safe or an unsafe manner, a danger will be found to exist if
Canada Post does not provide training "in respect of what amounts to [be]
common sense every day movements." Canada Post also complains that the
effect of the decision is to require it to train employees in a series of
movements that will vary according to the configuration of each RSMC’s vehicle.
[103] On
this point, the appeals officer wrote:
[103] Added to
this, [Canada Post] had not provided C. Pollard with training on the delivery
of rural mail from the right-hand shoulder of roadways that was appropriate to
her physical condition and work environment when it advised her on November 24,
2004, that her deliveries had to be carried out in this manner. In fact, [Canada
Post] did not provide her with any training. The absence of training was not
surprising because it appeared that [Canada Post] has not considered the need
to revise its RSMC in-vehicle RMB delivery procedures in conjunction with its
notices to RSMC’s that delivery on the left-hand shoulder of roadways was no
longer permitted.
[104] I
question Canada Post's characterization of this as a “major area of
concern" for the appeals officer. Rather, it appears to me that the
officer was dealing with Canada Post's arguments that Ms. Pollard could have
avoided injury by buying a different vehicle or altering her method of
delivery. In that context, the appeals officer did not err by noting that, if
the injury was preventable through options relating to the selection of a
vehicle or work procedures, Canada Post had a duty to inform employees of those
options and to provide necessary training. This conclusion was supported by
section 124 and paragraph 125(1)(q) of the Code.
c. Did the appeals officer err
in law by finding, in the absence of evidence, that there was an inherent risk
of injury for delivery frequencies in excess of 40 RMBs per hour, to the point
that it constituted a danger under any and all potential circumstances?
[105] Canada
Post's submissions on this point are as follows:
53. Canada Post
submits that in the absence of any evidence on the record to support a
conclusion that there was an inherent risk of injury for delivery frequencies
in excess of 40 rural mail boxes per hour, the [appeals officer’s] decision is
patently unreasonable. A key factor in the [appeals officer’s] decision was
the ergonomic study performed by Canada Post’s internal ergonomist, Chris
Eady. The study was not statistically relevant, dealing with a limited number
of evaluations. Although the study concluded that there were ergonomic issues
of concern, it concluded that there was no immediate risk to RSMCs.
54. The [appeals
officer] accepted the ergonomist’s findings, but refused to accept this
conclusion. Indeed, the [appeals officer] concluded, based upon the report,
that there was an inherent risk of injury for delivery frequencies in excess of
40 rural mailboxes per hour, notwithstanding the fact that the report indicated
only that there might be long term implications above that frequency. There
was no other objective evidence upon which the [appeals officer] could support
this conclusion. The [appeals officer’s] conclusions were stated in very
definitive terms, indicating that:
“in the short term, [Canada Post] should develop best
ergonomic practices for shuffling across the seat, manipulating the letter
containers and reaching RMBs. [Canada Post] should deem any situation where a
RSMC cannot park within 25 inches of the RMB to be an impediment to mail
delivery. Additionally, [Canada Post] should inform RSMC drivers about vehicle
features that are advantageous from an ergonomic point of view”; and
“in the long term, [Canada
Post] should investigate alternative delivery modes that do not require RSMCs
to slide across their vehicles.”
55. In respect
of this ergonomic report, the [appeals officer] further stated:
“The [Canada Post] ergonomic report concluded that
associated ergonomic concerns increased across all observed delivery methods as
the rate of RMBs per hour increased. The report suggested that there was no
immediate risk of injury in delivering mail from the truck or vans tested in
the study, but cautioned that long term injury implications were a concern
where the rate of RMBs per hour exceeded 37-40. In this case, C. Pollard had
to make 700 RMB stops in approximately 4 hours. To stay within 40 RMBs per
hour, C. Pollard would take more than 17 hours every day to complete her
route. Thus her actual RMB delivery rate exceeded four times the rate of 40
RMBs per hour. Based on this, and that fact that the ergonomic study looked
only at 45 RMB stops per scenario, I give little weight to the suggestion in
the report that there might not be an immediate risk to RSMCs associated with
the work.” [emphasis in original and references to the evidence are
omitted]
56. Accordingly,
the [appeals officer’s] conclusion with respect to the report is patently
unreasonable given the lack of evidence to support such a conclusion.
[106] At
the outset, I note that, at paragraph 54 of its written submissions, Canada
Post purports to set out certain conclusions of the appeals officer that are
said to be "stated in very definitive terms". In fact, review of
paragraph 95 of the officer's reasons shows that the officer reached no such
conclusions. Rather, the officer was quoting two recommendations from the
ergonomic study prepared for Canada Post about the need to inform and train its
employees.
[107] The
portion of the appeals officer's reasons quoted at paragraph 55 of Canada
Post's written submissions is found at paragraph 102 of the decision, where the
officer was discussing the required impending element to the definition of
danger.
[108] Reading
the appeals officer’s decision fairly, I do not accept Canada Post’s submission
that the officer found that there was an inherent risk of injury for delivery
frequencies in excess of 40 RMBs per hour. Instead, the officer noted that
ergonomic concerns increased as the delivery rate increased, that long-term
injury implications become a concern where the delivery rate exceeded 37-40 per
hour, and that Ms. Pollard's delivery rate was far in excess of that rate.
This evidence was relevant to the application of the definition of “danger” as
explained in Verville and Martin C.A., both cited above.
[109] To
the extent that the appeals officer relied, in part, upon an inference drawn
from the ergonomic study to conclude that the hazard arising from the
stretching and twisting required in order to deliver mail through the front
passenger-side window could reasonably be expected to cause injury to Ms. Pollard,
such an inference was not patently unreasonable.
[110] The
officer's decision to give little weight to the suggestion in the ergonomic
study that there might not be an immediate risk to RSMCs was also not patently
unreasonable in view of the delivery rate considered in the study.
Conclusion and Costs
[111] For
the above reasons, the application for judicial review is allowed in part. The
decision and the direction of the appeals officer with respect to the traffic
safety issues are set aside. The application for judicial review is dismissed
in respect of the officer’s decision and direction with respect to the
ergonomic issues.
[112] As
to the relief to be granted in consequence of the breach of procedural
fairness, the parties agree that the decision about the traffic safety issues
is severable from the decision about the ergonomic issues. For this reason,
the decision and direction about the ergonomic issues may be upheld while the
decision and direction about the traffic safety issues may be set aside.
[113] In
supplemental written submissions, Canada Post submitted that, in such an event,
the appropriate relief would be to simply quash the decision on traffic safety
without referral back to the CAOOHS. In Canada Post’s view, “[m]uch has
changed since the date of the original refusal [to work], both in terms of the
route and the assessment tools/methodology related to RSMC traffic safety.”
Thus, Canada Post argues that the parties would be better served if this matter
was dealt with by the parties pursuant to Part II of the Code. Canada Post
notes that, after that process is completed, recourse would still exist to an appeals
officer.
[114] In
the alternative, Canada Post submits that the matter should be remitted to a
different appeals officer because the original appeals officer “has already
expressed a conclusion on the traffic safety issue and will have had his
decision overturn [sic] by the Court on the basis of procedural error.”
[115] Ms.
Pollard submits that the matter should be remitted back to the original appeals
officer because he “is familiar with the case and it would be more efficient
for him to resume the hearing on this issue.” Ms. Pollard observes that Canada
Post did not suggest that the original officer would be biased or unable to
render a fair decision.
[116] I
am not prepared to simply quash the decision and direction in respect of
traffic safety without referral back to the CAOOHS. This is not relief
originally sought by Canada Post and there is no evidence before the Court
about what, if anything, has changed since the original decision of the appeals
officer. Moreover, there is, in my view, a significant possibility that such a
course would lead to further delay.
[117] As
to whether the traffic safety issues should be remitted to the original appeals
officer, as matter of law, a matter may be remitted back to the original
decision-maker so long as there is no reasonable apprehension that the
decision-maker is not likely to determine the matter objectively.
[118] Sara
Blake, in her text Administrative Law in Canada (4th edition), notes
at page 220 that it is preferable that a “re-hearing be by the same tribunal
panel, especially if only one part of the proceeding is quashed and referred
back, since it is familiar with the matter.”
[119] A
decision-maker may redetermine a matter after its original decision has been
set aside, even where the first decision was quashed for a breach of the duty
of fairness. See: Deigan v. Canada
(Industry) (2000), 258 N.R. 103 (F.C.A.), and Gale v. Canada
(Treasury Board) (2004), 316 N.R. 395 (F.C.A.).
[120] In
the present case, there is no evidence of bias or a reasonable apprehension of
bias. Having carefully reviewed the transcript of the original hearing, I have
no reason to believe that the original appeals officer would not determine the
traffic safety issues objectively after hearing all of the evidence.
[121] The
matter will therefore be remitted to the CAOOHS for redetermination by the
original appeals officer unless he is not reasonably available.
[122] With
respect to costs, counsel were agreed that costs should follow the event. If
success was divided, costs were left to the discretion of the Court.
[123] Success
was divided and, in all of the circumstances, I conclude that there should be
no award of costs. Each side shall therefore bear their own costs on the
application.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES
that:
1. The application for judicial review is allowed in part. The
decision and the direction of the appeals officer with respect to the traffic
safety issues are hereby set aside.
2. The issue of the existence of any traffic safety hazards and
whether they constitute a danger is remitted to the CAOOHS for redetermination
by the original appeals officer, Mr. Malanka, unless he is not reasonably
available. In that event, the matter may be determined by a different appeals
officer.
3. The application for judicial review is dismissed in respect of
the decision and direction of the appeals officer with respect to the ergonomic
issues.
4. No costs are awarded.
“Eleanor
R. Dawson”
SCHEDULE A
Set out below are
sections 122(1), 122.1, 124, 125(1)(q), 128(1) and (2), 129, 145(1) and
(2), 145.1, 146.1(1) and (2), 146.2, 146.3, and 146.4 of the Canada Labour
Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. L-2:
122(1) "danger"
means any existing or potential hazard or condition or any current or future
activity that could reasonably be expected to cause injury or illness to a
person exposed to it before the hazard or condition can be corrected, or the
activity altered, whether or not the injury or illness occurs immediately
after the exposure to the hazard, condition or activity, and includes any
exposure to a hazardous substance that is likely to result in a chronic
illness, in disease or in damage to the reproductive system;
[…]
122.1 The purpose of
this Part is to prevent accidents and injury to health arising out of, linked
with or occurring in the course of employment to which this Part applies.
[…]
124 Every
employer shall ensure that the health and safety at work of every person
employed by the employer is protected.
[…]
125(1)(q)
provide, in the prescribed manner, each employee with the information,
instruction, training and supervision necessary to ensure their health and
safety at work;
[…]
128(1) Subject to this section,
an employee may refuse to use or operate a machine or thing, to work in a
place or to perform an activity, if the employee while at work has reasonable
cause to believe that
(a) the use or operation of the
machine or thing constitutes a danger to the employee or to another employee;
(b) a condition exists in the
place that constitutes a danger to the employee; or
(c) the performance of the
activity constitutes a danger to the employee or to another employee.
(2) An employee may not, under this
section, refuse to use or operate a machine or thing, to work in a place or
to perform an activity if
(a) the refusal puts the life,
health or safety of another person directly in danger; or
(b) the danger referred to in
subsection (1) is a normal condition of employment.
[…]
129(1) On being notified that an
employee continues to refuse to use or operate a machine or thing, work in a
place or perform an activity under subsection 128(13), the health and safety
officer shall without delay investigate or cause another officer to
investigate the matter in the presence of the employer, the employee and one
other person who is
(a) an employee member of the
work place committee;
(b) the health and safety
representative; or
(c) if a person mentioned in
paragraph (a) or (b) is
not available, another employee from the work place who is designated by the
employee.
(2) If the investigation involves more
than one employee, those employees may designate one employee from among
themselves to be present at the investigation.
(3) A health and safety officer may
proceed with an investigation in the absence of any person mentioned in
subsection (1) or (2) if that person chooses not to be present.
(4) A health and safety officer shall, on
completion of an investigation made under subsection (1), decide whether the
danger exists and shall immediately give written notification of the decision
to the employer and the employee.
(5) Before the investigation and decision
of a health and safety officer under this section, the employer may require
that the employee concerned remain at a safe location near the place in
respect of which the investigation is being made or assign the employee
reasonable alternative work, and shall not assign any other employee to use
or operate the machine or thing, work in that place or perform the activity
referred to in subsection (1) unless
(a) the other employee is
qualified for the work;
(b) the other employee has been
advised of the refusal of the employee concerned and of the reasons for the
refusal; and
(c) the employer is satisfied
on reasonable grounds that the other employee will not be put in danger.
(6) If a health and safety officer decides
that the danger exists, the officer shall issue the directions under
subsection 145(2) that the officer considers appropriate, and an employee may
continue to refuse to use or operate the machine or thing, work in that place
or perform that activity until the directions are complied with or until they
are varied or rescinded under this Part.
(7) If a health and safety officer decides
that the danger does not exist, the employee is not entitled under section
128 or this section to continue to refuse to use or operate the machine or
thing, work in that place or perform that activity, but the employee, or a
person designated by the employee for the purpose, may appeal the decision,
in writing, to an appeals officer within ten days after receiving notice of
the decision.
[…]
145(1) A health and safety
officer who is of the opinion that a provision of this Part is being
contravened or has recently been contravened may direct the employer or
employee concerned, or both, to
(a) terminate the contravention
within the time that the officer may specify; and
(b) take steps, as specified by
the officer and within the time that the officer may specify, to ensure that
the contravention does not continue or re-occur.
[…]
145(2) If a health and safety officer
considers that the use or operation of a machine or thing, a condition in a place
or the performance of an activity constitutes a danger to an employee while
at work,
(a) the officer shall notify
the employer of the danger and issue directions in writing to the employer
directing the employer, immediately or within the period that the officer
specifies, to take measures to
(i) correct the hazard or condition or alter the
activity that constitutes the danger, or
(ii) protect any person from the danger; and
(b) the officer may, if the
officer considers that the danger or the hazard, condition or activity that
constitutes the danger cannot otherwise be corrected, altered or protected
against immediately, issue a direction in writing to the employer directing
that the place, machine, thing or activity in respect of which the direction
is issued not be used, operated or performed, as the case may be, until the
officer’s directions are complied with, but nothing in this paragraph
prevents the doing of anything necessary for the proper compliance with the
direction.
[…]
145.1(1) The Minister may
designate as an appeals officer for the purposes of this Part any person who
is qualified to perform the duties of such an officer.
(2) For the purposes of sections 146 to
146.5, an appeals officer has all of the powers, duties and immunity of a
health and safety officer.
[…]
146.1(1) If an appeal is brought
under subsection 129(7) or section 146, the appeals officer shall, in a
summary way and without delay, inquire into the circumstances of the decision
or direction, as the case may be, and the reasons for it and may
(a) vary, rescind or confirm
the decision or direction; and
(b) issue any direction that
the appeals officer considers appropriate under subsection 145(2) or (2.1).
(2) The appeals officer shall provide a
written decision, with reasons, and a copy of any direction to the employer,
employee or trade union concerned, and the employer shall, without delay,
give a copy of it to the work place committee or health and safety
representative.
[…]
146.2 For the purposes of a
proceeding under subsection 146.1(1), an appeals officer may
(a) summon and enforce the
attendance of witnesses and compel them to give oral or written evidence
under oath and to produce any documents and things that the officer considers
necessary to decide the matter;
(b) administer oaths and solemn
affirmations;
(c) receive and accept any
evidence and information on oath, affidavit or otherwise that the officer
sees fit, whether or not admissible in a court of law;
(d) examine records and make
inquiries as the officer considers necessary;
(e) adjourn or postpone the
proceeding from time to time;
(f) abridge or extend the time
for instituting the proceeding or for doing any act, filing any document or
presenting any evidence;
(g) make a party to the
proceeding, at any stage of the proceeding, any person who, or any group
that, in the officer’s opinion has substantially the same interest as one of
the parties and could be affected by the decision;
(h) determine the procedure to
be followed, but the officer shall give an opportunity to the parties to
present evidence and make submissions to the officer, and shall consider the
information relating to the matter;
(i) decide any matter without
holding an oral hearing; and
(j) order the use of a means of
telecommunication that permits the parties and the officer to communicate
with each other simultaneously.
146.3 An appeals officer’s
decision is final and shall not be questioned or reviewed in any court.
146.4 No order may be made, process entered or proceeding taken
in any court, whether by way of injunction, certiorari, prohibition, quo
warranto or otherwise, to question, review, prohibit or restrain an
appeals officer in any proceeding under this Part.
|
122(1) «danger
» Situation, tâche ou risque — existant ou éventuel — susceptible de causer
des blessures à une personne qui y est exposée, ou de la rendre malade — même
si ses effets sur l’intégrité physique ou la santé ne sont pas immédiats — ,
avant que, selon le cas, le risque soit écarté, la situation corrigée ou la
tâche modifiée. Est notamment visée toute exposition à une substance
dangereuse susceptible d’avoir des effets à long terme sur la santé ou le
système reproducteur.
[…]
122.1 La
présente partie a pour objet de prévenir les accidents et les maladies liés à
l’occupation d’un emploi régi par ses dispositions.
[…]
124
L’employeur veille à la protection de ses employés en matière de santé et de
sécurité au travail.
[…]
125(1)q)
d’offrir à chaque employé, selon les modalités réglementaires, l’information,
la formation, l’entraînement et la surveillance nécessaires pour assurer sa
santé et sa sécurité;
[…]
128(1) Sous réserve des autres dispositions du présent article,
l’employé au travail peut refuser d’utiliser ou de faire fonctionner une
machine ou une chose, de travailler dans un lieu ou d’accomplir une tâche
s’il a des motifs raisonnables de croire que, selon le cas :
a) l’utilisation ou le fonctionnement de la machine ou de la chose
constitue un danger pour lui-même ou un autre employé;
b) il est dangereux pour lui de travailler dans le lieu;
c) l’accomplissement de la tâche constitue un danger pour lui-même
ou un autre employé.
(2) L’employé ne peut invoquer
le présent article pour refuser d’utiliser ou de faire fonctionner une
machine ou une chose, de travailler dans un lieu ou d’accomplir une tâche
lorsque, selon le cas :
a) son refus met directement en danger la vie, la santé ou la
sécurité d’une autre personne;
b) le danger visé au paragraphe (1) constitue une condition normale
de son emploi.
[…]
129(1) Une fois
informé, conformément au paragraphe 128(13), du maintien du refus, l’agent de
santé et de sécurité effectue sans délai une enquête sur la question en
présence de l’employeur, de l’employé et d’un membre du comité local ayant été
choisi par les employés ou du représentant, selon le cas, ou, à défaut, de
tout employé du même lieu de travail que désigne l’employé intéressé, ou fait
effectuer cette enquête par un autre agent de santé et de sécurité.
(2) Lorsque plusieurs employés maintiennent
leur refus, ils peuvent désigner l’un d’entre eux pour agir en leur nom dans
le cadre de l’enquête.
(3) L’agent peut procéder à l’enquête en
l’absence de toute personne mentionnée aux paragraphes (1) ou (2) qui décide
de ne pas y assister.
(4) Au terme de l’enquête, l’agent décide
de l’existence du danger et informe aussitôt par écrit l’employeur et
l’employé de sa décision.
(5) Avant la tenue de l’enquête et tant
que l’agent n’a pas rendu sa décision, l’employeur peut exiger la présence de
l’employé en un lieu sûr proche du lieu en cause ou affecter celui-ci à
d’autres tâches convenables. Il ne peut toutefois affecter un autre employé
au poste du premier que si les conditions suivantes sont réunies :
a) cet employé a les compétences voulues;
b) il a fait part à cet employé du refus de son prédécesseur et des
motifs refus;
c) il croit, pour des motifs raisonnables, que le remplacement ne
constitue pas un danger pour cet employé.
(6) S’il conclut à l’existence du danger,
l’agent donne, en vertu du paragraphe 145(2), les instructions qu’il juge
indiquées. L’employé peut maintenir son refus jusqu’à l’exécution des
instructions ou leur modification ou annulation dans le cadre de la présente
partie.
(7) Si l’agent conclut à l’absence
de danger, l’employé ne peut se prévaloir de l’article 128 ou du présent
article pour maintenir son refus; il peut toutefois — personnellement ou par
l’entremise de la personne qu’il désigne à cette fin — appeler par écrit de
la décision à un agent d’appel dans un délai de dix jours à compter de la
réception de celle-ci.
[…]
145(1) S’il est d’avis qu’une contravention à la présente partie
vient d’être commise ou est en train de l’être, l’agent de santé et de
sécurité peut donner à l’employeur ou à l’employé en cause l’instruction :
a) d’y mettre fin dans le délai qu’il précise;
b) de prendre, dans les délais précisés, les mesures qu’il précise
pour empêcher la continuation de la contravention ou sa répétition.
[…]
145(2) S’il estime que l’utilisation d’une
machine ou chose, une situation existant dans un lieu de travail ou
l’accomplissement d’une tâche constitue un danger pour un employé au travail,
l’agent :
a) en avertit l’employeur et lui enjoint, par instruction écrite,
de procéder, immédiatement ou dans le délai qu’il précise, à la prise de
mesures propres :
(i) soit à écarter le risque, à
corriger la situation ou à modifier la tâche,
(ii) soit à protéger les personnes
contre ce danger;
b) peut en outre, s’il estime qu’il est impossible dans l’immédiat
de prendre les mesures prévues à l’alinéa a),
interdire, par instruction écrite donnée à l’employeur, l’utilisation du
lieu, de la machine ou de la chose ou l’accomplissement de la tâche en cause
jusqu’à ce que ses instructions aient été exécutées, le présent alinéa
n’ayant toutefois pas pour effet d’empêcher toute mesure nécessaire à la mise
en oeuvre des instructions.
[…]
145.1 (1) Le ministre peut désigner toute personne compétente à titre
d’agent d’appel pour l’application de la présente partie.
(2) Pour l’application des articles 146 à
146.5, l’agent d’appel est investi des mêmes attributions — notamment en
matière d’immunité — que l’agent de santé et de sécurité.
[…]
146.1 (1) Saisi d’un appel formé en vertu du paragraphe 129(7) ou de
l’article 146, l’agent d’appel mène sans délai une enquête sommaire sur les
circonstances ayant donné lieu à la décision ou aux instructions, selon le
cas, et sur la justification de celles-ci. Il peut :
a) soit modifier, annuler ou confirmer la décision ou les
instructions;
b) soit donner, dans le cadre des paragraphes 145(2) ou (2.1), les
instructions qu’il juge indiquées.
(2) Il avise par écrit de sa décision, de
ses motifs et des instructions qui en découlent l’employeur, l’employé ou le
syndicat en cause; l’employeur en transmet copie sans délai au comité local
ou au représentant.
[…]
146.2 Dans le cadre de la procédure prévue au paragraphe 146.1(1),
l’agent d’appel peut :
a)
convoquer des témoins et les contraindre à comparaître et à déposer sous
serment, oralement ou par écrit, ainsi qu’à produire les documents et les
pièces qu’il estime nécessaires pour lui permettre de rendre sa décision;
b) faire
prêter serment et recevoir des affirmations solennelles;
c)
recevoir sous serment, par voie d’affidavit ou sous une autre forme, tous
témoignages et renseignements qu’il juge indiqués, qu’ils soient admissibles
ou non en justice;
d)
procéder, s’il le juge nécessaire, à l’examen de dossiers ou registres et à
la tenue d’enquêtes;
e) suspendre
ou remettre la procédure à tout moment;
f) abréger
ou proroger les délais applicables à l’introduction de la procédure, à
l’accomplissement d’un acte, au dépôt d’un document ou à la présentation
d’éléments de preuve;
g) en tout
état de cause, accorder le statut de partie à toute personne ou tout groupe
qui, à son avis, a essentiellement les mêmes intérêts qu’une des parties et
pourrait être concerné par la décision;
h) fixer
lui-même sa procédure, sous réserve de la double obligation de donner à chaque
partie la possibilité de lui présenter des éléments de preuve et des
observations, d’une part, et de tenir compte de l’information contenue dans
le dossier, d’autre part;
i)
trancher toute affaire ou question sans tenir d’audience;
j)
ordonner l’utilisation de modes de télécommunications permettant aux parties
et à lui-même de communiquer les uns avec les autres simultanément.
146.3 Les décisions de l’agent d’appel sont définitives et non
susceptibles de recours judiciaires.
146.4 Il n’est admis aucun recours ou
décision judiciaire — notamment par voie d’injonction, de certiorari, de prohibition ou de quo warranto
— visant à contester, réviser, empêcher ou limiter l’action de l’agent
d’appel exercée dans le cadre de la présente partie.
|
SCHEDULE B
Page
|
Description
|
Speaker
|
Details
|
539(1)
|
Hearing Convened
|
|
February 16, 2006
|
539(1)
|
Introduction
|
Chairperson
|
The Chairperson framed the
issue before him as whether or not the Health and Safety Officer, Ken
Manella, erred when he made his decision that a danger did not exist for Ms.
Pollard at the time of his investigation.
|
540(5)
|
Introduction
|
Chairperson
|
“The process that I’m
following is quasi-judicial in nature. By that, I am required to ensure that
a fair and impartial hearing is held here. … It is quasi-judicial, so it’s a
serious matter; but just to make the point that I can have my hearings as
formal or as informal as I think is appropriate. I always like to try and
keep it as less formal and less legal, following what you would normally see
in a court, as is possible.”
|
540(7)
|
Introduction
|
Chairperson
|
“[O]nce we’re done here,
then I’ll have an opportunity to go back to my office. When I’m considering
the case, if there’s anything that I’m not clear on, that I’m uncertain on, I
can call the parties and seek further information.”
|
544(23)
|
Opening Statement
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
Mr. Nash canvassed a number
of issues in his opening remarks, including the compensation owed to Ms.
Pollard for the loss of her mail routes, the removal of grievances contained
in Ms. Pollard’s file, and the existence of a labour board decision from Quebec that
found rural mail delivery to be unsafe.
|
544(26)
|
Opening Statement
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
Mr. Bird disagreed with Mr.
Nash’s understanding of the relevant issues, suggesting that the Chairperson
was to put himself in the shoes of the Health and Safety Officer on the date
of the refusal to work and determine whether the Officer’s decision was
sound.
|
545(26)
|
Opening Statement
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“Mr. Nash has raised a
great number of other issues, many of which, the bulk of which are labour
relations issues. The proper forum for that is under the collective
agreement and adjudication is under Part I of the Code. You have no jurisdiction
to inquire into that area or grant any remedies.”
|
545(27)
|
Comment on Opening
Statements
|
Chairperson
|
“Normally I don’t comment
after opening statements but I am compelled to. With regard to your opening
statement, Mr. Nash, Mr. Bird is quite right.”
|
545(28)
|
Comment on Opening
Statements
|
Chairperson
|
“I’m looking to decide
whether or not the Health and Safety officer erred … . And not more than
that. All the other matters, then, you’re just going to have to deal with
somewhere else.”
|
546(30)
|
Statement of Health and
Safety Officer
|
Ken Manella
|
Mr. Manella read the report
that he prepared in respect of Ms. Pollard’s complaint.
|
550(46)
|
Cross-Examination of Health
and Safety Officer
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
Mr. Nash questioned Mr. Manella
regarding his investigation. Mr. Manella acknowledged that he felt that Ms.
Pollard’s complaint focused on the physical process of delivering the mail as
opposed to issues of traffic-safety. Ms. Pollard also questioned Mr. Manella
about the need for vehicle signage. When Mr. Nash sought to introduce other
decisions made under Part II of the Canada Labour Code regarding rural mail
delivery, Mr. Bird raised an objection.
|
555(65)
|
Objection to Introduction
of Health and Safety Decisions from other Provinces
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“[A]gain, Mr. Chairman, I’m
not going to be objecting very often to Mr. Nash’s presentation to you. … I
am not sure how familiar Mr. Nash is with this process. He’d indicated it
was his first one. Obviously, you’re prepared to give him a great deal of
latitude. I’m prepared to do the same. But at the end of the day, we do
have a focus here and much of the information that is being put to this
witness in the questioning is unfocused to the events before us … .”
|
555(66)
|
Comment in Response to
Objection
|
Chairperson
|
“[W]here I’m facing a
hearing where we have, for example, one person represented by counsel and
someone else who is indicating not much experience with this process, I have
somewhat of a duty to level the playing field … .”
|
556(70)
|
Comment about Fairness
Concerns
|
Chairperson
|
“[B]ecause I can’t
anticipate where you’re going and what you are doing … . I think we’re just
going to have to operate as we said. … Just go ahead and if there’s a problem
with it that deals with fairness, then Mr. Bird will raise it.”
|
556(72)
|
Cross-Examination of Health
and Safety Officer
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
Mr. Bird inquired into Mr.
Manella’s experience, his investigation, and the circumstances surrounding
his finding that no danger existed.
|
562(93)
|
Re-examination of the Heath
and Safety Officer
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
Before Mr. Nash began his
re-examination of Mr. Manella, Mr. Bird asked that the Chairperson remind Mr.
Nash of the limited scope of questioning on re-examination.
|
562(93)
|
Comment on Scope of
Re-examination
|
Chairperson
|
“[Y]ou’re limited to
whatever matters that Mr. Bird has raised. However, having said that,
because again we have a situation of a party represented by counsel and one
not and one is admittedly saying he’s not familiar with this process, I’m
going to give him latitude. If he strays into another area, I’ll give you an
opportunity to respond to it.”
|
564(102)
|
Examination of Carolyn
Pollard
|
Mr. Nash
|
Mr. Nash questioned Ms. Pollard
regarding the circumstances leading up to her refusal to work. When Mr. Nash
sought to introduce a package of documents that Ms. Pollard had prepared and
taken to the hearing, Mr. Bird raised an objection. The discussion focused
primarily on a document prepared on September 19, 2005, which purported to
list “unsafe” mailboxes on Ms. Pollard’s route.
|
571(129)
|
Objection to Documents
Tendered by Carolyn Pollard
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“I may have some problems
with some of this documentation, Mr. Chairman.”
|
571(131)
|
Submission regarding the
List of Unsafe Mailboxes prepared by Carolyn Pollard
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“Whatever the concerns with
respect to individual boxes approximately a year after the event, even if
boxes were before you, which from what we’ve heard so far, is not, is a
matter that’s just totally irrelevant to these proceedings.”
|
572(133)
|
Exchange as to the Meaning
of the List of Unsafe Mailboxes
|
Carolyn Pollard
|
MS. POLLARD: “… I was
concerned about these mailboxes that were unsafe to deliver, and not one time
did they send out anyone to check these boxes. Not one time did they come
back to me and ask me if they were still unsafe.”
THE CHAIRPERSON: “What was
the nature of unsafe?”
MS. POLLARD: “Unsafe was
meaning that I couldn’t pull up to them properly without being in the line of
traffic because they were telling us that our vehicle could not be in the
line of traffic whatsoever. It had to be pulled over on a shoulder.”
THE CHAIRPERSON: “How does
that relate to the ergonomic issue you’re talking about?”
MS. POLLARD: “Well that,
again, is delivering the mail to myself. When I was delivering the mail,
they had brought up the fact of making sure that we stayed on the shoulder.
I took the information and went out and looked at it every time I delivered
because I never paid any attention. I’ve just always delivered my route and
I realized how many mailboxes I was over the shoulder, out into the main
traffic of the road. That’s why I wrote this down. Not that I couldn’t
deliver, but safety-wise, it was unsafe. That’s why I wrote that up.”
|
572(136)
|
Submission regarding the
List of Unsafe Mailboxes prepared by Carolyn Pollard
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
THE CHAIRPERSON: “Mr. Nash,
do you have any comment with regard to the question of relevance that Mr.
Bird has raised?”
MR. NASH: “[I]f you’re out
of your seatbelt and somebody hits you, you’re off the side of the road or
you’re not off the side of the road, you’re impeding the traffic, people
having to go around you … that’s what the ergonomic issue actually is, sir.”
THE CHAIRPERSON: “And your
argument is that all this material is relevant to the issue before me?”
MR. NASH: “For the most
part, sir. …”
|
573(137)
|
Submission
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“Again, I guess we go back
to what is the nature of the complaint before you … . If we go back to … the
registration form that we showed to Mr. Manella, it certainly doesn’t speak
of any of the events with respect of box location. … However, what we’re
doing here today, as I understood it, is we’ll review the events as they
occurred on November 24th, 2004 as limited by the particular work refusal.”
|
573(137)
|
Submission
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“I have no doubt that Ms.
Pollard has a great degree of passion with respect to her work and the safety
issues, as she rightly should. … But, indeed, the purpose of these
proceedings has a narrower focus.”
|
573(139)
|
Comment on Mandate
|
Chairperson
|
“In terms of the mandate
that I have, you’re quite right. The focus is the decision that Health and
Safety Officer Manella made. … Essentially we’re looking at a potential
hazard that could have constituted a danger. … What I’m trying to say is I’m
not frozen in time.”
|
574(141)
|
Submission
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“I think what we’re doing
is we’re losing focus as to what the actual issue on the appeal is with
respect to the boxes.”
|
574(142)
|
Comment on Mandate
|
Chairperson
|
“Well, if I can, and I’ll
engage in some exchange here because I want to make sure I have all the facts
here. … This is probably good that I’m looking at this because it’s going to
cause me to consider the scope here, in a sense. … I’m starting to sense from
some of the evidence that’s exchanged that I’m being expected to look rigidly
at the complaint that was on the complaint form, that it was only the
ergonomic, that I’m not going to look at how close the vehicle was to the
post or how close she could get to the post, whatever. … [I]t would seem to
me that when I’m looking at what is ergonomically involved, I can’t see how
the distance that can be achieved, the vehicle to the post, can’t be
relevant.”
|
574(146)
|
Comment regarding Issue to
be Decided
|
Chairperson
|
“The decision that I have
to make is whether or not I’m going to accept this as a document.”
|
575(148)
|
Submission
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
MR. BIRD: “I’m just seeing
that this hearing will evolve into something far more lengthy than perhaps it
ought, given what I perceive to be the limitations of your analysis. … What
we do need to focus, though, is on the issue in question. And to the extent
that this information relates to things that are other than the issue in
question in November of 04 – ”
THE CHAIRPERSON: “Okay.”
MR. BIRD: “ – they-re not
properly received by it. … So I leave it to you to give us some guidance and,
if necessary, I can make argument at the end of the day.”
|
576(150)
|
Ruling
|
Chairperson
|
“What I am going to do is
I’m going to accept this document, but I certainly accept that you may wish
to respond to it by evidence or you may wish to address it in your final
submission and argument.”
|
576(152)
|
Ruling
|
Chairperson
|
“Before we recessed for
lunch, there was this package that I had to consider, and I really haven’t
completely come to a decision on it. … [T]here’s a little bit of the document
with regard to the list of unsafe mailboxes. I’m uncertain, still in my mind,
what this is relating to and what is relevant.”
|
577(154)
|
Ruling
|
Chairperson
|
“So part of the difficulty
I’m having with the document is exactly what they’re being submitted for and
what they’re supposed to be telling me.”
|
578(159)
|
Comment on Fairness
|
Chairperson
|
“[I]f I suddenly am
convinced that a danger existed with regard, I’ll be specific, with regard to
somebody smashing into the back of a vehicle. I’ll leave it to your argument
as to what I should be doing with that in terms of should I be looking at
it? Should I interpret my powers under the Code, to address it? Now, to try
and make certain that we don’t leave the parties with a sense of unfairness,
often in a case, once I’ve heard it, if I feel that I’m going to be going
into another area that would not have necessarily come to the understanding
of the parties doing the hearing, then what I’ll do is reconvene the hearing
and I’ll be saying to you, I am considering something that perhaps you didn’t
appreciate and therefore I’ll take an opportunity to give you time to give
evidence and argumentation with that.”
|
578(160)
|
Comment on Accepting
Evidence
|
Chairperson
|
“I’m just going to indicate
to you that when I’m deciding whether to take a document, part of it is so
that I have [a] picture of the complete situation so that, at the end of it,
I can say to myself, I’m satisfied that I looked at all of the aspects of the
hazards that were involved in the circumstances and that if I have concerns,
then I’ll raise it with the parties.”
|
582(173)
|
Question
|
Chairperson
|
THE CHAIRPERSON: “If I
could, before you go on then – and it’s a question that came up in that
exchange – and if I didn’t write it down and it was said, forgive me then.
What was the alleged unsafe features of the box?”
MS. POLLARD: “Because the
safety way to deliver the mail to a rural route is your vehicle is supposed
to be right on the shoulder with no tires on the road whatsoever. So you’re
not impending [sic] any traffic coming behind you. I don’t know if that’s
the right word. So that was why, because all these boxes that I’ve written
down, I’m against the side, on the shoulder, but my tires are still on the
main road. There’s not enough shoulder space for me to – ”
|
587(196)
|
Cross-examination of
Carolyn Pollard
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
At the outset of Mr. Bird’s
cross-examination of Ms. Pollard, the Chairperson noted that a document
contained in the package prepared by Ms. Pollard had not been canvassed.
That document purported to be a petition signed by a number of rural mail
carriers that shared Ms. Pollard’s view that the mail routes were unsafe.
Mr. Bird reiterated his concern about the Chairperson receiving the package
of documents.
|
583(202)
|
Submission
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
MR. BIRD: “[W]e’re
beginning to get to a part of the proceedings where I’m having concerns about
the documentation that you’re receiving.”
THE CHAIRPERSON: “Okay. But
just to confirm, I’m accepting this because it has relevance, because it
deals with material that you have provided and I’ll leave it up to Mr. Nash …
through his arguments as to whether I should give this any weight or not and
you have also the same opportunity.”
|
595(225)
|
Question
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
MS. POLLARD: “If I was to
deliver it on the left-hand side, again my vehicle is out on the road.”
MR. BIRD: “I was going to
ask you that very question. It doesn’t matter which side of the road you’re
on, you’re still going to be on the roadway if it is too close to the
shoulder or too close to the road.”
MS. POLLARD: “Right.”
MR. BIRD: “So there’s no
difference, left or right, on this.”
MS. POLLARD: “No.”
|
595(226)
|
Question
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of Canada
Post
|
MR. BIRD: “Did you raise
your concerns about any of these boxes in November of 2004?”
MS. POLLARD: “When I put my
safety, no. My concern was that I was delivering on the right-hand side,
that it was impossible to do that. That was originally, that’s what my whole
case has been about. This came afterwards, in the fact of, I think, again it
was stated about the safety thing of where your car’s supposed to be on the
road and that’s why those came up too. By my case is about that it cannot be
delivered on the right-hand side safely, one person.
MR. BIRD: “And the reason
for that is the stress and strain on your body in terms of the bending,
twisting, leaning, stretching.”
MS. POLLARD: “And also
because of the safety fact of where you’re located on the road.”
MR. BIRD: “Okay, let me
catch up with you on that one. Can you point out to me, in your text, where
the vehicle location is a concern to you?”
MS. POLLARD: “Where my
vehicle concern is?”
MR. BIRD: “The vehicle
location.”
MS. POLLARD: “It’s not – I
haven’t written that. …”
|
632(1)
|
Hearing Reconvened
|
|
April 25, 2006
|
632(2)
|
Issues Arising since Last
Hearing
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
At the outset of the
hearing, Mr. Nash noted that Ms. Pollard had been contacted by Canada Post
following the initial hearing. In the exchange that followed, the
Chairperson reiterated that disciplinary action taken in response to a
refusal to work was a matter of labour relations and not within his mandate.
|
633(8)
|
Comment on Mandate
|
Chairperson
|
“[I]t seems to me that this
is in the area that you raised at the first hearing that we had … and that
was questions of matters going on between Canada Post and Ms. Pollard, which
were outside of my jurisdiction. I mean, I’m here, strictly looking at the
decision that Health and Safety Officer Manella made and the direction that
he issued.”
|
635(13)
|
Re-examination of Carolyn
Pollard
|
Mr. Nash
|
|
639(32)
|
Examination of Kelly Marsh
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
Mr. Nash confirmed that Ms.
Marsh was a Rural and Suburban Mail Carrier, reviewed the conditions existing
on Ms. Marsh’s route, and then concluded by questioning Ms. Marsh about her
experience with Ms. Pollard’s route.
|
643(47)
|
Objection
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“I’ve heard nothing at this
point in time which appears to be relevant to Ms. Pollard’s complaint.”
|
643(48)
|
Objection
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“We’re hearing lots about
road conditions, which is not part of this complaint. We’re hearing about
fear from being hit from behind, which is not part of this complaint. We’re
hearing about the speed limits, which is not part of this complaint. We’re
hearing about boxes, which is not relevant to the complaint. I don’t know
where Mr. Nash is going with this, but I’m really at a loss to see how this
assists you in your inquiry.”
|
647(63)
|
Cross-examination of Kelly
Marsh
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
Mr. Bird simply confirmed
that Ms. Marsh was the person pictured in the photographs in evidence.
|
648(66)
|
Re-examination of Kelly Marsh
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
Following the
re-examination of Ms. Marsh, there was discussion regarding a video depicting
Ms. Pollard’s delivery route. The video was said to show how far her vehicle
was off the road at various points along the route. Mr. Bird reiterated that
the focus of Ms. Pollard’s refusal to work was the change in delivery method.
|
649(72)
|
Submission
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
MR.BIRD: “Well again, maybe
there’s a misunderstanding as to what we’re here for. … Change in delivery
method. And in Ms. Pollard’s narrative, her concern is delivering outside
the driver’s side, or the passenger side.”
THE CHAIRPERSON: “And what
do you ascribe the statement also to undo my seatbelt?”
MR. BIRD: “It’s all
ergonomics, Mr. Chairman. This is how she has to deliver out the passenger
side window is what we’ve been hearing about the entire time. That’s what
the safety officer was investigating.”
|
650(73)
|
Comment on Mandate
|
Chairperson
|
“I will certainly agree
with you that there is an issue that I’m going to have to resolve in my
decision, and that’s with regard to the matters of the other – about the
safety concerns off the road. … Now, one of the things that I think you have
an opportunity in arguing this is to address that very thing as to what
consideration I should be giving to that.”
|
650(74)
|
Comment on Mandate
|
Chairperson
|
“But at the same time,
there is a totality of circumstances here that I just feel, at least in
gathering evidence here that I have to listen to, and certainly make some
decision in my final decision with regard to whether I should be venturing in
on those other aspects. … [J]ust sitting here, I’m kind of thinking that I
would want to hear the evidence with regard to the total situation so that I
can decide later in my mind whether or not the danger did extend to the
things that the Health and Safety Officer Manella perhaps had not properly
reviewed, or given weight. … I’m not quite sure where I’m going with it, but
it certainly strikes me that I should hear the evidence and hear the
arguments from both parties as to my mandate under the Code, under my review
here as to whether or not I should be looking beyond the ergonomic issue.”
|
650(75)
|
Comment on Mandate
|
Chairperson
|
“I’m certainly willing to
take your argument on that but I will give you advance notice that I’m
considering it. It’s an issue that I think needs to be considered. … And so
as I say, I just think I have to look at the evidence and then make some
decision as to where my mandate is with the final decision on this.”
|
651(80)
|
Submission
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“I need to advise that
based on the comments that you made earlier, we are very concerned that this
case is now taking a different direction and becoming one of traffic safety,
which it wasn’t when we went in earlier. … There’s a lot of other things that
Canada Post is doing with respect to traffic safety. We are not marshalling
any of that. I’m not certain whether I will be in a position to complete the
case … .”
|
652(84)
|
Examination of Carolyn
Pollard on the Video
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
Mr. Nash examined Ms.
Pollard as to the content of the video. The focus of the examination was the
traffic-related issues arising from Ms. Pollard’s route, but Mr. Nash did
conclude by touching on the stretching required to effect delivery.
|
654(91)
|
Cross-examination of
Carolyn Pollard on the Video
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
Mr. Bird questioned Ms.
Pollard as to what solution she was looking for in terms of the ergonomic
concerns. Ms. Pollard confirmed that she was looking for a helper, or a
right-handed vehicle, or community mailboxes.
|
655(93)
|
Re-examination of Carolyn
Pollard
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
|
656(99)
|
Examination of Catherine
Janveau
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
Mr. Bird reviewed Ms.
Janveau’s supervisory position at Canada Post. Ms. Janveau canvassed the
layout of rural mail routes, Canada Post’s requirements for rural mail
delivery, and Canada Post’s procedure for reporting unsafe mail boxes. When
Mr. Bird sought to review a Memorandum of Agreement between Canada Post and
the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, Mr. Nash questioned the relevance of
the agreement because it was signed after Ms. Pollard’s refusal to work.
|
662(122)
|
Comment on Mandate in
response to Question raised by Mr. Nash
|
Chairperson
|
“As I’ve indicated to Mr.
Bird already, I have some question in my mind as to whether or not my mandate
for reviewing … Ms. Pollard’s appeal, includes all of the evidence that I’m
going to receive with regard to safety issues around that situation. I know
that, and I can’t cite a case, but I know the federal court has said in the
past that safety officers cannot be expected to go in and essentially do
fishing expeditions. If an employee were to say there’s a danger here and
not really identify what the danger is, just say I’m not sure but I’m certain
that there’s a danger here. The federal court has said, no, you can’t turn
it as that vague. They have not come up with anything that goes to the opposite,
which would be employee complains about a danger, a safety officer goes in,
there are several dangers around them, they focus only on the one that the
employee raises with them and leaves. Whether or not that is, whether or not
the federal court would be saying, or whether or not any review body would
say well, you ought to have looked at it and not just been limited to what
the employee said. It’s something that’s there and you could see that it was
a contravention or even more seriously, a danger, then I’m not so certain
that anybody, if it ever was reviewed in a court, would say no, you shouldn’t
have looked at that. It goes a little bit to that. It goes a little bit to
exactly what the issue is before me, and that is how Safety Officer Manella was,
as I’m saying, from the evidence, was made aware of a certain situation that
was evolving, suggested a solution, which was internal complaint resolution,
and then, upon her refusal, decided one matter was not constituting a danger
and felt obligated to issue a direction in the other. Since my review brings
me into face with all the facts, the question I have to ask myself is would
anybody expect me not to look at other areas that through the evidence I’m
receiving that might constitute a danger, even though Health and Safety
Officer Manella did not. So given that I’ve said I’m hoping for your
arguments on that, but by even raising it and giving some indication that I
expect that the Code is telling me that I should be looking at everything
that Manella looked at, the document in question here is certainly relevant
because if I find that there was a danger on any of the health issues that
are being raised in this hearing, and I find that there’s a danger, then I’m
somewhat obliged, although not specifically as health and safety officers are
in the legislation.”
|
667(143)
|
Cross-examination of
Catherine Janveau
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
Mr. Nash questioned Ms.
Janveau as to Canada Post’s inspection process for rural mailboxes. The
focus of Mr. Nash’s cross-examination was Canada Post’s response, or lack
thereof, to Ms. Pollard’s complaints about the unsafe mailboxes on her route.
|
699(1)
|
Hearing Reconvened
|
|
April 26, 2006
|
669(1)
|
Examination of Catherine
Janveau
|
Chairperson
|
At the outset of the
hearing, the Chairperson posed a number of questions to Ms. Janveau. The
questions related to Canada Post’s management structure regarding issues of
health and safety, Canada Post’s involvement of its employees in the
consultation process, the Memorandum of Agreement signed between Canada Post
and the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, whether the delivery guidelines
issued by Canada Post reflected provincial laws relating to highway safety.
|
703(17)
|
Examination of Catherine
Janveau
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of Canada
Post
|
Mr. Bird reviewed the areas
canvassed by the Chairperson.
|
704(23)
|
Cross-Examination of
Catherine Janveau
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
During the course of Mr.
Nash’s re-examination, Mr. Bird noted that Ms. Janveau had already answered
questions in the areas raised by Mr. Nash. When Ms. Janveau completed her
testimony, Mr. Bird sought direction from the Chairperson.
|
707(34)
|
Request for Direction from
the Chairperson on Issues arising from Questions
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“[I]f there are areas you
have of concern, which are far reaching, which from your questions I have
come concern you may have, but we may be in a position that we will need to
bring in a lot more evidence to satisfy you.”
|
707(34)
|
Request for Direction from
the Chairperson on First Issue
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“[I]t appears from your
questions that you may not understand that Part I responsibilities in terms
of the representation rights of CUPW for the employees … . If you need
evidence on that, I’m going to have to bring in somebody from national labour
relations to explain to you the obligations under Part I.”
|
707(34)
|
Request for Direction from
the Chairperson on Second Issue
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“Similarly, I know you
understand the Code Part II, but your questions of this witness … did not
answer your questions. So in terms of the direct obligations under Part II …
[w]e will need evidence before you to do that if that’s a major concern, if
that’s going to be partly driving your decision-making process.”
|
707(35)
|
Request for Direction from
the Chairperson on Third Issue
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“Third of all, Mr. Nash
keeps saying that if Mr. Nash’s statements are accepted as evidence for you,
that CUPW is dropping the ball nationally in respect of its responsibilities
for this. … You may need to stop this process right at this point of time and
make CUPW a party … .”
|
707(36)
|
Request for Direction from
the Chairperson on Fourth Issue
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“The last issue is with
respect to the applicability of the highway traffic accidents … . I can tell
you that I have been involved in processes. The acts do not apply holus
bolus to Canada Post.”
|
708(37)
|
Submission on Requests for
Direction
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“… I cannot leave this
room, I cannot close with a case if there is any (inaudible) from you that
these are issues that you need evidence and information on that they will
materially affect your ruling. I realize this is sort of a precedent for me
to ask you how important is this information for you, but I need to ensure
that I’m doing both the best interest for the client and for you in terms of
your decision-making process.”
|
708(37)
|
Response to Request for
Direction
|
Chairperson
|
THE CHAIRPERSON: “The
normal process that I use would be to hear a case and return to my office and
often during the analysis of that evidence, I may decide that there are other
issues that I must address or I need to concern myself with, upon which I
will advise the parties of that fact and advise you of my concern and provide
you with an opportunity to give the evidence or whatever.”
MR. BIRD: “That would be
quite satisfactory…”
|
708(38)
|
Response to Request for
Direction
|
Chairperson
|
THE CHAIRPERSON: “… [I]f I
decide I want to pursue them, then I certainly would advise you of that fact
and give you every opportunity for you to present evidence.”
MR. BIRD: “… But I guess
for the record, I have to say that we have no end of evidence to satisfy your
concerns.”
THE CHAIRPERSON: “All
right, I appreciate that and as I have indicated, I’m certainly aware that it
would be improper for me to be making decisions where you were entitled to
more information, to provide me with more information. … Then unless I need
to broaden and to widen my investigation on this, then I’ll simply take the
evidence that you have provided me with and try and come up with a very fast
decision.”
|
709(41)
|
Summation
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
“I’ll let you know I’m a
letter carrier by trade, I’m not a lawyer, so I hope you take that into
consideration. I’ll do the best that I can to put all this stuff forth.”
|
709(41)
|
Summation
|
Mr. Nash, on behalf of
Carolyn Pollard
|
After reminding the
Chairperson that he was not a lawyer, Mr. Nash summarized the circumstances
leading up to Ms. Pollard’s refusal to work. Mr. Nash noted that, in
addition to the ergonomic concerns about delivering to 600 to 700 points of
call, there were also the concerns about impeding traffic and the positioning
of Ms. Pollard’s vehicle.
|
714(62)
|
Summation
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
Mr. Bird reviewed the
relevant caselaw on the definition of “danger” under Part II of the Canada
Labour Code. Mr. Bird also reiterated his position that Ms. Pollard’s
complaint dealt with strictly ergonomic issues.
|
716(69)
|
Summation
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“Please bear in mind when
we start talking about the ergonomic issues because that is truly the focus
of this case.”
|
717(76)
|
Summation
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“The truly disturbing thing
about it is the what ifs have absolutely nothing to do with the ergonomic
issues. They are where is the vehicle positioned relative to the shoulder?
What happens if a car comes from behind and strikes the vehicle while you’re
attempting to deliver out the passenger window? There are so many
hypotheticals here, none of which have to do with the issue before you.”
|
722(93)
|
Summation
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“We’re heard a great deal
of evidence with respect to roadways. The boxes, how far to the shoulder? The
final argument we heard about ditches and hills. This is not a case about any
of those things. Are they important? Yes, they are. Is there a work refusal
before you in respect of those issues? No, there is not.”
|
723(97)
|
Summation
|
Mr. Bird, on behalf of
Canada Post
|
“What is before you is a
non-specific complaint on ergonomic issues where the employee is in total
control of all ergonomic configurations. … Your area of focus is very
narrow.”
|
724(102)
|
Closing
|
Chairperson
|
“If I have any questions
I’ll relay them … or if there are issues that I wish to, that I am going to
indicate to parties that I’ll be pursuing in my direction, then I will
certainly, as I indicated to Mr. Bird earlier, provide parties with an opportunity
to provide new evidence on that.”
|