Docket: T-1639-15
Citation:
2017 FC 554
Ottawa, Ontario, June 6, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Elliott
BETWEEN:
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CANADIAN UNION
OF PUBLIC EMPLOYEES, AIR CANADA COMPONENT
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Applicant
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and
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AIR CANADA
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview and Facts
[1]
The question in this judicial review is whether
the presence of airborne chemicals arising from the pyrolysis of jet engine oil
and hydraulic fuel, in quantities not precisely measured but sufficient to
create a distinct “dirty socks” odour,
constituted a “danger” as defined by subsection
122(1) of the Canada Labour Code, RSC 1985, c L-2, as it appeared
between January 1, 2010, and December 13, 2012 [the Code].
[2]
In a decision dated August 27, 2015, an Appeals
Officer of the Occupational Health and Safety Tribunal Canada [Tribunal]
dismissed appeals from the findings of two health and safety officers [HSOs]
under subsection 129(7) of the Code that a danger did not exist: Diaz
Delgado et al v Air Canada, 2015 OHSTC 15 [the Decision]. The result of the
Decision is that three employees in Air Canada’s flight attendant bargaining
unit [Employees] were not permitted to refuse to work under section 129 of the
Code. The Employees’ bargaining agent, the Canadian Union of Public Employees,
Air Canada Component [CUPE] now applies for judicial review of the Decision.
[3]
At the same hearing that led to the Decision, the
Tribunal heard two parallel appeals brought by Air Canada to three sets of
directions issued by an HSO under subsection 145(1) of the Code, which allows
an HSO to issue directions to an employer where the HSO finds that the employer
has contravened a health and safety provision of the Code. While one of the
directions was rescinded by the Tribunal, it upheld two other directions made
on the basis that Air Canada had failed to warn its employees of a “known or foreseeable health hazard” or to investigate
in the prescribed manner a situation where its employees “may be exposed to hazardous substances”: Air
Canada v Canadian Union of Public Employees, 2015 OHSTC 14 [the Companion
Decision].
[4]
Air Canada has not applied for judicial review
of the Companion Decision, but the question of whether the same situation can reasonably
be a “known or foreseeable health hazard” but
not a “danger” is a significant area of
contention between the parties.
[5]
For the reasons set out below, this application
is granted. The Tribunal acknowledged that the underlying facts in the Decision
and the Companion Decision are identical. The findings made by the Tribunal
flow from a critical analysis that is contradictory as between the two
decisions. As a result, it is not possible to know whether the same outcome
would prevail if the analysis had been consistent between the two decisions.
For that reason, the Decision must be reconsidered to either correct the
inconsistency or clarify and explain the reasons for the apparent conflict.
[6]
The facts and the expert evidence before the
Tribunal are set out in great detail in the Decision and the Companion
Decision, both of which are reported and available online. I will therefore summarize
them here only briefly and will refer to specific passages throughout these
reasons as may be appropriate in the context.
A.
The Work Refusal on Fin 415
[7]
The work refusals at issue in this judicial review
took place on two aircraft, Fin 415 and Fin 214. On June 23, 2011, Fin 415 was
scheduled to fly from Edmonton to Vancouver as flight AC 239, and then from
Vancouver to Toronto as flight AC 1162. Francisco Diaz Delgado was to serve as
the Service Director for both flights, with a crew of two other flight
attendants. The Decision addresses the Fin 415 refusals.
[8]
During the first 15 minutes of inbound flight AC
239, Mr. Diaz Delgado noticed a smell he described at various times as being
like “blue cheese”, “dirty
sock” and a “smelly gym bag”. The smell
dissipated after those 15 minutes but returned on the aircraft’s approach and
landing. After checking the cabin logbook, Mr. Diaz Delgado saw that an odour
had previously been noticed in the cabin on June 18 and 19. In Vancouver, he
exercised his statutory refusal to work on flight AC 1162 under the Code, as did
the other two flight attendants. He maintained this refusal despite the view of
the flight’s captain and the maintenance team that the smell represented no
danger.
[9]
Air Canada brought in replacement crew members,
including Meng Liang as Service Director and two other flight attendants. They
overheard Mr. Diaz Delgado explain to the Crew Manager and members of the
workplace committee his reasons for refusing to work. Mr. Liang was concerned
that the aircraft mechanics could not pinpoint the defect that was causing the
odour. As a result, the replacement crew also refused to work on AC 1162. After
the captain of the flight explained that the odour would only be present for a
short period of time on takeoff and landing, three of the refusing crew members
agreed to work on AC 1162, but Mr. Diaz Delgado and Mr. Liang maintained their
refusal.
[10]
The refusals were referred to an HSO. Noting
that the smell had been present on flights on June 18, 19, 22 and 23, and that
maintenance had found fluid in the wheel well on June 24, the HSO determined
that the leak was most likely Skydrol LD4 [Skydrol]. Skydrol is not a dangerous
good, but in vapour or mist form can cause adverse health effects. The HSO
noted that the concentration of any chemicals causing the odour had not been
measured and crew members had only complained of the smell rather than any
illness symptoms. The HSO concluded that there was no danger under the Code.
B.
The Work Refusal on Fin 214
[11]
On January 4, 2012, Fin 214 was scheduled to fly
from Toronto to Calgary as AC 119, and then from Calgary to Vancouver as AC
215. Hadin Blaize was scheduled to work as a flight attendant on both flights.
Fin 214 was also scheduled to fly a third leg, AC 100, but Ms. Blaize was not
scheduled to work on that flight. As the aircraft pushed back from the gate,
Ms. Blaize noticed a smell she described as “similar to
vomit/strong smelly feet/shoes”. While the aircraft was preparing for
takeoff, Ms. Blaize was informed by the flight’s Service Director that there
was a defect entry in the log indicating that an inoperative airpack or
possible oil leakage had been detected and maintenance deferred. The smell
dissipated either during or shortly after takeoff. However, Ms. Blaize did find
the air in the rear half of the aircraft to be dry, causing her some mild
nausea.
[12]
On arriving in Calgary, Ms. Blaize discovered
that Fin 214 would be the aircraft for the next flight. She exercised her right
to refuse to work. The other crew members of AC 119 were not scheduled to work
on AC 215. By this time, Ms. Blaize’s symptoms had gone away and she did not
seek medical attention in Calgary. However, at the urging of Air Canada that
she see a doctor, Ms. Blaize saw her family doctor the next day.
[13]
The crew on AC 215 did not experience any
symptoms, though the Service Director and a flight attendant at the front of
the plane noticed a mild “smelly socks” odour.
However, on AC 100, the entire crew noticed a strong unpleasant odour. The
first officer became very unwell and vomited numerous times, and the entire
crew experienced headaches. One of the flight attendants experienced nausea and
light-headedness and by the end of the flight had a metal or oil taste in her
mouth and was unable to sleep in her hotel room that night.
[14]
According to Fin 214’s maintenance log, an
unpleasant odour had been described on the aircraft during takeoff and landing
on December 28, 2011, and January 1, 3 and 4, 2012. On an earlier flight on
January 4, one of the crew noticed not only a smell during takeoff, but also a
haze in the rear galley.
[15]
The work refusal was investigated by an HSO, who
determined that the smell at issue was likely caused by Mobil Jet Oil II [Jet
Oil]. While Jet Oil was not expected to produce adverse health effects under
normal conditions of use, it could decompose at elevated temperatures, and the
resulting vapours could be irritating or harmful. The HSO found that a low
threshold of vapours was not necessarily harmful, and that a smell did not
indicate a hazard to health. The HSO therefore found that there was no danger
under the Code.
C.
Evidence on the Appeals to the Tribunal
[16]
The Employees’ appeals proceeded on an agreed
statement of facts. Expert evidence was also tendered by both sides, and a
further expert provided evidence at the invitation of the Tribunal. The same
evidence was used for both the Decision and the Companion Decision. The expert
evidence is briefly summarized here, and included in more detail where relevant
to the parties’ arguments.
(1)
David Supplee
[17]
David Supplee, a former certified and lead
Airbus mechanic at U.S. Airways was invited to testify by the Tribunal. He
testified into the workings of the relevant aircraft ventilation systems as
well as the possible sources of air contamination. His evidence was largely
uncontested. Mr. Supplee explained that outside air enters the engines where it
is compressed by fans and reaches high temperatures. It is then bled out of
each engine through two valves and travels through ventilation ducts to a “pre-cooling” system and then into two air packs that
cool the hot bleed air.
[18]
On the basis of Mr. Supplee’s evidence, the
Tribunal determined that the likely source of the contamination causing the
odour was oil that had filtered through leaky seals in the jet engine or
auxiliary power unit [APU], a sort of miniature engine that is used to start
the main engines, or from a compressor in the air packs. Because the “bleed air” from the engines is quite hot, it would
have vaporized or pyrolyzed the oil, then mixed with the recirculated air from
the cabin, and contaminated the air in the cabin.
[19]
Moreover, once the engines cool down, much of
the vaporized oil would condense all along the air system. This makes the
source of the contamination very difficult to track down, and prevents the crew
from stopping the contamination by shutting down an air pack or a bleed valve
from one of the engines. As long as hot bleed air comes into the system, it
would re-vaporize the oil residue and contaminate the cabin. Mr. Supplee also
testified that a fume event did not necessarily indicate a large oil leak.
Rather, even a few drops of oil entering the bleed air can create a fume event.
He indicated that a sign of an oil leak would be increased oil consumption by
an engine. In normal operation an aircraft engine would consume 1 to 2 quarts
of oil per day but, a leaking bearing would increase the consumption to 3 or 4 quarts
per day.
[20]
Based on Mr. Supplee’s uncontested evidence, the
Tribunal found that the fume events at issue in this application were caused by
the leakage and pyrolysis of oil or hydraulic fluid into the bleed air, and
that this pyrolysis caused the presence in the cabin air of an unknown
concentration of potentially harmful chemicals.
[21]
The parties do not contest this finding on
judicial review, but disagree about the interpretation of the rest of the
expert evidence and about whether it should have led to a danger finding.
(2)
Dr. Clifford P. Weisel
[22]
Dr. Weisel, who gave evidence for the Employees,
was recognized as an expert in exposure science. In addition to testifying
about the source of the air contamination, he also identified several
potentially hazardous compounds that could be released by the pyrolysis of Jet
Oil or hydraulic fluid. Some of these compounds would create a rancid odour,
though other hazardous compounds would have no scent. Based on the documented
air quality problems in the aircraft, Dr. Weisel was of the opinion that
oil had leaked into the bleed air of the aircraft, and the smell was caused by
a mixture of chemicals including the engine oil and unknown products of the
oil’s pyrolysis. He indicated that oil leak events or incidents occur at an
average frequency of 1% of flight cycles.
[23]
Dr. Weisel also gave evidence about the quantity
of oil that would be necessary to reach threshold limit values [TLVs], being the
levels at which a worker can be exposed to a chemical without suffering
adverse health effects. Specifically, he was of the opinion that one gram of pyrolyzed
oil would produce enough formaldehyde in the air of the cabin to reach the
TLV-C level, the ceiling limit of a chemical that should not be exceeded for
any length of time. Given the oil consumption of jet engines, Dr. Weisel
believed that a leak undetectable in routine maintenance would be sufficient to
cause the cabin air to reach the TLV-C level of formaldehyde.
[24]
Dr. Weisel concluded that as the aircrafts in
question were documented to a have had air quality problems associated with oil
leakage into the bleed air it was a reasonable expectation of the cabin crew
that working a subsequent flight, on the same aircraft without that aircraft
having received proper maintenance to identify and repair the source of the oil
leakage, would result in the crew and passengers being exposed to a mixture of
hazardous and toxic chemicals. These chemicals would have been composed of
engine oil and unknown pyrolysis products of the oil.
(3)
Dr. Robert Harrison
[25]
Dr. Harrison also gave evidence for the
Employees, and was qualified as an expert in occupational medicine as well as
toxicology, the latter over the objections of Air Canada. Dr. Harrison has
consulted with over 50 aircraft crew members who had been exposed to bleed air
contamination during a fifteen year period and has authored a guide for health
practitioners on exposure to bleed air contaminants.
[26]
Dr. Harrison found that after exposure to bleed
air and other contaminants, acute symptoms may be experienced including cough,
shortness of breath, nausea, chest pain, headache, dizziness and confusion. The
symptoms indicate toxic effects to the respiratory and central nervous systems.
Physical examination may show wheezing or crackles in the lungs, and urological
testing may show impairment in balance, gait and coordination. Persistent
symptoms may show abnormal pulmonary function and impaired concentration,
memory and other cognitive abnormalities.
[27]
Dr. Harrison’s opinion was that using the
accepted methodology of occupational medicine, the Employees had a reasonable
expectation that they were exposed to toxic contaminants and that they may
develop either acute and/or chronic health problems as result. Although he
noted that odours can be useful in determining the presence of a particular gas
or vapour they are an unreliable indicator of toxicity because of the variable
relationship of odour threshold and the minimum concentration which would
reduce toxic effects. However, he believed that the presence of smells/odours
associated with toxic compounds combined with the symptoms of illness that can
be caused by those compounds indicated that the pyrolyzed oil on these aircraft
had caused illness, once the other possible causes of the symptoms had been
ruled out.
(4)
Dr. Richard Carl Pleus
[28]
Dr. Pleus was the sole expert put forward by Air
Canada, and he was qualified as an expert in toxicology. Dr. Pleus’s evidence was
to the effect that a smell is not indicative of a hazard, since many odorous
compounds are not harmful while many harmful compounds have no odour. His
opinion was also based on the belief that there is no binary relationship between
toxic and non-toxic chemicals. Rather, the “dose makes
the poison.” The question is whether, knowing the composition of Jet Oil
and Skydrol, sufficient quantities of pyrolyzed by-products would have entered
the cabin for a sufficient time to cause adverse health effects. According to Dr. Pleus’s
evidence, to reach levels sufficient to cause chronic illness, there
would need to have been enough contaminants in the air circulation system to create
a visible haze in the cabin. Since only smells were reported on Fin 415, and
smells could be created at chemical concentrations well below harmful levels, Dr. Pleus
did not believe the evidence established a harmful level of contaminants in the
cabin. Moreover, Dr. Pleus’ opinion was that given the considerable amount of
air introduced into the cabin, there would be constant dilution and short
duration for exposure to any chemical agent.
[29]
Dr. Pleus also attempted to answer why the crew
members displayed adverse health symptoms after exposure to the odour. One
possible explanation was a psychological response to foul odours: in layman’s
terms, a sufficiently noxious smell can cause someone to vomit or experience
other symptoms even if the smell is not caused by a harmful chemical. The other
explanation he offered was psychogenic illness, where misunderstood or false
information can cause sufficient anxiety in a patient to trigger real symptoms.
This explanation was rejected by the Tribunal.
II.
The Tribunal’s Decisions
A.
The Decision
[30]
The Tribunal identified what it called a generic
question: whether at the time of the work refusals the Employees were exposed
to a danger as defined by the Code. On reviewing the evidence the Tribunal
found that all the refusals originated with smelling or, being informed of, an
odour of “dirty socks” or “a smelly wet gym bag”. The Tribunal next identified
the specific issue as being whether the odour served to indicate a danger that
justified the Employees to refuse to work.
[31]
In addressing these issues, the Tribunal considered
the definition of danger at subsection 122(1) of the Code:
“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
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« 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.
|
[32]
The Tribunal also referred to sections 122.1 and
122.2 which set out the purpose of Part II of the Code, which addresses matters
of Occupational Health and Safety:
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.
122.2 Preventive measures should consist first of the elimination
of hazards, then the reduction of hazards and finally, the provision of
personal protective equipment, clothing, devices or materials, all with the
goal of ensuring the health and safety of employees.
|
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.
122.2 La prévention devrait consister avant tout dans
l’élimination des risques, puis dans leur réduction, et enfin dans la
fourniture de matériel, d’équipement, de dispositifs ou de vêtements de protection,
en vue d’assurer la santé et la sécurité des employés.
|
[33]
The hearing before the Tribunal took place over
several days with the three experts for the parties and the expert called by
the Tribunal all giving viva voce evidence in addition to their initial
and rebuttal written reports. Overall, the Agreed Statement of Facts, expert
reports and accompanying evidence of internal documents, reports and studies
which were submitted to the Tribunal encompassed 1700 - 2000 pages. The reasons
provided by the Tribunal are extensive and detailed. The reasons review the background
facts and circumstances of the work refusals, examine and comment upon the
various expert reports, identify the issues to be determined, review the
submissions of the parties, the pertinent legislative provisions and
jurisprudence, make findings on the facts and draw conclusions on the issues.
[34]
The first step for the tribunal was to identify
the “existing or potential hazard or condition”
to be evaluated for risk of injury or illness. While Air Canada argued that a
smell could not be a hazard, the Tribunal found that the hazard complained of
was not the smell, but the pyrolyzed Jet Oil or hydraulic fluid that caused the
smell. The issue was whether the chemicals released by that pyrolysis could
reasonably be expected to cause injury or illness to a person exposed to them.
[35]
The Tribunal decided that there was insufficient
evidence to establish such expectation. In doing so, it relied largely on Dr.
Pleus’s formulation that “the dose makes the poison”.
While the chemicals released by pyrolysis could, at some concentrations, cause
symptoms similar to those suffered by some of the Employees, some of the same
chemicals are often present during routine flight without adverse health
effects. The Tribunal found there was no relationship between the concentration
of chemicals sufficient to give off an odour and the concentration high enough
to pose a health risk. It concluded that the smell, by itself, could prove the
presence of the chemicals but not whether they were concentrated enough to meet
the statutory definition of being a danger.
[36]
On this issue, the Employees argued that the
toxicity of the chemicals in the cabin could be inferred from the symptoms. If
you know that a chemical causes certain symptoms when sufficiently
concentrated, and someone suffers those symptoms in an environment where that
chemical is present, it is reasonable to diagnose the chemical as being the
cause of the symptoms. Based on the analysis of Dr. Harrison, it should have
been possible for the Tribunal to find that the pyrolyzed Jet Oil or hydraulic
fluid actually caused illness to the Employees, and therefore it was reasonable
for the Employees to expect that they would suffer further illness from the
pyrolyzed oil and hydraulic fluid if they did not refuse to work.
[37]
The Tribunal did not accept this argument. While
symptoms may have occurred after the Employees were exposed to the odour, the
Tribunal was not convinced that the symptoms had been caused by the chemical
contamination in the air. While Dr. Harrison was unable to specify the
concentrations needed to pose a health risk, Dr. Pleus showed that at
concentrations high enough to create a risk to the Employees’ health, there
would have been a visible haze in the cabin. The Tribunal also felt that the
case studies Dr. Harrison relied on to provide his medical opinion were of
limited use, since it was unclear what the circumstances were in those other
cases.
[38]
Part of the reason the Tribunal preferred Dr.
Pleus’ evidence over Dr. Harrison’s appears to have been based on concessions
made by Dr. Harrison in cross-examination. Dr. Harrison admitted that a
cause-and-effect relationship could not be established between the air
contamination and the symptoms without considering each individual’s medical
history, evidence of exposure and toxicological information about the chemical
the individual was exposed to. In the present case, however, Dr. Harrison
prepared his opinion solely on information given to him by CUPE. He never obtained
or considered the Employees’ occupational or medical histories, did not
consider potential non-occupational causes of the symptoms and did not conduct
a physical examination of any of the Employees. Dr. Harrison admitted that when
preparing his medical opinion, he did not follow the methodology he created for
his guide for healthcare providers evaluating health effects from contaminated
bleed air.
[39]
Dr. Harrison had concluded that either the odour
or the mechanical investigations of the aircraft were sufficient to cause the
Employees to reasonably expect toxic contaminants had been released that could
result in health problems. The Tribunal found it was not sufficient to conclude
that employees suffered symptoms as a result of being exposed to a smelly sock
odour; what had to be evaluated for potential harmful effects was the
contamination, not the odour. The Tribunal also found that the only expert who
provided insight into the issue of levels of exposure was Dr. Pleus.
[40]
The Tribunal concluded that it had not been
demonstrated that the symptoms the flight attendants experienced were the
direct result of being exposed to the contaminated air. The Tribunal said that there
may be a “mere possibility that exposure to
contaminated bleed air would result in illness or injury,” remarking
that it depended on factors such as duration of the exposure and the
concentration and toxicity of the contaminants. The evidence was that the
contaminants were unlikely to remain in the cabin air for very long because of
vaporization. Certain compounds would need to be present in a significantly
large quantity in order to cause adverse effects and, that was unlikely given
the amount of Jet Oil required for the engine and the fact that the aircraft
are routinely maintained.
[41]
Finally, the Tribunal found that in all cases
where fume events were reported the maintenance personnel took appropriate
action to address and resolve the issue. It was therefore even less likely that
injury or illness would occur before the hazard could be corrected.
[42]
The Tribunal held that there was no danger to
the flight attendants and the decision by the HSO was upheld.
B.
The Companion Decision
[43]
While the Employees were unsuccessful in
appealing the HSO’s assessment that there was no danger, Air Canada had mixed
success on its appeals in the Companion Decision. Air Canada’s appeals related
to two danger findings made in the course of issuing directions, but the
Tribunal found that it would not review the danger findings; it would only
consider the appropriateness of the directions themselves, since the validity
of the directions did not depend on whether there was a danger.
[44]
The Tribunal overturned one of the directions
but upheld two others. The first upheld direction related to Air Canada’s
obligation under paragraph 125.1(s) of the Code to “ensure
that each employee is made aware of every known or foreseeable health and
safety hazard in the area where the employee works”. While the material
safety data sheet [MSDS] for Jet Oil indicated that it was a “Non-Hazardous Substance”, the text also indicated
that this was under normal conditions of use, which the Tribunal found did not
include oil leakage and pyrolysis.
[45]
The same MSDS also said that at elevated
temperatures, the oil could decompose and give off irritating or harmful fumes,
creating symptoms that included headache, nausea, eye, nose and throat
irritation. The Tribunal concluded that this description from the MSDS was a “foreseeable health hazard” once pyrolyzed oil was
detectible by smell in the cabin. The Code required Air Canada to make affected
employees specifically aware of the hazard created by pyrolyzed Jet Oil and Air
Canada had failed to do so, making the HSO’s direction warranted.
[46]
The second direction upheld by the Tribunal
concerned the interplay of paragraph 125.1(f) of the Code with section 5.4 of
the Aviation Occupational Health and Safety Regulations, SOR/2011-87 [AOHSR].
Paragraph 125.1(f) requires an investigation in prescribed form “where employees may be exposed to hazardous substances”.
Section 5.4 of the AOHSR sets out the prescribed form of investigation,
but states that the obligation is triggered “[i]f there
is a likelihood that the health and safety of an employee is or may be
endangered by exposure to a hazardous substance”.
[47]
The Tribunal found that these were different
thresholds, and a scenario might trigger paragraph 125.1(f) of the Code without
triggering section 5.4 of the AOHSR. However, the scenario needed to
satisfy both sections in order to create a duty for the employer to investigate.
Therefore the direction to investigate could only be upheld if there was “a likelihood that the health and safety of an employee is or
may be endangered by exposure” to the pyrolyzed Jet Oil in the cabin
air.
[48]
In trying to overturn the direction, Air Canada
relied on the same arguments it made about why there was no danger to the
Employees: even if there was exposure to a hazardous substance, there must be a
likelihood of endangerment to the employee. Dr. Pleus’s expert evidence was
that odours could be detected at non-toxic levels and the dose detected that
gave rise to the direction would not be sufficient to endanger employee health
and safety. In addition, in the employee complaint that triggered the
direction, no health symptoms were associated with the exposure.
[49]
The Tribunal rejected this argument, finding
that symptoms of illness were not required. What was required was not a
certainty but a possibility of endangerment that rose to the level of
likelihood. Having regard to the evidence and that the only obligation being
triggered was to investigate, the Tribunal found that there was a sufficient
likelihood of health endangerment to trigger the obligation to investigate and
upheld the direction.
III.
Issues and Standard of Review
[50]
The issue before the Tribunal was stated as
being whether the dirty socks smell represented or served to indicate a danger
that justified the refusal to work by the Employees. Although the parties have each
phrased the issues somewhat differently, they are in agreement that the question
before the Court is whether the decision of the Tribunal was reasonable.
A.
Components of a reasonableness review of the
decision of this Tribunal
[51]
The standard of review of a decision by an
appeals officer has previously been determined to be reasonableness. This
applies to the factual findings, the interpretation of the definition of “danger” under Part II of the Code, and the
application of that interpretation to the facts as found. In conducting the
reasonableness review a significant degree of deference is owed by the Court to
the Tribunal: P&O Ports Inc v International Longshoremen's and
Warehousemen's Union, Local 500, 2008 FC 846 at para 16.
[52]
The Federal Court of Appeal has found it is not
the role of the reviewing court to weigh the evidence which was before the
Tribunal, nor is the Court to come to a conclusion about whether the evidence
rose to the level of a reasonable expectation of injury. Those tasks belong to
the Appeals Officer. The reviewing court is required to determine whether the
Tribunal had regard to the relevant evidence and applied the relevant
provisions of the Code to that evidence: Martin v Canada (Attorney General),
2005 FCA 156 at para 42 [Martin]. CUPE alleges the Tribunal did have not
have regard to relevant evidence and it also made findings in the absence of
evidence.
[53]
With respect to the Tribunal’s interpretation of
the definition of danger in the Code, in Martin the Court of Appeal
followed a decision by the Supreme Court of Canada, which found that “decisions of specialized tribunals, such as the Labour
Board, are to be accorded deference both as to the determination of facts and
the interpretation of the law; the Court should only interfere if the
interpretation placed on legislation by the Tribunal was patently unreasonable”:
Martin at para 13. Of course, since Dunsmuir v New Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir], the patently unreasonable standard has been
folded into the standard of reasonableness.
[54]
The Court of Appeal has commented upon the
parameters of the tests for a finding of danger: one must ascertain in what
circumstances a potential hazard could reasonably be expected to cause injury
and to determine that such circumstances will occur in the future as a
reasonable possibility (as opposed to a mere possibility), that it must be
determined whether it is more likely than not that the scenario asserted will
take place in the future, and that it is not necessary to establish the precise
time when the hazard will occur, or that it occurs every time: Canada Post
Corporation v Pollard, 2008 FCA 305 [Pollard] at para 16.
[55]
More recently the test was put another way by
Madam Justice Gleason when she was a member of this Court: for a “danger” to exist, the circumstances must be shown to
present a realistic possibility of injury actually occurring: Martin-Ivie v
Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FC 772 at para 49.
[56]
There is both a subjective and an objective
aspect to the issue of whether there is a danger that justifies a refusal to
work. In Laroche v Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FC 797 [Laroche]
it is articulated by Mr. Justice Roy at paragraph 60:
The appeals officer was asked to consider
all of the relevant evidence to determine whether there was danger within the
meaning of the Code. If there was no danger, the refusal to work would not have
been valid under section 128 of the Code. The concept of danger is
dependent on the possibility that a hazard arises. For a danger to be the
subject of a refusal to work, there must be a reasonable possibility, which
implies a measure of objectivity. Subjective fear alone cannot satisfy this
test. . . .
[57]
In evaluating both the Tribunal’s formulation of
the test and its application to the evidence, my review is to consider the
Decision as a whole, in the context of the underlying record, to determine
whether it was reasonable: Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’ Union v
Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62 at para 16.
IV.
Was the decision reasonable?
A.
Positions of the Parties
(1)
Inconsistent Findings in the Decision and the Companion
Decision
[58]
CUPE submits that the Tribunal unreasonably
interpreted and applied the definition of “danger”
in the Code by making two inconsistent findings: (1) in the Companion Decision,
the health or safety of an employee may be endangered by exposure to the contaminated
cabin air; (2) in the Decision, those same facts were insufficient to establish
a reasonable expectation of illness.
[59]
CUPE submits the Decision is unintelligible
because the same facts lead to findings of both “likely
to endanger” and, “no danger”, and there
is no evidence or reasoning to distinguish the two decisions from each other.
To the contrary, the Tribunal acknowledged the circumstances are the same in
each appeal. CUPE submits that if a health hazard is foreseeable, it is likely
that the employee will be in danger.
[60]
Air Canada objects to the CUPE’s suggestion that
being “endangered” is the same as being in “danger”. CUPE replies that a hazard is not
necessarily a danger, rather a hazard in a workplace from which you cannot get
away before it is remedied is a danger. CUPE submits the Tribunal tried to “split the baby down the middle” and in so doing it
made an irrational finding.
[61]
Air Canada says that the Companion Decision did
not address the question of “danger”. Though the
HSOs in the Companion Decision found a danger, they did not issue directions
under subsection 145(2) of the Code, but instead issued directions under
subsection 145(1), which only requires a contravention of the Code, regardless
of whether that contravention meets the definition of “danger”.
Air Canada argues that there is no inconsistency between the two decisions,
because the Companion Decision only found that the Code had been contravened,
not that the contaminated air constituted a danger.
[62]
Air Canada also points out that the Code
definition of danger requires both exposure to injury or illness and a
reasonable expectation that an injury or illness will occur before the hazard
or condition can be corrected. Objectively, there must be a reasonable
possibility of injury as opposed to a mere possibility or a speculative and
subjective assessment by the Employees. In support of these propositions Air
Canada refers to both Martin and Verville v Canada (Service
correctionnel), 2004 FC 767.
[63]
CUPE relies on the same cases in saying that to
ground a finding of a reasonable expectation of danger it is not necessary that
“it could be reasonably expected that every time the
condition or activity occurs, it will cause injury”.
B.
Analysis
[64]
The task of the Tribunal is to assess the
likelihood of an alleged risk materializing. In doing so, it is to weigh the
evidence to determine whether it is more likely than not that what an employee
is asserting will take place in the future: Martin at para 37; . To make
a finding of danger, the Tribunal is to first ascertain the circumstances in
which the potential hazard could reasonably be expected to cause injury and then
find a reasonable possibility that those circumstances will occur in the future:
Pollard at para 16.
[65]
In the Companion Decision, the Tribunal found
that, although a contravention of paragraph 125.1(s) of the Code does not
require establishing danger, when pyrolyzed Mobil Jet Oil enters the
environmental control system it satisfies the requirement of a “foreseeable health hazard”. The direction issued by
the HSO was upheld because Air Canada had not made the employee aware of the
foreseeable health hazard.
[66]
With respect to the second direction, which had
been issued in connection with paragraph 125.1(f) of the Code and section 5.4
of the AOHSR, the Tribunal confirmed that “the
conduct of the investigation under section 5.4 of the AOHSR is dependent on the
likelihood of health endangerment, which, in the circumstances of a work
refusal, applies to the health of the refusing employee or employees”. Subsection
5.4(1) refers to the likelihood of an employee’s health being endangered:
Hazard Investigation
5.4 (1) If there is a likelihood that the health or safety of an
employee is or may be endangered by exposure to a hazardous substance, the
employer shall, without delay,
(a) appoint a qualified person to carry out an investigation in
that regard;
|
Enquêtes sur les risques
5.4 (1) Si la santé ou la sécurité d’un employé risque d’être
compromise par l’exposition à une substance dangereuse, l’employeur, sans
tarder :
a) nomme une personne qualifiée pour faire enquête sur la
situation;
|
[67]
In arriving at the finding that an investigation
was required, the Tribunal did not accept the argument by Air Canada that there
was no likelihood of endangerment to the Employees. Paragraph 125.1(f) requires
that an employer investigate and assess hazardous substances to which “employees may be exposed” in the workplace. The
Tribunal acknowledged that no substance that could explain the odour was
definitively identified. It held that a definitive identification was not
required under paragraph 125.1(f) of the Code because the word “may” modifies the word exposure. It also found that
not knowing the exact nature of the contaminants was not speculative and such
an allegation would create a circular argument as, on that basis, there would
never be investigations because by nature an investigation is inquiring into
matters that are not known.
[68]
Although the specific contaminants were not
known, the Tribunal found that the odours were commonly associated with oil
contamination of the environmental control system. The Tribunal concluded that it
was sufficient to trigger the application of the obligation to investigate in
the AOHSR even though not every scenario that met the test in paragraph
125.1(f) of the Code would meet the more onerous requirements to trigger an
investigation in the AOHSR. Necessarily, the Tribunal found that there
was a likelihood of endangerment to the health of the Employees.
[69]
In the Decision, the Tribunal found that the
hazard presented to the Employees was contaminated bleed air. The contamination
was caused by leakage of Jet Oil, hydraulic fluid and other contaminants, such
as pyrolyzed compounds, resulting in an unknown mixture of chemicals. In both
decisions the Tribunal differentiated the odour from the actual contaminant as
the contaminants caused the odour.
[70]
In determining that there was no danger to the
Employees, the Tribunal made two critical findings in the Decision. At
paragraph 180 the Tribunal explains that an important causal relationship
exists:
[. . .] The definition of danger provided by
the Code establishes a causal relationship between a hazard, condition
or activity in the work place and the effect that it can have on an
employee’s health and safety.
[my emphasis]
[71]
In the next sentence the Tribunal establishes
the nature of the proof required to show that causal relationship:
It follows that, for me to arrive at the
conclusion of danger in circumstances of air contamination there must be
either medical or scientific evidence that points to a causal link between
the environmental conditions of the work place and the possibility of injury or
illness to an employee; without this, such a conclusion is simply
speculative.
[my emphasis]
[72]
One of the problems with this conclusion is that
causation is proven on a balance of probabilities; that standard of proof does
not require scientific certainty: Ediger v Johnston, 2013 SCC 18 at para
36. The reasonable expectation of an illness occurring can be established by
expert opinions or thorough inference arising logically and reasonably from
known facts. Another problem is that while the Tribunal recited factors it
would apply in determining the likelihood that a hazard would cause illness
before it could be corrected, there is little evidence of it actually applying
those factors in the analytical portion of its reasons.
[73]
It appears that consideration of an inference
was open to the Tribunal. In the Companion Decision, when finding that there was
a foreseeable health hazard, the Tribunal relied upon statements in the MSDS
for Jet Oil. In the Decision, at paragraph 107, the MSDS was considered as well:
The MSDS for Mobil Jet Oil II does report
however that decomposition products can be harmful. Those are listed as carbon
monoxide, phosphorous oxides, aldehydes, smoke, fume and incomplete combustion
products. At elevated temperature and under fire conditions, the oil may
decompose and give off irritating and/or harmful gases, vapours or fumes. The
possible symptoms from acute exposure to these decomposition products in a
confined space may include headache, nausea, eye, nose and throat irritation.
[my emphasis]
[74]
It is not clear that the Tribunal actually
considered the factors in assessing whether a danger entitling the employees to
refuse to work had been shown to exist. At paragraph 181 of the Decision the
Tribunal found that although actual illnesses were suffered by some of the
Employees there was not enough information to prove cause and effect:
[. . .] A number of employees incurred or
suffered from a number of symptoms, such as nausea, burning eyes or scratchy
throat, and I am not suggesting that this was not the case. Dr. Harrison
described those as illnesses and while the listing of what constitutes illness
in the scientific literature may serve to characterize actual states as
illness, this is not sufficient in the present context to arrive at a finding
of danger where one does not have the necessary information to establish a
cause and effect relationship between those symptoms and the factual
conditions on the involved aircrafts. . . .
[my emphasis]
[75]
The symptoms suffered by some of the Employees
are identical to the symptoms the MSDS for Jet Oil indicated may be caused when
it is pyrolyzed. Given the Tribunal’s requirement for cause and effect to be
shown between the contaminants in the cabin air and the health effects feared
by the Employees, it is concerning that these relevant facts were not mentioned
and analyzed. While the Tribunal is presumed to have assessed even evidence it
does not mention, a failure to mention sufficiently important evidence can
leave the Court with an inference that the evidence was overlooked rather than
rejected: Cepeda-Gutierrez v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration)
(1998), 157 FTR 35 at para 17. In the Companion Decision, the listed
health effects of pyrolyzed Jet Oil was sufficient evidence for the Tribunal to
find a likelihood of health endangerment on a flight where the employee
suffered no health symptoms, but the Tribunal was unwilling to infer the cause
of actual symptoms in the Decision without proof of chemical concentrations in
the cabin.
[76]
Whether or not to draw an inference is in the
discretion of the Tribunal, and significant deference is owed to the expertise
of the Appeals Officer. If the Companion Decision did not exist, the Tribunal’s
failure to draw an inference of causation would not make the Decision
unreasonable. However, the Court cannot ignore that the Decision and Companion
Decision were made based on the same evidence applying two very
similarly-worded statutory provisions about the likelihood of health
endangerment. The Federal Court of Appeal has said that one of the methods a
reviewing court can use to assess the reasonableness of an administrative decision
is to seek out “badges of unreasonableness”. A
badge of unreasonableness can raise an apprehension of unreasonableness if not
sufficiently explained by the administrative decision-maker: Delios v Canada
(Attorney General), 2015 FCA 117 at para 27.
[77]
In the unique circumstances of this case, the
contradictory findings in the Decision and the Companion Decision are a badge
of unreasonableness, and the contradiction was not sufficiently explained so as
to maintain the transparency and intelligibility of the Decision. On its face,
the Decision is difficult to reconcile with the Companion Decision. The
Companion Decision finds the Employees were endangered while the Decision finds
that there was no danger to the Employees. The words danger and endanger are the
same with the former being the noun and the latter a verb.
[78]
The same hazard—pyrolyzed oil in the bleed air—was
present, in the same circumstances, in both decisions. The hazard was made
known to the Employees the same way in each decision: by the presence of the
odour of smelly socks on aircraft where the immediately prior flights had also
experienced the same odour. The odour is known in the industry and in the
literature to be caused by oil in the bleed air system. As the facts are
identical, to find danger in one decision and no danger in the other is not
intelligible unless there is a clear explanation of the difference between the
decisions. This is especially the case given that the work refusals took place
after the Employees suffered symptoms consistent with the MSDS while in the
Companion Decision, the Tribunal found a likelihood of health endangerment
despite the absence of any symptoms.
[79]
The two decisions involved identical evidence
and very similarly-worded statutory provisions. The main difference between
them is that the Companion Decision deals with an investigation of a hazardous
substance and the Decision addresses a refusal to work. But a decision-maker
cannot evaluate evidence differently depending on the consequences of the
decision. If the Tribunal believes that a reasonable expectation of illness
requires a higher threshold of evidence than a likelihood of health
endangerment, then it must say so explicitly. Otherwise the contradictory
outcomes between the Decision and the Companion Decision appear to be more the
result an unreasonable assessment of the evidence than of divergent statutory
interpretations.
[80]
Finally, I note that the Tribunal began its
analysis in the Decision noting that the definition of danger at subsection
122(1) of the Code and the statement of purpose of the Code at section 122.1
have to be considered in looking at that issue. It acknowledged that the
foremost principle to guide the analysis of whether or not danger existed was
the preventive purpose of the Code. Unfortunately, after identifying the
importance of the purpose, the Tribunal never explained or commented upon how
the purpose was served by the findings it made in either of the two decisions.
In that respect, on redetermination it may be necessary for the Tribunal to
indicate how the purpose applies to the conclusion that there was both a likelihood
that health may be endangered and no danger.
[81]
As a judge of the reviewing Court, it is not in
my purview to say whether the evidence rose to the level of a reasonable
expectation of illness or injury and I do not purport to make any such finding.
While the Decision is extensive, it must be set aside because it lacks
sufficient transparency and justification to explain its inconsistency with the
Companion Decision. It is also not clear that the Tribunal applied an
appropriate standard of proof for causation. The Tribunal did not address the
purpose of the Code and appears to have treated the MSDS differently in the two
decisions. The Tribunal may also have failed to consider relevant evidence that
could have addressed the causal link it was seeking. It is not possible to
determine whether the outcome would be the same if these matters had been
addressed. The matter must therefore be returned for redetermination, if possible
before the same Appeals Officer.
[82]
Given the time and expense that would be
involved in a de novo rehearing of the evidence, the parties’ agreement
on the facts and the extensive transcripts of expert cross-examinations, the
existing evidentiary record is more than sufficient for a fair redetermination
by the same or a different Appeals Officer. The redetermination will therefore
be restricted to the evidence originally before the Appeals Officer and the
transcript of the original appeals, though the parties may make additional
submissions in the redetermination.