Crown Employee Performing Indecent Acts: Ordered Back to Work

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Crown Employee Performing Indecent Acts: Ordered Back to Work

When is off-duty conduct considered “just cause” for termination of employment?  This was the question that an arbitrator of the Ontario Grievance Settlement Board recently answered.  The case, Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Richard) and The Crown in right of Ontario (Ministry of Transportation) (GSB#2010-2164), illustrates the high level of misconduct that unionized employers must demonstrate in order to uphold the dismissal of an employee.

In this case, a Transportation Enforcement Officer was convicted of two counts of Performing Indecent Acts.  The employee was dismissed for just cause.  The dismissed two-year employee was caught masturbating in public, on an outdoor trail in the Welland area, near a girls’ school.  Two young girls witnessed the incidents and were “traumatized.”  The grievor was not on duty at the time and was not in uniform…in fact, apparently, he was not actually wearing anything.

At the time of his arrest, and at the hearing of this matter, the grievor maintained that he harboured some animosity towards women and towards his ex-girlfriend in particular.  He was not able to provide any genuine reassurance that this conduct would not continue.  He admitted to ten previous incidents of performing indecent acts, but he had only be charged with four counts and was only convicted on two of these charges.  The grievor, of course, would be regularly required to work with women in his job, including co-employees, police officers and members of the public.  He argued that he should be reinstated and that the employer’s decision to fire for just cause should be overturned.

Arbitrator Loretta Mikus noted that the grievor chose an area that was near a girls’ school and would likely encounter young girls.  However, she found that there was no evidence that he actually assaulted anyone or that he was in possession of any kind of child pornography.  Apparently, he was acting alone at the time he was caught in the act, red-handed.  Moreover, neither the public, nor the employee’s co-workers knew about the case, which was not publicized widely.

At his criminal trial, the grievor was given a conditional discharge of his criminal convictions with a three year probation, including a condition that he stay off of any recreational waterway trails.  The arbitrator held that these acts were at the “lesser” end of acts attracting criminal sanction and that the probationary restrictions would not impede the grievor from being able to perform the duties of his job.

Ultimately, the arbitrator ordered that the grievor be returned to work without back pay.  The grievor had been first suspended in 2008 and had been on a paid leave of absence until the time of his criminal trial in 2010.  After pleading guilty, he was placed on a leave without pay by his employer for almost three years.  As a result of the arbitrator’s award, he has now been ordered back to work without any of the three years’ back pay.

Counsel for the Ministry argued that this kind of case might be quite distasteful for most members of the public who would have thought that this kind of off-duty conduct would be incompatible with the duties and responsibilities of an Enforcement Officer who is required to enforce and uphold the law.  However, the arbitrator felt that the grievor deserved a “second chance” even though he had only been with the Ministry for approximately two years.  This conduct was not “just cause.”

It remains to be seen whether the Ministry will seek judicial review of the decision.  To date, it is probably fortunate for the grievor that the case has not had nearly as much public exposure as his private parts.

 

 

 

2 Comments

  1. Eric says:

    As a Transportation Enforcement Officer with the same organization, I find this decision to be offensive to the real victims; the young persons who stumbled upon this criminal Act and the good Officers that work in this Agency. The union painted this party to be the victim in this; all the while forgetting about the true casualties; the persons exposed to this; the Officers in this organization; the Agency itself and of course…common sense.

  2. bob says:

    Disgusting…plainly said disgusting

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