Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario
B E T W E E N:
Claudio Rego Applicant
-and-
Mount Sinai Hospital Respondent
INTERIM DECISION
Adjudicator: Alan G. Smith Date: March 7, 2011 Citation: 2011 HRTO 458 Indexed as: Rego v. Mount Sinai Hospital
WRITTEN SUBMISSIONS
Claudio Rego, Applicant ) Self-represented Mount Sinai Hospital, ) Maria McDonald, Counsel Respondent )
INTRODUCTION
1This is an Application filed December 7, 2010, pursuant to section 34 of Part IV of the Human Rights Code, R.S.O. 1990, c. H.19, as amended, (the "Code"). This Interim Decision deals with a Notice of Intent to Defer issued by the Tribunal by which the Application would be deferred pending the outcome of the ongoing workplace grievance-arbitration process undertaken by the parties.
2In its submissions of February 18, 2011, the respondent supports the deferral of the Application.
3The applicant opposes deferral because he is concerned about the delay in scheduling an arbitration hearing.
4The respondent submits that, with regard to the applicant's timeliness concerns:
a) An arbitrator has been selected and dates will soon be chosen for the hearing of the matter;
b) The applicant is currently working the hours that he requested in his Application and therefore his immediate medical concerns have been alleviated.
5Deferral of an application ensures that proceedings dealing with the same issues do not run concurrently, raising the possibility of inconsistent decisions on facts or law.
6While deferral is not automatic, it is granted to avoid adjudicative duplication. The Tribunal has held that some of the factors that may be relevant in deciding whether to defer consideration of an application are the subject matter of the other proceeding, the nature of the other proceeding, the type of remedies available in the other proceeding, and whether it would be fair overall to the parties to defer, having regard to the status of each proceeding and the steps that have been taken to pursue them. See: Christianson v. College of Physicians and Surgeons, 2009 HRTO 438 at para. 10; Groves v. Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2010 HRTO 1779.
DECISION
7The Tribunal has generally deferred applications where there is an ongoing grievance under a collective agreement based on the same facts and human rights issues: Blackman v. Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2009 HRTO 970 at para. 5. In explaining this approach, the Tribunal has referred to the fact that the Supreme Court of Canada has affirmed that grievance arbitrators have not only the power but also the responsibility to implement and enforce the substantive rights and obligations of human rights as if they were part of the collective agreement: Parry Sound (District) Social Services Administration Board v. O.P.S.E.U., Local 324, 2003 SCC 42.
8A review of the grievances filed by the applicant reveals they are virtually identical to the subject matter of the Application.
9While the applicant may be frustrated with the length of time the grievance/arbitration process has taken, this is not a sufficient reason to proceed with the Application in all the circumstances: Law v. Organizational Solution, 2010 HRTO 1158.
ORDER
10In these circumstances, the Tribunal finds that the most fair, just and expeditious approach is to defer consideration of this Application pending the conclusion of the grievance arbitration process. The Tribunal directs the parties' attention to Rules 14.3 and 14.4 which outline the process by which a party may request, in accordance to Rule 19, the Tribunal to proceed with an application after the conclusion of another process.
11I am not seized of this matter.
Dated at Toronto, this 7th day of March, 2011.
"Signed by"
Alan G. Smith
Member

