Northern Exposure

What Happens When Child Care and Work Conflict – More Guidance for Employers

By Ralph Nero and Ida Martin

As we reported last week, decision makers across Canada are struggling with the meaning of discrimination on the basis of family status. Last week we looked at a Human Rights Tribunal decision out of British Columbia. This week we look at a recent Ontario arbitration decision, Re Power Stream Inc. and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 636 (Bender et al.). Like the British Columbia case, the arbitrator ruled that not all conflicts between family and work lead to a duty to accommodate on the part of the employer.

Facts
The employer in the Ontario case is an electricity distribution company. Under a previous collective agreement, employees had the option of working five eight-hour shifts per week or four 10-hour shifts per week. The 10-hour shift commenced one hour earlier and ended one hour later than the eight-hour shift. While most employees chose the 10-hour shifts, the four grievors chose the eight-hour shifts. That schedule allowed them to more easily fulfill their family responsibilities:

  • Grievor 1 was separated but had joint custody of six- and 10-year-old children. The eight-hour shift permitted him to drop the children off at daycare and pick them up on the way home during his custody weeks. He could no longer fulfill those child-care responsibilities under the 10-hour shift. Plus, the children had to change schools and the custody arrangements had to be changed to the detriment of both parents.
  • Grievor 2 was married with eight- and 10-year-old children. His wife traveled frequently for work, so he had to drop the children off in the morning.
  • Grievor 3 was married with two children and was unable to pick up the children from daycare under the 10-hour schedule. His wife had to and, according to the grievor, her opportunity for advancement at work was hindered.
  • Grievor 4 was a divorced father of three teen-agers who had custody of two of the children. He claimed that the 10-hour schedule conflicted with his ability to watch their extracurricular activities.

Understandably, the employer preferred a standard shift. That way, employees could attend a standard daily planning meeting together. And forepersons could be more easily assigned. While initially resistant to the idea of standard shifts, the union eventually bargained for a standard 10-hour shift – 10 hours because most members preferred it.

Decision
To start out, the arbitrator indicated that not all employer actions that have a negative impact on a family or parental obligation are discriminatory:

… I do not think that every conflict between a work obligation and a parental obligation must be accommodated by the employer. More importantly, I do not think that every such conflict should give rise to a finding of discrimination such that an inquiry should be conducted over whether the employer should accommodate the conflict.

Instead, arbitrators are to consider a number of factors when determining whether employees have been discriminated against on the basis of family status:

  1. What are the relevant characteristics establishing the grievors’ family status?
  2. What are the adverse effects complained of, and is it reasonable to expect that the Human Rights Code offers protection against the particular adverse effect of the employer’s action on each grievor?
  3. What prompted the adverse effect on the grievor – a change in the employer’s rule or a change in the characteristics of the grievors’ family status?
  4. What efforts have the grievors made to self-accommodate their conflict? Have they rejected options at self-accommodation that they should reasonably be expected to have made?
  5. In light of the answers to all those questions taken together, is it reasonable to make a finding of discrimination necessitating an inquiry into whether the employer is able to accommodate the adverse effects of the discrimination?

On this basis, the arbitrator held that Grievors 2, 3, and 4 hadn’t been discriminated against on the basis of family status. Rearranging of family responsibilities between spouses is what families do every day. Further, being unable to attend children’s extracurricular activities doesn’t amount to discrimination.

The employer wasn’t so lucky with Grievor 1. There, the arbitrator said that a change in a workplace rule that forces parents to alter a carefully constructed custody agreement to their detriment may be found to be discriminatory. In this instance, there should have first been an inquiry by the employer regarding the possibility of accommodation prior to forcing the Grievor to make substantial family and legal changes.

Where does that leave employers?
On balance, this case is favorable to employers. Like the British Columbia case last week, it reinforces that not every conflict between work and family obligations results in a duty to accommodate on the part of the employer. However, these “accommodation of family responsibility” cases are rising more frequently, and we expect that trend to continue.  As we said last week – proceed cautiously and pay attention to changes in workplace practices that affect unique or mandatory family obligations.

1 thought on “What Happens When Child Care and Work Conflict – More Guidance for Employers”

  1. what if you have an established schedule(1st shift) and employer wants to change your schedule to like 2nd or 3rd and its not a necessary change and the employee has 2 minor children in school and daycare and employer is aware of this??

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