Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Video Of Sexual Relations Can Be Used At Grievance In Fire Department Firings

The Canadian Press, 30 Nov, 2018 07:48 PM
  • Video Of Sexual Relations Can Be Used At Grievance In Fire Department Firings
VANCOUVER — Two employees of the fire department in Vernon, B.C., are battling to keep their jobs after a videotape showed them having sexual relations in the interim fire chief's office.
 
 
The pair, who are not named, were fired two days after the incident earlier this year, but their union is grieving the dismissals.
 
 
It argued the camera was hidden and its footage amounts to "an illegal collection of personal information" that should not be used against the employees.
 
 
"The union does not deny the two employees engaged in the activity recorded in the footage, which the union characterizes as 'a deeply personal and compromising interaction,' " says the decision.
 
 
But it says the union did not agree to an admission of the activity as part of the arbitration process, asserting the employer has a legal onus to prove each employee engaged in activity that justified their firing.
 
 
The camera had been installed several months earlier after David Lind, who was the interim chief at the time, became concerned that someone might be accessing his locked file cabinet, which contained sensitive staffing and budget documents.
 
 
Video didn't show a staff member accessing the file cabinet and the union applied to have the pictures excluded as evidence in the termination proceedings, but an arbitration ruling issued on Oct. 30 disagrees.
 
 
A majority ruling by two of the three arbitration panel members found the "surreptitious surveillance" was both necessary as part of an investigation of alleged employee misconduct and a "reasonable exercise of management authority."
 
 
Union grievances of the firings were scheduled to be held last week, with the video permitted as evidence.
 
 
The city said in a news release on Friday that the case involved a firefighter and another employee of the fire service.
 
 
"Because this incident is before an arbitration panel, no additional information will be made available from the city at this time," it said.
 
 
In reaching their decision, arbitration panel chair James Dorsey and employer nominee John McKearney found the video footage was not a serious invasion of privacy. 
 
 
"The brief, fleeting loss of privacy by individual firefighters ... was at the lower end of any range of seriousness of invasion of privacy at work," the decision says.
 
 
But Lorne West, the union nominee on the panel, wrote in a dissenting opinion that consideration is needed of the troubled labour management atmosphere in the fire department, where Lind had arrived as part of a complete turnover of department leadership barely a year earlier.
 
 
The decision says when Lind was hired, he was "told there were relationship challenges" in the department.
 
 
"The explicit message was to be cautious trusting union leadership," it says.
 
 
When Lind found the lock of his file cabinet in the unlocked position after he was sure he locked it, the arbitration decision says he and the deputy chief "speculated the most likely culprit was a union representative."
 
 
It says Lind and the deputy chief decided to install camera surveillance.
 
 
The panel says it shares "some of the union's concerns" about Lind’s testimony, but West goes further, writing it was "not believable."
 
 
"If there is no truth to interim fire Chief Lind's testimony then there can be no justification for the video camera installation. Therefore, the video footage should not be admissible," wrote West. 
 
 
He also says the employer's efforts throughout the hearing were "laser focused" on one of the two employees.
 
 
"The employee that is clearly the focus of the employer in this matter is a strong leader within the fire department and the last of the leadership to be removed and replaced. ... Is it coincidental?"

MORE National ARTICLES

Edmonton Homeless Man Finds Extremely Valuable 'Bambi' Cel In A Dumpster

Adam Gillian, who is 38, brought the item into Curiosity Inc., an antique shop in Edmonton, and the owner bought it for $20.

Edmonton Homeless Man Finds Extremely Valuable 'Bambi' Cel In A Dumpster

UCP Member John Carpay Apologizes For 'Unintentionally' Comparing Pride Flag To Swastikas

UCP Member John Carpay Apologizes For 'Unintentionally' Comparing Pride Flag To Swastikas
A member of Alberta's United Conservative Party is apologizing for making what he says was an unintentional comparison between the rainbow LGBTQ pride flag and swastikas in a speech this weekend.

UCP Member John Carpay Apologizes For 'Unintentionally' Comparing Pride Flag To Swastikas

Trial Begins For Woman Accused Of Killing Her Two Young Daughters

Trial Begins For Woman Accused Of Killing Her Two Young Daughters
LAVAL, Que. — When her two daughters were found dead in the family playroom on March 31, 2009, dressed in their school uniforms, Adele Sorella was going through a difficult time, a jury heard Monday.

Trial Begins For Woman Accused Of Killing Her Two Young Daughters

A Fine, No Jail Time For Canadian Charged With Vandalizing Historic Thai Wall

A Canadian woman who was arrested in northern Thailand for spraying paint on an ancient wall has avoided more jail time, but must still pay a $4,000 fine for her actions.

A Fine, No Jail Time For Canadian Charged With Vandalizing Historic Thai Wall

New $10 Bill Featuring Viola Desmond Goes Into Circulation Next Week

New $10 Bill Featuring Viola Desmond Goes Into Circulation Next Week
HALIFAX — A new $10 banknote featuring Viola Desmond's portrait will go into circulation in a week, just over 72 years after she was ousted from the whites-only section of a movie theatre in New Glasgow, N.S.

New $10 Bill Featuring Viola Desmond Goes Into Circulation Next Week

Canadian Forces Safe After Attack In Mali; Jihadists Claim Responsibility

Canadian Forces Safe After Attack In Mali; Jihadists Claim Responsibility
GAO, Mali — A car-bomb explosion in northern Mali killed three civilians on Monday, and one group reportedly claimed that Canadian soldiers and other foreign forces were targeted.

Canadian Forces Safe After Attack In Mali; Jihadists Claim Responsibility