Document

MO-1167

Institution/HIC  Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board
Summary  NATURE OF THE APPEAL: The Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board (the Board) received a request under the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the Act ) for access to the requester's personal information located in the files of a named disability management officer. The Board located a number of responsive records and granted access to some of them. Access was denied to the remaining 13 records, pursuant to section 52(3) of the Act , as the Board indicated that they fell outside the ambit of the Act . The appellant appealed the decision to deny access. The appellant, an employee with the Board, had been away from work due to illness and the records relate to her receipt of Long-Term Disability benefits, the termination of those benefits and her return to work. This office provided a Notice of Inquiry to the appellant and the Board. Representations were received from both parties. In its representations, the Board indicated that it had granted access to an additional record. The records that remain at issue in this appeal consist of 12 documents which include a six-page Claim History, 22 pages of internal e-mail, a one-page internal memorandum, a two-page summary and a five-page summary and comments. These records appear as items A-D and F-M on the Index of Records prepared by the Board and provided to the appellant and to this office. DISCUSSION: JURISDICTION The interpretation of sections 52(3) and (4) of the Act is a preliminary issue which relates to the Commissioner's jurisdiction to continue an inquiry. These sections read: (3) Subject to subsection (4), this Act does not apply to records collected, prepared, maintained or used by or on behalf of an institution in relation to any of the following: 1. Proceedings or anticipated proceedings before a court, tribunal or other entity relating to labour relations or to the employment of a person by the institution. 2. Negotiations or anticipated negotiations relating to labour relations or to the employment of a person by the institution between the institution and a person, bargaining agent or party to a proceeding or an anticipated proceeding. 3. Meetings, consultations, discussions or communications about labour relations or employment-related matters in which the institution has an interest. (4) This Act applies to the following records: 1. An agreement between an institution and a trade union. 2. An agreement between an institution and one or more employees which ends a proceeding before a court, tribunal or other entity relating to labour relations or to employment-related matters. 3. An agreement between an institution and one or more employees resulting from negotiations about employment- related matters between the institution and the employee or employees. 4. An expense account submitted by an employee of an institution to that institution for the purpose of seeking reimbursement for expenses incurred by the employee in his or her employment. Section 52(3) is record specific and fact specific. If this section applies to a specific record, in the circumstances of a particular appeal, and none of the exceptions listed in section 52(4) are present, then the record is excluded from the scope of the Act and not subject to the Commissioner's jurisdiction. The Board submits that the records fall outside the ambit of the Act because of the application of section 52(3)3. Section 52(3)3 In order for a record to fall within the scope of paragraph 3 of section 52(3), the Board must establish that: 1. The record was collected, prepared, maintained or used by the Board or on its behalf; and 2. This collection, preparation, maintenance or usage was in relation to meetings, consultations, discussions or communications; and 3. These meetings, consultations, discussions or communications are about labour relations or employment-related matters in which the Board has an interest. [Order P-1242] The Board submits that all of the records fall within the scope of section 52(3)3 and are, therefore, outside the ambit of the Act . The Board argues that the records were prepared and used by staff in various departments: benefits, disability management, teacher personnel, school administrators and employee relations. The appellant agrees that the records were collected, prepared, maintained or used by the Board or on its behalf. The Board states that the records relate to the appellant's ongoing entitlement claim to Long-Term Disability Benefits, the decision by the Board's carrier to terminate benefits, the possibility of legal action against the Board, the process of assisting the appellant's return to work, sick leave credits and the determination of the appellant's employment status under the Secondary Teachers' Collective Agreement, should the appellant not return to work. I have carefully reviewed all the records. I find that they were collected, prepared, maintained or used by the Board in relation to various meetings, discussions and consultations which took place regarding the appellant's long-term disability benefit claims and her return to work. I also find that because these meetings, discussions, consultations were concerned with the appellant's employment with the Board, they were clearly about an employment-related matter. I must now determine whether these records concern an employment-related matter in which the Board "has an interest". The Board submits that the records relate to the appellant's application for long-term disability benefits. The Board states that under the Ontario Human Rights Code , it has a duty to accommodate an employee with a disability. Further, that under the Secondary School Teachers Collective Agreement, it has an obligation to provide rehabilitative assistance to members of the bargaining unit. The Board submits that should it become necessary for the Board to determine a change in the employment status of the appellant, the matter would become grievable under the collective agreement. The Board argues that this would have the potential to affect its legal rights or obligations and it would, therefore, have a legal interest in the matter. The appellant relies on Order 52 in which former Commissioner Sidney B. Linden addressed the interpretation of the term "anticipated" in the context of the litigation under section 19 (solicitor-client privilege) of the Act . She notes that the former Commissioner found that "there must be a reasonable prospect of such litigation at the time of the preparation of the document - litigation must be more than just a vague or theoretical possibility." The appellant states that "[t]he corollary of this, of course, is that time mitigates against the concept of "anticipated proceedings", which is to say that, absent any facts which demonstrate the need to prepare a record for a future anticipated proceeding, the more time between the date that the record was created and the request, the less the possibility of an "antic
Legislation
  • MFIPPA
  • 52(3)3
Published  Nov 25, 1998
Type  Order
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