Focuses on human resources law from a business perspective, featuring news and cases from the courts, in-depth articles on legal trends and insights from top employment lawyers across Canada.
Issue link: https://digital.hrreporter.com/i/407890
6 | September 3, 2014 Canadian HR Reporter, a Thomson Reuters business 2014 Cases and Trends Employee felt most of her duties were taken away « from HaSTY on page 1 for funds to hire staff for such efforts and helped prepare a new by-law for dealing with such properties. In 2007, Robbins applied for and won the position of manager, property use in- spection branch. e position dealt with licensing, by-laws, policies and procedures dealing with property use in Vancouver. Co-ordinated enforcement — with which Robbins had been heavily involved in her previous position — was not considered a focus or primary function in her new job, which was at a higher pay grade. In her new position, Robbins dealt with problem property situ- ations which rarely became bad enough to warrant serious in- tervention or enforcement co- ordination by the city, such as the grow-ops she dealt with in her old job. However, Robbins retained some of her former responsibili- ties because she enjoyed the work and working with the assistant director for by-law administra- tion, of which her new boss, the director of licence and inspec- tions, wasn't aware. Robbins later explained that her replacement as manager of by-law administration wasn't familiar with enforcement orders, so she continued to pre- pare as part of a "transition phase." Robbins also described her job title as "manager, property use in- spection branch and co-ordinated enforcement," which wasn't actu- ally her new job title. Restructuring following executive's retirement In May 2010, the assistant director for by- law administration retired and the city decided to eliminate the position and re- organize. Robbins reported directly to the director of licence and inspections, but in July a new assistant director position was created to head the inspection services. Robbins' property use department would be part of that division. Robbins was upset, because she had ex- pected the assistant director of by-law ad- ministration would be offered to her rather than be eliminated. She also complained she would be reporting to someone who didn't know anything about co-ordinated enforcement, but her boss told her the new assistant director would learn and she should continue doing what she always did. Robbins felt her old boss's job hadn't really been eliminated, but rather renamed into the new assistant director position to keep her from getting it. After a tragic fire at a problem property, the city created a strategic enforcement committee to look at properties with seri- ous compliance concerns. Robbins attend- ed the committee's first meeting, but she felt the city manager didn't take her sug- gestions seriously. When asked to arrange for co-ordinated inspections, Robbins ex- pressed concern about her workload. Manager wanted to hang on to her unofficial responsibilities In January 2011, a new assistant director for inspection services was hired. Robbins was removed from the committee in favour of the new assistant director and co-ordinated enforcement duties were shifted to him as part of the section services. Robbins ex- pressed frustration with what she perceived as a lack of support from management on co-ordinated enforcement duties she had been doing since the assistant director for by-law administration had retired. She also complained that shifting the work to the new assistant director was taking away "80 per cent" of her work. Robbins was told co-ordinated enforce- ment shouldn't be taking so much of her time, as it wasn't part of her core duties. She felt "devastated and embarrassed" because she felt her status with the city was reduced. e next business day, a meeting with all the managers of the inspection branches was held. Robbins sat back and didn't par- ticipate, and afterwards she told her staff she was going to take vacation time because she didn't know what to do. A week later, Robbins was back and re- ceived an email asking about the procedure for dealing with an invoice from a security company. Robbins replied that it was part of co-ordinated reinforcement and she no longer did that. On Jan. 26, 2011, Robbins gave her boss a letter from her lawyer stating her position that she was constructively dismissed by "unilateral and substantial changes to the essential terms" of her employment con- tract. Her boss tried to explain the changes to her duties were limited, she would still be participating in some co-ordinated rein- forcement and her pay would be the same, but Robbins kept interrupting, arguing co- ordinated reinforcement was her main area and they were tak- ing away all her work. She said her phone and parking pass were on her desk and she was going to say good-bye to her staff. e city treated her departure as a resignation. e court found that Rob- bins' role in co-ordinated rein- forcement gradually increased once her assistant director be- came responsible for it in 2000 and by 2010 it was her primary function. However, there was no fundamental change in the position she held — manager, property use inspection — and officially co-ordinated enforce- ment was not the primary func- tion of her position. ough Robbins claimed she was spend- ing 80 per cent of her time doing co-ordinated enforcement, the court wasn't persuaded she was only spending 20 per cent of her time managing the property use inspection branch. e court also found Robbins' boss was telling the truth when he tried to tell her she would still be involved in co-ordinated en- forcement, and just the high-level files would be handled by the strategic enforcement com- mittee. However, Robbins refused to listen. "Ms. Robbins acted precipitously by leav- ing her employment without waiting to see how the restructuring played out and the role she would continue to play in co-ordi- nated reinforcement," said the court. e court found that the restructuring would have resulted in co-ordinated rein- forcement taking up less of Robbins' time, but the changes did not constitute a funda- mental change in her position or a breach of the employment contract. Robbins' claim for constructive dismissal was dismissed. For more information see: • Robbins v. Vancouver (City), 2014 Car- swellBC 1363 (B.C. S.C.). CRedit: AlexmillOS/ShUtteRStOCk.COm