Health unit spent $135K investigating workplace harassment in last 4 years
CBC
The Middlesex-London Health Unit has spent $135,000 in the last four years investigating workplace harassment or an internal toxic work environment, documents obtained by CBC News show.
In 2020 alone, the health unit paid almost $70,000 to Schroeder Law, a London firm that focuses exclusively on workplace conflict and employs investigators and lawyers who deal with workplace harassment, violence, discrimination, bullying and human rights abuses.
Other external firms were hired by the health unit to conduct investigations in each of the last four years, the documents show.
"It's a lot. You have to wonder, what is the missing piece in their policies and processes and how they handle their culture, and what is this doing to their overall environment," said Jann Danyluk, a London-based workplace human resources investigator with Ford Keast Human Resources.
Danyluk has worked in the field for more than 20 years, and was speaking to CBC News generally about workplace investigations. She is not familiar with what led to the investigations at the health unit, but said the number of investigations raises questions.
"Do they have solid relationships, do they have a management that takes things seriously? Do they follow all the health and safety guidelines, is there training and education in place so that people can do their jobs?"
CBC News requested records pertaining to money spent by the health unit or its board of directors on workplace harassment or toxic workplace investigations from 2018 to 2021. The records show:
There are others investigations, but the health unit said it would not disclose them under a provision of the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act that protects documents that fall under solicitor-client privilege or that could be used to give legal advice or be used for a law suit.
Matt Reid, the chair of the health unit's board of directors, which oversees workplace investigations, said he could not comment on the nature of the investigations because they are personnel matters.
"MLHU takes seriously its legal obligation to investigate workplace allegations. There are often costs associated with doing so," Reid said in a statement.
The health unit currently has 870 employees. Before the pandemic, it had 308.
Dr. Alex Summers has been filling in as medical officer of health since November 2021, when Dr. Chris Mackie began a leave of absence for unspecified reasons. Mackie was hired as medical officer of health and CEO of the health unit in 2013. In July 2020, the CEO role was taken over by someone else.
Under Ontario's Occupational Health and Safety Act, employers have a duty to investigate if there's a complaint about harassment or if they become aware of concerns about harassment, said London lawyer Mihad Fahmy, who conducts independent investigations for workplaces.
Some employers choose to do an internal investigation, but many use a third-party investigator because they have expertise and are neutral, Fahmy said.