Canadian War Museum ordered to reinstate 'star' historian after arbitrator finds she was unjustly fired - Action News
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Canadian War Museum ordered to reinstate 'star' historian after arbitrator finds she was unjustly fired

The Canadian War Museum has been ordered to reinstate a "star" historian after a federal labour arbitrator concluded the decision to fire her was directly related to her disability.

Labour arbitrator concluded museum's decision to fire Joanne Stober directly related to disability

A museum is pictured
The Canadian War Museum in Ottawa is one of three museums overseen by the Canadian Museum of History, which is a Crown corporation. The museum has been ordered to reinstate historian Joanne Stober. (www.warmuseum.ca)

The Canadian War Museum in Ottawa has been ordered to reinstate a "star"historian after a federal labour arbitrator concluded the decision to fire her was directly related to herdisability.

In a lengthy decision, Colin Johnston found that the museum unjustly terminated film and photography curatorJoanne Stoberin March 2019 nearly a year after she went on leave because of a disorder linked to work-relatedanxiety and depression.

Johnston said Stober should be compensated for lost wages, findingshe was also entitled to human rights damages for the museum's failure to accommodate her disability, despite notes from two doctors saying she wasn't ready to return to work on the date set by her employer.

"I accept that Dr. Stober's decision not to return ... was made in good faith and was based on the advice she was receiving from her doctors," Johnston wrote.

'Her dream job'

The rulinghighlights behind-the-scenes conflictat Canada's national museum of military history that saw Stober hired with fanfare in 2016 only to feel like she had a target on her back after the sudden departure of formermuseum director general Stephen Quick two years later.

The decision underscores a key finding inother workplace disputes:"that an employer cannot ignore a medical opinion simply because workplace stressors brought on the illness."

Joanne Stober is an expert in film and photography who was hired as a historian by the Canadian War Museum. (Carleton University)

The Canadian War Museum is one of three museums overseen by the Canadian Museum of History, which is a Crown corporation. Stober's firing was grieved by her union The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada.

Stober left a job as a senior archivist at Library and Archives Canada in 2016 to take on a mission that included showcasingthe war museum's existing art holdings while bringing the collection into the digital age.

The museum put out a press release to announce her hiring which was unusual for a historian.

Stoberclaimed she made it clear she had a young family and needed time off during the summer. She testified that the museumwas not opposed to that request.

In herfirst two years on the job, she gavelectures around the country, developedprograms for school groups and receivedan internal scholarship that increased her wage.

"She described her position at the museum as her dream job, perfectly matching her qualifications," Johnston wrote.

"This all changed in 2018."

Viewed as a 'star hire'

Stober'sproblems began with an exhibition brought in from Boston on thework of female photographers from the Middle East.

She said the museum's director of public affairs was concernedabout her use of the word "Palestinian"during a TV interview, and the Jewish Federation of Ottawacomplained about an exhibit referring to Gaza as an "occupied territory."

Former Canadian War Museum director general Stephen Quick hired Joanna Stober in 2016, but he left the museum abruptly in 2018. She said she felt she was targeted after his departure. (William Kent/Canadian War Museum)

"[Stober]was directed to contact the curator in Boston and request that the offending text be removed," the decision reads.

"[She]felt humiliated by this conversation and worried that it could do irreparable damage to her reputation as an academic and historian."

After Quick left as director general, Stober claimed his replacement said the departure shouldn't worry hera comment she found odd.

She said she was told"some viewed her as Dr. Quick's 'star'hire" and when she asked if that meant she could be terminated, she was told it would be difficult because her position was unionized a response she didn't find comforting.

"At this point, she began to obsess over her future with the organization, and the events that followed only seemed to reinforce her paranoia," Johnston wrote.

Stoberbelieved shewas subject to a series of professional slights, including the museum saying it would no longer pay for her travel to Oxford University togive a keynote lecture after initially approving the trip.

"The Oxford lecture was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that would boost her career as a historian and academic.The museum was now trying to take this away from her," Johnston wrote.

"She felt that the employer was targeting her because of her association with Dr. Quick."

An adjustment disorder

As 2018 continued, Stober was denied her request for parental leave in the summer and she noticed that the scores on her performance evaluations had been lowered something the new general director claimed was happening for all staff, not just Stober, under demands for more stringent standards from management.

By the end of June, she was tearful, anxious, not sleeping and had pains in her chest.

Photographs displayed in an exhibit called 'She Who Tells a Story' at the Canadian War Museum in 2017. Historian Joanne Stober brought the exhibition to the museum but claimed it became a source of conflict. (Jean-Francois Chevrier/CBC)

Her doctor said she was suffering from "an adjustment disorder" which was explained by a psychologist as "an emotional or behavioural reaction to psychosocial stressors where faulty thinking is at the root of the problem."

The doctor wroteher anote placing her on medical leave, but the museum had concerns about the validity of her claim, given that it coincided with her request for parental leave.

They asked for more proof, which resulted in her doctor including an outraged note in his second letter saying"itis frankly insulting that non-medical personnel have deemed that my medical assessment is not valid."

'A difficult witness'

The decision details the back and forth between Stober, her doctor, the union, the museum, an insurance company, a psychologist and an outside doctorhired by the museumto get a second opinion.

That doctor spoke with Stober's physicianbriefly but never connected with the psychologist, concluding the historian's problems were due to an "allegedhuman resources issue" and that there was no"medical reason why she cannot return to work."

The Canadian Museum of History oversees the operations of three museums, including the Canadian War Museum, which has been ordered to reinstate a fired historian. (Simon Lasalle/Radio-Canada)

Johnston noted that the same doctorwas a "difficult witness" who swore at the arbitrator and called the union's counsel "a bitch."The arbitrator called the report "flawed" because the doctor attributed all Stober's problems toworkplace conflict without giving any real consideration to the medical evidence.

The museum argued it had cause to terminate Stober's employment and said the problem had to do with her failure to provide medical proof she was totally disabled from working not the fact she suffered from a medical condition.

The employer also said Stober was not targeted and that the fuss around the photography exhibition was "much ado about nothing."

Johnston agreed there was no evidence to conclude that management deliberately targeted Stober. But that wasn't the point because sheheld the "honest belief" she was being singled out and it was making her sick.

"Enough things were happening to lead her to believe rightly or wrongly that she was no longer in management's favour and that decisions were to her disadvantage," the arbitrator wrote.

At the end of the day, Johnston found Stoberprovided enough evidence to show that on the face of it, she was unable to return to work.

"The employer, in my view, has put forward no evidence to contradict this conclusion," he wrote.

"I accept that her decision was made in the best interest of her health and cannot be interpreted as wilful insubordination."

Museum staff could not be reached for comment.