OPSEU's former president Warren 'Smokey' Thomas countersues union, leadership - Action News
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OPSEU's former president Warren 'Smokey' Thomas countersues union, leadership

The former president of an Ontario public sector union is countersuing the organization and its current leadership, alleging that claims against him are the culmination of a politically motivated campaign to destroy his reputation.

OPSEU seeking nearly $6M it alleges was unlawfully transferred to former union executives

Ontario Public Service Employees Union president Warren (Smokey) Thomas speaks to reporters at Queen's Park in Toronto on Jan. 21, 2019.
The former president of the Ontario Public Services Employees Union, Warren (Smokey) Thomas, is countersuing the organization and its current leadership, alleging that claims against him are the culmination of a politically motivated campaign to destroy his reputation. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

The former president of an Ontario public sector union is countersuing the organization and its current leadership, alleging that claims against him are the culmination of a politically motivated campaign to destroy his reputation.

The Ontario Public Services Employees Union (OPSEU) is suing former president Warren (Smokey) Thomas, former first vice-president/treasurer Eduardo Almeida and former financial services administrator Maurice Gabay, for the nearly $6 million it alleges they unlawfully transferred to themselves, including strike fund cash and union vehicles.

In a statement of defence and countersuit filed on Friday, Thomas alleged the claims against him are part of a campaign by president JP Hornick, along with vice-president and treasurer Laurie Nancekivell,to undermine his reputation and deflect negative attention from their leadership.

Thomas, who retired in April 2022 after 15 years as OPSEUpresident, is seeking $4.5 million in damages, including for breach of contract, conspiracy and defamation, plus another $1 million in punitive damages.

The statement of defence alleges that the claim against him has "no basis in reality, and is entirely manufactured."

"Every single one of the transactions in respect of which Mr. Thomas had any personal involvement was appropriate and consistent with his obligations to OPSEU," the statement of defence reads.

In a statement Monday, Thomas called the allegations of financial improprieties made by the union "bogus."

"Since I stood beside other labour leaders and Premier Ford for his $15 per hour minimum wage announcement, I have been a victim of a nasty, political campaign by some OPSEU/SEFPO leadership members to advance their own agenda with the Ontario NDP," Thomas said in a statement sent to CBC Toronto.

"I've dedicated my whole adult life to advancing the cause of labour and defending workers. Some new radical leadership members are trying to destroy my reputation and 38 years of service for OPSEU/SEFPO members, while wasting union funds."

Hornick and Nancekivell argue in a statement that Thomas' defence and counterclaim are "fiction at best." Bothwere elected to their current positions in April 2022.

"While we are very limited in terms of what we can repeat or comment on publicly at this time, we would classify Mr. Thomas's defence and counterclaim as fiction at best," the OPSEU leaderssaid in a statement to CBC Toronto.

"It does not address the substance of our fact-based statement of claim, which seeks to recoup $6,000,0000 in funds from Thomas, Almeida and Gabay which we believe to have been misappropriated, and which is the result of a thorough forensic audit of our finances undertaken by an independent third-party."

None of the allegations havebeen tested in court.

$1.75Min funds misappropriated, alleges union

The union has alleged Thomas misappropriated around $1.75 million in union funds for personal benefit and then worked with his co-defendants to try to stall the executive board from carrying out a third-party forensic audit that exposed alleged wrongdoing.

OPSEU's statement of claim alleged Thomas illegitimately transferred five union vehicles to himself or family, signed off on over $600,000 in unauthorized withdrawals from the strike fund and received nearly $750,000 in cash payouts for weekend, overtime and vacation pay to which he was not entitled.

Thomas's statement of defence, meanwhile, alleged Hornick andNancekivell are political crusaders who sought to undermine a successful president in their own leadership pursuits and who brought the suit in an alleged attempt to distract from reports some people in the union felt "marginalized by the new regime."

The statement of defence said tensions between him and a "politicized faction" of the union, led by Hornick and Nancekivell,"exploded" in November 2021, when he appeared alongside other union leaders and Premier Doug Ford at a news conference announcing a $15 minimum wage.

Thomas claims he was pressured to support NDP

Thomas alleged Hornick had long pressured him to support Ontario's NDP, despite his refusal to back a political party, fearing it could backfire in contract negotiations.

After the appearance, which Thomas said was incorrectly seen as a Ford endorsement, the faction's "festering resentment" turned into a "personal vendetta" to take over OPSEU's leadership, the statement of defence alleged.

Thomas claimed he filed a successful harassment complaint againstNancekivell and other members of the union's executive board in February 2022 after alleged attempts to strip him of power and defame him.

Thomas claimed after a third-party investigation "substantiated his complaint," he agreed to a confidential settlement proposed byOPSEU's in-house counsel, which included cash and the transfer of a vehicle.

Current OPSEU president JP Hornick said Monday the claims made by former union president Warren (Smokey) Thomas in a statement of defence and counterclaim are 'fiction at best.' (CBC)

The union alleged the $500,000 in cash and transfer of Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland for the "so-called settlement agreements" was not authorized by the board and amounted to conspiracy and collusion. Thomas said it was not his job as the complainant to inform the board of the settlement.

Thomas claimed that over the years he paid for the opportunity to transfer "depreciated used" union vehicles to himself or family with "financial entitlements still owed to him."

The statement of defence described Thomas as a "workaholic" who had accumulated a significant number of lieu days, compensating days and vacation days by his retirement. All of the payouts he received in that respect, the defence said, were properly accrued and followed union policy.

It said Thomas has "no recollection" of the strike fund withdrawals in question but any withdrawal he approved were for "appropriate and necessary union purposes."

His countersuit alleged the current leaders were using their positions to "personally and professionally destroy" Thomas to advance their "partisan agenda," which it alleged is at odds with previous direction from members.

With files from CBC News