HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-1115.Fu.89-09-29IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN ENPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between: OPSEU (Wei Fu)
Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Citizenship)
Employer
Before:
For the Grievor:
For the Employer:
Hearings:
T.H. Wilson Vice-Chairperson
I. Freedman Melube r
W. Lobraico Member
~J. Mosher
Counsel
Gowling, Strathy & Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
L. McIntosh
Law Officer
Crown Law Office, Civil
Ministry of the Attorney General
May 11, 1988
August 22, 1?888
September 29, 1988
October 6, 1988
December 8, 1988
The grievor applied on a job posting. He scored 6.5 out of 14
but he needed 8 to receive an interview. He grieves against that denial
of an interview. The Board held five days of hearing. The first'day of
hearing was adjourned when the Board learned that the incumbents had not
been given proper notice. Proper notice was subsequently given and
those incumbents who attended were given full opportunity to
participate.
The job competition was for a Race Relations Consultant (Human
Rights Commission Officer 2) with the Race Relations Directorate. In
Toronto, four positions were available and there were 700 applicants
(Job Competition L8 204/85-86). The employer granted 50' interviews.
The relevant provision of the collective agreement is section 4.3 which
provides as follows:
"4.3 In filling a vacancy, the Employer shall give primary
consideration to qualifications and ability to perform the
required duties. where qualifications and ability em
relatively equal length of continuous service shall be a
consideration."
The union's principal argument is that the criteria that were
used by the Ministry were improperly applied to the grievor. The
grievor's seniority date is May 1974. The applicable standards of
review in such a situation were set out in Bore&i and Ninistrv of
Natural Resources (G.S.B. 256/82). In that case, where as in our case,
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;. the grievor had been denied an interview the Board ruled at pages 2-
3:
.
"First, the Board should determine whether the employer acted
improperly in denying the grievor an interview with the onus on
the employer to show that it acted properly. If it acted
properly, the case would be over. If it acted improperly, the
Board would have to consider tbe relative equality of the
candidates and the appropriate remedy."
At pages 7-8 the Board states:
"Did the employer act improperly, then, in failing to interview
the grievor? In conducting a job competition, an employer can not
be required to interview all the applicants, regardless of their
suitability. when numerous applications come forward, as is
common in the public service with its large number of employees,
questions of efficiency and cost may require some screening of
applications. At times, only those meeting the basic
qualifications may be considered. Of course, these qualifications
must be reasonably related to tbe job in question. At other
times, the pool of apparently qualified applicants may be so large
that a ranking of tbe most qualified will have to occur and only
those with the highest scores will be called for an interview and
further consideration. The ranking, again must be reasonable, in
the sense tbat each candidate's qualifications are reasonably
evaluated. Failure to interview an employee wi cl2 greater
seniority than the successful candidate may well lead to a
grievance, with the senior employee arguing tbac he is relatively
egual."
In that particular case, tbe Board concluded "that tbe employer
acted reasonably in deciding not to call the grievor for an interview".
In the present case in reference to the two step determination
outlined in Borecki, the parties all agreed that the hearing should not
be bifurcated but that all evidence should be received. The criteria
for grading applications on tbe job posting were set out in a Memorandum
dated April 29, 1986 from Sam Ifejika; Manager of Operations to Dan
WacIntyre, Commissioner for Race Relations. It is set out on pages 3
and 4 of this Decision:
Ontario Commlaslon - 3 _
Human Rights ontarlenne de8
Commlsslon droll8 de la porsonne
RlUX Dwlslon Relations oes rapporls Dlvc+lon enIre Les rfices
April 29, 1986
MEMOItANDUM,TO: Dan McIntyre
Commissioner for Race Relations
PROM: Sam Ifejika
M~f~uger of Operations
RE: CRITERIA FOR SCREENING OF APPLICATIONS
I nm ~forwarding for your review and approval, the scoring system which the
supcr&iors agreed on for the screening of the applications for the position
of Race Relations Consultant. The previous IO-point system was judged
inadequate in light of the new job description.
I. ESSENTIAL SKILLS (10)
Ten essential skills were identified and scored as follows:
Employment Equity (2)
1) Evidence that the candidate has knowlcd e awareness or
understtrlldin& of emplo?menL equity %iues (1) ---F
2) Consultinp experience in employment equity, (1)
Research and Report Writing(Z)
4) General research and analytical skills (1)
4) Research and/or report-writing in race relations (1)
IrlsIiItrIion/1l I~x~wricrw2 (2)
,..
5) Experiuncc in wcrrhing with wy of the nmjor institulions of
acrciely sucli US cducution. the crinliruil justlce system, business
and industry, or with community agencies, such as the United “’
Way, Children’s Aid Society, etc. (1)
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6) Leadership role or progressive responsibilities in an institution
or agency (1)
Community Experience (2)
7) Experience in working with community groups, racial and Y I.>
ethnic minorities (1)
8) Leadership role in community organi+ations (1)
hlcdiation, conciliution experience or skill
W tipericncc in conflict resoiution or dispute mediation In a
community or institutionlrl setting or formnl trclinlng in
conflict rusolution (I)
Orgenieing skills
lb) Experience in organiring conferences, seminars or workshops ,.I
(1)
IL. ADDITIONAL SKILLS (1)
The following additional skills were considered useful for a candidate
LO hnve:
I’rcrscntrrtion/Truining exper’ience -
11) Experience in making formal presentations to a group and/or in
the design and delivery of trnining to others (1)
Plrtnning/Policy experience
12) Practical experience in planning end policy development or
specific forrnrtl training in planning nad policy development (1)
Investigation skills
l . w
13) Experiences in investigation. From past interviews, police
officers and lawyers hnve usually scored n point in this area (3)
Educe tion
1-t) Degree from a university or diploma from a community college
(1)
:_:
^ _., - 5 -
5
I The screening process was done by three different persons:
Eric Wist, Ray Chopra and Helen Griffin. Wist and Chopra at the
beginning selected 30 names at random as a sample, scored them, and then
compared their results. By chance the grievor’s application was in that
group and both scored the grievor independently at 6.5.
Wei Pu is employed by the Ministry of the Solicitor General as
a Security Officer 2 (a peace officer). He testified that it is
Management policy to resolve any crisis “without making waves.” He was
assigned to Osgoode Hall in Toronto from 1974 to 1985 when he was
transferred to another location in Toronto and then subsequently
returned to Osgoode~Hall. The grievor who as his evidence disclosed is
active in the Chinese community in Toronto was encouraged by members of
that community to apply for one of the new positions with the Human
Rights Commission.. He wrote to Dan MacIntyre, Commissioner for Race
Relations on January 5, 1986 enclosing a completed application for
employment and a resume. He later saw the competition Notice on The
Topical and telephoned about it. He then sent in an updated resume.
The dispute over the denial of an interview for the grievor
turned on certain individual parts of the criteria (Exhibit 17) for
which the grievor received no or only half credit. The first of these
is Employment Equity. The grievor received no credit in this area which
in total was worth a potential 2 points. In his view, he should have
received full credit. On April 21, 1986, he had written to Joan Pinnie,
Senior Staffing Officer with respect to the competition and had included
in that letter the following:
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II
. . . *Employment Equity" gives some new hope to the minority
communities. 'It is a progressive legislative proposal. The best
part of it is to put the onus to the employer. However, it
appears to me that unless there is a powerful mechanism to enforce
it, it may end up as another piece of the law which is made to be
seen, but not to be respected."
On his current resume, he had included the following:
E) Self Education:
“A great deal of my time has been spent in studying
the labour and human rights legislations as well as
their latest developments. I am particularly
interested in the recent Federal and Provincial
legislative proposals on employment equity".
He testified that at the time, there was a discussion paper at
the federal level which was being circulated among interested groups
including the Chinese Community. He was familiar with it. At the
provincial level, there was nothing in writing.' I note that the Federal
Parliament passed the Employment Equity Act (1986 c.31) during this time
period. Furthermore, the grievor relied on the reference in his resume
to the fact that he was a Columnist: ("I write a weekly commentary for
a leading Chinese newspaper in North America)." In cross-examination,
Ministry Counsel put to the grievor that someone reading the resume and
his letter would think he had the idea that' there was in fact a
provincial legislative proposal. The grievor felt that was a matter of
interpretation of what "proposal" means. Fu himself believed that
strong legislation is necessary and secondly persuading employers to do
things voluntarily. He had heard from human rights activists that the
province was planning legislation. The grievor felt that he had some
; . .
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? experience in the area as well because he gave consultations to people
and wrote articles and advised fellow employees.
Eric Wist, a Regional Supervisor of the Race Relations
Directorate testified for the Ministry. One of the areas that he
identified as part of the mandate of the position of race relations
consultant is employment equity. This involves providing consultative
services. Information is provided to employers for example helping them
to audit the work place, training management and employment equity
networks. It is a work place process or planning process to identify
and remove discriminatory barriers or intentional or unintentional
discriminatory practices. It uses positive measures to ensure the equal
participation of a target group and ensure its equal participation.
Primarily they focus on racial groups.
Wist testified with respect to the references in the grievor's
resume and letter that the definition is not anchored to -any experience
undertaken in a professional or voluntary capacity. He stated that it
referred only to interest. He further testified that the grievor should
not have restricted his comments to legislative proposals. It in fact
refers to work practice. There can be voluntary programs. In his
opinion, the grievor's statements suggested that there were provincial
legislative proposals in the works when in fact there were not.
Finally, Wist summarized his testimony as follows:
"Looking at a definition that doesn't anchor it to experience or
activity and simply states an interest end in cw separate cases
is wrong about the nature of employment equity didn't score a
point. "
. .
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There are in my opinion serious problems with the
reasonableness of this decision. Reasonable people may disagree about
the best approach to employment equity but the grievor's identification
of it as a legislative proposal was not a grounds for scoring zero; in
fact the federal government has gone the legislative route. It was not
correct to assume or conclude that the grievor had no "Knowledue,
awareness or understanding of employment equity issues." Quite the
contrary - given that this was the preliminary screening stage based
solely on documents an applicant who gave ~JY evidence of meeting one of
the criteria should have been given some credit until at least at the
interview stage it was demonstrated that such evidence was false.
Furthermore, it certainly ought to have been irrelevant whether Wist
disagreed with the grievor's apparent preference for a legislative
approach to employment equity. I would give the grievor a l/2 point for
that part. I do however, agree with the tfinistry that the grievor's
documents do not show specifically any "consulting experience &
emlovment equf."
The next area in dispute was Research and Reuort Writing being
Items 3) General research and analytical skills, and h) research and/or
report-writing in race relations. The grievor got l/2 point out of a
potential 2. The grievor has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political
Science from Chengchi University in Taipei, Taiwan and a Master of Arts
degree in Political Science from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova
Scotia. He also has taken two community college courses at Humber
College's Centre of Labour Studies, one in Labour Law and the other in
Work, Racism and Labour. As well, the grievor had taken several I
-..
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p workshops in the labour movement and Minority Community including the
Ontario Federation of Labour Anti-Racism Instructor Training. He
testified that these all require research and report writing in race
relations. He also relied on then fact that he had listed himself as a
columnist and a part-time reporter. In cross-examination, he was asked
how the evaluator could tell what his reporting related to since it
could be on movies or about products. The grievor replied that if it
had been irrelevant such as about fashion he would not have included it
and in any event it was known at the Race Relations Secretariat.
Eric Wist explained what was intended in the research and
report writing. The position includes priority briefing notes for the
Minister's office, case reports, situational reports on activities and
more sustained documents on planning in the upcoming year. The onus
here is on report writing skills. He testified that #3 on Exhibit 17
would have been clearer if it had included report writing. As an
example he stated that someone might have written a study on access to
government.services. Any kind of report would get a candidate a point.
Also t4 should have read specifically report in race relations. He did
not give credit for report writing needed to graduate from university
since education was computed in item 14 and theses writing was not
suitable for situation report writing. The three markers had discussed
this among themselves. He did not know what kind of column the grievor
wrote in the Chinese paper but still gave a l/2 point for it under #3.
In cross-examination, counsel for the union drew to this witness's
attention that the advertisement in Topical (April 4, 1986) stated under
gualifications: "excellent analytical, planning, orgenizational and
.. .
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.s
communication skills usually obtained through formal training." It
makes no mention of report writing. In Wist's view communication skills
speaks to writing skills but he agreed that the Topical advertisement
should have been more specific. It is interesting to note here that
Wist acknowledges that the Topical makes no specific reference to'report
writing that #3 in Exhibit 17 also failed to mention it and that 84
should have been conjunctive only instead of being in the alternative.
I also note that even though the applicant would not be alerted to the
need to highlight any report writing experience, the grievor's resume in
fact showed extensive educational and workshop knowledge and practice in
race relations as well as newspaper writing as a columnist and part-time
reporter. Furthermore, his correspondence demonstrated fluency in
written English. It is important to note that Wist’s evaluation of
other applicants he assumed certain aspects of various jobs such as that
a law clerk wrote reports, but gave no credit to the grievor for writing
on race relations in a Chinese language newspaper when the grievor's
resume was replete with courses and participation in race relations
activities. I give the grievor an additional l/2 point in this area.
The grievor contended that he should have credit for #6
"leadership role on progressive responsibilities in an institution or
agency. '. The grievor referred to his former employment as a lieutenant
in the Military Police in Taiwan. He testified that since Taiwan was
under military rule, as a military police lieutenant he provided
leadership in the community. Also he had been a foreman at the Royal
York Hotel and had provided leadership in his local union as the
secretary, a steward and a co-ordinator of the Human Rights Committee.
. r
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F? Eric Wist testified that they were looking for a person with a directing
role in an association or responsibility for planning. That may involve z
a director of a family services association, or a school trustee. There
were a number of municipal politicians with that type of experience who
applied. The grievor did get credit under t5 "Experience in working
with any of the major institutions of society such as education, the
criminal justice system, business and industry, or with community
agencies, etc." for his work with the union. It is interesting to note,
however, that t5 did not involve any leadership component. The grievor
therefore was not receiving any credit for the leadership aspects of his
experience as a police lieutenant, a foreman or a local union officer.
Although these functions may not be as sophisticated as some other
positions Wist had in mind, they did in fact demonstrate leadership
experience and therefore could easily have earned the grievor a half
point.
With respect to #8 leadership role in community organizations,
the grievor in testimony claimed that he was a leader in the Chinese
community. Without setting out the details of his oral testimony, it is
fair to say that the resume itself does not highlight or set out this
aspect of his experience. The leadership roles actually indicated are
those for which I have given him a half point under Item 6. At an
interview stage, however, he would not of course be restricted to what
is set out in the resume.
That brings us to the next area of dispute namely, mediation,
conciliation exnerience or skill 9) Experience in conflict resolution or
dispute mediation in a community or institutional setting or formal
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training conflict resolution." The grievor argues strenuously that his
experience as a foreman and as a local union official on the negotiating
team, as a steward and as a co-ordinator of the Human Rights Committee
of the union local demonstrated experience in the mediation and
conciliation field. Even as an Ontario Security Officer he feels his
experience includes conciliating situations. I have no doubt in finding
that his labour experience should attract credit ins this area. Even an
elementary experience or knowledge of modem labour relations would
inform an evaluator that conciliation and mediation are at the heart of
labour relations. Eric Wist suggested that a neutral conciliation role
was looked for. The evidence relating to other candidates does not
support that and in any event the union office itself inherently
involves some degree of neutrality between various individuals and
factions. Furthermore the definition in Exhibit 17 does not stipulate
neutrality nor need it do so. Almost no one starts his career as a
neutral in the labour relations field or indeed in almost any field. I
would be prepared to give the grievor from l/2 point to a full point for
this part.
The last area in dispute is #12 "Practical experience in
planning and policy development or specific formal training in planning
and policy development." The grievor relied principally upon his formal
education in Political Science. However, because he did not in his
resume elaborate on exactly how much if any of his university courses in
Political Science focused on planning and policy development as
distinguished from other areas falling within political science, I
cannot fault the evaluator for not giving credit here. Again, this is a
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$z matter to be dealt with in the interview phase if the grievor feels he
has more qualifications.
In summary then, I have easily found another 2 to 2 l/2 points
on the documentation which brings the grievor's score to 8 l/2 - 9 and
well within the range of entitlement to an interview. As the case law
indicates the Ministry has no obligation to give an oral interview to
every applicant to a position posting. However, because of the
possibility of misunderstanding the significance of experience or
training set out in an applicant's resume, it is, fairer and more
reliable to err on the side of liberalism in interpreting an applicant's
credentials. This is especially true when the qualities being sought
are subject to judgment calls such as those required in the subject
competition. It is not my intention to set out at this point all the
other applicants whose resumes were filed in the arbitration but I note,
for .example, that applicant #42, was credited by Wist with experience
and skills on the bases of having been the Executive Director of a
Student Union while the grievor got none for being a foreman or a union
local leader. Without disagreeing with credit given to candidate #42 I
find it unacceptable that then no leadership credit was given the
grievor for his experience as a foreman, a police lieutenant and a local
union officer. This kind of error could be avoided by giving the
benefit of the doubt to an applicant when assessing documentary
evidence.
The union challenged the 8 point requirement for an interview
as artificial. It also criticized the decision of management in this
part of the competition to search for generic skills rather than to
‘t
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,"
emphasize race relations experience. Inasmuch as I have found that the
grievor reaches a point score that entitles him to an interview, hit is
not actually necessary to decide whether the emphasis on generic skills
was proper or whether the 8 point requirement was arbitrary. Hr. Wist
himself in testimony expressed doubt about the esphasis on qeueric
skills.
Waving now qualified for an interview, no doubt the grievor
will. have an opportunity to demonstrate his race relations
gualifications. Having reach an 8 l/2 - 9 point score, on the screening
process, the grievor has within the Winistry’s own criteria sufficiently
demonstrated relative equality for an interview phase of the
competition. Accordingly, I direct the competition to be reopened and
the grievor granted an interview. The Board will remain seised pending
the completion of its directive.
DA!l’ED at Toronto, Ontario this
T.H. Wilson
I. Freedman
Hemher
“1 dissent” (dissent attached)
W. Lobraico
Member
.
Re: C.6.B. 11151%6 Wei Fu
‘. . .
With respect, I must disagree with the .majority award
on this grievance. The grievor is a civil servant with
over 15 years service and should know that job applicat-
ions and resumes must clearly state experience and qual-
ifications in terms related to the position requirements.
This was not done clearly and he cannot expect Ministry
officials to deliberate extensively over each application
when there are 7G0 appiicants.
The Ministry may have made a subjective judgement, which
in the light of testimony at the hearing, wasnot entirely
accurate but there was no evidence of bad iai,th..Faced
with an overwhelming number of applicants it was necess-.
ary to be a little ruthless in the initial screening and
the grievor should have-known this was a critical stage.
Granting the grievor an interview now, is in my respect-
f ul opinion “second guessing” based on information which
the selection board did not clearly have at the initial
screening step. An unsuccessful interview will on’ly
result in another grievance. As the grievor had no rights
to an interview under the collective agreement 1 would
have dismissed the grievance.