HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-1439.Union.88-03-16! Between
Before
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES’COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
OPSEU (Union Grievance)
Grievor
And
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health)
Employer
Paula Knopf Vice-Chairman
T. Traves Member
H. Roberts Member
For the Grievor A. Ryder
COWlSC!l
Gowling & Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
For the Employer E. Hipfner - Staff Relations’Officer
The Management Board of Cabinet
Hearing December 18. 1987
AWARD
This is an unusual job posting grievance. The
Union is alleging that the Employer has failed to post
full-time classif ied positions and thus violated
Article 4 of the collective agreement. The Employer
asserts that there were no “vacancies” to post and that
instead it was exercising its exclusiva right to organize
and determine staff complement in times of a recruitment
freeze. The issue in the case is whether vacancies
existed at the relevant times.
The incumbents in the positions in question had
been notified of their right to be present at the hearing
and to participate independently in the process.
However , they have chosen not to appear or to
participate.
There is no dispute over the facts giving rise to
this case. Indeed, the Union elicited its evidence
through James McLennan, the Manager of Claim Services in
London, Ontario who supervises the jobs in question. The
office that he supervises receives claims from doctors
and processes them for services rendered, both within and
outside the province. Prior to October 17, 1986, there
wera approximately 56 claims clerks who were responsi>le
for processing and 48 or 49 of them dealt with claims
from within the province. The rest of the clerks
processed claims from outside the province as well as
“opted out” dot tors.
In the early fall of 1936, Mr. McLennan knew that
he had lost or would be losing four oE his staff due to
retirements or transfers. But in August 1986, the Deputy
Minister of the Ministry had announced a hiring freeze
- 2 ‘-
affective until October 31, 1906. so on October 17,
198G, Mr. McLannan posted two scp;lrate notices for
"developmental assignments". These "assignments"
normally enable people to train in a new position for a
limited period of time in order to gain further and
better experience in new joas. One of these notices was
for a "claims clerk out of province/au t of country”
claims processor. The other notice was for *claims
processing” which would only deal with Ontario claims.
Mr. McLennan's department had lost four employees
for various reasons. Their names and duties were as
follows:
White - in-province claims
Revi t - out-of-province claims
Lydested - in and out-of-province
Voorhaus - out-of-province
The evidence established that clerks who processed
out-of-province claims were also called upon to process
in-province claims from time to time. When Mrs. White
retired, her workload was distributed among all the other
in-province claims clerks.
Following the postings for the developmental
assignments, two people were' appointed to the claims
clerks "out-of-province/out-of-country" position to take
over the places of one person who retired and one person
who resigned. Both were from within the department.
Elizabeth Kirby was appointed in Desember 1996 and Carolyn
Bakker was appointed in March 1987. They still hold these
positions. Prior to taking this position, Ms. Kirby had
been primarilygrocessi~ng in-province claims, but her work
also occasionally covered out-of-province and "opted out"
doctors as well. The Employer acknowledes that Ms. Kirby
c - 3 -
and Ms. Bakker are doing the same work of the two People
they replaced. Mr. McLennan also acknowledges that at the
time of the posting, the Employer intended to make these
appointments on a permanent basis. The notice was 1
designed simply to determine who was interested in the job
so that Mr. ElcLennan could assign someone who at least
wanted to do the work.
After the new assignments were taken up,
Ms. Bakker's former workload was given to one of the
successful candidates in the competition for the
in-province job. Most of Ms. Kirby's work had disappeared
with the introduction of legislation prohibiting Ontario
doctors from opting out of OHIP. The.remainder of her
workload was distributed throughout the department.
No appointments were made pursuant to the posting
for the developmental assignment for the in-,province
claims processing. Even though two positions in that unit
had to be filled, it was not necessary to do so by way of
a developmental assignment because the hiring freeze was
lifted even before the assignments could be made. The
Employer then posted the vacancies in~accordance with
Article 4 of the collective agreement. The Union's
objection is to the original posting for the developmental
assignment. Only declaratory relief is sought regarding
these positions.
The Argument
Counsel for the Union based his argument on the
working together of sections 7 and 18 of the Crown ---
Employees Collective Bareining. lJn.ier section 18 it --- ----
is acknowledged that management had the exclusive
authority to make appointments s,uch as developmental
2 - 4 -
,”
assignments. however, under section 7, it was argued that
transfers and promotions must be subject to the collective
agreement. In the case of such overlap, counssl argued
that the parties had limited management rights pursuant to
Article 4 of the collective agreement by requiring the
posting provisions for vacancies in the classified service
to fill full-time jobs. It was said that the main issue
in t.he case was whether a vacancy arose. It was
acktiowledged that a vacancy arises when management decides
that there is a sufficient bundle of work for an emialoyee
to do on a full-time basis. Counsel argued that in the
case at hand, management had decided that a vacancy
existed because someone had to be brought in to do a
certain amount of work after the original staff wars
reduced. It was argued that the developmental assignment
was simply a device designed to avoid the recruitment
freeze and that the best proof was that no real training
programme was established in conjunction with the alleged
developmen ta1 assignment. It was stressed that Article 4
of the collective agreement could not be avoided with the
ruse of a developmental assignment. By way of relief, the
Union sought a declaration that the posting of the
developmen ta1 -assignment with respect to the in-province
claims processors (Exhibit 3) violates the collective
agreement. The Union also sought a deslaration that the
posting for the out-of-province/out-of-country (Exhibit 21
development assignment was also invalid and that a new
competition be ordered.
The Employer argued that the Union had not met the
onus of proving that. a vacancy did exist. Counsel for the e
Employer defined a vacancy as something which occurs when
there is “work to be done” in the opinion of the employer
which the employer decides to fill. Counsel argued that
the facts reveal that no vacancy should be considered to
have occurred because the work done by the Eour employees
who left the department was redistribute3 in accordance
with management rights throughout the rast of the
department. Further, it was argued that management's
actions are exclusively witbin its right to rotate ,and
reassign staff and that these rights had not been reduced
by Article 4 of the collective agreement. The Board was
referred to the following authorities: Thompson v.
Ninistry_of TransporEtion & Communications, Board File
141/84; O& Chemical h Atomic Workers, Local 9-599, and -I_--
Tidewater Oil%., (Canada) Ltd. (19631, 14 L.A.C. 233
(Raville); Klonowski v. Ministry of Correctional Services, --. --
Board File 16/83 and 17/83; United Automobile Workers and
Kysor of Ridqsown Ltd., Kysor Industrial of Canada Ltd.
and Erie Metal Finishers Ltd. (19671, 18 L.A.C. 63 -
(Palmer); Hergott v. Worker's Compensation Board,
File 431/82 and Corv et al. v. Ministry of Health, Board
File 0414/85 etc.
The Decision
The issue in this case is whether the evidence
establishes that a vacancy existed. If there were any
vacancies within the meaning of the collective agreement,
then the obligations under Article 4 can be triggered,
including the obligation to post. If no vacancies
existed, management is free to exercise its rights to
organize the work force as it sees fit without regard to
the dictates of Article 4. The parties essentially agree
as to what constitutes a vacancy. They agree that a
vacancy occurs when management determines that there is
sufficient work to be done by an employee on a full-time
basis.
Applying this definition to the facts in this
case, we shall turn first to the out-of-province claims
processors.' At the time the notice fo,r the developmental
I .’
- 6 -
assignment was postej, the evidence clearly establishes
that manaqement had lost or was losing two emi>loyees in
that unit. Management then chose to find two people to
replace them. The work was not redistributed throtighout
the department. While the posting advertised itself as a
"developmental assignment", it was the acknowledged need
and intention of Mr. McLennan to appoint two of the
recruits on a p.ermanent basis to these positions. 'Thus,
no other conclusion can be drawn except that management
perceived that there was sufficient work to be done by two
employees on a permanent basis. Therefore, two vacancies
existed that management decided to fill.
Management chose to fill those vacancies by
recruiting interested applicants through the developmental
assignment notices rather than the posting requirements
under Article 4. Obviously, the recruitment freeze
imposed upon management made it appear impossible to hold
the traditional job posting. This recruitment resulted in
the selection of two employees. One of those employees,
Ms. Kirby, had previously done work which encompassed the
job to which she was reassigned, namely out-of-country
claims. The Union acknowledges that because the tasks she
was doing, both before and after the events in question,
amount to the same "job' or "position", management had the
right to reassign her to do the difforent work within the
same job. Thus, it is conceded that there was no b.:each
of the collective agreement with regard to the
rsasaignment of Ms. Kirby to her new duties. Futher, her
"reassignment" is accepted by the Union as a legitimate
way in which management could staff-the positions.
However, the Union still asserts that the notice (Exhibit
3) and the appointment of Ms. Uakker were contrary to the
collective agreement.
- 7 -
As stated above,
it is clear that a vacancy
existed. Ms. Bakker had been a claims clerk before she
answer23 the recruit notice for an out-of-province claims
clerk. The Employer itself treats “in-province and
out-of-province”
clerk positions as two different jobs,
even though they fall within the same classification and
job specification. The best example of this is the
“separate” postings filed advertising the different
positions. (See Exhibits 2 and 5. ) Thus management chose
to put Ms. Bakker in the new “job” without regard to
Article 4 of the collective agreement. However, since a
vacancy for the out-of-province claims clerk job existed,
management was obligated to comply with Article 4 and hold
a competition for that position or vacancy which
Ms. Bakker filled. The result of management’s action was
~ that the collective agreement has been breached and that
other employees who were entitled to the benefits of the
job posting and competition have been deprived of that
opportunity . Therefore, this Board orders that a
competition be held for this one position as soon as
prac ticable. As much as is humanly possible, Ms. Bakker
is not to be given any advantage in the competition with
regard to the knowledge and experience she has gained in
the position since her appointment in 1986.
The Union has also sought declaratory relief for
the posting of the developmental assignment for
<n-province claims. The evidence in that context
establishes first of all that although two ?eo>le were
leaving the unit, the work of one 01 those people was
simply redistributed throughout the rest of the unit and
ad:Jed to the remaining employees’ caseload. Thus, the
position was cssentiallyeliminatedbecause management
decided that the body of work was not suEf icien t to have
it done by one person on a full-time basis. The right to
redistribute workload is an undisputed right of management
in this situation and therefore did not amount to a brozch
of the collective agreement.
Management chose to deal with the remaining
caseload and other workers differently. Management
decided to have that work done by interested applicants on
a rotational basis to enable them to learn the job.
Mr. Mciennan intended to laave them in place for six to
eight weeks and then to rotate others in their place. The
Thompson case, ~a_ suggests that rotation for
developmental purposes, even for a period of two years, is
permi~ssibl’e under the collective agreement. This panel of
the Board will not agree fully with that because
management could not be allowed to disguise a vacancy or
avoid the rights of Article 4 with the ploy of a
develogmen ta1 assignment. But each case must be decided
on i ts own fat ts. On the fat ts of this case, we are
satisfied that at the time the developmental assignment
was posted, management had determined that the work needed
to be done and could best be done by employees being
trained for specified periods of time. This is distinct
from a situation where work needs to be done by a person
on a full-time or permanent basis. Thus, no vacancy
existed in the true sense of the word for the in-province
claims processors. We reach that conclusion even in the
face of the evidence that little or no documentation
corroborated the claim that a real training programme was
designed. Further, we acknowledge that as soon as the
recruitment freeze was lifted, the P,m?loyer abandoned the
concept of the developmental assignGent and then posted
two positions in accordance with Article 4 of the
collective agreement. But despite all this, we are
convinced on the Eacts that at all relevant times
management had bona fide organized the work force in such
a way that full-time permanent positions did not exist
,
ihe BOdt-d r-ztains jurisdiction with the mstL?r in
the nvent that 0;lr assistanc3 is r3quire'j. with regard to
the implemsntation of this award.
DATED at Toronto, 3ntario this 16th day of MARCH
1938.
_-_----- ___._~ Paula iinopf, VlcG??ZGZGn--
_-__-----.--me- __----
T. WAVES, Member
H. Roberts, Member