HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-1723.OPSEU.00-11-09 DecisionONTARIOEMPLOYÉS DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEESDE L’ONTARIO
GRIEVANCECOMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENTRÈGLEMENT
BOARDDES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, SUITE 600, TORONTO ON M5G 1Z8 TELEPHONE/TÉLEPHONE,(416) 326-1388
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST BUREAU 600, TORONTO (ON) M5G IZ8FACSIMILE/TELECOPIE:(416) 326-1396
GSB #1723/99, 1006/00
OPSEU #00U002, 00U137
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(OPSEU)
Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care)
Employer
BEFORERichard Brown Vice Chair
FOR THE Richard Blair, Counsel
GRIEVOR Ryder, Wright, Blair & Doyle
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE John Smith, Counsel
EMPLOYERLegal Services Branch
Management Board Secretariat
HEARINGOctober 20, 2000.
2
The union has filed two policy grievances, one relating to the transfer of
Brockville Psychiatric Hospital and the other relating to the transfer of
Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital. Each of these institutions is about to be
transferred to a local hospital in the broader public sector. Pursuant to a
transfer agreement negotiated with the crown, each receiving facility has made
a offer of employment to all affected employees on terms and conditions
which include a salary of at least 85% of their former earnings and
recognition of service and seniority acquired in the Ontario public service.
The instant dispute concerns entitlement to severance pay for
employees who at the date of transfer will have completed more than one
year and less than five years of service with the provincial government. The
parties agree employees with less than one year of service are not entitled to
severance pay under the collective agreement. Employees with more than five
years of service will receive severance pay. As to employees with between
one and five years of service, the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care
claims they are not entitled to severance pay. The union disagrees.
I
Entitlement to severance pay is governed by article 53.4 relating to full-time
employees and by article 78.1 relating to part-time employees. As the relevant
language in these two provisions is identical, only the applicable portion of
the former article need be reproduced:
53.4 An employee,
(a) who has completed a minimum of one (1) year of continuous
service and who ceases to be an employee because of,
3
...
(3) release from employment under section 22(4) of the P.S.A.,
or
(4) resignation during the surplus notice period; or
(b) who has completed five (5) years of continuous service and who
ceases to be an employee for any reason other than,
(1) dismissal for cause under section 22 of the P.S.A., or
(2) abandonment of position under section 20 of the P.S.A.;
is entitled to severance pay ...
Applying paragraph (a) to the facts at hand, counsel for the union
contends an employee with between one and five years of service is entitled
to severance pay under sub-paragraph (4) as having resigned during the
surplus notice period. In the alternative, counsel submits an entitlement to
severance pay arises under sub-paragraph (3) because the employee has been
released under section 22(4) of the Public Service Act.
II
I begin with the union’s alternative argument concerning article 53.4(a)(3)
which creates an entitlement to severance pay when an employee has been
released under section 22(4) of the Public Service Act. That section states:
A deputy minister may release from employment in accordance with
the regulations any public servant where he or she considers it
necessary by reason of shortage of work or funds or the abolition of a
position or other material change in the organization.
4
Counsel for the union contends an employee has been so released when he
or she ceases to be a public servant because of the transfer of a government
facility to a new employer.
The same argument was made by the union and rejected by this board
in analogous circumstances in OPSEU and Ministry of Consumer and
Commercial Relations, File 201/97, dated May 30, 1997 (Fisher) and
OPSEU and Ministry of Finance, File 2105/96, dated March 23, 1999
(Leighton).
In Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations, the employees
affected by the transfer had accepted employment with the receiving
employer (page 4). The decision that they were not entitled to severance pay
was based upon the last sentence of section 1(a) of Appendix 9 to the
collective agreement which states:
When an employee has been transferred to a new employer he or she
will be deemed to have resigned and no other provisions of the
collective agreement will apply except Article 53 or 78 (Termination
Pay).
The union argued a transferred employee “is deemed to have resigned for all
purposes except for the purposes of articles 53 and 78” (page 7). Mr. Fisher
rejected this argument and concluded the employees concerned were not
entitled to severance pay “as they are deemed to have resigned, and therefore
have not been released from employment under section 22(4) of the Public
Service Act” (page 9).
In Ministry of Finance, the union again claimed employees transferred
to a new employer were entitled to severance pay because they had been
released from employment under section 22(4) of the Public Service Act.
Counsel suggested a deemed resignation under Appendix 9 was not
5
voluntary and, therefore, should not bar the conclusion that an employee had
been released. Ms. Leighton rejected this argument. Deferring to Mr. Fisher’s
earlier decision, she wrote:
The argument that transferees to private employers pursuant to the
provisions in Appendix 9 have been released under section 22(4) of
the Public Service Act ... was addressed and rejected in [Ministry of
Consumer and Commercial Relations]. There was nothing in the
union’s submission to persuade me that it was patently unreasonable.
page 16).
Both of these cases were decided before Appendix 18 was added to
the collective agreement. Section 6.4 of Appendix 18 reiterates the point
made in the last sentence of section 1(a) of Appendix 9: an employee who
transfers to the receiving employer is deemed to have resigned. Section 6.4
states:
Employees who accept a job offer in accordance with Article 6.1.1
with a receiving employer will be deemed to have resigned effective
the date they commence employment with the new employer, and no
other provisions of the Collective Agreement will apply except for
Article 53 or 78 (Termination Pay). (emphasis added)
Section 6.5 of Appendix 18 makes explicit a point which arguably was
implicit in Appendix 9: an employee is deemed to have resigned if he or she
declines what might be described as a “good” offer of employment. Section
6.5 states:
6.5If an employee refuses a job offer which provides a salary of at
least 85% of the respective employee’s weekly salary at the time of the
transfer and recognizes the service and seniority in the Ontario Public
Service (OPS) of each employee for the purpose of qualification for
vacation, benefits (except pension), layoff, job competition, severance
and termination payments to the extent that they are provided in the
proponent’s workplace, the employee shall be deemed to have
resigned effective the date of the transfer of their job and no other
6
provision of the collective agreement will apply except for Article 53 or
78 (Termination Pay).
Read together, sections 6.4 and 6.5 indicate an employee who receives a
“good” job offer is deemed to have resigned, regardless of whether it is
accepted.
In the instant case, the employees concerned received “good” job
offers. As they are deemed to have resigned by Appendix 18, the question
whether they have been released under section 22(4) of the Public Service
Act is indistinguishable from the question addressed by Mr. Fisher in
Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations. Like Ms. Leighton in
Ministry of Finance, I conclude Mr. Fisher’s initial decision on this point
must be followed because it is not patently unreasonable. Accordingly,
employees are not entitled to severance pay under article 53.4(a)(3).
In neither Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations nor
Ministry of Finance did the union contend the employees concerned were
entitled to severance pay under article 53.4(a)(4) as having resigned during
the surplus notice period.
III
The union’s claim under article 53.4(a)(4) remains to be considered. The
board has not previously considered the application of this article to
employees who leave the public service in the context of a transfer governed
by Appendix 9 and Appendix 18.
Article 53.4 predates Appendix 9 and Appendix 18. Before these
appendices were added to the collective agreement, an employee with more
than one year of service would have been entitled to severance pay under
7
article 53.4 if she left the public service because the facility where she worked
was being transferred from the crown to another employer. An employee
with more than five years of service would have received severance pay
under article 53.4(b) as having ceased to be employed other than by reason
of dismissal for cause or abandonment. An employee with between one and
five years of service, who did not resign after being declared surplus, would
have been entitlement to severance pay under 53.4(a)(3) as having been
released from employment under section 22(4) of the Public Service Act. An
employee who resigned during the “surplus notice period” would have been
entitled to severance pay under article 53.4(a)(4). This notice period is
described in article 20.2.1 and 20.2.2:
20.2.1 An employee identified as surplus shall receive six (6) months
notice of lay-off or, with mutual consent, an employee may resign and
receive equivalent pay in lieu of notice. ...
20.2.2 The notice period will begin when the employee receives
official written notice. Copies of such notice shall be provided to the
Management Board Secretariat and to the Union. (emphasis added)
An employee who received notice of layoff and resigned during the notice
period would have been entitled to severance pay. All of this is common
ground between the parties.
The crux of the dispute is whether Appendix 9 and Appendix 18 have
altered entitlement to severance pay. As there is no material difference in the
relevant provisions of these two appendices, I will restrict my analysis to the
impact of the language of Appendix 18 on entitlement to severance pay.
Section 6 of Appendix 18 divides employees into three categories; (1)
those who accept a job offer from the receiving employer; (2) those who
decline a “good” job offer; and (3) those who reject a “poor” job offer.
8
Under section 6.6, employees who decline “poor” job offers maintain their
entitlements under the collective agreement including article 20:
6.6Where the salary of the job offered by the receiving employer is
less than eighty-five percent (85%) of the employee’s current weekly
salary, or if the employee’s service or seniority are not carried over to
the receiving employer, the employee may decline the offer. In such a
case, the employee may exercise the rights prescribed by Article 20
(Employment Stability) and/or paragraphs 2 to 5 of Appendix 9. The
employee must elect whether or not to accept employment with the
receiving employer within three (3) days of receiving an offer. In
default of election, the employee shall be deemed to have accepted the
offer.
Section 6.6 preserves article 20 rights for employees who reject a “poor” job
offer, but such rights are not preserved by section 6.5 concerning employees
who decline a “good” job offer. Nor are they preserved by section 6.4
concerning employees who transfer from the crown to the receiving
employer. Employees to whom these latter two sections apply are deemed to
have resigned and their contractual rights are expressly limited to those found
in article 53. Their entitlements under article 20 are abrogated. In short, they
forfeit their article 20 rights but maintain their rights under article 53.
For employees who accept a job with the receiving employer or who
decline a “good” job offer, the impact of Appendix 18 on rights under
articles 20 and 53 is clear-cut in most respects. These employees lose
entitlements under article 20, including those relating to notice of layoff or
pay in lieu, displacement and re-deployment. Employees with more than five
years of service retain their entitlement to severance pay under article 53.4(b).
About this there is no contest.
The dispute is limited to the application of article 53.4(a)(4) concerning
severance pay for employees with between one and five years of service.
9
Counsel for the union contends these employees are surplus because their
services will not be required by the provincial government after the facilities
in which they work have been transferred. According to this line of argument,
their surplus notice period began when they got letters saying they will be
deemed to have resigned on the transfer date because they had received
“good” job offers. Their deemed resignation, effective the date of transfer, is
said by counsel to occur during the surplus notice period.
Counsel for the employer contends that employees who have received
a “good” job offer are not surplus. Counsel notes the ministry requires the
services of these employees until the date of transfer. I was reminded the
word “surplus” does not appear in sections 6.4 and 6.5 of Appendix 18
which apply to these employees. As they are not surplus, counsel suggests
their deemed resignation upon transfer will not occur during the “surplus
notice period” within the meaning of article 53.4(a)(4).
In reply, counsel for the union notes that section 6.2.1 of Appendix 18
applies the label “surplus” to employees without regard to whether they have
received a “good” offer. This section states:
In the event that a receiving employer does not fully agree to the
request in article 6.1.1, including the matter of a probationary period,
the employer may offer the receiving employer a financial incentive up
to the amount that would have been payable as enhanced severance
pay (calculated as provided in paragraph 4 of Appendix 9) to each
employee affected by the transfer that the employer determines will be
declared surplus, in order to secure or improve a job offer to the
employee equivalent to a job offer as described in Article 6.1.1 above
or to ensure where job offers are received from the receiving Employer
for less than the full complement of employees identified by the
Employer, that the receiving Employer offer employees jobs on the
basis of seniority. The parties agree in no case will the employer be
10
required to pay a financial incentive in excess of the maximum of
enhanced severance for the affected employees.
Section 6.1.1 requires the ministry to propose that the receiving employer
make job offers with no loss of salary and with recognition of service and
seniority. When the new employer does not fully agree with this proposal,
section 6.1.2 contemplates the ministry offering a financial incentive up to the
amount of enhanced severance pay for the employees who “will be declared
surplus”. If the receiving employer initially suggests offers that include
recognition of service and seniority and a salary of at least 85% but less than
100% of previous compensation, they would be “good” offers. Nonetheless,
section 6.1.2 would apply and the employees would be treated as “surplus”
for the purpose of calculating the financial incentive. In this sense, section
6.1.2 characterizes as surplus an employee with a “good” offer.
Do sections 6.4 and 6.5 of Appendix 18 defeat a claim to severance
pay under article 53.4(a)(4)? The answer to this question is not obvious.
Entitlement to severance pay under this article depends upon whether an
employee resigns during the “surplus notice period”. The contractual right to
a surplus notice period is created by article 20.2. Sections 6.4 and 6.5
remove article 20 rights from employees with ‘good” job offers. As these
sections disentitle employees to notice of layoff under article 20.2, one might
conclude they are not surplus and have no surplus notice period. If so, their
deemed resignation could not occur during such period. This reasoning
would indicate employees with between one and five years of service are not
entitled to severance pay under article 53.4(a)(4). This is the essence of the
employer’s argument.
11
On the other hand, the entitlement of employees to severance pay
under article 53 is explicitly preserved by sections 6.4 and 6.5, without any
distinction being drawn between employees with more than five years of
service and those with less. This express preservation might lead one to
conclude that the entitlement of employees to severance pay under article
53.4 is not affected by these two sections of Appendix 18, not only for
employees with more than five years of service but also for those with less.
Moreover, employees who receive “good” offers are nonetheless surplus in
the sense that they are superfluous to the needs of the public service after the
date of transfer, as acknowledged by the use of the word “surplus” in section
6.2.1. Because they receive notice of their redundant status in the public
service before the transfer occurs, their deemed resignation on the date of
transfer might be said to occur during their “surplus notice period” within the
meaning of article 53.4(a)(4). This is the essence of the union’s argument.
The foregoing analysis of the language of sections 6.4 and 6.5 of
Appendix 18 leads me to conclude it is patently ambiguous as to whether
employees with between one and five years of service are entitled to
severance pay. In other words, when the parties agreed in Appendix 18 to
negate article 20 rights and to reaffirm article 53 rights, they failed to clearly
indicate their intention regarding entitlement under article 53.4(a)(4) which
might be seen to depend upon the existence of article 20 surplus rights.
Perhaps the negotiators did not turn their minds to this precise issue.
What bearing does this ambiguity have upon the proper interpretation
of the collective agreement as a whole? As noted above, article 53.4 was part
of the collective agreement before Appendix 9 and Appendix 18 were added
to it. Before these appendices were negotiated, an employee with between
12
one and five years of service would have received severance pay under article
53.4(a)(4) if she had resigned from the public service after receiving official
notice that the facility where she worked was about be transferred from the
crown to another employer. The right to severance pay in these
circumstances was clearly expressed in this article. I conclude this entitlement
continues to exist today because it was not clearly negated when the parties
fashioned Appendix 9 and Appendix 18.
Employees at the two psychiatric hospital, with one to five years of
service, are entitled to severance pay under articles 53.4(a)(4) and 78.1(a)(4).
Dated at Toronto, this 9th day of November, 2000.
Richard Brown, Vice-Chair.