HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-1203.Schoular.02-07-18 DecisionONTARIO EMPLOYÉS DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L’ONTARIO
GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT RÈGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, SUITE 600, TORONTO ON M5G 1Z8 TELEPHONE/TÉLÉPHONE: (416) 326-1388
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST, BUREAU 600, TORONTO (ON) M5G IZ8 FACSIMILE/TÉLÉCOPIE: (416) 326-1396
GSB # 1203/00, 1531/00
UNION # 00B379, 01B052
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between: Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Schoular) Union
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The Crown In Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Education) Employer
Before: Owen V. Gray Vice-Chair
For the Union: George Richards
Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
For the Employer: Kelly Burke
Counsel
Legal Services Branch
Management Board Secretariat
Hearing: March 22, June 25 and 28, October 10 and 11,
and November 28 and 29, 2001
and February 6, 2002
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Decision
[1] In the fall of 2000, David Schoular decided to seek re-election as a Trustee
of the
Upper Canada District School Board (hereafter, “UCDSB”). He was then
employed in the Ottawa District Office of the Ministry of Education as a Finance
Officer in the branch of the Ministry that deals with applications by school
boards for funding. He informed the Deputy Minister of his decision to run
again. The Deputy Minister responded that Mr. Schoular’s holding the office of
school board Trustee would interfere with the performance of the duties of his
employment and conflict with the interests of the Crown within the meaning of
sections 28.4 and 28.7 of the Public Service Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P. 47, as
amended (“the PSA”). The Deputy Minister told Mr. Schoular that he could seek
election as Trustee only if he took a leave of absence without pay pursuant to
subsection 28.4(3) of the PSA and that, if elected, he would have to resign his
employment in accordance with subsection 28.7(2) of the PSA.
[2] Mr. Schoular had twice before been elected and served as a school board
Trustee while employed by the Ministry, without objection by the then Deputy
Ministers. He had been elected in 1997 as Trustee of the UCDSB, and in 1994 as
Trustee of one of its predecessor school boards. Before he ran again in 1997, he
had been advised by then Assistant Deputy Minister that it would not be a
conflict for him to accept another term as Trustee as long as he met certain
conditions. Mr. Schoular felt that he that had met those conditions, and that
nothing had happened since 1997 to give rise to a conflict between his serving as
Trustee and his employment with the Ministry. It appeared to him that the
change in the Ministry’s position was due to a complaint made by another
UCDSB Trustee whom he regarded as a political adversary.
[3] The grievor applied for and took a leave of absence without pay under
protest, and grieved the imposition on him of that requirement. He was re-
elected as Trustee on November 13, 2000, but did not then resign his
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employment. On November 16, 2000 the Ministry deemed him to have resigned,
and treated his employment as at an end. He then filed the second of the two
grievances before me, alleging dismissal without just cause.
The Grievor’s Employment Duties
[4] When his employment was terminated, the grievor was one of several
Finance Officers employed in the Transfer Payments and Financial Reporting
Branch of the Ministry of Education. He and the other Finance Officers in that
Branch reported to the Manager, Transfer Payments Unit, who in turn reported
to the Director of the Branch.
[5] The Transfer Payments and Financial Reporting Branch administers and
enforces the rules under which the Ministry provides funding to elementary and
secondary schools. Other branches of the Ministry concerned with the funding of
public schools are the Education Finance Branch and the Business Services
Branch. The Business Services Branch deals with the capital funding of
education facilities. The Education Finance Branch develops policy with respect
to funding and funding rules, engages in forecasting of funding requirements
and provides information services.
[6] Prior to 1998, school boards had two sources of funding: property tax
revenue and funding from the Ministry. The level of Ministry funding varied
from school board to school board. Some large school boards in metropolitan
areas received no Ministry funding at all. Ministry funding formed a substantial
portion of the total funding for other school boards, perhaps as much as 90 per
cent for some smaller, rural school boards. This dual source funding changed
with the enactment of the Education Quality Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997,
c.31 (“the EQIA”)
.
[7] As a result of the EQIA, school boards could no longer raise any portion of
their operating funds through municipal property taxes. School boards’ only
funding was to come from the Ministry, in accordance with a funding model
prescribed by regulation. The initial funding model was announced in March
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1998, and was applied for the first time to the 1998-99 school year. Changes and
refinements were made to the funding model from time to time thereafter.
[8] Under the new funding regulations, the Ministry allocates funding on the
basis of formulae that take into account student enrolment, class sizes, the
numbers of teachers and where they are on the compensation grid, and other
factors. Various “envelope” conditions are attached to the funding provided. The
portion of the funding that is allocated to classroom instruction, for example,
must be spent only on classroom instruction – it cannot be spent on
administrative or other non-classroom expenditures. There are similar envelopes
for special education and capital expenditures. A school board cannot spend more
on administration and governance than has been allocated to that item, although
monies in that envelope can be spent in other areas.
[9] Finance Officers in the Transfer Payments and Financial Reporting
Branch have several major responsibilities. Each Finance Officer is assigned a
group of school boards as a client group. A Finance Officer is responsible for
advising the school boards in his or her client group concerning the funding rules
and the school boards’ preparation of the financial estimates and financial
statements that they must submit in support of their applications for initial and
final funding. A Finance Officer also reviews, analyses and verifies filings
received from each school board in his/her client group, and recommends to the
Branch the initial and final amounts to which in each case s/he determines that
a client school board is entitled under the funding model.
[10] One of the important duties of Finance Officers is to gather “field
intelligence” with respect to the operation and outcomes of the funding formulae
— to report on what school boards are doing and saying with respect to matters
of funding.
[11] The Ministry may audit one or more of the several aspects of a school
board’s operations that are relevant to its funding entitlements. Senior
management determines which school boards will be audited, and in what
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respects. Finance Officers conduct the audits. The school boards to be audited by
a Finance Officer may be outside his/her own client group. All of the Finance
Officers will know which school boards are to be audited before the school boards
themselves do. When school board filings or audits reveal non-compliance with
the regulations, senior management determines what consequences will be
imposed. Senior management also determines a level of tolerance for non-
compliance — that is, the extent of non-compliance for which adverse
consequences will not be imposed. Finance officers are told what the tolerance
levels are. School boards are not.
[12] The current job description for Finance Officers states that they may
“Conduct special assignments such as participating on committees, provide
training (professional development) and direction to client groups, carry out
…financial investigations and analysis, and make recommendations for
improvement to financial management systems and procedures.” Finance
Officers also assist in maintaining a computer database of school board financial
data, by entering data received from their client school boards.
[13] The Transfer Payments and Financial Reporting Branch provides
information that the Education Finance Branch uses to inform and validate the
budget process, to identify variances between actual and forecast budget
requirements and to identify compliance issues and needs for technical
amendments in the funding regulations. All three branches become involved in
the formulation of policy at some point in that process, and they all advise the
Deputy Minister with respect to the proposals of those who lobby the Ministry.
[14] Finance Officers contribute to the policy formulation process by
identifying to senior management the issues of interpretation, application,
consistency and compliance that they encounter in reviewing budgets and
administering the Ministry’s funding policies and regulations. Finance Officers
may be consulted about a variance between projected and actual outcomes, in an
effort to find an explanation for it. Finance Officers have been briefed, and
occasionally consulted, on changes to policies and regulations that are under
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consideration, and they have been informed of decided-upon changes before those
changes are announced.
[15] A good deal of the information to which Finance Officers have access
concerning the funding model is public information. It is part of their job to
provide that information to school boards. Finance Officers also have access to
information that is not public, however. In some cases it is information that will
become public at a later date, as in the case of decided-upon changes to
regulations and policies, or decisions about which school boards will be audited.
In some cases the information to which they have access will never be revealed
to school boards, such as the tolerance levels for non-compliance.
[16] The grievor worked out of the Ottawa office. He was the only Finance
Officer in that office. His client group consisted of a number of Eastern Ontario
public and separate school boards. The area served by the UCDSB is the south-
east corner of the province. The grievor’s client group would ordinarily have
included the UCDSB, but it was assigned to a Finance Officer in Toronto because
the grievor was one of its trustees. His client group included the public and
separate school boards in the areas adjoining the UCDSB’s, as well as the
separate school board that served the same geographic area.
The Conflict of Interest Alleged
[17] The Ministry’s evidence about the duties of Finance Officers and the
context in which they are performed was given by four witnesses: Nancy Naylor,
Peggy McCormick, Paul Babin and Ross Peebles. Ms. Naylor served as Director
of the Education Finance Branch from May 1998 until January 2001, when she
was seconded to another position. Ms. McCormick began serving as Project
Manager of Financial Accountability in June 2000, reporting to Mr. Babin. She
had previously served as Acting Manager in the Business Service Branch for
about a year. From July 1996 to mid-1999 she was the Acting Manager of what
was then called the Accountability and Field Services Unit. During that time she
was the grievor’s immediate supervisor. Prior to that she was a Finance Officer
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herself. Mr. Babin was the Manager of Transfer Payments Unit to whom the
grievor and other Financial Officers reported from June 2000 on. Mr. Peebles
was Assistant Deputy Minister from 1998 to the spring of 2001. The human
resources and legal functions of the Ministry reported to him. He was
responsible for formulating the Deputy Minister’s response to the grievor’s
situation.
[18] Ministry witnesses were concerned that if a school board trustee has
access to the confidential information available to Financial Officers it gives that
trustee and the trustee’s school board an advantage, real or perceived, over other
trustees and school boards. They were also concerned that a Finance Officer’s
serving as a school board trustee would interfere with the performance of his job
functions because it would cause those with whom he must interact, both within
the Ministry and at client school boards, to be reticent in their dealings with
him.
[19] Nancy Naylor testified that Finance Officers would be aware of the
variance between actual and forecast funding requirements. That information is
important to assessing the likelihood that the government will enhance funding
in mid-year. Finance Officers also have advance knowledge of funding
announcements. The evidence of the Ministry witnesses was that these are
matters about which school boards seek out and appear to value having
information.
[20] With reference to the gathering of field intelligence, Ms. Naylor testified
that school boards sometimes complain that although they are in compliance,
their neighbouring school boards are not. The implication was that a Finance
Officer would be less able to gather such intelligence if he or she is a trustee of a
neighbouring school board about which such a complaint might be made. Ms.
Naylor also spoke about the level of conflict between school boards and the
government. She noted that the Ontario School Board Trustees’ Association was
or had been engaged in litigation with the government over the constitutionality
of the government’s funding scheme. She observed that the trustees of individual
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school boards regularly lobby for changes in the funding model that Finance
Officers are obliged to work within. She and other management witnesses
expressed concern about and discomfort with the prospect of a Finance
Officer/trustee’s lobbying Ministry officials in that or other respects.
[21] Peggy McCormick testified that Finance Officers would know whether the
Ministry has decided not to make adjustments for non-compliance in certain
areas because of vagueness in the policy in those areas. She said that school
boards want to know what changes are under consideration, what has been put
to cabinet but not adopted, and what the Ministry is focused on in terms of
compliance. She had difficulty providing an example of how a school board could
gain a financial advantage by knowing these things in advance of public
announcements. One she offered was that a school board’s knowing that the
Ministry planned to increase funding to cover increases in fuel costs might have
influenced how it would contract with suppliers of school bus services. Ms.
McCormick also expressed concern that a parent calling the Ministry’s Ottawa
District Office to speak to the Ministry about the actions of the UCDSB —
concerning the closing of a school, for example — could find herself speaking
with a UCDSB Trustee.
[22] Mr. Babin testified that if a school board knew whether, when and in
what respects it would be audited, that could influence the school board’s
planning. A school board that knew in advance what aspect of its operations
would be audited might allocate resources to the targeted area at the possible
expense of non-compliance in areas the school board knows will not be audited.
He also testified if a school board were aware of the tolerance levels for non-
compliance, as Finance Officers are, it could plan to satisfy the tolerance levels
rather than the prescribed limits. He identified classroom size as one area in
which a school board might do this — increasing average class size up to but not
beyond the tolerance level.
[23] Mr. Babin felt that the sharing of information at meetings of Finance
Officers and other Ministry employees and officials might be inhibited if one of
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the participants is also a school board trustee. He observed that the information
shared with Finance Officers in meetings and via documents on the Ministry’s
computer network includes policy directions under study, regulations being
drafted, policy gaps, and loopholes or inadequacies that had been discovered in
the guidelines. He thought that the fact that a trustee of a particular school
board has access to this information could lead to perception of disadvantage by
other school boards. He also referred to the possibility of awkwardness if a
Finance Officer were involved in lobbying on behalf of a school board in meetings
with senior management.
[24] Mr. Babin observed that school boards have described themselves as being
in competition with one another for students, and also that school boards are
encouraged to enter into partnerships with one another in areas in which they
have common interests. He thought there was potential for conflict and concern
if, as Finance Officer, Mr. Schoular were auditing one of UCDSB’s neighbouring
school boards. He said that there was as least one school board in the grievor’s
client group that had preferred to deal with the Toronto office rather than the
grievor, and that he had heard indirectly that this was because of Mr. Schoular’s
being a trustee of the UCDSB.
[25] Ms. Naylor acknowledged that some of the points of conflict that she felt
existed between the Finance Office and Trustee roles after the enactment of the
EQIA were perhaps present before it was enacted in the case of school boards
that were getting a large percentage of their funding from Ministry. She felt that
the conflict in those respects had been heightened following enactment of the
EQIA as a result of changes to school board’s business practices, changes to the
funding model, the greater degree of public debate and the increased
responsibility of both Finance Officers and Trustees.
[26] In addition to the four witnesses from the civil service, the Ministry
introduced the testimony of two trustees of the UCDSB.
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[27] Art Buckland was Chair of the UCDSB during the 1997-2000 term, when
Mr. Schoular was Vice-Chair of the Board. He testified that he could not take
Mr. Schoular with him to meetings with the Ministry to “hammer” them
concerning areas they felt were unfair because Mr. Schoular had, in Mr.
Buckland’s words, “a professional responsibility to his employer.” Mr. Buckland
said there was a perception of double loyalty on Mr. Schoular’s part. When a
lawyer retained by the school board made a disparaging remark about the
Ministry at a meeting of the board, Mr. Schoular said, “If you don’t criticize the
Ministry, I won’t criticize Toronto lawyers.” The lawyer had been retained to
advise the board about payment of employees for overtime in circumstances in
which such payment might have put the school board in contravention of
Ministry guidelines. Mr. Buckland testified that when Mr. Schoular was not
present, the lawyer expressed concern about how he was to deal with Mr.
Schoular, given the nature of his employment with the Ministry.
[28] Maria Thompson was a UCDSB Trustee during the 1997-2000 term who
was re-elected in 2000. She had previously served as trustee in a predecessor
board other than the one on which the grievor had served in the 1994-97 period.
She wrote to the Minister of Education in January 2000 to complain about what
she described as Mr. Schoular’s “moral conflict of interest.”
[29] In her letter, Ms. Thompson expressed three concerns. One was that as a
result of Mr. Schoular’s election as its Vice-Chair, the school board had a
Ministry employee in an “executive” position. Another was that Mr. Schoular
had participated in reviewing a position paper provided in confidence by the
Ontario Public School Boards Association concerning strategies that school
boards could or should take collectively with other parties, including the
Ministry, concerning collective bargaining issues. Her concern was that there
was an expectation that the contents of the document would be kept confidential
from the Ministry, that this would have faced Mr. Schoular with a dilemma and
that she was not sure to which group his allegiance would ultimately be owed in
that regard. Her third concern was with Mr. Schoular’s participation in the
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hiring of the board’s Superintendent of Business, a concern apparently based in
part on the belief that the board’s Superintendent of Business would have been
dealing with Mr. Schoular on behalf of the Ministry but for the Regional Office’s
having “found a way for our administration to do an end run around Mr.
Schoular.”
[30] Mr. Peebles testified that the specific issues raised in Ms. Thompson’s
letter were matters of concern for the school board rather than for the Ministry.
He referred Ms. Thompson’s letter to the audit branch for investigation,
however, and recalls that their preliminary view was that “there was a conflict.”
When he left the Ministry for another position in the civil service in the spring of
2001 he had not yet seen a final report from them on the matter. It is not
apparent whether the audit branch expressed its preliminary view before or
after Mr. Schoular’s employment was treated as at an end, what conflict it
identified or what rationale it offered for its preliminary view.
The Historical Context
[31] Given the union’s position that nothing had happened to warrant a
change in the Ministry’s earlier position on whether Mr. Schoular could serve as
a school board trustee while remaining employed as a Finance Officer, a good
deal of the parties’ evidence focused on changes said to have taken place in the
Finance Officer’s role over the years, Mr. Schoular’s employment history while
serving as Trustee and the evolution of the Ministry’s attitude toward his doing
so.
[32] There is no evidence before me about the approval of the grievor’s running
for and serving his first term as Trustee for the predecessor school board for the
1994 – 1997 term.
[33] In July 1997 Garth Jackson, Mr. Peebles’ predecessor as Assistant Deputy
Minister with responsibility for such matters, responded in writing to a letter
from Mr. Schoular concerning his desire to seek re-election as Trustee for the
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amalgamated school board, the UCDSB, for the 1997-2000 term. Mr. Jackson
wrote that after weighing the advice of audit and legal services staff:
… I have concluded that it would not be a conflict for you to accept another
term as a Public School Board Trustee as long as you meet the following
conditions.
•
•
•
You cannot participate in any direct assignment affecting the Board
that you serve on.
You must specify in any agreement between yourself and the Board
you serve on that you are not providing your services within the scope
of your employment with the Ontario government.
You are under a continuing obligation to disclose should there be a
change in the circumstances that you have set out i.e. any change in
job duties and/or responsibilities.
If, at some point in the future, you are required to take on assignments
affecting the Board that you serve on, we would have to reassess the
situation. It is important for you to recognize now that should such
circumstances arise, you may have to make a decision between your role with
the ministry and your role with the Board.
[34] Ross Peebles became Assistant Deputy Minister in the Ministry in 1998.
The legal and human resources staff reported to him. Matters of conflict of
interest fell within the scope of his responsibility. He recalls that in early 1999
someone on the legal staff brought Mr. Schoular’s situation to his attention, and
suggested that the EQIA had “changed things” since the earlier approval.
[35] In May 1999, the Ministry learned that Mr. Schoular had participated in
a radio interview in which he had commented on the platform of a provincial
party in matters relating to education funding. Mr. Peebles approved a letter
that was sent to Mr. Schoular over the Deputy Minister’s signature. The letter
warned Mr. Schoular that his making those comments was contrary to the PSA
(under which such comments could be made by a civil servant only while on
leave of absence for political activity purposes) and that further conduct of that
sort could lead to discipline. Of interest for purposes of these grievances is the
way Mr. Schoular was introduced by the interviewer:
David Schoular wears two hats in the education world. One is as a trustee for
the Upper Canada Board. The other is as an employee of the Ministry of
Education. Schoular says this isn’t a conflict of interest. The former NDP
government made it legal for civil servants to run for public office.
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This was followed by the two questions of and answers by the grievor that led to
the disciplinary letter. It is unclear how the fact of the grievor’s two hats or the
question whether that was a conflict of interest had arisen between the
interviewer and the grievor, but Mr. Schoular does not dispute that it did.
[36] Mr. Peebles testified that when he dealt with the May 1999 incident he
concluded that Mr. Schoular was in a conflict of interest serving as a school
board trustee while employed by the Ministry as a Financial Officer. He was not
sure that the conclusion expressed in his predecessor’s letter of July 1997 was
correct even in the circumstances as they then existed. In any event, he felt that
the relationship between the Ministry and school boards had changed
dramatically following the enactment of the EQIA, and that that change made
the grievor’s conflict clear. He recognized that there would be a disruption for
Mr. Schoular if he were required to resign one or other of his positions at that
point in time. He says he believed that Mr. Schoular would recognize the conflict
himself and choose not to run again at the end of his term, and that the Ministry
could live with the situation in the meantime, relying on Mr. Schoular’s good
judgment to avoid or remove himself from any situation in which an actual
conflict of interest might arise.
[37] The warning letter that was sent to the grievor concerning the radio
interview did not include any suggestion that the grievor had a conflict of
interest, however, nor was Mr. Peebles’ conclusion to that effect communicated
to Mr. Schoular by any other means prior to October 2000.
[38] The Ministry’s position was that there had been real changes in the
Finance Officer’s job since 1997, as well as changes in the roles of school boards
and in their relationship and interaction with the Ministry.
[39] Until 1996 each district office had a Superintendent who checked the
work of the Finance Officers in that office before the results were passed on to
head office in Toronto. The Superintendent position was eliminated in 1996. The
Finance Officer position was at the FO 4 level at that time. Prior to 1996, the
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Finance Officers’ audit function had been largely focused on the verification of
enrolment levels. The audit function was suspended entirely in 1996, and the
Ministry did not resume auditing until 2000. During that period Finance Officers
were focused on informing and advising school boards and on gathering field
intelligence. They were also encouraged to take on special project work.
[40] The Finance Officer function was reclassified to the FO5 level at the end
of December 1999. The reclassification was effective as of April 1, 1999, when a
Ministry restructuring had resulted in the creation of the Transfer Payments
and Financial Reporting Branch. Ms. McCormick understood that the
reclassification was due to the Finance Officer job’s increased responsibility and
access to sensitive information following the legislative changes described
earlier. The Branch “geared up again” for auditing starting in 1999, but did not
perform any audits until 2000.
[41] Addressing the issue of change over time, Ms. McCormick said that there
had been a lot more checks and balances on the Finance Officer’s work in the
past, and that there were now more points of conflict with the public and
arguments over responsibility as between the Ministry and school boards. Ms.
Naylor acknowledged that in the case of school boards that received a large
percentage of funding from Ministry, there might have been some of the
foundation for an appearance of conflict between the Finance Office and trustee
roles even before the enactment of the EQIA, but felt this had been heightened
following that enactment by changes to school boards’ business practices,
changes to the funding model, the degree of public debate about funding of
education and the increased responsibility of both Finance Officers and school
board trustees.
[42] For two to three days a week between June 1998 and March 1999, Mr.
Schoular was involved in a special project concerning the funding of school books
for the new curriculum. In about January of 1999 he also participated in a
special project involving the funding of expenses incurred by school boards in
Eastern Ontario as a result of the ice storm that occurred in January 1998. He
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testified that this involved assisting school boards to maximize the funds they
obtained from the federal government’s disaster relief program. He said that
from March 1999 to June 2000 he participated full-time in a project concerned
with the funding of expenditures arising out of the “Y2K” computer issue. In
each case he was administering the provisions of a funding plan that he testified
had been formulated before he became involved. Ms. McCormick testified that it
would have been difficult for him to extend preferential treatment to his own or
any other school board in those assignments.
[43] The grievor was not limited to his client group in these special
assignments, and the UCDSB was one of the boards whose applications for
funding he processed in the course of them. He did not seek or obtain the Deputy
Minister’s approval of his participating in those assignments. In answer to the
suggestion that this was a violation of the express conditions of the Jackson
letter, the grievor said that his immediate superiors were aware of the Jackson
letter and did not raise any issue with him when they approved his participation
in those assignments.
[44] The thrust of the grievor’s case was that in the two terms during which he
was permitted to serve as Trustee while employed with the Ministry, the Trustee
role and his employment duties involved many of the same elements now relied
upon by the Ministry as giving rise to a conflict of interest, and if those matters
did not create a conflict then, they did not do so (or cannot be relied upon by the
employer as having done so) in the fall of 2000.
[45] The grievor testified that the school board on which he served prior to the
1997 elections had received a very substantial portion of its funding from the
Ministry — about 90 percent, he believed — prior to enactment of the EQIA. The
former ability to tax was not a cash cow, he said, because there was significant
local pressure to minimize its use. He testified that he and other Finance
Officers had conducted audits — enrolment audits, transportation audits and
special education audits — prior to enactment of the EQIA. Gathering field
intelligence had always been part of the Finance Officer’s job. School boards had
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lobbied the Ministry throughout his time there, and the Ontario Public School
Boards Association had always lobbied on behalf of school boards. The grievor
emphasised that he had not been personally involved in lobbying the Ministry on
behalf of the UCDSB. He regarded that and other interactions with the Ministry
as the function of the school board’s staff. He said that he had not met with
trustees of other school boards in his capacity as Field Officer — he had dealt
with school board staff.
[46] In particulars delivered on his behalf in advance of the hearing, the
grievor acknowledged that in 2000 his branch of the Ministry had begun sharing
with Finance Officers information that had previously been discussed only at
more senior levels in advance of its release to the public, but noted that he was
mindful of the oath of secrecy he had taken under section 10 of the PSA. In his
testimony he rejected the notion that a trustee would act on information about
changes the Ministry or Cabinet was considering or might make in advance of
their actually committing to and announcing such changes, because until then
the position might change. A school board would not take advantage of tolerance
levels by increasing average class size, he said, because parents would complain.
He testified that he could not imagine how he could favour his own board in the
course of his duties as Finance Officer, and noted that Finance Officers are
required to be even-handed.
[47] As for the 1999 reclassification of the Finance Officer position, Mr.
Schoular noted that he was seconded to the Y2K project full-time from March
1999 to June 2000, so his experience of any effect of the reclassification on the
regular duties of his position was limited to the period between June 2000 and
October 12, 2000. He said it did not seem to him during that period that there
had been any difference in the job’s decision making role.
Analysis
[48] Part III of the PSA is entitled “Political Activity Rights.” That Part
includes the following:
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28.4 (1) A Crown employee who does not belong to the restricted category
described in subsection 28.3(3) is entitled to engage in political activity
without restriction, subject only to section 28.1 and to the following
exceptions:
1. A Crown employee may be a candidate, seek to be nominated as a
candidate or campaign on behalf of a candidate in a municipal
election without taking leave of absence and may hold municipal
office, but only if the activity or office would not interfere with the
performance of the employee’s duties and would not conflict with the
interests of the Crown.
…
4. A civil servant may comment publicly and outside the scope of the
duties of his or her position on matters that are directly related to those
duties and that are dealt with in the positions or policies of a federal or
provincial political party or in the positions publicly expressed by a
candidate in a federal or provincial election only while on leave of absence
granted under subsection (4).
28.7 …
(2) A Crown employee who is elected in a municipal election to an office that
would interfere with the performance of the employee’s duties or would
conflict with the interests of the Crown shall immediately resign his or her
position as a Crown employee.
28.8 A Crown employee who contravenes section 28.1, subsection 28.3(2) or
28.4(1) is subject to the full range of available disciplinary penalties,
including suspension and dismissal.
28.9 (1) A Crown employee has the grievance rights set out in subsection (2) if
he or she,
(a) is disciplined for a contravention of section 28.1, subsection 28.3(2) or
28.4(1);
(b) suffers adverse consequences in the context of his or her employment
as a result of engaging in or declining to engage in political activity that
this Act permits; or
(c) is threatened with an action described in clause (a) or (b).
(2) A Crown employee to whom subsection (1) applies,
(a) is entitled to have the matter dealt with by final and binding
arbitration under a collective agreement, if any;
[49] The parties disagree about how the termination of the grievor’s
employment should be characterized. The employer describes it as a deemed
resignation. The union says it was a dismissal.
[50] Subsection 28.7(2) of the PSA requires that a civil servant resign his or
her employment under certain circumstances. The PSA restricts certain limited
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re-employment rights to those who resign in accordance with section 28.7, but
does not otherwise prescribe an employment consequence for failure to resign. In
particular, it does not give the employer authority to deem an employee to have
resigned from employment if the employee has not actually resigned. In
circumstances in which section 28.7 requires resignation, however, a civil
servant who fails to resign as the section requires would thereafter be in breach
of subsection 28.4(1). The employer is entitled under section 28.8 to take
disciplinary action in response to a breach of subsection 28.4(1). It is clear from
section 28.7 that the disciplinary response to a breach of that provision can and
should be such as to bring the conflict to an end.
[51] The grievor did not resign. He cannot be deemed to have resigned. The
employer’s having treated his employment as at an end therefore constituted
dismissal from employment.
[52] Having regard to subsections 28.4(1) and 28.7(2) and section 28.8 of the
PSA, the central issue in both of the grievances before me is whether the
employer was correct in concluding that the grievor’s serving as Trustee of the
Upper Canada District School Board following the 2000 elections “would
interfere with the performance of the employee’s duties or would conflict with
the interests of the Crown.”
[53] Several decision involving alleged “conflict of interest” were referred to in
argument: Re Regional Municipality of Hamilton-Wentworth and Canadian
Union of Public Employees, Local 167 (1978), 18 L.A.C. (2d) 46 (Kennedy),
Hallborg and Ministry of Revenue, GSB 79/21 (June 7, 1979, Weatherill), Van
der Linden and Ministry of Industry and Tourism (February 4, 1981, Swinton),
Re Windsor Star and Windsor Newspaper Guild (1992), 26 L.A.C. (4th) 129
(McLaren), OPSEU (Edwards) and Ministry of Health, GSB 2216/94, (January 9,
1996, Finley), E. Degreitis and Ministry of the Environment and Energy, PSGB
P/0007/94 (May 28, 1998, Lynk), and OPSEU (Hannan) and Ministry of
Economic Development, Trade and Tourism, GSB 0008/96 (January 7, 1998,
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Gray). The Hallborg decision is the only one that deals with conflict between
employment in the civil service and holding municipal office.
[54] In McKendry and the Treasury Board (May 31, 1973, E. B. Jolliffe,
unreported, quoted in Re Regional Municipality of Hamilton-Wentworth and
Canadian Union of Public Employee, Local 167 (1978), 18 L.A.C. (2d) 46
(Kennedy) at 54 and 55) the arbitrator made these observations about conflict of
interest in the federal public service:
1. Public servants must not seek, for private gain, to make use of
information not available to the general public to which they have access
by reason of their official duties.
2. A conflict of interest occurs when the public interest in proper
administration of a government office and a government official’s interest
in his private economic affairs clash or appear to clash; and a finding of
conflict of interest does not depend on wilful wrongdoing by the official or
on the issue of whether the official’s judgment has in fact been affected.
3. A government official should not put himself in a position where his
judgment could, even unconsciously, be affected by friendship.
…
This is not a matter of yielding to public suspicion or malicious criticism. The
essential requirements are that the public servant should serve only one
master and should never place himself in a position where he could be even
tempted to prefer his own interests or the interests of another over the
interests of public he is employed to serve. Those requirements constitute the
rationale of the doctrine that he should avoid a position of apparent bias as
well as actual bias, and that he should never place himself in a position
where … as Dean Manning puts it … “two interests clash, or appear to clash.”
[55] Likewise, in Edwards, 2216/94 (Finley), at pages 25 and 26 this Board
(differently constituted) observed that
The nature of conflict of interest legislation and policy respecting public
servants in the Province of Ontario is preventive in direction and is very
broad in concept. It puts the onus on the employee to make known to the
Deputy Minister an actual, perceived, or potentially actual or perceived
conflict in order that the Deputy Minister may provide “advice” on the matter
and see that the matter is promptly resolved. The penalty for failure to notify
can be severe; it can go so far as dismissal. The Deputy Minister has wide
discretion in providing that advice and resolving the issue or in removing the
conflict. Some situations which may attract the conflict of interest label are
the receipt of honoraria, the holding of political office, outside employment
activities, outside business activities, the derivation of personal benefit when
being in a position to influence, the ownership of property, the accepting of
favours, ant the receipt of personal benefit by the immediate gamily of a
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public servant. It is not necessary for any financial advantage to come to a
public servant for a conflict of interest to exist. The public servant whose
situation attracts the conflict of interest label, may have taken no action
whatsoever, and further may have no intention of taking any action which
would be contrary to the Employer’s interest. A public servant who finds him
or herself so labelled may feel that his or her honesty is being impugned.
This, however, does not follow. A public servant with a conflict of interest
label is not being accused of a lack of integrity or honesty. For such an
accusation there would need to be some specific action on the part of the
employee which would attract such a designation. It is sufficient in conflict of
interest situations that there is the suggestion of the possibility of a conflict
of interest and no action need ever have taken place and no benefit, present
or future, need be derived.
[56] The cases frequently refer to a conflict between the employer’s interest
and the employee’s financial interest, but the conflicting employee interest need
not be economic in order for a conflict of interest to arise. It may arise from a
matrimonial or other personal relationship, as in Edwards and Hannan, or from
the holding of municipal office, as in Hallborg.
[57] In Hallborg the grievor had been employed by the Ministry of Revenue as
a Neighbourhood Assessor. He had decided to seek election as a member of
municipal council of a municipality in the assessment region in which he was
employed. He had informed his superiors of that intention, and the Deputy
Minister had advised him that if elected he would have a conflict of interest. He
was elected, did not resign and was dismissed. He grieved, and the central issue
was whether there was a conflict of interest between the grievor’s employment
and his holding municipal office. Although the grievor’s assessment work was
primarily in another municipality in the assessment region, he had access to
information concerning properties throughout the assessment region and would
be involved in discussions about them with other assessors in the region with a
view to ensuring that similar properties were similarly assessed. The board
found that some of the information to which assessors had access was
information that they were obliged to keep confidential from others, information
that might give a municipal counsellor an advantage, real or perceived, in some
circumstances. In that context the board made these observations at pages 6 to 9
of its award:
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There is, as the employer acknowledges and as we are convinced, no
question of the grievor’s personal honesty and integrity. There is no
suggestion that the grievor would take advantage of his special knowledge for
his own benefit or even for the benefit of his constitutents [sic] or his
municipality. It is nevertheless the case that the proper interests of an
Assessor conflict with the proper interests of a municipal counsellor in the
same Region. Not only is the same person undertaking to “serve two masters”
whose interests are not the same and are sometimes opposed but he may be
seen, and reasonably so, as being in a position where it is open to him to take
advantage in one position (even if not for his own benefit) of the special
knowledge he has gained in the other. The constituent, ward, municipality or
province on the other side of some matter in which the council member with
special knowledge is involved might well feel, whatever the real case may be,
that the situation is an unfair one. There is, in fact, a conflict of interest.
The situation in the instant case is of course very different from those
which were dealt with by the Public Service Staff Relations Board in the
McKendry (166-2-674) Atkins (166-2-889) or Garrett (166-2-3040) cases. In
those cases the grievors either accepted benefits from those whose cases they
were to deal with, traded on knowledge or position, or entered into
transactions with the employer for their own benefit. There was what some of
the witnesses for the grievor referred to as an “actual conflict of interest” in
those cases in the sense that the employee concerned had behaved wrongly
and had in fact taken improper advantage of his position. That is, a conflict of
interest had occurred, and the employee had promoted his own interests over
those of his employer. There is, of course, nothing like that here, but there is
an “actual” conflict of interests nevertheless, in that the grievor has —
honestly and from the best of motives — taken on obligations which are, in
part, contradictory, and which involve interests which will, at times, be in
conflict, and be seen to be in conflict.
The conflict of interest in this case is a significant and substantial one,
and arises out of the very nature of the two obligations which the grievor has
undertaken. It is not the sort of “interest”, arising out of some particular
matter or transaction, to which The Municipal Conflict of Interest Act, 1972,
applies, and which can be dealt with by declaration and abstention. It
involves rather a fundamental divergence of obligations.
The rights of Crown employees to participate in political activities are
governed by The Public Service Act and the Regulations thereunder. A
candidate in provincial or federal elections must take a leave of absence to
campaign, and on being elected must resign his position as a Crown
employee. Crown employees may, however, (with certain exceptions noted in
the Act or Regulations, and which do not cover the grievor) be candidates for
municipal office and if elected may serve in such office, provided, as is set out
in section 11 of the Act:
a) the candidacy, service or activity does not interfere with the
performance of his duties as a Crown employee;
b) the candidacy, service or activity does not conflict with the interests of
the Crown; and
c) the candidacy, service or activity is not in affiliation with or sponsored
by a provincial or federal political party. R.S.O. 1970, c 386, s.11.
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In the instant case, while there is no evidence touching on condition (c),
and while we do not consider that condition (a) applies in any very
substantial way, it is our view that there is, for the reasons we have given, a
conflict with the interests of the Crown, so that condition (b) is not met, and
the grievor is not entitled to serve in the municipal office in question. His
serving in such office constituted a violation of Section 11 and must, under
section 16, be deemed to be sufficient cause for dismissal.
There was adduced, on behalf of the grievor, considerable evidence as to
other cases in which Crown employees have been elected to and serve in
Municipal office and yet remain in employment. In many of these cases we
are not convinced that there is in fact any significant conflict of interest.
There are some - we think particularly of the case of a Manager in the
Niagara Assessment Region who is said to sit as a member of the Niagara
Peninsula Conservation Authority - where (although we make no
determination of the matter), a conflict of interest does appear. That such
cases may have escaped notice or consideration, however, does not absolve
others from meeting the requirements of The Public Service Act. In any event,
it is clear to us that there has been no attempt to discriminate unjustly
against the grievor himself. The requirements of the law are, we think, clear,
and they must be met in the circumstances of this case.
It should be repeated that in reaching the conclusion which we do, we do
not reflect at all adversely on the grievor’s honesty or integrity. It is simply
that, within a given Assessment Region, the positions of municipal council
member and Neighbourhood Assessor are not ones which can properly be
held by the same person at the same time, as they necessarily involve that
person in conflicting allegiances.
[58] The union argues that whatever the conclusion might have been had the
grievor been seeking office for the first time in 2000, the employer was obliged to
approach the matter in a manner consistent with the 1997 opinion of the then
Assistant Deputy Minister unless some change in either or both of the roles in
question had given rise to a conflict where none previously existed. In effect, the
argument is that no feature of the situation as it existed in 2000 should be
weighed in favour of a conclusion that there was a conflict of interest if that
feature was present in July 1997. It also argues that in interpreting the Political
Rights portion of the PSA, “conflict of interest” should be interpreted narrowly
when it is being weighed against the right to seek and hold public office, and in
that regard relies on Re Windsor Star, supra, for the proposition that a conflict
should be actual and not merely potential in order to qualify as a conflict of
interest in this context.
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[59] There was some discussion about whether the grievor had failed to comply
with the conditions in the 1997 letter, by seeking out, accepting and
participating in special assignments that affected the UCDSB. Whether or not
his participation in them involved a conflict of interest, the terms of the letter
required the grievor to first clear his participation in those projects with the
Deputy Minister or his/her delegate directly, and he failed to do so. It is not an
answer that his immediate superiors knew of his dual role and even of the 1997
letter when they approved the assignments. It was not their role to assess the
conflict of interest question. That was a matter on which the grievor, and indeed
any civil servant, was bound to deal directly with the Deputy Minister (or his/her
delegate for that purpose). The grievor’s immediate superiors were entitled to
expect that he would do that before accepting the assignments.
[60]
These failures to inform and consult the Deputy Minister were not offered
as cause for termination of his employment in October 2000 but, rather, to
diminish the weight that might otherwise have been assigned to the letter and to
illustrate, in conjunction with the evidence about the radio interview, the
difficulty of keeping the two roles from coming into obvious conflict.
[61] In any event, I do not think it matters whether his failures in that regard
somehow diminished the effect of the Jackson letter. Even if there had been no
failure to meet the conditions set out in the letter, I would not agree with the
union that the opinion expressed in it controlled or controls the conflict of
interest determination in the manner the union suggests. I should certainly take
it into account in assessing the credibility and bona fides of the employer’s
contentions. I am not obliged to treat the opinion as having been correct at the
time, however, nor was the employer in 2000. If the employer had required that
the grievor resign one or other of his roles by reason of his holding office as
trustee during the 1997-2000 term, I might have had to grapple with the
question whether the Crown could be estopped from exercising its rights under
the statute by reason of the 1997 opinion, or if some other doctrine with respect
to expectation interests would have that effect. The 1997 letter only spoke to his
- 24 -
seeking election and serving “another term as a Public School Board Trustee”,
however. It did not purport to bind whoever might have to deal with a request
from the grievor to seek election and serve as trustee for the 2000-2003 term.
[62] In his particulars, the grievor said
The grievor disputes the implication that School Boards and the Ministry are
in an adversarial relationship. They are different components in a large
system with one goal, to provide quality education to the people of Ontario.
Since these components are not in competition with each other, the basis for
a conflict of interest is minimal.
Whether the relationship between school boards and the Ministry may properly
be described as adversarial, the thrust of the Ministry’s case is that on occasion
the interests of the Ministry are in conflict with the interests of school boards
and of school board trustees generally or of a particular school board or its
trustees. I find that to be so. While I accept as genuine the grievor’s belief that a
school board could not and would not make use of the confidential information to
which he would have access as a Finance Office, I accept as true the evidence of
the Ministry witnesses that school boards behave as though that information is
of value to them. It is evident that not all school board trustees share the
grievor’s perspective. The question whether a Finance Officer would have a
conflict of interest serving as a school board trustee cannot turn on the
particular Finance Officer’s political perspective or on how sympathetic he is to
the Ministry’s interests.
[63] Finance Officers have access to information that the Ministry reasonably
wishes kept confidential from school boards. That Mr. Schoular would not share
the information with his school board colleagues is not a sufficient answer to
this. Finance Officer Schoular could not keep the information confidential from
Trustee Schoular. There are some respects, at least, in which only he would
know whether Trustee Schoular had taken advantage of information acquired by
Finance Officer Schoular in determining what position to advance or support on
issues arising at or concerning the UCDSB. In any event, as in Hallborg the
issue is not whether the grievor has actually taken or would be likely to take
- 25 -
improper advantage of his position as Finance Officer for the benefit of his school
board or his position as trustee. The issue is whether by assuming office as
school board trustee while continuing in employment as a Finance Officer he
became subject to “obligations which are, in part, contradictory, and which
involve interests which will, at times, be in conflict, and be seen to be in conflict.”
If he did, then, as the Hallborg decision says, there is an actual conflict of
interest of the sort with which the PSA is concerned.
[64] I agree with the Ministry that as of October 2000, the grievor’s serving
both as Finance Officer and as school board trustee would have created a conflict
of interest within the meaning of sections 28.4 and 28.7 of the PSA. Apart
altogether from whether it would have been possible for the grievor to have
favoured his school board financially in the course of his duties as Finance
Officer, I consider it sufficient that as Finance Officer he would necessarily be
privy to information that the employer reasonably wishes kept confidential from
school boards.
[65] At least some of the circumstances that have led me to find a conflict of
interest were present in a more attenuated form in 1997, when Mr. Jackson
opined that there would be no conflict of interest if the conditions he outline were
met. I am inclined to Mr. Pebbles’ view that that opinion may not have been
entirely correct at the time it was expressed, and that it might have been more
accurate for Mr. Jackson to have said that the conflict was sufficiently slight in
the circumstances as they then existed that the Ministry was prepared to
tolerate it.
[66] I wish to emphasize that there is no suggestion by the Ministry, and I
have made no finding, that Mr. Schoular took improper advantage of his
employment as Finance Officer while serving as a trustee of the UCDSB.
Moreover, while I have come to the conclusion that his position on the conflict
issue must be rejected, it is entirely understandable in the circumstances that he
took and pursued that position with the union’s able assistance.
- 26 -
[67] Although I have come to the same conclusion as the Ministry did in 1999,
I am troubled that it did not inform the grievor of that conclusion in May 1999
when Mr. Peebles came to it. The appropriate official of the Ministry had told the
grievor in 1997 that there was no conflict. The interview transcript on which the
Ministry acted in May 1999 recorded that the grievor had told the radio
interviewer there was no conflict. The Ministry reprimanded him for having said
other things in the interview, but did not take that opportunity to disabuse him
of the notion that there was no conflict. Its inaction in that regard could only
have encouraged the grievor in his belief that there was no conflict. Although he
left his obtaining approval of a third term as trustee rather late, in the
circumstances he might be forgiven for having thought that the outcome was a
foregone and favourable conclusion. By the time he learned otherwise he was
publicly committed to running, the election was a few weeks away and there was
no way any challenge to the Ministry’s changed position could be resolved before
he had to choose between dropping out of the election or risk losing his job.
[68] Having come in May 1999 to the conclusion that there was a conflict, the
Ministry was prepared to tolerate the conflict for the balance of the grievor’s
term of office as trustee. There is no reason why it could not have told him in
May 1999 both of its conclusion that there was a conflict of interest and of its
willingness to tolerate the unavoidable aspects of the conflict for the balance of
his term. That would have given him an opportunity to have his grievance about
that position addressed in the grievance process and at arbitration before having
to choose between his two roles. It would have given him the opportunity to seek
some other position in the civil service in which it would not be a conflict for him
to continue to serve as trustee. It would have given him the opportunity to plan a
graceful exit from one or other of the two roles.
[69] I do not accept the union’s submission that the employer had an obligation
to find the grievor a non-conflicting position in the civil service. I do not suggest
that the employer’s failure to give the grievor notice of its changed view earlier
than it did was a breach of some legal entitlement of the grievor’s in respect of
- 27 -
which he is entitled as of right to a particular remedy. It is, however, a
consideration that I think should be taken into account in considering the
exercise of my statutory jurisdiction to alter the penalty for the grievor’s having
put himself in a conflict of interest contrary to the Ministry’s belated direction.
[70] Accordingly, I direct that if within the sixty day period following the
release of this decision the grievor gives the employer his written undertaking to
resign his position as trustee effective on the date of his reinstatement, the
employer shall reinstate him to his former position as Finance Officer within two
weeks after receiving that written undertaking, or such further time as he and
the Ministry may agree. In the event that the grievor delivers such an
undertaking, the period between his last day of paid employment in October
2000 and the date of his reinstatement is to be treated as a leave without pay
pursuant to Article 24.1 of the parties’ collective agreement. Any breach of such
an undertaking to resign will be cause for discharge. I retain jurisdiction to
resolve any dispute concerning the implementation of these directions.
Otherwise, these two grievances are dismissed.
[71] The parties are free to agree on some outcome other than one provided for
in my direction. I have stipulated a sixty day period in order that the parties can
have adequate time to consider their interests and options in that regard.
Having said that the employer is under no legal obligation to do so, I
nevertheless hope that in the sixty day period provided for, and any extension on
which the parties may agree, it will explore with the grievor, if he wishes, the
possibility of restoring him and his talents to the civil service in a position that
would not necessitate his resigning office as school board trustee.
Dated at Toronto this 18th
day of July, 2002.
Owen V. Gray, Vice-Chair