HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-1928.Policy Grievance.03-12-19 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB#2002-1928
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
The Association of Management Administrative and
Professional Crown Employees of Ontario
(Policy Grievance) Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Management Board Secretariat) Employer
BEFORE Richard Brown Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Andrea Bowker
Sack Goldblatt Mitchell
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER David Strang and Mary-Pat Moore
Counsel
Management Board Secretariat
HEARING December 8, 2003.
2
Decision
The association contends bargaining-unit work is being done by persons who would be
characterized properly as employees of the provincial government but are being treated as if they
are not employees. This is the fourth in a series of interim decisions dealing with the
association’s request for disclosure. An order for disclosure, issued on July 14, 2003, was
amended in orders dated August 7 and September 11.
The disclosure mandated by these orders was restricted to a single ministry, eventually
determined to be Management Board Secretariat (MBS). The initial order required disclosure of
details about “all people not formally designated as employees, who are engaged for a period of
more than ninety days … to perform work requiring regular attendance at one or more sites
controlled by the employer. The order excluded “people in any category not arguably involving
work of the bargaining unit” and stated such categories were to be “determined through
agreement of the parties or by this board” In the end, no excluded categories were identified,
probably because the process of determining them would have been more burdensome than was
providing disclosure. MBS has made the required disclosure relating to 233 people.
The association now seeks an order for disclosure relating to the rest of the Ontario
Public Service. The proposal advanced divides ministries into four groups. It would require
disclosure for the first group by March 15, 2004 and for the last group by June 15, 2004.
Opposing an order of this scope, the employer proposes to provide disclosure for the Ministry of
Health by April 15, 2004.
I
In determining the appropriate scope of disclosure at this time, I am guided by the same
considerations which underlie the order made on July 14, 2003. In that decision, I wrote:
I do not view the association’s request for production as a “fishing expedition.” The
report of the provincial auditor provides reasonable grounds to suspect that bargaining-
unit work in six ministries is being done by a substantial number of people outside the
unit who would be characterized properly as employees. In addition, the dispute at hand
is significantly different than one about employees being underpaid, as the employer has
ready access to information, not accessible to other disputants, about who is performing
bargaining unit work. For these reasons, I conclude the association is entitled to some
form of disclosure for at least the six ministries mentioned in the auditor’s report.
3
Disclosure should be tailored with the following objectives in mind:
• to provide information arguably relevant to the identification of people
performing bargaining-unit work who are not members of the unit even though
they would be characterized properly as employees of the provincial government;
• to ensure the process of disclosure is expeditious and does not entail undue cost;
and
• to ensure the larger dispute process also is expeditious and does not entail undue
cost.
Having ordered production relating to a single ministry, I went on to say:
The issue of disclosure for the remaining five ministries surveyed by the provincial
auditor, and for all other ministries, will be considered later with the benefit of the lessons
learned in dealing with the first ministry. (emphasis added)
The initial disclosure order was based largely upon the report of the provincial auditor.
As the report provided reasonable grounds to suspect the collective agreement was being
violated in a substantial way by six ministries, I decided the association was entitled to
disclosure, relating to those ministries, which would not had been required otherwise.
Nonetheless, I determined that the initial order would be limited to one such ministry and that the
issue of disclosure for the remaining five would be “considered later with the benefit of the
lessons learned in dealing with the first ministry.”
Should disclosure across the OPS be required at this stage in these proceedings? MBS has
fulfilled its disclosure obligation, but the substantive issues about people engaged by that
ministry have not been resolved. No determination has been made as to whether MBS, or any
other ministry for that matter, has violated the collective agreement. In this context, I see no
good reason to order disclosure by ministries not addressed in the report of the provincial
auditor. For these ministries, the association has not demonstrated there are reasonable grounds
to suspect substantial non-compliance with the collective agreement.
Six ministries come under suspicion because of the provincial auditor’s report. MBS and
the Ministry of Health are among them. The employer does not object to providing disclosure for
the Ministry of Health. In my view, disclosure at this stage should be limited to these two
ministries and not extend to the other four mentioned by the provincial auditor. I come to this
conclusion for two reasons. The first is that suspicion is not the same thing as proof; no
violations of the agreement by MBS have yet been proven. If MBS has not contravened the
agreement, one might reasonably wonder whether the same could be true of other ministries
4
cited by the provincial auditor. The second reason is based upon learning from experience. MBS
makes widespread use of consultants. The Ministry of Health makes widespread use of staff
seconded from transfer payment agencies. Consultants and seconded staff make up a large
proportion of the people working for the provincial government who are not designated as
employees. Accordingly, experience gained in dealing with MBS and the Ministry of Health has
the potential to grease the wheels of dispute resolution when attention turns to the other
ministries.
II
The employer is directed to provide the same sort of disclosure for the Ministry of Health as has
been provided for MBS. Such disclosure shall be provided by March 5, using a baseline date of
January 7.
To facilitate the process of dispute resolution, after the employer has provided the
required information about people not designated as employees, I propose the following
timetable:
• The association shall endeavour to inform the employer, by March 12, as to which
people on the list are “claimed” by the association.
• The employer shall endeavour to inform the association, by March 26, as to which
of the people claimed by it are not contested, and to provide particulars to the
association about those disputed.
• The association shall endeavour to provide, by April 2, particulars to the employer
about the people claimed by it and disputed by the employer.
I decline at this stage to make any orders about people engaged by the Ministry of Health
on the baseline date but not the disclosure date or about people engaged by the ministry on the
disclosure date but not the baseline date.
Dated at Toronto this 19th day of December 2003.
Richard Brown
Vice-Chair